home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
- preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
- notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash-
- ington, D.C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order that
- corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
- SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
- --------
- No. 93-289
- --------
- JOHN H. DALTON, SECRETARY OF THE NAVY, et
- al., PETITIONERS v. ARLEN SPECTER et al.
- on writ of certiorari to the united states court
- of appeals for the third circuit
- [May 23, 1994]
-
- Chief Justice Rehnquist delivered the opinion of the
- Court.
- Respondents sought to enjoin the Secretary of Defense
- (Secretary) from carrying out a decision by the President
- to close the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard. This deci-
- sion was made pursuant to the Defense Base Closure
- and Realignment Act of 1990 (1990 Act), 104 Stat. 1808,
- as amended, note following 10 U. S. C. 2687 (1988 ed.,
- Supp. IV). The Court of Appeals held that judicial
- review of the decision was available to ensure that
- various participants in the selection process had com-
- plied with procedural mandates specified by Congress.
- We hold that such review is not available.
- The decision to close the shipyard was the end result
- of an elaborate selection process prescribed by the 1990
- Act. Designed -to provide a fair process that will result
- in the timely closure and realignment of military
- installations inside the United States,- 2901(b), the
- Act provides for three successive rounds of base closings
- -in 1991, 1993, and 1995, respectively, 2903(c)(1). For
- each round, the Secretary must prepare closure and
- realignment recommendations, based on selection criteria
- he establishes after notice and an opportunity for public
- comment. 2903(b) and (c).
- The Secretary submits his recommendations to
- Congress and to the Defense Base Closure and Realign-
- ment Commission (Commission), an independent body
- whose eight members are appointed by the President,
- with the advice and consent of the Senate. 2903(c)(1);
- 2902(a) and (c)(1)(A). The Commission must then hold
- public hearings and prepare a report, containing both an
- assessment of the Secretary's recommendations and the
- Commission's own recommendations for base closures
- and realignments. 2903(d)(1) and (2). Within roughly
- three months of receiving the Secretary's recommenda-
- tions, the Commission has to submit its report to the
- President. 2903(d)(2)(A).
- Within two weeks of receiving the Commission's
- report, the President must decide whether to approve or
- disapprove, in their entirety, the Commission's recom-
- mendations. 2903(e)(1)-(3). If the President disap-
- proves, the Commission has roughly one month to
- prepare a new report and submit it to the President.
- 2903(e)(3). If the President again disapproves, no
- bases may be closed that year under the Act.
- 2903(e)(5). If the President approves the initial or
- revised recommendations, the President must submit the
- recommendations, along with his certification of approval,
- to Congress. 2903(e)(2) and (e)(4). Congress may,
- within 45 days of receiving the President's certification
- (or by the date Congress adjourns for the session,
- whichever is earlier), enact a joint resolution of disap-
- proval. 2904(b); 2908. If such a resolution is passed,
- the Secretary may not carry out any closures pursuant
- to the Act; if such a resolution is not passed, the
- Secretary must close all military installations recom-
- mended for closure by the Commission. 2904(a) and
- (b)(1).
- In April 1991, the Secretary recommended the closure
- or realignment of a number of military installations,
- including the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard. After
- holding public hearings in Washington, D. C., and
- Philadelphia, the Commission recommended closure or
- realignment of 82 bases. The Commission did not
- concur in all of the Secretary's recommendations, but it
- agreed that the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard should be
- closed. In July 1991, President Bush approved the
- Commission's recommendations, and the House of
- Representatives rejected a proposed joint resolution of
- disapproval by a vote of 364 to 60.
- Two days before the President submitted his certifica-
- tion of approval to Congress, respondents filed this
- action under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5
- U. S. C. 701 et seq., and the 1990 Act. Their com-
- plaint contained three counts, two of which remain at
- issue. Count I alleged that the Secretaries of Navy
- and Defense violated substantive and procedural require-
- ments of the 1990 Act in recommending closure of the
- Philadelphia Naval Shipyard. Count II made similar
- allegations regarding the Commission's recommendations
- to the President, asserting specifically that, inter alia,
- the Commission used improper criteria, failed to place
- certain information in the record until after the close of
- public hearings, and held closed meetings with the Navy.
- The United States District Court for the Eastern
- District of Pennsylvania dismissed the complaint in its
- entirety, on the alternative grounds that the 1990 Act
- itself precluded judicial review and that the political
- question doctrine foreclosed judicial intervention.
- Specter v. Garrett, 777 F. Supp. 1226 (1991). A divided
- panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the
- Third Circuit affirmed in part and reversed in part.
- Specter v. Garrett, 971 F. 2d 936 (1992) (Specter I). The
- Court of Appeals first acknowledged that the actions
- challenged by respondents were not typical of the
- -agency actions- reviewed under the APA, because the
- 1990 Act contemplates joint decisionmaking among the
- Secretary, Commission, President, and Congress. Id., at
- 944-945. The Court of Appeals then reasoned that
- because respondents sought to enjoin the implementation
- of the President's decision, respondents (who had not
- named the President as a defendant) were asking the
- Court of Appeals -to review a presidential decision.- Id.,
- at 945. The Court of Appeals decided that there could
- be judicial review of the President's decision because the
- -actions of the President have never been considered
- immune from judicial review solely because they were
- taken by the President.- Ibid. It held that certain
- procedural claims, such as respondents' claim that the
- Secretary failed to transmit to the Commission all of the
- information he used in making his recommendations,
- and their claim that the Commission did not hold public
- hearings as required by the Act, were thus reviewable.
- Id., at 952-953. The dissenting judge took the view
- that the 1990 Act precluded judicial review of all
- statutory claims, procedural and substantive. Id., at
- 956-961.
- Shortly after the Court of Appeals issued its opinion,
- we decided Franklin v. Massachusetts, 505 U. S. ___
- (1992), in which we addressed the existence of -final
- agency action- in a suit seeking APA review of the
- decennial reapportionment of the House of Represen-
- tatives. The Census Act requires the Secretary of
- Commerce to submit a census report to the President,
- who then certifies to Congress the number of Represen-
- tatives to which each State is entitled pursuant to a
- statutory formula. We concluded both that the Secre-
- tary's report was not -final agency action- reviewable
- under the APA, and that the APA does not apply to the
- President. Id., at ___ (slip op., at 6-12). After we
- rendered our decision in Franklin, petitioners sought our
- review in this case. Because of the similarities between
- Franklin and this case, we granted the petition for
- certiorari, vacated the judgement of the Court of Ap-
- peals, and remanded for further consideration in light of
- Franklin. 506 U. S. ___ (1992).
- On remand, the same divided panel of the Court of
- Appeals adhered to its earlier decision, and held that
- Franklin did not affect the reviewability of respondents'
- procedural claims. Specter v. Garrett, 995 F. 2d 404
- (1993) (Specter II). Although apparently recognizing that
- APA review was unavailable, the Court of Appeals felt
- that adjudging the President's actions for compliance
- with the 1990 Act was a -form of constitutional review,-
- and that Franklin sanctioned such review. Id., at
- 408-409. Petitioners again sought our review, and we
- granted certiorari. 510 U. S. ___ (1993). We now
- reverse.
-
-
- I
- We begin our analysis on common ground with the
- Court of Appeals. In Specter II, that court acknowl-
- edged, at least tacitly, that respondents' claims are not
- reviewable under the APA. 995 F. 2d, at 406. A
- straightforward application of Franklin to this case
- demonstrates why this is so. Franklin involved a suit
- against the President, the Secretary of Commerce, and
- various public officials, challenging the manner in which
- seats in the House of Representatives had been appor-
- tioned among the States. 505 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at
- 1). The plaintiffs challenged the method used by the
- Secretary of Commerce in preparing her census report,
- particularly the manner in which she counted federal
- employees working overseas. The plaintiffs raised
- claims under both the APA and the Constitution. In
- reviewing the former, we first sought to determine
- whether the Secretary's action, in submitting a census
- report to the President, was -final- for purposes of APA
- review. (The APA provides for judicial review only of
- -final agency action.- 5 U. S. C. 704 (emphasis added)).
- Because the President reviewed (and could revise) the
- Secretary's report, made the apportionment calculations,
- and submitted the final apportionment report to Con-
- gress, we held that the Secretary's report was -not final
- and therefore not subject to review.- 505 U. S., at ___
- (slip op., at 9).
- We next held that the President's actions were not
- reviewable under the APA, because the President is not
- an -agency- within the meaning of the APA. Id., at ___
- (slip op., at 11-12) (-As the APA does not expressly
- allow review of the President's actions, we must presume
- that his actions are not subject to its requirements-).
- We thus concluded that the reapportionment determina-
- tion was not reviewable under the standards of the APA.
- Id., at ___ (slip op., at 11-12). In reaching our conclu-
- sion, we noted that the -President's actions may still be
- reviewed for constitutionality.- Ibid. (citing Youngstown
- Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U. S. 579 (1952), and
- Panama Refining Co. v. Ryan, 293 U. S. 388 (1935)).
- In this case, respondents brought suit under the APA,
- alleging that the Secretary and the Commission did not
- follow the procedural mandates of the 1990 Act. But
- here, as in Franklin, the prerequisite to review under
- the APA--final agency action--is lacking. The reports
- submitted by the Secretary of Defense and the Commis-
- sion, like the report of the Secretary of Commerce in
- Franklin, -carr[y] no direct consequences- for base
- closings. Id., at ___ (slip op., at 9). The action that
- -will directly affect- the military bases id., at ___ (slip
- op., at 7), is taken by the President, when he submits
- his certification of approval to Congress. Accordingly,
- the Secretary's and Commission's reports serve -more
- like a tentative recommendation than a final and
- binding determination.- Id., at ___ (slip op., at 9). The
- reports are, -like the ruling of a subordinate official, not
- final and therefore not subject to review.- Ibid. (inter-
- nal quotation marks and citation omitted). The actions
- of the President, in turn, are not reviewable under the
- APA because, as we concluded in Franklin, the President
- is not an -agency.- See id., at ___ (slip op., at 11-12).
- Respondents contend that the 1990 Act differs signifi-
- cantly from the Census Act at issue in Franklin, and
- that our decision in Franklin therefore does not control
- the question whether the Commission's actions here are
- final. Respondents appear to argue that the President,
- under the 1990 Act, has little authority regarding the
- closure of bases. See Brief for Respondents 29 (pointing
- out that the 1990 Act does not allow -the President to
- ignore, revise or amend the Commission's list of clo-
- sures. He is only permitted to accept or reject the
- Commission's closure package in its entirety-). Conse-
- quently, respondents continue, the Commission's report
- must be regarded as final. This argument ignores the
- ratio decidendi of Franklin. See 505 U. S., at ___ (slip
- op., at 11-12).
- First, respondents underestimate the President's
- authority under the Act, and the importance of his role
- in the base closure process. Without the President's
- approval, no bases are closed under the Act, see
- 2903(e)(5); the Act, in turn, does not by its terms
- circumscribe the President's discretion to approve or
- disapprove the Commission's report. Cf. Franklin, 505
- U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 10). Second, and more funda-
- mentally, respondents' argument ignores -[t]he core
- question- for determining finality: -whether the agency
- has completed its decisionmaking process, and whether
- the result of that process is one that will directly affect
- the parties.- Id., at ___ (slip op., at 7). That the
- President cannot pick and choose among bases, and
- must accept or reject the entire package offered by the
- Commission, is immaterial. What is crucial is the fact
- that -[t]he President, not the [Commission], takes the
- final action that affects- the military installations. Id.,
- at ___ (slip op., at 10). Accordingly, we hold that the
- decisions made pursuant to the 1990 Act are not
- reviewable under the APA. Accord, Cohen v. Rice, 992
- F. 2d 376 (CA1 1993).
- Although respondents apparently sought review exclu-
- sively under the APA, the Court of Appeals neverthe-
- less sought to determine whether non-APA review, based
- on either common law or constitutional principles, was
- available. It focused, moreover, on whether the Presi-
- dent's actions under the 1990 Act were reviewable, even
- though respondents did not name the President as a
- defendant. The Court of Appeals reasoned that because
- respondents sought to enjoin the implementation of the
- President's decision, the legality of that decision would
- determine whether an injunction should issue. See
- Specter II, 995 F. 2d, at 407; Specter I, 971 F. 2d, at
- 936. In this rather curious fashion, the case was
- transmuted into one concerning the reviewability of
- presidential decisions.
-
- II
- Seizing upon our statement in Franklin that presiden-
- tial decisions are reviewable for constitutionality, the
- Court of Appeals asserted that -there is a constitutional
- aspect to the exercise of judicial review in this case-an
- aspect grounded in the separation of powers doctrine.-
- Specter II, 995 F. 2d, at 408. It reasoned, relying
- primarily on Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer,
- 343 U. S. 579 (1952), that whenever the President acts
- in excess of his statutory authority, he also violates the
- constitutional separation of powers doctrine. Thus,
- judicial review must be available to determine whether
- the President has statutory authority -for whatever
- action- he takes. 995 F. 2d, at 409. In terms of this
- case, the Court of Appeals concluded that the President's
- statutory authority to close and realign bases would be
- lacking if the Secretary and Commission violated the
- procedural requirements of the Act in formulating their
- recommendations. Ibid.
- Accepting for purposes of decision here the propriety
- of examining the President's actions, we nonetheless
- believe that the Court of Appeals' analysis is flawed.
- Our cases do not support the proposition that every
- action by the President, or by another executive official,
- in excess of his statutory authority is ipso facto in
- violation of the Constitution. On the contrary, we have
- often distinguished between claims of constitutional
- violations and claims that an official has acted in excess
- of his statutory authority. See, e.g., Wheeldin v.
- Wheeler, 373 U. S. 647, 650-652 (1963) (distinguishing
- between -rights which may arise under the Fourth
- Amendment- and -a cause of action for abuse of the
- [statutory] subpoena power by a federal officer-); Bivens
- v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents, 403 U. S. 388,
- 396-397 (1971) (distinguishing between -actions contrary
- to [a] constitutional prohibition,- and those -merely said
- to be in excess of the authority delegated . . . by the
- Congress-).
- In Larson v. Domestic & Foreign Commerce Corp., 337
- U. S. 682, 691, n. 11 (1949), for example, we held that
- sovereign immunity would not shield an executive officer
- from suit if the officer acted either -unconstitutionally or
- beyond his statutory powers.- (Emphasis added). If all
- executive actions in excess of statutory authority were
- ipso facto unconstitutional, as the Court of Appeals
- seemed to believe, there would have been little need in
- Larson for our specifying unconstitutional and ultra
- vires conduct as separate categories. See also Dugan v.
- Rank, 372 U. S. 609, 621-622 (1963); Harmon v.
- Brucker, 355 U. S. 579, 581 (1958) (-In keeping with our
- duty to avoid deciding constitutional questions presented
- unless essential to proper disposition of a case, we look
- first to petitioners' non-constitutional claim that respond-
- ent [Secretary of the Army] acted in excess of powers
- granted him by Congress- (emphasis added)).
- Our decision in Youngstown, supra, does not suggest
- a different conclusion. In Youngstown, the Government
- disclaimed any statutory authority for the President's
- seizure of steel mills. See 343 U. S., at 585 (-[W]e do
- not understand the Government to rely on statutory
- authorization for this seizure-). The only basis of
- authority asserted was the President's inherent constitu-
- tional power as the Executive and the Commander-in-
- Chief of the Armed Forces. Id., at 587. Because no
- statutory authority was claimed, the case necessarily
- turned on whether the Constitution authorized the
- President's actions. Youngstown thus involved the
- conceded absence of any statutory authority, not a claim
- that the President acted in excess of such authority.
- The case cannot be read for the proposition that an
- action taken by the President in excess of his statutory
- authority necessarily violates the Constitution.
- The decisions cited above establish that claims simply
- alleging that the President has exceeded his statutory
- authority are not -constitutional- claims, subject to
- judicial review under the exception recognized in Frank-
- lin. As this case demonstrates, if every claim alleging
- that the President exceeded his statutory authority were
- considered a constitutional claim, the exception identified
- in Franklin would be broadened beyond recognition.
- The distinction between claims that an official exceeded
- his statutory authority, on the one hand, and claims
- that he acted in violation of the Constitution, on the
- other, is too well established to permit this sort of
- evisceration.
- So the claim raised here is a statutory one: The
- President is said to have violated the terms of the 1990
- Act by accepting procedurally flawed recommendations.
- The exception identified in Franklin for review of
- constitutional claims thus does not apply in this case.
- We may assume for the sake of argument that some
- claims that the President has violated a statutory
- mandate are judicially reviewable outside the framework
- of the APA. See Dames & Moore v. Regan, 453 U. S.
- 654, 667 (1981). But longstanding authority holds that
- such review is not available when the statute in ques-
- tion commits the decision to the discretion of the
- President.
- As we stated in Dakota Central Telephone Co. v. South
- Dakota ex rel. Payne, 250 U. S. 163, 184 (1919), where
- a claim
- -concerns not a want of [presidential] power, but a
- mere excess or abuse of discretion in exerting a
- power given, it is clear that it involves consider-
- ations which are beyond the reach of judicial power.
- This must be since, as this court has often pointed
- out, the judicial may not invade the legislative or
- executive departments so as to correct alleged
- mistakes or wrongs arising from asserted abuse of
- discretion.-
- In a case analogous to the present one, Chicago &
- Southern Air Lines, Inc. v. Waterman S. S. Corp., 333
- U. S. 103 (1948), an airline denied a certificate from the
- Civil Aeronautics Board to establish an international air
- route sought judicial review of the denial. Although the
- Civil Aeronautics Act, 49 U. S. C. 646 (1946 ed.),
- generally allowed for judicial review of the Board's
- decisions, and did not explicitly exclude judicial review
- of decisions involving international routes of domestic
- airlines, we nonetheless held that review was unavail-
- able. 333 U. S., at 114.
- In reasoning pertinent to this case, we first held that
- the Board's certification was not reviewable because it
- was not final until approved by the President. See id.,
- at 112-114 (-orders of the Board as to certificates for
- overseas or foreign air transportation are not mature
- and are therefore not susceptible of judicial review at
- any time before they are finalized by Presidential
- approval-). We then concluded that the President's
- decision to approve or disapprove the orders was not
- reviewable, because -the final orders embody Presiden-
- tial discretion as to political matters beyond the compe-
- tence of the courts to adjudicate.- See id., at 114. We
- fully recognized that the consequence of our decision was
- to foreclose judicial review:
- -The dilemma faced by those who demand judicial
- review of the Board's order is that before Presiden-
- tial approval it is not a final determination . . . and
- after Presidential approval the whole order, both in
- what is approved without change as well as in
- amendments which he directs, derives its vitality
- from the exercise of unreviewable Presidential
- discretion.- Id., at 113 (Emphasis added).
- Although the President's discretion in Waterman S. S.
- Corp. derived from the Constitution, we do not believe
- the result should be any different when the President's
- discretion derives from a valid statute. See Dakota
- Central Telephone Co., supra, at 184; United States v.
- George S. Bush & Co., 310 U. S. 371, 380 (1940).
- The 1990 Act does not at all limit the President's
- discretion in approving or disapproving the Commission's
- recommendations. See 2903(e); see also Specter II, 995
- F. 2d, at 413 (Alito, J., dissenting). The Third Circuit
- seemed to believe that the President's authority to close
- bases depended on the Secretary's and Commission's
- compliance with statutory procedures. This view of the
- statute, however, incorrectly conflates the duties of the
- Secretary and Commission with the authority of the
- President. The President's authority to act is not
- contingent on the Secretary's and Commission's fulfill-
- ment of all the procedural requirements imposed upon
- them by the 1990 Act. Nothing in 2903(e) requires the
- President to determine whether the Secretary or Com-
- mission committed any procedural violations in making
- their recommendations, nor does 2903(e) prohibit the
- President from approving recommendations that are
- procedurally flawed. Indeed, nothing in 2903(e)
- prevents the President from approving or disapproving
- the recommendations for whatever reason he sees fit.
- See 2903(e); Specter II, 995 F. 2d, at 413 (Alito, J.,
- dissenting).
- How the President chooses to exercise the discretion
- Congress has granted him is not a matter for our
- review. See Waterman S. S. Corp., supra; Dakota
- Central Telephone Co., supra, at 184. As we stated in
- George S. Bush & Co., supra, at 380, -[n]o question of
- law is raised when the exercise of [the President's]
- discretion is challenged.-
-
- III
- In sum, we hold that the actions of the Secretary and
- the Commission cannot be reviewed under the APA
- because they are not -final agency actions.- The actions
- of the President cannot be reviewed under the APA
- because the President is not an -agency- under that Act.
- The claim that the President exceeded his authority
- under the 1990 Act is not a constitutional claim, but a
- statutory one. Where a statute, such as the 1990 Act,
- commits decisionmaking to the discretion of the Presi-
- dent, judicial review of the President's decision is not
- available.
- Respondents tell us that failure to allow judicial
- review here would virtually repudiate Marbury v.
- Madison, 1 Cranch 137 (1803), and nearly two centuries
- of constitutional adjudication. But our conclusion that
- judicial review is not available for respondents' claim
- follows from our interpretation of an Act of Congress, by
- which we and all federal courts are bound. The judicial
- power of the United States conferred by Article III of
- the Constitution is upheld just as surely by withholding
- judicial relief where Congress has permissibly foreclosed
- it, as it is by granting such relief where authorized by
- the Constitution or by statute.
- The judgment of the Court of Appeals is
- Reversed.
-