JOYCE RILEY, Plaintiff-Appellant, versus ST. LUKE’S EPISCOPAL HOSPITAL, BRANISLAV RADOVANCEVIC, O. HOWARD FRAZIER, M.D., SURGICAL ASSOCIATES OF TEXAS, P.A., THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS HOUSTON HEALTH SCIENCE CENTER, BAYLOR COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, TEXAS HEART INSTITUTE, and EDWARD K. MASSIN, M.D., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 97-20948
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit
May 25, 2001
Before JOLLY, HIGGINBOTHAM, DAVIS, JONES, SMITH, WIENER, BARKSDALE, EMILIO M. GARZA, DeMOSS, BENAVIDES, STEWART, PARKER, and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.*
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas. *Chief Judge King did not participate in this decision.
We took this case en banc to reconsider the issue of whether the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act (“FCA“), which permits private citizens, or relators, to pursue actions for fraudulent claims in the name of the federal government, violate the constitutional separation of powers doctrine under the Take Care and Appointments Clauses of
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Joyce Riley (“Riley“), a former nurse at St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital (“St. Luke’s“), sued eight defendants under the qui tam provisions of the FCA, claiming that they defrauded and conspired to defraud the United States Treasury in violation of the statute. Riley proceeded with the lawsuit although the government exercised its right not to intervene under
The United States intervened to defend the constitutionality of the FCA. We subsequently decided to rehear this case en banc, but delayed it pending the Supreme Court’s decision in Stevens.4
DISCUSSION
I. The Role of History
Qui tam lawsuits have been used throughout American and English history as a means to discover and to prosecute fraud against the national treasuries. Indeed, the Founding Fathers and the First Congress enacted a number of statutes authorizing qui tam actions. Stevens, 529 U.S. at 848 nn.5-7. After undergoing a decline in popularity and need, qui tam, under the guise of the original FCA, enjoyed a renaissance during the Civil War era. This renaissance was precipitated by a desire to combat widespread corruption and fraud amongst defense contractors who supplied the Union Army. Stevens, 529 U.S. at 843.
In 1986, qui tam underwent a similar surge of popularity after Congress’s decision to amend the FCA in order to promote such lawsuits in the face of an ever-growing federal deficit and fears that defense contractors were once again defrauding the government. The most important amendment that Congress made to the 1986 legislation was to increase the reward offered to qui tam plaintiffs. J. Randy Beck, The False Claims Act and the English Eradication of Qui Tam Legislation, 78 N.C. L. REV. 539, 541-42 (2000). The increase in the proceeds available to relators has resulted in an
The practical effects of the 1986 amendments to the FCA notwithstanding, the Supreme Court in Stevens gave due credence to the important historical role that qui tam lawsuits have played on both sides of the Atlantic as a means to root out corruption against national governments. Justice Scalia, writing for the 7-2 majority in Stevens, noted that the history of qui tam was “well nigh conclusive” with respect to resolving the question of whether qui tam relators filing suit under the FCA have Article III standing. Stevens, 529 U.S. at 848.
Although the Court in Stevens expressed no opinion regarding the role of history in evaluating the
II. The Executive’s Control Over Qui Tam Actions Initiated Under the FCA
That a private citizen may pursue qui tam litigation under the FCA, whether the government chooses to intervene or does not choose, does not interfere with the President’s constitutionally assigned functions under
As this Court has previously noted, the Executive retains significant control over litigation pursued under the FCA by a qui tam relator. First, there is little doubt that the Executive retains such control when it intervenes in an action initiated by a relator.5 Second, even in cases where the government does not intervene, there are a number of control mechanisms present in the qui tam provisions of the FCA so that the Executive nonetheless retains a significant amount of control over the litigation. The record before us is devoid of any showing that the government’s ability to exercise its authority has been thwarted in cases where it was not an intervenor.
In United States ex rel. Russell v. Epic Healthcare Mgmt. Group, we held that parties, in a qui tam suit filed under the FCA in which the United States does not intervene, have 60 days to file a notice of appeal under
Furthermore, the FCA itself describes several additional ways in which the United States retains control over a lawsuit filed by a qui tam plaintiff. In the area of settlement, for example, the government may settle a case over a relator’s objections if the relator receives notice and hearing of the settlement.
For this reason, it is therefore apparent that the Supreme Court’s decision in Morrison v. Olson, 487 U.S. 654, 108 S. Ct. 2597, 101 L. Ed. 2d 569 (1988), the primary case upon which the Riley panel majority relied to analyze the constitutionality of the qui tam provisions of the FCA under
counsel provisions of the Ethics in Government Act (“EGA“), which permitted the delegation of “criminal prosecution functions to a judicially appointed prosecutor who could be removed only by the Attorney General, and only under a highly constrained ‘good cause’ requirement.” Returning Separation-of-Powers Analysis to Its Normative Roots: The Constitutionality of Qui Tam Actions and Other Private Suits to Enforce Civil Fines, 30 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. L. Inst.) 11,081, at 11, 095 (Dec. 2000) [hereinafter Returning Separation-of-Powers]. The Morrison Court upheld the independent counsel provisions, finding that they do not violate separation of powers principles by impermissibly infringing upon the Executive’s constitutional duties under either the Take Care Clause or the Appointments Clause of
Morrison, although it examined similar constitutional questions with regard to the Executive’s duties under
Second, in contrast to independent counsel who undertake functions relevant to a criminal prosecution, relators are simply civil litigants. No function cuts more to the heart of the Executive’s constitutional duty to take care that the laws are faithfully executed than criminal prosecution. Since the advent of public prosecutions in the United States, “no private citizen . . . can subject another private citizen to the unique and virtually unfettered powers of a criminal prosecutor . . . . The burdens of criminal investigation cannot be imposed on any target unless the investigator has been duly clothed with the power of the state through a process that is legally and politically accountable.” Returning Separation-of-Powers, at 11, 097. Thus, because the independent counsel provisions at issue in Morrison and the qui tam provisions central to Riley involve two different types of lawsuits, the Executive must wield two different types of control in order to ensure that its constitutional duties under
There is also a credible argument that because the Court upheld the EGA’s independent counsel provisions under
Moreover, the powers of a qui tam relator to interfere in the Executive’s overarching power to prosecute and to control litigation are seen to be slim indeed when the qui tam provisions of the FCA are examined in the broad scheme of the American judicial system. The prosecution of criminal cases has historically lain close to the core of the
For example,
Thus, although our judicial system allows for these seemingly greater intrusions by the Judiciary into the Executive’s paramount power to prosecute in the criminal context,
III. The FCA’s Qui Tam Provisions do not Violate the Appointments Clause
The Appointments Clause states in part that “the President shall nominate, and by and with the advice and consent of the Senate shall appoint . . . all other officers of the United States, whose appointments are not herein otherwise provided for and which shall be established by law. But the Congress may, by law, vest the appointment of such inferior officers as they may think proper . . . in the heads of departments.”
Supreme Court precedent has established that the constitutional definition of an “officer” encompasses, at a minimum, a continuing and formalized relationship of employment with the United States Government. See Auffmordt v. Hedden, 137 U.S. 310, 327, 11 S. Ct. 103, 34 L. Ed. 674 (1890) (finding that a merchant appraiser is not an “officer” for purposes of the Appointments Clause where his position is without tenure, duration, continuing emolument, or continuous duties); United States v. Germaine, 99 U.S. 508, 511-12, 25 L. Ed. 482 (1878) (holding that a surgeon appointed by Commissioner of Pensions was not an “officer” where his duties were not continuing and permanent). There is no such relationship with regard to qui tam relators, and they therefore are not subject to either the benefits or the requirements associated with offices of the United States. For instance, qui tam plaintiffs do not draw a government salary and are not required to establish their fitness for public employment.13 Therefore, we are persuaded that the FCA’s qui tam provisions do not violate the Appointments Clause.
CONCLUSION
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Allowing relators to pursue False Claims Act (“FCA“) qui tam actions in which the government has declined to intervene violates the Take Care Clause14 and the Appointments Clause15 of
I. Violations of Separation of Powers Generally.
The Constitution divides power among the three branches. “The ultimate purpose of this separation of powers is to protect the liberty and security of the governed.” Metro. Washington Airports Auth. v. Citizens for Abatement of Aircraft Noise, Inc., 501 U.S. 252, 272 (1991). As former Attorney General Levi explained:
The essence of the separation of powers concept formulated by the Founders from the political experience and philosophy of the revolutionary era is that each branch, in different ways, within the sphere of its de-fined powers and subject to the distinct institutional responsibilities of the others is essential to the lib-erty and security of the people. Each branch, in its own way, is the people‘s agent, its fiduciary for certain purposes. . . .
Fiduciaries do not meet their obligations by arro-gating to themselves the distinct duties of their mas-ter‘s other agents.
Levi, Some Aspects of Separation of Powers, 76 COLUM. L. REV. 371
The branch that must be most carefully monitored against at-tempted encroachments on the other branches is the legislative, as James Madison explained:
It will not be denied, that power is of an encroaching nature, and that it ought to be effectually restrained from passing the limits assigned to it. . . . The founders of our republics . . . seem never for a moment to have turned their eyes from the danger to liberty from the overgrown and all-grasping prerogative of an hereditary magistrate . . . They seem never to have recollected the danger from legislative usurpations; which by assembling all power in the same hands, must lead to the same tyranny as is threatened by executive usurpations. . . . [I]t is against the enterprising ambition of this department, that the people ought to indulge all their jealousy and exhaust all their precautions.
The legislative department derives a superiority in our governments from other circumstances. Its constitutional powers being at once more extensive and less susceptible of precise limits, it can with the greater facility, mask under complicated and indirect measures, the encroachments which it makes on the co-ordinate departments. It is not unfrequently a question of real-nicety in legislative bodies, whether the operation of a particular measure, will, or will not extend beyond the legislative sphere.
THE FEDERALIST No. 48, at 332-34 (J. Cooke ed. 1961).
To protect against the danger of legislative encroachment, the Constitution forbids Congress to “invest itself or its Members with either executive power or judicial power.” J.W. Hampton, Jr., & Co. v. United States, 276 U.S. 394, 406 (1928). This prohibition applies not only to Congress but also to its agents, as explained in Bowsher v. Synar, 478 U.S. 714, 726 (1986):
To permit the execution of the laws to be vested in an officer answerable only to Congress would, in practical terms, reserve in Congress control over the execution of the laws. . . . The structure of the Constitution does
not permit Congress to execute the laws; it follows that Congress cannot grant to an officer under its control what it does not possess.
Thus, the Constitution is pellucid on separation of powers.18 It does not permit Congress to vest executive power in one of Con-gress’s agents. The question presented in this case is whether the Constitution also forbids Congress from vesting the executive power in a self-appointed agent who answers to no one. The answer to this question must be no, because the Constitution is violated both when one branch of government aggrandizes itself at the expense of another and when one branch “impermissibly undermine[s]”19 the con-stitutionally granted powers and functions of another, even if there is no aggrandizement.20
II. Take Care Clause and Separation of Powers.
A. Violations of Take Care Clause.
The Take Care Clause states that the Executive “shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed.”
The Take Care Clause was designed as a crucial bulwark to the separation of powers and is far from a dead letter or obsolete rel-ic. As recently as 1997, the Supreme Court cited the Take Care Clause in striking (on other grounds) provisions of the Brady Act, explaining:
The Constitution does not leave to speculation who is to administer the laws enacted by Congress; the President, it says, “shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully ex-ecuted,”
Art. II, § 3 , personally and through officers whom he appoints. . . . The Brady Act effectively transfers this responsibility to thousands of [state law enforcement officers] in the 50 States, who are left to implement the program without meaningful Presidential control (if indeed meaningful Presidential control is possible without the power to appoint and remove). The insistence of the Framers upon unity in the Federal Executive—to insure both vigor and accountability—is well-known. . . . That unity would be shattered, and the power of the President would be subject to reduction, if Congress could act as effectively without the President
as with him, by simply requiring state officers to exe-cute its laws.
Printz v. United States, 521 U.S. 898 (1997) (citations omitted).21
Like the Brady Act, the FCA violates the separation of powers embodied in the Take Care Clause in a number of ways. First, it diminishes the political accountability of the Executive for en-forcement of the laws by allowing any private citizen to sue on be-half of the government, even though the Attorney General—perhaps because he believes that institution of the action is inimical to the government’s interests—has decided not to pursue the claim.22 This removes from the Executive Branch the prosecutorial discretion that is at the heart of the President‘s power to execute the laws,23
Second, the FCA violates the separation of powers principles embodied in the Take Care Clause by both aggrandizing Congressional power and impermissibly undermining Executive power.24 Through this statute, Congress has invoked both its own power—to pass laws—and that of the Executive—to assign their enforcement. It does not save the Act that Congress did not give itself the enforcement power it took from the Executive, because the Act “impermissibly undermines” Executive functions by wresting control, from the President, of the initiation and prosecution of government lawsuits.
Defendants need show no more than this to establish a Take Care Clause separation-of-powers violation. Nevertheless, the FCA goes further, aggrandizing both the Legislative and Judicial branches: first, by allowing Congress to enforce laws without reliance on the Executive; second, by decreasing Executive power, which makes Congress relatively stronger; and third, by shifting some of the discretion to bring suit and to control the action from the Executive to the judiciary, as I discuss infra.
Nor may the Executive freely dismiss a qui tam action. If the relator objects to the decision to dismiss, the government must notify him of the filing of the motion to dismiss, and the court must
Moreover, the Executive may not freely settle a qui tam action. If the relator objects to the government‘s attempt to settle, the government must obtain court approval, and the court may approve only after it holds a hearing and finds that the settlement is “fair, adequate, and reasonable under all the circumstances.”31
The Executive may not freely restrict the relator‘s participation in the qui tam action but first must first show the court that the relator‘s unrestricted participation “would interfere with or unduly delay the Government‘s prosecution of the case, or would be repetitious, irrelevant, or for purposes of harassment.”
B. Inapplicable Precedent.
In only one case has the Supreme Court allowed an encroachment on the Executive anywhere near that countenanced by the FCA. In Morrison v. Olson, 487 U.S. 654 (1988), the Court upheld the constitutionality of the independent counsel provisions of the Ethics in Government Act (“EGA“). The Court recognized that the special structural problems dealt with by the EGA required some encroachment on the Executive‘s Take Care Clause powers.
Most importantly, [1] the Attorney General retains the power to remove the counsel for “good cause,” a power that we have already concluded provides the Executive with substantial ability to ensure that the laws are “faithfully executed” by an independent counsel. [2] No independent counsel may be appointed without a specific request by the Attorney General, and the Attorney General‘s decision not to request appointment if he finds “no reasonable grounds to believe that further investigation is warranted” is committed to his unreviewable discretion. The Act thus gives the Executive a degree of control over the power to initiate an investigation by the independent counsel. [3] In addition, the jurisdiction of the independent counsel is defined with reference to the facts submitted by the Attorney General, and [4] once a counsel is appointed, the Act requires that the counsel abide by Justice Department policy unless it is not “possible” to do so. Notwithstanding the fact that the counsel is to some degree “independent”
and free from executive supervision to a greater extent than other federal prosecutors, in our view these features of the Act give the Executive Branch sufficient control over the independent counsel to ensure that the President is able to perform his constitutionally assigned duties.
Morrison, 487 U.S. at 696 (emphasis added).
As the panel opinion pointed out, not a single one of the features of the EGA that preserved Executive control is present in the FCA‘s qui tam provisions. The Attorney General has no power to remove a relator, no matter how irresponsible the suit becomes. If he makes the proper showing to the court, the Attorney General may limit the relator‘s participation, see
Perhaps more importantly, the second crucial feature present in the independent counsel statute is missing: The Attorney General loses all control over the decision whether to initiate the suit. Even if the Attorney General determines that there are “no reasonable grounds” for the fraud action, the relator may override that judgment and initiate a lawsuit.33 The action goes forward in
The third and fourth features also are conspicuously absent. The Attorney General has no control over the breadth of a relator‘s suit. Indeed, as I have already noted, a relator may make sweeping allegations that he is unable effectively to litigate, and thereby bind the government, via res judicata, to his failed suit. Finally, the relator, unlike the independent counsel, need not adhere to the rules and policies of the DOJ.
The majority makes two unconvincing arguments as to why it is improper to apply the analysis in Morrison to this case. It reasons:
First, the EGA assigns the independent counsel to act as the United States itself, in contrast to the FCA‘s qui tam provisions, which only authorize the relator to bring a lawsuit in the name of the United States. . . . Second, in contrast to independent counsel who undertake functions relevant to a criminal prosecution, relators are simply civil litigants.
(Citing
The majority‘s second stated reason why Morrison is irrelevant to this case is a mere distinction between the facts of the two cases. The majority points out that independent counsel are granted criminal prosecutorial duties, whereas FCA relators “are simply civil litigants.” The majority notes that criminal prosecution is at the “heart of the Executive‘s constitutional duty” and then, without more, asserts that “the Morrison control test that the panel majority used to evaluate the constitutionality of the qui tam
Further, as the majority notes, other circuits have found the control provisions in Morrison useful “as a whole” in evaluating the constitutionality of the FCA “as a whole.”35 The majority unfairly attacks the panel opinion as rigidly applying the four-factor test from Morrison in determining whether the FCA withstands constitutional scrutiny under Article II. In actuality, after ob
As I have explained above, the most crucial ways in which the FCA fails to provide the executive with sufficient control are that the FCA does not allow the Executive to initiate litigation, terminate litigation (without court approval), control the scope and pace of the litigation, or control the procedures used by the lawyer prosecuting the case. The FCA‘s most severe violations of the separation of powers principles embedded in the Take Care Clause include the fact that unaccountable, self-interested relators are put in charge of vindicating government rights, and that the transparency and controls of the constitutional system are not in place to influence the outcome of such litigation.
Finally, the elements of the FCA that disable effective Executive control were not drafted in response to the special intra-branch problems that the EGA sought to correct in Morrison.36
III. Violations of the Appointments Clause.
The Appointments Clause is a valid and independent ground for affirming the district court‘s dismissal. That clause mandates that the Executive
shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, Judges of the Supreme Court, and all other Officers of the United States, whose Appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by Law; but the Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in Heads of Departments.
As I have noted, relators are not appointed by any branch of government, but rather appoint themselves. The majority gives
Supreme Court precedent makes it plain that the answer to this question is no. The Court has twice held, first in Buckley, 424 U.S. 1, and then in Morrison, 487 U.S. at 671 n.12, that persons litigating on behalf of the United States are officers of the United States. In Buckley, the Court held that the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, which authorized the President pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House to select four of the six voting members of the Federal Election Commission, violated the Appointments Clause. Buckley, 424 U.S. at 113, 140. The Court adopted the general rule that “any appointee exercising significant authority pursuant to the laws of the United States is an ‘Officer of the United States’ and must, therefore, be appointed in the manner prescribed by § 2, cl. 2, of [Article II]. . . .” Id. at 126.38 The Buckley Court observed that the Act assigned the commission “primary responsibility for conducting civil litigation
Defendants argue that “[t]he authority of qui tam relators to initiate, conduct, and terminate litigation on behalf of the United States brings them within the Buckley standard.” Defendants further note that when the government does not intervene, the relator has primary responsibility for the litigation. Thus, defendants reason, in cases in which the government does not intervene, the litigation of qui tam actions by relators violates the Appointments Clause because in such cases relators exercise “significant authority pursuant to the laws of the United States,” Buckley, 424 U.S. at 126, but are not properly appointed officers of the United States.
The government responds with reasoning similar to the majority‘s by arguing that the Appointments Clause applies only to federal government appointees and that “since the decision in Buckley deals with what functions federal officials can properly carry out, it tells us nothing about the constitutional status of private persons such as qui tam relators.” This argument proves too much. Under this reasoning, all that Congress or the President must do to circumvent the strictures of the Appointments Clause is to delegate authority to someone who has not officially been appointed to any federal office.
The government alternatively attempts to show that relators do not need to be appointed, because they are litigating only for themselves. This argument also is unavailing. The holding in Vermont Agency of Natural Resources v. United States ex rel. Stevens, 529 U.S. 765 (2000), that relators are only partial assignees
The government puts forth another alternative argument for why the Appointments Clause is not violated by the FCA. It is the same argument made by the majority in contending that the FCA does not violate the Take Care Clause—that relators litigate “for” the government but not “as” the government. This semantic distinction is as unavailing in the context of the Appointments Clause as it was in that of the Take Care Clause.
Neither the government nor the majority cites any authority holding that litigating for the government is different from litigating as the government, and indeed there is no difference for purposes of this case. No matter how one describes what the relator does, the fact remains that he sues under the laws of the United States, based on claims owned by the United States and to vindicate public injury. This is made obvious by, inter alia, the fact that settlements cannot be approved without the government‘s acquiescence.
It is because relators are not litigating only for themselves that the approval of the party they are representing—the government—is needed for settlements. That the persons carrying out these functions on behalf of the government are properly appointed is the very purpose and command of the Appointments Clause.
The collapsing of private and public injury explicit in the government‘s reasoning would lead to the ultimate conclusion that all citizens must be allowed to sue to enforce all laws, because every law, even in the core “private” law areas of tort and contract, can be said to serve the purpose of the sovereign—i.e., to regulate individuals’ conduct through law. Although such a system may be interesting to contemplate, it has not been accepted in American jurisprudence. Instead, the public/private distinction, however flawed, has been maintained as a key determinant of what is government action and when such action is permissible. Thus, the government‘s title VII analogy fails, and the FCA‘s violation of the Appointments Clause remains.
IV. Stevens Left Open the Constitutionality of Qui tam Suits Under Article II.
As we know, Stevens held that relators in qui tam suits have standing to sue under the FCA. From this holding, the majority claims to be “persuaded that it is logically inescapable that the same history which was conclusive on the Article III question in Stevens . . . is similarly conclusive with respect to the Article II question concerning this statute.”40 If this logical inescapability is true, it seems to have been missed by a majority of the Supreme Court. Instead, the six-member majority in Stevens expressly disclaimed any view with regard to Article II challenges, stating explicitly that Article II was neither presented to the Court by the parties, nor rose to a jurisdictional issue that the Court was required to resolve sua sponte.41 Moreover, the fact that the majority in Stevens took pains to point out that it was not deciding the constitutionality of qui tam suits under Article II
In fact, Justice Scalia, the author of the majority opinion in Stevens, and Justice Thomas and perhaps Justice Kennedy, seem to have reservations as to the constitutionality of qui tam actions under Article II. In Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc., 528 U.S. 167 (2000) (“FOE“), which was decided just four months before Stevens, Justices Scalia and Thomas, while noting that the case (like Stevens) did not raise Article II issues,42 nevertheless described some of the potentially troubling loss of control that can arise from citizen suits brought without government intervention:
By permitting citizens to pursue civil penalties payable to the Federal Treasury, the Act does not provide a mechanism for individual relief in any traditional sense, but turns over to private citizens the function of enforcing the law. . . .
To be sure, the EPA may foreclose the citizen suit by itself bringing suit. This allows public authorities to avoid private enforcement only by accepting private direction as to when enforcement should be undertaken—which is no less constitutionally bizarre. Elected officials are entirely deprived of their discretion to decide that a given violation should not be the object of suit at all, or that the enforcement decision should be postponed. See
[33 U.S.C.] § 1365(b)(1)(A) (providing
Id. at 210 (Scalia, J., dissenting) (citations omitted).43
Further, in FOE, Justice Kennedy wrote a concurring opinion explicitly recognizing that
The obvious question, then, is how the majority in Stevens could have found that history is so important in determining
We are confirmed in this conclusion [regarding standing] by the long tradition of qui tam actions in England and the American Colonies. That history is particularly relevant to the constitutional standing inquiry since, as we have said elsewhere, Article III‘s restriction of the judicial power to ‘Cases’ and ‘Controversies’ is properly understood to mean ‘cases and controversies of the sort traditionally amenable to, and resolved by, the judicial process.’
Stevens, 529 U.S. at 766 (emphasis added). In other words, the nature of the standing inquiry dictates that special attention be paid to historical practice. Such extreme deference need not be given, by contrast, within the context of
The
V. History Is Not Controlling.
The majority believes that even if Stevens does not settle this issue, the long historical use of “qui tam” statutes somehow constitutionalizes them. The majority quotes Justice Stevens‘s dissent in Stevens “[t]hat [historical] evidence, together with the evidence that private prosecutions were commonplace in the 19th century . . . is . . . sufficient to resolve the Article II question . . . ” (quoting Stevens, 529 U.S. at 863. (Stevens, J., dissenting).45 Long use—even dating back to the earliest Congress—cannot insulate a practice from constitutional challenge, however, as all three judges on the original panel agreed.46
Further, although action taken by the earliest Congress has been looked to as evidence of the founders’ interpretation of the meaning of the Constitution, courts logically have given less weight to acts passed quickly and without deliberation as to their constitutionality.47
The government disagrees, arguing that a number of the original qui tam statutes were similar to the
This ambiguity and the broad coverage of historical qui tam statutes have allowed widely divergent interpretations of the first such laws. Defendants assert that only three of the qui tam statutes passed by the first Congress permitted a private citizen to sue on the government‘s behalf when he had not suffered personal injury, and they characterize the rest of the early qui tam statutes as “simple informer laws” that merely awarded informers a share in any recovery secured by the government. Conversely, the government quotes United States ex rel. Marcus v. Hess, 317 U.S. 537, 541 n.4 (1943), which states: “Statutes providing for a reward to informers which do not specifically either authorize or forbid the informer to institute the action are construed to authorize him to sue” (citation omitted). From this the government assumes that all twenty of the early qui tam statutes must have allowed citizens to sue on its behalf.
Although the precise contours of the early qui tam statutes are difficult to distinguish, the defendants’ interpretation of them is more accurate than is the government‘s. Even if the government is correct in stating that early qui tam statutes that were silent on the issue of enforcement allowed citizen suits, it still
Moreover, it is undisputed that Congress largely abandoned the use of qui tam statutes in the nineteenth century. In fact, all of the qui tam provisions enacted by the First Congress have been repealed. See Note, The History and Development of Qui tam, 1972 WASH. U. L.Q. 81, 97-101. Later Congresses enacted only seven qui tam statutes,49 and none was passed after 1871. The few qui tam
Finally, at the time the first qui tam acts were passed, the executive was in its infancy. There was no DOJ, and the nugatory prosecutorial arm of the Executive could not adequately monitor fraud committed by government contractors. Thus, the exigencies of a weak Executive led Congress to pass a number of qui tam acts.
The first version of the
Notes
A Clean Water Act plaintiff pursuing civil penalties acts as a self-appointed mini-EPA. Where, as is often the case, the plaintiff is a national association, it has significant discretion in choosing enforcement targets. Once the association is aware of a reported violation, it need not look long for an injured member, at least under the theory of injury the Court applies today. And once the target is chosen, the suit goes forward without meaningful public control. The availability of civil penalties vastly disproportionate to the individual injury gives citizen plaintiffs massive bargaining power—which is often used to achieve settlements requiring the defendant to support environmental projects of the plaintiffs’ choosing. Thus is a public fine diverted to a private interest.
The independent counsel device was intended to address a narrow structural problem—the perceived conflict of interest when the Attorney General is called on to investigate criminal wrongdoing by his close colleagues within the Executive Branch. The Morrison Court accepted the independent counsel as an appropriate means of dealing with this intra-branch conflict. The device arguably does not unduly encroach on executive power, because its very purpose is to investigate impermissible executive activity. Moreover, it is narrowly tailored to achieve its purpose: It encroaches on the Executive only to the limited extent necessary to protect against a conflict of interest, while retaining executive control consistent with that objective. . . . Given the independent counsel statute‘s special objective and narrow tailoring, the Morrison Court likely was especially forgiving of Executive encroachment.
Freytag, 501 U.S. at 880 (quoting INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919, 942 n.13 (1983)).The structural principles embodied in the Appointments Clause do not speak only, or even primarily, of Executive prerogatives simply because they are located in Article II. The Appointments Clause prevents Congress from dispensing power too freely; it limits the universe of eligible recipients of the power to appoint. Because it articulates a limiting principle, the Appointments Clause does not always serve the Executive‘s interests. For example, the Clause forbids Congress to grant the appointment power to inappropriate members of the Executive Branch. Neither Congress nor the Executive can agree to waive this structural protection. ‘The assent of the Executive to a bill which contains a provision contrary to the Constitution does not shield it from judicial review.’ The structural interests protected by the Appointments Clause are not those of any one branch of Government but of the entire Republic.
FOE, 528 U.S. at 197 (Kennedy, J., concurring). Justice Kennedy’s concurrence seems to have been made to clarify that a passing remark made in a footnote by the majority opinion in FOE did not decide the issue ofDifficult and fundamental questions are raised when we ask whether exactions of public fines by private litigants, and the delegation of Executive power which might be inferable from the authorization, are permissible in view of the responsibilities committed to the Executive by Article II of the Constitution of the United States. The questions presented in the petition for certiorari did not identify these issues with particularity; and neither the Court of Appeals in deciding the case nor the parties in their briefing before this Court devoted specific attention to the subject. In my view these matters are best reserved for a later case. With this observation, I join the opinion of the Court.
FOE, 528 U.S. at 188 n.4.the dissent’s broader charge that citizen suits for civil penalties under the Act carry ‘grave implications for democratic governance’ seems to us overdrawn. Certainly the federal Executive Branch does not share the dissent‘s view that such suits dissipate its authority to enforce the law. In fact, the Department of Justice has endorsed this citizen suit from the outset, submitting amicus briefs in support of FOE in the District Court, the Court of Appeals, and this Court. As we have already noted, the Federal Government retains the power to foreclose a citizen suit by undertaking its own action. And if the Executive Branch opposes a particular citizen suit, the statute allows the Administrator of the EPA to ‘intervene as a matter of right’ and bring the Government‘s views to the attention of the court.
Today, giving suits to relators does encroach more on Executive power because, with the full prosecutorial power of the DOJ behind it, the Executive could easily bring these suits if it wanted to. Therefore, in cases such as this, in which the government has declined to intervene, it is likely that that decision is not a result of limited resources, but instead because the government has decided for some reason that to pursue the claim is inappropriate. To encroach on this prosecutorial discretion now is thus a greater violation of separation of powers principles than was the historic use of the FCA.
