In 1952 thе Rudders became tenants from month to month of an apartment in Lincoln Heights Dwellings, a low-cost housing development in thе District of Columbia constructed under the United States Housing Act of 1937. 1 2***The United States owns the property and the National Cаpital Housing Authority manages it.
In 1953, in supposed compliance with the Gwinn Amendment, 2 the Housing. Authority asked the Rudders and other tenants to sign a so-called “Certification of Nonmеmbership in Subversive Organizations”, which contains the words: “I hereby certify that I am not a member of any of the organizations listed in the document entitled ‘Consolidated List, Dated November 10, 1952, of Organizations Designated by the Attorney General of the United Stаtes As Within Executive Order No. 9835’ * * A list, under that title, accompanied the Certification which the Rudders were asked to sign.
Executive Order 9835 [5 U.S.C.A. § 631 note] authorized consideration, “in connection with the determination of disloyalty” of government employees, of various matters including “Membership in, affiliation with or sympathetic association with any foreign or domestic organization, association, movement, group or combination of persons, designated by the Attorney General as [1] totalitarian, [2] fascist, [3] communist, or [4] subversive, or [5] as having adopted a policy of advocating or approving thе commission of acts of force or violence to deny other persons their rights under the Constitution of the United States, or [6] as seeking to alter the form of government of the United States by unconstitu *53 tional means.” (Numbers added.) 3 C. F.R. 132, 1947 Supp., E.O. 9835.
The Consоlidated List that accompanied the Certification named nearly 200 organizations. It did not indicate that the Attorney General had designated any as “subversive”. It indicated nothing more than that all had been “designated by the Attorney General оf the United States as within Executive Order No. 9835.” The Attorney General had, in fact, designated very few organizations as subversive. In 1948 he designated many as “Totalitarian”, many as “Fascist”, more as “Communist”, a few as advocating violent denial of the rights of оthers, and a few as seeking to alter the form of government by unconstitutional means. At that time he designated only six as “Subversive”. 13 Fed.Reg. 6137-6138. A “List of Organizations Designated by the Attorney General Pursuant to Executive Order No. 9835 [Revised]”, in the 1952 Cumulative Pocket Supplement to the 1949 edition of the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 5, (pp. 123, 126) designates only 13 organizations as “Subversive”.
The Rudders refused to sign the Certification. For that reason, the United States served them with notice to quit and afterwards brought this suit for possession. The Municipal Court of Appeals affirmed a judgment for the plaintiff, 3 and we allowed this appeal.
The District of Columbia Code provides thаt a tenancy from month to month may be terminated on 30 days’ notice, and that a landlord may recover possession in the Municipal Court. 4 The Code does not require that a reason for termination be given. But those propositions dо not decide this case. The government as landlord is still the government. It must not act arbitrarily, for, unlike private landlords, it is subject to the requirements of due process of law. Arbitrary action is not due process.
In our opinion the United States acted arbitrarily in undertaking to evict the Rudders. Their refusal to deny that they were members of any organizations on the Consolidated List was not proof that they were members. Even proof that they were members of, e. g., a “totalitarian” organization, knowing nothing of its character, would be an arbitrary ground for an administrative decision to evict them from public housing. Cf. Wieman v. Updegraff,
The Attorney General gave the organizations and their members no hearing before he designated the organizations as within Executive Order 9835. The Housing Authority gave the Rudders no hearing before it undertook to evict them. If it had used supposed membership only as “prima facie evidence of disqualification”, a different question would have been presented. Adler v. Board of Education,
Accordingly this case does not present the question whether it would be
*54
arbitrary to evict persons proved to be, e. g., “subversive”. It does not present the question whether it would be аrbitrary to evict the Rudders if it were proved that an organization was “subversive”, that they were members of it, and that they knew its сharacter. Cf. Garner v. Board of Public Works,
The government contends that the Gwinn Amendment 5 required it to evict the Rudders. But construing the language of the Amendment strictly, as we must in order to avoid a serious question as to the constitutionality of this Act of Congress, we conclude that it does not touсh this case. We have pointed out that most of the organizations on the Consolidated List were not designated as subvеrsive 6 by the Attorney General, and that the Rudders were not shown to be members of any organization.
Reversed.
Notes
. 50 Stat. 888, as amended, 42 U.S.C.A. § 1401 ff.
. “That no housing unit constructеd under the United States Housing Act of 1937, as amended, shall be occupied by a person who is a member of an organization designated as subversive by the Attorney General: Provided further, That the foregoing prohibition shall be enforced by the local housing authority * * *.” 66 Stat. 403, 42 U.S.C.A. § 1411c.
. Rudder v. United States, D.C.Mun.App., 105 A.2d 74L
. D.O.Code 1951, §§ 45-902, 45-910, 31 Stat 1382, 35 Stat 628.
. Supra note 2.
. Some other courts have recognized this. Peters v. New York City Housing Authority,
