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SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 18–877
_________________
FREDERICK L. ALLEN, et al., PETITIONERS
v. ROY A. COOPER, III, GOVERNOR OF NORTH CAROLINA,
et al.
on writ of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the fourth circuit
[March 23, 2020]
Justice Kagan delivered the opinion of the
Court.
In two basically identical statutes passed in
the early 1990s, Congress sought to strip the States of their
sovereign immunity from patent and copyright infringement suits.
Not long after, this Court held in
Florida Prepaid Postsecondary
Ed. Expense Bd. v.
College Savings Bank,
527 U.S.
627 (1999), that the patent statute lacked a valid
constitutional basis. Today, we take up the copyright statute. We
find that our decision in
Florida Prepaid compels the same
conclusion.
I
In 1717, the pirate Edward Teach, better known
as Blackbeard, captured a French slave ship in the West Indies and
renamed her
Queen Anne’s Revenge. The vessel became his
flagship. Carrying some 40 cannons and 300 men, the
Revenge
took many prizes as she sailed around the Caribbean and up the
North American coast. But her reign over those seas was
short-lived. In 1718, the ship ran aground on a sandbar a mile off
Beaufort, North Carolina. Blackbeard and most of his crew escaped
without harm. Not so the
Revenge. She sank beneath the
waters, where she lay undisturbed for nearly 300 years.
In 1996, a marine salvage company named
Intersal, Inc., discovered the shipwreck. Under federal and state
law, the wreck belongs to North Carolina. See 102Stat. 433, 43
U. S. C. §2105(c); N. C. Gen. Stat. Ann. §121–22
(2019). But the State contracted with Intersal to take charge of
the recovery activities. Intersal in turn retained petitioner
Frederick Allen, a local videographer, to document the operation.
For over a decade, Allen created videos and photos of divers’
efforts to salvage the
Revenge’s guns, anchors, and other
remains. He registered copyrights in all those works.
This suit arises from North Carolina’s
publication of some of Allen’s videos and photos. Allen first
protested in 2013 that the State was infringing his copyrights by
uploading his work to its website without permission. To address
that allegation, North Carolina agreed to a settlement paying Allen
$15,000 and laying out the parties’ respective rights to the
materials. But Allen and the State soon found themselves embroiled
in another dispute. Allen complained that North Carolina had
impermissibly posted five of his videos online and used one of his
photos in a newsletter. When the State declined to admit
wrongdoing, Allen filed this action in Federal District Court. It
charges the State with copyright infringement (call it a modern
form of piracy) and seeks money damages.
North Carolina moved to dismiss the suit on the
ground of sovereign immunity. It invoked the general rule that
federal courts cannot hear suits brought by individuals against
nonconsenting States. See State Defendants’ Memorandum in No.
15–627 (EDNC), Doc. 50, p. 7. But Allen responded that an
exception to the rule applied because Congress had abrogated the
States’ sovereign immunity from suits like his. See Plaintiffs’
Response, Doc. 57, p. 7. The Copyright Remedy Clarification
Act of 1990 (CRCA or Act) provides that a State “shall not be
immune, under the Eleventh Amendment [or] any other doctrine of
sovereign immunity, from suit in Federal court” for copyright
infringement. 17 U. S. C. §511(a). And the Act specifies
that in such a suit a State will be liable, and subject to
remedies, “in the same manner and to the same extent as” a private
party. §501(a); see §511(b).[
1]
That meant, Allen contended, that his suit against North Carolina
could go forward.
The District Court agreed. Quoting the CRCA’s
text, the court first found that “Congress has stated clearly its
intent to abrogate sovereign immunity for copyright claims against
a state.” 244 F. Supp. 3d 525, 533 (EDNC 2017). And that
abrogation, the court next held, had a proper constitutional basis.
Florida Prepaid and other precedent, the District Court
acknowledged, precluded Congress from using its Article I
powers—including its authority over copyrights—to take away a
State’s sovereign immunity. See 244 F. Supp. 3d
, at
534. But in the court’s view,
Florida Prepaid left open an
alternative route to abrogation. Given the States’ “pattern” of
“abus[ive]” copyright infringement, the court held, Congress could
accomplish its object under Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment.
244 F. Supp. 3d
, at 535.
On interlocutory appeal, the Court of Appeals
for the Fourth Circuit reversed. It read
Florida Prepaid to
prevent recourse to Section 5 no less than to Article I. A Section
5 abrogation, the Fourth Circuit explained, must be “congruent and
proportional” to the Fourteenth Amendment injury it seeks to
remedy. 895 F.3d 337, 350 (2018).
Florida Prepaid had
applied that principle to reject Congress’s attempt, in the Patent
Remedy Act, to abolish the States’ immunity from patent
infringement suits. See 527 U. S., at 630. In the Fourth
Circuit’s view, nothing distinguished the CRCA. That abrogation,
the court reasoned, was “equally broad” and rested on a “similar
legislative record” of constitutional harm. 895 F. 3d, at 352.
So Section 5 could not save the law.
Because the Court of Appeals held a federal
statute invalid, this Court granted certiorari. 587 U. S. ___
(2019). We now affirm.
II
In our constitutional scheme, a federal court
generally may not hear a suit brought by any person against a
nonconsenting State. That bar is nowhere explicitly set out in the
Constitution. The text of the Eleventh Amendment (the single most
relevant provision) applies only if the plaintiff is not a citizen
of the defendant State.[
2] But
this Court has long understood that Amendment to “stand not so much
for what it says” as for the broader “presupposition of our
constitutional structure which it confirms.”
Blatchford v.
Native Village of Noatak,
501 U.S.
775, 779 (1991). That premise, the Court has explained, has
several parts. First, “each State is a sovereign entity in our
federal system.”
Seminole Tribe of Fla. v.
Florida,
517 U.S.
44, 54 (1996). Next, “[i]t is inherent in the nature of
sovereignty not to be amenable to [a] suit” absent consent.
Id., at 54, n. 13 (quoting The Federalist No. 81, p. 487 (C.
Rossiter ed. 1961) (A. Hamilton)). And last, that fundamental
aspect of sovereignty constrains federal “judicial authority.”
Blatchford, 501 U. S., at 779.
But not entirely. This Court has permitted a
federal court to entertain a suit against a nonconsenting State on
two conditions. First, Congress must have enacted “un- equivocal
statutory language” abrogating the States’ immunity from the suit.
Seminole Tribe, 517 U. S., at 56 (internal quotation
marks omitted); see
Dellmuth v.
Muth,
491 U.S.
223, 228 (1989) (requiring Congress to “mak[e] its intention
unmistakably clear”). And second, some constitutional provision
must allow Congress to have thus encroached on the States’
sovereignty. Not even the most crystalline abrogation can take
effect unless it is “a valid exercise of constitutional authority.”
Kimel v.
Florida Bd. of Regents,
528 U.S.
62, 78 (2000).
No one here disputes that Congress used clear
enough language to abrogate the States’ immunity from copyright
infringement suits. As described above, the CRCA provides that
States “shall not be immune” from those actions in federal court.
§511(a); see
supra, at 2–3. And the Act specifies that a
State stands in the identical position as a private
defendant—exposed to liability and remedies “in the same manner and
to the same extent.” §501(a); see §511(b). So there is no doubt
what Congress meant to accomplish. Indeed, this Court held in
Florida Prepaid that the essentially verbatim provisions of
the Patent Remedy Act “could not have [made] any clearer”
Congress’s intent to remove the States’ immunity. 527 U. S.,
at 635.
The contested question is whether Congress had
authority to take that step. Allen maintains that it did, under
either of two constitutional provisions. He first points to the
clause in Article I empowering Congress to provide copyright
protection. If that fails, he invokes Section 5 of the Fourteenth
Amendment, which authorizes Congress to “enforce” the commands of
the Due Process Clause. Neither contention can succeed. The slate
on which we write today is anything but clean.
Florida
Prepaid, along with other precedent, forecloses each of Allen’s
arguments.
A
Congress has power under Article I “[t]o
promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for
limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their
respective Writings and Discoveries.” §8, cl. 8. That
provision—call it the Intellectual Property Clause—enables Congress
to grant both copyrights and patents. And the monopoly rights so
given impose a corresponding duty (
i.e., not to infringe) on
States no less than private parties. See
Goldstein v.
California,
412 U.S.
546, 560 (1973).
In Allen’s view, Congress’s authority to
abrogate sovereign immunity from copyright suits naturally follows.
Abrogation is the single best—or maybe, he says, the only—way for
Congress to “secur[e]” a copyright holder’s “exclusive Right[s]” as
against a State’s intrusion. See Brief for Petitioners 20 (quoting
Art. I, §8, cl. 8). So, Allen contends, the authority to take
that step must fall within the Article I grant of power to protect
intellectual property.
The problem for Allen is that this Court has
already rejected his theory. The Intellectual Property Clause, as
just noted, covers copyrights and patents alike. So it was the
first place the
Florida Prepaid Court looked when deciding
whether the Patent Remedy Act validly stripped the States of
immunity from infringement suits. In doing so, we acknowledged the
reason for Congress to put “States on the same footing as private
parties” in patent litigation. 527 U. S., at 647. It was, just
as Allen says here, to ensure “uniform, surefire protection” of
intellectual property. Reply Brief 10. That was a “proper Article I
concern,” we allowed. 527 U. S., at 648. But still, we said,
Congress could not use its Article I power over patents to remove
the States’ immunity. We based that conclusion on
Seminole
Tribe v.
Florida, decided three years earlier. There,
the Court had held that “Article I cannot be used to circumvent”
the limits sovereign immunity “place[s] upon federal jurisdiction.”
517 U. S., at 73. That proscription ended the matter. Because
Congress could not “abrogate state sovereign immunity [under]
Article I,”
Florida Prepaid explained, the Intellectual
Property Clause could not support the Patent Remedy Act. 527
U. S., at 636. And to extend the point to this case: if not
the Patent Remedy Act, not its copyright equivalent either, and for
the same reason. Here too, the power to “secur[e ]” an
intellectual property owner’s “exclusive Right” under Article I
stops when it runs into sovereign immunity. §8, cl. 8.
Allen claims, however, that a later case offers
an exit ramp from
Florida Prepaid. In
Central Va.
Community College v.
Katz,
546 U.S.
356, 359 (2006), we held that Article I’s Bankruptcy Clause
enables Congress to subject nonconsenting States to bankruptcy
proceedings (there, to recover a preferential transfer). We thus
exempted the Bankruptcy Clause from
Seminole Tribe’s general
rule that Article I cannot justify haling a State into federal
court. In bankruptcy, we decided, sovereign immunity has no place.
But if that is true, Allen asks, why not say the same thing here?
Allen reads
Katz as “adopt[ing] a clause-by-clause approach
to evaluating whether a particular clause of Article I” allows the
abrogation of sovereign immunity. Brief for Petitioners 20. And he
claims that the Intellectual Property Clause “supplies singular
warrant” for Congress to take that step.
Ibid. That is so,
Allen reiterates, because “Congress could not ‘secur[e]’ authors’
‘exclusive Right’ to their works if [it] were powerless” to make
States pay for infringing conduct.
Ibid.
But everything in
Katz is about and
limited to the Bankruptcy Clause; the opinion reflects what might
be called bankruptcy exceptionalism. In part,
Katz rested on
the “singular nature” of bankruptcy jurisdiction. 546 U. S.,
at 369, n. 9. That jurisdiction is, and was at the Founding,
“principally
in rem”—meaning that it is “premised on
the debtor and his estate, and not on the creditors” (including a
State).
Id., at 369–370 (internal quotation marks omitted).
For that reason, we thought, “it does not implicate States’
sovereignty to nearly the same degree as other kinds of
jurisdiction.”
Id., at 362. In remaining part,
Katz
focused on the Bankruptcy Clause’s “unique history.”
Id., at
369, n. 9. The Clause emerged from a felt need to curb the
States’ authority. The States, we explained, “had wildly divergent
schemes” for discharging debt, and often “refus[ed] to respect one
another’s discharge orders.”
Id., at 365, 377. “[T]he
Framers’ primary goal” in adopting the Clause was to address that
problem—to stop “competing sovereigns[ ]” from interfering
with a debtor’s discharge.
Id., at 373. And in that project,
the Framers intended federal courts to play a leading role. The
nation’s first Bankruptcy Act, for example, empowered those courts
to order that States release people they were holding in debtors’
prisons. See
id., at 374. So through and through, we
thought, the Bankruptcy Clause embraced the idea that federal
courts could impose on state sovereignty. In that, it was
sui
generis—again, “unique”—among Article I’s grants of authority.
Id., at 369, n. 9.
Indeed,
Katz’s view of the Bankruptcy
Clause had a yet more striking aspect, which further separates it
from any other. The Court might have concluded from its analysis
that the Clause allows Congress to abrogate the States’ sovereign
immunity (as Allen argues the Intellectual Property Clause does).
But it did not; it instead went further. Relying on the above
account of the Framers’ intentions, the Court found that
the
Bankruptcy Clause itself did the abrogating.
Id., at 379
(“[T]he relevant ‘abrogation’ is the one effected in the plan of
the [Constitutional] Convention”). Or stated another way, we
decided that no congressional abrogation was needed because the
States had already “agreed in the plan of the Convention not to
assert any sovereign immunity defense” in bankruptcy proceedings.
Id., at 377. We therefore discarded our usual rule—which
Allen accepts as applying here—that
Congress must speak, and
indeed speak unequivocally, to abrogate sovereign immunity. Compare
id., at 378–379 (“[O]ur decision today” does not
“rest[ ] on any statement Congress ha[s] made on the subject
of state sovereign immunity”), with
supra, at 5 (our
ordinary rule). Our decision, in short, viewed bankruptcy as on a
different plane, governed by principles all its own. Nothing in
that understanding invites the kind of general, “clause-by-clause”
reexamination of Article I that Allen proposes. See
supra,
at 7. To the contrary, it points to a good-for-one-clause-only
holding.
And even if
Katz’s confines were not so
clear,
Florida Prepaid, together with
stare decisis,
would still doom Allen’s argument. As Allen recognizes, if the
Intellectual Property Clause permits the CRCA’s abrogation, it also
would permit the Patent Remedy Act’s. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 9
(predicting that if his position prevailed, “ultimately, the Patent
Remedy Act would be revisited and properly upheld as a valid
exercise of Congress’s Article I power”). Again, there is no
difference between copyrights and patents under the Clause, nor any
material difference between the two statutes’ provisions. See
supra, at 3, and n. 1, 6. So we would have to overrule
Florida Prepaid if we were to decide this case Allen’s way.
But
stare decisis, this Court has understood, is a
“foundation stone of the rule of law.”
Michigan v.
Bay
Mills Indian Community,
572 U.S.
782, 798 (2014). To reverse a decision, we demand a “special
justification,” over and above the belief “that the precedent was
wrongly decided.”
Halliburton Co. v.
Erica P. John Fund,
Inc.,
573 U.S.
258, 266 (2014). Allen offers us nothing special at all; he
contends only that if the Court were to use a clause-by-clause
approach, it would discover that
Florida Prepaid was wrong
(because, he says again, the decision misjudged Congress’s
authority under the Intellectual Property Clause). See Brief for
Petitioners 37;
supra, at 6–7. And with that charge of error
alone, Allen cannot overcome
stare decisis.
B
Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, unlike
almost all of Article I, can authorize Congress to strip the States
of immunity. The Fourteenth Amendment “fundamentally altered the
balance of state and federal power” that the original Constitution
and the Eleventh Amendment struck.
Seminole Tribe, 517
U. S., at 59. Its first section imposes prohibitions on the
States, including (as relevant here) that none may “deprive any
person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”
Section 5 then gives Congress the “power to enforce, by appropriate
legislation,” those limitations on the States’ authority. That
power, the Court has long held, may enable Congress to abrogate the
States’ immunity and thus subject them to suit in federal court.
See
Fitzpatrick v.
Bitzer,
427
U.S. 445, 456 (1976).
For an abrogation statute to be “appropriate”
under Section 5, it must be tailored to “remedy or prevent” conduct
infringing the Fourteenth Amendment’s substantive prohibitions.
City of Boerne v.
Flores,
521
U.S. 507, 519 (1997). Congress can permit suits against States
for actual violations of the rights guaranteed in Section 1. See
Fitzpatrick, 427 U. S., at 456. And to deter those
violations, it can allow suits against States for “a somewhat
broader swath of conduct,” including acts constitutional in
themselves.
Kimel, 528 U. S., at 81. But Congress
cannot use its “power to enforce” the Fourteenth Amendment to alter
what that Amendment bars. See
id., at 88 (prohibiting
Congress from “substantively redefin[ing]” the Fourteenth
Amendment’s requirements). That means a congressional abrogation is
valid under Section 5 only if it sufficiently connects to conduct
courts have held Section 1 to proscribe.
To decide whether a law passes muster, this
Court has framed a type of means-end test. For Congress’s action to
fall within its Section 5 authority, we have said, “[t]here must be
a congruence and proportionality between the injury to be prevented
or remedied and the means adopted to that end.”
Boerne, 521
U. S., at 520. On the one hand, courts are to consider the
constitutional problem Congress faced—both the nature and the
extent of state conduct violating the Fourteenth Amendment. That
assessment usually (though not inevitably) focuses on the
legislative record, which shows the evidence Congress had before it
of a constitutional wrong. See
Florida Prepaid, 527
U. S., at 646. On the other hand, courts are to examine the
scope of the response Congress chose to address that injury. Here,
a critical question is how far, and for what reasons, Congress has
gone beyond redressing actual constitutional violations. Hard
problems often require forceful responses and, as noted above,
Section 5 allows Congress to “enact[ ] reasonably prophylactic
legislation” to deter constitutional harm.
Kimel, 528
U. S., at 88;
Boerne, 521 U. S., at 536
(Congress’s conclusions on that score are “entitled to much
deference”);
supra, at 10. But “[s]trong measures
appropriate to address one harm may be an unwarranted response to
another, lesser one.”
Boerne, 521 U. S., at 530.
Always, what Congress has done must be in keeping with the
Fourteenth Amendment rules it has the power to “enforce.”
All this raises the question: When does the
Fourteenth Amendment care about copyright infringement? Sometimes,
no doubt. Copyrights are a form of property. See
Fox Film
Corp. v.
Doyal,
286 U.S.
123, 128 (1932). And the Fourteenth Amendment bars the States
from “depriv[ing]” a person of property “without due process of
law.” But even if sometimes, by no means always. Under our
precedent, a merely negligent act does not “deprive” a person of
property. See
Daniels v.
Williams,
474 U.S.
327, 328 (1986). So an infringement must be intentional, or at
least reckless, to come within the reach of the Due Process Clause.
See
id., at 334, n. 3 (reserving whether reckless
conduct suffices). And more: A State cannot violate that Clause
unless it fails to offer an adequate remedy for an infringement,
because such a remedy itself satisfies the demand of “due process.”
See
Hudson v.
Palmer,
468 U.S.
517, 533 (1984). That means within the broader world of state
copyright infringement is a smaller one where the Due Process
Clause comes into play.
Because the same is true of patent infringement,
Florida Prepaid again serves as the critical precedent. That
decision defined the scope of unconstitutional infringement in line
with the caselaw cited above—as intentional conduct for which there
is no adequate state remedy. See 527 U. S
., at 642–643,
645. It then searched for evidence of that sort of infringement in
the legislative record of the Patent Remedy Act. And it determined
that the statute’s abrogation of immunity—again, the equivalent of
the CRCA’s—was out of all proportion to what it found. That
analysis is the starting point of our inquiry here. And indeed, it
must be the ending point too unless the evidence of
unconstitutional infringement is materially different for
copyrights than patents. Consider once more, then,
Florida
Prepaid, now not on Article I but on Section 5.
In enacting the Patent Remedy Act,
Florida
Prepaid found, Congress did not identify a pattern of
unconstitutional patent infringement. To begin with, we explained,
there was only thin evidence of States infringing patents at
all—putting aside whether those actions violated due process. The
House Report, recognizing that “many states comply with patent
law,” offered just two examples of patent infringement suits
against the States.
Id., at 640 (quoting H. R. Rep. No.
101–960, pt. 1, p. 38 (1990)). The appellate court below,
boasting some greater research prowess, discovered another seven in
the century-plus between 1880 and 1990. See 527 U. S., at 640.
Even the bill’s House sponsor conceded the lack of “any evidence”
of “widespread violation of patent laws.”
Id., at 641
(quoting statement of Rep. Kastenmeier). What was more, there was
no evidence that any instance of infringement by States crossed
constitutional lines. Congress, we observed, “did not focus” on
intentional or reckless conduct; to the contrary, the legislative
record suggested that “most state infringement was innocent or at
worst negligent.”
Id., at 645. And similarly, Congress
“barely considered the availability of state remedies for patent
infringement.”
Id., at 643. So, we concluded, nothing could
support the idea that States were more than sporadically (if that)
“depriving patent owners of property without due process of law.”
Id., at 646.
Given that absence of evidence,
Florida
Prepaid held, the Patent Remedy Act swept too far. Recall what
the Patent Remedy Act did—and did not. It abrogated sovereign
immunity for any and every patent suit, thereby “plac[ing] States
on the same footing as private parties.”
Id., at 647. It did
not set any limits. It did not, for example, confine the abrogation
to suits alleging “nonnegligent infringement or infringement
authorized [by] state policy.”
Ibid. Neither did it target
States refusing to offer alternative remedies to patent holders.
No, it exposed all States to the hilt—on a record that failed to
show they had caused any discernible constitutional harm (or,
indeed, much harm at all). That imbalance made it impossible to
view the legislation “as responsive to, or designed to prevent,
unconstitutional behavior.”
Id., at 646 (quoting
Boerne, 521 U. S., at 532). The statute’s
“indiscriminate scope” was too “out of proportion” to any due
process problem. 527 U. S.
, at 646–647. It aimed not to
correct such a problem, but to “provide a uniform remedy for patent
infringement” writ large.
Id., at 647. The Patent Remedy
Act, in short, did not “enforce” Section 1 of the Fourteenth
Amendment—and so was not “appropriate” under Section 5.
Could, then, this case come out differently?
Given the identical scope of the CRCA and Patent Remedy Act, that
could happen only if the former law responded to materially
stronger evidence of infringement, especially of the
unconstitutional kind. Allen points to a significant disparity in
how Congress created a record for the two statutes. See Brief for
Petitioners 7–10, 47–50. Before enacting the CRCA, Congress asked
the then-Register of Copyrights, Ralph Oman, to submit a report
about the effects of the Eleventh Amendment on copyright
enforcement. Oman and his staff conducted a year-long examination,
which included a request for public comments eliciting letters from
about 40 copyright holders and industry groups. The final 158-page
report concluded that “copyright proprietors have demonstrated they
will suffer immediate harm if they are unable to sue infringing
states in federal court.” Copyright Office, Copyright Liability of
States and the Eleventh Amendment 103 (1988) (Oman Report). Is that
report enough, as Allen claims, to flip
Florida Prepaid’s
outcome when it comes to copyright cases against the States?
It is not. Behind the headline-grabbing
conclusion, nothing in the Oman Report, or the rest of the
legislative record, cures the problems we identified in
Florida
Prepaid. As an initial matter, the concrete evidence of States
infringing copyrights (even ignoring whether those acts violate due
process) is scarcely more impressive than what the
Florida
Prepaid Court saw. Despite undertaking an exhaustive search,
Oman came up with only a dozen possible examples of state
infringement. He listed seven court cases brought against States
(with another two dismissed on the merits) and five anecdotes taken
from public comments (but not further corroborated). See Oman
Report, at 7–9, 90–97. In testifying about the report, Oman
acknowledged that state infringement is “not widespread” and “the
States are not going to get involved in wholesale violation of the
copyright laws.” Hearings on H. R. 1131 before the
Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the
Administration of Justice, 101st Cong., 1st Sess., 53 (1989) (House
Hearings). Indeed, he opined: “They are all respectful of the
copyright law” and “will continue to respect the law”; what State,
after all, would “want[ ] to get a reputation as a copyright
pirate?”
Id., at 8. The bill’s House and Senate sponsors got
the point. The former admitted that “there have not been any
significant number” of copyright violations by States.
Id.,
at 48 (Rep. Kastenmeier). And the latter conceded he could not
currently see “a big problem.” Hearings on S. 497 before the
Subcommittee on Patents, Copyrights and Trademarks, 101st Cong.,
1st Sess., 130 (1989) (Sen. DeConcini). This is not, to put the
matter charitably, the stuff from which Section 5 legislation
ordinarily arises.
And it gets only worse. Neither the Oman Report
nor any other part of the legislative record shows concern with
whether the States’ copyright infringements (however few and far
between) violated the Due Process Clause. Of the 12 infringements
listed in the report, only two appear intentional, as they must be
to raise a constitutional issue. See Oman Report, at 7–8, 91
(describing a judicial finding of “willful” infringement and a
public comment charging continued infringement after a copyright
owner complained). As Oman testified, the far greater problem was
the frequency of “honest mistakes” or “innocent” misunderstandings;
the benefit of the bill, he therefore thought, would be to “guard
against sloppiness.” House Hearings
, at 9. Likewise, the
legislative record contains no informa- tion about the availability
of state-law remedies for copyright infringement (such as contract
or unjust enrichment suits)—even though they might themselves
satisfy due process. Those deficiencies in the record match the
ones
Florida Prepaid emphasized. See 527 U. S., at
643–645. Here no less than there, they signal an absence of
constitutional harm.
Under
Florida Prepaid, the CRCA thus must
fail our “congruence and proportionality” test.
Boerne, 521
U. S., at 520. As just shown, the evidence of Fourteenth
Amendment injury supporting the CRCA and the Patent Remedy Act is
equivalent—for both, that is, exceedingly slight. And the scope of
the two statutes is identical—extending to every infringement case
against a State. It follows that the balance the laws strike
between constitutional wrong and statutory remedy is
correspondingly askew. In this case, as in
Florida Prepaid,
the law’s “indiscriminate scope” is “out of proportion” to any due
process problem. 527 U. S., at 646–647; see
supra, at
13. In this case, as in that one, the statute aims to “provide a
uniform remedy” for statutory infringement, rather than to redress
or prevent unconstitutional conduct. 527 U. S., at 647; see
supra, at 13
. And so in this case, as in that one,
the law is invalid under Section 5.
That conclusion, however, need not prevent
Congress from passing a valid copyright abrogation law in the
future. In doing so, Congress would presumably approach the issue
differently than when it passed the CRCA. At that time, the Court
had not yet decided
Seminole Tribe, so Congress probably
thought that Article I could support its all-out abrogation of
immunity. See
supra, at 6. And to the extent it relied on
Section 5, Congress acted before this Court created the “congruence
and proportionality” test. See
supra, at 11. For that
reason, Congress likely did not appreciate the importance of
linking the scope of its abrogation to the redress or prevention of
unconstitutional injuries—and of creating a legislative record to
back up that connection. But going forward, Congress will know
those rules. And under them, if it detects violations of due
process, then it may enact a proportionate response. That kind of
tailored statute can effectively stop States from behaving as
copyright pirates. Even while respecting constitutional limits, it
can bring digital Blackbeards to justice.
III
Florida Prepaid all but prewrote our
decision today. That precedent made clear that Article I’s
Intellectual Property Clause could not provide the basis for an
abrogation of sovereign immunity. And it held that Section 5 of the
Fourteenth Amendment could not support an abrogation on a
legislative record like the one here. For both those reasons, we
affirm the judgment below.
It is so ordered.