The seven plaintiffs brought this suit to enjoin the use of federal funds (1) to finance instruction in reading, arithmetic, and other subjects in religious and sectarian schools, and (2) for the purchase of textbooks and other instructional materials for use in such schools. They allege that defendants have been and are using federal funds for these purposes in administering Titles I and II of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, 79 Stat. 27 et seq. (1965), 20 U.S.C. §§ 241a-i, 821-827 (Supp.1966). Properly construed, plaintiffs allege, the Act does not authorize such federal expenditures. If it does, they further contend, the statute must be struck down under the First Amendment, both as a “law respecting an establishment of religion” and as a “law * * * prohibiting the free exercise thereof * *
The complaint asserts that plaintiffs pay federal income taxes; that they are “qualified legal voters of the United States;” that they reside and vote in New York State; that one plaintiff (Shanker) is a “real property taxpayer” in New York; and that another (Hen-kin) “has children regularly registered in and attending the elementary or secondary grades in the public schools of New York.” Invoking the court’s jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 2201, 2202, 2282, and 2284, plaintiffs have moved under the last two sections for the convening of a three-judge court. Defendants have moved under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b) for dismissal of the complaint on the ground that plaintiffs lack standing to sue.
The parties are agreed that a three-judge court should be convened unless plaintiffs’ claims under the Federal Constitution are “plainly unsubstantial.” Ex parte Poresky,
The able briefs on both sides focus upon the decision in Frothingham v. Mel
*353
lon,
The doctrine of
Frothingham,
defendants urge, “is dispositive of this case.” Their argument is a powerful one. It may well be accepted ultimately as the obligatory ground for decision at the district court level. It has lately been held by another district judge to be so clearly correct as to require dismissal of a similar suit without the summoning of a three-judge court. Protestants and Other Americans United v. United States
1. Even apart from the possibly material distinctions between the First Amendment problem here and the purely economic interest asserted in
Frothing-ham,
that decision has been the subject of weighty criticism in the years since 1923. See, e. g., Public Affairs Associates, Inc., v. Rickover,
There are answers, perhaps complete ones, to that thought. But it does not *354 seem either necessary or appropriate to pursue them to any final conclusions. The limited office of this memorandum is to sketch arguments which appear to defeat defendants’ assertion of plain unsubstantiality.
2. Defendants make the point that the Senate has recently passed a bill (S. 3, 90th Cong., 1st Sess.) — identical with a bill passed by the Senate, but not the House, in the prior Congress — which would give to any federal taxpayer the right to raise in a suit for a declaratory judgment the First Amendment questions tendered here, with no “additional showing of direct or indirect financial or other injury, actual or prospective, on the part of the plaintiff * * * required for the maintenance of any such action.” See. 3(a). 2 “The very fact that such legislation is before the Congress,” defendants argue, “demonstrates that this Court is without jurisdiction to consider the merits of the present controversy.” 3 There is room for argument, however, that the Senate’s action “demonstrates” — or, at least, suggests- — other things.
The report on S. 3, S. Rep. No. 85, 90th Cong., 1st Sess. (1967), reflects careful study and the participation of notable scholars. It outlines not only the deliberations of the Committee on the Judiciary, but the participation in the legislative drafting of the Attorney General and the Solicitor General (id., p. 2) —both, along with the Senate, bound by and sensitive to the pertinent commands of the Constitution. And it states the studied conclusion that “the
Frothingharn
decision was founded on grounds other than purely constitutional ones.” Id., p. 4. Indeed, the passage of the bill by the Senate rests upon the weighty, if not final, judgment that this conclusion is correct. Cf. Muskrat v. United States,
As to the separation of powers, the report on S. 3 contains this interesting passage (p. 7.):
“One of the initial sponsors of this legislation, Senator Wayne Morse, declared in his testimony before the subcommittee: T think we will greatly strengthen our whole system of three coordinate and coequal branches of government if we provide in a broad bill a jurisdictional basis for judicial review.’ The bill recognizes that the final power to adjudicate controversies arising under the Constitution rests in the courts rather than the Congress.”
The report also contains material favorable to defendants’ view. Considering the narrow scope of the present memorandum, there is no need to exhaust this material, but one passage should certainly be quoted (ibid.):
“Several cases are now pending which challenge the constitutionality of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. The pendency of these cases may be cited by opponents of judicial review as a substitute for legislation. The committee feels, however, that if the question of standing is raised by the defendants in these cases, they will undoubtedly be successful under the present state of the law.”
Contrary to that observation, this court is proceeding on the view that the ultimate success of defendants on the standing issue is not “undoubtedly” assured. Taking altogether the work of the Senate and its Committee on this subject, we find in it enough suggestion of plausible doubt to add weight to plaintiffs’ thesis that they have enough to justify the attentions of a three-judge court.
3. Continuing only to ask whether plaintiffs show the requisite minimum of substance, it bears mention that respectable arguments may flow from the dif
*355
ference in subject matter between
Frothingham,
and this case, and from related differences in the asserted bases for the claim of standing. The alleged injury here is not merely, or mainly, economic loss. And the roles in which plaintiffs allege injury are not simply their roles as taxpayers. When the Founders proscribed laws “respecting an establishment of religion,” their aim, as Madison described it, was to make it impossible “to force a citizen to contribute three pence only of his property for the support of any one [church] establishment * * * ” Memorial and Remonstrance Against Religious Assessments, quoted in Everson v. Board of Education,
It may not be unfair in this connection to note that defendants’ argument would extend logically to the case of a federal appropriation for the building of a cathedral for some particular sect. Assuming that no taxpayer as such would have standing because of Frothingham, would it follow that nobody had standing to attack such an expenditure? Could it be assailed, for example, by people of different religions or no religion living in the neighborhood of the proposed structure? If it could, it may turn out that the allegations of the present plaintiffs concerning their interests as parents and holders of real property have weight on the standing question of a kind wholly absent from Frothingham.
The First Amendment forbids not only aid to religions, but actions that might “influence a person to go to or to remain away from church against his will * * Everson v. Board of Education,
4. The foregoing thoughts merely graze an enormous area that has been the subject of lengthy and difficult opinions by the Supreme Court in recent years. The general drift of First Amendment jurisprudence may plausibly be appraised as moving toward increasingly relaxed criteria for the achievement of standing to sue. See, e. g., School District of Abington Township v. Schempp,
Accordingly, the motion to convene a three-judge court will be granted, and the matter will be referred to the Chief Judge of this Circuit for that purpose. Defendants’ motion to dismiss will be held for the decision of the three-judge court.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The complaint in that case, similarly attacking the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, contained a prayer on behalf of the individual plaintiffs for damages of $5,000,000. It may be permissible to say, even at this far remove, that this grandiose novelty may have appeared to sound a somewhat bizarre note. Strictly speaking, however, the decision of the Ohio District Court goes squarely on Frothingham, and does not indicate that any significance was attached to the prayer for damages in reaching the conclusion that the plaintiffs patently lacked standing.
. Subsection (b) of Section 3 of the bill goes on to give standing far more sweepingly to “[a]ny citizen,” and “citizen” is defined in subsection (c) to include a corporation. Both the taxpayer provision and the broader “citizen” subsection confer upon plaintiffs the right to bring their actions as broad class suits.
. Defendants’ Reply Memorandum, p. 4.
