Lead Opinion
The United States Court of Federal Claims certified this interlocutory appeal to examine the limits of the “deliberative process privilege.” The trial court decided that only the Agency head could invoke the privilege on the Agency’s behalf. Therefore, the trial court rejected as procedurally flawed a process allowing a high ranking subordinate to invoke the privilege. Marriott Int’l Resorts, L.P. v. United States,
I.
The case arises in the context of a tax case in the Court of Federal Claims. Marriott International Resorts, L.P. (Marriott) requested production of all documents that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS or Agency) relied upon in defining “liability” under 26 U.S.C. § 752. See id. at 414. Marriott alleges the Agency’s pre-1995 interpretation of § 752 justified its treatment of various short-sale transactions as liabilities in its 1994 tax returns. Id. at 413. In 1995, however, the Agency reinterpreted § 752 in a manner that excluded Marriott’s short-sale transactions, thereby increasing Marriott’s 1994 taxable income by $72,946,839. Id. Thereafter, Marriott filed suit in the Court of Federal Claims, challenging the Agency’s treatment of its short-sale transactions. Id. As summarized by the trial court:
In pursuit of support for those allegations, Marriott ... requested from the government all documents relied upon by the IRS “in formulating its position with respect to the definition of ‘liability’ in Treasury Regulations issued under [Internal Revenue] Code section 752 in 1988 and 1991 and various revenue rulings in which the IRS purported to define the term.”
Id. at 414 (citing Pis.’ Mot. at 9-10) (alteration in original).
While producing some documents in response to Marriott’s request, the Government withheld or redacted portions of 339 responsive documents under a claim of
Without addressing the merits of the privilege claim, the trial court rejected the Agency’s invocation of the privilege as procedurally flawed because, in its view, the privilege could only be invoked “by the head of agencies after personal familiarization with the documents involved and a determination that disclosure would significantly and adversely affect the agency’s vital functions.” Id. at 417. In reaching that conclusion, the trial court relied on a case from this court’s predecessor, the United States Court of Claims, namely Cetron Electronic Corporation v. United States,
II.
As noted, the trial court felt bound by the holding of the Court of Claims in Ce-tron Elec. See id. at 417. The trial court further commented that Cetron Elec. was consistent with an earlier Court of Claims decision, Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corporation v. United States,
Kaiser Aluminum occasionally receives credit as the first federal case to recognize a deliberative process privilege.
[T]he request included all internal GSA reports, memoranda, or other documents concerning these sales to Kaiser and Reynolds prepared by all employees or agents of the Administration for in-tra-agency use, particularly prior drafts of the Kaiser contract with Agency interpretation and justification thereof and similar papers in connection with that*1305 claim. There was also sought the like intra-agency reports and comparisons concerning the Reynolds contract.
Id. at 942. In response, the Government produced all but one document “on the ground that it was ‘contrary to the national interest.’ ” Id. The Kaiser Aluminum opinion decided the propriety of this privilege claim.
Initially, “[Kaiser] objected that ... the [Government’s] claim of privilege had not been made by the head of the department after actual personal consideration, citing United States v. Reynolds,
Cetron Elec, involved “the failure of ... a defunct wholly owned subsidiary ... to withhold and pay over ... federal .employment taxes for the second and third calendar quarters of 1963.” Cetron Elec.,
internal reports of officials of [the] IRS relating to assessment of the 100-per-cent penalty tax under section 6672 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, against those persons deemed responsible for the failure of Associated Engineers to collect and pay over to [the] IRS the taxes at issue.
Id. In response, the Government refused to produce seven relevant documents. It invoked “an alleged general privilege the Government has against disclosure of any intra-agency communications that contain opinions, conclusions, and reasoning of Government officials used in the administrative decision making process.” Id.
Notably, however, the Government did not invoke the deliberative process privilege in Cetron Elec.
Of Course, even executive privilege has its limitations and is not absolute, but we do not need to go into that here since it is not claimed in this case.
Id.
Moreover, even if the general discussion in Cetron Elec, appears to apply to the deliberative process privilege generally, the Court of Claims did not confront or consider the propriety of a delegated invocation of the privilege. Nowhere does Ce-tron Elec, even discuss the Agency’s procedure of invocation of the privilege claim that was specifically not asserted in the case before this court’s predecessor. Thus, Cetron Elec, did not address or decide the issue before this court.
For these reasons, the trial court’s reliance on Kaiser Aluminum and Cetron Elec, was misplaced. Neither Kaiser Aluminum nor Cetron Elec, rejected a delegated invocation of the deliberative process privilege. Thus, this court confronts for the first time the specific issue presented in this case.
III.
The “Agency head” requirement originated in the Supreme Court’s Reynolds opinion, which involved tort claims stemming from a late 1940s Air Force plane crash.
Unlike Reynolds, however, the present case involves the deliberative process privilege, not the military and state secrets privilege. On this point, our sister circuits have split over whether the Agency head invocation rule outlined in Reynolds applies to the deliberative process privilege as well as the military and state secrets privilege. See Dep’t of Energy v. Brett,
In Landry, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) invoked the deliberative process privilege to justify withholding various documents sought in pretrial discovery. Landry,
Delegated review by a subordinate undoubtedly results in a more thorough, more consistent, and timelier review of potentially privileged documents than personal review by the Agency head. In the present case, for example, the 339 documents at issue came from a larger cache of more than 4,000 relevant pages of material. The subordinate, even though familiar with the documents and the nature of the privilege, still consumed over thirty-one hours in review of these records. Even if the Commissioner — -undoubtedly less familiar with the nature of the documents at issue and less practiced at large-scale document review — could review documents as efficiently as the subordinate, the burden of personal review of each and every document in each and every case the IRS is involved in could interfere with the Commissioner’s overall responsibilities. See Martin v. Albany Bus. Journal, Inc.,
Moreover, significant differences between the deliberative process privilege and other privileges (e.g., the military and state secrets privilege) justify delegated invocation in this case. Of most importance, the state secrets privilege is an absolute privilege; the deliberative process privilege is not. Thus, in a case with the state secrets branch of the executive privilege, even the most compelling need for the withheld documents cannot overcome the claim of privilege. See Reynolds,
In contrast, a showing of compelling need can overcome the qualified deliberative process privilege. See e.g., In re Sealed Case,
Hence, for these reasons, this court concludes that the head of an Agency can, when carefully undertaken, delegate authority to invoke the deliberative process privilege on the Agency’s behalf. This case provides an excellent example of the Agency’s care in the delegation process. Given the large number of documents implicated by Marriott’s request, the Commissioner issued Delegation Order No. 220 (Rev.3), expressly excluding from its scope the authority to claim the state secrets privilege and establishing detailed criteria for claiming the deliberative process privilege:
Executive privilege may be claimed only for those internal or inter-agency records or information that are predecisional and deliberative, the disclosure of which would significantly impede or nullify Internal Revenue Service actions in carrying out a responsibility or function or would constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.
Delegation Order No. 220 (Rev.3),
IV.
In sum, this court commends the trial court’s caution in carefully consulting this court’s precedents, namely, Cetron Elec. and Kaiser Aluminum. In this case, however, the trial court’s reliance on those inapposite cases was misplaced. These cases did not rule on the propriety of a delegated invocation of the deliberative process privilege. For the reasons stated, this court concludes an Agency head may delegate the authority to invoke the deliberative process privilege on the Agency’s behalf. The decision of the trial court is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
COSTS
Each party shall bear its own costs.
REVERSED and REMANDED
Notes
. Notably, Kaiser Aluminum was authored by retired United States Supreme Court Justice Stanley Reed sitting by designation.
. The court specifically noted only two legal issues in the case: "First, does the United States possess a privilege to produce a document that contains opinions rendered the Liquidator by a member of his staff concerning a sale.” Kaiser Aluminum & Chem. Corp. v. United States,
. The deliberative process privilege is but one of several privileges that generally fall within the scope of the more general “executive privilege.”
While the presidential communications privilege and the deliberative process privilege are closely affiliated, the two privileges are distinct and have different scopes. Both are executive privileges designed to protect executive branch decisionmaking, but one applies to decisionmaking of executive officials generally, the other specifically to decisionmaking of the President. The presidential privilege is rooted in constitutional separation of powers principles and the President’s unique constitutional role; the deliberative process privilege is primarily a common law privilege.
In re Sealed Case,
. The Government argued at the trial court that decisions of the Temporary Emergency Court of Appeals (TECA) are binding on this court. Court of Federal Claims Decision,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Because the “deliberative process” privilege is merely a subset of executive privilege, and executive privilege must be invoked by an agency head, see Kaiser Aluminum & Chem. Corp. v. United States,
