Standard Form 189, devised by appellee Director of the
Information Security Oversight Office (DISOO), and Form 4193,
created by appellee Director of Central Intelligence (DCI), forbade
certain Executive Branch employees to reveal classified or
"classifiable" information to persons not authorized to receive
such information, making clear that, if they did so, they could
lose their security clearances, their jobs, or both. The DISOO, but
not the DCI, defined the term "classifiable." Although § 630
of the Continuing Resolution for fiscal year 1988 prohibited the
expenditure of that year's funds for the implementation or
enforcement of,
inter alia, the forms, both forms
continued to be used. Appellant American Foreign Service
Association and others filed suit in the District Court challenging
the use of the forms on the ground that they violated § 630,
and seeking declaratory and injunctive relief that would, among
other things, direct appellees to notify all employees who signed
either form after the effective date of § 630 that the
agreements were void and that their terms could not be enforced
during fiscal year 1988. The lawsuit was consolidated with other
suits seeking to enjoin the forms' use on the ground,
inter
alia, that the term "classifiable" was so vague and overbroad
that it inhibited employees' speech in violation of the First
Amendment. The District Court assumed that the Executive Branch's
actions since § 630's enactment did not comply with the
section's requirements, but granted summary judgment in favor of
appellees on the ground that § 630 was an unconstitutional
interference with the President's authority to protect the national
security. While the court's judgment was pending review in this
Court, the District Court ruled on the constitutional challenge in
the cases consolidated with appellants' suit. It concluded that the
term "classifiable" is unconstitutionally vague, but that the
DISOO's definition would remedy the vagueness. It also ordered
appellees to notify employees either that this definition was in
force or that no penalties would be imposed for the disclosure of
"classifiable" information. Thereafter, appellees deleted the word
"classifiable" from the forms, replacing it with th154
DISOO's definition, and gave individualized notice of this
change to current employees.
Held:
1. The controversy is moot as to current employees who have been
notified that the term "classifiable" no longer controls their
disclosure of information. P.
490 U. S.
159.
2. The case is remanded to the District Court for it to address
in the first instance: (1) with respect to appellants' request for
individualized notice to former employees, whether individualized
notice is required by § 630 and whether appellants' complaint
can be read to request such notice for former employees; (2) with
respect to appellants' argument that the DISOO's definition of
"classified" does not comply with § 630, whether appellants
should be allowed to amend their complaint to take into account
this new definition; and (3) with respect to appellants' argument
that the forms do not comply with the § 630 provisions dealing
with disclosure of classified information to Congress, whether this
part of the case is ripe for decision, since no instance in which
an employee has sought to disclose information to Congress and was
prohibited from doing so has been brought to this Court's
attention. Pp.
490 U. S.
159-161.
3. On remand, the District Court should decide first whether the
controversy is sufficiently live and concrete to be adjudicated and
whether it is an appropriate case for equitable relief, and then
decide whether the statute and forms are susceptible of a
reconciling interpretation. Only if they are not should the court
turn to the constitutional question whether § 630
impermissibly intruded upon the Executive Branch's authority over
national security information. Pp.
490 U. S.
161-162.
688 F.
Supp. 671, vacated and remanded.
Page 490 U. S. 155
PER CURIAM.
As a condition of obtaining access to classified information,
employees in the Executive Branch are required to sign
"nondisclosure agreements" that detail the employees' obligation of
confidentiality and provide for penalties in the event of
unauthorized disclosure. Two such nondisclosure forms are at issue
in this case. One, Standard Form 189, was devised by the Director
of the Information Security Oversight Office (DISOO) (now appellee
Garfinkel); the other, Form 4193, was created by the Director of
Central Intelligence (DCI) (now appellee Webster). Both of these
forms forbade employees to reveal classified or "classifiable"
information to persons not authorized to receive such information,
App. 15, 19, and made clear that employees who disclosed
information in violation of these agreements could lose their
security clearances, their jobs, or both.
Id. at 16, 21.
Neither form defined the term "classifiable." The DISOO eventually
promulgated a regulation that defined the term "classifiable" in
Form 189 to include only unmarked classified information or
unclassified information that was "in the process of a
classification determination." Under this regulation, moreover, an
employee would violate the nondisclosure agreement by disclosing
unclassified information only if that employee "knows, or
reasonably should know, that such information is in the process of
a classification determination and requires interim protection." 52
Fed.Reg. 48367 (1987). For those employees who signed Form 4193,
however, the DCI did not attempt to define "classifiable." More
than half of the Federal Government's
Page 490 U. S. 156
civilian and military employees have signed either Form 189 or
4193. Brief for Appellants 5.
Section 630 of the Continuing Resolution for Fiscal Year 1988,
Pub.L. 100-202, 101 Stat. 1329-432, enacted by Congress in 1987,
prohibited the expenditure of funds in fiscal year 1988 for the
implementation or enforcement of Form 189, Form 4193, or any other
form that violated one of its five subsections.
* In response to
this statute, appellee Garfinkel ordered agencies to cease using
Form 189, but several agencies nevertheless required approximately
43,000 employees to sign the form after § 630 was enacted.
Brief for Appellants 10. The DCI, in contrast, continued to require
employees to sign Form 4193, but attached a paragraph to the form
stating that the nondisclosure agreement would
Page 490 U. S. 157
"be implemented and enforced in a manner consistent with" the
statute of which § 630 was a part. App. 26-27. Three months
after § 630 became law, the DCI replaced Form 4193 with Form
4355, which eliminated the term "classifiable."
National
Federation of Federal Employees v. United
States, 688 F.
Supp. 671, 680, n. 11 (DC 1988).
Appellant American Foreign Service Association (AFSA) and
several Members of Congress brought the present lawsuit challenging
appellees' use of Forms 189 and 4193 on the ground that they
violated § 630. They sought declaratory and injunctive relief
that would (1) bar appellees from requiring employees to execute or
sign Form 4193 during fiscal year 1988; (2) compel appellees to
treat any Form 4193 agreement signed after December 22, 1987 (the
effective date of § 630), as void; and (3) direct appellees to
notify all employees who signed Form 189 or 4193 after December 22,
1987, that these agreements were void and that the terms of such
forms signed before that date could not be enforced in fiscal year
1988. App. 10. This lawsuit was consolidated with two other cases,
brought by the National Federation of Federal Employees and the
American Federation of Government Employees, which sought to enjoin
the use of Forms 189 and 4193 because, among other things, they
violated § 630 and because the term "classifiable" was so
vague and overbroad that it inhibited employees' speech in
violation of the First Amendment.
The District Court for the District of Columbia concluded that
appellant AFSA had standing to challenge the nondisclosure forms on
behalf of its members, but that the Members of Congress lacked
standing to challenge the use of the forms. 688 F. Supp. at
678-682. The court then assumed that "the Executive's actions since
enactment of section 630 do not comply with the requirements of
that legislation,"
id. at 683, and n. 16, because the DCI
had continued to require employees to sign Form 4193 for three
months after enactment of § 630 despite § 630's specific
prohibition on the use of that
Page 490 U. S. 158
form. Acknowledging that, during that time, the DCI had added a
paragraph to Form 4193 stating that the agreement would be enforced
in a manner consistent with § 630, the District Court
nevertheless concluded that this action was not "
true to the
congressional mandate from which it derives authority,'"
id. at 683-684, n. 16, quoting Farmers Union Central
Exchange, Inc. v. FERC, 236 U.S.App.D.C. 203, 217, 734 F.2d
1486, 1500 (1984), and that review of the Executive's action under
the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 706, "likely"
would show that the Executive's action was contrary to law, 688 F.
Supp. at 684, n. 16. Having thus skirted the statutory question
whether the Executive Branch's implementation of Forms 189 and 4193
violated § 630, the court proceeded to address appellees'
argument that the lawsuit should be dismissed because § 630
was an unconstitutional interference with the President's authority
to protect the national security. Concluding that § 630
"impermissibly restricts the President's power to fulfill
obligations imposed upon him by his express constitutional powers
and the role of the Executive in foreign relations," 688 F. Supp.
at 685, the court entered summary judgment in favor of
appellees.
Appellants took a direct appeal from the District Court's
judgment pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1252, and we noted probable
jurisdiction, 488 U.S. 923 (1988). In spite of the importance of
the constitutional question whether § 630 impermissibly
intrudes upon the Executive's authority to regulate the disclosure
of national security information -- indeed, partly because of it --
we remand this case to the District Court without expressing an
opinion on that issue.
Events occurring since the District Court issued its ruling
place this case in a light far different from the one in which that
court considered it. Since issuing the decision that we now review,
the District Court has ruled on the constitutional challenge
presented by the cases with which the present one was consolidated,
and has decided that the unadorned
Page 490 U. S. 159
term "classifiable" used in Forms 189 and 4193 is
unconstitutionally vague.
See National Federation of Federal
Employees v. United States, 695 F.
Supp. 1196, 1201-1203 (DC 1988). The court further held that
the DISOO's definition of the term "classifiable,"
see
supra, at 155, would remedy this vagueness, and ordered
appellees to notify employees either that this definition was in
force or that no penalties would be imposed for the disclosure of
"classifiable" information. 695 F. Supp. at 1203-1204. Appellees
thereafter deleted the word "classifiable" -- a primary focus of
appellants' challenge to Forms 189 and 4193 -- from all
nondisclosure forms, and replaced it with the definition given in
the DISOO's regulation. They also furnished individualized notice
of this change to employees who signed either Form 189 or Form
4193. 53 Fed.Reg. 38278 (1988); Motion to Affirm 13. According to
appellants, however, appellees have notified only current employees
of the refinement of the term "classifiable"; former employees, who
signed Form 189 or 4193 but have left the employment of the Federal
Government, have not received such notice. Brief for Appellants 15.
The controversy as it exists today is, in short, quite different
from the one that the District Court considered.
Indeed, appellees urge us to hold the case moot to the extent
that it challenges the use of the term "classifiable" in Forms 189
and 4193. Brief for Appellees 31-32. As to current employees who
have been notified that the term "classifiable" no longer controls
their disclosure of information, the controversy is indeed moot.
Appellants emphasize, however, that former employees have not been
informed of the switch in terminology; as to them, the controversy
whether they should have received notice of this change remains
alive. Brief for Appellants 20. We decline to decide the merits of
appellants' request for individualized notice to these employees,
however, because the questions whether individual notice is
required by § 630 and whether appellants' complaint can be
read to request such notice for
former employees,
see
Page 490 U. S. 160
Brief for Appellees 32, n. 24 (arguing that it cannot be so
read), are questions best addressed in the first instance by the
District Court.
A second reason why we remand this case for further proceedings
rather than ordering it dismissed is that appellants argue that the
definition of "classified information" now supplied by the DISOO,
53 Fed.Reg. 38279 (1988) (to be codified in 32 CFR §
2003.20(h)(3)), does not comply with § 630. They contend that
the DISOO's definition prohibits disclosure of information that an
employee reasonably should have known was classified, whereas
subsection (1) of § 630 refers only to information that is
"known by the employee" to be classified or in the process of being
classified. Brief for Appellants 19-20. In contrast, appellees and
the Senate as
amicus argue that there is no inconsistency
between § 630(1) and this new definition. Brief for Appellees
39-41; Brief for United States Senate as
Amicus Curiae
17-18. It appears that, in order to press this issue, appellants
would be forced to amend their complaint in order to take into
account the new definition of the term "classified." Brief for
Appellees 41. Because the decision whether to allow this amendment
is one for the District Court, and because appellants' argument
raises a question of statutory interpretation not touched upon by
the District Court, we leave these matters for that court to decide
in the first instance.
In addition, there remains a question whether the forms comply
with subsections (3), (4), and (5) of § 630, dealing with
disclosure of classified information to Congress. Both appellants
and appellees apparently agree that these subsections simply
preserve preexisting rights, rights guaranteed by other statutes
and constitutional provisions. Brief for Appellants 38-40; Brief
for Appellees 48. The only relief appellants request with respect
to this portion of the case is notice to employees informing them
that Forms 189 and 4193 did not alter those preexisting rights.
Brief for Appellants 38. No actual instance in which an employee
sought
Page 490 U. S. 161
to disclose information to Congress, and was prohibited from
doing so, has been brought to our attention. There thus exists a
substantial possibility that this last portion of the case is not
ripe for decision, and this is exactly the argument pressed by
several
amici. Brief for American Civil Liberties Union as
Amicus Curiae 28-48; Brief for Speaker and Leadership
Group of House of Representatives as
Amicus Curiae 12-16;
Brief for United States Senate as
Amicus Curiae 15-21. We
are not, however, disposed to decide for ourselves whether this is
so. Since the District Court analyzed the interaction between
§ 630 and the Executive Branch's nondisclosure policy only in
abbreviated fashion, we do not have the benefit of a lower court's
interpretation of the statute and of Executive policy to help us
decide whether the case is ready for decision or, if it is, to
guide our own resolution of the merits. Again, therefore, we return
these questions to the District Court to allow it to sort them out
in the first instance.
Because part of the controversy has become moot but other parts
of it may retain vitality, we vacate the judgment below and remand
for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
See,
e.g., United States Dept. of Treasury v. Galioto, 477 U.
S. 556,
477 U. S. 560
(1986);
United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U. S.
36,
340 U. S. 39-40
(1950). In doing so, we emphasize that the District Court should
not pronounce upon the relative constitutional authority of
Congress and the Executive Branch unless it finds it imperative to
do so. Particularly where, as here, a case implicates the
fundamental relationship between the Branches, courts should be
extremely careful not to issue unnecessary constitutional rulings.
On remand, the District Court should decide first whether the
controversy is sufficiently live and concrete to be adjudicated and
whether it is an appropriate case for equitable relief, and then
decide whether the statute and forms are susceptible of a
reconciling interpretation; if they are not, the court may turn to
the constitutional question
Page 490 U. S. 162
whether § 630 impermissibly intrudes upon the Executive
Branch's authority over national security information.
See,
e.g., Ashwander v. TVA, 297 U. S. 288,
297 U. S.
345-356 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concurring);
Rescue
Army v. Municipal Court of Los Angeles, 331 U.
S. 549 (1947);
Clark v. Jeter, 486 U.
S. 456,
485 U. S. 459
(1988).
The judgment of the District Court for the District of Columbia
is vacated, and the case is remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
* Section 630 provides:
"No funds appropriated in this or any other Act for fiscal year
1988 may be used to implement or enforce the agreements in Standard
Forms 189 and 4193 of the Government or any other nondisclosure
policy, form or agreement if such policy, form or agreement:"
"(1) concerns information other than that specifically marked as
classified; or, unmarked but known by the employee to be
classified; or, unclassified but known by the employee to be in the
process of a classification determination;"
"(2) contains the term 'classifiable;'"
"(3) directly or indirectly obstructs, by requirement of prior
written authorization, limitation of authorized disclosure, or
otherwise, the right of any individual to petition or communicate
with Members of Congress in a secure manner as provided by the
rules and procedures of the Congress;"
"(4) interferes with the right of the Congress to obtain
executive branch information in a secure manner as provided by the
rules and procedures of the Congress;"
"(5) imposes any obligations or invokes any remedies
inconsistent with statutory law:
Provided, That nothing in
this section shall affect the enforcement of those aspects of such
nondisclosure policy, form or agreement that do not fall within
subsections (1)-(5) of this section."
Section 630 applied only to fiscal year 1988; however, §
619 of the Treasury, Postal Service and General Government
Appropriations Act, 1989, Pub.L. 100-440, 102 Stat. 1756, includes
restrictions on expenditures of funds during fiscal year 1989 that
are identical to those contained in § 630.