MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This is an action challenging the legality of defendant Alexander M. Haig, Jr., serving simultaneously as an Assistant to the President of the United States and as an officer of the Army holding the rank of General. The action further seeks to compel defendant Howard W. Callaway, Secretary of the Army, to remove the name of defendant Haig from the retired list of the Regu *1161 lar Army and correct pertinent military records to reflect that defendant Haig’s military appointment was terminated before his announced retirement date. The case is now before the court on defendants’ motion to dismiss.
Plaintiff brings this suit in his capacity as a citizen and as a, taxpayer. The record reflects that on May 4, 1973, the White House announced the interim appointment of defendant Haig, then currently Vice Chief of Staff of the Army, to be an Assistant to the President. On June 6, 1973, the White Houes announced the retirement of defendant Haig from active duty effective August 1, 1973. His retirement from active duty was subsequently confirmed by the Senate and on July 31, 1973, defendant Haig was placed on the retired list of the Regular Army with the grade of General. 1
The gravamen of the complaint is founded upon 10 U.S.C. § 973(b) which provides in pertinent part:
“(b) Except as otherwise provided by law, no officer on the active list of the Regular Army, . . . may hold a civil office by election or appointment, whether under the United States, a Territory or possession, or a State. The acceptance of such a civil office or the exercise of its functions by such an officer terminates his military appointment.”
and upon Art. I, § 9, cl. 7, of the Constitution :
“No money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law. . . . ”
Plaintiff contends that because the position of Advisor to the President is a “civil office” within the scope of § 973(b), defendant Haig effectively terminated his military appointment prior to retirement when he accepted the White House position on May 4, 1973. As a consequence, plaintiff argues that it was illegal for defendant Callaway to continue to furnish General Haig with salary and perquisites of his military office as well as to later recognize his retirement from a military appointment previously terminated by operation of law.
Defendants have moved to dismiss on grounds, inter alia, that plaintiff lacks standing to maintain this suit. Plaintiff’s position is that he has standing both as a taxpayer and as a citizen. For reasons set forth below, the court finds that plaintiff lacks standing to bring this action and accordingly grants defendants’ motion to dismiss.
Plaintiff urges taxpayer standing under Flast v. Cohen,
In the instant case, plaintiff is not challenging the constitutionality of a congressional enactment, rather he is attacking the legality of an executive appropriation. Plaintiff acknowledges this distinction, but nevertheless urges the court not to rely on a straitjacket interpretation of Flast. Instead, plaintiff argues for a more liberal construction on the grounds that Flast should not be read to preclude a taxpayer’s suit in situations where an executive rather than a congressional violation of the Constitution is alleged.
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In support of this position, plaintiff relies on Richardson v. United States,
“The Government argues that Flast must be limited to challenges to appropriations. That view attempts to confine the case to its facts without regard to its reasoning. Flast is concerned with adverseness and specificity of issues for ‘standing,’ not spending per se.” Id. at 852 (Footnote omitted.)
In passing upon plaintiff’s request for a more expansive interpretation of
Flast,
this Court has carefully reviewed the history of taxpayer standing together with the language of
Flast
itself. As Judge Adams thoroughly recounts in his dissent to
Richardson,
the history of a taxpayer to challenge federal spending is in a sense one of no history at all. Until
Flast
lowered the “barrier”, a taxpayer had been virtually without standing to challenge federal expenditures on the basis of his status as a taxpayer. Frothingham v. Mellon,
Turning to the boundary conditions set down in Flast for taxpayer standing, these conditions are ^precise and unequivocal as to the criteria for establishing a logical link between one’s status as a taxpayer and the type of enactment attacked. Merely claiming that tax dollars are being spent pursuant to an objectionable enactment is insufficient to establish this link. One must go that extra step and show that the expenditures of tax funds are made pursuant to an enactment created under Congress’ taxing and spending powers. It is this very narrow relationship between the taking of one’s tax dollars and Congress’ power to tax and spend which elevates the relationship to the level of a logical link referred to by the Court. In view of the historically limited view which the Supreme Court has adopted toward taxpayer standing, as well as the direct link which must be established, the extrapolation which plaintiff makes from the legislation attacked in Flast, to the executive action challenged in this suit, is unwarranted.
This court finds no justification for expanding Flast to cover citizen challenges to executive appropriations. Accordingly, plaintiff has satisfied neither part of the logical nexus test and taxpayer standing is unavailable.
The court is equally unpersuaded that plaintiff can claim standing on the basis of his status as a citizen. ■ In Reservists Committee to Stop War v. Laird,
In the present case, plaintiff relies on no self-operative constitutional clause which seeks to maintain independence among the governmental branches, but rather on a congressional enactment, 10 U.S.C. § 973(b), whose only similarity to the constitutional provision in Reserv ists, is that it seeks to guard against the potential for undue influence. However, this single commonality alone is too far removed from the constitutional aspects of citizen standing set forth in Reservists to justify a finding of such standing in the present case. •
Accordingly, defendants’ motion to dismiss is granted.
Notes
. Cong.Rec. S13516 (daily ed. July 14,1973).
