The issue we address in this case is whether appellants have standing under Article III of the Constitution to invoke the power of the federal courts. If they do not, we need go no further. Analyzing Article III standing in a given case is not always easy. The Supreme Court decisions in this area do not mesh with nice consistency, and the concept cannot be stated in a neat epigram.
See Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans United,
Ronald A. Schiavone and the Schiavone Construction Company applied to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Glasser, J.) for appointment of independent counsel to investigate whether one Mario Montuoro had given false evidence before a grand jury and, if so, to prosecute for any violation of federal criminal law warranted by that finding. The district court denied the application holding that the court has no constitutional or statutory authority to make an appointment of counsel.
I Background
On September 20, 1984 an application for appointment of independent counsel was filed on behalf of appellants Ronald A. Schiavone and the Schiavone Construction Company. The allegations contained in the application, reproduced in
Schiavone claimed that Montuoro’s conduct warranted criminal prosecution for perjury, 18 U.S.C. § 1621, false declaration before a grand jury, 18 U.S.C. § 1623, false statements, 18 U.S.C. § 1001, obstruction of justice, 18 U.S.C. § 1505, and contempt, 18 U.S.C. § 401. Schiavone further stated that the government has not sought to indict Montuoro on any of these charges. With his application to the district court, he submitted affidavits by six experts in the field of professional responsibility, all of whom were of the opinion that the Department of Justice violated applicable standards of professional conduct by failing to prosecute Montuoro for his false testimony because of a conflict of interest.
See
The district court denied’the application on its merits. The court held that it had no inherent or statutory authority to appoint an independent prosecutor, and that there was no precedent in the history of the common law for such an appointment. It concluded that the constitutional principle of separation of powers between the executive and the judicial branches, together with the broad discretion vested in the prosecutor, precluded the court from interfering with the prosecutorial function. At the end of its opinion the district court noted the government’s assertion that Schiavone lacked standing to submit his application, but declined to rule on that issue.
II Discussion
A. General Rules Governing Standing
The framers of the Constitution drawing on history’s examples urged that the preservation of liberty depended on keeping the “three great departments of power ... separate and distinct.” The Federalist No. 47, at 313 (J. Madison) (Sesquicentennial ed. 1937). The separation of powers is the bedrock theory upon which our federal government rests. With respect to the federal judiciary, this concept is embodied in section 2 of Article III of the Constitution, which states that the “judicial Power” of the federal courts “shall extend to” certain described “Cases” and “Controversies.”
A legal device crafted in decisional law to implement the case-or-controversy requirement is the doctrine of standing, which places limits on a plaintiff’s ability to invoke the power of the federal courts.
See, e.g., Allen v. Wright,
— U.S. -,
The Supreme Court consistently has stated that the essence of the question of standing is whether plaintiff has “demonstrate[d] a ‘personal stake in the outcome’ [of the controversy] in order to ‘assure that concrete adverseness which sharpens the presentation of issues’ necessary for the proper resolution of constitutional questions.”
City of Los Angeles v. Lyons,
In addition to the Article III standing requirements, there are judge-made, prudential limitations on the exercise by a federal court of judicial power.
See, e.g., Wright,
B. Supreme Court Precedents
With the Article III requirements and prudential limitations in mind, we consider several Supreme Court cases that have applied these factors in the same area of the law as that now under consideration. The appellant in
Linda R.S. v. Richard D.,
The district court dismissed the mother’s case for lack of standing and the Supreme Court affirmed. The Court held that appellant “failed to allege a sufficient nexus between her injury and the government action which she attacked] to justify judicial intervention.”
Id.
at 617-18,
In
Leeke v. Timmerman,
C. Standing Requirements Applied to This Case
We note that on appeal the government properly raised the standing issue, even though the district court declined to rule on the issue and the government did not cross-appeal. First, as standing derives from Article Ill’s limitation on federal judicial power, it is a threshold issue in every ease.
Warth,
We turn to analyze the circumstances of this case. In so doing we recognize that when ruling on a motion to dismiss for want of standing, we must accept all material allegations of the application as true.
Warth,
Applying the standing tests and the Supreme Court’s ruling in Linda R.S. it is evident that applicants lack standing. Concededly, applicants have suffered an injury stemming from Montuoro’s state *76 ments to federal officers and the grand jury. Public allegations that construction company officers made an improper payment to a union officer are damaging to the reputation of the company and the individuals involved, both within the industry and the community. Yet, even granting counsel’s argument that the individual applicant and the company suffered serious reputational and economic injury, applicants have failed to demonstrate that their injuries are traceable to the government’s failure to prosecute. Any injury they suffered was a result of Montuoro’s actions and the perception of the public; none was caused by the government’s inaction.
Further, were the court to grant the relief requested, such relief would not redress the applicants’ injuries. Even «/independent counsel were to.investigate Mon-tuoro, and
if
prosecution were warranted, and «/Montuoro were convicted, to say that the prospect of applicants obtaining relief from such prosecution is speculative is surely an understatement. Successful prosecution would only result in the jailing of Montuoro, not in financial recompense for Schiavone.
See Linda R.S.,
D. Prudential Limitations Applied to This Case
Appellants further contend that they satisfy the “zone of interests” test enunciated by the Supreme Court in
Association of Data Processing Service Organizations,
Appellants failed to prove the most critical aspect of the standing requirement: that there is some reasonable nexus between their injury and the chaljenged action, or in this case, the challenged inaction. It is well-settled that the bare existence of an abstract injury is not enough to confer standing.
See Massachusetts v. Mellon,
Finally, applicants claim that they are permitted to submit an application for independent counsel in order to vindicate the public interest in the fair administration of justice. But they have not alleged any particularized injury with respect to this goal. Rather, whatever injury they suffered in this context is one shared by society at large. The doctrine of separation of powers precludes an individual from invoking the power of a court to compel the government to act on behalf of all members of society to vindicate the administration of justice.
See Wright,
*77 III Conclusion
We therefore conclude that applicants lack standing to submit their application for the appointment of independent counsel. The district court’s order is vacated and the application dismissed.
Notes
. J. Milton, Paradise Lost, in 4 Harvard Classics, The Complete Poems of John Milton 125 (Eliot ed. 1909).
