After respondent, the manager of a company which provided
medical services for patients eligible for federal Medicare
benefits, was convicted,
inter alia, of submitting 65
false claims for Government reimbursement in violation of the
federal criminal false-claims statute, he was sentenced to prison
and fined $5,000. Based solely on facts established by his criminal
conviction, the District Court then granted the Government summary
judgment in its suit against him under the federal civil False
Claims Act (Act). Under the strict terms of that Act's remedial
provision, as it then existed, respondent would have been liable
for a civil penalty of $2,000 on each of the 65 false claims, as
well as for twice the amount of the Government's actual damages of
$585 and the costs of the action. However, because the statutorily
authorized recovery of more than $130,000 bore no "rational
relation" to the sum of the Government's actual loss plus its costs
in investigating and prosecuting the false claims, which the court
approximated at no more than $16,000, the court held that
imposition of the full statutory amount would violate the Double
Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment by punishing respondent a
second time for the same conduct for which he had been convicted.
Since it considered the Act unconstitutional as applied to
respondent, the court limited the Government's recovery to double
damages and costs. The Government took a direct appeal to this
Court.
Held: The statutory penalty authorized by the Act, as
applied to respondent, violates the Double Jeopardy Clause. Pp.
490 U. S.
440-452.
(a) Although
Helvering v. Mitchell, 303 U.
S. 391,
United States ex rel. Marcus v. Hess,
317 U. S. 537, and
Rex Trailer Co. v. United States, 350 U.
S. 148, establish that proceedings and penalties under
the Act are civil in nature, and that a civil remedy does not
constitute multiple punishment violative of the Clause merely
because Congress provided for civil recovery in excess of the
Government's actual damages, those cases did not consider and do
not foreclose the possibility that, in a particular case, a civil
penalty authorized by the Act may be so extreme and so divorced
from the Government's actual damages and expenses as to constitute
prohibited "punishment." Pp.
490 U. S.
440-446.
(b) In the rare case such as the present, where a prolific but
small-gauge offender previously has sustained a criminal penalty,
and the civil
Page 490 U. S. 436
penalty sought in a subsequent proceeding bears no rational
relation to the goal of compensating the Government for its loss,
but rather appears to qualify as "punishment" in the plain meaning
of the word, the defendant is entitled to an accounting of the
Government's damages and costs in order to allow the trial court,
in its discretion, to determine whether the penalty sought in fact
constitutes a second punishment violative of the Clause and to set
the size of the civil sanction the Government may receive without
crossing the line between permissible remedy and prohibited
punishment. Pp.
490 U. S.
446-451.
(c) While the District Court correctly found that the disparity
between its approximation of the Government's costs and
respondent's statutory liability is sufficiently disproportionate
that the sanction provided by the Act constitutes a second
punishment violative of double jeopardy, the case is remanded to
permit the Government to demonstrate that that court's assessment
of its injuries was erroneous, since it would be unfair to deprive
the Government of an opportunity to present an accounting of its
actual costs arising from respondent's fraud, to seek an adjustment
of the court's approximation, and to recover demonstrated costs. P.
490 U. S.
452.
664 F.
Supp. 852, vacated and remanded.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
KENNEDY, J., filed a concurring opinion.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case, we consider whether and under what circumstances a
civil penalty may constitute "punishment" for the purposes of
double jeopardy analysis. [
Footnote
1]
Page 490 U. S. 437
I
Respondent Irwin Halper worked as manager of New City Medical
Laboratories, Inc., a company which provided medical service in New
York City for patients eligible for benefits under the federal
Medicare program. In that capacity, Halper submitted to Blue Cross
and Blue Shield of Greater New York, a fiscal intermediary for
Medicare, 65 separate false claims for reimbursement for service
rendered. Specifically, on 65 occasions during 1982 and 1983,
Halper mischaracterized the medical service performed by New City,
demanding reimbursement at the rate of $12 per claim when the
actual service rendered entitled New City to only $3 per claim.
Duped by these misrepresentations, Blue Cross overpaid New City a
total of $585; Blue Cross passed these overcharges along to the
Federal Government. [
Footnote
2]
The Government became aware of Halper's actions and in April,
1985, it indicted him on 65 counts of violating the criminal
false-claims statute, 18 U.S.C. § 287, which prohibits
"make[ing] or present[ing] . . . any claim upon or against the
United States, or any department or agency thereof, knowing such
claim to be false, fictitious, or fraudulent."
Halper was convicted on all 65 counts, as well as on 16 counts
of mail fraud. He was sentenced in July, 1985, to imprisonment for
two years and fined $5,000.
Page 490 U. S. 438
The Government then brought the present action in the United
States District Court for the Southern District of New York against
Halper and another, who later was dismissed from the case,
see App. 21, 36, under the civil False Claims Act (Act),
31 U.S.C. §§ 3729-3731. That Act was violated when
"[a] person not a member of an armed force of the United States
. . . (2) knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made or used, a
false record or statement to get a false or fraudulent claim paid
or approved."
§ 3729. Based on facts established by Halper's criminal
conviction and incorporated in the civil suit, the District Court
granted summary judgment for the Government on the issue of
liability.
660 F.
Supp. 531, 532-533 (1987).
The court then turned its attention to the remedy for Halper's
multiple violations. The remedial provision of the Act stated that
a person in violation is
"liable to the United States Government for a civil penalty of
$2,000, an amount equal to 2 times the amount of damages the
Government sustains because of the act of that person, and costs of
the civil action."
31 U.S.C. § 3729 (1982 ed., Supp. II). [
Footnote 3] Having violated the Act 65 separate
times, Halper thus appeared to be subject to a statutory penalty of
more than $130,000.
The District Court, however, concluded that, in light of
Halper's previous criminal punishment, an additional penalty this
large would violate the Double Jeopardy Clause. Although the court
recognized that the statutory provisions for a civil sanction of
$2,000 plus double damages for a claims violation was not, in
itself, criminal punishment, it concluded that this civil remedy,
designed to make the Government whole, would constitute a second
punishment for double jeopardy
Page 490 U. S. 439
analysis if, in application, the amount of the penalty was
"entirely unrelated" to the actual damages suffered and the
expenses incurred by the Government. 660 F. Supp. at 533. In the
District Court's view, the authorized recovery of more than
$130,000 bore no "rational relation" to the sum of the Government's
$585 actual loss plus its costs in investigating and prosecuting
Halper's false claims.
Ibid. The court therefore ruled
that imposition of the full amount would violate the Double
Jeopardy Clause by punishing Halper a second time for the same
conduct. To avoid this constitutional proscription, the District
Court read the $2,000-per-count statutory penalty as discretionary
and, approximating the amount required to make the Government
whole, imposed the full sanction for only 8 of the 65 counts. The
court entered summary judgment for the Government in the amount of
$16,000.
Id. at 534.
The United States, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
59(e), moved for reconsideration. The motion was granted. On
reconsideration, the court confessed error in ruling that the
$2,000 penalty was not mandatory for each count.
664 F.
Supp. 852, 853-854 (1987). It remained firm, however, in its
conclusion that the $130,000 penalty could not be imposed because,
in the circumstances before it, that amount would violate the
Double Jeopardy Clause's prohibition of multiple punishments.
Ibid. Looking to
United States ex rel. Marcus v.
Hess, 317 U. S. 537
(1943), for guidance, the court concluded that, although a penalty
that is more than the precise amount of actual damages is not
necessarily punishment, a penalty becomes punishment when, quoting
Justice Frankfurter's concurrence in
Hess, id. at
317 U. S. 554,
it exceeds what "
could reasonably be regarded as the equivalent
of compensation for the Government's loss.'" 664 F. Supp. at 854.
Applying this principle, the District Court concluded that the
statutorily authorized penalty of $130,000, an amount more than 220
times greater than the Government's measurable loss, qualified as
punishment which, in
Page 490 U. S.
440
view of Halper's previous criminal conviction and sentence,
was barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause. Because it considered the
Act unconstitutional as applied to Halper, the District Court
amended its judgment to limit the Government's recovery to double
damages of $1,170 and the costs of the civil action. Id.
at 855.
The United States, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1252, took a
direct appeal to this Court. We noted probable jurisdiction, 486
U.S. 1053 (1988), in order to determine the constitutionality of
the remedial provisions of the civil False Claims Act as applied in
Halper's case.
II
This Court many times has held that the Double Jeopardy Clause
protects against three distinct abuses: a second prosecution for
the same offense after acquittal; a second prosecution for the same
offense after conviction; and multiple punishments for the same
offense.
See, e.g., North Carolina v. Pearce, 395 U.
S. 711,
395 U. S. 717
(1969). The third of these protections -- the one at issue here --
has deep roots in our history and jurisprudence. As early as 1641,
the Colony of Massachusetts in its "Body of Liberties" stated: "No
man shall be twise sentenced by Civill Justice for one and the same
Crime, offence, or Trespasse." American Historical Documents
1000-1904, 43 Harvard Classics 66, 72 (C. Eliot ed.1910). In
drafting his initial version of what came to be our Double Jeopardy
Clause, James Madison focused explicitly on the issue of multiple
punishment: "No person shall be subject, except in cases of
impeachment, to more than one punishment or one trial for the same
offence." 1 Annals of Cong. 434 (1789-1791) (J. Gales ed. 1834). In
our case law, too, this Court, over a century ago, observed:
"If there is anything settled in the jurisprudence of England
and America, it is that no man can be twice lawfully punished for
the same offence."
Ex parte
Lange, 18 Wall. 163,
85 U. S. 168
(1874).
Page 490 U. S. 441
The multiple punishment issue before us is narrowly framed by
the common understandings of the parties to this case. They do not
dispute that respondent Halper already has been punished as a
result of his prior criminal proceeding when he was sentenced to a
jail term and fined $5,000. Nor do they dispute that the instant
proceeding and the prior criminal proceeding concern the same
conduct, the submission of 65 false claims. [
Footnote 4] The sole question here is whether the
statutory penalty authorized by the civil False Claims Act, under
which Halper is subject to liability of $130,000 for false claims
amounting to $585, constitutes a second "punishment" for the
purpose of double jeopardy analysis.
The Government argues that in three previous cases,
Helvering v. Mitchell, 303 U. S. 391
(1938),
United States ex rel. Marcus v. Hess, supra, and
Rex Trailer Co. v. United States, 350 U.
S. 148 (1956), this Court foreclosed any argument that a
penalty assessed in a civil proceeding, and specifically in a civil
False Claims Act proceeding, may give rise to double jeopardy.
Specifically, the Government asserts that these cases establish
three principles: first, that the Double Jeopardy Clause's
prohibition against multiple punishment protects against only a
second criminal penalty; second, that criminal penalties are
imposed only in criminal proceedings; and, third, that proceedings
under, and penalties authorized by, the civil False Claims Act are
civil in nature. In addition, the Government argues on the basis of
these three cases and others,
see, e.g., United States v.
Ward, 448 U. S. 242
(1980), that whether a proceeding or penalty is civil or criminal
is a matter of statutory construction, and that Congress clearly
intended the proceedings and penalty at issue here to be civil in
nature.
The Government, in our view, has misconstrued somewhat the
nature of the multiple punishment inquiry, and, in so doing, has
overread the holdings of our precedents. Although,
Page 490 U. S. 442
taken together, these cases establish that proceedings and
penalties under the civil False Claims Act are indeed civil in
nature, and that a civil remedy does not rise to the level of
"punishment" merely because Congress provided for civil recovery in
excess of the Government's actual damages, they do not foreclose
the possibility that, in a particular case, a civil penalty
authorized by the Act may be so extreme and so divorced from the
Government's damages and expenses as to constitute punishment.
In
Mitchell, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue
determined that the taxpayer fraudulently had asserted large sums
as deductions on his 1929 income tax return. Mitchell was indicted
and prosecuted for willful evasion of taxes. At trial, however, he
was acquitted. The Government then brought an action to collect a
deficiency of $728,709.84 in Mitchell's tax and, as well, a 50%
additional amount specified by statute on account of the fraud.
Mitchell argued that this second action subjected him to double
jeopardy because the 50% addition was intended as punishment, and
that the supposedly civil assessment proceeding therefore was
actually a second criminal proceeding based on a single course of
conduct.
This Court did not agree. The Double Jeopardy Clause, it noted,
"prohibits merely punishing twice, or attempting a second time to
punish criminally, for the same offense." 303 U.S. at
303 U. S. 399.
Because Mitchell was acquitted (and therefore not punished) in his
criminal prosecution, the Court was called upon to determine only
whether the statute imposed a criminal sanction -- in which case
the deficiency proceeding would be an unconstitutional second
attempt to punish criminally. Whether the statutory sanction was
criminal in nature, the Court held, was a question of statutory
interpretation; and, applying traditional canons of construction,
the Court had little difficulty concluding that Congress intended
that the statute impose a civil penalty, and that the deficiency
sanction was in fact remedial, providing reimbursement to
Page 490 U. S. 443
the Government for investigatory and other costs of the
taxpayer's fraud.
Id. at
303 U. S.
398-405. Since, "in the civil enforcement of a remedial
sanction, there can be no double jeopardy,"
id. at
303 U. S. 404,
the Court rejected Mitchell's claim.
Mitchell at most is of tangential significance for our current
inquiry. While the opinion makes clear that the Government may
impose both a criminal and a civil sanction with respect to the
same act or omission, and that whether a given sanction is criminal
is a matter of statutory construction, it simply does not address
the question we face today: whether a civil sanction, in
application, may be so divorced from any remedial goal that it
constitutes "punishment" for the purpose of double jeopardy
analysis. If anything, Justice Brandeis' carefully crafted opinion
for the Court intimates that a civil sanction may constitute
punishment under some circumstances. As noted above, the Court
distinguished between the Double Jeopardy Clause's prohibition
against "attempting a second time to punish criminally" and its
prohibition against "merely punishing twice."
Id. at
303 U. S. 399.
The omission of the qualifying adverb "criminally" from the
formulation of the prohibition against double punishment suggests,
albeit indirectly, that "punishment" indeed may arise from either
criminal or civil proceedings.
See also United States v. La
Franca, 282 U. S. 568,
282 U. S. 573
(1931) (asking, but not answering, the question whether a penalty
assessed in a civil proceeding may nonetheless constitute
punishment for the purposes of double jeopardy analysis).
United States ex rel. Marcus v. Hess is closer to the
point, but it, too, does not preclude the District Court's
judgment. In
Hess, electrical contractors were indicted
for defrauding the Government by bidding collusively on public
works projects. They pleaded
nolo contendere and were
fined $54,000. 317 U.S. at
317 U. S. 545. Subsequently, a group of private
plaintiffs brought a
qui tam action in the name of the
United States against the defendants pursuant to a statute
providing that a person guilty of defrauding the Government
Page 490 U. S. 444
was subject to a civil penalty of $2,000 for each violation,
double the amount of actual damages, and the costs of the suit.
[
Footnote 5] The plaintiffs
obtained a judgment for $315,000, of which $112,000 reflected the
$2,000 per-count figure for the 56 counts and $203,000 was for
double damages.
Id. at
317 U. S.
540.
The defendants challenged the judgment on double jeopardy
grounds, arguing, as did the defendant in
Mitchell, that
the proceeding was barred as a second attempt to punish the
defendants criminally. This Court dispensed with this claim of
criminal punishment, precisely as it had in
Mitchell, by
reference to the statute. The Court held that the chief purpose of
the statute
"was to provide for restitution to the government of money taken
from it by fraud, and that the device of double damages plus a
specific sum was chosen to make sure that the government would be
made completely whole."
317 U.S. at
317 U. S.
551-552. Since proceedings under the statute were
remedial and designed to "protect the government from financial
loss" -- rather than to "vindicate public justice" -- they were
civil in nature.
Id. at
317 U. S.
548-549.
Because the defendants in
Hess had been punished in a
prior criminal proceeding (as Mitchell had not), the Court faced a
further double jeopardy problem: whether (as in the instant case)
the second sanction was barred because it constituted a second
punishment. Under the
qui tam provision of the statute,
the Government's share of the recovery was $150,000,
id.
at
317 U. S. 545,
for actual damages of $101,500. Although the recovery was greater
than the precise amount of the actual damages, the Court
recognized, at least with respect to "the remedy now before [it],"
that the lump sum and double damages provided by statute did not
"do more than
Page 490 U. S. 445
afford the government complete indemnity for the injuries done
it."
Id. at
317 U. S. 549.
Those injuries, of course, included not merely the amount of the
fraud itself, but also ancillary costs, such as the costs of
detection and investigation, that routinely attend the Government's
efforts to root out deceptive practices directed at the public
purse.
Id. at
317 U. S.
551-552. Since the actual costs to the Government
roughly equaled the damages recovered, in rejecting the defendants'
double jeopardy claim, the Court simply did not face the stark
situation presently before us, where the recovery is exponentially
greater than the amount of the fraud, and, at least in the District
Court's informed view, is also many times the amount of the
Government's total loss.
Nor did the Court face such a situation in
Rex Trailer.
In that case, the defendants fraudulently purchased five trucks
under the Surplus Property Act of 1944 by claiming veteran priority
rights to which they were not entitled. They pleaded
nolo
contendere to criminal charges and paid fines aggregating
$25,000. The Government then brought a civil action under the
Surplus Property Act of 1944, 58 Stat. 765, 780, which provided
three alternative civil remedies: (1) $2,000 for each act plus
double damages and costs; (2) recovery "as liquidated damages" of
twice the consideration agreed to be given; and (3) recovery of the
property plus, "as liquidated damages," retention of the
consideration given.
See 350 U.S. at
350 U. S. 149,
n. 1. The Government sought the first of these remedies which the
Court considered "comparable to the recovery under liquidated
damage provisions which fix compensation for anticipated loss."
Id. at
350 U. S. 153.
The Court rejected the defendants' claim that the $2,000-per-count
penalty constituted a second punishment. Although the Court
recognized that the Government's actual loss due to the defendants'
fraud was difficult, if not impossible, to ascertain, it recognized
that the Government did sustain injury due to the resultant
decrease of motor vehicles available to Government agencies, an
increase in undesirable speculation, and damage
Page 490 U. S. 446
to its program of promoting bona fide sales to veterans.
[
Footnote 6] Since the function
of a liquidated damages provision was to provide a measure of
recovery where damages are difficult to quantify, the Court found
on the record before it -- where the defendants were liable for
only $10,000 -- that they had not been subjected to a "measure of
recovery . . . so unreasonable or excessive" as to constitute a
second criminal punishment in violation of double jeopardy.
Id. at
350 U. S. 154.
See also One Lot Emerald Cut Stones v. United States,
409 U. S. 232,
409 U. S. 237
(1972) (customs forfeiture "provides a reasonable form of
liquidated damages for violation of the inspection provisions and
serves to reimburse the Government for investigation and
enforcement expenses").
The relevant teaching of these cases is that the Government is
entitled to rough remedial justice, that is, it may demand
compensation according to somewhat imprecise formulas, such as
reasonable liquidated damages or a fixed sum plus double damages,
without being deemed to have imposed a second punishment for the
purpose of double jeopardy analysis. These cases do not tell us,
because the problem was not presented in them, what the
Constitution commands when one of those imprecise formulas
authorizes a supposedly remedial sanction that does not remotely
approximate the Government's damages and actual costs, and rough
justice becomes clear injustice. That such a circumstance might
arise appears to be anticipated not only in
Mitchell, as
noted above, but also in the explicitly case-specific holdings of
Hess and
Rex Trailer.
III
We turn, finally, to the unresolved question implicit in our
cases: whether and under what circumstances a civil penalty may
constitute punishment for the purpose of the Double Jeopardy
Clause. As noted above, the Government takes
Page 490 U. S. 447
the position that punishment in the relevant sense is meted out
only in criminal proceedings, and that whether proceedings are
criminal or civil is a matter of statutory construction. The
Government correctly observes that this Court has followed this
abstract approach when determining whether the procedural
protections of the Sixth Amendment apply to proceedings under a
given statute, in affixing the appropriate standard of proof for
such proceedings, and in determining whether double jeopardy
protections should be applied.
See United States v. Ward,
448 U.S. at
448 U. S.
248-251. But while recourse to statutory language,
structure, and intent is appropriate in identifying the inherent
nature of a proceeding, or in determining the constitutional
safeguards that must accompany those proceedings as a general
matter, the approach is not well suited to the context of the
"humane interests" safeguarded by the Double Jeopardy Clause's
proscription of multiple punishments.
See Hess, 317 U.S.
at
317 U. S. 554
(concurring opinion of Frankfurter, J.). This constitutional
protection is intrinsically personal. Its violation can be
identified only by assessing the character of the actual sanctions
imposed on the individual by the machinery of the state. [
Footnote 7]
In making this assessment, the labels "criminal" and "civil" are
not of paramount importance. It is commonly understood that civil
proceedings may advance punitive as well as remedial goals, and,
conversely, that both punitive and remedial goals may be served by
criminal penalties.
Ibid. [
Footnote 8] The
Page 490 U. S. 448
notion of punishment, as we commonly understand it, cuts across
the division between the civil and the criminal law, and, for the
purposes of assessing whether a given sanction constitutes multiple
punishment barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause, we must follow the
notion where it leads.
Cf. Hicks v. Feiock, 485 U.
S. 624,
485 U. S. 631
(1988) ("[T]he labels affixed either to the proceeding or to the
relief imposed . . . are not controlling, and will not be allowed
to defeat the applicable protections of federal constitutional
law"). To that end, the determination whether a given civil
sanction constitutes punishment in the relevant sense requires a
particularized assessment of the penalty imposed and the purposes
that the penalty may fairly be said to serve. Simply put, a civil
as well as a criminal sanction constitutes punishment when the
sanction as applied in the individual case serves the goals of
punishment.
These goals are familiar. We have recognized in other contexts
that punishment serves the twin aims of retribution and deterrence.
See, e.g., Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez, 372 U.
S. 144,
372 U. S. 168
(1963) (these are the "traditional aims of punishment").
Furthermore, "[r]etribution and deterrence are not legitimate
nonpunitive governmental objectives."
Bell v. Wolfish,
441 U. S. 520,
441 U. S. 539,
n. 20 (1979). From these premises, it follows that a civil sanction
that cannot fairly be said solely to serve a remedial purpose, but
rather can only be explained as also serving either retributive or
deterrent purposes, is punishment, as we have come to understand
the term.
Cf. Mendoza-Martinez, 372 U.S. at
372 U. S. 169
(whether sanction appears excessive in relation to its nonpunitive
purpose is relevant to determination whether sanction is civil or
criminal). We therefore hold that, under the Double Jeopardy
Clause, a defendant who already has been
Page 490 U. S. 449
punished in a criminal prosecution may not be subjected to an
additional civil sanction to the extent that the second sanction
may not fairly be characterized as remedial, but only as a
deterrent or retribution.
We acknowledge that this inquiry will not be an exact pursuit.
In our decided cases, we have noted that the precise amount of the
Government's damages and costs may prove to be difficult, if not
impossible, to ascertain.
See, e.g., Rex Trailer, 350 U.S.
at
350 U. S. 153.
Similarly, it would be difficult, if not impossible in many cases,
for a court to determine the precise dollar figure at which a civil
sanction has accomplished its remedial purpose of making the
Government whole, but beyond which the sanction takes on the
quality of punishment. In other words, as we have observed above,
the process of affixing a sanction that compensates the Government
for all its costs inevitably involves an element of rough justice.
Our upholding reasonable liquidated damages clauses reflects this
unavoidable imprecision. Similarly, we have recognized that, in the
ordinary case, fixed-penalty-plus-double-damages provisions can be
said to do no more than make the Government whole.
We cast no shadow on these time-honored judgments. What we
announce now is a rule for the rare case, the case such as the one
before us, where a fixed penalty provision subjects a prolific but
small-gauge offender to a sanction overwhelmingly disproportionate
to the damages he has caused. The rule is one of reason: where a
defendant previously has sustained a criminal penalty and the civil
penalty sought in the subsequent proceeding bears no rational
relation to the goal of compensating the Government for its loss,
but rather appears to qualify as "punishment" in the plain meaning
of the word, then the defendant is entitled to an accounting of the
Government's damages and costs to determine if the penalty sought
in fact constitutes a second punishment. [
Footnote 9]
Page 490 U. S. 450
We must leave to the trial court the discretion to determine on
the basis of such an accounting the size of the civil sanction the
Government may receive without crossing the line between remedy and
punishment.
Cf. Morris v. Mathews, 475 U.
S. 237 (1986) (reducing criminal conviction to lesser
included offense in order to avoid double jeopardy bar);
see
also Peterson v. Richardson, 370
F. Supp. 1259, 1267 (ND Tex 1973),
aff'd, sub nom. Peterson
v. Weinberger, 508 F.2d 45 (CA5),
cert. denied sub nom.
Peterson v. Mathews, 423 U.S. 830 (1975) (imposing less than
full civil sanction authorized by False Claims Act when the full
sanction would be unreasonable and not remotely related to actual
loss). While the trial court's judgment in these matters often may
amount to no more than an approximation, even an approximation will
go far towards ensuring both that the Government is fully
compensated for the costs of corruption and that, as required by
the Double Jeopardy Clause, the defendant is protected from a
sanction so disproportionate to the damages caused that it
constitutes a second punishment.
We do not consider our ruling far-reaching or disruptive of the
Government's need to combat fraud. Nothing in today's ruling
precludes the Government from seeking the full civil penalty
against a defendant who previously has not been punished for the
same conduct, even if the civil sanction imposed is punitive. In
such a case, the Double Jeopardy Clause simply is not implicated.
Nor does the decision prevent the Government from seeking and
obtaining both the full civil penalty and the full range of
statutorily authorized
Page 490 U. S. 451
criminal penalties in the same proceeding. In a single
proceeding, the multiple punishment issue would be limited to
ensuring that the total punishment did not exceed that authorized
by the legislature.
See, e.g., Missouri v. Hunter,
459 U. S. 359,
459 U. S.
368-369 (1983) ("Where . . . a legislature specifically
authorizes cumulative punishment under two statutes . . . the
prosecutor may seek and the trial court or jury may impose
cumulative punishment under such statutes in a single trial").
[
Footnote 10] Finally,
nothing in today's opinion precludes a private party from filing a
civil suit seeking damages for conduct that previously was the
subject of criminal prosecution and punishment. The protections of
the Double Jeopardy Clause are not triggered by litigation between
private parties. [
Footnote
11] In other words, the only proscription established by our
ruling is that the Government may not criminally prosecute a
defendant, impose a criminal penalty upon him, and then bring a
separate civil action based on the same conduct and receive a
judgment that is not rationally related to the goal of making the
Government whole. [
Footnote
12]
Page 490 U. S. 452
IV
Returning to the case at hand, the District Court found a
"tremendous disparity" between the Government's actual damages and
the civil penalty authorized by the Act.
664 F.
Supp. at 855. The court approximated the Government's expenses
at no more than $16,000, as compared to the asserted liability of
Halper in excess of $130,000. 660 F. Supp. at 534. Although the
Government apparently did not challenge the District Court's figure
-- choosing instead to litigate the legal issue we now decide -- we
think it unfair to deprive the Government of an opportunity to
present to the District Court an accounting of its actual costs
arising from Halper's fraud, to seek an adjustment of the District
Court's approximation, and to recover its demonstrated costs. While
we agree with the District Court that the disparity between its
approximation of the Government's costs and Halper's $130,000
liability is sufficiently disproportionate that the sanction
constitutes a second punishment in violation of double jeopardy, we
remand the case to permit the Government to demonstrate that the
District Court's assessment of its injuries was erroneous.
The judgment of the District Court is vacated, and the case is
remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
The Double Jeopardy Clause reads:
"[N]or shall any person be subject for the same offence to be
twice put in jeopardy of life or limb. . . ."
U.S.Const., Amdt. 5.
[
Footnote 2]
The underlying details of Halper's fraud are of little
importance with respect to his double jeopardy claim. In brief,
providers such as New City bill for their service according to
designated code numbers corresponding to the medical service
provided. Code "9018" was the number for seeking reimbursement for
service performed for the first or only patient seen at a private
home or Skilled Nursing Facility the provider was required to
visit. Code "9019" was the number for seeking reimbursement for
service performed for each additional patient seen at the facility.
At all relevant times, the allowable reimbursement for service
under code "9018" was either $10 or $12. The allowable
reimbursement under code "9019" was $3. Halper submitted 65 claims
falsely seeking reimbursement under code "9018" for service
properly reimbursable under the lower priced code "9019."
See 660 F.
Supp. 531, 532 (SDNY 1987).
[
Footnote 3]
The Act was amended by the False Claims Amendments Act of 1986,
Pub.L. 99-562, 100 Stat. 3153, to increase the civil penalty to
"not less than $5,000 and not more than $10,000 plus 3 times the
amount of damages which the Government sustains because of the act
of that person,"
and "the costs of a civil action brought to recover any such
penalty or damages." 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(7) (1982 ed., Supp.
V).
[
Footnote 4]
Indeed, as has been noted, the District Court found Halper
liable strictly on the basis of the facts established in the
criminal proceeding.
[
Footnote 5]
Under the
qui tam provisions of the Act, 31 U.S.C.
§ 3730(b), a private party may bring suit in the name of the
United States. If the suit is successful, the plaintiff may receive
what the District Court deems to be a reasonable portion of the
civil penalty and damages, though this share may not exceed 25% of
the proceeds of the action and an amount for reasonable expenses
necessarily incurred and costs. § 3730(c)(2).
[
Footnote 6]
The Court could have included the Government's investigative and
prosecutorial costs. These also must be factored into a
determination as to whether the sanction was disproportionate to
the Government's loss.
[
Footnote 7]
This is not to say that whether a sanction constitutes
punishment must be determined from the defendant's perspective. On
the contrary, our cases have acknowledged that, for the defendant,
even remedial sanctions carry the sting of punishment.
See,
e.g., United States ex rel. Marcus v. Hess, 317 U.
S. 537,
317 U. S. 551
(1943). Rather, we hold merely that, in determining whether a
particular civil sanction constitutes criminal punishment, it is
the purposes actually served by the sanction in question, not the
underlying nature of the proceeding giving rise to the sanction,
that must be evaluated.
[
Footnote 8]
As the name indicates, punitive damages, available in civil
cases, serve punitive goals.
Day v.
Woodworth, 13 How. 363,
54 U. S. 371
(1852). By the same token, strict liability crimes are principally
directed at social betterment, rather than punishment of culpable
individuals.
See United States v. Balint, 258 U.
S. 250,
258 U. S. 252
(1922).
[
Footnote 9]
Had Halper been found liable under the False Claims Amendment
Act of 1986,
see n 3,
supra, the civil penalty against him would have amounted
to more than $326,755.
[
Footnote 10]
That the Government seeks the civil penalty in a second
proceeding is critical in triggering the protections of the Double
Jeopardy Clause. Since a legislature may authorize cumulative
punishment under two statutes for a single course of conduct, the
multiple punishment inquiry in the context of a single proceeding
focuses on whether the legislature actually authorized the
cumulative punishment.
See Ohio v. Johnson, 467 U.
S. 493,
467 U. S.
499-500 (1984). On the other hand, when the Government
already has imposed a criminal penalty and seeks to impose
additional punishment in a second proceeding, the Double Jeopardy
Clause protects against the possibility that the Government is
seeking the second punishment because it is dissatisfied with the
sanction obtained in the first proceeding.
[
Footnote 11]
We express no opinion as to whether a
qui tam action,
such as the one in
Hess is properly characterized as a
suit between private parties for the purposes of this rule. In
contrast to the plaintiff in a private attorney general action, the
private party in a
qui tam action brings suit in the name
of the United States and shares with the Government any proceeds of
the action. 31 U.S.C. § 3730. In
Hess, the Court
assumed, but did not decide, that a
qui tam action could
give rise to double jeopardy. Since this assumption was not
essential to the judgment in
Hess, we consider the issue
unresolved.
[
Footnote 12]
It hardly seems necessary to state that a suit under the Act
alleging one or two false claims would satisfy the rational
relationship requirement. It is only when a sizable number of false
claims is present that, as a practical matter, the issue of double
jeopardy may arise.
JUSTICE KENNEDY, concurring.
I join the opinion of the Court and write only to discuss the
limits of today's holding. As the Court points out, our holding
will not undermine the Government's efforts to enforce the laws
effectively, since appropriate alternatives remain to ensure the
Government's ability to make full use of the sanctions authorized
by statute.
Ante at
490 U. S.
450-451. Our rule permits the imposition in the ordinary
case of at least a fixed penalty roughly proportionate to the
damage caused or a reasonably
Page 490 U. S. 453
liquidated amount, plus double damages.
Ante at
490 U. S.
449.
Today's holding, I would stress, constitutes an objective rule
that is grounded in the nature of the sanction and the facts of the
particular case. It does not authorize courts to undertake a broad
inquiry into the subjective purposes that may be thought to lie
behind a given judicial proceeding.
Cf. Hicks v. Feiock,
485 U. S. 624,
485 U. S. 635
(1988);
Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez, 372 U.
S. 144,
372 U. S.
168-169 (1963). Such an inquiry would be amorphous and
speculative, and would mire the courts in the quagmire of
differentiating among the multiple purposes that underlie every
proceeding, whether it be civil or criminal in name. It also would
breed confusion among legislators who seek to structure the
mechanisms of proper law enforcement within constitutional
commands. In approaching the sometimes difficult question whether
an enactment constitutes what must be deemed a punishment, we have
recognized that a number of objective factors bear on the inquiry.
Ibid. In the case before us, I agree with the Court that
the controlling circumstance is whether the civil penalty imposed
in the second proceeding bears any rational relation to the damages
suffered by the Government. Here it does not, so it must be
considered punishment for purposes of the Double Jeopardy
Clause.