This action was brought to set aside the determination of the United States Civil Service Commission (Commission) that certain political activities of the plaintiff, Glen D. Palmer, while he was Director of the Department of Conservation of the State of Illinois, violated sec. 12 of the Hatch Political Activities Act (Hatch Act). 1 The District Court directed the Commission to set aside its determination and dismiss the letter of changes which had initiated the administrative proceeding.
On June 9, 1958, the Commission issued a letter of charges against the plaintiffs. The charge made was that plaintiff Palmer, from the time of his employment by the State of Illinois, Department of Conservation, on June 28, 1953, had taken an active part in political management and political campaigns. It is not denied in this record that Palmer served actively as Precinct Committeeman and as Chairman of the Kendall County Republican Committee throughout the period of his employment.
The District Court filed a forty-three page opinion (Palmer v. United States Civil Service Commission,
Pertinent quotations from the Hatch Act are: “No officer or employee of any State or local agency whose principal employment is in connection with any activity which is financed in whole or in part by loans or grants made by the United States or by any Federal agency * * *. No such officer or employee shall take any active part in political management or in political campaigns * * *. [T] he term ‘officer or employee’ shall not be construed to include * * * (3) officers holding elective offices.”
It is undisputed that |2,263,661.20 of federal funds under three different federal aid programs were paid to the State of Illinois during Palmer’s tenure as Director of the Department of Conservation from 1953 to 1958.
The Pittman-Robertson Act also known as The Federal Aid to Wild Life Act, 16 U.S.C.A. §§ 669-669Í, authorizes the Secretary of Interior to cooperate with the states through their respective State Fish and Game Departments in wild life-restoration projects. The federal contribution to the States under this Act is set apart in the United States Treasury as “The Federal aid to wild life-restoration fund,” the monies for which were accumulated from federal taxes imposed on firearms, shells and cartridges.
The Dingell-Johnson Act, 16 U.S.C.A. §§ 777-777k contains provisions for the restoration and management of all species .of fish which have a material value in connection with sport or recreation in marine or fresh Waters of the United States. The federal contributions come from revenues obtained from federal taxes on fishing rods, creels, reels, artificial lures, baits and flies. .16 U.S.C.A. § 777b.
The Clarke-McNary Act, 16 U.S.C.A. §§ 471, 505, 515, 564-570 makes provision for cooperative undertakings between the Secretary of Agriculture and the States or their agencies with respect *452 to systems of forest fire prevention and suppression and the procurement, production and distribution of forest-tree seeds and plants.
The Department of Conservation is the agency designated by the State of Illinois to deal cooperatively with the Federal Government in programs concerning fish, wild life and forestry conservation. Smith-Hurd Illinois Annotated Statutes, Chapter 127, Section 63a, 63b, 63bl.
It was proved and it is without dispute that the separate Fish and Game fund maintained within the General Treasury of the State of Illinois received the federal monies under the Pittman-Robertson and the Dingell-Johnson Acts. Also, that federal monies were paid under the Clarke-McNary Act dealing with the Forestry program, and federal payments also were made under the Federal Soil Bank program.
As Director of the Department of Conservation of the State of Illinois, it was Mr. Palmer’s statutory duty to supervise the nine Divisions of his Department and some ten or twelve boards, commissions and councils. He alone had complete responsibility for policy direction and administration of the Department..
Mr. Palmer estimated that fifty percent of his time was spent on the Division of Parks-Memorials, but he could make no specific allocation of the balance of his' time among the other Divisions. He did say he spent less than one percent of his time on federal aid projects, and explained this was possible by reason of the activities of two full-time coordinators who supervised the administration of twenty to twenty-five federal aid projects then in the Illinois Department of Conservation. These coordinators are state employees appointed by .the Director of the Illinois Department of Conservation subject, by state, consent, to qualification approval by federal agencies.
The hearing examiner found the funds paid by the Federal Government under the conservation programs hereinbefore described, were “grants” under sec. 12 of the Hatch Act. He also found that Mr. Palmer, in his office as Director of the Department of Conservation, was a state officer covered by sec. 12 of the Act. However, he recommended that the matter be viewed as de minimis.
The Commission agreed with the examiner that Palmer had, in fact, been engaged in activities which were political; that the State had received substantial grants from the Federal Government, and that Palmer’s office as Director was not one of the offices exempted by sec. 12 (a) of the Act. The Commission rejected the examiner’s suggestion that the matter was de minimis.
Upon application by plaintiffs, the Commission reconsidered the question of de minimis, but again rejected same. In its order of October 1, 1959, the Commission pointed to Mr. Palmer’s position of responsibility for all of the activities of the Department of Conservation, including those financed in whole or in part by federal funds, and noted that these responsibilities were not lessened by the delegation of duties respecting particular projects to particular subordinates. The Commission pointed out that during Mr. Palmer’s tenure in office, approximately eight percent of the total expenditures of his Department came from federal grants.
The District Court’s lengthy discussion of State of Oklahoma v. United States Civil Service Commission,
Whether or not the Supreme Court sufficiently documented its holdings in the Oklahoma case by citations, footnotes or otherwise, there can be no doubt that *453 the Court did specifically and definitely decide the Hatch Act was constitutional. 2
The Supreme Court said,
The District Court states,
To try to understand the distinction made by the District Judge, we quote further from his opinion: “ * * * Thus it can readily be seen that the Hatch Act, when it points to the executive departments under the Governor, strikes at the supreme executive authority of Illinois, and this it cannot do any more than it could strike at the supreme executive authority of the United States, the Presidency * * *.” (
We must give more than lip service to the clear and definite holding of the Supreme Court that the Hatch Act is constitutional. In the Oklahoma ease, the State of Oklahoma had urged as grounds for holding the Hatch Act unconstitutional, 1) that it was an invasion of the sovereignty of the State in violation of the United States Constitution, and further, that the Act was invalid as an unlawful delegation of power; 2) if valid, the Act applies only to “active” participation in political management or political campaigns, and that “active” participation had not been shown; and 3) if valid, the Act did not warrant the United States Civil Service Commission in ordering the removal of the state official or alternatively, the application of a penalty to the State of Oklahoma. Similar contentions are made in the case at bar, yet these and other suggestions of invalidity were expressly rejected by the Supreme Court.
In the Oklahoma case, the state official, Paris, while a member of the State Highway Commission, was, for nine months, Chairman of the Oklahoma Democratic State Central Committee. His participation in politics during the nine-month period was comparatively modest because Oklahoma had no general election that year, and the State Democratic Headquarters were closed at least for a part of that period. Funds had been received by Oklahoma from the Federal Government to be used for highway purposes. The Civil Service Commission deter *454 mined these facts constituted taking an active part in political management or in political campaigns, and warranted the removal of Paris as Highway Commissioner.
Specifically, the Supreme Court held that “ * * * [T]he United States * * * does have power to fix the terms upon which its money allotments to states shall be disbursed.” and “The Tenth Amendment does not forbid the exercise of this power in the way that Congress has proceeded in this case. * * *" (
The factual differences between the case at bar and the Oklahoma case are of no importance. The Supreme Court squarely answered in favor of validity of the Hatch Act, every major assertion of unconstitutionality raised by the plaintiffs in this case. The claim that Palmer was deprived of vested rights without due process was settled in principle in the companion case of United Public Workers of America v. Mitchell,
We hold that the case at bar is controlled by State of Oklahoma v. United States Civil Service Commission,
One additional argument is made on the question of the alleged unconstitutionality of the Hatch Act. Plaintiffs argue that to apply sec. 12 of the Hatch Act to the facts of the instant case would be to deny to the citizens of Illinois a republican form of government in violation of Article IV, Section 4 of the Constitution of the United States. Plaintiffs insist this is true if a single state officer can determine for himself, by not resigning, whether his state shall or shall not receive federal funds for a two-year period.
No case is cited by plaintiffs concerning a republican form of government. In fact, plaintiffs admit there are no authorities directly in point. Plaintiffs do not point out the manner in which they claim a republican form of government is disturbed by the enforcement of the Hatch Act except for the general statement hereinbefore quoted. Ignored are statements of the United States Supreme Court such as in Harisiades v. Shaughnessy,
We also hold that the de minimis rule is inapplicable under the circumstances of this case. Palmer was the highest state official responsible for the conservation affairs of the State of Illinois. He had administrative supervision of all nine Divisions of the Department of Conservation. At least six of such Divisions conducted activities to which federal contributions had been made. Palmer was responsible for major policy decisions which had to be made at state level. He initially approved the project plan and report for each federal aid project. By state law, he was given specific responsibility for the state development of Federal-Grant-in-Aid-projects. His duties in connection with federally-financed activities took up at least fifty percent of his time. Palmer plainly met the test that his “principal employment” was “in connection with any activity which is financed in whole or in part by loans or grants made by the United States or any Federal agency.”
•It is of interest to note that the decision of the District Court in the instant
*455
case was strongly relied on by the plaintiffs in the case of Engelhardt and State of Alabama v. United States Civil Service Commission, M.D.Ala.,
The judgment of the District Court herein must be and is reversed with instructions to affirm the deteimination of the Commission.
Reversed and remanded.
