1. The issue as to the validity of § 304 of the Urgent
Deficiency Appropriation Act of 1943, providing that, after
November 15, 1943, no salary or other compensation shall be paid to
certain employees of the Government (specified by name) out of any
monies then or thereafter appropriated except for services as
jurors or members of the armed forces, unless they were again
appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the
Senate prior to such date, is not a mere political issue over which
Congress has final say, and a challenge to its constitutionality
presents a justiciable question to the courts. P.
328 U. S.
313.
(a) It is not a mere appropriation measure over which Congress
has complete control. P.
328 U. S.
313.
(b) Its purpose was not merely to cut off the employees'
compensation through regular disbursing channels, but permanently
to bar them from government service, except as jurors or soldiers
-- because of what Congress thought of their political beliefs. P.
328 U. S.
313.
(c) The Constitution did not contemplate that congressional
action aimed at three individuals, which stigmatized their
reputations and seriously impaired their chances to earn a living,
could never be challenged in court. P.
328 U. S.
314.
2. Section 304 violates Article I, § 3, cl. 9 of the
Constitution, which forbids the enactment of any bill of attainder
or
ex post facto law. P.
328 U. S.
315.
(a) Legislative acts, no matter what their form, that apply
either to named individuals or to easily ascertainable members of a
group in such a way as to inflict punishment on them without a
judicial trial, are bills of attainder prohibited by the
Constitution.
Cummins v.
Missouri, 4 Wall. 277;
Ex parte
Garland, 4 Wall. 333. P.
328 U. S.
315.
(b) Section 304 clearly accomplishes the punishment of named
individuals without a judicial trial. P.
328 U. S.
316.
Page 328 U. S. 304
(c) The fact that the punishment is inflicted through the
instrumentality of an Act specifically cutting off the pay of
certain named individuals found by Congress to be guilty of
disloyalty make it no less effective than if it had been done by an
Act which designated the conduct as criminal. P.
328 U. S.
316.
104 Ct.Cls. 557, 66 F. Supp. 142, affirmed.
The Court of Claims entered judgments in favor of certain
government employees for services rendered after November 15, 1943,
to whom § 304 of the Urgent Deficiency Appropriation Act of
1943, 57 Stat. 431, 450, forbade payment of any compensation after
that date from appropriated funds. 104 Ct.Cls. 557, 66 F. Supp.
142. This Court granted certiorari. 327 U.S. 773.
Affirmed, p.
328 U. S.
318.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1943, the respondents, Lovett, Watson, and Dodd, were, and
had been for several years, working for the Government. The
government agencies which had lawfully
Page 328 U. S. 305
employed them were fully satisfied with the quality of their
work, and wished to keep them employed on their jobs. Over the
protest of those employing agencies, Congress provided in §
304 of the Urgent Deficiency Appropriation Act of 1943, by way of
an amendment attached to the House bill, that, after November 15,
1943, no salary or compensation should be paid respondents out of
any monies then or thereafter appropriated except for services as
jurors or members of the armed forces, unless they were, prior to
November 15, 1943, again appointed to jobs by the President with
the advice and consent of the Senate. [
Footnote 1] 57 Stat. 431, 450. Notwithstanding the
congressional enactment, and the failure of the President to
reappoint respondents, the agencies kept all the respondents at
work on their jobs for varying periods after November 15, 1943; but
their compensation was discontinued after that date. To secure
compensation for this post-November 15th work, respondents brought
these actions in the Court of
Page 328 U. S. 306
Claims. They urged that § 304 is unconstitutional and void
on the grounds that: (1) The section, properly interpreted, shows a
congressional purpose to exercise the power to remove executive
employees, a power not entrusted to Congress, but to the Executive
Branch of Government under Article II, § 1, 2, 3, and 4 of the
Constitution; (2) the section violates Article I, § 9, Clause
3, of the Constitution, which provides that "No Bill of Attainder
or
ex post facto Law shall be passed"; (3) the section
violates the Fifth Amendment, in that it singles out these three
respondents and deprives them of their liberty and property without
due process of law. The Solicitor General, appearing for the
Government, joined in the first two of respondents' contentions,
but took no position on the third. House Resolution 386, 89
Cong.Rec. 10882, and Joint Resolution No. 230, 78th Congress, 58
Stat. 113, authorized a special counsel to appear on behalf of the
Congress. This counsel denied all three of respondents'
contentions. He urged that § 304 was a valid exercise of
congressional power under Article I, § 8, Clause 1; § 8,
Clause 18, and § 9, Clause 7 of the Constitution, which
sections empower Congress "To lay and collect Taxes . . . to pay
the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of
the United States," and
"To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for
carrying into Execution . . . all . . . Powers vested by this
Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any
Department or Officer thereof,"
and provide that "No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but
in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law . . ." Counsel for
Congress also urged that § 304 did not purport to terminate
respondents' employment. According to him, it merely cut off
respondents' pay, and deprived governmental agencies of any power
to make enforceable contracts with respondents for any further
compensation. The contention was that this involved
Page 328 U. S. 307
simply an exercise of congressional powers over appropriations,
which, according to the argument, are plenary, and not subject to
judicial review. On this premise, counsel for Congress urged that
the challenge of the constitutionality of § 304 raised no
justiciable controversy. The Court of Claims entered judgments in
favor of respondents. Some of the judges were of the opinion that
§ 304, properly interpreted, did not terminate respondents'
employment, but only prohibited payment of compensation out of
funds generally appropriated, and that, consequently, the continued
employment of respondents was valid, and justified their bringing
actions for pay in the Court of Claims. Other members of the Court
thought § 304 unconstitutional and void, either as a bill of
attainder, an encroachment on exclusive executive authority, or a
denial of due process. 104 Ct.Cls. 557, 66 F. Supp. 142. We granted
certiorari because of the manifest importance of the questions
involved.
In this Court, the parties and counsel for Congress have urged
the same points as they did in the Court of Claims. According to
the view we take, we need not decide whether § 304 is an
unconstitutional encroachment on executive power or a denial of due
process of law, and the section is not challenged on the ground
that it violates the First Amendment. Our inquiry is thus confined
to whether the actions, in the light of a proper construction of
the Act, present justiciable controversies, and, if so, whether
§ 304 is a bill of attainder against these respondents,
involving a use of power which the Constitution unequivocally
declares Congress can never exercise. These questions require an
interpretation of the meaning and purpose of the section, which, in
turn, requires an understanding of the circumstances leading to its
passage. We, consequently, find it necessary to set out these
circumstances somewhat in detail.
Page 328 U. S. 308
In the background of the statute here challenged lies the House
of Representatives' feeling in the late thirties that many
"subversives" were occupying influential positions in the
Government and elsewhere, and that their influence must not remain
unchallenged. As part of its program against "subversive"
activities, the House, in May, 1938, created a Committee on
Un-American Activities, which became known as the Dies Committee,
after its Chairman, Congressman Martin Dies. H.Res. 282, 83
Cong.Rec. 7568-7587. This Committee conducted a series of
investigations and made lists of people and organizations it
thought "subversive."
See, e.g., H.Rep. No. 1, 77th Cong.,
1st Sess.; H.Rep. No. 2743, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. The creation of
the Dies Committee was followed by provisions such as § 9A of
the Hatch Act, 53 Stat. 1148, 1149, and § 15(f) and 17(b) of
the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act of 1941, 54 Stat. 611, which
forbade the holding of a federal job by anyone who was a member of
a political party or organization that advocated the overthrow of
our constitutional form of Government in the United States. It
became the practice to include a similar prohibition in all
appropriations acts, together with criminal penalties for its
violation. [
Footnote 2] Under
these provisions, the Federal Bureau of Investigation began
wholesale investigations of federal employees, which investigations
were financed by special congressional appropriations. 55 Stat.
292, 56 Stat. 468, 482. Thousands were investigated.
While all this was happening, Mr. Dies, on February 1, 1943, in
a long speech on the floor of the House, attacked thirty-nine named
government employees as "irresponsible, unrepresentative, crackpot,
radical bureaucrats," and
Page 328 U. S. 309
affiliates of "Communist front organizations." Among these named
individuals were the three respondents. Congressman Dies told the
House that respondents, as well as the other thirty-six individuals
he named, were, because of their beliefs and past associations,
unfit to "hold a Government position," and urged Congress to refuse
"to appropriate money for their salaries." In this connection, he
proposed that the Committee on Appropriations "take immediate and
vigorous steps to eliminate these people from public office." 89
Cong.Rec. 474, 479, 486. Four days later, an amendment was offered
to the Treasury-Post Office Appropriation Bill which provided that
"no part of any appropriation contained in this act shall be used
to pay the compensation of" the thirty-nine individuals Dies had
attacked. 89 Cong.Rec. 645. The Congressional Record shows that
this amendment precipitated a debate that continued for several
days.
Id. 645-742. All of those participating agreed that
the "charges" against the thirty-nine individuals were serious.
Some wanted to accept Congressman Dies' statements as sufficient
proof of "guilt," while others referred to such proposed action as
"legislative lynching,"
id. at 651, smacking "of the
procedure in the French Chamber of Deputies, during the Reign of
Terror."
Id. at 654. The Dies charges were referred to as
"indictments," and many claimed this made it necessary that the
named federal employees be given a hearing and a chance to prove
themselves innocent.
Id. at 711. Congressman Dies then
suggested that the Appropriations Committee "weigh the evidence and
. . . take immediate steps to dismiss these people from the Federal
service."
Id. at 651. Eventually, a resolution was
proposed to defer action until the Appropriations Committee could
investigate, so that accused federal employees would get a chance
to prove themselves "innocent" of communism or disloyalty, and so
that each "man would
Page 328 U. S. 310
have his day in court," and "There would be no star chamber
proceedings."
Id. at 711 and 713,
but see id. at
715. The resolution which was finally passed authorized the
Appropriations Committee, acting through a special
subcommittee,
". . . to examine into any and all allegations or charges that
certain persons in the employ of the several executive departments
and other executive agencies are unfit to continue in such
employment by reason of their present association or membership or
past association or membership in or with organizations whose aims
or purposes are or have been subversive to the Government of the
United States."
Id. at 734, 742. The Committee was to have full plenary
powers, including the right to summon witnesses and papers, and was
to report its "findings and determination" to the House. It was
authorized to attach legislation recommended by it to any general
or special appropriation measure, notwithstanding general House
rules against such practice.
Id. at 734. The purpose of
the resolution was thus described by the Chairman of the Committee
on Appropriations in his closing remarks in favor of its
passage:
"The third and the really important effect is that we will
expedite adjudication and disposition of these cases, and thereby
serve both the accused and the Government. These men against whom
charges are pending are faced with a serious situation. If they are
not guilty, they are entitled to prompt exoneration; on the other
hand, if they are guilty, then the quicker the Government removes
them, the sooner and the more certainly will we protect the Nation
against sabotage and fifth-column activity."
Id. at 741.
After the resolution was passed, a special subcommittee of the
Appropriations Committee held hearings in secret executive session.
Those charged with "subversive" beliefs and "subversive"
associations were permitted to testify, but lawyers, including
those representing the agencies
Page 328 U. S. 311
by which the accused were employed, were not permitted to be
present. At the hearings, committee members, the committee staff,
and whatever witness was under examination were the only ones
present. The evidence, aside from that given by the accused
employees, appears to have been largely that of reports made by the
Dies Committee, its investigators, and Federal Bureau of
Investigation reports, the latter being treated as too confidential
to be made public.
After this hearing, the subcommittee's reports and
recommendations were submitted to the House as part of the
Appropriation Committee's report. The subcommittee stated that it
had regarded the investigations "as in the nature of an inquest of
office," with the ultimate purpose of purging the public service of
anyone found guilty of "subversive activity." The committee,
stating that "subversive activity" had not before been defined by
Congress or by the courts, formulated its own definition of
"subversive activity," which we set out in the margin. [
Footnote 3] Respondents Watson, Dodd,
and Lovett were, according to the subcommittee, guilty of having
engaged in "subversive activity within the definition adopted by
the committee." H.Rep. No. 448, 78th Cong., 1st Sess., 7, 9. The
ultimate finding and recommendation as to respondent Watson, which
was substantially similar to the findings with respect to Lovett
and Dodd, read as follows:
"Upon consideration of all of the evidence, your committee finds
that the membership and association of Dr. Goodwin B. Watson with
the organizations mentioned,
Page 328 U. S. 312
and his views and philosophies as expressed in various
statements and writings constitute subversive activity within the
definition adopted by your committee, and that he is, therefore,
unfit for the present to continue in Government employment."
H.Rep. No. 448, 78th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 6. As to Lovett, the
Committee further reported that it had rejected a "strong appeal"
from the Secretary of the Interior for permission to retain Lovett
in government service because, as the Committee stated, it could
not
"escape the conviction that this official is unfit to hold a
position of trust with this Government by reason of his membership,
association, and affiliation with organizations whose aims and
purposes are subversive to the Government of the United
States."
Id. at 12.
Section 304 was submitted to the House along with the Committee
Report. Congressman Kerr, who was chairman of the subcommittee,
stated that the issue before the House was simply:" . . . whether
or not the people of this country want men who are not in sympathy
with the institutions of this country to run it." He said further:
" . . . these people under investigation have no property rights in
these offices. One Congress can take away their rights given them
by another." 89 Cong.Rec. 4583. Other members of the House, during
several days of debate, bitterly attacked the measure as
unconstitutional and unwise.
Id. at 4482-4487, 4546-4556,
4581-4605. Finally, § 304 was passed by the House.
The Senate Appropriation Committee eliminated § 304, and
its action was sustained by the Senate. 89 Cong.Rec. 5024. After
the first conference report, which left the matter still in
disagreement, the Senate voted 69 to 0 against the conference
report which left § 304 in the bill. The House, however,
insisted on the amendment, and indicated that it would not approve
any appropriation bill without § 304. Finally, after the fifth
conference report
Page 328 U. S. 313
showed that the House would not yield, the Senate adopted §
304. When the President signed the bill, he stated
"The Senate yielded, as I have been forced to yield, to avoid
delaying our conduct of the war. But I cannot so yield without
placing on record my view that this provision is not only unwise
and discriminatory, but unconstitutional."
H.Doc. 264, 78th Cong., 1st Sess.
I
In view of the facts just set out, we cannot agree with the two
judges of the Court of Claims who held that § 304 required "a
mere stoppage of disbursing routine, nothing more," and left the
employer governmental agencies free to continue employing
respondents and to incur contractual obligations by virtue of such
continued work which respondents could enforce in the Court of
Claims. Nor can we agree with counsel for Congress that the section
did not provide for the dismissal of respondents, but merely
forbade governmental agencies to compensate respondents for their
work or to incur obligations for such compensation at any and all
times. We therefore cannot conclude, as he urges, that § 304
is a mere appropriation measure, and that, since Congress, under
the Constitution, has complete control over appropriations, a
challenge to the measure's constitutionality does not present a
justiciable question in the courts, but is merely a political issue
over which Congress has final say.
We hold that the purpose of § 304 was not merely to cut off
respondents' compensation through regular disbursing channels, but
permanently to bar them from government service, and that the issue
of whether it is constitutional is justiciable. The section's
language, as well as the circumstances of its passage which we have
just described, show that no mere question of compensation
procedure or of appropriations was involved, but that it
Page 328 U. S. 314
was designed to force the employing agencies to discharge
respondents and to bar their being hired by any other governmental
agency.
Cf. United States v. Dickerson, 310 U.
S. 554. Any other interpretation of the section would
completely frustrate the purpose of all who sponsored § 304,
which clearly was to "purge" the then existing and all future lists
of government employees of those whom Congress deemed guilty of
"subversive activities," and therefore "unfit" to hold a federal
job. What was challenged, therefore, is a statute which, because of
what Congress thought to be their political beliefs, prohibited
respondents from ever engaging in any government work except as
jurors or soldiers. Respondents claimed that their discharge was
unconstitutional; that they consequently rightfully continued to
work for the Government, and that the Government owes them
compensation for services performed under contracts of employment.
Congress has established the Court of Claims to try just such
controversies. What is involved here is a congressional
proscription of Lovett, Watson, and Dodd, prohibiting their ever
holding a government job. Were this case to be not justiciable,
congressional action, aimed at three named individuals, which
stigmatized their reputation and seriously impaired their chance to
earn a living, could never be challenged in any court. Our
Constitution did not contemplate such a result. To quote Alexander
Hamilton,
". . . a limited constitution . . . [is] one which contains
certain specified exceptions to the legislative authority, such,
for instance, as that it shall pass no bills of attainder, no
ex post facto laws, and the like. Limitations of this kind
can be preserved in practice no other way than through the medium
of the courts of justice, whose duty it must be to declare all acts
contrary to the manifest tenor of the Constitution void. Without
this, all the reservations of particular rights or privileges would
amount to nothing."
Federalist Paper No. 78.
Page 328 U. S. 315
II
We hold that § 304 falls precisely within the category of
congressional actions which the Constitution barred by providing
that "No Bill of Attainder or
ex post facto Law shall be
passed." In
Cummins v.
Missouri, 4 Wall. 277,
71 U. S. 323,
this Court said,
"A bill of attainder is a legislative act which inflicts
punishment without a judicial trial. If the punishment be less than
death, the act is termed a bill of pains and penalties. Within the
meaning of the Constitution, bills of attainder include bills of
pains and penalties."
The
Cummins decision involved a provision of the
Missouri Reconstruction Constitution which required persons to take
an Oath of Loyalty as a prerequisite to practicing a profession.
Cummins, a Catholic Priest, was convicted for teaching and
preaching as a minister without taking the oath. The oath required
an applicant to affirm that he had never given aid or comfort to
persons engaged in hostility to the United States, and had never
"been a member of, or connected with, any order, society, or
organization, inimical to the government of the United States . .
." In an illuminating opinion which gave the historical background
of the constitutional prohibition against bills of attainder, this
Court invalidated the Missouri constitutional provision both
because it constituted a bill of attainder and because it had an
ex post facto operation. On the same day the
Cummins case was decided, the Court, in
Ex parte
Garland, 4 Wall. 333, also held invalid on the same
grounds an Act of Congress which required attorneys practicing
before this Court to take a similar oath. Neither of these cases
has ever been overruled. They stand for the proposition that
legislative acts, no matter what their form, that apply either to
named individuals or to easily ascertainable members of a group in
such a way as to inflict punishment on them without a judicial
trial are bills of attainder prohibited by the Constitution.
Page 328 U. S. 316
Adherence to this principle requires invalidation of § 304.
We do adhere to it.
Section 304 was designed to apply to particular individuals.
[
Footnote 4] Just as the
statute in the two cases mentioned, it "operates as a legislative
decree of perpetual exclusion" from a chosen vocation.
Ex parte
Garland, supra, at
71 U. S. 377.
This permanent proscription from any opportunity to serve the
Government is punishment, and of a most severe type. It is a type
of punishment which Congress has only invoked for special types of
odious and dangerous crimes, such as treason, 18 U.S.C. 2;
acceptance of bribes by members of Congress, 18 U.S.C.199, 202,
203; or by other government officials, 18 U.S.C. 207, and
interference with elections by Army and Navy officers, 18 U.S.C.
58.
Section 304, thus, clearly accomplishes the punishment of named
individuals without a judicial trial. The fact that the punishment
is inflicted through the instrumentality of an Act specifically
cutting off the pay of certain named individuals found guilty of
disloyalty makes it no less galling or effective than if it had
been done by an Act which designated the conduct as criminal.
[
Footnote 5] No one would think
that Congress could have passed a valid law stating that, after
investigation, it had found Lovett, Dodd, and Watson "guilty" of
the crime of engaging in "subversive activities," defined that term
for the first time, and sentenced them to perpetual exclusion from
any government employment. Section 304, while it does not use that
language, accomplishes that result. The effect was to inflict
punishment without the safeguards of a judicial trial and
Page 328 U. S. 317
"determined by no previous law or fixed rule." [
Footnote 6] The Constitution declares that
that cannot be done either by a State or by the United States.
Those who wrote our Constitution well knew the danger inherent
in special legislative acts which take away the life, liberty, or
property of particular named persons because the legislature thinks
them guilty of conduct which deserves punishment. They intended to
safeguard the people of this country from punishment without trial
by duly constituted courts.
See Duncan v. Kahanamoku,
327 U. S. 304. And
even the courts to which this important function was entrusted were
commanded to stay their hands until and unless certain tested
safeguards were observed. An accused in court must be tried by an
impartial jury, has a right to be represented by counsel, he must
be clearly informed of the charge against him, the law which he is
charged with violating must have been passed before he committed
the act charged, he must be confronted by the witnesses against
him, he must not be compelled to incriminate himself, he cannot
twice be put in jeopardy for the same offense, and, even after
conviction,
Page 328 U. S. 318
no cruel and unusual punishment can be inflicted upon him.
See Chambers v. Florida, 309 U. S. 227,
309 U. S.
235-238. When our Constitution and Bill of Rights were
written, our ancestors had ample reason to know that legislative
trials and punishments were too dangerous to liberty to exist in
the nation of free men they envisioned. And so they proscribed
bills of attainder. Section 304 is one. Much as we regret to
declare that an Act of Congress violates the Constitution, we have
no alternative here.
Section 304 therefore does not stand as an obstacle to payment
of compensation to Lovett, Watson, and Dodd. The judgment in their
favor is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or
decision of these cases.
* Together with No. 810,
United States v. Watson, and
No. 811,
United States v. Dodd, on certiorari to the same
court, argued and decided on the same dates.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 304 provides:
"No part of any appropriation, allocation, or fund (1) which is
made available under or pursuant to this Act, or (2) which is now,
or which is hereafter made, available under or pursuant to any
other Act, to any department, agency, or instrumentality of the
United States, shall be used, after November 15, 1943, to pay any
part of the salary, or other compensation for the personal
services, of Goodwin B. Watson, William E. Dodd, Junior, and Robert
Morss Lovett, unless prior to such date such person has been
appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of
the Senate:
Provided, That this section shall not operate
to deprive any such person of payment for leaves of absence or
salary, or of any refund or reimbursement, which have accrued prior
to November 15, 1943:
Provided further, That this section
shall not operate to deprive any such person of payment for
services performed as a member of a jury or as a member of the
armed forces of the United States nor any benefit, pension, or
emolument resulting therefrom."
As we shall point out, the President signed the bill because he
had to do so, since the appropriated funds were imperatively needed
to carry on the war. He felt, however, that § 304 of the bill
was unconstitutional, and failed to reappoint respondents.
[
Footnote 2]
55 Stat. 92, § 5; 55 Stat. 265, § 504; 55 Stat. 303,
§ 7; 55 Stat. 366, § 10; 55 Stat. 408, § 3; 55 Stat.
446, § 5; 55 Stat. 466, § 704; 55 Stat. 499, § 10;
House Doc. 833, 77th Cong., 2d Sess.
[
Footnote 3]
"Subversive activity in this country derives from conduct
intentionally destructive of or inimical to the Government of the
United States -- that which seeks to undermine its institutions, or
to distort its functions, or to impede its projects, or to lessen
its efforts, the ultimate end being to overturn it all. Such
activity may be open and direct, as by effort to overthrow, or
subtle and indirect, as by sabotage."
H.Rep. No. 448, 78th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 5.
[
Footnote 4]
This is, of course, one of the usual characteristics of bills of
attainder.
See Wooddeson Law Lectures: A Systematical View
of the Laws of England (1792), No. 41, 622.
[
Footnote 5]
See Cummins v. Missouri, supra, 4 Wall. at
71 U. S. 325,
71 U. S. 329;
See also Fletcher v.
Peck, 6 Cranch 87,
10 U. S.
138-139;
Burgess v. Salmon, 97 U. S.
381,
97 U. S. 385.
[
Footnote 6]
See dissent of Mr. Justice Miller in
Cummins v.
Missouri, supra, 4 Wall. at
71 U. S. 388;
see also Wooddeson,
supra, at 624, 638
et
seq. Section 304 has all the characteristics of bills of
attainder, even as they are set out by Justice Miller's dissent,
except the corruption of blood. 4 Wall. at
71 U. S. 387.
The American precedents do not consider corruption of blood a
necessary element. Originally, a judgment of death was necessary to
attaint, and the consequences of attainder were forfeiture and
corruption of blood. Coke, First Institute (on Littleton) (Thomas
ed. 1818) Vol. III, 559, 563, 565. If the judgment was lesser
punishment than death, there was no attaint, and the bill was one
of pains and penalties. Practically all the American precedents are
bills of pains and penalties.
See Thompson, Anti-Loyalist
Legislation During the American Revolution (1908) 3 Ill.L.Rev. 81,
153
et passim; John C. Hamilton, History of the Republic
of the United States (1859) Vol. III, 23-40. The Constitution, in
prohibiting bills of attainder, undoubtedly included bills of pains
and penalties, as the majority in the
Cummins case
held.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, whom MR. JUSTICE REED joins,
concurring.
Nothing would be easier than personal condemnation of the
provision of the Urgent Deficiency Appropriation Act of 1943, here
challenged . § 304, 57 Stat. 431, 450. [
Footnote 2/1]
Page 328 U. S. 319
But the judicial function exacts considerations very different
from those which may determine a vote in Congress for or against a
measure. And what may be decisive for a Presidential disapproval
may not at all satisfy the established criteria which alone justify
this Court's striking down an act of Congress.
It is not for us to find unconstitutionality in what Congress
enacted, although it may imply notions that are abhorrent to us as
individuals or policies we deem harmful to the country's wellbeing.
Although it was proposed at the Constitutional Convention to have
this Court share in the legislative process, the Framers saw fit to
exclude it. And so,
"it must be remembered that legislatures are ultimate guardians
of the liberties and welfare of the people in quite as great a
degree as the courts."
Missouri, K. & T. R. Co. v. May, 194 U.
S. 267,
194 U. S. 270.
This admonition was uttered by Mr. Justice Holmes in one of his
earliest opinions, and it needs to be recalled whenever an
exceptionally offensive enactment tempts the Court beyond its
strict confinements.
Not to exercise by indirection authority which the Constitution
denied to this Court calls for the severest intellectual
detachment, and the most alert self-restraint. The scrupulous
observance, with some deviations, of the professed limits of this
Court's power to strike down legislation has been, perhaps, the one
quality the great judges of the Court have had in common.
Particularly when Congressional legislation is under scrutiny,
every rational trail must be pursued to prevent collision between
Congress and Court. For Congress can readily mend its ways, or the
people may express disapproval by choosing different
representatives. But a decree of unconstitutionality by this Court
is fraught with consequences so enduring and far-reaching as to be
avoided unless no choice is left in reason.
Page 328 U. S. 320
The inclusion of § 304 in the Appropriation Bill
undoubtedly raises serious constitutional questions. But the most
fundamental principle of constitutional adjudication is not to face
constitutional questions, but to avoid them, if at all possible.
And so the
"Court developed, for its own governance in the cases
confessedly within its jurisdiction, a series of rules under which
it has avoided passing upon a large part of all the constitutional
questions pressed upon it for decision."
Brandeis, J., concurring, in
Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley
Authority, 297 U. S. 288,
297 U. S. 341,
at
297 U. S. 346.
That a piece of legislation under scrutiny may be widely unpopular
is as irrelevant to the observance of these rules for abstention
from avoidable adjudications as that it is widely popular. Some of
these rules may well appear over-refined or evasive to the laity.
But they have the support not only of the profoundest wisdom. They
have been vindicated, in conspicuous instances of disregard, by the
most painful lessons of our constitutional history.
Such are the guiding considerations enjoined by constitutional
principles and the best practice for dealing with the various
claims of unconstitutionality so ably pressed upon us at the
bar.
The Court reads § 304 as though it expressly discharged
respondents from office which they held and prohibited them from
holding any office under the Government in the future. On the basis
of this reading, the Court holds that the provision is a bill of
attainder, in that it "inflicts punishment without a judicial
trial,"
Cummins v.
Missouri, 4 Wall. 277,
71 U. S. 323,
and is therefore forbidden by Article I, § 9 of the
Constitution. Congress is said to have inflicted this punishment
upon respondents because it disapproved the beliefs they were
thought to hold. Such a colloquial treatment of the statute
neglects the relevant canons of constitutional adjudication and
disregards those
Page 328 U. S. 321
features of the legislation which call its validity into
question on grounds other than inconsistency with the prohibition
against bills of attainder. To characterize an act of Congress as a
bill of attainder readily enlists, however, the instincts of a free
people who are committed to a fair judicial process for the
determination of issues affecting life, liberty, or property, and
naturally abhor anything that resembles legislative determination
of guilt and legislative punishment. As I see it, our duty
precludes reading § 304 as the Court reads it. But even if it
were to be so read the provision is not within the constitutional
conception of a bill of attainder.
Broadly speaking, two types of constitutional claims come before
this Court. Most constitutional issues derive from the broad
standards of fairness written into the Constitution (
e.g.,
"due process," "equal protection of the laws," "just
compensation"), and the division of power as between States and
Nation. Such questions, by their very nature, allow a relatively
wide play for individual legal judgment. The other class gives no
such scope. For this second class of constitutional issues derives
from very specific provisions of the Constitution. These had their
source in definite grievances, and led the Fathers to proscribe
against recurrence of their experience. These specific grievances
and the safeguards against their recurrence were not defined by the
Constitution. They were defined by history. Their meaning was so
settled by history that definition was superfluous. Judicial
enforcement of the Constitution must respect these historic
limits.
The prohibition of bills of attainder falls, of course, among
these very specific constitutional provisions. The distinguishing
characteristic of a bill of attainder is the substitution of
legislative determination of guilt and legislative imposition of
punishment for judicial finding and
Page 328 U. S. 322
sentence.
"A bill of attainder, by the common law, as our fathers imported
it from England and practised it themselves before the adoption of
the Constitution, was an act of sovereign power in the form of a
special statute . . . by which a man was pronounced guilty or
attainted of some crime, and punished by deprivation of his vested
rights, without trial or judgment
per legem terrae."
Farrar,
Manual of the Constitution (1867) 419.
And
see 2 Story,
Commentaries on the Constitution (5th
ed., 1891) 216; 1 Cooley,
Constitutional Limitations (8th
ed., 1927) 536. It was this very special, narrowly restricted,
intervention by the legislature, in matters for which a decent
regard for men's interests indicated a judicial trial, that the
Constitution prohibited. It must be recalled that the Constitution
was framed in an era when dispensing justice was a well established
function of the legislature. The prohibition against bills of
attainder must be viewed in the background of the historic
situation when moves in specific litigation that are now the
conventional, and, for the most part, the exclusive, concern of
courts were commonplace legislative practices.
See Calder v.
Bull, 3 Dall. 386;
Wilkinson
v. Leland, 2 Pet. 627,
27 U. S. 660;
Baltimore & Susquehanna R.
Co. v. Nesbit, 10 How. 395; Pound, Justice
According to Law, II (1914) 14 Col.L.Rev. 1-12; Woodruff,
Chancery in Massachusetts (1889) 5 L.Q.Rev. 370.
Cf.
Sinking-Fund Cases, 99 U. S. 700. Bills
of attainder were part of what now are staple judicial functions
which legislatures then exercised. It was this part of their
recognized authority which the Constitution prohibited when it
provided that "No Bill of Attainder . . . shall be passed." Section
304 lacks the characteristics of the enactments in the Statutes of
the Realm and the Colonial Laws that bear the hallmarks of bills of
attainder.
All bills of attainder specify the offense for which the
attainted person was deemed guilty and for which the
Page 328 U. S. 323
punishment was imposed. There was always a declaration of guilt,
either of the individual or the class to which he belonged. The
offense might be a preexisting crime or an act made punishable
ex post facto. Frequently, a bill of attainder was thus
doubly objectionable because of its
ex post facto
features. This is the historic explanation for uniting the two
mischiefs in one clause, "No Bill of Attainder or
ex post
facto Law shall be passed." No one claims that § 304 is
an
ex post facto law. If it is, in substance, a punishment
for acts deemed "subversive" (the statute, of course, makes no such
charge) for which no punishment had previously been provided, it
would clearly be
ex post facto. Therefore, if § 304
is a bill of attainder, it is also an
ex post facto law.
But if it is not an
ex post facto law, the reasons that
establish that it is not are persuasive that it cannot be a bill of
attainder. No offense is specified, and no declaration of guilt is
made. When the framers of the Constitution proscribed bills of
attainder, they referred to a form of law which had been prevalent
in monarchical England, and was employed in the colonies. They were
familiar with its nature; they had experienced its use; they knew
what they wanted to prevent. It was not a law unfair in general,
even unfair because affecting merely particular individuals, that
they outlawed by the explicitness of their prohibition of bills of
attainder. "Upon this point, a page of history is worth a volume of
logic."
New York Trust Co. v. Eisner, 256 U.
S. 345,
256 U. S. 349.
Nor should resentment against an injustice displace controlling
history in judicial construction of the Constitution.
Not only does § 304 lack the essential declaration of
guilt. It likewise lacks the imposition of punishment in the sense
appropriate for bills of attainder. The punishment imposed by the
most dreaded bill of attainder was, of course, death; lesser
punishments were imposed by similar bills more technically called
bills of pains and penalties.
Page 328 U. S. 324
The Constitution outlaws this entire category of punitive
measures.
Fletcher v.
Peck, 6 Cranch 87,
10 U. S. 138;
Cummins v.
Missouri, 4 Wall. 277. The amount of punishment is
immaterial to the classification of a challenged statute. But
punishment is a prerequisite.
Punishment presupposes an offense, not necessarily an act
previously declared criminal, but an act for which retribution is
exacted. The fact that harm is inflicted by governmental authority
does not make it punishment. Figuratively speaking, all
discomforting action may be deemed punishment, because it deprives
of what otherwise would be enjoyed. But there may be reasons other
than punitive for such deprivation. A man may be forbidden to
practice medicine because he has been convicted of a felony,
Hawker v. New York, 170 U. S. 189, or
because he is no longer qualified,
Dent v. West Virginia,
129 U. S. 114.
"The deprivation of any rights, civil or political, previously
enjoyed, may be punishment, the circumstances attending and the
causes of the deprivation determining this fact."
Cummins v.
Missouri, 4 Wall. 277,
71 U. S.
320.
Is it clear, then, that the respondents were removed from
office, still accepting the Court's reading of the statute, as a
punishment for past acts? Is it clear, that is, to that degree of
certitude which is required before this Court declares legislation
by Congress unconstitutional? The disputed section does not say so.
So far as the House of Representatives is concerned, the Kerr
Committee, which proposed the measure, and many of those who voted
in favor of the Bill (assuming it is appropriate to go behind the
terms of a statute to ascertain the unexpressed motive of its
members), no doubt considered the respondents "subversive," and
wished to exclude them from the Government because of their past
associations and their present views. But the legislation upon
which we now pass judgment is the product of both Houses of
Congress
Page 328 U. S. 325
and the President. The Senate five times rejected the substance
of § 304. It finally prevailed, not because the Senate joined
in an unexpressed declaration of guilt and retribution for it, but
because the provision was included in an important appropriation
bill. The stiffest interpretation that can be placed upon the
Senate's action is that it agreed to remove the respondents from
office (still assuming the Court's interpretation of § 304)
without passing any judgment on their past conduct or present
views.
Section 304 became law by the President's signature. His motive
in allowing it to become law is free from doubt. He rejected the
notion that the respondents were "subversive," and explicitly
stated that he wished to retain them in the service of the
Government. H.Doc. No. 264, 78th Cong., 1st Sess. Historically,
Parliament passed bills of attainder at the behest of the monarch.
See Adams, Constitutional History of England (Rev. ed.,
1935) 228-29. The Constitution, of course, provides for the
enactment of legislation even against disapproval by the Executive.
But to hold that a measure which did not express a judgment of
condemnation by the Senate, and carried an affirmative disavowal of
such condemnation by the President constitutes a bill of attainder,
disregards the historic tests for determining what is a bill of
attainder. At the least, there are such serious objections to
finding § 304 a bill of attainder that it can be declared
unconstitutional only by a failure to observe that this Court
reaches constitutional invalidation only through inescapable
necessity.
"It must be evident to anyone that the power to declare a
legislative enactment void is one which the judge, conscious of the
fallibility of the human judgment, will shrink from exercising in
any case where he can conscientiously and with due regard to duty
and official oath decline the responsibility."
1 Cooley, Constitutional Limitations (8th ed., 1927) 332.
Page 328 U. S. 326
But even if it be agreed, for purposes of characterizing the
deprivation of the statute as punishment, that the motive of
Congress was past action of the respondents, presumed motive cannot
supplant expressed legislative judgment.
"The expectations of those who sought the enactment of
legislation may not be used for the purpose of affixing to
legislation when enacted a meaning which it does not express."
United States v. Goelet, 232 U.
S. 293,
232 U. S. 298.
Congress omitted from § 304 any condemnation for which the
presumed punishment was a sanction. Thereby, it negatived the
essential notion of a bill of attainder. It may be said that such a
view of a bill of attainder offers Congress too easy a mode of
evading the prohibition of the Constitution. Congress need merely
omit its ground of condemnation, and legislate the penalty! But the
prohibition against a "Bill of Attainder" is only one of the
safeguards of liberty in the arsenal of the Constitution. There are
other provisions in the Constitution, specific and comprehensive,
effectively designed to assure the liberties of our citizens. The
restrictive function of this clause against bills of attainder was
to take from the legislature a judicial function which the
legislature once possessed. If Congress adopted, as it did, a form
of statute so lacking in any pretension to the very quality which
gave a bill of attainder its significance, that of a declaration of
guilt under circumstances which made its determination grossly
unfair, it simply passed an act which this Court ought not to
denounce as a bill of attainder. And not the less so because
Congress may have been conscious of the limitations which the
Constitution has placed upon it against passing bills of attainder.
If Congress chooses to say that men shall not be paid, or even that
they shall be removed from their jobs, we cannot decide that
Congress also said that they are guilty of an offense. And
particularly we cannot so decide as a
Page 328 U. S. 327
necessary assumption for declaring an act of Congress invalid.
Congress has not legislated that which is attributed to it, for the
simple fact is that Congress has said nothing. The words Congress
used are not susceptible of being read as a legislative verdict of
guilt against the respondents, no matter what dictionary, or what
form of argumentation, we use as aids.
This analysis accords with our prior course of decision. In
Cummins v. Missouri, supra, and
Ex parte
Garland, 4 Wall. 333, the Court dealt with
legislation of very different scope and significance from that now
before us. While the provisions involved in those cases did not
condemn or punish specific persons by name, they proscribed all
guilty of designated offenses. Refusal to take a prescribed oath
operated as an admission of guilt, and automatically resulted in
the disqualifying punishment. Avoidance of legislative proscription
for guilt under the provisions in the
Cummins and
Garland cases required positive exculpation. That the
persons legislatively punished were not named was a mere detail of
identification. Congress and the Missouri legislature,
respectively, had provided the most effective method for insuring
identification. These enactments followed the example of English
bills of attainder which condemned a named person and "his
adherents." Section 304 presents a situation wholly outside the
ingredients of the enactments that furnished the basis for the
Cummins and
Garland decisions. [
Footnote 2/2]
While § 304 is not a bill of attainder, as the gloss of
history defines that phrase in the Constitution, acceptance of the
Court's reading of § 304 would raise other serious
Page 328 U. S. 328
constitutional questions. The first in magnitude and difficulty
derives from the constitutional distribution of power over removal.
For about a century, this Court astutely avoided adjudication of
the power of control as between Congress and the Executive of those
serving in the Executive branch of the Government "until it should
be inevitably presented."
Myers v. United States,
272 U. S. 52,
272 U. S. 173.
The Court then gave the fullest consideration to the problem. The
case was twice argued, and was under consideration for nearly three
years. So far as the issues could be foreseen, they were
elaborately dealt with in opinions aggregating nearly two hundred
pages. Within less than a decade, an opinion of fifteen pages
largely qualified what the
Myers case had apparently so
voluminously settled.
Humphrey's Executor v. United
States, 295 U. S. 602.
This experience serves as a powerful reminder of the Court's duty
so to deal with Congressional enactments as to avoid their
invalidation unless a road to any other decision is barred.
The other serious problem the Court's interpretation of §
304 raises is that of due process. In one aspect, this is another
phase of the constitutional issue of the removal power. For, if
§ 304 is to be construed as a removal from office, it cannot
be determined whether singling out three government employees for
removal violated the Fifth Amendment until it is decided whether
Congress has a removal power at all over such employees, and how
extensive it is. Even if the statute be read as a mere stoppage of
disbursement, the question arises whether Congress can treat three
employees of the Government differently from all others. But that
question we do not have to answer. In any event, respondents are
entitled to recover in this suit, and their remedy -- a suit in the
Court of Claims -- is the same whatever view one takes of the legal
significance of § 304. To be sure, § 304 also purports to
prescribe conditions
Page 328 U. S. 329
relating to future employment of respondents by the Government.
This, too, is a question not now open for decision. Reemployment by
any agency of the Government, or the desire for reemployment, is
not now in controversy, "and, consequently, the subject may well be
postponed until it actually arises for decision."
Wilson v.
New, 243 U. S. 332,
243 U. S. 354.
The "great gravity and delicacy" of this Court's function in
passing upon the validity of an act of Congress is called into
action only when absolutely necessary.
Steamship Co. v.
Emigration Commissioners, 113 U. S. 33,
113 U. S. 39. It
should not be exercised on the basis of imaginary and nonexistent
facts.
See Brandeis, J., concurring, in
Ashwander v.
Tennessee Valley Authority, supra, at
297 U. S.
338-345.
Since it is apparent that grave constitutional doubts will arise
if we adopt the construction the Court puts on § 304, we ought
to follow the practice which this Court has established from the
time of Chief Justice Marshall. The approach appropriate to such a
case as the one before us was thus summarized by Mr. Justice Holmes
in a similar situation:
". . . the rule is settled that, as between two possible
interpretations of a statute, by one of which it would be
unconstitutional and by the other valid, our plain duty is to adopt
that which will save the Act. Even to avoid a serious doubt, the
rule is the same.
United States v. Delaware & Hudson
Co., 213 U. S. 366,
213 U. S.
407,
213 U. S. 408.
United
States v. Standard Brewery, 251 U. S. 210,
251 U. S.
220.
Texas v. Eastern Texas R.R. Co.,
258 U. S.
204,
258 U. S. 217.
Bratton
v. Chandler, 260 U. S. 110,
260 U. S.
114.
Panama R.R. Co. v. Johnson, 264 U. S.
375,
264 U. S. 390. Words have
been strained more than they need to be strained here in order to
avoid that doubt.
United States v. Jin Fuey Moy,
241 U. S.
394,
241 U. S. 401,
241 U. S.
402."
Blodgett v. Holden, 275 U. S. 142,
275 U. S.
148.
"'When the validity of an act of the Congress is drawn in
question, and even if a serious doubt of constitutionality
Page 328 U. S. 330
is raised, it is a cardinal principle that this Court will first
ascertain whether a construction of the statute is fairly possible
by which the question may be avoided.'
Crowell v. Benson,
285 U. S.
22,
285 U. S. 62."
Brandeis, J., concurring, in
Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley
Authority, supra, at
297 U. S.
348.
We are not faced inescapably with the necessity of adjudicating
these serious constitutional questions. The obvious or, at the
least, the one certain, construction of § 304 is that it
forbids the disbursing agents of the Treasury to pay out of
specifically appropriated moneys sums to compensate respondents for
their services. We have noted the cloud cast upon this
interpretation by manifestations by committees and members of the
House of Representatives before the passage of this section. On the
other hand, there is also much in the debates not only in the
Senate, but also in the House, which supports the mere fiscal scope
to be given to the statute. That such a construction is tenable
settles our duty to adopt it and to avoid determination of
constitutional questions of great seriousness.
Accordingly, I feel compelled to construe § 304 as did Mr.
Chief Justice Whaley below, 104 Ct.Cls. 557, 584, 66 F. Supp. 142,
147-148, whereby it merely prevented the ordinary disbursal of
money to pay respondents' salaries. It did not cut off the
obligation of the Government to pay for services rendered, and the
respondents are, therefore, entitled to recover the judgment which
they obtained from the Court of Claims.
[
Footnote 2/1]
"SEC. 304. No part of any appropriation, allocation, or fund (1)
which is made available under or pursuant to this Act, or (2) which
is now, or which is hereafter made, available under or pursuant to
any other Act, to any department, agency, or instrumentality of the
United States, shall be used, after November 15, 1943, to pay any
part of the salary, or other compensation for the personal
services, of Goodwin B. Watson, William E. Dodd, Junior, and Robert
Morss Lovett, unless prior to such date such person has been
appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of
the Senate:
Provided, That this section shall not operate
to deprive any such person of payment for leaves of absence or
salary, or of any refund or reimbursement, which have accrued prior
to November 15, 1943:
Provided further, That this section
shall not operate to deprive any such person of payment for
services performed as a member of a jury or as a member of the
armed forces of the United States nor any benefit, pension, or
emolument resulting therefrom."
[
Footnote 2/2]
Even against the holding that such enactments were bills of
attainder, Mr. Justice Miller wrote the powerful dissent concurred
in by Mr. Chief Justice Chase, Mr. Justice Swayne, and Mr. Justice
Davis.
71 U. S. 4 Wall.
333,
71 U. S.
382.