OPINION AND ORDER
In 1989, defendant Legal Services Corporation (“LSC”) hired plaintiff David Wilkinson (“Wilkinson”) to be its first Inspector General (“IG”). Wilkinson’s tenure was fraught with internal dissension and managerial gridlock, and, in February 1991, LSC notified Wilkinson that his employment contract would not be renewed. Wilkinson sued in three counts. One of the counts raised an important and undecided constitutional issue concerning the Board’s authority to fire him, which, along with a second count, has been finally resolved. 1 Although not previously apparent, the remaining Count III also raises an important question of first impression concerning the obligations of “private” corporations that have been created by Congress to follow their own rules.
This novel issue arises from Wilkinson’s claim that he was wrongfully discharged because LSC failed to comply with its personnel manual before it notified him that his contract would not be renewed. On its face, such a claim is hardly new. When brought against a private employer, a discharged employee’s claim based on a personnel manual is generally styled as breach of contract, alleging that the manual is binding on the employer because it incorporates the terms of an express or implied agreement. 2 If the claim is brought against a government agency, a discharged employee may argue that the personnel manual gave rise to a “property” interest in continued employment that was deprived without due process of law or that the manual set forth internal regulations that the agency was bound to follow under the Accardi doctrine. 3
The novelty in this ease arises from Wilkinson’s exclusive reliance on the Due Process Clause and the Accardi doctrine, both of which apply only to public agencies, even though Congress has declared that LSC “shall not be considered a department, agency, or instrumentality, of the Federal Government,” 42 U.S.C. § 2996d(e)(l). 4 Conse *35 quently, this ease now presents two threshold questions:
1) Can a eongressionally-created, private corporation be sued' for violation of the Due Process Clause?
2) Can a congressionally-ereated, private corporation be sued for violating its own rules under the Accardi doctrine?
For constitutional claims, the Court must independently determine whether LSC is a public or private agency, notwithstanding the disclaimer of governmental identity in § 2996d(e)(l).
See Lebron v. National RR Passenger Corp.,
Consequently, this Opinion relates two stories: the story of how Wilkinson came to join and then leave LSC, and the story of how the Supreme Court came to announce and apply the Accardi doctrine, on which Wilkinson so heavily relies. For those who wish to forgo the narrative journey, the Court has come to the following conclusions.
With respect to the threshold legal issues, the Court holds that LSC is a public agency subject to the Due Process Clause.- The Court also must reach Wilkinson’s alternative Accardi claim and holds that the Accardi doctrine derives from the Due Process Clause’s obligation that government agencies follow the law, even if that “law” is a procedural regulation by which the agency has gratuitously limited its otherwise unfettered discretion. This rule-of-law requirement is a necessary founding principle implicated in any suit against the government for its violations of law. But the constitutional stature of this founding principle does not make every agency’s violation of its own rules into a constitutional violation. Unless the agency has violated an independent constitutional provision, a lawsuit based on the Accardi doctrine relies on the predicate requirement that government agents are bound by law, but, for jurisdictional purposes such a claim arises under the regulation claimed to be violated, not the Due Process Clause.
Applying this holding to the instant ease, the Due Process Clause creates a presumption that judicial review of an Accardi claim against a government-created “private” corporation is available where Congress has given the corporation the power to make regulations that have the force and effect of law. Where, however, Congress has not given lawmaking power to such a corporation, the Accardi doctrine does not apply; the corporation’s personnel policies are no more public “law” than those of any other private employer. 5
With respect to Wilkinson’s claims, the Court finds that although they are not barred as a matter of law, the evidence supports neither claim. With respect to his Due Process claim, the Court finds that Wilkinson was not guaranteed that he would be dis *36 charged only for cause by either the 1978 or the 1990 manual, and therefore he had no property interest in staying on. With respect to the Accardi claim, the Court further finds that on the present record the 1990 Manual did come into force and that the provisions of the manual on which Wilkinson relies do not qualify as binding regulations and, even if they did, they do not apply to the LSC Inspector General. Finally, it is clear that even if LSC had been obliged to give Wilkinson periodic job evaluations, its failure to do so was harmless because Wilkinson’s contract would not have been renewed in any event. What follows are the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law as required by Rule 52(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
I.
A. The Legal Services Corporation
The Legal Services Corporation is a nonprofit, tax-exempt corporation established by the Legal Services Corporation Act of 1974 (“LSC Act”), codified at 42 U.S.C. § 2996b et seq. (1994). LSC provides financial support for legal assistance in certain noncriminal proceedings to persons throughout the United States who cannot otherwise afford legal assistance. LSC generally does not provide legal services to the indigent directly but does so through a series of grants to local organizations. See 42 U.S.C. § 2996e(c)(l). During the time relevant to this case, LSC distributed funds to approximately 300 grantees. See Trial Transcript (“Tr.”) at 187-88 (Testimony of former Board member, Howard H. Dana, Jr.).
By law, LSC is governed by an eleven-member Board of Directors (“Board”). See 42 U.S.C. § 2996c(a). Board members are appointed by the President of the United States with the advice and consent of the Senate and serve a specific term of years. Id. § 2996c(a), (b). However, certain members of the Board have served under recess appointments made by the President without the advice and consent of the Senate. See Stipulations of Fact (“Stip.”) ¶ 3. Although the Board is composed wholly of political appointees, the LSC Act declares that its members shall not be full-time employees of the United States, id. § 2996e(a), and that Board members “shall not, by reason of such membership, be deemed officers or employees of the United States.” Id. § 2996e(c). 6
The LSC Act also provides that LSC is to be managed by a President, who is elected by the Board and serves as chief executive officer subject to the Board’s supervision. See 42 U.S.C. § 2996d(a). The Board may also appoint “such other officers as [it] determines to be necessary.” Id. As with the Board, Congress has directed that
Except as otherwise specifically provided in this subchapter, officers and employees of the Corporation shall not be considered officers or employees, and the Corporation shall not be considered a department, agency, or instrumentality, of the Federal Government.
42 U.S.C. § 2996d(e)(l). Rather, LSC is to have the powers of a non-profit corporation under District of Columbia law. See 42 U.S.C. § 2996e(a).
LSC, however, is not like most non-profit corporations. Not only is it controlled entirely by presidential appointees, but also— like numerous other agencies and unlike most non-profit corporations — LSC has been required to have an Inspector General who reports to Congress since 1988. 7 Although for some agencies, the IG is nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate, 8 *37 when Congress amended the IG Act in 1988, it gave the “designated federal entities” such as LSC six months from October 18, 1988 to establish an Office of Inspector General and authorized the “head” of LSC to recruit an individual to fill the position. See 5 U.S.C.App. 3 § 8G(b), (c). 9
B. Wilkinson’s Tenure at LSC
In 1989, to comply with the IG Act, LSC established its Office of Inspector General (“OIG”). LSC selected Wilkinson to be its first Inspector General. Wilkinson is an attorney licensed to practice in Utah who, prior to joining LSC, had served as that State’s Attorney General for eight years. See Tr. 74,117 (Wilkinson). When Wilkinson arrived at LSC, he had no prior experience as an Inspector General, and LSC had no prior experience working with an IG. Wilkinson’s place in the LSC bureaucracy was made somewhat uncertain by the IG Act, which provides that
Each Inspector General shall report to and be under the general supervision of the head of the designated Federal entity. The head of the designated Federal entity shall not prevent or prohibit the Inspector General from initiating, carrying out, or completing any audit or investigation ...
5 U.S.C.App. 3 § 8G(d).
A certain degree of confusion and, perhaps, tension could be expected in such a situation. Indeed, almost immediately, friction and concern over “turf’ developed between Wilkinson, LSC staff, and certain members of the LSC Board. See, e.g., Tr. 155-58 (Testimony of LSC’s former Director of the Office of Human Resources, Alice Dickerson), 189 (Dana); 210 (Testimony of former Board member, Luis Guinot). In April 1990, the LSC President who had hired Wilkinson, Terrance J. Wear (“Wear”), called a meeting to identify and resolve contentious issues between Wilkinson and LSC staff, but that meeting bore no fruit. See Tr. at 154-59 (Dickerson). 10
In August 1990, the LSC Board was designated as LSC’s “head,” giving it supervisory responsibilities over Wilkinson. This change did nothing to abate the tensions with Wilkinson. The Board decided to create an Inspector General Oversight Committee because of the amount of attention Wilkinson required. Tr. at 186 (Dana), 210 (Guinot). The weight of the evidence demonstrates that the friction between Wilkinson and the LSC staff and Board went beyond that inherent in the circumstances. Wilkinson’s focus on establishing and protecting the independence and prerogatives of the OIG at the expense of establishing a working relationship with his supervisor (the Board) and LSC staff emerged as a constant source of friction.
A small but telling example is found in the testimony of two former Board members— testifying more than eight years after certain events had transpired — who credibly and vividly recalled the inordinate attention Wilkinson gave to obtaining his own letterhead. See Tr. at 187, 189-90 (Dana), 211 (Guinot); see also Def.’s Ex. 11 (Tr. of Jan. 28, 1991 Board Meeting) at 54, 60.
More fundamentally, Wilkinson’s view of his role under the IG Act conflicted materially with that of the Board and the LSC President. In the normal course of operations, LSC’s grantees were required to have an annual, independent audit by a Certified Public Accountant. Part of the responsibility of LSC staff was to ensure compliance with that requirement. Wilkinson initially believed that his office should audit all of LSC’s grantees. See Tr. at 187-89 (Dana); Def.’s Ex. 11 (Tr. of Jan. 28, 1991 Exec. Sess.) at 49-53. The Board did not agree. Id.
Another source of frustration to Wilkinson, the LSC Board, and the LSC President was *38 the fact that Wilkinson had not hired auditors to assist him in carrying out his duties— even those on which he and the Board agreed. The IG Act provided Wilkinson with hiring authority, although less expansive than that given to IG’s of executive agencies. Compare 5 U.S.C.App. 3 § 8G(g)(l), (2) with id. § 6(a)(7), (8). Wilkinson had authority to
select, appoint, and employ such officers and employees as may be necessary for carrying out the functions, powers, and duties of the Office of Inspector General and to obtain the temporary or intermittent services of experts or consultants or an organization thereof, subject to the applicable laws and regulations that govern such selections, appointments, and employment, and the obtaining of such services, within the designated Federal entity.
Id. § 8G(g)(2). Wilkinson did not exercise that authority to hire auditors. He testified that Wear would not authorize funding to hire auditors, and that Wear’s successor, Martin, did not rapidly authorize the hiring of auditors. See Tr. at 2-23, 2-24 (Wilkinson). LSC Board members viewed the responsibility for the stalemate as Wilkinson’s. Id. at 189-90, 201-02 (Dana), 212 (Guinot); see also Def.’s Ex. 11 (Tr. of Jan. 28, 1991 LSC Board meeting) at 59-60. In any event, it is undisputed that Wilkinson hired no auditors. Tr. at 2-23.
Finally, the issue of hiring other staff for the OIG was an ongoing tug-of-war between Wilkinson and Alice Dickerson, former Director of LSC’s Office of Human Resources. Again, some tension is to be expected from the structure of the IG Act, which makes the IG’s hiring authority subject to LSC’s personnel regulations. But Wilkinson’s highly formal approach to mediating that tension by negotiating a detailed Memorandum of Understanding (“MOU”) exacerbated the problem.
C. Wilkinson’s Discharge
In early 1991, the cumulative dissatisfaction with Wilkinson came to a head. Under the terms of Wilkinson’s letter agreement, he was to serve in office for an initial two-year term, which would automatically extend for subsequent one-year terms unless either party gave timely notice of nonrenewal. Stip. ¶ 7. The deadline for giving notice was March 5,1991. Id.
On January 28, 1991, the Board met in executive session to consider a number of matters. During that meeting, the Board discussed whether Wilkinson’s contract should be renewed. A fairly strong, though informal, consensus against renewing the contract emerged. See Def.’s Ex. 11 at 50-65. Subsequently, Wilkinson himself indicated frustration, contemplating that he would not wish to renew the contract absent certain guarantees. See Def.’s Ex. 13 (Feb. 22, 1991 Mem. from Wilkinson to LSC Board) at 10 (‘Without MOUs or their equivalent being in place, I for one do not care to remain IG for my “option” (third) year under my personal services contract.”).
The next executive session was scheduled for February 22, 1991, the final opportunity for the Board to act before the March 5 deadline. In advance of that meeting, on February 12, Guinot sent Wilkinson a letter requesting by February 22, “a memorandum from you describing your activities as Inspector General pursuant to §§ 4, 6 and 7 of The Inspector General Act of 1978, as amended...... The memorandum need have only sufficient detail so as to reasonably inform the [Oversight] Committee of the progress of the office under your direction, and need not identify any individuals by name.” Pl.’s Ex. 19 (Feb. 12, 1991 letter from Guinot to Wilkinson).
At the February 22 executive session, the Board formally considered whether it should renew Wilkinson’s contract. The discussion of that topic took place before the Board had received Wilkinson’s report as requested by Guinot’s February 12 letter; however the report’s absence was deemed to be immaterial. See Def.’s Ex. 14 (Tr. of Feb. 22, 1991 Exec. Sess.) at 31-32. At the conclusion of the discussion,- ten of the Directors voted not to renew Wilkinson’s contract, with one Director abstaining. Stip. ¶ 12. On or about February 27, LSC President Martin personally delivered to Wilkinson a February 25, 1991 letter signed by the Chairman of the Board giving Wilkinson notice that the term *39 of his employment contract would not be extended. Stip. ¶ 13. 11
D. Wilkinson Sues LSC
On April 23, 1991, while Wilkinson remained a LSC employee, he sued LSC alleging that it had violated the Government in the Sunshine Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552b, by conducting certain portions of its meetings in executive session.
See Wilkinson v. Legal Services Corp.,
Civ. No. 91-0889 (Order of Sept. 5, 1991). In August of that year, Wilkinson added two counts, including one for wrongful discharge. On the eve of his September 5, 1991 departure from LSC, he unsuccessfully sought injunctive relief.
Id.
After this Court denied Wilkinson’s request for an order requiring LSC to keep him on, he pressed his claim for wrongful discharge. This Court previously ruled in Wilkinson’s favor on Counts I and II, deciding that the LSC Board had violated the Sunshine Act, and that the Board — appointed by President Bush while the Congress was in recess— lacked the authority to decide not to renew Wilkinson’s contract.
See Wilkinson I,
The case was remanded so that this Court could consider Wilkinson’s “claim that the termination of his employment violated the LSC by-laws and Act____This claim is not a categorical, structural challenge to all the recess appointments Board’s action but rather focuses on the legality of the specific action which resulted in Wilkinson’s termination.”
Wilkinson II,
II.
Against this backdrop, we now turn to the facts directly pertinent to Count III. Wilkinson alleges that LSC did not have the discretion to discharge him as it did, and the relevant sources that may have limited LSC’s discretion are the LSC Act, the IG Act, Wilkinson’s employment agreement, and LSC’s personnel manual(s).
A. Statutory Provisions
Although Count III is phrased in terms of alleged violations of the LSC Act, Wilkinson did not rely directly on that Act at trial. The reason is self-evident; the LSC Act provides: “All officers shall serve at the pleasure of the Board.” 42 U.S.C. § 2996c(a) (emphasis added). In addition, the LSC President, “subject to general policies established by the Board, may appoint and remove such employees of the Corporation as he determines necessary to carry out the purposes of the Corporation.” Id. § 2996d(b)(l).
The Inspector General Act is of no more assistance to Wilkinson. The IG Act does not restrict the Board’s authority to discharge the IG, adding only the requirement that:
If an Inspector General is removed from office or is transferred to another position or location within a designated Federal entity, the head of the designated Federal entity shall promptly communicate in writ *40 ing the reasons for any such removal or transfer to both Houses of the Congress.
5 U.S.C.App. 3 § 8G(e).
B. Employment Agreement
Other than a seasonable notice requirement, Wilkinson’s two-year employment agreement also left LSC free not to renew the contract for any reason. After LSC had chosen Wilkinson as its IG-designate, LSC President Wear sent Wilkinson a three-page letter agreement, dated August 17,1989, outlining the proposed terms of employment. Wilkinson could have negotiated the terms, but he declined that opportunity. See Tr. at 117. By signing the agreement, Wilkinson accepted the IG position on the terms LSC had offered. Id. Among these was a provision that the agreement would be governed by the law of the District of Columbia. Wilkinson did no research regarding legal presumptions covering employment contracts in the District of Columbia, including the presumption that employees are at-will unless the contract evidences a contrary intent. See id. at 101.
The large majority of LSC employees did not have letter agreements setting out their terms of employment. At most, the LSC President and perhaps three or four other senior staff had written agreements. Tr. at 103 (Wilkinson Test.); see also Def.’s Ex. 11 (Tr. of Jan. 28, 1991 Exec. Sess.) at 67.
Two provisions of Wilkinson’s agreement cover the termination of his employment:
5. Your employment in the capacities outlined above may be terminated by the [LSC] President 13 prior to September 6, 1991, upon the happening of any of the following events:
(a) Your death;
(b) Failure to discharge your obligations under this contract;
(c) Illegal or immoral conduct by you;
(d) Thirty (30) days after you send written notice to the President or his des-ignee (or if there is no President, to the Chairman or a member of the Board) stating your intention to terminate your employment; or
(e)Thirty (30) days after the President notifies you in writing that he is terminating your employment for any reason other than those specified in sub-paragraphs (a) through (d).
6. The [LSC] President shall have the option of extending your appointment for increments of one year, beginning on September 5, 1991. In the event either party shall not desire such an extension, notice must be given to the other party by March 5, 1991, or by the 5th of March of each succeeding year in which this contract shall be in effect.
Def.’s Ex. 2 (Aug. 17, 1989 letter from Terrance J. Wear to David Wilkinson).
At trial, Wilkinson effectively conceded that Paragraph 6 imposes no restrictions on LSC’s decision whether to exercise its renewal option, but he argued that the provisions of LSC’s personnel manual applied to Wilkinson and independently limited LSC’s discretion. See Tr. at 24-25.
C. LSC’s Personnel Manual(s)
In 1978, LSC adopted its first personnel manual to set forth its policies and procedures vis-á-vis its employees. See Stip. ¶ 4; Pi’s. Ex. 9 (Personnel Procedures Manual) [hereafter “the 1978 Manual”]. The procedure for adopting the 1978 Manual was ad hoc. The 1978 Manual was written by LSC Staff. The Board had created a Personnel and Facilities Committee, which informally reviewed the proposed manual as it took shape. When the 1978 Manual was complete, that Committee determined that no formal motion or approval of the Committee recommending the 1978 Manual to the Board was necessary because matters addressed by the 1978 Manual were primarily administra *41 tive. See Pis. Exs. 1 (Minutes of Sept. 25, 1978 Meeting of LSC Board’s Personnel and Facilities Comm.) and 3 (Oct. 4, 1978 Mem. from LSC Pres, to LSC Board). The manual was assembled as a looseleaf binder to allow for periodic revision. See Pl.’s Ex. 4 (Tr. of Oct. 19,1978 Board Meeting) at 280.
As anticipated, LSC staff continuously revised the 1978 Manual without oversight by the Board, and by 1985 the 1978 Manual had become “badly outdated” and was not distributed to employees. Tr. at 167-68 (Dickerson). 14 When Wilkinson joined LSC in 1989 he did not receive a copy of the 1978 Manual. In fact, he did not become aware of its existence until well into the pendency of this litigation. See Tr. at 82-83.
From 1986 to 1990, Ms. Dickerson was the principal draftsperson for a new, updated personnel manual. Id. at 135. Working with her on the revisions to the personnel manual were other senior LSC employees and outside counsel. Id. at 138. When the revisions were complete, the group researched whether the Board would have to approve the revised personnel manual before it took effect, and they concluded that Board approval was not required. Id.
In or about March 1990, approximately six months after Wilkinson arrived, LSC issued the revised personnel manual. Stip. ¶ 8. The Board did not consider or discuss the revisions. See Tr. at 193-96 (Dana). Although the 1978 Manual and 1990 Manual differ in organization and tone, they are substantially similar in many respects relevant to this ease. Both provide that LSC employees are to receive a performance evaluation from their supervisor 90 days after employment has commenced, and that employees are to be evaluated on an annual basis thereafter. Both versions also provide that if a supervisor finds an employee’s performance to be lacking in some respect, the employee is to be placed on a performance improvement plan. Compare Pl.’s Ex. 9 (1978 Manual) at 1-18, III-20-21, V-4-5 with Pl.’s Ex. 14 (1990 Manual) at 10,16,47-48.
There are three significant differences. First, the 1990 Manual contains provisions explicitly stating that LSC is an employer-at-will and that LSC employees are provided no enforceable rights under the 1990 Manual.
For example, the new introduction to the 1990 Manual reads in pertinent part:
This Personnel Policy Manual consists of personnel policies, practices and procedures of the Corporation. It is intended to standardize the administration of personnel policies and is presented as a matter of information only. None of the benefits or policies in this manual are intended by reason of their publication to confer any rights or privileges upon an employee, or to entitle an employee to be, or remain, employed by the Corporation.
None of the statements contained in this manual are to be construed as a contract, and the manual may be altered, amended or eliminated from time to time as the Corporation in its judgment deems appropriate.
Pl.’s Ex. 14 (1990 Manual) (introduction). No similar disclaimer is in the 1978 Manual. The 1990 Manual reiterates the point in at least two other places. In a section entitled “Employment-Ab-Will,” the 1990 Manual states that
The Corporation is hopeful that each employment relationship will be a successful and enduring one. However, employees are employed at the will of the Corporation and may be terminated at any time, with or without cause, and with or without notice and may resign at any time, for any or no reason, with or without notice.
*42 Id. at 8; see also id. at 61 (“Employees are employed at the will of the Corporation and may be terminated or have the right to voluntarily resign at any time.”).
Second, the description of employees to whom the Manual applies was changed. The 1978 Manual includes in its definition of “Regular Employees,” “Employees who are hired for continuous predetermined periods of employment that exceed 1 year.” PL’s Ex. 9 at 1-2. By contrast, the 1990 Manual defines “Regular Employees” as “individuals, hired for continuous and undetermined periods of employment.” PL’s Ex. 14 at 6. The 1990 Manual does not define a category of contract employee that would describe Wilkinson.
Third, the provisions governing terminations were changed. The 1978 Manual sets forth four categories of termination that boil down to gross insubordination, unsatisfactory job performance, resignation and furlough. See PL’s Ex. 9 at V-6. But the manual also suggests that during a probationary period — when job security is generally less — an employee may be dismissed “for cause.” Id. at 1-18. By contrast, the severance section suggests a broader range of terminations that include reasons such as “an irreconcilable personality conflict that interferes with achievement of departmental goals or operations” and a termination where the incumbent lacks certain skills or characteristics. Id. at III — 19.
The 1990 Manual classifies terminations simply as voluntary or involuntary and requires only that Office Directors obtain clearance from the personnel office in advance of any “involuntary terminations,” i.e. firings. 15 The clearance procedure was designed to ensure consistent application of LSC’s policies and procedures. Tr. at 149-50 (Dickerson). The absence of clearance, however, would not invalidate a sudden termination. E.g., PL’s Ex. 14 at 61. Moreover, the clearance provision applies to Office Directors; neither the Board nor the LSC President would be required to clear a termination decision before firing an employee.
Neither the 1978 Manual or the 1990 Manual were published in the Federal Register, cf. PL’s Ex. 16 (Fed.Reg. Index showing no publication of personnel regulations in 1990), even though LSC has the power and the obligation to publish its rules, regulations, and guidelines in the Federal Register:
The Corporation shall afford notice and reasonable opportunity for comment to interested parties prior to issuing rules, regulations, and guidelines, and it shall publish in the Federal Register at least 30 days prior to their effective date all its rules, regulations, guidelines, and instructions.
42 U.S.C. § 2996g(e).
D. Wilkinson’s Draft MOU Concerning the 1990 Manual
Shortly after Wilkinson arrived at LSC, it became clear that he and Alice Dickerson took differing views as to what role, if any, the LSC’s Office of Human Resources would play in the process of hiring, placing, and firing OIG employees. Once the 1990 Manual was in place, Dickerson requested that Wilkinson, when recruiting staff, abide by the 1990 Manual. Wilkinson was initially resistant. The IG Act gave him hiring authority subject to the “laws and regulations that govern [personnel actions] within the designated Federal entity.” 5 U.S.CApp. 3 § 8G(g)(2).
Contrary to what he argues in this lawsuit, Wilkinson at the time asserted that the 1990 Manual was neither a “law” nor “regulation” within the meaning of the IG Act, and that the OIG would only consent to comply with the personnel manual to the extent set forth in a Memorandum of Understanding (“MOU”) between his office and Dickerson’s. Tr. at 95 (Wilkinson), 141 (Dickerson); Def.’s Ex. 8 (Draft MOU). Wilkinson drafted an extensive MOU commenting on a section-by-section basis as to which provisions of the *43 1990 Manual he was willing to have apply to his office. 16
Regarding the 1990 Manual’s clearance procedure for Office Directors who planned to fire an employee, Wilkinson’s draft MOU stated that
The OIG agrees to notify OHR and the Office of Financial and Administrative Services of a voluntary or involuntary termination of an OIG employee. However, the OIG reserves the right to effect an immediate termination without prior clearance and the Board of Directors may likewise terminate the Inspector General without prior clearance.
Def.’s Ex. 8 at 1-4 (emphasis added). The MOU was never signed.
E. Compliance With the Manual(s)
Wilkinson’s principal complaint in Count III is that he did not receive any of the performance evaluations to which he claims he was entitled under either manual. The evaluation procedures were primarily intended as precursors to salary decisions. Tr. at 60 (Dickerson). There is no dispute that Wilkinson did not receive a 90-day evaluation. See, e.g., Tr. at 64. No evidence was introduced to suggest that Wilkinson objected to the absence of such an evaluation. With respect to an annual evaluation, Wilkinson’s first anniversary date was September 5, 1990. On August 6, 1990, Dickerson sent Wilkinson the standard form given employees allowing them an opportunity to prepare a self-evaluation as part of the overall evaluation process. Pl.’s Ex. 15. The form indicates that the relevant paperwork had been sent to Wilkinson’s “supervisor,” who at that time was the LSC President. Two weeks later, the Board became Wilkinson’s supervisor. See 55 Fed.Reg. 34101-02 (Aug. 21, 1990).
Prior to August 1990, the only LSC employee supervised directly by the Board had been the LSC President, who, like Wilkinson, was employed under a letter agreement with LSC. The Board did not conduct annual evaluations of the LSC President. Tr. at 151-52 (Dickerson). After receiving supervisory responsibility for the Inspector General, the Board also did not conduct an annual evaluation of Wilkinson. Under Wilkinson’s Draft MOU, he did not consider such an evaluation mandatory. See Tr. at 103-05 (Wilkinson).
Wilkinson prepared a separate two-page draft MOU for the Board concerning its supervision of the Inspector General. Tr. at 102. That MOU contemplates an annual evaluation as optional. Def.’s Ex. 8 (Draft MOU) at II — 1, II-2 (“[A]n annual personal [sic] evaluation review {if required by the Board) will be conducted by the Board annually on or about the inspector general’s employment anniversary____”) (emphasis added). Indeed, in a “comment” introducing the MOU, Wilkinson acknowledged having received the evaluation form from Dickerson and noted that “I am in no rush since there seems little reason to pursue an evaluation rating if it is not tied close in time to a possible raise.” Id. at II — 1. Wilkinson considered himself to be a “contract employee” who did not fit neatly into the annual evaluation/salary review scheme, id.; in fact, Wilkinson received two raises without a performance evaluation having been conducted. See Pl.’s Exs. 24-Q, 24-R (Official Personnel Action forms).
In its role as supervisor, the Board did not provide notice and an opportunity to participate in a performance improvement plan when it was displeased with the performance of an LSC President. Tr. at 152-54 (Dickerson). Rather the Board would fire the LSC President, sometimes before the end of the contract period. See id. Executive turnover was not uncommon; LSC Presidents Wear and Martin were both let go by the Board. As with LSC Presidents, the Board did not consider itself obliged to give Wilkinson an opportunity to participate in a performance evaluation plan. Tr. at 197 (Dana) (“[T]his was not a place for on-the-job training.”).
In sum, LSC did not provide Wilkinson with a 90-day or an annual evaluation. Wilkinson never raised the issue of the 90-day *44 evaluation, and was in “no rush” to have the annual evaluation conducted. From his constant run-ins with LSC staff, and his strained relations with the Board, Wilkinson was well aware that his performance was not universally well regarded. He was not offered an opportunity to participate in a performance improvement plan, nor did he seek such an opportunity. The Board’s February 1991 decision not to exercise its option to retain Wilkinson’s services for another year came as a surprise to no one. In Wilkinson’s own view, LSC was not bound by the 1990 Manual, see Tr. at 92-93 (Wilkinson), and when he sued LSC in April 1991, he raised no issue about LSC’s procedural non-compliance. His procedural non-compliance issue was first raised in August 1991, when he amended his complaint. After doing so he limited his claims to the 90-day evaluation, the 1990 annual evaluation, and the performance improvement plan; he expressly waived any right to have an annual evaluation for 1991, which would have been a “sham.” Tr. at 114 (Wilkinson).
III.
On summary judgment, and again at trial, LSC argued that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on Count III because, even if Wilkinson had been entitled to the procedures he claims he was denied, LSC cannot be sued under the Due Process Clause or the
Accardi
doctrine.
See
Tr. at 125, 2-37. In
Wilkinson I,
this Court did not reach Count III because of the decision on Count II.
A. The Due Process Clause Applies to the Legal Services Corporation
As with any claim based on the federal Constitution, a threshold issue concerning Wilkinson’s Due Process claim is whether the claim has been brought against the Government or an equivalent “state actor,” because constitutional norms “ereet[ ] no shield against merely private conduct ...”
Shelley v. Kraemer,
Because LSC is a creature of Congress and the President,
see Wilkinson I,
Absent from this list, however, is a provision requiring LSC to comply with the Constitution. Instead, Congress directed that in all other respects LSC should be treated as a private, non-profit corporation.
See
42 U.S.C. §§ 2996b(c), 2996e(a), 2996i(e). From the text of the statute, it is evident that Congress did not intend LSC to be a state actor for constitutional purposes. The legislative history also evidences this intent.
See
H.R.Rep. No. 247, 93d Cong., 1st Sess. (1973)
reprinted in
1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3872, 3873. Other courts have come to the same conclusion.
E.g., Newman v. Legal Services Corp.,
However, it is not for Congress to make the final determination of LSC’s status as a government entity for purposes of determining the constitutional rights of citizens affected by its actions.
See Lebron v. National RR Passenger Corp.,
All of the factors that led the Court to consider Amtrak a state actor apply with equal, if not greater, force to LSC. Congress created LSC to fulfill an important governmental objective by providing legal services in noncriminal matters to the underprivileged.
See
42 U.S.C. § 2996. Unlike Amtrak, which has some privately-appointed Directors, LSC’s Board is composed entirely of political appointees,
id.
§ 2996e(a), and LSC’s funding is almost entirely made up of federal appropriations.
Id.
§ 2996L From the reasoning and holding of
Lebrón,
there is no question that LSC is a state actor for purposes of the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause.
Cf. Texas Rural Legal Aid, Inc. v. Legal Services Corp.,
B. The Evidence Does Not Support Wilkinson’s Due Process Claim
The Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause provides that “[n]o person shall be ... deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law____” U.S. Const. amend. V. This majestic provision has been invoked to correct a broad range of governmental missteps — from the shocking to the banal. The inquiry under the Clause comes in two parts: (1) has the plaintiff been deprived of an interest protected by the Clause?; and if so, (2) was the plaintiff afforded the process due with respect to that deprivation?
See Gilbert v. Homar,
Under the first inquiry, the broad contours of the Due Process Clause have been given more specific definition with respect to public employment. A government employee can be said to have a “property” interest in continued employment where applicable laws, regulations, contracts or customs. limit the government’s ability to terminate that employment, except upon the happening of certain events, such as termination for “cause.”
E.g., Gilbert,
The LSC Act plainly states that officers of the corporation, such as Wilkinson, “shall serve at the pleasure of the Board.” 42 U.S.C. § 2996d(a). This language creates no property interest in continued employment. 19 Similarly, Wilkinson’s employment contract provides that it will not renew if either party gives notice of non-renewal six months prior to the end of the initial two-year term. See Def.’s Ex. 2 ¶ 6. Where, as here, notice was given within the time prescribed, no entitlement to continued employment arose under the terms of the contract.
For those reasons, Wilkinson concentrated at trial on arguing that LSC’s personnel manual set forth binding regulations, which provided that he could keep his position unless dismissed for cause. Specifically, Wilkinson argued that the 1978 Manual guaranteed that LSC employees would be dismissed only for cause. See Tr. at 20, 2-32, 2-33. 20 Although the Board did not formally ratify the 1978 Manual, a committee of Board members had reviewed it and generally approved. Wilkinson argues that the Board’s informal review of the 1978 Manual amounts to a fundamental policy choice to depart from the broad discretion given it to be an employer-at-will by the LSC Act. In Wilkinson’s view, the 1978 Manual was intended to be binding upon LSC and to provide its employees with substantially more job security than that provided by the LSC Act. The argument continues that the 1990 Manual, which states in its introduction that none of the provisions in it confer any rights upon LSC employees and which openly declares that LSC is an employer-at-will, is a nullity because the Board did not approve the fundamental policy choice to return to an employment-at-will regime. At each step of his argument, the facts do not bear him out.
Wilkinson’s initial premise is erroneous. None of the exhibits from 1978, which Wilkinson introduced without sponsoring testi *47 mony, reflect that the Board decided to depart from the statutory employment-at-will scheme, and those exhibits make plain that Board approval was not required for the personnel manual, and any subsequent revisions and amendments thereto, to take effect.
Moreover, the text of the 1978 Manual hardly provides clear evidence of such an intent; in fact, the 1978 Manual is an ambiguous muddle, as LSC personnel have recognized. 21 Although the 1978 Manual’s termination section sets forth four categories of terminations, the severance section suggests a broader range of terminations that include reasons such as “an irreconcilable personality conflict that interferes with achievement of departmental goals or operations” — a provision that clearly describes one of the Board’s reasons for not renewing Wilkinson’s contract — and a termination where the incumbent lacks certain skills or characteristics. Pl.’s Ex. 9 at III — 19.
Nor is there any evidence that LSC’s employment practices under the 1978 Manual reflected a policy of terminations only for cause. Having reviewed the evidence and judged the credibility of the witnesses, the Court fully credits Ms. Dickerson’s testimony that LSC has been an employer-at-will throughout its history, that the 1990 Manual clarified that fact, and that the 1990 Manual took effect in March 1990.
See
Tr. at 136-41;
cf. Newman,
In any event, the Court rejects Wilkinson’s argument that no conflict arises between his employment agreement and his assertion that the 1978 Manual required cause before termination. Even if either version of LSC’s personnel manual provided for termination only for cause, such a provision would have been directly inconsistent with the language and intent of Wilkinson’s written employment agreement. The specific terms of the letter agreement, Def.’s Ex. 2, which preserves LSC’s unfettered “option” to renew the agreement, override any contrary provisions of the personnel manual.
Wilkinson had no property interest in continued employment because neither the LSC Act, Wilkinson’s employment contract, nor LSC’s personnel manual set forth limitations on LSC’s discretion not to renew his contract. When the Board deliberated on the matter and timely notified Wilkinson that it did not wish to continue his service as IG, Wilkinson received all the process he was due.
IV.
Recognizing the weakness of his Due Process claim, Wilkinson argues in the alternative that even if he had no legitimate expectation of continued employment because LSC could choose not to renew his contract for any reason, LSC had nonetheless committed itself in both the 1978 and the 1990 Manuals to give him a 90-day evaluation, annual performance evaluations, and an opportunity for him to participate in a performance improvement plan. He claims that he is entitled to a substantial monetary recovery because LSC failed to provide him with any of these job evaluations before choosing not to renew his contract.
The legal basis for this argument is the so-called
Accardi
doctrine, which states the general principle that a
public agency
“must adhere to voluntarily adopted, binding policies that limit its discretion.”
Padula v. Webster,
*48
Identifying the legal source for the Supreme Court’s pronouncement that government agencies are bound to follow their own rules is no simple matter.
22
This may be due, in part, to the fact that some of the earlier cases announcing the doctrine involved violations of agency rules where an individual was threatened with the deprivation of an interest protected by the Due Process Clause. The Court subsequently clarified that, under the doctrine, a person adversely affected by an agency’s violation of its own rules could seek judicial review, even when no protected interest has been implicated.
See Service v. Dulles,
As will be seen, the Supreme Court’s limited commentary on the source of its authority to exercise judicial review of agency action under the Accardi doctrine is divided. On one view, procedural rules confer procedural rights, and even if these procedural rights are not “property” protected by the Due Process Clause, the Clause still authorizes judicial review to remedy injury caused to an individual by an agency’s violation of its procedural rules. Another view recognizes the value of procedural regularity but rejects it as a constitutional value, at least when applied to an agency’s compliance with self-imposed procedural rules. On this view, the Accardi doctrine reflects an extension of common law “administrative law” review of agency action that apparently was not supplanted by passage of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § '551 et seq., and its comprehensive judicial review provisions.
Upon reflection, and having carefully reviewed this line of precedent, this Court concludes that the opposing views can be harmonized and reconciled. The Accardi doctrine is a hybrid. The requirement that agencies are bound by their own rules reflects the broader principle, found in the Due Process Clause, that government officials are bound by the rule of law. The constitutional rule-of-law provision reflects a founding principle of this Republic, one that is implicated every time the Government is sued for violating the law. If public officials were not bound by law, such suits would not be judicially cognizable. But the principle does not turn every public official’s violation of subconstitutional law, be that statute, regulation or binding practice, into a constitutional violation. With the rule-of-law principle in place, a suit against a public official for violation of law arises under the specific law alleged to .have been violated and not the general rule-of-law principle. Consequently, jurisdiction to hear such claims is determined by the law under which the suit arises. If the rule-of-law principle creates any directly enforceable federal right, it is a right to judicial review of agency action in some circumstances. 23 The facts of this case, however, do not require further elucidation of the contours of such a right.
A. The Rise of the Accardi Doctrine
1. The Constitutional Stature of the Rule of Law
In
United States v. Lee,
the Court forcefully expounded upon the fundamental character of the rule of law, and indicated that the Due Process Clause guarantees a right of judicial review to enforce the rule of law, at least for violations of law that lead to the deprivation of life, liberty or property. 106
*49
U.S. 196, 220-21,
No man in this country is so high that he is above the law. No officer of the law may set that law at defiance with impunity. All the officers of the government from the highest to the lowest, are creatures of the law and are bound to obey it. It is the only supreme power in our system of government, and every man who by accepting office participates in its functions is only the more strongly bound to submit to that supremacy, and to observe the limitations which it imposes upon the exercise of the authority which it gives.
Id.
at 220,
The evils supposed to grow out of the possible interference of judicial action with the exercise of powers of the government essential to some of its most important operations will be seen to be small indeed compared to this evil ... [referring to the evil of allowing property to be taken by government without a judicial remedy being available].
Id.
at 221,
2. Agency Regulations Are Subject to the Rule-of-Law Principle
Forty years later, the grand principle was articulated in the agency context in
United States ex rel. Bilokumsky v. Tod,
Shortly thereafter, the seeds of the modern
Accardi
doctrine appeared in the Court’s recognition that an agency’s adjudicative decision could be set aside if it conflicted with the agency’s own legislative rules.
See Arizona Grocery Co. v. Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co.,
3. Accardi Emerges
In
Bridges v. Wixon,
Then, in
United States ex rel. Accardi v. Shaughnessy,
Having apparently clarified that judicial review was available for agencies’ violations of gratuitous rules, the Court then obscured its reasons for doing so. The Court considered the gratuitous regulations to have conferred on Accardi a procedural “right” to have the Board exercise its independent discretion in making that decision.
29
The Court
*51
cryptically concluded that even though the INS and the Attorney General retained the discretion to deny Accardi a waiver of deportation, “at least he will have been afforded that due process
required by the regulations
in such proceedings.”
Id.
at 268,
B. The High Water Mark of the Accardi Doctrine
1. Internal Personnel Regulations Are Subject to the Rule-of-Law Principle: Service and Vitarelli
In a pair of cases applying the doctrine in the employee-discharge context, the Court strengthened and broadened it, stating that
Accardi
had recognized a new source of judicial review for an agency’s violation of its gratuitous regulations.
See Service v. Dulles,
regulations validly prescribed by a government administrator are binding upon him as well as the citizen, and that this principle holds even when the administrative action under review is discretionary in nature.
Service,
While it is of course true that under the McCarran Rider the Secretary was not obligated to impose upon himself these more rigorous substantive and procedural standards, neither was he prohibited from doing so ... and having done so he could not, so long as the Regulations remained *52 unchanged, proceed without regard to them.
Id.
at 388,
Vitarelli
is nearly as recondite. Although Vitarelli had no protected interest in keeping his job, the Court nonetheless exercised review because Vitarelli’s “procedural rights under the applicable regulations were violated in at least three material respects.... ”
Vitarelli
A somewhat perplexing aspect of
Service
and
Vitarelli
is the Supreme Court’s sole reliance on
Accardi
even though the Administrative Procedure Act of 1946 (“APA”), 5 U.S.C. § 551
et seq.,
had been law for more than 10 years. The APA imposes a series of procedural requirements on government agencies and explicitly provides for judicial review of agency action that is “contrary to law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). Apparently, the complaints in both cases sought judicial review under the APA.
See United States v. Caceres,
2. Congress is Bound By Its Rules As Well
Whatever the appeal of Justice Frankfurter’s characterization of the doctrine as one of “administrative law,” the Court subsequently made clear that the
Accardi
doctrine has deeper roots and broader application because it also applies to Congress.
See Yellin v. United States,
3. The Accardi Doctrine’s Defining Features
The precedents through
Yellin
established a doctrine with a number of common features. In each case, the Court inquired into the purpose of the regulations that the agency allegedly violated, and found that the party relying on the
Accardi
doctrine was in the class of persons for whose benefit the regulations had been promulgated.
See Yellin,
The purpose for inquiring into the goal of the regulations appears to have been to support a finding that the regulation conferred a procedural “right” on the individual that had been denied by the violation.
See also Mazaleski,
C. Limitations on Accardi’s Rule-of-Law Principle
1. The Prejudice, Harmless Error, and Finality
The Court soon retreated from its “strict compliance” standard, and announced an exception by which agencies may violate those “internal” rules not intended to protect a class of persons, at least where the violation was harmless.
See American Farm Lines v. Black Ball Freight Service,
it is always within the discretion of a court or an administrative agency to relax or modify its procedural rules adopted for the orderly transaction of business before it when in a given ease the ends of justice require it. The action of either in such a case is not reviewable except upon a showing of substantial prejudice to the complaining party.
Id.
at 539,
Four years later, in
Morton v. Ruiz,
Where the rights of individuals are affected, it is incumbent upon agencies to follow their own procedures. This is so even where the internal procedures are possibly more rigorous than otherwise would be required [citing Service and Vitarelli ].
Id.
at 235,
it is essential that the legitimate expectation of these needy Indians not be extinguished by what amounts to an unpublished ad hoc determination of the agency that was not promulgated in accordance with its own procedures, to say nothing of those of the Administrative Procedure Act.
Id. at 236. 37
■ The Court in
Ruiz
again declined to specify the source of the principle that agencies must follow them rules and that procedural violations are subject to judicial review. Also in 1974, the Supreme Court reaffirmed the basic
Accardi
holding that even a gratuitous regulation has the force of law and is binding on the executive,
see United States v. Nixon,
2. Federalism Limitations on the Ac-cardi Doctrine
In the mid-1970s, the Court faced Accardi claims appended to Due Process claims brought in federal court against state agencies. The Court made clear that an Accardi claim by itself was not rooted-in the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause, meaning that a party could not seek judicial review in federal court of a state agency’s violation of its self-imposed rules — at least where no property or liberty interest had been deprived. In the Court’s words:
The federal court is not the appropriate forum in which to review the multitude of personnel decisions that are made daily by public agencies. We must accept the harsh fact that numerous individual mistakes are inevitable in the day-to-day administration of our affairs. The United States Constitution cannot feasibly be construed to require federal judicial review for every such error.....[W]e must presume that official action was regular and, if erroneous, can best be corrected in other ways. The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is not a guarantee against incorrect or ill-advised personnel decisions.
Bishop v. Wood,
As for the legal conclusion that respondent draws, both Service ..., and Accardi ..., upon which Service relied, enunciate principles of federal administrative law rather than of constitutional law binding upon the States.
However, in neither case did the Court share the reasoning leading to this conclusion.
But cf. Massachusetts Fair Share v. Law Enforcement Assistance Admin.,
3. Congress’s Control Over Judicial Review of Accardi Claims
Also in 1977, the Court appears to have held
sub silentio
that an
Accardi
claim is unreviewable where Congress has provided that an agency’s discretionary decision is not subject to judicial review, even if the executive subsequently makes rules that limit that discretion.
See Morris v. Gressette,
4. Caceres: The Doctrine Refined?
The Court refined the harmless error exception and the prejudice inquiry while leaving the source of the doctrine unmentioned in
United States v. Caceres,
[A]ny inconsistency of which respondent complains is purely one of form, with no discernible effect in this case on the action taken by the agency and its treatment of respondent.
Id.
at 752,
5. Accardi meets the APA: Whether Judicial Review of Accardi Claims for Non-Compliance with Gratuitous Procedural Regulations Is Permitted
In the Supreme Court’s last substantive mention of the doctrine, it again faced a Service-type claim such as Wilkinson’s, that is, an employee-discharge case involving an alleged failure to comply with gratuitous procedural rules.
See Webster v. Doe,
*56
In
Webster,
plaintiff had been a model employee of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), who was discharged after voluntarily revealing that he was gay. The National Security Act (NSA), largely mirroring the McCarran Rider at issue in
Service,
gave the CIA Director authority to discharge any employee whenever he “shall deem such termination necessary or advisable in the interests of the United States.”
Id.
at 600,
Because our Court of Appeals had determined that the CIA’s regulations did not bind the Director’s discretion, the Supreme Court did not decide whether the APA forecloses review where an agency retains the substantive discretion to discharge an employee for any reason but is subject to self-imposed procedures before exercising that discretion. The CIA conceded before the Court that if it had violated its gratuitous regulations, judicial review would have been available
under the APA
as a violation of the NSA.
See Webster,
As Justice Scalia’s dissent demonstrates, the majority’s reasoning leads to the conclusion that under the APA Congress can make an agency decision unreviewable because there is “no law to apply,” but the agency can gratuitously supply “law” that limits discretion sufficient to trigger judicial review under 5 U.S.C. § 701(a)(2).
Accord Center for Auto Safety v. Dole,
V.
Although LSC is to be treated as a private corporation for most purposes, the Court has determined above that LSC is a public agency bound by the Constitution. Whether Wilkinson can sue LSC under the Accardi doctrine turns on whether the principle is at least in some respects constitutional. The survey of precedent above reveals divided dicta on the source of the Accardi doctrine. 42 This division reflects a *57 tension between a general recognition of primacy of the rule of law and a concern that if the Accardi doctrine is recognized as a constitutional principle, it will lead to unrestrained judicial review of both federal and state agency decisionmaking. When synthesized, however, the precedents yield a more nuanced statement of the Accardi doctrine that adequately mediates this tension.
A. Constitutional Roots of the Accardi Doctrine
The federal Constitution embraces and embodies the cardinal principle that this is a nation subject to the rule of law, and as such, agents of the government are bound to follow the law.
United States v. Lee,
Holding the requirement that government actors be bound by the law to be anything less than constitutional would be unsustainable. For, were the rule of law simply a subconstitutional rule of convenience, it would be within the power of Congress to enact a statute freeing those who administer the law from any obligation to adhere to it. Although the constitutional guarantee of equal protection might mitigate the worst abuses that could occur under such a regime, the notion that Congress could authorize a state of affairs by which we all were bound by law while government officials remained free to exercise their authority arbitrarily and capriciously violates the essence of due process and runs contrary to centuries of Anglo-American jurisprudence. 44
Although the Due Process Clause would appear to be the natural home for the rule-of-law principle, locating the principle there *58 is not without its difficulties. Given the doctrinal thicket that has grown up around the Clause’s guarantee of fundamental fairness, it becomes necessary to characterize the rule of law as a requirement of either procedural or substantive due process. Either characterization is possible, but a substantive due process explanation is the more persuasive.
1. Procedural Due Process
As a matter of procedural due process, a “property” or “liberty” interest must be implicated to trigger the Clause’s protection. Some cases suggest that an agency’s gratuitous regulations confer such a right on the regulated community.
See Vitarelli,
A second source of potential procedural due process review would be the “right, possessed by every citizen, to require that the government be administered according to law ...”
See Fairchild v. Hughes,
2. Substantive Due Process
Substantive due process then is the source of the constitutional rule-of-law principle. Although the Supreme Court is reluctant to extend substantive due process,
see, e.g., Collins v. Harker Heights,
Moreover, recognizing that the Due Process Clause requires government to be bound by law does not lead to unchecked judicial interference in the administration of the law.
See Berger, Do Regulations Really Bind Regulators?,
62 Nw.U.L.Rev. at 149-52. Some decisions and commentators have assumed that if the
Accardi
doctrine is a Due Process requirement, then every violation of an agency’s regulations is an actionable constitutional violation.
46
That assumption is unwarranted; it produces an upside-down result by which an agency’s violation of its own gratuitous rules would violate a constitutional norm, whereas an agency’s violation of a statute would violate a lesser, statutory norm.
See Webster,
Rather, the rule-of-law requirement implicit in the notion of due process, although added to the Constitution in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, reflects a founding assumption or first principle. Our nation would have no need for a Constitution to secure individual liberty if the Government were free to disregard its mandates. It is because governmental actors are bound by the law that the Constitution serves to limit the power of government. It is because public officials are bound by law that individuals may seek review and relief in the courts. The founding principle that public officials must obey the law is a necessary antecedent for a claim against such an official for violation of law. 47 But this general principle only lays the groundwork for the enforcement of the more specific laws that prescribe rules of conduct.
Procedurally, when judicial review is sought to remedy a government official’s violation of a rule of conduct, the claim does not arise under the general constitutional principle of the rule of law; rather, the claim arises under the specific legal provision alleged to have been violated. For this reason the
Caceres
Court could both recognize that agencies are bound by their own rules and still have no constitutional concerns about the IRS’s conceded violation of its gratuitous procedural rules — the violation arose under the regulations, not the Constitution.
See Caceres,
This understanding of the constitutional position of the
Accardi
doctrine narrows the gap between the
Horowitz dictum
and the
Caceres
dissent. I agree with Justice Marshall’s assertion that the rule-of-law aspect of the
Accardi
doctrine can be explained only as a reflection of Due Process jurisprudence.
See Caceres,
*60
Thus, the
Accardi
doctrine is a constitutional hybrid. Its requirement that agencies follow their own rules reflects a founding, constitutional principle that the Government is bound by law. But the Constitution does not immediately authorize judicial review by a federal court every time a state actor violates the law.
Cf. Columbia Broadcasting Sys. v. United States,
In this case, Wilkinson has alleged that his Accardi claim arises under the laws of the United States. See 28 U.S.C. § 1331. 49 Because an Accardi claim arises under the specific law alleged to have been violated, it is not enough for Wilkinson to say that LSC is a public agency for constitutional purposes and that the Accardi doctrine reflects a constitutional requirement that public agencies abide by law. For this Court to have federal question jurisdiction over his Accardi claim, LSC’s personnel regulations must also be federal laws. If LSC’s “private” status means that its self-imposed rules are not “law,” the Accardi doctrine does not apply, and Wilkinson’s claim fails as a matter of law.
B. The “Law” To Which Agencies Are Bound
While it can hardly be gainsaid that public officials must obey the law, in the administra-five context, a more nuanced question arises as to what constitutes “law” binding on the agencies. 50 The question is not posed in its broadest, jurisprudential sense. 51 Rather the question is to what sources must a court look to determine whether a government actor is prohibited from taking the action (or inaction) alleged to have been wrongfully done (or not done).
Form should be respected. Laws enacted through formal processes clearly are binding. Thus the Constitution, statutes, and “legislative rules” that have been promulgated after public notice and comment are binding:
Simply stated, rules are rules, and fidelity to the rules which have been properly promulgated, consistent with applicable statutory requirements, is required of those to whom Congress has entrusted the regulatory missions of modern life.
Reuters,
But determination of the “law” that binds agencies under the
Accardi
doctrine goes beyond form and looks to substance.
Ruiz
teaches that even internal, unpublished rules can be binding, at least on the agency.
See Ruiz,
In sum, the following syllogism emerges: The Due Process Clause establishes that public officials are bound to follow the law. Agency regulations intended to be binding are law — or, if qualification need be made, have the force and effect of law as applied to the agency. Therefore, the Due Process Clause requires that agency officials follow their own rules, even those promulgated gratuitously.
See Service,
C. Accardi As a Source of Judicial Review
But, the precedent demonstrates that the
Accardi
doctrine does more than bind public officials to “law.” The doctrine also served as the Supreme Court’s basis for judicial review to enforce an agency’s obligations under its own “laws.”
See, e.g., Vitarelli
In the context of the current inquiry, in which the Court must determine if the Legal Services Corporation can be sued for violating its own rules, even assuming LSC’s personnel regulations are “laws,” it may also be necessary to determine that the Constitution provides that some judicial review be available for Wilkinson to state an Accardi claim *62 against LSC. 54 If Congress intended to immunize LSC from judicial review of its violations of self-imposed rules, this Court would be required to respect that determination unless the Constitution overrode it.
As to the question of whether LSC’s personnel regulations are “laws” under the
Ac-cardi
doctrine, our Court of Appeals has previously determined that Congress gave LSC general rulemaking authority.
See Texas Rural Legal Aid, Inc. v. Legal Services Corp.,
As to judicial review, the LSC Act does not contain an express review provision. Nonetheless, the LSC Act impliedly provides for judicial review when LSC exercises its rulemaking authority vis-a-vis its grantees.
Texas Rural Legal Aid, Inc.,
VI.
After having related the lengthy tale of the Accardi doctrine’s development, and interpreting the doctrine to conclude that Wilkinson was not precluded as a matter of law from seeking review under the doctrine, the Court returns to Wilkinson’s Accardi claim for a brief coda.
A. Rules for Application of the Accardi Doctrine
The
Accardi
doctrine’s rule-of-law principle is unyielding, but its application is not.
58
In other words, adherence to the rule of law requires courts to declare an agency’s violation of law, even a binding, though gratuitous, procedural regulation, to be just that— a violation of law.
Cf. Korematsu v. United States,
Courts are not to require agencies to cross every “t” and dot every “i” without regard to the costs, difficulties, and proportionality of ordering such remedies. Rather, the
Accardi
doctrine establishes that the rule of law is to be reasonably enforced.
Caceres
and
American Farm Lines
stand for the proposition that when a procedural violation is deemed immaterial or harmless, a court will not require an agency to engage in the empty exercise of repeating a procedure according to rules where the result of the procedure is foreordained.
Cf. Lyng,
476 U.S. at
941-42,
The
Accardi
doctrine also has some additional flex. Although courts consider a range of sources that may create law binding on an agency, there is no presumption that every general guideline is a binding rule. Due regard must be given to an agency’s legitimate interest in setting forth general goals and procedures without having a court “transmogrify those guidelines into binding norms.”
Community Nutrition Institute v. Young,
Even when a lawmaking body has created binding law, its interpretation of that law will receive substantial deference from the courts.
See, e.g., Lyng v. Payne,
B. The Provisions of LSC’s Personnel Manual Are Not Binding Rules
Applying these rules to this case, it is clear that an agency’s personnel handbook can be the source of binding rules where the agency treats them as such.
See Frizelle,
Finally, even if Wilkinson had been entitled to receive the performance evaluations and an opportunity to participate in a performance improvement plan, the failure to afford him those procedures was harmless. Even within the narrow scope of the harmless error rule, it is evident on these facts that Wilkinson would not have had his contract renewed in any ease. At a fundamental level, his view of his responsibilities under the IG Act conflicted with the Board’s. Performance evaluations would have been immaterial to the resolution of that conflict, and that conflict was the Board’s primary reason in choosing not to renew Wilkinson’s contract.
See Simard v. Board of Educ. of Groton,
VII.
Two additional issues deserve mention. First, because Wilkinson did not prevail on his
Accardi
claim, this Court has not had to reach the question of what his remedy would
*65
have been had he prevailed. Specifically, while reinstatement is an equitable remedy available in
Accardi
cases,
see Vitarelli,
Second, the coexistence of the
Accardi
doctrine and the Administrative Procedure Act as two independent sources of judicial review has been for the most part benign. For example, with respect to the question of what “law” binds agencies, our Court of Appeals had developed one line of cases under the
Accardi
doctrine, and another under the APA concerning whether the court could or must require agencies to abide by their interpretive rules or policy statements. In
Vietnam Veterans,
Judge Williams, writing for the court, reconciled these by holding that under either theory, enforceable rules are those to which the agency intends to be bound.
See Vietnam Veterans,
The one area of potential conflict arises in a case such as this, where the party seeking judicial review concedes that the agency was free to make its decision for any reason but was bound to follow certain procedures before making its decision. The
Accardi
cases have found that exercise of review is appropriate because the procedural rules are law that agencies are bound to obey.
E.g., Vitarelli,
However, a competing view is that under the APA, where the enabling statute imposes no substantive limits on an agency’s discretion, judicial review is not available because that decision has been committed to agency discretion by law even if the agency subsequently imposes procedural rules on itself.
E.g. Webster,
The analysis above suggests two potential results that could flow from adoption of the latter view of the APA, 5 U.S.C. § 701(a)(2). If the APA and the Accardi doctrine were to remain co-equal sources of judicial review, and the APA had been deemed to deny review of an agency’s procedural non-compliance where the Accardi doctrine had not, the potential for “doctrine shopping” arises. Or, if the interpretation of the APA restricting judicial review prevails, and is considered to trump the availability of review under the Accardi doctrine, judicial review of procedural non-compliance claims would be precluded in cases involving agencies subject to the APA but would remain available against government actors not subject to the APA, such as Congress and LSC.
VIII.
This case arose out of the Legal Services Corporation’s decision not to extend the employment contract of its first Inspector General for an additional year. Because of the unique position that congressionally-created “private” corporations such as LSC hold, this otherwise standard-fare employment dispute has generated a series of novel issues. Resolving two of these, the Court has concluded that the nature and structure of LSC render it a public employer for purposes of the Due Process Clause. Further, because the Due Process Clause requires the Government to abide by its own laws, because Congress delegated general rulemaking authority to LSC, and has not limited judicial review for Accardi claims, this Court has jurisdiction to consider whether LSC complied with its own rules. On the facts of this case, Wilkinson received all the process he was due, and LSC did not intend for its employee evaluation procedures in its personnel manual to be binding regulations. Accordingly, it .is hereby
ORDERED that Judgment on Count III of the Second Amended Complaint shall enter in favor of defendant Legal Services Corporation and against plaintiff David L. Wilkinson; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs Exhibit 29 is admitted into evidence.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
.
See generally Wilkinson v. Legal Services Corp.,
.
E.g., Sisco v.
GSA
National Capital Federal Credit Union,
. The
Accardi
doctrine holds that government agencies are bound to follow their own rules, even self-imposed procedural rules that limit otherwise discretionary decisions.
See United States ex rel. Accardi v. Shaughnessy,
.Wilkinson's Due Process and
Accardi
arguments are made in the alternative because a 1978 and a 1990 version of the LSC personnel manual
*35
exist. Wilkinson’s first argument is that the 1978 Manual applies, and, under that manual, LSC could only discharge him for cause. Wilkinson did not explicitly style this as a Due Process claim, but numerous cases treat a public employee who cannot he fired except for cause as possessing a property right in continued employment that cannot be taken away without due process.
E.g., Gilbert v. Homar,
In the alternative, Wilkinson argues that under the 1990 Manual, even if LSC could have discharged him for any reason, it failed to conduct the periodic job performance evaluations it was required to do. For this claim, Wilkinson relies on the Accardi doctrine, claiming that the job evaluation procedures were binding regulations that LSC disregarded.
. Of course, a discharged employee could bring a "private law” claim, breach of contract, against such a corporation according to the standards set forth in the cases cited above in n. 2.
. In
Wilkinson I,
this Court held that for constitutional purposes, Board members were officers of the United States, but for statutory purposes they were not.
See Wilkinson I,
. See Inspector General Act Amendments of 1988, Pub.L. No. 100-504, § 104(a), codified at 5 U.S.C.App. 3 § 8G(a)(2) (making LSC a "designated federal entity” required to have an IG). In a codification snafu, two § 8G’s were enacted for some time. That error has been corrected. See Pub.L. No. 104-208, Div. A, Tit. I, § 101(f), 110 Stat. 3009-379 (Sept. 30, 1996).
.See, e.g. 5 U.S.C.App. 3 § 3(a); H.R.Rep. 100-1020, 100th Cong., 2d Sess., reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3179, 3179 (Sept. 30, 1988) (noting that Pub.L. No. 100-504 requires President to *37 appoint IG for five agencies including the Departments of Justice and Treasury).
. Responsibility for designating a "head” of LSC was delegated to the Office of Management and Budget ("OMB”). Initially OMB designated the LSC President as its "head” for purposes of the IG Act. See 54 Fed.Reg. 47158-59 (Nov. 9, 1989). In August 1990, OMB redesignated the LSC Board as the agency’s "head” for purposes of the IG Act. Slip. ¶ 9; 55 Fed.Reg. 34101-02 (Aug. 21, 1990).
. For unrelated reasons, the Board replaced Wear with David H. Martin ("Martin”), who took office on October 1, 1990.
. As it later turned out, Martin may well have had personal motivations for seeking Wilkinson’s departure. See PI.’s Ex. 23 (Tr. of July 8, 1991 Exec. Sess.) at 24-33. But, although the Board was aware at the time that Wilkinson had focused some investigative effort on Martin, its February 22, 1991 decision was independent of, and unaffected hy, Martin’s personal motivations.
. Following remand, the parties filed cross motions for summary judgment on Count III. In a Memorandum Opinion and Order filed October 14, 1997, this Court granted LSC's motion in part and denied it in part and denied Wilkinson’s motion altogether. The Court ordered supplemental briefing on the question of whether the Accardi doctrine applies to LSC and held a two-day bench trial to resolve outstanding factual disputes in the event that it does.
. The agreement contemplated that the LSC President would function as the "head" of LSC for purposes of conforming the employment contract to the IG Act. After August 21, 1990, when OMB designated the LSC Board as the "head” of LSC, the parties in practice substituted the LSC Board for the President in terms of meeting their respective contractual obligations. See Stip. ¶ 10; Def.’s Ex. 8 (Draft Memorandum of Understanding between Wilkinson and Dickerson) at I-3.
. Wilkinson submitted deposition testimony from Ms. Dickerson’s predecessor, Robert Fuller, taken in a previous action filed in this District by former LSC employees alleging wrongful termination. See Pl.’s Ex. 6 (Dep. of Robert Fuller, Jan. 30, 1985, in Newman v. Legal Services Corp., Civ. No. 84-3345). Fuller testified in January 1985 that the 1978 Manual had not been revised. See id. at 25. But the Court credits Alice Dickerson's testimony and finds that numerous revisions had been made to LSC's personnel manual without the knowledge or approval of the LSC Board. It may be that the testimony of the two is consistent if Fuller understood “revision” to mean substitution of pages in the manual; Ms. Dickerson testified that revisions were made by separate memoranda issued by the Office of Human Resources rather than by issuing substitute pages for the 1978 Manual. See Tr. at 167-68.
. The 1990 Manual provides that:
The Office of Human Resources/Equal Opportunity must be notified of any intention to terminate an employee by the Office Director prior to the effective date of the termination.
All requests for immediate terminations must be cleared with the Office of Human Resources/Equal Opportunity prior to dismissal.
PL's Ex. 14 at 11.
. See Def.’s Ex. 8 (Draft MOU) at 1-1 (“The OIG agrees to be subject to the provisions in the LSC Personnel Manual (March 1990) noted below, notwithstanding that they have not been enacted as laws or promulgated as regulations.”).
.
Lebrón
involved a First Amendment challenge to Amtrak’s decision to prevent a politically provocative advertisement from being displayed at Pennsylvania Station in New York City. The Court considered the history of government corporations, and mentioned the disclaimer of governmental identity in the LSC Act in connection with its discussion of the nearly identically-worded section of Amtrak’s organic statute, the Rail Passenger Service Act of 1970, codified at 45 U.S.C. § 541.
See Lebron,
. A second line of analysis considers whether an employee has a "liberty" interest that is affected by a termination decision if such decision will "seriously harm his standing in the commu
*46
nity or foreclose his future opportunities for reemployment.”
Mazaleski,
.
See, e.g. Mazaleski,
Potentially, this would end the analysis. The Act directs that officers "shall" serve at the pleasure of the Board. Congress may have meant that officers must be employed at will and that LSC was not delegated the authority to create limitations on its dismissal power such that its employees would enjoy a property interest in their jobs.
Cf. Sims v. Fox,
Nonetheless, Congress has frequently employed language granting an agency full discretion to discharge its employees, and such language is routinely interpreted to mean that the agency has been given the flexibility to remain an employer at will or to create additional job security for its employees as it sees fit.
See, e.g., Service
v.
Dulles,
. Wilkinson did not formally invoke the Due Process Clause to support this claim, however, liberally construed, his argument that he could only have been terminated for cause translates into an argument that he had a property interest in continued employment of which he was unlawfully deprived. Wilkinson’s counsel was not fully committed to this argument because on summary judgment, and elsewhere at trial, see Tr. at 25, he appeared to have conceded that LSC could have chosen not to renew Wilkinson's contract for any reason or no reason at all, but that it had nevertheless obligated itself to go through the motions of evaluating his job performance.
. See Pl.’s Ex. 29 (Apr. 23, 1993 Mem. from LSC Gen. Counsel to LSC Board) at 4-5 ("some LSC employees may be in a position to argue that the terms of the 1978 manual at least raise factual questions as to whether their LSC employment is at-will.”). LSC sought to exclude this exhibit from evidence, but its relevance argument goes to weight rather than admissibility. The parties briefed the issue, and the Court has decided to admit Exhibit 29 into evidence.
. Accord. Joshua I. Schwartz, The Irresistible Force Meets The Immovable Object: Estoppel Remedies For An Agency's Violations Of Its Own Regulations Or Other Misconduct, 44 Admin.L.Rev. 653, 671 (1992) (the Supreme Court’s opinions are "remarkably unhelpful in identifying the doctrinal basis” for the rule); Rodney A. Smolla, The Erosion Of The Principle That The Government Must Follow Self-Imposed Rules, 52 Fordham L.Rev. 472, 476 (1984) ("[T]here is no clear explication of the source of law from which the doctrine is derived.”).
. For example, if a State were to enact a provision permitting its agents to disregard state law or a provision foreclosing judicial review in the state courts of state agencies' violations of their own rules, potentially a federal court would be available to review such legislation under the Accardi doctrine. But so long as a state court is available to review state agencies' violations of self-imposed rules, the constitutional element of the Accardi doctrine is satisfied.
. In
Lee,
the former owners of the land comprising Arlington National Cemetery sued agents of the United States in Virginia state court seeking to eject the United States from the land.
. The Court’s assumption rested on the holdings of three circuits that failure to comply with the Secretary’s procedural rules had rendered deportation hearings unfair.
See Sibray v. United States,
.Signaling the emergence of the modem administrative state, the
Arizona Grocery
majority recognized the Interstate Commerce Commission’s (ICC) power to act in both a quasi-legislative and quasi-judicial capacity, but announced the principle that when acting in its judicial capacity, the agency was bound by its legislative rules. Initially the ICC only had the power to act judicially by declaring certain rates charged by interstate carriers to be unreasonable.
Id.
at 385,
. In
Bridges,
the petitioner, a prominent labor organizer alleged to have been unlawfully affiliated with the Communist Party, sought a writ of habeas corpus on the grounds that the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) had violated its procedural rules by relying on prehearing, unsworn statements as substantive evidence supporting deportability. Before the Court, the Government conceded the procedural violation but asserted that the issue had not been preserved for appeal.
Bridges,
. A "gratuitous" regulation is a self-imposed binding substantive or procedural rule that limits an agency's discretion, one that was not required by any constitutional or statutory provision.
.It may be that because Accardi’s liberty was ultimately at stake, the procedural "right” was itself a liberty or property interest unlawfully denied him.
But see Olim v. Wakinekona,
. In
Service,
a Foreign Service Officer who had served in China for ten years, was discharged by the Department of State for alleged disloyalty.
Service,
. In
Service,
Congress had abrogated any protected interest that Foreign Service Officers may have had in the so-called McCarran Rider, which provided that "[n]otwithstanding the provision of ... any other law, the Secretary of State may, in his absolute discretion, ... terminate the employment of any [Foreign Service Officer] whenever he shall deem such termination necessary or advisable in the interests of the United States.”
Service,
In
Vitarelli,
by both statute and regulation, the Secretary of Interior had unfettered discretion to summarily dismiss Vitarelli without any statement of reasons.
Vitarelli,
.In
Service,
the Secretary of State had limited his "absolute discretion” under the McCarran Rider by requiring that the Department follow certain procedures before discharging a Foreign Service Officer under its authority.
Service,
Anticipating an issue that would arise again, the Court in
Service
rejected the holdings in this District Court and our Court of Appeals that the Secretary lacked the authority to impose binding rules that would limit the discretion delegated by Congress in the McCarran Rider.
Service,
. By resting its holding on the procedural viola-lion, the Court explicitly avoided the question of whether an employment-discharge hearing based on submissions from unidentified "confidential informants" violated the Constitution.
Vitarelli,
.In
American Farm Lines,
the ICC had statutory authority to grant temporary operating authority to motor carriers to satisfy an immediate and urgent need for transportation service. The ICC promulgated regulations required that an applicant for such authority support its application with statements from its customers demonstrating that currently authorized carriers could not meet their needs. The ICC had granted American Farm Lines temporary authority on the basis of a statement from its customer, the Department of Defense, that did not demonstrate need in conformity with the regulations. The ICC argued that it had substantially complied with its rules, but neither the majority nor the dissent accepted this view.
See American Farm Lines,
. For this proposition, the Court relied in part on
McKenna v. Seaton,
. Ruiz was an Indian denied general assistance benefits by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) on the ground that he-did not live "on” a reserva
*54
tion, as was required by the agency’s unpublished, internal operations manual. In a lengthy exposition, the Court first established that Ruiz was statutorily entitled to receive benefits.
Ruiz,
. Again, the Court did not rely on the APA as the authority for its review or as authority for its holding. The Court was clearly cognizant that it could have grounded its holding on the APA,
see id.
at 235,
. In Horowitz, a medical student who had been dismissed from school alleged that she had been deprived of a liberty interest without due process and that the university had failed to follow its own evaluation procedures. In the footnote quoted above, the Court rejected the notion that the procedural non-compliance claim made out an independent constitutional violation.
. In dicta,, the Court suggested that its
Accardi
doctrine cases reflect the application of the APA.
See Caceres,
. The Casey majority's reasoning embraced this minimal procedural review as well. Because no issue was raised about the Director's procedure for invoking a national security reason for the discharge, the Supreme Court did not comment on the limited procedural review that Judge Buckley considered available.
. In its most recent comment, the Court has again simply characterized the
Accardi
doctrine as a "familiar rule of administrative law.”
See Fort Stewart Schools
v.
Federal Labor Relations Authority,
.Compare, e.g., Caceres,
.
See
U.S. Const, art. II, § 3. On the theory of a unitary executive,
see generally
Steven G. Cala-bresi and Kevin H. Rhodes,
The Structural Constitution: Unitary Executive, Plural Judiciary,
105 Harv.L.Rev. 1153 (1992), administrative agencies remain under presidential control and are therefore subject to the President’s responsibilities under the Take Care Clause. Given the expansive powers delegated by Congress to the agencies, the term "faithfully execute” would encompass an agency’s obligation to conform even its informal, adjudicative decisions to the rules it had promulgated.
See Arizona Grocery,
An Article II explanation for the obligation of agencies to follow their own rules has certain appealing features. It would, for example, moot the Horowitz Court’s implicit concern that rooting the Accardi doctrine in the Due Process Clause would lead ipso facto to federal court review of procedural violations by state agencies. Ultimately, though, this approach is unpersuasive because it could give rise to the negative inference that while the executive branch is bound by the law, Congress and the courts are not. Further, an Article II explanation for the Accardi doctrine also would leave the Yellin Court’s application of the doctrine to Congress unmoored.
.
See United States v. Nixon,
.
Mazaleski
appears to be internally inconsistent on this point. Having recognized that due process protection extends only to "property” or "liberty” interests,
.
See Horowitz,
. This "first principle” approach also explains what some commentators may have meant when referring due process in its "primal sense.” See Rodney A. Smolla, The Erosion of the Principle that the Government Must Follow Self-Imposed Rules, 52 Fordham L.Rev. 472, 496-97 & n. 155 (1984); Berger, Do Regulations Really Bind Regulators?, 62 Nw.U.L.Rev. at 149-50.
.The jurisdiction of the federal courts is limited, in part, to those cases or controversies that "arise under” federal law.
See
U.S. Const, art. Ill, § 2, cl. 1; 28 U.S.C. § 1331. Plaintiffs
Accardi
claim in
Horowitz,
absent the deprivation of a property or liberty interest, would not have involved a federal question because it would have “arisen under” the state university’s regulation.
Accord Bates v. Sponberg,
. In his complaint, Wilkinson also alleged diversity jurisdiction, which he could have invoked had he proceeded on a breach of contract theory.
.
See Lyng v. Payne,
. E.g., H.L.A. Hart, The Concept of Law 1 (1961) (“Few questions concerning human society have been asked with such persistence and answered by serious thinkers in so many diverse, strange, and even paradoxical ways as the question 'What is law?’ ”).
.
See, e.g., Frizelle v. Slater,
.
See Webster,
As to subconstitutional claims, although there is a strong presumption that courts can review agencies' compliance with subconstitutional norms, Congress apparently can constitutionally preclude such review.
See Transactive Corp. v. United States,
But the
Accardi
precedent suggests that there may be a narrow class of cases for which the Due Process Clause mandates that judicial review be available for an agency’s violation of its own rules. These would be where an agency has bound its discretion by promulgating procedural rules to protect the interests of a class of individuals, and the agency violates those rules such that a member of that class suffers substantial prejudice caused by the violation and no alternative remedy is available.
See Caceres,
. As the analysis above demonstrates, Wilkinson’s Accardi claim is not in and of itself a constitutional claim; it arises under LSC's alleged regulations. If the Constitution does not require that some review be available for an agency’s violation of its own regulations, then the effect of the LSC Act may well be to insulate LSC from Wilkinson’s Accardi claim.
. By requiring that a clearer restriction on LSC’s lawmaking power be expressed, the Court avoids the question of whether, under the Accar-di doctrine and the Lebrón analysis, the Court could find that a government-created, private corporation’s rules are federal law and exercise judicial review of alleged violations of that law, notwithstanding a congressional statement that the entity should be treated as a private corporation.
.
E.g., National Senior Citizens Law Ctr. v. Legal Services Corp.,
.See Legal Services Corp. of Prince George’s County v. Ehrlich,
. To the extent that unfortunate phrasing in
American Farm Lines
suggests that agencies are free to "relax” or "modify” binding, internal, "housekeeping” rules at any time,
see American Farm Lines,
The
Caceres
Court expressed an agnostic view on this point. On the one hand, agencies are not free to violate their own rules,
Caceres,
. Counterfactual analysis occurs when the court or a jury must inquire as to what might have been, counter to the facts as established in the record. See generally Robert N. Strassfeld, If ... Counterfactuals in the Law, 60 Geo.Wash.L.Rev. 339 (1992).
.
E.g., Vietnam Veterans,
. But in certain other respects, open questions remain as to whether
Accardi
cases and APA cases converge. For example, as Judge June L. Green has recently made plain, a court can rely on the APA to exercise review of an agency’s alleged violation of its own personnel rules.
Evans v. Perry,
. Because this is considered an open question, the Supreme Court has implicitly limited
Morris v. Gressette,
