*668On December 14, 2018, the Court entered its Order granting partial summary judgment on Count I of the Plaintiffs' Amended Complaint. See ECF No. 211. On December 16, 2018, the Court ordered the Parties to meet and confer and, by January 4, 2019, to jointly propose a schedule for resolving the Plaintiffs' remaining claims. See ECF No. 212. On December 17, 2018, the Intervenor Defendants moved the Court to clarify that the December 14, 2018 Order is not binding or to enter a stay if the Order is binding and to enter final judgment or certify the Order for immediate appeal. See ECF No. 213.
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs are the States of Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Governor Paul LePage of Maine (the "State Plaintiffs"), and individuals Neill Hurley and John Nantz (the "Individual Plaintiffs" and, collectively with the State Plaintiffs, "Plaintiffs").
Defendants are the United States of America, the United States Department of Health and Human Services ("HHS"), Alex Azar, in his official capacity as Secretary of HHS, the United States Internal Revenue Service (the "IRS"), and David J. Kautter, in his official capacity as Acting Commissioner of Internal Revenue (collectively, the "Federal Defendants").
Finally, the States of California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, and Washington, and the District of Columbia intervened as defendants (collectively, the "Intervenor Defendants").
The Plaintiffs sued the Federal Defendants seeking, among other things, a declaration that the Individual Mandate of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), Pub. L. 111-148,
The Federal Defendants agree the Individual Mandate is unconstitutional and inseverable from the ACA's pre-existing-condition provisions. But they argue all other ACA provisions are severable from the mandate. The Intervenor Defendants argue all of Plaintiffs' claims fail.
The Plaintiffs filed an Application for Preliminary Injunction, (ECF No. 39), on April 26, 2018; the Federal Defendants and the Intervenor Defendants responded, (ECF Nos. 91 and 92), on June 7, 2018; and Plaintiffs replied, (ECF No. 175), on July 5, 2018. Because the Federal Defendants argued a judgment, as opposed to an injunction, was more appropriate, the Court provided notice of its intent to resolve the issues raised by the Application for Preliminary Injunction on summary judgment. See July 16, 2018 Order, ECF No. 176 (citing FED. R. CIV. P. 56(f)(3) ). The parties responded. See ECF Nos. 177-79.
On December 14, 2018, the Court issued its order denying the Plaintiffs' request for a preliminary injunction but granting summary judgment on Count I of the Amended Complaint, finding the Individual Mandate is unconstitutional because it no longer triggers a tax and is inseverable from the remainder of the ACA. See Dec. 14, 2018 Order, ECF No. 211. On December 17, 2018, the Intervenor Defendants moved the Court to (1) clarify whether the December 14, 2018 Order is immediately binding on the parties and (2) stay the order or certify it for appeal, as appropriate. See Intervenor Defs.' Mot. Stay, ECF No. 213. The Court ordered expedited briefing, see ECF No. 215, and the Parties promptly complied, see ECF Nos. 216, 217, and 218.
As an initial matter, the Court recognizes the Parties' diligent work on this delicate and complex matter. Counsel have conducted themselves with grace and professionalism, consistently advocating zealously on behalf of their clients with candor and class. And it is no small feat, the Court acknowledges, to prepare such crisp briefing, with so many moving parts, on an expedited basis during the holiday season. For all this, the Court is grateful.
Having reviewed the briefing and applicable law, the Court finds it is most efficient and appropriate to GRANT the Intervenor Defendants' request for final judgment on the December 14, 2018 Order granting summary judgment on Count I of the Amended Complaint and to GRANT the Intervenor Defendants' request for a stay of that judgment.
II. LEGAL STANDARDS
A. Partial Final Judgment
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b) provides: "When an action presents more than one claim for relief ... the court may direct entry of a final judgment as to one or more, but fewer than all, claims or parties only if the court expressly determines that there is no just reason for delay." FED. R. CIV. P. 54(b). This Rule *670"permits district courts to authorize immediate appeal of dispositive rulings on separate claims in a civil action raising multiple claims." Gelboim v. Bank of Am. Corp. , --- U.S. ----,
B. Stay of Judgment
"The party requesting a stay bears the burden of showing that the circumstances justify an exercise of [the court's] discretion." Nken v. Holder ,
III. ANALYSIS
A. The Court Will Enter Partial Final Judgment
Given the Parties' inquiries about whether the Court's December 14, 2018 Order is final and binding-and the unanimous agreement that the Order should be immediately appealable
The Federal Defendants suggest it would be inappropriate for the Court to enter partial final judgment under Rule 54(b)"because the Amended Complaint presents only one claim for purposes of Rule 54(b) -that the individual mandate is unconstitutional and that it is not severable from the rest of the ACA."
Count I, for example, asks for a declaratory judgment that the Individual Mandate is unconstitutional.
Moreover, the Court finds that summary judgment on Count I is an "ultimate disposition of an individual claim." Pilgrim Enterprises ,
The Court therefore GRANTS the Intervenor Defendants' motion for final judgment on the December 14, 2018 Order, (ECF No. 211), granting summary judgment on Count I of the Amended Complaint and declaring the Individual Mandate unconstitutional and inseverable.
B. The Order is Stayed
The Intervenor Defendants bear the burden of demonstrating that a stay is warranted. Nken ,
1. The Intervenor Defendants Are Unlikely to Succeed
The Intervenor Defendants put forth a very powerful narrative in this case-one they assert the Fifth Circuit is likely to adopt. In truth, the narrative presents a forceful, surface-level appeal. It goes something like this.
The Individual Plaintiffs have no standing because they suffer no injury. After the TCJA, there is no tax penalty for non-compliance with the Individual Mandate. And anyways, the Individual Mandate is purely optional. So, at most, the ACA presents the Individual Plaintiffs with a simple choice between buying ACA-compliant insurance or "paying" a $0 tax. No harm, no foul.
But even if the choice between buying insurance and doing nothing creates standing, the Intervenor Defendants continue, the Individual Mandate is constitutional. It is constitutional as an exercise of Congress's Tax Power because the now-eliminated shared-responsibility payment still satisfies a number of the tax factors discussed in NFIB . And even if the Individual Mandate is no longer salvageable as an exercise of the Tax Power, it may now be viewed as a proper exercise of Congress's Interstate Commerce Power because it does not compel anyone to do anything.
*672Finally, even if the Individual Mandate is unconstitutional, it is severable from the remainder of the ACA. We know that because the 2017 Congress that passed the TCJA eliminated the shared-responsibility payment but left the rest of the ACA intact.
So stated, this narrative is compelling. But it rests on two crucial premises, without which it falls apart. First, it is premised on a belief that written law is not binding. Second, it is premised on the view that the Supreme Court's reasoning in NFIB did not simply craft a saving construction but instead permanently supplanted Congress's intent by altering the very nature of the ACA. In the Court's view, neither of these premises hold and therefore neither does the narrative. The Court therefore finds the Intervenor Defendants are unlikely to succeed on the merits of their appeal for at least the following basic reasons.
a. Standing
The Intervenor Defendants assert that, on appeal, they "are likely to establish that the Individual Plaintiffs do not have standing to maintain this action" because, after January 1, 2019, the Individual Plaintiffs will not be put to a choice "between purchasing minimum essential coverage, on the one hand, and paying the penalty for not doing so, on the other." Intervenor Defs.' Mot. Stay 8, ECF No. 213-1 (citing Hotze v. Burwell ,
In Hotze , the plaintiffs challenged the ACA as unconstitutional under the Origination Clause and the Takings Clause, unlike the Individual Plaintiffs here who, like the plaintiffs in NFIB , challenge the Individual Mandate as beyond Congress's enumerated powers.
Specifically, Dr. Hotze pleaded that the "ACA compels Plaintiff Hotze and other Texans to pay enormous penalties to the federal government, or else purchase health insurance that is far more expensive and less useful than existing employer-based coverage." Complaint at 1, Hotze v. Sebelius ,
Hotze , then, is not a broad holding that individuals lack standing to challenge the Individual Mandate's constitutionality unless they first disobey that provision and fail to maintain compliant coverage. To read Hotze in such a manner would run headlong into the well-established doctrine that individuals need not first disobey a law to earn standing to challenge it.
Importantly, the Individual Plaintiffs here chart a different course than Dr. Hotze. Their pleadings clearly allege they are required by the Individual Mandate to maintain insurance they do not want to continue purchasing-i.e., they are required by a law to continue activity they do not want to engage in-and that this requirement is inherently beyond Congress's enumerated powers. See Am. Compl. 5, ECF No. 27 ("Mr. Hurley maintains minimum essential health insurance coverage, which he purchased on the ACA-created exchange."); id. at 27 ("In the absence of the ACA, the Individual Plaintiffs would purchase a health-insurance plan different from the ACA-compliant plans that they are currently required to purchase were they afforded the option without the ACA."); id. at 28 (" Section 5000A's individual mandate exceeded Congress's enumerated powers by forcing Individual Plaintiffs to maintain ACA-compliant health insurance coverage.").
The Fifth Circuit is therefore likely to find that the Individual Plaintiffs pleaded a sufficient injury in two respects.
Second, as discussed in the Court's Order,
*675Bell v. Hood ,
The Individual Plaintiffs' allegation is therefore likely to satisfy the test for constitutional injury on appeal.
This raises one final point: The Intervenor Defendants argue the Individual Plaintiffs cannot plead a constitutional injury (or any justiciable injury, for that matter) because the Individual Mandate no longer compels compliance. See Intervenor Defs.' Mot. Stay 8, ECF No. 213-1 ("Beginning January 1, 2019, the Individual Plaintiffs will no longer be on the horns of that dilemma; as a result, the Fifth Circuit is likely to hold that they lack standing."). But standing analysis and merits analysis are fundamentally separate inquiries, and this line of attack conflates them.
This then brings into focus the proper injury inquiry for the Individual Plaintiffs' constitutional challenge: Do the Individual Plaintiffs sufficiently allege that the Individual Mandate operates to injure them? The inquiry is not whether the Individual Plaintiffs are injured if they break the law-i.e., if they disobey the Individual Mandate. The Court does not ask whether a plaintiff is injured by a challenged law if they choose to disregard the law they challenge as unconstitutional-the injury arises from following the law as Congress intended. That is the entire point of a constitutional challenge. Were courts to assess whether plaintiffs are injured by disregarding allegedly unconstitutional laws, courts would not only be implicitly sanctioning lawlessness but would be foreclosing a large swath of constitutional challenges already entertained by the Supreme Court.
In this regard, the Individual Plaintiffs' alleged injury-the requirement to purchase an unwanted product-is not self-inflicted, it is congressionally inflicted. Congress intended to achieve something through the Individual Mandate, the Individual Plaintiffs allege, that is beyond its constitutional reach. It would be illogical to ask whether the allegedly unconstitutional Individual Mandate injures the Individual Plaintiffs when it is ignored. The answer is obviously "no," but it is also *678obviously irrelevant. Answering whether the Individual Mandate injures the Plaintiffs by unconstitutionally requiring them to do something requires analyzing what the law requires them to do, not whether the Plaintiffs can get away with not doing it.
In sum, the pleadings satisfy Hotze and otherwise sufficiently state a constitutional injury sufficient to meet the Article III requirements of standing. And to the extent an independent, justiciable injury other than regulation by unconstitutional legislation is necessary, the Individual Plaintiffs have alleged that, too-they are required to purchase a product that, in the absence of § 5000A(a), they allege they would not purchase. If the Fifth Circuit has held that an allegation of death to whooping cranes-majestic as they are-is sufficient injury-in-fact to confer standing on an individual,
b. Merits
The Intervenor Defendants also contend they are likely to succeed on the merits of the Plaintiffs' claims. First, the Intervenor Defendants assert they are likely to succeed in arguing the Individual Mandate "can still be upheld as a lawful exercises of Congress's taxing power" because " Section 5000A will retain most of the features that the Supreme Court pointed to in concluding that it could fairly be construed as a tax" and because "the Fifth Circuit is unlikely to share this Court's view that the production of revenue at all times is the sine qua non of a tax." Intervenor Defs.' Mot. Stay 8-9, ECF No. 213-1. They also assert the Fifth Circuit "has upheld the constitutionality of a statute that taxed the making of machine guns, even though federal law had subsequently banned the possession of machine guns, and even though the federal government no longer collected the tax."Id. at 9 ( United States v. Ardoin ,
Next, the Intervenor Defendants argue they "are likely to succeed on their alternative theory that, if the minimum coverage provision can no longer be fairly construed as a tax, it no longer violates the Commerce Clause" because "once the penalty for failing to maintain coverage is reduced to zero, it will lose its coercive effect."
The Court disagrees with each of the Intervenor Defendants' contentions for the reasons set out in the Court's 55 pages of analysis in the December 14, 2018 Order. See ECF No. 211. But the Court finds it appropriate to briefly summarize the logic of why the Intervenor Defendants' arguments, though well-made, are ultimately *679unavailing and unlikely to succeed on appeal.
i. Unconstitutional Under the Tax Power
The Individual Mandate can no longer be saved as an exercise of Congress's Tax Power for the following reasons:
• The Individual Mandate, 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(a), and the shared-responsibility payment, §§ 5000A(b) and (c), are textually and functionally distinct.29
• The Supreme Court's decision in NFIB recognized this distinction.30
• The Supreme Court held the Individual Mandate could be saved under Congress's Tax Power because it triggered the shared-responsibility payment, which could be plausibly read as a tax.31
• The Supreme Court held the shared-responsibility payment could be treated as the tax the Individual Mandate triggered based on the following factors: The payment
• "is paid into the Treasury by 'taxpayer[s]' when they file their tax returns,"
• "does not apply to individuals who do not pay federal income taxes because their household income is less than the filing threshold,"
• "amount is determined by such familiar factors as taxable income, number of dependents, and joint filing status,"
• "is found in the Internal Revenue Code and enforced by the IRS," and
• "yields the essential feature of any tax: It produces at least some revenue for the Government."32
• In light of the TCJA, § 5000A(b) no longer "looks like a tax in many respects."33 It now fails at least Factor 1 (no longer paid by taxpayers into the Treasury), Factor 3 (no amount and $0 is not determined by familiar factors), Factor 4 (not enforced by the IRS) and, crucially, Factor 5 (no longer yields the "essential feature" of a tax).
• Section 5000A(b) now fails four out of the five factors identified by the Supreme Court as justifying its saving construction, including the one feature the Supreme Court identified as "essential."34 The mandate therefore no longer triggers a tax.
Accordingly, the Court finds the Fifth Circuit is likely to draw a straight line *680from the majority's reasoning in NFIB and agree that the Individual Mandate cannot be sustained under the saving construction that construed the mandate as triggering a tax.
ii. Unconstitutional Under the Interstate Commerce Power
The Individual Mandate continues to be unsustainable under Congress's Interstate Commerce Power, as the Supreme Court already held, for the following reasons:
• The Supreme Court held the Individual Mandate is unconstitutional under the Interstate Commerce Clause.37
• The Individual Mandate no longer triggers a tax, so the saving construction crafted in NFIB no longer applies.38
• Even under the saving construction crafted in NFIB , the Individual Mandate was a requirement to act-otherwise, the failure to act would not have triggered a tax.39
• All that remains now is a written law with plain text that mandates the *681Individual Plaintiffs to purchase minimum essential coverage-which the evidence suggests they and others will do.40
• Plain text confirms the Individual Mandate is a mandate.41 It is entitled, "Requirement to maintain minimum essential coverage."42 It states, "An applicable individual shall ... ensure that the individual ... is covered."43
• Five Supreme Court Justices concluded "[t]he most straightforward reading of the mandate is that it commands individuals to purchase insurance. After all, it states that individuals 'shall' maintain health insurance."44
• Surrounding text confirms the Individual Mandate creates an obligation in the absence of the shared-responsibility payment.45 Section 5000A(e), for example, "did and still does exempt some individuals from the eliminated shared-responsibility payment but not the *682Individual Mandate."46 Section 5000A(d)"exempted, and continues to exempt, certain individuals from the Individual Mandate itself."47
• Reading the Individual Mandate to be anything other than a mandate would twice violate the canon against surplusage by rendering the mandatory words of § 5000A(a) ineffective-i.e., "requirement" and "shall"-and rendering whole provisions of § 5000A ineffective-i.e., §§ 5000A(d) and (e).48
• Written law is binding, with or without the specter of an enforcement provision.49
*683• The Individual Mandate, § 5000A(a), is federal law-having satisfied the Constitution's bicameralism and presentment requirements-and federal law is inherently binding on those within its jurisdiction.50 Not even the Founders, who were leery of Federal power, argued otherwise.51
• This is as true with respect to the Constitution as it is with respect to the Individual Mandate: Most of the Constitution's provisions are unaccompanied by a penalty-tax or otherwise. Yet time and again courts recognize the Constitution, as written law, is inherently binding.52
The Individual Mandate no longer triggers a tax and therefore can no longer be read as an exercise of Congress's Tax Power. That being true, the Court finds the Fifth Circuit is unlikely to either disagree with the Supreme Court's NFIB holding that the mandate is unsustainable under Congress's Interstate Commerce Power or accept the alternative theory that the mandate, though it regulates interstate conduct, is simply not binding.
iii. Frost Is Not Dispositive
Frost does not control or require invalidating Congress's tax bill for the following reasons:
*684• In Frost , the plaintiff challenged the later-in-time legislation.54 Here, the Plaintiffs do not challenge the later-in-time legislation.55
• In Frost , all parties agreed the earlier-in-time legislation was constitutional-and the Supreme Court expressly relied on that concession .56 Here, the entire case is about the constitutionality of the earlier-in-time legislation.
• In Frost, the later-in-time legislation did not render an earlier law unconstitutional-it was itself unconstitutional because it created disparately treated classes.57 Here, the later-in-time TCJA is constitutional.
• Anyways, the later-in-time TCJA does not render the ACA unconstitutional-it abrogates the ground on which the Supreme Court concluded the ACA could be saved.58
• Frost stands only for the proposition that courts may invalidate unconstitutional action and preserve constitutional action; it does not empower the judiciary to construe constitutional action as unconstitutional to preserve unconstitutional action as constitutional.
For these reasons, the Fifth Circuit is unlikely to invalidate Congress's constitutional tax law under the guise of Frost , a decision that invalidated an unconstitutional law. To read Frost as empowering courts to invalidate Congress's constitutional legislation to save a judicial opinion that admittedly construed unconstitutional legislation as something other than what *685Congress intended would go above and beyond any limits on the judicial power yet seen.
iv. Individual Mandate Inseverable
The Individual Mandate is entirely inseverable for the following straightforward reasons:
• The test for severability is congressional intent.60
• Congressional intent is expressed through enacted text.61
• If the enacted text is unambiguous, no further inquiry is permitted.62
• The enacted text is unambiguous: The Individual Mandate is "essential" to the ACA.63
• The Supreme Court relied on the import of this plain text before and after the exchanges were created and the Individual Mandate was in effect.64
*686• The past two Administrations have agreed the Individual Mandate is inseverable from the guaranteed-issue and community-rating provisions.65
• No Congress-not in 2017, not ever-repealed the Individual Mandate.66
• No Congress-not in 2017, not ever-repealed the ACA's Findings.67
• The Court cannot rely on the 2017 Congress's elimination of the shared-responsibility payment to treat the textually and functionally distinct Individual Mandate as implicitly repealed when Congress left the Individual Mandate as enacted text and left in place other text that calls the Individual Mandate-not the functionally distinct shared-responsibility payment-"essential."68
• The Constitution's separation of powers prohibits the Court from doing for Congress what Congress *687tried and failed to do itself.69
• Floor statements and policy arguments do not supplant enacted text or allow the Court to construe what Congress did and did not do as what a party asserts Congress almost did and did not do.70
• Congress included a severability clause for Medicaid Expansion but not for the Individual Mandate, which Congress called "essential."71
• The 2017 Congress's "decision" to not repeal the remainder of the ACA was not a "decision" that supports an inference of severability intent-it was a consequence of the TCJA being passed as part of the budget and reconciliation process.72
*688• If Congress intends to sever the Individual Mandate from the remainder of the ACA, Congress can sever the Individual Mandate from the remainder of the ACA. The Court cannot do that for Congress.73
Accordingly, the Fifth Circuit is unlikely to *689accept the Intervenor Defendants' countertextual severability argument based on extratextual evidence.
2. The Equities Favor a Stay
As to the remaining elements of the stay analysis, the Intervenor Defendants assert "[t]he equities ... tip overwhelmingly in favor of a stay." Intervenor Defs.' Mot. Stay 11, ECF No. 213-1. To this point, the Intervenor Defendants catalog the real-life impact the Court's December 14, 2018 Order is likely to have in the absence of time for lawmakers to respond. See id. at 13 ("Suddenly declaring [the ACA] void would cause chaos for patients, providers, insurance carriers, and the federal and state governments."). Meanwhile, the Intervenor Defendants point out, "since open enrollment in Texas for 2019 has concluded, the Individual Plaintiffs have already purchased (or declined to purchase) ACA-compliant insurance for 2019. In other words, the Court's decision cannot affect the choices that they have already made for next year." Id. at 12.
The Plaintiffs suggest certifying the Order for appeal and therefore do not brief the stay analysis; instead, they "leave to the Court's discretion whether [a stay] may be appropriate under these unique Circumstances." Pls.' Resp. 5-6, ECF No. 216. The Federal Defendants "do not object to Intervenor-Defendants' request that the Court stay enforcement of the Order pending appeal, given the potential for disruption to the healthcare markets if immediate implementation were required." Fed. Defs.' Resp. 10-11, ECF No. 216. "Indeed, the ACA has now been in effect for several years," the Federal Defendants continue, "and it is in the parties' and the public's interest that appellate review be exhausted before the Federal Defendants begin implementing the Court's judgment." Id. at 11.
The Intervenor Defendants' arguments on the equities of a stay are well-taken. And the Plaintiffs' and Federal Defendants' agreement, or lack of disagreement, that a stay is warranted for those reasons is telling. The Court therefore GRANTS the Intervenor Defendants' request for a stay of the Rule 54(b) Final Judgment on the December 14, 2018 Order.
IV. CONCLUSION
"The American rule of law ... depends on neutral, impartial judges who say what the law is, not what the law should be."
But because many everyday Americans would otherwise face great uncertainty during the pendency of appeal, the Court finds that the December 14, 2018 Order declaring the Individual Mandate unconstitutional and inseverable should be stayed. Accordingly, the Court ORDERS that the December 14, 2018 Order, (ECF No. 211), and the Partial Final Judgment severing Count I and finalizing that Order-which will issue by separate order-be stayed during the pendency of the Order's appeal.
SO ORDERED on this 30th day of December, 2018
Notes
See, e.g. , Intervenor Defs.' Mot. Stay 14, ECF No. 213-1; Fed. Defs.' Resp. 6, ECF No. 216; Pls.' Resp. 5, ECF No. 217.
Fed. Defs.' Resp. 8, ECF No. 216.
Id.
See Am. Compl. 28, ECF No. 27.
Id. at 30.
Id. at 32.
See Intervenor Defs.' Mot. Stay 7-14, ECF No. 213-1.
Compare Hotze ,
See Hotze ,
See also id. at 6 ("Plaintiffs will suffer irreparable harm in being compelled to switch to a more expensive government-approved insurance plan that does not cover or reimburse for desired medical services."); id. at 6-7 ("Plaintiffs will suffer unrecoverable financial losses from the implementation of ACA, which they will have no practical way of recouping from the federal government or from private, government-approved insurance carriers."); id. at 7 ("Plaintiffs have already suffered harm by the reduction in market choice for affordable health insurance, as insurance premiums have already increased in the market due to ACA.").
See Hotze ,
See, e.g. , Steffel v. Thompson ,
See, e.g., Time Warner Cable, Inc. v. Hudson ,
See Complaint at 1-7, Hotze ,
It is also worth noting that the Fifth Circuit in Hotze held that Dr. Hotze failed to adequately plead an injury caused by the possibility of being faced with a choice between accepting undesirable health insurance or violating the Individual Mandate only because that injury presupposed the decision of a third party-Dr. Hotze's employer. See Hotze ,
See Doe v. Chao ,
See December 14, 2018 Order 16-17, ECF No. 211.
Compl. 26, ECF No. 27 ("The ACA injures Individual Plaintiffs Hurley and Nantz by mandating that they purchase minimum essential health insurance coverage despite the Supreme Court's determination that the requirement is unconstitutional."); id. at 27 ("Individual Plaintiffs have an obligation to comply with the individual mandate under the ACA while it remains federal law, despite the provision's unconstitutionality."); id. at 5 ("Mr. Hurley is subject to the individual mandate and objects to being required by federal law to comply with it."); id. at 6 ("Mr. Nantz is subject to the individual mandate and objects to being required by federal law to comply with it."); id. at 27 ("Each of the injuries to Individual Plaintiffs is caused by the Defendants' continued enforcement of the Affordable Care Act, and each of these injuries will be redressed by a declaratory judgment from this Court pronouncing the Affordable Care Act unconstitutional.").
See, e.g. , Hudson ,
See U.S. Const. amend. IX ("The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people."); United States v. Lopez ,
See Arizona State Legislature v. Arizona Indep. Redistricting Comm'n , --- U.S. ----,
See December 14, 2018 Order 17, ECF No. 211 ("But this argument begs a leading question in this case by assuming the Individual Plaintiffs need not comply with the Individual Mandate.").
See, e.g. , Intervenor Defs.' Mot. Stay 9, ECF No. 213-1 ("In NFIB , The Supreme Court held that the requirement of maintaining minimum coverage went beyond Congress's powers under the Commerce Clause because it 'compels individuals' to participate in commerce ... But once the penalty for failing to maintain coverage is reduced to zero, it will lose its coercive effect." (citation omitted) ).
Meese v. Keene ,
See, e.g. , Gee ,
For example, the Supreme Court did not ask in Clements v. Fashing whether the officeholders would be injured if they simply disregarded the law and did not resign their current offices upon announcing candidacy.
See Aransas Project v. Shaw ,
See December 14, 2018 Order 19-27, ECF No. 211.
Id. at 20-22.
See id. at 22 ("NFIB does not contravene Congress's intent to separate the Individual Mandate and shared-responsibility penalty. To the extent the Supreme Court held § 5000A could be fairly read as a tax, it reasoned only that the Individual Mandate could be viewed as part and parcel of a provision supported by the Tax Power-not that the Individual Mandate itself was a tax. The Supreme Court stated its 'precedent demonstrate[d] that Congress had the power to impose the exaction in § 5000A under the taxing power'-and § 5000A(b) is the exaction-'and that § 5000A need not be read to do more than impose a tax. That is sufficient to sustain it.' " (quoting NFIB ,
Id. at 23-24.
NFIB ,
The Intervenor Defendants contend that "the Fifth Circuit is unlikely to share this Court's view that the production of revenue at all times is the sine qua non of a tax." Intervenor Defs.' Mot. Stay 9. This Court does not have a view on the issue. But the Supreme Court does. See NFIB ,
Nothing in United States v. Ardoin ,
See December 14, 2018 Order 27-34, ECF No. 211.
NFIB ,
See Josh Blackman, Undone: the New Constitutional Challenge to Obamacare , 23 Tex. Rev. L. & Pol. (forthcoming 2018) (manuscript at 17) ("Now that the penalty has been zeroed out, and the saving construction cannot hold, we are left with '[t]he most straightforward reading of the mandate.' What is that reading? Section 5000A 'commands individuals to purchase insurance.' " (quoting NFIB ,
See December 14, 2018 Order 32-33, ECF No. 211; accord Intervenor Defs.' Mot. Stay 9, ECF No. 213-1 ("In NFIB , the Supreme Court held that the requirement of maintaining minimum coverage went beyond Congress's powers under the Commerce Clause because it 'compels individuals' to participate in commerce." (citing NFIB ,
See December 14, 2018 Order 29-30, ECF No. 211; accord Blackman, supra note 38, at 12 ("According to a November 8, 2017 report from CBO and the Joint Committee on Taxation, CBO observed that 'with no penalty at all, only a small number of people who enroll in insurance because of the mandate under current law would continue to do so solely because of a willingness to comply with the law.' The number is no doubt 'small,' but it is not zero. No matter how small this class is, such virtuous individuals do exist. Therefore, a certain number of individuals are still affected by a penalty-less mandate. The mandate still has force, even if no penalty accompanies it." (citation omitted) ).
See December 14, 2018 Order, 30-32, ECF No. 211. See also United States v. Kaluza ,
26 U.S.C. § 5000A(a) (emphasis added).
NFIB ,
Id. at 665,
December 14, 2018 Order 33, ECF No. 211. It is not surprising Congress would subject some individuals to the mandate but not the penalty. Congress's stated goal was to "add millions of new consumers to the health insurance market, increasing the supply of, and demand for, health care services, and ... increase the number and share of Americans who are insured."
December 14, 2018 Order 33, ECF No. 211.
December 14, 2018 Order 29-30, ECF No. 211. The Intervenor Defendants assert the Plaintiffs are not bound by federal law unless compelled by "force, threats, or overwhelming pressure." See Intervenor Defs.' Mot. Stay 9, ECF No. 213-1. In other words, "might makes right." But "might makes right" is incompatible with the concept of a "government of laws, and not of men." See John Adams, Novanglus Essays No. 7 (Feb. 6, 1775). And it is incompatible with the concepts of equality and, relatedly, government by consent. See The Declaration of Independence (U.S. 1776) ("We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed ." (emphasis added) ). That the binding nature of law is justified by something other than brute force is a first principle of American society and in the very nature of a written Constitution-as well as constitutionally sanctioned statutes. Cf. Nicholas C. Dranias, Consideration As Contract: A Secular Natural Law of Contracts ,
See, e.g. , U.S. Const. art. VI. ("[T]he laws of the United States ... shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby."); United States v. Grumka ,
See, e.g. , The Federalist No. 28 (Alexander Hamilton) ("It merits particular attention in this place, that the laws of the Confederacy as to the enumerated and legitimate objects of its jurisdiction will become the Supreme Law of the land, to the observance of which all officers, legislative, executive, and judicial in each State will be bound by the sanctity of an oath ." (emphasis added) ).
Consider, for example, a suit against the President brought by Intervenor Defendant the District of Columbia alleging violations of the Constitution's Emoluments Clauses. See Complaint ¶ 2, District of Columbia v. Trump , No. 8:17-cv-01596,
See December 14, 2018 Order 54 n.34, ECF No. 211.
Frost ,
See Am. Compl. 28, ECF No. 27 ("Section 5000A's individual mandate exceeds Congress's enumerated powers by forcing Individual Plaintiffs to maintain ACA-compliant health insurance coverage."). To acknowledge what the Plaintiffs claim and do not claim is not to "conclude that a party can plead its way around Frost ." Intervenor Defs.' Mot. Stay 10, ECF No. 213-1. It is a recognition of the fundamental rule in district court proceedings that a claim not raised in the complaint is not properly before the court. Cf. Cutrera v. Bd. Supervisors La. State Univ. ,
Frost ,
See NFIB ,
See December 14, 2018 Order 34-55, ECF No. 211.
See id. at 35-37; accord Minnesota v. Mille Lacs Band of Chippewa Indians ,
Connecticut Nat'l Bank v. Germain ,
Germain ,
See December 14, 2018 Order 37-41, ECF No. 211.
See December 14, 2018 Order 41-46, ECF No. 211; King v. Burwell , --- U.S. ----,
See December 14, 2018 Order 42, n.29, ECF No. 211.
See 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(a). The 2017 Congress, in passing the TCJA, reduced the shared-responsibility payment to $0. It did not repeal the Individual Mandate.
See
See Epic Sys. Corp. v. Lewis , --- U.S. ----,
For example, the House passed H.R. 3762 in 2015 which included a repeal of the Individual Mandate. See Congressional Research Service, Legislative Actions in the 112th, 113th, and 114th Congresses to Repeal, Defund, or Delay the Affordable Care Act 7 (February 7, 2017). But that version of the bill could not garner the necessary votes in the Senate: "Lacking ... a supermajority in the Senate, the Republicans chose instead to modify the provisions so that they would not violate the Byrd Rule. The Senate version kept the mandates but eliminated the penalties for noncompliance."Id. at 8. This is one example of how Congress attempted to, but did not, repeal the mandate. And it is a powerful illustration of why the thing Congress did do-eliminate the shared-responsibility payment-is not the thing Congress did not do-repeal the Individual Mandate. Yet the Intervenor Defendants insist the Court must construe the former as the latter. This is far beyond the Court's power. See Epic Sys. Corp. ,
See, e.g. , Intervenor Defs.' Resp. 29-30, ECF No. 91 (collecting statements by members of 2017 Congress). "More fundamentally, ... intentions do not count unless they are enshrined in a text that makes it through the constitutional processes of bicameralism and presentment." Murphy v. Nat'l Collegiate Athletic Ass'n , --- U.S. ----,
See December 14, 2018 Order 40, n.26, ECF No. 211. As noted in the December 14, 2018 Order, the absence of a severability clause is by no means dispositive, but it is certainly of evidentiary value in a situation where one provision-the Individual Mandate-was called "essential" and contained no severability clause while another part of the statute-Medicaid Expansion-was not called "essential," did contain a severability clause, and was expressly held by the Supreme Court to be severable to the extent necessary due to the severability clause . See NFIB ,
See Congressional Research Service, The Budget Reconciliation Process: Stages of Consideration ii (January 4, 2017) ("In adopting a budget resolution, Congress is agreeing upon its budgetary goals for the upcoming fiscal year. Because it is in the form of a concurrent resolution, however, it is not presented to the President or enacted into law. As a consequence, any statutory changes concerning spending or revenues that are necessary to implement these policies must be enacted in separate legislation."). Even if it were appropriate to look beyond the unambiguous text of the ACA, in other words, the 2017 Congress demonstrated no legislative intent to leave the ACA intact when it passed the TCJA because the TCJA gave Congress no legislative choice on the matter.
See, e.g. , Alton ,
The Intervenor Defendants assert, "Nor is the Fifth Circuit likely to conclude that the 2017 Congress demonstrated an intent to unwind the entire ACA by choosing not to repeal Section 5000A(a) or
Brett M. Kavanaugh, Fixing Statutory Interpretation ,
Kavanaugh, supra note 75, at 2118.
See Transcript of Oral Argument at 36, NFIB ,
Kavanaugh, supra note 75, at 2119.
