This appeal presents two primary issues: Does the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (“the PLCAA”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 7901 et seq. (2005), by its terms require dismissal of the plaintiff/appellants’ suit under the District of Columbia’s Assault Weapons Manufacturing Strict Liability Act of 1990, D.C.Code § 7-2551.01 et seq. (2001) (“the SLA”); and, if so, does the PLCAA as applied to the plaintiffs’ pending claims under the SLA violate separation of powers principles or due process principles embodied in the Fifth Amendment, or constitute a “taking” under the Fifth Amendment for which “just compensation” must be paid. We answer the first question yes, the second question no, and affirm the dismissal of the plaintiffs’ suit.
I.
This litigation began when the individual plaintiffs and the District of Columbia (hereafter collectively “the plaintiffs”) sued the defendants, various gun manufacturers, importers, or distributors of firearms, alleging negligence, creation of a public nuisance, and liability under the SLA.
1
This court in
District of Columbia v. Beretta,
Subsequently, however, Congress enacted the PLCAA, key purposes of which (as stated in 15 U.S.C. § 7901(b)), were to:
(1) ... prohibit causes of action against manufacturers, distributors, dealers, and importers of firearms or ammunition products, and their trade associations, for the harm solely caused by the criminal or unlawful misuse of firearm products or ammunition products by others when the product functioned as designed and intended. ... [and]
‡ ‡ ‡
(4) ... prevent the use of such lawsuits to impose unreasonable burdens on interstate and foreign commerce.
The PLCAA provides that a “qualified civil liability action may not be brought in any Federal or State court,” id. § 7902(a), and that a “qualified civil liability action that is pending on October 26, 2005 [the date of enactment], shall be immediately dismissed by the court in which the action was brought or is currently pending.” Id. § 7902(b). A “qualified civil liability action” is defined as:
a civil action or proceeding or an administrative proceeding brought by any per *168 son against a manufacturer or seller of a qualified product, [2] or a trade association, for damages, punitive damages, in-junctive or declaratory relief, abatement, restitution, fines, or penalties, or other relief, resulting from the criminal or unlawful misuse of a qualified product by the person or a third party....
However, not every civil action against a manufacturer or seller of firearms is barred by the PLCAA. Specifically, as relevant here, a qualified civil liability action “shall not include”:
(iii) an action in which a manufacturer or seller of a qualified product knowingly violated a State or Federal statute applicable to the sale or marketing of the product, and the violation was a proximate cause of the harm for which relief is sought, including—
(I) any case in which the manufacturer or seller knowingly made any false entry in, or failed to make appropriate entry in, any record required to be kept under Federal or State law with respect to the qualified product, or aided, abetted, or conspired with any person in making any false or fictitious oral or written statement with respect to any fact material to the lawfulness of the sale or other disposition of a qualified product; or
(II) any case in which the manufacturer or seller aided, abetted, or conspired with any other person to sell or otherwise dispose of a qualified product, knowing, or having reasonable cause to believe, that the actual buyer of the qualified product was prohibited from possessing or receiving a firearm or ammunition under subsection (g) or (n) of section 922 of Title 18.
Id. § 7903(5)(A)(iii). The parties here, and other courts construing this language, have referred to subsection (5)(A)(iii) as the “predicate exception” to the PLCAA because, to take effect, it requires that the manufacturer or seller have committed an underlying (or predicate) statutory violation. We will identify it that way also.
Following enactment of the PLCAA, the defendants here moved to dismiss the SLA claim, and on May 22, 2006, Judge Brook Hedge granted the motion in a memorandum opinion and order. She concluded, first, that because the SLA “is a state statute [3] that applies specifically and exclusively to the firearms industry,” causes of action under the SLA would, “under a literal interpretation of the predicate exception, ... seem to be excluded from the PLCAA’s definition of a ‘qualified civil liability action.’” Nevertheless, the judge applied principles of statutory construction to consider whether, “[w]hen taken as a whole and in the context of the purpose of the PLCAA, ... the predicate exception was meant to include any state statute that applies to a result of the sale or manufacture of firearms, or [instead] whether it was meant to include only those state statutes that apply to the manner in which firearms are marketed or sold” (emphasis in original). Performing this inquiry, in particular after applying the doctrine of ejusdem generis (“where specific words follow general words, the application of the general term is restricted to things ... *169 similar to those specifically enumerated,” citing 2A N. Singer, Sutherland Statutory Construction § 47.17 (5th ed. 1992)), the court reasoned that “the specific cases given as examples in the predicate exception are clearly those involving violations of statutes regulating the manner in which firearms are sold or marketed,” and that, accordingly, “the state statutes ... mentioned in the general part of the predicate exception are limited to [those] regulating the manner in which firearms are sold or marketed, and not statutes that are merely capable of being applied to the result of the sale or marketing of firearms.” Any other interpretation, the judge believed, would “lead [ ] to a result ... plainly at variance with the [PLCAA] as a whole.” Thus, because the SLA by its terms is not a statute regulating how — the manner in which — firearms are marketed, it “imposes the type of liability ... Congress has attempted to prohibit by ... the PLCAA,” and the plaintiffs had failed to bring their cause of action within the predicate exception.
The judge further rejected the plaintiffs’ arguments for unconstitutionality of the PLCAA as applied. First, although the PLCAA directs the “immediate [] dismissal]” by courts of any “qualified civil liability action” still pending, it does not violate the separation of powers and specifically “the rule stated in
United States v. Klein,
II. Statutory Interpretation
We consider first the plaintiffs’ argument that their cause of action under the SLA fits within the predicate exception of the PLCAA, an issue of statutory construction that we decide
de novo. See Chamberlain v. American Honda Finance Corp.,
The plaintiffs contend they have met the predicate exception because their complaint alleges that the defendants “knowingly violated” the SLA, a statute that by its express terms “applifes] to the sale or marketing of’ a class of firearms. Our difficulty with this position begins, however, with determining just how the defen *170 dants may be said to have “violated” the SLA. In ordinary language, a “violation” is understood to mean “an infringement or transgression,” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 2554 (2002 ed.), and a violation of a law to mean “[a]n infraction or breach of the law.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1600 (8th ed. 2004). Plain meaning, therefore, would seem to require the law in question to contain a prohibition against, or standards of, conduct that are being violated. Indeed, the PLCAA illustrates statutory “violations” in this sense that it has in mind by exempting from its reach actions in which, for example, the manufacturer or seller is shown to have “knowingly made any false entry in, or failed to make appropriate entry in, any record required to be kept under Federal or State law with respect to [firearms],” § 7908(5)(A)(iii)(I), or to have “conspired with any other person to sell” a firearm knowing that the actual buyer “was prohibited from possessing or receiving a firearm” under federal law. Section 7903(5)(A)(iii)(II). Significantly, too, District of Columbia law provides a statutory cause of action for damages against firearms manufacturers or sellers who “violate [ ] a ... statute” in the commonly understood sense of those words. See D.C.Code § 7-2531.02(a) (2001). While otherwise generally mirroring the SLA, it requires proof that the defendant “knowingly and willfully engaged in the illegal sale” of a firearm, id. (emphasis added), defined to mean any of four actions including “[f]ail-ure to establish proof of the purchaser’s residence in a jurisdiction where the purchase of the weapon is legal,” id. § 7-2531.01(4)(A), or “[failure to maintain full, complete, and accurate records of firearm sales as required by local, state, and federal law.” Id. § 7-2531.01(4)(c).
The plaintiffs, however, have not alleged liability under D.C.Code § 7-2531.02, nor is their SLA claim that the defendants knowingly violated any proscriptions or requirements of local or federal law governing the sale or possession of firearms. Instead their argument is that the SLA, which by its terms would make these defendants “strictly liable in tort” for death or injuries resulting from the discharge of an assault weapon or machine gun they manufactured or sold, embodies “a legal duty owed to the residents of the District” and that its requirement to compensate for injuries “thus presupposes a ‘violation’ of a statutory duty.” Br. for Individual Plaintiffs at 4-5 (citing Blaox’s Law Dictionary as defining “violation” broadly to include “contravention of a right or duty”).
Imaginative though this argument is, we think it stretches the meaning of “violation” well beyond what the authors of the PLCAA reasonably intended. The SLA imposes no duty on firearms manufacturers or sellers to operate in any particular manner or according to any standards of care or reasonableness.
Cf., e.g., City of Gary ex rel. King v. Smith & Wesson Corp.,
For one thing, as we have implied, the literal meaning of the predicate excep tion — i.e., its operative requirement of a “violation of] a ... statute” — connotes in ordinary speech something very different from a duty to compensate without having transgressed upon or breached any standard of conduct or care separately imposed. But even assuming some ambiguity in Congress’s choice of a verb, we have also seen that the statute gives specific indication, in the succeeding paragraphs, of the class of statutory violations Congress had in mind, and none of these can reasonably be compared to a “violation” consisting of no more — nor less — than a duty to insure against injuries resulting from the discharge of a firearm. See generally 2A N. SiNGER, Sutherland Statutory Construction § 47.17 (5th ed. 1992) (where specific words follow general words, application of the general term is normally restricted to things similar to those specifically enumerated). Furthermore, the predicate exception requires proof that, despite the misuse of the firearm by a third person, “the [statutory] violation was a proximate cause of the harm for which relief is sought,” § 7903(5)(A)(iii), and it is quite implausible, we think, that Congress meant by this no greater showing than of a causal link between the “injury or death ... [and] the discharge of the assault weapon or machine gun in the District of Columbia.” D.C.Code § 7-2551.02 (emphasis added).
Finally, individual words of a statute “are to be read in the light of the statute taken as a whole,”
Columbia Plaza Tenants’ Ass’n v. Columbia Plaza Ltd. P’ship,
By the terms of the PLCAA, the plaintiffs’ action under the SLA was properly dismissed.
III. Constitutional Issues
The plaintiffs next argue that the PLCAA, read to divest them of their pending cause of action under the SLA, (a) violates principles of separation of powers, (b) deprives them of a “vested right” contrary to due process principles embodied in the Fifth Amendment, and (c) amounts to an unconstitutional taking of their property. We consider these arguments in succession, again conducting
de novo
review.
See In re Warner,
A. Separation of Powers
Relying on
United States v. Klein,
In Klein, the administrator of the estate of a Confederate sympathizer sought to recover the value of property seized by federal agents during the Civil War. See id. at 136. The administrator prevailed in the Court of Claims, based on legislation that authorized recovery upon proof that the property owner had not given aid or comfort to the rebellion. See id. at 139, 143. The Supreme Court had previously held that a presidential pardon was enough to prove loyalty under this provision. See id. at 145. While Klein was pending in the Supreme Court, however, Congress passed a statute providing that a pardon was inadmissible as evidence of loyalty (indeed would constitute evidence of disloyalty), and further requiring the Court of Claims and the Supreme Court to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction any pending claims based on a pardon. See id. at 143, 145. The Supreme Court held this to be an impermissible attempt by Congress to “prescribe rules of decision to the Judicial Department of the government in cases pending before it.” Id. at 146.
‘Whatever the precise scope of
Klein,
however, later decisions have made clear that its prohibition does not take hold when Congress ‘amend[s] applicable law.’ ”
Plant v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc.,
The new law “compelled changes in law,” the Court said, “not findings or results under old law.”
Id.
at 438,
Plant
and
Robertson
demonstrate why
Klein
does not apply to this case. The PLCAA sets forth new standards that must be met before a case may be brought or a pending one may proceed against the manufacturer or seller of a firearm for damages resulting from the use of the firearm by a third person. When, but only when, a suit is found by a court not to meet one of the statutory exceptions to a “qualified civil liability action,” it must be dismissed. As Judge Hedge correctly reasoned, “nothing within the statute controls a court’s determination as to whether particular cases satisfy [the] new legal standard or its exceptions.” In the words of
Robertson,
the statute “direet[s no] particular findings of fact or application of law ... to fact”; rather, in the Supreme Court’s more recent words, instead of “prescribing a rule of decision, [it] simply imposes the consequences of the court’s application of the new legal standard,”
Miller v. French,
B. Due Process
The plaintiffs contend that their accrued cause of action under the SLA amounts to a property right that Congress could not abridge by retroactive application of the PLCAA. As the District of Columbia puts it (Br. for District at 17), “an accrued cause of action is a vested property right ... that ... cannot be divested by statute, including a statute applied retroactively.” Moreover, they argue that a decision binding on this panel,
Barrick v. District of Columbia,
173 A.2d
*174
372 (D.C.1961),
aff'd sub nom. Swenson v. Barrick,
Laws enacted by Congress under its power to regulate interstate commerce, and thus meant to “adjust [] the burdens and benefits of economic lifef,] come to the Court with a presumption of constitutionality, and ... the burden is on one complaining of a due process violation to establish that the legislature has acted in an arbitrary and irrational way.”
Usery v. Turner Elkhorn Mining Co.,
strong deference accorded legislation in the field of national economic policy is no less applicable when that legislation is applied retroactively. Provided that the retroactive application of a statute is supported by a legitimate legislative purpose furthered by rational means, judgments about the wisdom of such legislation remain within the exclusive province of the legislative and executive branches.
Pension Benefit Guar. Corp. v. R.A. Gray & Co.,
Undeniably, Congress meant the PLCAA to apply to pending “qualified civil liability actions.” Nor have the plaintiffs persuasively argued that Congress acted arbitrarily or irrationally, see
Usery, supra,
in giving “comprehensive effect” to the statute by applying it to pending actions.
Landgraf, supra.
Congress was especially concerned with “[ljawsuits [that]
have been commenced”
seeking “money damages and other relief’ against manufacturers and sellers of firearms for harms caused by the misuse of their products by others, including criminals, 15 U.S.C. § 7901(a)(3) (emphasis added), and with the threat to interstate commerce of thus “imposing liability on an entire industry for harm ... solely caused by others.”
Id.
§ 7901(a)(6). As the court stated in
Ileto, supra,
“[although one may disagree with Congress’s predictions” about the effect on commerce of unchecked lawsuits of that kind, “one cannot credibly argue that the Act’s retroactive provision does not further a legitimate legislative purpose.”
Ileto,
The plaintiffs argue, however, that all of this is essentially beside the point. They maintain that due process bars the retroactive application of the PLCAA to then action under the SLA because “a cause of action is a species of property protected by ... [d]ue [p]rocess,”
Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
Yet, while re-affirming that government could not “randomly]” deny “potential litigants use of established adjudicatory procedures,”
Logan,
The plaintiffs read this language as saying nothing about a legislature’s power retroactively to “create immunities ... or to eliminate statutorily created causes of action.” But in a case
{Logan)
where the issue was precisely the manner by which the state had deprived the claimant of a “right to redress ... guaranteed” by law, it would be strange for the Court to have described the legitimate manner in which such “depriv[ation] ... of a protected property interest” may be accomplished if, even hypothetically, it could not apply to the cause of action in that case.
Logan,
Rather, we think the correct constitutional distinction is one the Supreme Court has confirmed in the meantime and to which federal courts have almost uniformly adhered, namely, between causes of action that have reached final, unreviewable judgment — and in that sense have vested — and all others, pending and future, which may be modified by rationally grounded retroactive legislation. In Plaut, supra, the Supreme Court adverted to this distinction in striking down (as violative of the separation of powers) an amendment to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 that required federal courts to reopen final judgments in private civil actions under § 10(b) of the Act. The Court said:
When a new law makes clear that it is retroactive, an appellate court must apply that law in reviewing judgments still on appeal that were rendered before the law was enacted and must alter the outcome accordingly. See United States v. Schooner Peggy,1 Cranch 103 ,2 L.Ed. 49 (1801); Landgraf[,] ... 511 U.S. [at] 273-280,114 S.Ct. 1483 .... It is the obligation of the last court in the hierarchy that rules on the case to give effect to Congress’s latest enactment, even when that has the effect of overturning the judgment of an inferior court, since each court, at every level, must “decide according to existing laws.” Schooner Peggy, supra,1 Cranch, at 109 ,2 L.Ed. 49 . Having achieved finality, however, a judicial decision becomes the last word of the judicial department with regard to a particular case or controversy, and Congress may not declare by retroactive legislation that the law applicable to that very case was something other than what the courts said it was.
Applying this distinction, federal appellate courts have repeatedly rejected claims, similar to the plaintiffs’ here, that federal statutes modifying or abrogating pending state tort law actions violate due process by depriving litigants of their right to proceed.
See, e.g., Hammond v. United States,
Joining these courts, we hold that while the plaintiffs’ cause of action under the SLA “is a species of property protected by ... [d]ue [p]rocess,”
Logan,
It remains for us to explain why
Barrick v. District of Columbia, supra,
does not stand in the way of this holding.
See generally M.A.P. v. Ryan,
The defendants argue that
Barrick,
although plainly based upon an understanding of “vested rights” contrary to the one we have joined here, is distinguishable because it dealt only with abrogation of a common law cause of action, unlike the statutory action created by the SLA.
Bar-rick
does provide support for that distinction. In stating that the plaintiffs “cause of action against the ambulance driver
\i.e.,
the District employee] was a property right,”
id.
at 375, the court quoted in a footnote this passage from Mass
a v. Nastri,
We choose not to distinguish
Barrick
on this basis, however. The federal appellate
*179
decisions cited earlier, which we find persuasive, do not further distinguish among
pending
— ie., non-final — actions based on whether they were statutory or common-law based. And, to accord common-law actions greater privilege in this regard is difficult to reconcile with the Supreme Court’s observation in
Duke Power Co., supra
note 8, at 88 n. 32,
Instead, we conclude that this is a situation where the law simply has not “stood still” since
Barrick, see Elam v. Monarch Life Ins. Co.,
C. Takings
The plaintiffs contend, finally, that elimination of their cause of action by the PLCAA constitutes a “taking” for which the Fifth Amendment requires that they receive “just compensation.” That compensation, they say, would be either the damages they can prove in a hypothetical suit against the defendants or, as they urged at oral argument, an order enjoining application of the PLCAA to their action.
“[A] party challenging governmental action as an unconstitutional taking bears a substantial burden,”
Eastern Enters.,
“There is no set formula to determine where [government] regulation” — as distinct from the “paradigmatic taking” of “direct government appropriation or physical invasion of private property,”
Lingle v. Chevron U.S.A., Inc.,
Among the federal courts cited earlier that have found no due process violation in Congress’s abrogation of pending — but not final — causes of action, those that have addressed related taking claims have rejected them for essentially the same reasons.
See Grimesy v. Huff,
In these decisions, the courts have applied key factors that inform taking analysis, including “the character of the action and ... the nature and extent of the interference,”
Penn Central,
Moreover, while Congress unmistakably took away the specific cause of action the plaintiffs have alleged, that interference cannot be viewed “in a vacuum,”
id.
at 225,
IV.
For all of the above reasons, the judgment of the Superior Court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. The SLA provides, in relevant part:
Any manufacturer, importer, or dealer of an assault weapon or machine gun shall be held strictly liable in tort, without regard to fault or proof of defect, for all direct and consequential damages that arise from bodily injury or death if the bodily injury or death proximately results from the discharge of the assault weapon or machine gun in the District of Columbia.
D.C.Code § 7-2551.02.
2. A “qualified product” is defined as "a firearm (as defined in subparagraph (A) or (B) of section 921(a)(3) of title 18), including any antique firearm (as defined in section 921(a)(16) of such title), or ammunition (as defined in section 921(a)(17)(A) of such title), or a component part of a firearm or ammunition, that has been shipped or transported in interstate or foreign commerce.” 15 U.S.C. § 7903(4).
3. The PLCAA defines the District of Columbia as a "State” for purposes of the statutory exception and other provisions of the statute.
. Dismissal in this event would be required whether the matter is viewed as one of federal pre-emption or, instead, as an instance of the rule that "a congressional statute of national application prevails over a statute applying only to the District of Columbia."
In re Estate of Couse,
. The plaintiffs acknowledge that the closest analogy to the cause of action the SLA creates is the common law doctrine of “abnormally dangerous activities,” which makes a party engaging in such activity a virtual insurer against resulting injury. See Restatement *171 (Second) of the Law, Torts § 519 cmt. d, at 35 (1977) (liability imposed by this doctrine is "the responsibility of relieving against [the] harm [caused by such activity] when it does in fact occur”).
. One congressional "finding” that underlay these purposes was a concern with liability actions "without foundation in hundreds of years of the common law” and that "do not represent a bona fide expansion of the common law.” 15 U.S.C. § 7901(a)(7). From these words the plaintiffs infer that Congress was substantially less troubled by the existence of statutory liability actions reflecting judgments "by the legislatures of the several States.” Id. No such distinction, though, is reflected either in the definition of a "qualified civil liability action” or in the enumerated actions excluded therefrom, including the predicate exception; and to posit one all the same would ignore Congress’s objection to "[l]awsuits” as a class (unless excepted) that “seek money damages and other relief [against manufacturers and sellers] for the *172 harm caused by the misuse of firearms by third parties, including criminals.” Id. § 7901(a)(3).
. The United States asserts, at the threshold, that because Klein is premised on separation of powers principles it has no application to “Congress's regulation of non-Article III courts like those of the District of Columbia” (Br. for United States at 11). The plaintiffs respond that “[njothing in Klein suggests that [its] rule does not apply to all independent judicial bodies, including the District of Columbia courts, which indisputably enjoy the same autonomy from improper legislative directives that Article III grants to federal courts” (Reply Br. for Indiv. Plaintiffs at 11-12 n. 10). Our resolution of this issue enables us to stay clear of that interpretive thicket.
. Because, as explained earlier, Congress did not deprive injured persons of all potential remedies against manufacturers or sellers of firearms that discharge causing them injuries, we need not consider the plaintiffs’ subsidiary claim that due process at least requires Congress to supply an alternative remedy before it may eliminate a cause of action retroactively.
But see, e.g., Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Envtl. Study Group, Inc.,
.
See also De Ferranti
v.
Lyndmark,
. Barrick, for example, relied on the 1943 edition of Sutherland on Statutory Construction, but succeeding editions have recognized that "[i]t is impossible to discover the precise meaning of the term [vested rights] through which all of the decisions [employing it] can be consistently explained,” 2 Norman J. Singer, Sutherland Statutory Construction § 41:6, at 423-27 (6th ed., rev. 2001), and that such rights may be abridged by retroactive amendment "if it is clear that the legislature intended the amendment to operate in such a fashion” provided that, as a species of "property,” they are "protect[ed] from arbitrary interference.” Id. at 428 (emphasis added).
We observe, moreover, that the statute at issue in
Barrick,
the District of Columbia Employee Non-Liability Act, 74 Stat. 519 (1960), was an exercise of Congress’s authority to legislate exclusively for the District of Columbia,
see generally Palmare v. United States,
. Congress, that is to say, has not worked the equivalent of a "total deprivation of beneficial use,”
Lucas v. S. Carolina Coastal Council,
