Lead Opinion
Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
Concurring Opinion filed by Senior Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
Senate Rule XXII provides that three fifths of all senators duly chosen and sworn can bring debate on an issue to a close. For amendments of the Senate rules themselves, however, cloture under Rule XXII requires a vote of two thirds of all senators present and voting. Rule V provides that the Senate’s rules continue from one Congress to the next unless changed as provided in the Senate rules. The three-fifths rule applies to judicial nominations.
Judicial Watch, Inc., a non-profit organization that advocates “transparency, integrity and accountability in government, politics, and the law,” filed suit in district court against the Senate, its Secretary, and its Sergeant at Arms, challenging Rules V and XXII and seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. It claims that the
On a motion under Rule 12(b), the district court dismissed Judicial Watch’s suit for want of Article III standing. Judicial Watch, Inc. v. U.S. Senate,
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To show constitutional standing, Judicial Watch must meet the familiar requirements of injury-in-fact, causation, and redressability. See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
The district court found that Judicial Watch failed to show any of the three elements of Article III standing. Id. at 31-38. In rejecting Judicial Watch’s claim of injury-in-fact it relied heavily on language in Lujan describing the requisite injury as “invasion of a legally protected interest.” Id. at 31-32 (emphasis added) (quoting Lujan,
Our review of the grant of the motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction is de novo. See Information Handling Services, Inc. v. Defense Automated Printing Services,
The first question is what rule would prevail in the absence of Rule XXII. As Senate practice from 1806 until the initiation of formal cloture rules in 1917 was
First, we note that Judicial Watch offers no systematic evidence of confirmation delay due to Rule XXII. Granted, it faces considerable difficulty marshalling evidence, as the only changes in rules from 1917 to the present have been first to make non-unanimous cloture possible, then to reduce the requisite cloture majority (from two-thirds to three-fifths) and to change the applicable baseline (from senators present and voting to all senators). In any event, even if recent times have manifested an increase in confirmation times (a proposition that in fact is highly sensitive to the definition of the time period in which nominations may have been susceptible to the filibuster and to the classification of nominees ultimately not confirmed), plaintiff has alleged no facts supporting an inference of a material role for Rules V and XXII. Given the great variation in confirmation times in the nearly 200 years during which at least as a formal matter the Senate might be argued to have applied a supermajority cloture rule, it is not enough, in trying to support an inference that Rule XXII has played a material role, to rely simply on intuition.
Second, even if Rule XXII has materially slowed the confirmation process, plaintiffs allegations do almost nothing to show that such a slowing has materially increased case disposition time. One relevant variable that may be a main driver of disposition times, and relatively unresponsive to small changes in overall judgepower, is pre-argument processing (including procedural and dispositive motions). In fact, in the D.C. Circuit, the venue which Judicial Watch cites for evidence of delay, the median time from filing a notice of appeal to filing the last brief is four months longer than the systemwide median, while the median time from notice of appeal to final disposition is only 0.1 months (merely three days) longer than the median time for all circuits. See Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, U.S. Courts of Appeals Statistical Tables (Mar. 2003), available at http:/ /jnet.ao.dcn/img/assets/4.647/appeal303.pdf (Table B4). Moreover, judges may respond to judicial vacancies by working harder.
The evidence proves little. First, Judicial Watch never in fact identifies what it regards as the filibuster era. Our best guess is that it sees that era at least as encompassing 2002' — the cases that Judicial Watch cites for evidence of delay were initiated in February and August of 2001, and the filibuster of its prime example, nominee Miguel Estrada, was ongoing in that year. But with no assertion of a specific time period, Judicial Watch has posed an effectively non-falsifiable claim. Second, Judicial Watch makes no effort to compare the systemwide case disposition time of 10.7 months in 2002 with disposition times in what it regards as filibuster-free eras. Third, focusing solely on its own D.C. Circuit cases, Judicial Watch makes no effort to show a pattern over time; and it disregards cases that it filed in the same era that were speedily resolved: Judicial Watch, Inc. v. Department of Justice, No. 01-5019,
Again, serious comparison would pose great difficulties. Judicial Watch and the Senate do not even agree, for example, on the calculation of vacancies. Compare Appellees’ Br. at 36-37 n.26, with Appellant’s Reply Br. at 7 n.2. Ideally one would consider vacancies and nomination delays by circuits and court terms, and try to ascertain what if any relation may exist between these and case delay, accounting for other relevant differences. Judicial Watch has instead offered only a handful of cases selected to overrepresent case delay; these don’t begin to cut it.
In short, Judicial Watch has failed to substantiate either essential link — between Rule XXII and delayed vacancy filling, and between delayed vacancy filling and delayed adjudication. See Allen,
Because we agree with the district court that Judicial Watch failed to establish the causation element of Article III standing, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. In the Meng case the 16-17 months estimate is a bit of a stretch, as the panel opinion issued about 13 and 1/2 months after filing; final rejection of an en banc petition required 2 and 1/2 additional months.
. These in due course concluded, taking roughly 20, 18, 8, and 12 months. See Chung v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I write separately to express my puzzlement over the meaning of Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife’s requirement that, for “injury in fact,” the plaintiff must show “invasion of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized ... and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.”
The modifier “legally protected” has appeared episodically in Supreme Court opinions since its' introduction in Lujan. Some seven cases employ the phrase, but in only two is it applied. See McConnell v. FEC,
There are at least two obvious candidates for interpretation of the phrase. One would be that it simply reformulates pre-existing requirements, particularly that the interest affected be a cognizable one (variants of which are discussed below). Another would be that it imposes a requirement that the interest be one affirmatively protected by some positive law, either common law, statutory or constitutional. Powerful reasons favor the first interpretation.
First, Lujan itself did not purport to announce a new rule but rather appeared aimed at restating the Article III standing triad. See
Second, the use of the phrase “legally protected” to require showing, of a substantive right would thwart a major function of standing doctrine — to avoid premature judicial involvement in resolution of issues on the merits. In Association of Data Processing Service Organizations, Inc. v. Camp,
Third, the eases that Lujan itself purports to recapitulate, see
Fourth, the Court appears to use the “legally protected” and “judicially cognizable” language interchangeably. Thus, in Bennett v. Spear,
Of the two cases actually applying the “legally protected” phrase, Stevens fits comfortably within the “judicially cognizable” label, at least if that phrase is understood (1) to encompass the other conventionally stated requirements (that the injury be concrete and particularized, and actual or imminent) and (2) possibly to serve as a screen (perhaps open-ended) against interests that it would make little sense to treat as adequate. In Stevens the Court accepted a qui tarn relator’s
McConnell is more perplexing. There the Court seemed to mingle the breadth or diffusion of plaintiffs’ claims (which seems to involve the concrete/particularized and actual/imminent distinction), with issues of substantive right (whether an interest is protected under positive law). Plaintiffs, candidates and voters (and organizations of voters), attacked a provision of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 that raised the “hard money” limits of prior legislation, claiming that it deprived them of “an equal ability to participate in the election process based on their economic status.” The Court said that it had “never recognized a legal right comparable to the broad and diffuse injury asserted by the ... plaintiffs.”
Of course the “zone of interests” requirement of prudential standing poses the question whether the plaintiffs interest is so incongruent with the statutory purposes as to preclude an inference that Congress might have intended such a party' as a challenger. See Clarke v. Securities Industry Ass’n,
Our decision in Claybrook v. Slater is also hard to classify. As already noted, we pointed out that in Lujan itself the Court had found an aesthetic interest in observing animals to qualify as cognizable without actually examining statutes or any source of positive law to see if it was “legally protected.”
Pending Supreme Court clarification, users of the “legally protected” tag should proceed with caution.
. Under the reading of Stevens offered above, the Animal Legal Defense Fund majority’s position might be reframed as an application of the idea that "judicially cognizable” includes an open-ended screening function.
