Lead Opinion
Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge GINSBURG.
Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge TAMM.
This аction charges the Internal Revenue Service with failure to fulfill its obligation to confine tax exemption under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to private schools that operate on a racially nondiscriminatory basis.
In this appeal plaintiffs’ standing to sue is the dominant issue. In addition to concluding that plaintiffs lacked standing, the district court also determined that deference to the Internal Revenue Service and to Congress portended against judicial review. We conclude that the district court erred in dismissing the case on the grounds asserted; we therefore remand for further proceedings.
I. THE GREEN AND WRIGHT CASE HISTORIES
In 1969, when the Green litigation commenced, the IRS accorded tax-exempt status to racially discriminatory private schools so long as the schools were not receiving state aid. See Green v. Kennedy,
We take note of defendants’ contention that plaintiffs have no standing to bring this action in their capacity as taxpayers. We need not consider that issue at this juncture. This case is properly maintained as a class action, pursuant to Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, by Negro school children in Mississippi and the parents of those children on behalf of themselves and all persons similarly situated. They have standing to attack the constitutionality of statutory provisions which they claim provides [sic ] an unconstitutional system of benefits and matching grants that fosters and supports a system of segregated private schools as an alternative available to white students seeking to avoid desegregated public schools.
Id. at 1132.
Prior to further disposition by the court, the Service changed its position. It announced that racially discriminatory private schools are not entitled to tax exemption.
In June 1971, the court decided Green on the merits; granting plaintiffs both declaratory relief and a permanent injunction, the court held that “the Code requires the denial and elimination of Federal tax exemptions for racially discriminatory рrivate schools and of Federal income tax deductions for contributions to such schools.” Green v. Connally,
Clearly the Federal Government could not under the Constitution give direct financial aid to schools practicing racial discrimination. But tax exemptions and deductions certainly constitute a Federal Government benefit and support. While that support is indirect, and is in the nature of a matching grant rather than an unconditional grant, it would be difficult indeed to establish that such support can be provided consistently with the Constitution.
The injunction ordered in Green in June 1971 barred the Service from granting tax exemption to any private school in Mississippi unless the school adopted a racially nondiscriminatory policy as to students and gave meaningful notice to the community concerning that policy. Further, the injunction required schools seeking exemption to supply the Service with information as to (1) the racial composition of students, faculty, staff, and applicants for admission; (2) recipients of scholarship and .loan funds; and (3) the school’s organizers, board members, and donors of land and buildings.
To obviate any possible confusion the court is not to be misunderstood as laying down a special rule for schools located in Mississippi. The underlying principle is broader, and is applicable to schools outside Mississippi with the same or similar badge of doubt. Our decree is limited to schools in Mississippi because this is an action in behalf of black children and parents in Mississippi ....
Id. at 1174.
After the Supreme Court summarily affirmed the three-judge district court decision in Green v. Connally,
On July 23, 1976, the Green plaintiffs reopened that case, asserting that the Service was not complying with the court’s continuing injunction against tax exemption for racially discriminatory private schools in Mississippi. In particular, the plaintiffs sought to compel the Service to withdraw tax-exempt status from, and refuse to grant .it to,
all Mississippi private schools or the organizations which operate them, which:
(1) have been determined in adversary judicial or administrative proceedings to be racially discriminatory; or
(2) which have insubstantial minority enrollments, which are located in or serve desegregating public school districts, and which either (i) were established or expanded at or about the time the public school districts in which they are located or which they serve were desegregating, or (ii) cannot demonstrate that they do not provide racially segregated educational opportunities for white children avoiding attendance in desegregating public school systems.10
One week later, this action commenced. Inez Wright, the mother of four black children attending public schools in Memphis, Tennessee, and a number of other similarly situated parents in eight states across the country filed a complaint in the district court, individually, on behalf of their minor children, and as representatives of a class, seeking relief on a nationwide basis similar to that sought with respect to Mississippi in the reopened Green case. Complaint at 3-4, J.A. 11-12. In April 1977, on motion of plaintiffs in both cases, the court consolidated the Green and Wright actions “inasmuch as [they] involve common questions of law and fact.” J.A. 49. This action then became known as the “Wright component” of the consolidated proceedings. In May 1977, W. Wayne Allen, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Briarcrest School System in Memphis, was granted leave to intervene in Wright. Intervenor Allen pointed out that Briarcrest was one of the private schools specifically mentioned in the Wright complaint as a “segregated academy.” He participated in Wright as a parent who has chosen to send his children to Briarcrest and as a contributor to that private school system who deducts the contributions on his federal income tax returns. J.A. 41-44; Brief for Intervenor-Appellee at 5-6.
Prompted by the Green and Wright lawsuits, the Service reviewed its procedures and concluded that more specific guidelines were needed to determine whether the “actual practice” of certain schools “conformed to their asserted policies.”
Effective October 1, 1979, further IRS action was stayed by Congress through amendments to the Treasury Appropriations Act of 1980.
Thereafter, on November 26, 1979, the district judge dismissed this action, the Wright component of the consolidated proceedings, stating three grounds, each sufficient in his judgment to warrant the dismissal: first, the Wright plaintiffs lacked standing; second, the action was barred by “the doctrine of nonreviewability”; third, granting the relief requested by the Wright plaintiffs would thwart the express will of Congress, manifest in the Ashbrook and Dornan amendments. Wright v. Miller,
The district judge did not supplement his order in Green with an opinion reconciling that decree with his dismissal of the Wright complaint. Both sets of plaintiffs sought review of the same agency action (or inaction). The will of Congress, we believe, does not separate Mississippi from the rest of the nation. An objection to standing, raised when Green was reopened, was denied without opinion.
A. The District Court's' Position
The district court determined that standing in this case depended on satisfaction of four''criteria and that plaintiffs satisfied none of them. First, the court said, plaintiffs asserted no “distinct, palpable, and concrete injury.”
If plaintiffs can prove that a private school is discriminating in direct contravention of the Constitution and federal law, such discrimination is redressable through an ordinary lawsuit in an adversary context filed directly against the offending school. If, on the other hand, plaintiffs cannot prove such discrimination, they have failed to assert a distinct, palpable, and concrete injury and thus lack the requisite standing to assert their claims.
Id. at 794. Plaintiffs urge that this analysis fits a complaint they did not bring. They maintain they have no interest whatever in enrolling their children in a private school. They assail only government action. The sole injury they claim is the denigration they suffer as black parents and schoolchildren when their government graces with tax-exempt status educational institutions in their communities that treat members of their race as persons of lesser worth. Plaintiffs point out that the district court cited, but did not purport to distinguish, Supreme Court decisions recognizing the standing of black citizens, parents, and schoolchildren to challenge government action on that basis: Coit v. Green,
Second, assuming the injury plaintiffs complained of was inflicted by private schools that practiced race discrimination, the court concluded that such an injury was not “fairly traceable” to IRS action. For this conclusion, the court relied dominantly on Simon v. Eastern Kentucky Welfare Rights Organization,
Third, the district court stated that it was “purely speculative” whether the relief requested would redress plaintiffs’ injury.
Concerning the likelihood that invigorated IRS procedures would yield fewer tax exemptions, plaintiffs point out that the district court’s dismissal of the case at the threshold precluded any evidentiary submission. They further note that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue had told Congress that existing procedures were “ineffective in identifying schools which in actual operation discriminate against minority students.” Hearings, supra note 1, at 5. Finally, they suggest thаt the court’s action in Green contradicts its conclusion in Wright about the “speculativeness” of the relief requested. If tighter IRS procedures are not likely to yield fewer tax exemp
As a final point, the district court expressed the view that no genuine article III case or controversy existed because the defendant IRS “seems to have nothing to lose if it were forced to grant less tax exemptions to private schools.”
On this point too, Green stands in jarring contrast. The posture of the IRS is not different in the two cases. While intervenors originally participated in Green and indeed pursued that case in the Supreme Court, no intervenor appears to have participated actively in the reopened Green proceeding as intervenor Allen did in Wright. Nevertheless, the district court treated Green as a genuine case or controversy and, as we recounted earlier, required the Service to tighten its procedures in dealing with Mississippi schools.
B. Divergent Supreme Court Precedent: Eastern Kentucky on the one hand; Green, Norwood, and Gilmore on the other
The law of standing has been described as “extraordinarily uneven.”
In this opinion, we do not search for a grand solution that will unclutter this area of the law and lead to secure, evenhanded adjudication. Instead, as an intermediate court of review, we select from two divergent lines of Supreme Court decision the one we believe best fits the case before us.
We turn first to Eastern Kentucky. There indigents and organizations of indigents challenged a Revenue Ruling discontinuing a requirement that a hospital, to be classified as “charitable” under section 501(c)(3), must provide free or below cost service to indigents to the extent of its financial ability. After the new Ruling, some of the plaintiffs had been denied hospital services on account of their indigency. The Supreme Court held that plaintiffs lacked standing to bring the suit.
Plaintiffs’ injury, the Court said, was the denial of hospital service. But plaintiffs could not show that the hospitals’ refusal to serve them resulted from the Ruling. “It is purely speculative,” the Court declared, “whether the denials of service specified in the complaint fairly can be traced to [the Ruling] or instead result from decisions
Plaintiffs do not dispute that it is “speculative,” within the Eastern Kentucky frame, whether any private school would welcome blacks in order to retain tax exemption
We turn next to the three adjudications that appear to us determinative of the standing issue in this case: the companion Green litigation; Norwood v. Harrison; and Gilmore v. City of Montgomery. All three involved, in common with the matter before us, charges of government conduct alleged to be inconsistent with an overriding, constitutionally rooted national policy against racial discrimination in United States educational facilities. Again in line with the instant case, none involved a claim for relief against private actors.
As we set out earlier, see pp. 822, 823, 825, 826, 827 supra, the plaintiffs in Green, like those in Wright, are black parents and their minor schoolchildren attending public schools in desegregating areas; in both cases, the plaintiffs charged that the Internal Revenue Service has failed, through the inadequacy of its monitoring procedures, to confine tax-exempt status to
Norwood, like Green and Wright, was brought by parents of black schoolchildren against a government actor. Plaintiffs sought to enjoin in part the enforcement of Mississippi’s long-established textbook lending program. The Mississippi Textbook Purchasing Board provided free textbooks to all sсhools in the state, including a number of “all-white, nonsectarian private schools which [had] been formed throughout the state since the inception of public school desegregation.” Norwood v. Harrison,
Of prime relevance to the case at hand, the Court in Norwood plainly stated that it was not critical to the plaintiffs’ claim for relief whether “any child enrolled in private school, if deprived of free textbooks, would withdraw from private school and subsequently enroll in the public schools.” Id. at 465,
We do not agree with the District Court in its analysis of the legal consequences of [the] uncertainty [whether the relief requested would result in student transfers from private to public schools], for the Constitution does not permit the State to aid discrimination even when there is no precise causal relationship between state financial aid to a private school and the continued well-being of that school. A State may not grant the type of tangible financial aid here involved if that aid has a significant tendency to facilitate, reinforce, and support private discrimination.
Id. at 465-66,
Plaintiffs in Norwood, like the plaintiffs here, indicated no interest in attending the private schools that received textbooks at state expense, nor did they show that the textbook subsidy kept those schools afloat. The gravamen of plaintiffs’ complaint was that the state had aided private racial discrimination when the Constitution commanded that government “steer clear” of such action. That complaint was enough, the Court’s disposition clarifies, to entitle plaintiffs to relief. Without departing radically frоm Norwood, therefore, we cannot accept the district court’s apparent view that plaintiffs here must either pursue relief they do not want — admission of their children to private schools — or allege and prove that withdrawal of tax-exempt status would cause those schools to suffer enrollment declines and, correspondingly, quicken the pace of public school desegregation.
Finally, in Gilmore v. City of Montgomery, black citizens who had brought a successful action in 1958 to desegregate public parks in Montgomery, Alabama, reopened the litigation in 1970 and sought supplemental relief in 1971. They complained that the city was allowing “racially segregated schools and other segregated private groups and clubs to use city parks and recreational facilities.”
any tangible state assistance, outside the generalized services government might provide to private segregated schools in common with other schools, and with all citizens, is constitutionally prohibited if it has “a significant tendency to facilitate, reinforce, and support private discrimination.”
Like the tax-exempt status at issue here, the exclusive temporary use of park facilities in Gilmore was a government benefit not available to the public generally. Government must “steer clear” of providing such benefits to racially discriminatory local groups. Norwood,
Green, Norwood, and Gilmore presented plaintiffs whose standing seems to us indistinguishable on any principled ground from the standing of the plaintiffs in this action. If the plaintiffs before us are not entitled to question the IRS practices at issue here, it is difficult to comprehend why the Green, Norwood, and Gilmore plaintiffs were entitled to challenge the tax exemptions, textbook loans, and specially reserved park facilities at issue in those cases.
The Supreme Court’s decisions in Green, Norwood, and Gilmore did not focus on standing as Eastern Kentucky did. But as Eastern Kentucky emphasized, “[t]he necessity that the plaintiff who seeks to invoke judicial power stand to profit in some personal interest remains an Art. Ill requirement. A federal court cannot ignore this requirement without overstepping its assigned role in our system of adjudicating only actual cases and controversies.”
In Green, standing was addressed summarily in the lower court.
In Norwood, as in Green, plaintiffs’ standing was challenged in the lower court.
In Eastern Kentucky, the Supreme Court viewed plaintiffs’ sole injury as inflicted by the hospitals that declined to serve indigents, and not by the Internal Revenue Service.
III. APPROPRIATIONS RIDERS STAYING IRS INITIATIVES DO NOT PRECLUDE THE DISTRICT COURT FROM FASHIONING A REMEDY
In amendments to the Treasury Appropriations Act for fiscal year 1980,
Intervenor Allen argues with force in support of the position adopted in this case by the district judge. The appropriations riders reflect a congressional determination that existing IRS procedures are adequate to identify racially discriminatory schools, intervenor Allen maintains,
Our starting point is a proposition not disputed in this litigation or in conflict with the appropriations riders: racially discriminatory institutions are ineligible for tax-exempt status under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. As the court held in Green v. Connally,
Next, as we set out earlier,
We are just saying do not go forward with these broad [IRS] regulations or procedures, whatever you want to call them, until the Congress or a court affirmatively acts on that subject. That is all we are trying to do.
125 Cong.Rec. H5882 (daily ed. July 13, 1979) (remarks of Rep. Ashbrook) (emphasis supplied).
The district judge who, in this action, ruled out a judicial decree going beyond existing IRS guidelines, nevertheless granted such relief in the reopened Green case.
The district judge did not explain why he regarded Green as uninstructive — without precedential value — on the “jurisdictional” arguments in Wright, nor did he clarify why he considered congressional action significant in Wright but not in Green. It is true that the Green litigation has a long history and involves Mississippi private schools only, while the instant case was initiated some seven years after Green commenced and encompasses private schools in all states. But the appropriations riders do not distinguish Mississippi from the rest of the nation. Nor did the original Green court interpret section 501(c)(3) for Mississippi only. Rather, that court declared the principle underlying its decision “applicable to schools outside Mississippi with the same or similar badge of doubt.”
IV. NO NONREVIEWABILITY DOCTRINE IMPEDES ADJUDICATION ON THE MERITS
Referring to “the doctrine of nonreviewability,” the district judge deemed it
First, as we pointed out in preceding portions of this opinion, in suggesting that appellants’ remedy lies in case-by-case litigation against each allegedly offending school, the district court focused on an injury other than the one the complaint describes. To recapitulate, appellants disclaim any interest in gaining admission to the schools in question. Rather, they complain of conduct by their government. They assert that current IRS practice permits schools that in fact discriminate on the basis of race to acquire and retain section 501(c)(3) status and, thereby, to attract tax-deductible contributions for their maintenance. Part of each such contribution, appellants aver, constitutes prohibited government support for race discrimination in educational facilities.
Second, we turn to the case as appellants have drawn it, a case against a government agency alleged to furnish economic benefits to racially discriminatory local educatiоnal institutions. We believe that, should appellants succeed on the merits,
In sum, neither deference to administrative expertise, nor potential action by the legislature supplies an acceptable basis •for avoiding decision on the merits in this case. The area is not one in which tax experts have special competence,
CONCLUSION
We have held that the plaintiffs here have standing to pursue this action, that
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, implemented by § 501(a), corporations “organized and operated exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific, ... or educational purposes” are exempt from federal income taxation. Such organizations are also exempt from federal social security taxes (FICA), I.R.C. § 3121(b)(8)(B), and from federal unemployment taxes (FUTA), I.R.C. § 3306(c)(8). Since a private school’s “income” often does not exceed deductible expenses, the primary benefit of tax-exempt status derives from § 170, which permits donors to deduct contributions to exempt organizations from gross income. Such contributions are also deductible for federal estate and gift tax purposes under §§ 2055 and 2522. For discussion of the importance of tax-deductible contributions to private schools, see Tax-Exempt Status of Private Schools: Hearings Before the Subcomm. on Oversight of the House Comm, on Ways and Means, 96th Cong., 1st Sess. 302 (1979) [hereinafter cited as Hearings ] (testimony of William B. Ball); id. at 388-89 (testimony of W. Wayne Allen, Chairman of the Board, Briarcrest School System); id. at 400 (statement of John Esty, Jr., Pres., Nat’l Ass’n of Independent Schools).
. We decline to address in the first instance other issues raised before, but not yet considered by, the district court.
. The plaintiffs asserted that the Internal Revenue Code was unconstitutional to the extent that it authorized the Service to grant tax-exempt status to segregated schools. Green v. Kennedy,
. IRS News Release (July 10, 1970), reprinted in Hearings, supra note 1, at 10.
.Plaintiffs’ standing, questioned prior to issuance of the preliminary injunction, was not further addressed at this stage of the litigation. The court treated comprehensively, however, objections pressed by intervenors based on First Amendment freedom of association concerns that related to the right to educate one’s child in a school of the parent’s choice, whether public, private, or parochial.
. Coit v. Green,
. See particularly Rev.Proc. 72-54, 1972-
One section of the current IRS guidelines, Rev.Proc. 75-50, § 8, makes special reference to Mississippi:
Mississippi Schools
The United States District Court for the District of Columbia has ordered specific guidelines and record-keeping requirements for Mississippi private schools. Green v. Connally,330 F.Supp. 1150 , aff’d sub nom. Coit v. Green,404 U.S. 997 ,92 S.Ct. 564 ,30 L.Ed.2d 550 (1971). To the extent that the requirements of the Court’s Order vary from the guidelines and recordkeeping requirements set forth in this Revenue Procedure, the Court’s Order is controlling for Mississippi schools.
1975-
. See Hearings, supra note 1, at 236-51 (letter and attachments from Arthur S. Flemming to Jerome Kurtz). The Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice had suggested stronger language for the proposed IRS guidelines and later criticized the final guidelines as ineffective. Id. at 1181-82, 1187-91 (statement of James P. Turner).
. Hearings, supra note 1, at 5 (statement of Jerome Kurtz).
. Motion to Enforce Decree and for Further Declaratory and Injunctive Relief at 7 (July 23, 1976), Green v. Miller.
. Hearings, supra note 1, at 6 (statement of Jerome Kurtz).
. 43 Fed.Reg. 37296 (Aug. 22, 1978), reprinted in Hearings, supra note 1, at 21.
. 44 Fed.Reg. 9451 (Feb. 13, 1979), reprinted in Hearings, supra note 1, at 41.
. Hearings, supra note 1, at 6-7 (statement of Jerome Kurtz).
. Id. at 6.
. Treasury, Postal Service, and General Government Appropriations Act, 1980, Pub.L. No.96-74, 93 Stat. 559 (1979).
. Id. § 615.
. Id. § 103.
. The restrictions lapsed October 1, 1980, when a new fiscal year opened. They were continued in force, however, until June 5, 1981, under H.R.J. Res. 644, Pub.L.No.96-536, 94 Stat. 3166 (1980).
. See Green v. Miller, No. 1355-69 (D.D.C. May 25, 1971) (order denying motiоn to dismiss). The district court apparently considered the objection foreclosed by prior proceedings in Green. See Hearing Transcript of May 17, 1977, at 35, 106-07. See also text following note 50 infra.
. Green v. Connally,
. Davis, Standing, 1976, 72 Nw.U.L.Rev. 69, 69 (1977).
. Id. at 70; cf. Americans United for Separation of Church & State, Inc. v. United States Dep't of Health, Education and Welfare,
.After Eastern Kentucky, this court held, in American Society of Travel Agents v. Blumenthal,
Eastern Kentucky was featured in Judge Tamm’s opinion in American Jewish Congress v. Vance,
. But cf. note 1 supra (significance of tax-exempt status to private schools).
. The court on remand in Norwood v. Harrison,
. At oral argument, the Service stressed that Green (when the action commenced in 1969), Norwood, and Gilmore, were egregious cases. In those cases, the private schools aided by government action openly avowed discriminatory policies while in this case, plaintiffs do not allege that any particular school turns away students on the basis of race. Instead, plaintiffs complain more generally that some schools “are slipping through the Commissioner’s net of enforcement.” But the standing analysis should remain unaffected so long as plaintiffs have a right to demand that their government “steer clear” of aiding discrimination in local educational facilities, and contend, as plaintiffs do here, that current government (IRS) practice does not meet the “steer clear” standard. Cf. note 43 and accompanying text, infra (Commissioner’s acknowledgment that, under current guidelines, schools adjudged racially discriminatory nonetheless retained tax-exempt status).
We do not include Griffin v. County School Board of Prince Edward County,
. The relevant passage is set out at p. 823 supra.
. Because the IRS changed its course before the issuance of the permanent injunction in Green, the Supreme Court later noted that the summary affirmance in Coit v. Green “lacks the precedential weight of a case involving a truly adversary controversy.” Bob Jones University v. Simon,
We note finally that, although Green was not such a case, there are extraordinary situations in which the Supreme Court may proceed to judgment despite the absence of a genuine adversary contest in the lower courts. See Granville-Smith v. Granville-Smith,
. Treasury, Postal Service, and General Government Appropriations Act, 1980, Pub.L. No.96-74, 93 Stat. 559 (1979).
. See notes 17-19 and accompanying text supra.
. See notes 4 & 7 and accompanying text supra.
. See notes 11-15 and accompanying text supra.
. The district judge recognized, however, that Congress had not dictated his course. He agreed with plaintiffs that “the legislative history of the [appropriations riders] apparently allows a federal court to fashion a remedy in this area.”
. Typical of the view expressed by proponents of the riders is the statement of Senator Helms, quoted by intervenor:
The existing law provides substantial procedures for the IRS to deny the tax exempt status of schools which discriminate.
... [The appropriations bill amendment] does not change the existing law contained in Revenue Procedure 75-50, and thus it preserves the ability of IRS to act against offending schools on a case-by-case basis.
125 Cong.Rec. SI 1979-80 (daily ed. Sept. 6, 1979).
. Plaintiffs further urge that, even as restraints directed solely to the IRS, the appropriations act riders are unconstitutional. Cf. Parnell, Congressional Interference in Agency Enforcement: The IRS Experience, 89 Yale L.J. 1360, 1368-86 (1980) (suggesting that the riders may violate establishment ban or equal protection guarantee but not separation of powers doctrine). The question before us concerns only the propriety of court adjudication. We do not reach the further issue plaintiffs tender regarding the legitimacy of appropriations riders to stop IRS action.
. Cf. Nixon v. Administrator of General Services,
. See Brown v. Califano,
. See notes 4-6 and accompanying text supra.
. The three-judge court looked to the common-law definition of “charitable” but ultimately rested on the overriding federal policy against racial discrimination, a policy directed most pointedly against government support for racially segregated education.
Congress appears to agree with the Green court that section 501(c)(3) does not accommodate tax-exempt status for racially discriminatory private schools. No effort has been made to require the IRS to withdraw guidelines adopted before August 1978. Moreover, Congress overturned a court holding, McGlotten v. Connally,
. Cf. Bittker & Kaufman, supra note 5,
. See pp. 824-26 supra.
. Hearings, supra note 1, at 5 (statement of Jerome Kurtz).
. Congressional subcommittees had been reviewing the proposed guidelines at the time the issue was brought directly to the House floor through the appropriations act amendment device. See Hearings, supra note 1; Tax-Exempt Status of Private Schools: Hearings on S. 103, S.449, S.990, S.995 Before the Subcomm. on Taxation and Debt Management of the Senate Comm, on Finance, 96th Cong., 1st Sess. (1979). See also Note, supra note 38, 93 Harv. L.Rev. at 383-84, 392. Since the 1979 congressional action by appropriations act riders, the regular tax-writing committees of the House and Senate have not further reviewed the Commissioner’s action or proposed action in this area, nor have they ventured to formulate other standards for the administration of sections 501(c)(3) and 170(c). Brief for the Federal Appellees at 32. See also note 61 infra.
. See 125 Cong.Rec. H5882 (daily ed. July 13, 1979) (remarks of Rep. Ashbrook).
. For criticism of this mode of legislating, raising constitutional, policy, and practical problems the technique entails, see Parnell, supra note 36; Note, supra note 38, 93 Harv.L. Rev. at 390-92.
. See notes 36-38 supra and authorities cited therein.
. On a later day, at a time when the House was not debating any rider, Representative Ashbrook delivered an address in which he maintained that he did indeed intend his appropriations rider to halt court as well as IRS action. See 126 Cong.Rec. H5197, H5198 (daily ed. June 18, 1980). However, he thereafter acknowledged that his earlier statement accurately reflected the effect of the rider. He disavowed any purpose to challenge a court order and said, particularly: “There is an orderly process which was followed in Mississippi [in the Green case] where the courts or IRS can become involved. I did not change that in any way.” Id at H7291 (daily ed. Aug. 20, 1980). See also the ruling of the Chairman, declaring in order House consideration of the Dornan amendment in connection with fiscal year 1981 appropriations: “With reference to the court order issue, the language of the amendment does not in any way speak to the quеstion of court orders or address the viability of court orders with regard to the agency’s actions.” Id at H7212 (daily ed. Aug. 19, 1980). Accord id at H7293 (daily ed. Aug. 20, 1980) (remarks of Rep. Panetta).
. Green v. Miller, No. 1355-69 (D.D.C. May 5, 1980) (clarified and amended June 2, 1980).
. See 126 Cong.Rec. H5193, H5195 (daily ed. June 18, 1980) (remarks of Rep. Ashbrook); id at H7214 (daily ed. Aug. 19, 1980).
. Cf. 126 Cong.Rec. H5195 (daily ed. June 18, 1980) (remarks of Rep. Stokes) (noting the irrationality of maintaining one regime for Mississippi private schools, another for private schools elsewhere in the country).
. Panama Canal Co. v. Grace Line, Inc.,
. Defendants and intervenor do not suggest, nor did the district court, that the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201 (1976), which excludes suits “with respect to Federal taxes," or the Tax Injunction Act, 26 U.S.C. § 7421(a) (1976), which bars suits to enjoin the assessment or collection of taxes, precludes this litigation. Dismissal on the basis of these statutes, ’ and a sovereign immunity bar, were urged, unsuccessfully, in Eastern Kentucky Welfare Rights Organization v. Simon,
.Green v. Connally accepts this thesis. For discussion in commentary, compare Note, supra note 38, and Comment, Tax Incentives as State Action, 122 U.Pa.L.Rev. 414 (1973), with Bittker & Kaufman, supra note 5,
The Service observes, citing Walz v. Tax Commission,
. The precise statutory and constitutional questions plaintiffs raise have not yet been addressed by the Supreme Court. See Prince Edward School Foundation v. United States,
. As intervenor candidly notes, the current IRS guidelines, embodied in Rev.Proc. 75-50, 1975-
. See Green v. Miller, No. 69-1355 (D.D.C. May 5, 1980) (clarified and amended June 2, 1980).
. Confronted with genuine cases and controversies, federal judges have been required to deal with situations presenting remedial problems far more complex and difficult than the one this case presents. See generally Johnson, In Defense of Judicial Activism, 28 Emory L.J. 901 (1979); Chayes, The Role of the Judge in Public Law Litigation, 89 Harv.L.Rev. 1281 (1976); Special Project, The Remedial Process in Institutional Reform Litigation, 78 Colum.L. Rev. 784 (1978); Note, Implementation Problems in Institutional Reform Litigation, 91 Harv.L.Rev. 428 (1977).
. Intervenor so remarked at congressional hearings. See Hearings, supra note 1, at 388-89 (remarks of W. Wayne Allen).
. As discussed in the preceding section, Congress acted to stay further IRS initiatives.
. The House Committee on Appropriations recommended holding the Service proposals in abeyance “until the appropriate legislative committees have had a chance to evaluate them.” H.R.Rep. No. 248, 96th Cong., 1st Sess. 15 (1979). The federal appellees inform us that those committees have “shown no inclination” to proceed with the evaluation. Brief for the Federal Appellees at 32. Cf. 126 Cong.Rec. H7212, H7213 (daily ed. Aug. 19, 1980); id. at H7293 (daily ed. Aug. 20, 1980) (remarks of Reps. Gradison and Panetta, criticizing Congress for failure to address the issue through the regular lawmaking process).
. The order and permanent injunction in Green v. Miller has no preclusive effect in this action. The district court retаins jurisdiction in that action; intervenor here did not participate in Green; no fact findings or legal conclusions accompany the May 1980 order and permanent injunction in Green. Moreover, a decision on the merits for plaintiffs in this lawsuit, and the decisions and orders in Green, while they would count as relevant precedent, would not preclude challenges to IRS action by schools not party to the litigation. See 26 U.S.C. § 7428 (declaratory judgment relating to tax-exempt status); Restatement (Second) of Judgments §§ 41 (Tent. Draft No. 1, 1973), 78(3) (Tent. Draft No. 2, 1975), 68, 68.1 (Tent. Draft No. 4, 1977), 88 (Tent. Draft No. 3, 1976).
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Under cover of selecting between conflicting lines of Supreme Court precedent, the court today boldly creates new law on the jurisdiction of federal courts. Under cover of selecting the most comfortable precedent, the court in fact oversteps well-established limits upon the power of the judiciary. We are not required, as the majority suggests, to choose among Supreme Court precedent as we would footwear — selecting that which “best fits the case before us.” Instead, we need only examine carefully the law of standing as it presently exists and properly apply that law to the case before us.
The majority’s cleverly constructed and ostensibly reasonable opinion hinges initially upon the setting up of conflicting lines of Supreme Court precedent. In one, characterized by the majority as the “Eastern Kentucky” line, the Court addressed at some length the question of standing to sue in federal courts. In the other, characterized as the “Green, Norwood, and Gilmore” line, the Court addressed the constitutionality of governmental involvement in racial discrimination. Although a reading of the majority’s analysis of this latter line of cases may lead one to think otherwise, the Supreme Court made no statement in these cases that can be construed as justifying the result reached by the court today. In fact, the only remarks by the Court upon the question of standing make clear that the traditional requirements of standing must be satisfied in this case as in any other. Gilmore v. City of Montgomery,
Despite this explicit reminder, the majority interprets this line of precedent as requiring it to abandon long-established standing principles, principles limiting the exercise of judicial power to the redress of actual injury. To assess the necessity of such an interpretation, we must first turn to those cases by which the majority claims to be bound. In Coit v. Green,
Plaintiffs’ standing was not addressed in the district court decision affirmed by the Supreme Court. Green v. Connally,
The majority opinion mischaracterizes the status of Green at this point as a “sharp adversary contest . . . . ” Majority opinion (Maj. op.) at 823. In fact, the Supreme Court has explicitly stated that, because the IRS had reversed its position prior to appeal, this case did not involve “a truly adversary controversy.” Bob Jones University v. Simon,
The majority opinion attempts to support the result it reaches by contrasting the action of the district court upon the reopening of Green with its action in the present context. Accordingly, the majority emphasizes at several places the similarity of these two cases, while pointing out their dissimilar dispositions. Maj. op. at 826, 827, 828, 835. Observing that the same district court judge ruled in both cases, the majority opinion suggests that such an “anomalous result” is irreconcilable
Mississippi plaintiffs instituted Green in 1969. In 1970 a three-judge court issued a preliminary injunction against the IRS and noted, albeit summarily, that plaintiffs possessed standing. Green v. Kennedy,
The Green plaintiffs reopened this case in 1976, one week prior to the filing of the action here on appeal. Wright and Green were then consolidated and, on May 17, 1977, the late Judge Waddy heard motions to dismiss that raised the precise jurisdictional issues before us today. During this hearing Judge Waddy emphasized at several points his belief that “separate considerations” governed the two cases. See, e. g., Hearing Transcript of May 17, 1977, at 18. At one such point, he aptly characterized the standing argument pressed by the Wright plaintiffs’ counsel as being that “you’re Black and a citizen, and live in South Carolina,” and thereby possess standing. Id. at 91. At the conclusion of the hearing, Judge Waddy denied the Government’s motion to dismiss in Green but took the motion in Wright under advisement. The court found that the Green plaintiffs “have a right to prоceed to determine whether or not that there has been good-faith compliance with the Order of this Court and if not, then the Court has the duty and responsibility to amend or supplement its prior Decree in such manner as to affect (sic) the purposes of the original Decree.” Id. at 106-07.
Thus, before Green had reached the chambers of the present district court judge, not only had two other district courts sustained plaintiffs’ standing, but the Supreme Court had affirmed, however summarily, the granting of the permanent injunction. In these circumstances, therefore, it would appear reasonable for the district court to accept the prior rulings on standing as the law of the case. See United States ex rel. Epton v. Nenna,
Unlike Green, the two other cases “binding” the majority are dispositions by opinion. Norwood v. Harrison,
As the majority opinion notes, maj. op. at 830, black citizens who had won the desegregation of public parks in Montgomery, Alabama in 1958 reopened that litigation in 1970.
Defining “exclusive use” as the possession and control of an entire facility by a private group, the Supreme Court sustained the injunction to the extent of prohibiting such use by racially segregated private schools. The Court found that “the city’s policy of allocating facilities to segregated private schools, in the context of the 1959 parks desegregation order and subsequent history, created, in effect, ‘enclaves of segregation’ and deprived petitioners of equal access to parks and recreational facilities.” Id. at 566,
Upon this record, we are unable to draw a conclusion as to whether the use of zoos, museums, parks, and other recreational facilities by private school groups in common with others, and by private nonschool organizations, involves government so directly in the actions of those users as to warrant court intervention on constitutional grounds. . .. The questions to be resolved and the decisions to be made rest upon careful identification of the different types of city facilities that are available and the various uses to which they might be put by private groups.
Id. at 570,
At this time the Court also remarked upon the standing of plaintiffs on remand.
[W]e are not prepared, at this juncture and on this record, to assume the standing of these plaintiffs to claim relief against certain nonexclusive uses by private school groups. The plaintiffs in Norwood were parties to a school desegregation order and the relief they sought was directly related to the concrete injury they suffered. Here, the plaintiffs were parties to an action desegregating the city parks and recreational facilities. Without a properly developed record, it is not clear that every nonexclusive use of city facilities by school groups, unlike their exclusive use, would result in cognizable injury to these plaintiffs. The District Court does not have carte blanche authority to administer city facilities sim*253 ply because there is past or present discrimination. The usual prudential tenets limiting the exercise of judicial power must be observed in this case as in any other.
Id. at 570-71 n.10,
In this brief glance at standing, the Court made clear that in cases concerning alleged racial discrimination, as elsewhere, both the constitutional and prudential limitations upon the exercise of judicial power must be observed. That such limits were observed in Gilmore and Norwood seems evident. In Norwood, the plaintiffs, parties to a school desegregation order, challenged the constitutionality of a Mississippi state law that authorized the provision of free textbooks to all schoolchildren regardless of the admissions policies of the schools they attended. The relief they sought and obtained would thus end state aid to discriminatory schools and was therefore “directly related to the concrete injury they suffered.” Id. In Gilmore, the plaintiffs, parties to an action desegregating public parks, challenged the exclusive use of facilities that “created, in effect, ‘enclaves of segregation’ ” and thus deprived them of equal access to recreational facilities. Id. at 566,
Similar observance of these limitations requires that this court determine initially whether the plaintiffs here have “suffered ‘some threatened or actual injury resulting from the putatively illegal action ....’” Warth v. Seldin,
The majority opinion apparently holds that the “very act by the IRS of according tax exemption to a school that discriminates . . . causes immediate injury to [plaintiffs] and that is the only injury for which they seek redress.” Maj. op. at 827. In other words, because plaintiffs allege the violation of their constitutional rights, they have alleged injury. This approach apparently adopted by the court today postulates unlimited judicial power. The Supreme Court has rejected similar attempts to circumvent the limitations imposed by Article III. In O’Shea v. Littleton,
The second injury that plaintiffs claim— interference with their court-ordered right to a desegregated public education — does not represent actual injury because plaintiffs fail to allege the necessary components of such a claim. “Interference” only takes place upon the actual violation of plaintiffs’ constitutiоnal rights: in this context, through the use by private schools of racially discriminatory admissions policies.
Under Supreme Court precedent, this contention cannot support a federal court’s exercise of jurisdiction. As this court recently noted, such precedent makes clear that an
asserted interest in the proper administration of the laws is a generalized one shared by all other citizens. Such an abstract injury is insufficient for standing. Schlesinger v. Reservists Committee to Stop the War, 418 U.S. [208] at 217, 219-21 [94 S.Ct. 2925 , 2930, 2931-32,41 L.Ed.2d 706 ] .... In Reservists, the Supreme Court held that standing tо sue may not be predicated upon an interest that is held in common by all members of the public, such as is present in this case .... Although the proper administration of the laws serves the interests of all, “[t]he proposition that all [laws] are enforceable by any citizen simply because citizens are the ultimate beneficiaries . . . has no boundaries.” Id. at 226 — 27 [94 S.Ct. at 2934-35 ].
Daughtrey v. Carter,
Appellants contend that they have more than a general interest in the effectiveness of IRS procedures. They claim to suffer “distinct and palpable injury when discriminatory private schools receive or retain tax exemptions.” Brief for Appellants at 30. The majority opinion attempts to particularize this asserted interest by characterizing plaintiffs’ injury as “the denigration they suffer as black parents and schoolchildren when their government graces with tax-exempt status educational institutions in their communities that treat members of their race as persons of lesser worth.” Maj. op. at 827. A similar reliance on ethnic affinity, however, was recently held by this court to be insufficient to constitute the personal stake requisite to standing.
In American Jewish Congress v. Vance,
Those plaintiffs who claimed standing on the basis of their status as American Jewish citizens argued that the implementation of cooperative programs between this country and Saudi Arabia “had the purpose and effect of deterring and discouraging American Jews from applying for or otherwise seeking employment and other economic opportunities resulting from the Agreement on Saudi-Arabian-United States Cooperation, although but for their religion, ancestry or identity they aré qualified therefor.” Complaint at 8. Despite this allegation of substantial governmental involvement in illegal discrimination, this court did not automatically extend to those plaintiffs the right to challenge that involvement. Instead the court proceeded to assess the injury purportedly arising from that governmental involvement. A direct comparison of the plaintiffs in the case at hand with these particular plaintiffs reveals the even more attenuated nature of the allegations presented herein. These plaintiffs are black parents аnd their schoolchildren who challenge governmental involvement in the form of tax exemptions to racially segregated private schools. Nowhere do the plaintiffs allege that they sought admission to these schools, that they were deterred from applying, or even that the schools engage in unlawful discrimination. In essence, they allege only that the inadequacy of Service procedures encourages the development of racially segregated schools, thereby undermining their right to public school desegregation. It would appear, therefore, that the plaintiffs here are in no better position than the Jewish citizens above who challenge United States involvement with Saudi Arabian discrimination solely as American citizens of the Jewish religion. “Once again, however, the plaintiffs have fallen short of alleging the type of concrete and direct injury requisite to invocation of federal judicial power.” See ex Parte Levitt, 302 U.S. [633] at 634,
The court today thus either distinguishes American Jewish Congress because the plaintiffs before us are black, see, e. g., maj. op. at 832 (noting the “centrality” in our post-Civil War constitutional order of the right of black citizens to be free from discrimination), or implicitly overrules that decision. I find it difficult to credit the majority’s apparent distinction of that case, maj. op. at 829 n.24, which suggests that future plaintiffs may secure standing in federal court simply by alleging that “the government action in question contributed to perpetuation within our borders of a view of [them] as persons of lesser worth,” id., especially when the American Jewish Congress plaintiffs complained specifically about “the degree to which American citizens of the Jewish faith are discriminated against . . . . ” Brief for Appellants at 6, American Jewish Congress v. Vance,
The consistent emphasis throughout the majority opinion upon the significance of
no matter how inclined we may be toward appellant’s position on the merits, we must first satisfy ourselves that he “has ‘alleged such a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy’ as to warrant his invocation of federal-court jurisdiction and to justify exercise of the court’s remedial powers on his behalf.”
Reuss v. Balles,
Plaintiffs have argued to this court that as black parents and schoolchildren they are entitled to challenge IRS enforcement procedures, the inadequacy of which they claim interferes with their right to a desegregated education. I believe, however, that these plaintiffs have failed to plead injury in fact.
The court’s decision today reflects an approach to the question of standing that is simply and clearly wrong, the product of an impermissible shift in focus from the right of these plaintiffs to make their сhallenge to the rights they wish to assert. In its haste to afford plaintiffs an opportunity to vindicate their chosen cause, the majority not only expands significantly the law of standing- but also oversteps the constitutional limits of its jurisprudential power.
The Supreme Court has warned repeatedly in the past of the hazards in straying from the Constitutional requirement of a case or controversy. Absent adherence to the Constitutional mandate, courts become forums for the vindication of personal values and political preferences, usurping the legislative branch as the focus for public debate and lobby, and usurping as well the executive’s primary*259 responsibility for the implementation of federal law. Federal courts cannot, consistent with the Constitution, exercise their jurisdiction to vindicate litigants’ chosen causes; they are empowered only to grant specific relief in response to, and in order to remedy, a particularized showing of individual injury.
Evans v. Lynn,
. The majority opinion expresses the view that lower courts are bound by Supreme Court summary affirmance of a decision even as to issues that were not addressed in that decision, as long as a contrary decision on that issue would preclude affirmance. Such a view is directly contrary to the Court’s statements concerning the precedential value of its summary affirmances. See, e. g., Illinois State Bd. of Elections v. Socialist Workers Party,
The majority’s innovative view of precedent, especially questionable in light of the Service’s reversal of position prior to the affirmance in Green, is to be deplored as a statement of jurisprudential principle. See Note, Summary Disposition of Supreme Court Appeals: The Significance of Limited Discretion and a Theory of Limited Precedent, 52 B.U.L.Rev. 373, 410 (1972). Such a statement is also regrettable when it substitutes for analysis of the issue before us. The court may well, however, simply discard such a view in the future when it finds it politic to do so. Cf. Note, supra, at 386.
Ultimately, this declaration of Green as binding precedent on the issue of standing is of no relevance to the case at hand. The allegations of injury made in this case, and the claim for relief pressed by plaintiffs here, differ substantially from those made in Green. Thus, even if it were binding, it would still not be precedent. See note 5 and text following infra.
. I emphasize that this case involves neither a situation in which reconsideration of an older Supreme Court precedent is requested of this court, Breakefield v. District of Columbia,
. In the ordinary case, such prior rulings are not binding.
Where a jurisdictional challenge is repeated, however, as is the case where standing is in issue, the “law of the case” requirement is less rigid. Earlier jurisdictional rulings are entitled to important, but not dispositive weight ... If it can be shown that controlling authority has subsequently taken a clearly contrary view of the issue, then the renewed motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction may be appropriately filed and may prevail.
Common Cause v. Bolger,
. One commentator pointed to this opinion as an example of the way in which “[c]ourts typically fail explicitly to identify the relevant standing criteria.” Note, The Judicial Role in Attacking Racial Discrimination in Tax-Exempt Private Schools, 93 Harv.L.Rev. 378, 386 n.44 (1979).
. The essential distinction, therefore, between these cases and the one at hand is thе predicate of discrimination established in both cases. This predicate was also established in Green. Upon the granting of temporary injunctive relief, the three-judge court adopted the contemporaneous findings made by a Mississippi federal court in Coffey v. State Educ. Finance Comm’n,
Another more recent decision is also distinguishable on this basis. Moton v. Lambert,
. Analysis of this question often takes place under the rather undifferentiated concept of “personal stake.” See, e. g.. Citizens Concerned For Separation of Church and State v. City and County of Denver,
However the question is approached, this court has made clear that “the basic concern of the standing doctrine is that the individual complaining party have such a strong connection to the controversy that its outcome will demonstrably cause him to win or lose in some measure." Harrington v. Bush,
. See generally Comment, Community Resistance to School Desegregation: Enjoining the Undefinabie Class, 44 U.Chi.L.Rev. Ill (1976). Once private discrimination is established, of course, this “interference” in the form of a tax exemption can be enjoined should it be found to constitute “state action.” This question was not passed upon by the district court and is not before us today. See generally Bittker and Kaufman, Taxes and Civil Rights: “Constitutionalizing” the Internal Revenue Code, 82 Yale L.J. 51, 61-74 (1972).
. I have noted elsewhere that the allegation that the governmеnt funds unlawful discrimination “without regard to whether [the plaintiffs] personally are victims of the discrimination” does not constitute a distinct and palpable injury sufficient to confer standing to sue in the federal courts. Nat’I Black Police Ass’n v. Velde,
. Judge Robinson dissented only with respect to the standing of the plaintiff allegedly denied employment, finding the remainder of the court’s discussion “in accord with the Supreme Court’s recent teachings . . . . ”
. Even apart from this impermissible orientation, the majority opinion errs in seizing upon language in Norwood to delineate the constitutional right asserted in this case. Black citizens, indeed all citizens, possess the constitutional right to be free from unlawful discrimination. The court decides today that all black citizens possess the right to insist that the government “steer clear” of aiding any such discrimination. In my opinion the Constitution neither requires the government to take this driving test at the behest of every black citizen, nor does it permit a federal court to grade such a test.
The Constitution does require, of course, in a case appropriate for judicial resolution, that a federal court enjoin state action that significantly contributes to racial discrimination. See note 7 supra. That is not this case.
. Becausе I believe that the judgment of the district court should be affirmed on the grounds of lack of standing, I do not address the correctness of the remainder of the district court opinion. See maj. op. at 832-838. I trust, however, that the majority’s passing comments on the scope of the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201 (Supp. Ill 1979), and the Tax Injunction Act, 26 U.S.C. § 7421(a) (Supp. HI 1979), maj. op. at 836 n.52, are not meant to decide these questions. See maj. op. at 822 n.2. I do believe, moreover, that the considerations addressed by the district court,
.The defendant in this case may be quite willing to respond to the district court’s decree. Although the Service possesses certain jurisdictional objections to the granting of injunctive relief in this case, of which the plaintiffs’ standing was primary, it does agree with plaintiffs that more effective enforcement procedures are warranted. If both named parties desire the same result, of course, no Article III case or controversy exists. GTE Sylvania, Inc. v. Consumers Union,
The majority opinion takes pains to emphasize that a “strong advocate of the private schools” is participating in this case. Maj. op. at 828. It is apparent, however, that “[¡Intervention cannot cure any jurisdictional defect that would have barred the federal court from hearing the original action. Intervention presupposes the pendency of an action in a court of competent jurisdiction and cannot create jurisdiction if none existed before.” Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil § 1917 at 584 (1972) (footnotes omitted). See ICC v. Southern Railway,
. The logical result of the court’s holding today is, for example, that female plaintiffs may be heard to complain simply that certain public programs are not being administered efficiently and thereby operate to discriminate against others of their sex. Requirements of specificity and of injury in fact are therefore no longer applicable. Cf. Ridgefield Women’s Political Caucus, Inc. v. Fossi,
Today’s decision cannot be interpreted as merely an attempt to carve out an exception to the apparent ban against public interest tax litigation imposed in Eastern Kentucky. Eastern Kentucky,
. See, e. g., Lamar v. Whiteside,
