*16 OPINION
This matter is before the Court pursuant to the Court of Appeals’ decision in
Sanjour v. Environmental Protection Agency,
BACKGROUND
The history of this litigation is discussed at length in this Court’s prior Opinion and in the Court of Appeals’ era
banc
opinion.
See Sanjour v. EPA,
This Court granted summary judgment to defendants on all counts except a single claim of selective prosecution, and was affirmed by a panel of the Court of Appeals. A subsequent era
banc
decision, however, invalidated the “no-expenses” prohibition on First Amendment grounds and remanded the case “for proceedings consistent with this opinion.”
Sanjour,
DISCUSSION
I. Motions for Issuance of a Final Order
Plaintiffs move this Court to declare that the
regulations, policies, memoranda and directives of defendants which prohibit plaintiffs from paying or receiving reasonable travel reimbursements for non-official speech which concerns the responsibilities, programs and policies of the EPA, OGC [sic] and United States government are invalid ... and ... unconstitutional under the First Amendment, as they relate to plaintiffs, federal government employees who work below the grade level of senior executive service, and outside organizations similarly situated to plaintiff [NC WARN],
Pis.’ Proposed Order at 1-2. Plaintiffs further ask this Court to enjoin defendants from enforcing “against plaintiffs, and against all federal employees below the senior executive service level of employment, ... all restrictions placed on their reimbursement for reasonable travel expenses as prohibited on page 3 of EPA Ethics Advisory 91-1, under 5 C.F.R. § 2635.807(a), 5 C.F.R. § 2636.202(b) and under 41 C.F.R. § 304-1.3.” Id. at 1.
The government challenges plaintiffs’ requested relief on three grounds. First, the government contends that plaintiffs’ proposed order is overbroad because it provides for a government-wide injunction. Defendants argue that because plaintiffs did not litigate this case as a class action, any relief entered by this Court should be restricted to the plaintiffs.
The
Sanjour
decision explicitly contemplates an injunction granting government-wide relief. The Court of Appeals explained that the test for “determining the constitutionality of a statute or regulation restricting government employee speech requires the reviewing court to consider ... the ‘interests of both potential audiences and a vast group of present and future employees in a broad range of present and future expression.’”
Sanjour,
[W]e cannot go so far as to include every possible application of the challenged scheme .... [T]he balancing of interests relevant to senior executive officials might “present[ ] a different constitutional question than the one we decide today.” We therefore express no view on whether the challenged regulations may be applied to senior executive employees.
Id.
This Court thus concludes that government-wide relief for plaintiffs and all similarly situated government employees is appropriate. Such a ruling is well-supported by precedent, as courts frequently enjoin the enforcement of regulations ultimately held to be invalid.
See, e.g., Harmon v. Thornburgh,
Moreover, courts may issue injunctions that benefit non-parties where they are necessary to give the prevailing parties the relief to which they are entitled.
See Brown v. Trustees of Boston Univ.,
The government further contends that plaintiffs’ proposed order improperly involves this Court in formulating standards of ethical conduct by usurping the Office of Government Ethics’ (“OGE’s”) authority to promulgate regulatory amendments in response to the Sanjour decision. The Court disagrees. Plaintiffs’ proposed government-wide injunction leaves the OGE free to promulgate new regulations which it believes are the most appropriate response to Sanjour; it does not involve the Court in such decisions. The OGE simply is prohibited from enforcing the current regulations against employees below the senior executive service level of employment. 1
Finally, defendants argue that plaintiffs’ proposed order is overbroad because it enjoins the enforcement of more regulations *18 than necessary to carry out the Sanjour court’s mandate. Defendants argue that the Court should not enjoin the enforcement of the GSA regulation found at 41 C.F.R. § 304~1.3(a) [hereinafter “GSA Regulation”] or any provisions of 5 C.F.R. § 2635.807(a) other than subsection (a)(2)(i)(E)(2). 2
The Court of Appeals clearly considered the constitutionality of the entire regulatory scheme in
Sanjour,
including §§ 2636.202(b), 2635.807(a), and the GSA Regulation.
Sanjour,
An injunction against the enforcement of 5 C.F.R. § 2635.807(a) in its entirety is necessary to provide plaintiffs with complete relief. The
Sanjour
court never broke § 2635.807(a) into subsections; it evaluated the statute as a whole.
Sanjour,
The Court does, however, agree with defendants that the GSA Regulation need not be enjoined in order to fully vindicate plaintiffs’ interests.
4
Though plaintiffs rightly point out that the
Sanjour
court held the entire regulatory scheme (§§ 2636.202(b), 2635.807(a), the GSA Regulation, and EPA Ethics Advisory 91-1) invalid, that holding does not mean the entire regulatory scheme must be enjoined.
See Sanjour,
was only constitutionally objectionable to the Sanjour court in light of the regulatory prohibition on travel expense reimbursements in connection with certain unofficial travel .... [Ojnce the prohibition on travel expense reimbursement .for unofficial speech about the agency’s programs and policies ... is lifted, then there can be no possible constitutional objection to allowing agencies to accept travel reimbursements from outside sources for official travel .... [A]gencies could accept travel expenses for an official speaker while unofficial speakers ... would be free to receive such reimbursements [personally].
Defs.’ Reply at 11; see
also
41 C.F.R. § 304-I.3(a). Therefore, because “injunctions issued by federal courts should be narrowly tailored to remedy the harm shown,” this Court will not enjoin enforcement of the GSA Regulation.
Yeutter,
II. Attorney’s Fees and Costs under the Equal Access to Justice Act
Plaintiffs also ask this Court to find them eligible for reasonable legal expenses incurred in filing and pursuing this lawsuit before this Court and the Court of Appeals, pursuant to the Equal Access to Justice Act (“EAJA”), 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d). Under that statute, a “prevailing party” against the United States in a civil action (other than cases sounding in tort) may be awarded fees and other expenses unless the court finds that the position of the United States was “substantially justified or that special circumstances make an award unjust.”
Id.
at § 2412(d)(1)(A). When the government contests an application for fees under EAJA, “it must address two issues: first, whether the agency’s underlying action that gave rise to the civil litigation is substantially justified; [and] second, whether its position in the civil litigation is substantially justified.”
Jones v. Lujan,
“The threshold inquiry in determining whether the government’s ... position was substantially justified is identification of that position.”
Martin v. Lauer,
As a general rule, plaintiffs “prevail” by receiving some or all of their requested relief, in which ease the government must prove that its overall position in the litigation, even with regard to arguments on which the ultimate relief was not based, were “substantially justified.”
See Hensley v. Eckerhart,
*20
Plaintiffs’ claims fall squarely into that category of claims which must be treated separately according to
Martin.
The Court of Appeals noted in
Sanjour
that “selective enforcement” is an equal protection cause of action totally distinct from a challenge under the First Amendment.
Sanjour,
Defendants are thus required to prove that their position on the First Amendment claim was substantially justified,
ie.,
“justified to a degree that could satisfy a reasonable person.”
Pierce,
In this case, the governmental action giving rise to the First Amendment, violation was the promulgation and enforcement of 5 C.F.R. §§ 2635.807(a) & 2636.202(b), and 41 C.F.R. § 304-1.3. Though this regulatory scheme ultimately was held to be unconstitutional, there were logical reasons for the EPA’s allowing third-party reimbursement for official travel only. The government established the regulations to protect “the integrity of the government occasioned by employees using their public office for private gain.”
Sanjour,
Finally, in order to defeat plaintiffs’ application for attorney’s fees and costs under the EAJA, the government must establish that its litigation position had “a reasonable basis in law and fact.”
Id.
Previous cases have held that a litigation position was not substantially justified when the government failed to address obvious legal issues or made inexcusable motions.
See, e.g., Lundin,
It is clear that the government conducted this litigation in a manner well-grounded in law and fact. Though the government’s arguments were not ultimately accepted by a majority of the Court of Appeals, the government squarely addressed each issue.
See Sanjour,
Nor did the Supreme Court’s
NTEU
decision make the government’s litigation position frivolous, as plaintiffs contend. Defendants argued this, case before the Court of Appeals
en banc
on February 9,1994.
Id.
Moreover, the government’s position would not be unreasonable even had the
NTEU
opinion been issued before it presented its case to the Court of Appeals. The vast majority of speech at issue in
NTEU
did not involve the subject matter of government employment.
NTEU,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth herein, plaintiffs’ motion for issuance of a final order is granted to the extent it requests an injunction against the enforcement of restrictions placed on reimbursement for reasonable nonofficial travel expenses as prohibited on page 3 of EPA Ethics Advisory 91-1 and under 5 C.F.R. §§ 2635.807(a) & § 2636.202(b) and a judgment declaring the unconstitutionality of the entire scheme. Plaintiffs’ motion is denied to the extent that it requests an injunction against 41 C.F.R. § 304-1.3. Defendants’ motion for issuance of a final order is granted insofar as it requests no injunction of 41 C.F.R. § 304-1.3, and denied in its request to limit injunctive relief to plaintiffs only. In addition, plaintiffs’ motion for leave to file an application for attorney’s fees and costs under the Equal Access to Justice Act is denied. In accordance with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 58, an appropriate Judgment accompanies this Opinion.
Notes
. Defendants argue that plaintiffs' proposed injunction usurps the OGE’s authority by choosing the senior executive service level as a cut-off point. The
Sanjour
court, however, explicitly stated that it expressed "no view on whether the challenged regulations may be applied to senior executive employees.”
Sanjour,
. Defendants also argue that § 2636.202(b) need not be enjoined because it was superseded by 5 C.F.R. § 2635.807(a). The D.C. Circuit, however, indicated that § 2636.202(b) remains in effect, thus the Court will enjoin its enforcement.
See Sanjour,
. Defendants point out that some speech which falls under § 2635.807(a) may not involve speech of "public concern” and, therefore, the regulation as applied to that speech may be constitutionally permissible. However "[wjhen a court finds that an agency regulation is invalid in substantial part, and that the invalid portion cannot be severed from the rest of the rule, its typical response is to vacate the rule.”
Harmon,
.The GSA Regulation provides, in relevant part:
Acceptance of payment for employee. As provided in this part, an agency may accept payment from a non-Federal source (or authorize an employee to receive such payment on its behalf) with respect to attendance of the employee at a meeting or similar function which the employee has been authorized to attend in an official capacity on behalf of the employing agency.
41 C.F.R. § 304-1.3(a).
. In their motion for attorney's fees, plaintiffs indicate that they have abandoned the selective prosecution claim; thus the Court dismisses that claim.
. Plaintiffs proffer a great deal of evidence that the regulations were selectively enforced. This is not the issue on which plaintiffs ultimately prevailed, and therefore such evidence is not relevant to the "substantial justification” which the government must establish.
. The fact that some judges or courts agree with the government’s position does not establish definitively that it was substantially justified.
See Pierce,
