During the waning months of the Presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson
in 1968, respondent, a management analyst with the Department of
the Air Force, testified before a congressional Subcommittee about
cost overruns and unexpected technical difficulties concerning the
development of a particular airplane. In January, 1970, during the
Presidency of petitioner Richard M. Nixon, respondent was dismissed
from his job during a departmental reorganization and reduction in
force, in which his job was eliminated. Respondent complained to
the Civil Service Commission, alleging that his separation
represented unlawful retaliation for his congressional testimony.
The Commission rejected this claim, but concluded that respondent's
dismissal offended applicable regulations because it was motivated
by "reasons purely personal to" respondent. Respondent thereafter
filed suit for damages in Federal District Court against various
Defense Department officials and White House aides allegedly
responsible for his dismissal. An amended complaint later named
petitioner as a defendant. After earlier judicial rulings and
extensive pretrial discovery, only three defendants were involved:
petitioner and two White House aides (petitioners in
Harlow v.
Fitzgerald, post, p.
457 U. S. 800).
Denying the defendants' motion for summary judgment, the court held
that respondent had stated triable causes of action under two
federal statutes and the First Amendment, and that petitioner was
not entitled to claim absolute Presidential immunity. Petitioner
took a collateral appeal of the immunity decision to the Court of
Appeals, which dismissed summarily.
Held:
1. This Court has jurisdiction to determine the immunity
question. Pp.
457 U. S.
741-744.
(a) The case was "in" the Court of Appeals for purposes of 28
U.S.C. 1254, which authorizes this Court's review of "[c]ases in"
the courts of appeals. The Court of Appeals here dismissed the
appeal for lack of jurisdiction. However, petitioner's appeal to
the Court of Appeals falls within the "collateral order" doctrine
of
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp., 337 U.
S. 541, as raising a "serious and unsettled
Page 457 U. S. 732
question" of law. Although the Court of Appeals had previously
ruled in another case that the President was not entitled to
absolute immunity, this Court had never so held. Pp.
457 U. S.
741-743.
(b) Nor was the controversy mooted by an agreement to liquidate
damages entered into between the parties after the petition for
certiorari was filed and respondent had entered his opposition.
Under the terms of the agreement, petitioner paid respondent
$142,000; respondent agreed to accept liquidated damages of $28,000
if this Court ruled that petitioner was not entitled to absolute
immunity; and no further payments would be made if the decision
upheld petitioner's immunity claim. The limited agreement left both
parties with a considerable financial stake in the resolution of
the question presented in this Court.
Cf. Havens Realty Corp.
v. Coleman, 455 U. S. 363. Pp.
457 U. S.
743-744.
2. Petitioner, as a former President of the United States, is
entitled to absolute immunity from damages liability predicated on
his official acts. Pp.
457 U. S.
744-758.
(a) Although there is no blanket recognition of absolute
immunity for all federal executive officials from liability for
civil damages resulting from constitutional violations, certain
officials -- such as judges and prosecutors -- because of the
special nature of their responsibilities, require absolute
exemption from liability.
Cf. Butz v. Economou,
438 U. S. 478.
Determination of the immunity of particular officials is guided by
the Constitution, federal statutes, history, and public policy. Pp.
457 U. S.
744-748.
(b) The President's absolute immunity is a functionally mandated
incident of his unique office, rooted in the constitutional
tradition of the separation of powers and supported by the Nation's
history. Because of the singular importance of the President's
duties, diversion of his energies by concern with private lawsuits
would raise unique risks to the effective functioning of
government. While the separation of powers doctrine does not bar
every exercise of jurisdiction over the President, a court, before
exercising jurisdiction, must balance the constitutional weight of
the interest to be served against the dangers of intrusion on the
authority and functions of the Executive Branch. The exercise of
jurisdiction is not warranted in the case of merely private suits
for damages based on a President's official acts. Pp.
457 U. S.
748-754.
(c) The President's absolute immunity extends to all acts within
the "outer perimeter" of his duties of office. Pp.
457 U. S.
755-757.
(d) A rule of absolute immunity for the President does not leave
the Nation without sufficient protection against his misconduct.
There remains the constitutional remedy of impeachment, as well as
the deterrent effects of constant scrutiny by the press and
vigilant oversight by Congress. Other incentives to avoid
misconduct may include a desire to
Page 457 U. S. 733
earn reelection, the need to maintain prestige as an element of
Presidential influence, and a President's traditional concern for
his historical stature. Pp.
457 U. S.
757-758.
Reversed and remanded.
POWELL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BURGER,
C.J., and REHNQUIST, STEVENS, and O'CONNOR, JJ., joined. BURGER,
C.J., filed a concurring opinion,
post, p.
457 U. S. 758.
WHITE, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN, MARSHALL,
and BLACKMUN, JJ., joined,
post, p.
457 U. S. 764.
BLACKMUN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN and
MARSHALL, JJ., joined,
post, p.
457 U. S.
797.
JUSTICE POWELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in this lawsuit seeks relief in civil damages from
a former President of the United States. The claim rests on actions
allegedly taken in the former President's official capacity during
his tenure in office. The issue before us is the scope of the
immunity possessed by the President of the United States.
I
In January, 1970 the respondent A. Ernest Fitzgerald lost his
job as a management analyst with the Department of the Air Force.
Fitzgerald's dismissal occurred in the context of a departmental
reorganization and reduction in force, in
Page 457 U. S. 734
which his job was eliminated. In announcing the reorganization,
the Air Force characterized the action as taken to promote economy
and efficiency in the Armed Forces.
Respondent's discharge attracted unusual attention in Congress
and in the press. Fitzgerald had attained national prominence
approximately one year earlier, during the waning months of the
Presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson. On November 13, 1968, Fitzgerald
appeared before the Subcommittee on Economy in Government of the
Joint Economic Committee of the United States Congress. To the
evident embarrassment of his superiors in the Department of
Defense, Fitzgerald testified that cost-overruns on the CA
transport plane could approximate $2 billion. [
Footnote 1] He also revealed that unexpected
technical difficulties had arisen during the development of the
aircraft.
Concerned that Fitzgerald might have suffered retaliation for
his congressional testimony, the Subcommittee on Economy in
Government convened public hearings on Fitzgerald's dismissal.
[
Footnote 2] The press reported
those hearings prominently,
Page 457 U. S. 735
as it had the earlier announcement that his job was being
eliminated by the Department of Defense. At a news conference on
December 8, 1969, President Richard Nixon was queried about
Fitzgerald's impending separation from Government service.
[
Footnote 3] The President
responded by promising to look into the matter. [
Footnote 4] Shortly after the news
conference, the petitioner asked White House Chief of Staff H.R.
Haldeman to arrange for Fitzgerald's assignment to another job
within the administration. [
Footnote 5] It also appears that the President suggested
to Budget Director Robert Mayo that Fitzgerald might be offered a
position in the Bureau of the Budget. [
Footnote 6]
Fitzgerald's proposed reassignment encountered resistance within
the administration. [
Footnote
7] In an internal memorandum of January 20, 1970, White House
aide Alexander Butterfield reported to Haldeman that
"'Fitzgerald is no doubt a top-notch cost expert, but he must be
given very low
Page 457 U. S. 736
marks in loyalty; and after all, loyalty is the name of the
game.' [
Footnote 8]"
Butterfield therefore recommended that "
[w]e should let him
bleed, for a while at least.'" [Footnote 9] There is no evidence of White House efforts to
reemploy Fitzgerald subsequent to the Butterfield
memorandum.
Absent any offer of alternative federal employment, Fitzgerald
complained to the Civil Service Commission. In a letter of January
20, 1970, he alleged that his separation represented unlawful
retaliation for his truthful testimony before a congressional
Committee. [
Footnote 10] The
Commission convened a closed hearing on Fitzgerald's allegations on
May 4, 1971. Fitzgerald, however, preferred to present his
grievances in public. After he had brought suit and won an
injunction,
Fitzgerald v. Hampton, 152 U.S.App.D.C. 1, 467
F.2d 755 (1972), public hearings commenced on January 26, 1973. The
hearings again generated publicity, much of it devoted to the
testimony of Air Force Secretary Robert Seamans. Although he denied
that Fitzgerald had lost his position in retaliation for
congressional testimony, Seamans testified that he had received
"some advice" from the White House before
Page 457 U. S. 737
Fitzgerald's job was abolished. [
Footnote 11] But the Secretary declined to be more
specific. He responded to several questions by invoking "executive
privilege." [
Footnote
12]
At a news conference on January 31, 1973, the President was
asked about Mr. Seamans' testimony. Mr. Nixon took the opportunity
to assume personal responsibility for Fitzgerald's dismissal:
"I was totally aware that Mr. Fitzgerald would be fired or
discharged or asked to resign. I approved it and Mr. Seamans must
have been talking to someone who had discussed the matter with me.
No, this was not a case of some person down the line deciding he
should go. It was a decision that was submitted to me. I made it,
and I stick by it. [
Footnote
13]"
A day later, however, the White House press office issued a
retraction of the President's statement. According to a press
spokesman, the President had confused Fitzgerald with another
former executive employee. On behalf of the President, the
spokesman asserted that Mr. Nixon had not had "put before him the
decision regarding Mr. Fitzgerald." [
Footnote 14]
After hearing over 4,000 pages of testimony, the Chief Examiner
for the Civil Service Commission issued his decision
Page 457 U. S. 738
in the Fitzgerald case on September 18, 1973.
Decision on
the Appeal of A. Ernest Fitzgerald, as reprinted in App. 60a.
The Examiner held that Fitzgerald's dismissal had offended
applicable civil service regulations.
Id. at 86a-87a.
[
Footnote 15] The Examiner
based this conclusion on a finding that the departmental
reorganization in which Fitzgerald lost his job, though purportedly
implemented as an economy measure, was in fact motivated by
"reasons purely personal to" respondent.
Id. at 86a. As
this was an impermissible basis for a reduction in force, [
Footnote 16] the Examiner
recommended Fitzgerald's reappointment to his old position or to a
job of comparable authority. [
Footnote 17]
Page 457 U. S. 739
The Examiner, however, explicitly distinguished this narrow
conclusion from a suggested finding that Fitzgerald had suffered
retaliation for his testimony to Congress. As found by the
Commission,
"the evidence of record does not support [Fitzgerald's]
allegation that his position was abolished and that he was
separated . . . in retaliation for his having revealed the C-5A
cost overrun in testimony before the Proxmire Committee on November
13, 1968."
Id. at 81a.
Following the Commission's decision, Fitzgerald filed a suit for
damages in the United States District Court. In it, he raised
essentially the same claims presented to the Civil Service
Commission. [
Footnote 18] As
defendants he named eight officials of the Defense Department,
White House aide Alexander Butterfield, and "one or More" unnamed
"White House Aides" styled only as "John Does."
The District Court dismissed the action under the District of
Columbia's 3-year statute of limitations,
Fitzgerald v.
Seamans, 384 F.
Supp. 688 (DC 1974), and the Court of Appeals affirmed as to
all but one defendant, White House aide Alexander Butterfield,
Fitzgerald v. Seamans, 180 U.S.App.D.C. 75, 553 F.2d 220
(1977). The Court of Appeals reasoned that Fitzgerald had no reason
to suspect White House involvement in his dismissal, at least until
1973. In that year, reasonable grounds for suspicion had arisen,
most notably through publication of the internal White House
memorandum in which Butterfield had recommended that Fitzgerald at
least should be made to "bleed for a while" before being offered
another job in the administration.
Id. at 80, 84, 553 F.2d
at 225, 229. Holding that concealment of illegal activity
Page 457 U. S. 740
would toll the statute of limitations, the Court of Appeals
remanded the action against Butterfield for further proceedings in
the District Court.
Following the remand and extensive discovery thereafter,
Fitzgerald filed a second amended complaint in the District Court
on July 5, 1978. It was in this amended complaint -- more than
eight years after he had complained of his discharge to the Civil
Service Commission -- that Fitzgerald first named the petitioner
Nixon as a party defendant. [
Footnote 19] Also included as defendants were White House
aide Bryce Harlow and other officials of the Nixon administration.
Additional discovery ensued. By March, 1980, only three defendants
remained: the petitioner Richard Nixon and White House aides Harlow
and Butterfield. Denying a motion for summary judgment, the
District Court ruled that the action must proceed to trial. Its
order of March 26 held that Fitzgerald had stated triable causes of
action under two federal statutes and the First Amendment to the
Constitution. [
Footnote 20]
The court also
Page 457 U. S. 741
ruled that petitioner was not entitled to claim absolute
Presidential immunity.
Petitioner took a collateral appeal of the immunity decision to
the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. The
Court of Appeals dismissed summarily. It apparently did so on the
ground that its recent decision in
Halpern v. Kissinger,
196 U.S.App.D.C. 285, 606 F.2d 1192 (1979),
aff'd in pertinent
part by an equally divided Court, 452 U.
S. 713 (1981), had rejected this claimed immunity
defense.
As this Court has not ruled on the scope of immunity available
to a President of the United States, we granted certiorari to
decide this important issue. 452 U.S. 959 (1981).
II
Before addressing the merits of this case, we must consider two
challenges to our jurisdiction. In his opposition to the petition
for certiorari, respondent argued that this Court is without
jurisdiction to review the nonfinal order in which the District
Court rejected petitioner's claim to absolute immunity. [
Footnote 21] We also must consider
an argument that an agreement between the parties has mooted the
controversy.
A
Petitioner invokes the jurisdiction of this Court under 28
U.S.C. § 1254, a statute that invests us with authority to review
"[c]ases in" the courts of appeals. [
Footnote 22] When the petitioner
Page 457 U. S. 742
in this case sought review of an interlocutory order denying his
claim to absolute immunity, the Court of Appeals dismissed the
appeal for lack of jurisdiction. Emphasizing the "jurisdictional"
basis for the Court of Appeals' decision, respondent argued that
the District Court's order was not an appealable "case" properly
"in" the Court of Appeals within the meaning of § 1254. We do not
agree.
Under the "collateral order" doctrine of
Cohen v. Beneficial
Industrial Loan Corp., 337 U. S. 541
(1949), a small class of interlocutory orders are immediately
appealable to the courts of appeals. As defined by
Cohen,
this class embraces orders that
"conclusively determine the disputed question, resolve an
important issue completely separate from the merits of the action,
and [are] effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final
judgment."
Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay, 437 U.
S. 463,
437 U. S. 468
(1978);
see Cohen, supra, at
337 U. S.
546-547. As an additional requirement,
Cohen
established that a collateral appeal of an interlocutory order must
"presen[t] a serious and unsettled question." 337 U.S. at
337 U. S. 547.
At least twice before, this Court has held that orders denying
claims of absolute immunity are appealable under the
Cohen
criteria.
See Helstoski v. Meanor, 442 U.
S. 500 (1979) (claim of immunity under the Speech and
Debate Clause);
Abney v. United States, 431 U.
S. 651 (1977) (claim of immunity under Double Jeopardy
Clause). In previous cases the Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit also has treated orders denying absolute immunity
as appealable under
Cohen. See Briggs v. Goodwin,
186 U.S.App.D.C. 179, 227-229, 569 F.2d 10, 58-60 (1977) (Wilkey,
J., dissenting on the appealability issue);
McSurely v.
McClellan, 172 U.S.App.D.C. 364, 372, 521 F.2d 1024, 1032
(1975),
aff'd in pertinent part en banc, 180 U.S.App.D.C.
101, 107-108, n. 18, 553 F.2d 1277, 1283-1284, n. 18 (1976),
cert. dism'd sub nom. McAdams v. McSurely, 438 U.
S. 189 (1978).
In "dismissing" the appeal in this case, the Court of Appeals
appears to have reasoned that petitioner's appeal lay
Page 457 U. S. 743
outside the
Cohen doctrine because it raised no
"serious and unsettled question" of law. This argument was pressed
by the respondent, who asked the Court of Appeals to dismiss on the
basis of that court's "controlling" decision in
Halperin v.
Kissinger, supra.
Under the circumstances of this case, we cannot agree that
petitioner's interlocutory appeal failed to raise a "serious and
unsettled" question. Although the Court of Appeals had ruled in
Halperin v. Kissinger that the President was not entitled
to absolute immunity, this Court never had so held. And a petition
for certiorari in
Halperin was pending in this Court at
the time petitioner's appeal was dismissed. In light of the special
solicitude due to claims alleging a threatened breach of essential
Presidential prerogatives under the separation of powers,
see
United States v. Nixon, 418 U. S. 683,
418 U. S.
691-692 (1974), we conclude that petitioner did present
a "serious and unsettled," and therefore appealable, question to
the Court of Appeals. It follows that the case was "in" the Court
of Appeals under § 1254 and properly within our certiorari
jurisdiction. [
Footnote
23]
B
Shortly after petitioner had filed his petition for certiorari
in this Court and respondent had entered his opposition, the
parties reached an agreement to liquidate damages. [
Footnote 24] Under
Page 457 U. S. 744
its terms, the petitioner Nixon paid the respondent Fitzgerald a
sum of $142,000. In consideration, Fitzgerald agreed to accept
liquidated damages of $28,000 in the event of a ruling by this
Court that petitioner was not entitled to absolute immunity. In
case of a decision upholding petitioner's immunity claim, no
further payments would be made.
The limited agreement between the parties left both petitioner
and respondent with a considerable financial stake in the
resolution of the question presented in this Court. As we recently
concluded in a case involving a similar contract:
"Given respondents' continued active pursuit of monetary relief,
this case remains 'definite and concrete, touching the legal
relations of parties having adverse legal interests.'"
Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman, 455 U.
S. 363,
455 U. S. 371
(1982), quoting
Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Haworth,
300 U. S. 227,
300 U. S.
240-241 (1937).
III
A
This Court consistently has recognized that government officials
are entitled to some form of immunity from suits for civil damages.
In
Spalding v. Vilas, 161 U. S. 483
(1896), the Court considered the immunity available to the
Postmaster General in a suit for damages based upon his official
acts. Drawing upon principles of immunity developed in English
cases at common law, the Court concluded that "[t]he interests of
the people" required a grant of absolute immunity to public
officers.
Id. at
161 U. S. 498.
In the absence of immunity, the Court reasoned, executive officials
would hesitate to exercise
Page 457 U. S. 745
their discretion in a way "injuriously affect[ing] the claims of
particular individuals,"
id. at
161 U. S. 499,
even when the public interest required bold and unhesitating
action. Considerations of "public policy and convenience" therefore
compelled a judicial recognition of immunity from suits arising
from official acts.
"In exercising the functions of his office, the head of an
Executive Department, keeping within the limits of his authority,
should not be under an apprehension that the motives that control
his official conduct may, at any time, become the subject of
inquiry in a civil suit for damages. It would seriously cripple the
proper and effective administration of public affairs as entrusted
to the executive branch of the government, if he were subjected to
any such restraint."
Id. at
161 U. S.
498.
Decisions subsequent to
Spalding have extended the
defense of immunity to actions besides those at common law. In
Tenney v. Brandhove, 341 U. S. 367
(1951), the Court considered whether the passage of 42 U.S.C. §
1983, which made no express provision for immunity for any
official, had abrogated the privilege accorded to state legislators
at common law.
Tenney held that it had not. Examining §
1983 in light of the "presuppositions of our political history" and
our heritage of legislative freedom, the Court found it incredible
"that Congress . . . would impinge on a tradition so well grounded
in history and reason" without some indication of intent more
explicit than the general language of the statute.
Id. at
341 U. S. 376.
Similarly, the decision in
Pierson v. Ray, 386 U.
S. 547 (1967), involving a § 1983 suit against a state
judge, recognized the continued validity of the absolute immunity
of judges for acts within the judicial role. This was a
doctrine
"'not for the protection or benefit of a malicious or corrupt
judge, but for the benefit of the public, whose interest it is that
the judges should be at liberty to exercise their functions
Page 457 U. S. 746
with independence and without fear of consequences.'"
Id. at
386 U. S. 554,
quoting
Scott v. Stansfield, L.R. 3 Ex. 220, 223 (1868).
See Bradley v.
Fisher, 13 Wall. 335 (1872). The Court in
Pierson also held that police officers are entitled to a
qualified immunity protecting them from suit when their official
acts are performed in "good faith." 386 U.S. at
386 U. S.
557.
In
Scheuer v. Rhodes, 416 U. S. 232
(1974), the Court considered the immunity available to state
executive officials in a § 1983 suit alleging the violation of
constitutional rights. In that case, we rejected the officials'
claim to absolute immunity under the doctrine of
Spalding v.
Vilas, finding instead that state executive officials
possessed a "good faith" immunity from § 1983 suits alleging
constitutional violations. Balancing the purposes of § 1983 against
the imperatives of public policy, the Court held that,
"in varying scope, a qualified immunity is available to officers
of the executive branch of government, the variation being
dependent upon the scope of discretion and responsibilities of the
office and all the circumstances as they reasonably appeared at the
time of the action on which liability is sought to be based."
416 U.S. at
416 U. S.
247.
As construed by subsequent cases,
Scheuer established a
two-tiered division of immunity defenses in § 1983 suits. To most
executive officers,
Scheuer accorded qualified immunity.
For them the scope of the defense varied in proportion to the
nature of their official functions and the range of decisions that
conceivably might be taken in "good faith." This "functional"
approach also defined a second tier, however, at which the
especially sensitive duties of certain officials -- notably judges
and prosecutors -- required the continued recognition of absolute
immunity.
See, e.g., Imbler v. Pachtman, 424 U.
S. 409 (1976) (state prosecutors possess absolute
immunity with respect to the initiation and pursuit of
prosecutions);
Stump v. Sparkman, 435 U.
S. 349 (1978) (state judge possesses absolute immunity
for all judicial acts).
This approach was reviewed in detail in
Butz v.
Economou,
Page 457 U. S. 747
438 U. S. 478
(1978), when we considered for the first time the kind of immunity
possessed by federal executive officials who are sued for
constitutional violations. [
Footnote 25] In
Butz, the Court rejected an
argument, based on decisions involving federal officials charged
with common law torts, that all high federal officials have a right
to absolute immunity from constitutional damages actions.
Concluding that a blanket recognition of absolute immunity would be
anomalous in light of the qualified immunity standard applied to
state executive officials,
id. at
438 U. S. 504,
we held that federal officials generally have the same qualified
immunity possessed by state officials in cases under § 1983. In so
doing, we reaffirmed our holdings that some officials, notably
judges and prosecutors, "because of the special nature of their
responsibilities,"
id. at
438 U. S. 511,
"require a full exemption from liability."
Id. at
438 U. S. 508.
In
Butz itself, we upheld a claim of absolute immunity for
administrative officials engaged in functions analogous to those of
judges and prosecutors.
Ibid. We also left open the
question whether other federal officials could show that "public
policy requires an exemption of that scope."
Id. at
438 U. S.
506.
B
Our decisions concerning the immunity of government officials
from civil damages liability have been guided by the Constitution,
federal statutes, and history. Additionally, at least in the
absence of explicit constitutional or congressional guidance, our
immunity decisions have been informed by the common law.
See
Butz v. Economou, supra, at
438 U. S. 508;
Imbler v. Pachtman, supra, at
424 U. S. 421.
This Court necessarily also has weighed concerns of public policy,
especially as illuminated
Page 457 U. S. 748
by our history and the structure of our government.
See,
e.g., Butz v. Economou, supra, at
438 U. S. 508;
Imbler v. Pachtman, supra, at
424 U. S. 421;
Spalding v. Vilas, 161 U.S. at
161 U. S. 498.
[
Footnote 26]
This case now presents the claim that the President of the
United States is shielded by absolute immunity from civil damages
liability. In the case of the President the inquiries into history
and policy, though mandated independently by our cases, tend to
converge. Because the Presidency did not exist through most of the
development of common law, any historical analysis must draw its
evidence primarily from our constitutional heritage and structure.
Historical inquiry thus merges almost at its inception with the
kind of "public policy" analysis appropriately undertaken by a
federal court. This inquiry involves policies and principles that
may be considered implicit in the nature of the President's office
in a system structured to achieve effective government under a
constitutionally mandated separation of powers.
IV
Here a former President asserts his immunity from civil damages
claims of two kinds. He stands named as a defendant in a direct
action under the Constitution and in two statutory actions under
federal laws of general applicability. In neither case has Congress
taken express legislative action to subject the President to civil
liability for his official acts. [
Footnote 27]
Page 457 U. S. 749
Applying the principles of our cases to claims of this kind, we
hold that petitioner, as a former President of the United States,
is entitled to absolute immunity from damages liability predicated
on his official acts. We consider this immunity a functionally
mandated incident of the President's unique office, rooted in the
constitutional tradition of the separation of powers and supported
by our history. Justice Story's analysis remains persuasive:
"There are . . . incidental powers belonging to the executive
department which are necessarily implied from the nature of the
functions which are confided to it. Among these must necessarily be
included the power to perform them. . . . The president cannot,
therefore, be liable to arrest, imprisonment, or detention, while
he is in the discharge of the duties of his office, and, for this
purpose, his person must be deemed, in civil cases at least, to
possess an official inviolability."
3 J. Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United
States § 1563, pp. 418-419 (1st ed. 1833).
A
The President occupies a unique position in the constitutional
scheme. Article II, § 1, of the Constitution provides that "[t]he
executive Power shall be vested in a President of
Page 457 U. S. 750
the United States. . . ." This grant of authority establishes
the President as the chief constitutional officer of the Executive
Branch, entrusted with supervisory and policy responsibilities of
utmost discretion and sensitivity. These include the enforcement of
federal law -- it is the President who is charged constitutionally
to "take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed"; [
Footnote 28] the conduct of foreign
affairs -- a realm in which the Court has recognized that
"[i]t would be intolerable that courts, without the relevant
information, should review and perhaps nullify actions of the
Executive taken on information properly held secret [
Footnote 29]"
and management of the Executive Branch -- a task for which
"imperative reasons requir[e] an unrestricted power [in the
President] to remove the most important of his subordinates in
their most important duties. [
Footnote 30]"
In arguing that the President is entitled only to qualified
immunity, the respondent relies on cases in which we have
recognized immunity of this scope for governors and cabinet
officers.
E.g., Butz v. Economou, 438 U.
S. 478 (1978);
Scheuer v. Rhodes, 416 U.
S. 232 (1974). We find these cases to be inapposite. The
President's unique status under the Constitution distinguishes him
from other executive officials. [
Footnote 31]
Page 457 U. S. 751
Because of the singular importance of the President's duties,
diversion of his energies by concern with private lawsuits would
raise unique risks to the effective functioning of government. As
is the case with prosecutors and judges --
Page 457 U. S. 752
for whom absolute immunity now is established -- a President
must concern himself with matters likely to "arouse the most
intense feelings."
Pierson v. Ray, 386 U.S. at
386 U. S. 554.
Yet, as our decisions have recognized, it is in precisely such
cases that there exists the greatest public interest in providing
an official "the maximum ability to deal fearlessly and impartially
with" the duties of his office.
Ferri v. Ackerman,
444 U. S. 193,
444 U. S. 203
(1979). This concern is compelling where the officeholder must make
the most sensitive and far-reaching decisions entrusted to any
official under our constitutional system. [
Footnote 32] Nor can the sheer prominence of the
President's
Page 457 U. S. 753
office be ignored. In view of the visibility of his office and
the effect of his actions on countless people, the President would
be an easily identifiable target for suits for civil damages.
[
Footnote 33] Cognizance of
this personal vulnerability frequently could distract a President
from his public duties, to the detriment of not only the President
and his office but also the Nation that the Presidency was designed
to serve.
B
Courts traditionally have recognized the President's
constitutional responsibilities and status as factors counseling
judicial deference and restraint. [
Footnote 34] For example, while courts generally have
looked to the common law to determine the scope of an official's
evidentiary privilege, [
Footnote
35] we have recognized that the Presidential privilege is
"rooted in the separation of powers under the Constitution."
United States v. Nixon, 418 U.S. at
418 U. S. 708.
It is settled law that the separation of powers doctrine does not
bar every exercise of jurisdiction
Page 457 U. S. 754
over the President of the United States.
See, e.g., United
States v. Nixon, supra; United States v. Burr, 25 F. Cas. 187,
191, 196 (No. 14,694) (CC Va. 1807);
cf. Youngstown Sheet &
Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U. S. 579
(1952). [
Footnote 36] But
our cases also have established that a court, before exercising
jurisdiction, must balance the constitutional weight of the
interest to be served against the dangers of intrusion on the
authority and functions of the Executive Branch.
See Nixon v.
Administrator of General Services, 433 U.
S. 425,
433 U. S. 443
(1977);
United States v. Nixon, supra, at
418 U. S.
703-713. When judicial action is needed to serve broad
public interests -- as when the Court acts not in derogation of the
separation of powers, but to maintain their proper balance,
cf.
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, supra, or to
vindicate the public interest in an ongoing criminal prosecution,
see United States v. Nixon, supra -- the exercise of
jurisdiction has been held warranted. In the case of this merely
private suit for damages based on a President's official acts, we
hold it is not. [
Footnote
37]
Page 457 U. S. 755
C
In defining the scope of an official's absolute privilege, this
Court has recognized that the sphere of protected action must be
related closely to the immunity's justifying purposes. Frequently
our decisions have held that an official's absolute immunity should
extend only to acts in performance of particular functions of his
office.
See Butz v. Economou, 438 U.S. at
438 U. S.
508-517;
cf. Imbler v. Pachtman, 424 U.S. at
424 U. S.
430-431. But the Court also has refused to draw
functional lines finer than history and reason would support.
See, e.g., Spalding v. Vilas, 161 U.S. at
161 U. S. 498
(privilege extends to all matters "committed by law to [an
official's] control or supervision");
Barr v. Matteo,
360 U. S. 564,
360 U. S. 575
(1959) (fact "that the action here taken was within the outer
perimeter of petitioner's line of duty is enough to render the
privilege applicable . . .");
Page 457 U. S. 756
Stump v. Sparkman, 435 U.S. at
435 U. S. 363,
and n. 12 (judicial privilege applies even to acts occurring
outside "the normal attributes of a judicial proceeding"). In view
of the special nature of the President's constitutional office and
functions, we think it appropriate to recognize absolute
Presidential immunity from damages liability for acts within the
"outer perimeter" of his official responsibility.
Under the Constitution and laws of the United States, the
President has discretionary responsibilities in a broad variety of
areas, many of them highly sensitive. In many cases, it would be
difficult to determine which of the President's innumerable
"functions" encompassed a particular action. In this case, for
example, respondent argues that he was dismissed in retaliation for
his testimony to Congress -- a violation of 5 U.S.C. § 7211 (1976
ed., Supp. IV) and 18 U.S.C. § 1505. The Air Force, however, has
claimed that the underlying reorganization was undertaken to
promote efficiency. Assuming that petitioner Nixon ordered the
reorganization in which respondent lost his job, an inquiry into
the President's motives could not be avoided under the kind of
"functional" theory asserted both by respondent and the dissent.
Inquiries of this kind could be highly intrusive.
Here, respondent argues that petitioner Nixon would have acted
outside the outer perimeter of his duties by ordering the discharge
of an employee who was lawfully entitled to retain his job in the
absence of "
such cause as will promote the efficiency of the
service.'" Brief for Respondent 39, citing 5 U.S.C. § 7512(a).
Because Congress has granted this legislative protection,
respondent argues, no federal official could, within the outer
perimeter of his duties of office, cause Fitzgerald to be dismissed
without satisfying this standard in prescribed statutory
proceedings.
This construction would subject the President to trial on
virtually every allegation that an action was unlawful, or was
taken for a forbidden purpose. Adoption of this construction thus
would deprive absolute immunity of its intended effect.
Page 457 U. S. 757
It clearly is within the President's constitutional and
statutory authority to prescribe the manner in which the Secretary
will conduct the business of the Air Force.
See 10 U.S.C.
§ 8012(b). Because this mandate of office must include the
authority to prescribe reorganizations and reductions in force, we
conclude that petitioner's alleged wrongful acts lay well within
the outer perimeter of his authority.
V
A rule of absolute immunity for the President will not leave the
Nation without sufficient protection against misconduct on the part
of the Chief Executive. [
Footnote 38] There remains the constitutional remedy of
impeachment. [
Footnote 39]
In addition, there are formal and informal checks on Presidential
action that do not apply with equal force to other executive
officials. The President is subjected to constant scrutiny by the
press. Vigilant oversight by Congress also may serve to deter
Presidential abuses of office, as well as to make credible the
threat of impeachment. [
Footnote
40] Other incentives to avoid misconduct may include a desire
to earn reelection, the need to maintain prestige as an element of
Presidential influence, and a President's traditional concern for
his historical stature.
Page 457 U. S. 758
The existence of alternative remedies and deterrents establishes
that absolute immunity will not place the President "above the
law." [
Footnote 41] For the
President, as for judges and prosecutors, absolute immunity merely
precludes a particular private remedy for alleged misconduct in
order to advance compelling public ends.
VI
For the reasons stated in this opinion, the decision of the
Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case is remanded for action
consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
See Economics of Military Procurement: Hearings before
the Subcommittee on Economy in Government of the Joint Economic
Committee, 90th Cong., 2d Sess., pt. I, pp.199-201 (1968-1969). It
is not disputed that officials in the Department of Defense were
both embarrassed and angered by Fitzgerald's testimony. Within less
than two months of respondent's congressional appearance, staff had
prepared a memorandum for the outgoing Secretary of the Air Force,
Harold Brown, listing three ways in which Fitzgerald might be
removed from his position.
See App. 209a-211a (memorandum
of John Lang to Harold Brown, Jan. 6, 1969). Among these was a
"reduction in force" -- the means by which Fitzgerald ultimately
was removed by Brown's successor in office under the new Nixon
administration. The reduction in force was announced publicly on
November 4, 1969, and Fitzgerald accordingly was separated from the
Air Force upon the elimination of his job on January 5, 1970.
[
Footnote 2]
See The Dismissal of A. Ernest Fitzgerald by the
Department of Defense: Hearings before the Subcommittee on Economy
in Government of the Joint Economic Committee, 91st Cong., 1st
Sess. (1969). Some 60 Members of Congress also signed a letter to
the President protesting the "firing of this dedicated public
servant" as a "punitive action."
Id. at 115-116.
[
Footnote 3]
A briefing memorandum on the Fitzgerald matter had been prepared
by White House staff in anticipation of a possible inquiry at the
forthcoming press conference. Authored by aide Patrick Buchanan, it
advanced the view that the Air Force was "firing . . . a good
public servant." App. 269a (memorandum of Patrick Buchanan to
Richard Nixon, Dec. 5, 1969). The memorandum suggested that the
President order Fitzgerald's retention by the Defense
Department.
[
Footnote 4]
Id. at 228a.
[
Footnote 5]
See id. at 109a-112a (deposition of H.R. Haldeman);
id. at 137a-141a (deposition of petitioner Richard Nixon).
Haldeman's deposed testimony was based on his handwritten notes of
December 12, 1969.
Id. at 275a.
[
Footnote 6]
See id. at 126a (deposition of Robert Mayo);
id. at 141a (deposition of Richard Nixon).
[
Footnote 7]
Both Mayo and his deputy, James Schlesinger, appear to have
resisted at least partly due to a suspicion that Fitzgerald lacked
institutional loyalty to executive policies and that he spoke too
freely in communications with friends on Capitol Hill. Both also
stated that high-level positions were presently unavailable within
the Bureau of the Budget.
See id. at 126a (deposition of
Robert Mayo);
id. at 146a-147a (deposition of James
Schlesinger).
[
Footnote 8]
Quoted in
Decision on the Appeal of A. Ernest
Fitzgerald (Sept. 18, 1973) (
CSC Decision), reprinted
in App. 60a, 84a. (Page citations to the
CSC Decision
refer to the cited page in the Joint Appendix.)
[
Footnote 9]
Id. at 85a. The memorandum added that "
[w]e owe
"first choice on Fitzgerald" to [Senator] Proxmire and others who
tried so hard to make him a hero [for exposing the cost
overruns].'" Suspicion of Fitzgerald's assumed loyalty toward
Senator Proxmire was widely shared in the White House and in the
Defense Department. According to the CSC Decision,
supra:
"While Mr. Fitzgerald has denied that he was 'Senator Proxmier's
[
sic] boy in the Air Force,' and he may honestly believe
it, we find this statement difficult to accept. It is evident that
the top officials in the Air Force, without specifically saying so,
considered him to be just that. . . . We also note that, upon
leaving the Air Force, Mr. Fitzgerald was employed as a consultant
by the Proxmire Committee, and that Senator Proxmire appeared at
the Commission hearing as a character witness for
[Fitzgerald]."
App. 83a.
[
Footnote 10]
Id. at 61a.
[
Footnote 11]
See id. at 83a-84a.
[
Footnote 12]
See ibid.
[
Footnote 13]
Id. at 185a. A few hours after the press conference,
Mr. Nixon repeated privately to Presidential aide Charles Colson
that he had ordered Fitzgerald's firing.
Id. at 214a-215a
(recorded conversation of Jan. 31, 1973).
[
Footnote 14]
Id. at 196a (transcription of statement of White House
press secretary Ronald Ziegler, Feb. 1, 1973). In a conversation
with aide John Ehrlichman, following his conversation with Charles
Colson,
see n 13,
supra, the President again had claimed responsibility for
Fitzgerald's dismissal. When Ehrlichman corrected him on several
details, however, the President concluded that he was "thinking of
another case."
Id. at 21& (recorded conversation of
Jan. 31, 1973).
See id. at 220a. It was after this
conversation that the retraction was ordered.
[
Footnote 15]
Fitzgerald's position in the Air Force was in the "excepted
service," and therefore not covered by civil service rules and
regulations for the competitive service.
Fitzgerald v.
Hampton, 152 U.S.App.D.C. 1, 4, 467 F.2d 755, 758 (1972);
see CSC Decision, App. 63a-64a. In
Hampton,
however, the court held that Fitzgerald's employment nonetheless
was under "legislative protection," since he was a "preference
eligible" veteran entitled to various statutory protections under
the Veterans' Preference Act.
See 152 U.S.App.D.C. at
4-14, 467 F.2d at 758-768. Among these were the benefits of the
reduction-in-force procedures established by civil service
regulation.
See id. at 4, 467 F.2d at 758.
[
Footnote 16]
The Examiner found that Fitzgerald in fact was dismissed because
of his superiors' dissatisfaction with his job performance. App.
86a-87a. Their attitude was evidenced by "statements that he was
not a
team player' and `not on the Air Force team.'"
Id. at 83a. Without deciding whether this would have been
an adequate basis for an "adverse action" against Fitzgerald as an
"inadequate or unsatisfactory employee," id. at 86a, the
Examiner held that the Commission's adverse action procedures,
current version codified at 5 CFR pt. 752 (1982), implicitly
forbade the Air Force to employ a "reduction in force" as a means
of dismissing respondent for reasons "personal to" him. App.
87a.
[
Footnote 17]
The Commission also ordered that Fitzgerald should receive
backpay.
Id. at 87a-88a. Following the Commission's order,
respondent was offered a new position with the Defense Department,
but not one that he regarded as equivalent to his former
employment. Fitzgerald accordingly filed an enforcement action in
the District Court. This litigation ultimately culminated in a
settlement agreement. Under its terms, the United States Air Force
agreed to reassign Fitzgerald to his former position as Management
Systems Deputy to the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force,
effective June 21, 1982.
See Settlement Agreement in
Fitzgerald v. Hampton et al., Civ. No. 71486 (DC June 15,
1982).
[
Footnote 18]
The complaint alleged a continuing conspiracy to deprive him of
his job, to deny him reemployment, and to besmirch his reputation.
Fitzgerald alleged that the conspiracy had continued through the
Commission hearings and remained in existence at the initiation of
the lawsuit.
See Fitzgerald v. Seamans, 384 F.
Supp. 688, 690-692 (DC 1974).
[
Footnote 19]
The general allegations of the complaint remained essentially
unchanged. In averring Nixon's participation in the alleged
conspiracy against him, the complaint quoted petitioner's press
conference statement that he was "totally aware" of, and in fact
"approved," Fitzgerald's dismissal. Second Amended Complaint in
Fitzgerald v. Butterfield, Civ. No. 74-78 (DC), p. 6.
[
Footnote 20]
See App. to Pet. for Cert. 1a-2a. The District Court
held that respondent was entitled to "infer" a cause of action
under 5 U.S.C. § 7211 (1976 ed., Supp. IV) and 18 U.S.C. § 1505.
Neither expressly confers a private right to sue for relief in
damages. The first, 5 U.S.C. § 7211 (1976 ed., Supp. IV), provides
generally that
"[t]he right of employees . . . to . . . furnish information to
either House of Congress, or to a committee or Member thereof, may
not be interfered with or denied."
The second, 18 U.S.C. § 1505, is a criminal statute making it a
crime to obstruct congressional testimony. The correctness of the
decision that a cause of action could be "implied" under these
statutes is not currently before us. As explained
infra,
this case is here under the "collateral order" doctrine, for review
of the District Court's denial of petitioner's motion to dismiss on
the ground that he enjoyed absolute immunity from civil suit. The
District Court also held that respondent had stated a claim under
the common law of the District of Columbia, but respondent
subsequently abandoned his common law cause of action.
See
Supplemental Brief in Opposition 2.
[
Footnote 21]
See Brief in Opposition 2. Although Fitzgerald has not
continued to urge this argument, the challenge was jurisdictional,
and we therefore address it.
[
Footnote 22]
The statute provides in pertinent part:
"Cases in the courts of appeals may be reviewed by the Supreme
Court by the following methods:"
"(1) By writ of certiorari granted upon the petition of any
party to any civil or criminal case, before or after rendition of
judgment or decree. . . ."
[
Footnote 23]
There can be no serious doubt concerning our power to review a
court of appeals' decision to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction -- a
power we have exercised routinely.
See, e.g., Gardner v.
Westinghouse Broadcasting Co., 437 U.
S. 478 (1978). If we lacked authority to do so,
decisions to dismiss for want of jurisdiction would be insulated
entirely from review by this Court.
Nor, now that we have taken jurisdiction of the case, need we
remand to the Court of Appeals for a decision on the merits. The
immunity question is a pure issue of law, appropriate for our
immediate resolution. Especially in light of the Court of Appeals'
now-binding decision of the issue presented, concerns of judicial
economy fully warrant our decision of the important question
presented.
[
Footnote 24]
Respondent filed a copy of this agreement with the Clerk of this
Court on August 24, 1981, as an appendix to his brief in opposition
to a motion of Morton, Ina, David, Mark, and Gary Halperin to
intervene and for other relief. On June 10, 1980, prior to the
Court's action on the petition for certiorari, counsel to the
parties had advised the Court that their clients had reached an
agreement to liquidate damages, but that there remained a live
controversy. Counsel did not include a copy of the agreement in
their initial submission.
[
Footnote 25]
Spalding v. Vilas, 161 U. S. 483
(1896), was distinguished on the ground that the suit against the
Postmaster General had asserted a common law -- and not a
constitutional -- cause of action.
See Butz v. Economou,
438 U.S. at
438 U. S.
493-496.
[
Footnote 26]
Although the Court in
Butz v. Economou, supra, at
438 U. S. 508,
described the requisite inquiry as one of "public policy," the
focus of inquiry more accurately may be viewed in terms of the
"inherent" or "structural" assumptions of our scheme of
government.
[
Footnote 27]
In the present case, we therefore are presented only with
"implied" causes of action, and we need not address directly the
immunity question as it would arise if Congress expressly had
created a damages action against the President of the United
States. This approach accords with this Court's settled policy of
avoiding unnecessary decision of constitutional issues. Reviewing
this case under the "collateral order" doctrine,
see supra
at
457 U. S. 742,
we assume for purposes of this opinion that private causes of
action may be inferred both under the First Amendment and the two
statutes on which respondent relies. But it does not follow that we
must -- in considering a
Bivens (Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed.
Narcotics Agents, 403 U. S. 388
(1971)) remedy or interpreting a statute
in light of the
immunity doctrine -- assume that the cause of action runs
against the President of the United States.
Cf. Tenney v.
Brandhove, 341 U. S. 367,
341 U. S. 376
(1951) (construing 1983 in light of the immunity doctrine, the
Court could not accept "that Congress . . . would impinge on a
tradition [of legislative immunity] so well grounded in history and
reason by covert inclusion in the general language before us," and
therefore would not address issues that would arise if Congress had
undertaken to deprive state legislators of absolute immunity).
Consequently, our holding today need only be that the President is
absolutely immune from civil damages liability for his official
acts in the absence of explicit affirmative action by Congress. We
decide only this constitutional issue, which is necessary to
disposition of the case before us.
[
Footnote 28]
U.S.Const., Art. II, § 3.
[
Footnote 29]
Chicago & Southern Air Lines, Inc. v. Waterman S.S.
Corp., 333 U. S. 103,
333 U. S. 111
(1948).
[
Footnote 30]
Myers v. United States, 272 U. S.
52,
272 U. S.
134-135 (1926).
[
Footnote 31]
Noting that the Speech and Debate Clause provides a textual
basis for congressional immunity, respondent argues that the
Framers must be assumed to have rejected any similar grant of
executive immunity. This argument is unpersuasive. First, a
specific textual basis has not been considered a prerequisite to
the recognition of immunity. No provision expressly confers
judicial immunity. Yet the immunity of judges is well settled.
See, e.g., 80 U. S.
Fisher, 13 Wall. 335 (1872);
Stump v. Sparkman,
435 U. S. 349
(1978). Second, this Court already has established that absolute
immunity may be extended to certain officials of the Executive
Branch.
Butz v. Economou, 438 U.S. at
438 U. S.
511-512;
see Imbler v. Pachtman, 424 U.
S. 409 (1976) (extending immunity to prosecutorial
officials within the Executive Branch). Third, there is historical
evidence from which it may be inferred that the Framers assumed the
President's immunity from damages liability. At the Constitutional
Convention several delegates expressed concern that subjecting the
President even to impeachment would impair his capacity to perform
his duties of office.
See 2 M. Farrand, Records of the
Federal Convention of 1787, p. 64 (1911) (remarks of Gouverneur
Morris);
id. at 66 (remarks of Charles Pinckney). The
delegates, of course, did agree to an Impeachment Clause. But
nothing in their debates suggests an expectation that the President
would be subjected to the distraction of suits by disappointed
private citizens. And Senator Maclay has recorded the views of
Senator Ellsworth and Vice President John Adams -- both delegates
to the Convention -- that
"the President, personally, was not the subject to any process
whatever. . . . For [that] would . . . put it in the power of a
common justice to exercise any authority over him and stop the
whole machine of Government."
Journal of William Maclay 167 (E. Maclay ed. 1890). Justice
Story, writing in 1833, held it implicit in the separation of
powers that the President must be permitted to discharge his duties
undistracted by private lawsuits. 3 J. Story, Commentaries on the
Constitution of the United States § 1563, pp. 418-419 (1st ed.
1833) (quoted
supra at
457 U. S.
749). Thomas Jefferson also argued that the President
was not intended to be subject to judicial process. When Chief
Justice Marshall held in
United States v. Burr, 25 F. Cas.
30 (No. 14,692d) (CC Va. 1807), that a subpoena
duces
tecum can be issued to a President, Jefferson protested
strongly, and stated his broader view of the proper relationship
between the Judiciary and the President:
"The leading principle of our Constitution is the independence
of the Legislature, executive and judiciary of each other, and none
are more jealous of this than the judiciary. But would the
executive be independent of the judiciary if he were subject to the
commands of the latter, & to imprisonment for
disobedience; if the several courts could bandy him from pillar to
post, keep him constantly trudging from north to south & east
to west, and withdraw him entirely from his constitutional duties?
The intention of the Constitution, that each branch should be
independent of the others, is further manifested by the means it
has furnished to each to protect itself from enterprises of force
attempted on them by the others, and to none has it given more
effectual or diversified means than to the executive."
10 The Works of Thomas Jefferson 404 n. (P. Ford ed.1905)
(quoting a letter from President Jefferson to a prosecutor at the
Burr trial) (emphasis in the original).
See also 5 D.
Malone, Jefferson and His Time: Jefferson the President 320-325
(1974).
In light of the fragmentary character of the most important
materials reflecting the Framers' intent, we do think that the most
compelling arguments arise from the Constitution's separation of
powers and the Judiciary's historic understanding of that doctrine.
See text
supra. But our primary reliance on
constitutional structure and judicial precedent should not be
misunderstood. The best historical evidence clearly supports the
Presidential immunity we have upheld. JUSTICE WHITE's dissent cites
some other materials, including ambiguous comments made at state
ratifying conventions and the remarks of a single publicist. But
historical evidence must be weighed, as well as cited. When the
weight of evidence is considered, we think we must place our
reliance on the contemporary understanding of John Adams, Thomas
Jefferson, and Oliver Ellsworth. Other powerful support derives
from the actual history of private lawsuits against the President.
Prior to the litigation explosion commencing with this Court's 1971
Bivens decision, fewer than a handful of damages actions
ever were filed against the President. None appears to have
proceeded to judgment on the merits.
[
Footnote 32]
Among the most persuasive reasons supporting official immunity
is the prospect that damages liability may render an official
unduly cautious in the discharge of his official duties. As Judge
Learned Hand wrote in
Gregoire v. Biddle, 177 F.2d 579,
581 (CA2 1949),
cert. denied, 339 U.S. 949 (1950),
"[t]he justification for . . . [denying recovery] is that it is
impossible to know whether the claim is well-founded until the case
has been tried, and to submit all officials, the innocent as well
as the guilty, to the burden of a trial and to the inevitable
danger of its outcome, would dampen the ardor of all but the most
resolute. . . ."
[
Footnote 33]
These dangers are significant even though there is no historical
record of numerous suits against the President, since a right to
sue federal officials for damages for constitutional violations was
not even recognized until
Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics
Agents, 403 U. S. 388
(1971).
[
Footnote 34]
This tradition can be traced far back into our constitutional
history.
See, e.g., 71 U. S.
Johnson, 4 Wall. 475,
71 U. S. 501 (1866) ("[W]e are fully satisfied that this
court has no jurisdiction of a bill to enjoin the President in the
performance of his official duties, and that no such bill ought to
be received by us");
Kendall v. United
States, 12 Pet. 524,
37 U. S. 610
(1838) ("The executive power is vested in a President; and as far
as his powers are derived from the constitution, he is beyond the
reach of any other department, except in the mode prescribed by the
constitution through the impeaching power").
[
Footnote 35]
See United States v. Reynolds, 345 U. S.
1,
345 U. S. 6-7
(1953) (Secretary of the Air Force);
Carl Zeiss Stiftung v.
V.E.B. Carl Zeiss, Jena, 40 F.R.D. 318, 323-324 (DC 1966),
aff'd sub nom. V.E.B. Carl Zeiss, Jena v. Clark, 128
U.S.App.D.C. 10, 384 F.2d 979,
cert. denied, 389 U.S. 952
(1967) (Department of Justice officials).
[
Footnote 36]
Although the President was not a party, the Court enjoined the
Secretary of Commerce from executing a direct Presidential order.
See 343 U.S. at
343 U. S.
683.
[
Footnote 37]
The Court has recognized before that there is a lesser public
interest in actions for civil damages than, for example, in
criminal prosecutions.
See United States v. Gillock,
445 U. S. 360,
445 U. S.
371-373 (1980);
cf. United State v. Nixon, 418
U.S. at
418 U. S.
711-712, and n.19 (basing holding on special importance
of evidence in a criminal trial and distinguishing civil actions as
raising different questions not presented for decision). It never
has been denied that absolute immunity may impose a regrettable
cost on individuals whose rights have been violated. But, contrary
to the suggestion of JUSTICE WHITE's dissent, it is not true that
our jurisprudence ordinarily supplies a remedy in civil damages for
every legal wrong. The dissent's objections on this ground would
weigh equally against absolute immunity for any official. Yet the
dissent makes no attack on the absolute immunity recognized for
judges and prosecutors.
Our implied rights of action cases identify another area of the
law in which there is not a damages remedy for every legal wrong.
These cases establish that victims of statutory crimes ordinarily
may not sue in federal court in the absence of expressed
congressional intent to provide a damages remedy.
See, e.g.,
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner Smith, Inc. v. Curran,
456 U. S. 353
(1982);
Middlesex County Sewerage Auth. v. National Sea
Clammers Assn., 453 U. S. 1 (1981);
California v. Sierra Club, 451 U.
S. 287 (1981). JUSTICE WHITE does not refer to the
jurisprudence of implied rights of action. Moreover, the dissent
undertakes no discussion of cases in the
Bivens line in
which this Court has suggested that there would be no damages
relief in circumstances "counseling hesitation" by the judiciary.
See Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents, supra, at
403 U. S. 396;
Carlson v. Green, 446 U. S. 14,
446 U. S. 19
(1980) (in direct constitutional actions against officials with
"independent status in our constitutional scheme . . . judicially
created remedies . . . might be inappropriate").
Even the case on which JUSTICE WHITE places principal reliance,
Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch 137 (1803), provides dubious
support, at best. The dissent cites
Marbury for the
proposition that
"[t]he very essence of civil liberty certainly consists in the
right of every individual to claim the protection of the laws,
whenever he receives an injury."
Id. at
5 U. S. 163. Yet
Marbury does not establish that the individual's
protection must come in the form of a particular remedy. Marbury,
it should be remembered, lost his case in the Supreme Court. The
Court turned him away with the suggestion that he should have gone
elsewhere with his claim. In this case, it was clear at least that
Fitzgerald was entitled to seek a remedy before the Civil Service
Commission -- a remedy of which he availed himself.
See
supra at
457 U. S.
736-739, and n. 17.
[
Footnote 38]
The presence of alternative remedies has played an important
role in our previous decisions in the area of official immunity.
E.g., Imbler v. Pactman, 424 U.S. at
424 U. S.
428-429 ("We emphasize that the immunity of prosecutors
from liability in suits under § 1983 does not leave the public
powerless to deter misconduct or to punish that which occurs").
[
Footnote 39]
The same remedy plays a central role with respect to the
misconduct of federal judges, who also possess absolute immunity.
See Kaufman, Chilling Judicial Independence, 88 Yale L.J.
681, 690-706 (1979). Congressmen may be removed from office by a
vote of their colleagues. U.S.Const., Art. I, § 5, cl. 2.
[
Footnote 40]
Prior to petitioner Nixon's resignation from office, the House
Judiciary Committee had convened impeachment hearings.
See
generally Report of the Committee on the Judiciary of the
House of Representatives: Impeachment of Richard M. Nixon,
President of the United States, H.R.Rep. No. 93-1305 (1974).
[
Footnote 41]
The dissenting opinions argue that our decision places the
President "above the law." This contention is rhetorically
chilling, but wholly unjustified. The remedy of impeachment
demonstrates that the President remains accountable under law for
his misdeeds in office. This case involves only a damages remedy.
Although the President is not liable in civil damages for official
misbehavior, that does not lift him "above" the law. The dissents
do not suggest that a judge is "above" the law when he enters a
judgment for which he cannot be held answerable in civil damages;
or a prosecutor is above the law when he files an indictment; or a
Congressman is above the law when he engages in legislative speech
or debate. It is simply error to characterize an official as "above
the law" because a particular remedy is not available against
him.
CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER, concurring.
I join the Court's opinion, but I write separately to underscore
that the Presidential immunity derives from and is mandated by the
constitutional doctrine of separation of powers. Indeed, it has
been taken for granted for nearly two centuries. [
Footnote 2/1] In reaching this conclusion, we do
well to bear in mind that the focus must not be imply on the matter
of judging
Page 457 U. S. 759
individual conduct in a fact-bound setting; rather, in those
familiar terms of John Marshall, it is a
Constitution we
are expounding. Constitutional adjudication often bears unpalatable
fruit. But the needs of a system of government sometimes must
outweigh the right of individuals to collect damages.
It strains the meaning of the words used to say this places a
President "above the law."
United States v. Nixon,
418 U. S. 683
(1974). The dissents are wide of the mark to the extent that they
imply that the Court today recognizes sweeping immunity for a
President for all acts. The Court does no such thing. The immunity
is limited to civil damages claims. Moreover, a President, like
Members of Congress, judges, prosecutors, or congressional aides --
all having absolute immunity -- are not immune for acts outside
official duties. [
Footnote 2/2]
Ante at
457 U. S.
753-755. Even the broad immunity of the Speech and
Debate Clause has its limits. [
Footnote
2/3]
Page 457 U. S. 760
In his dissenting opinion, JUSTICE WHITE confuses "judicial
process" in the subpoena sense with a civil damages suit.
Post at
457 U. S. 778,
n. 23. He quotes language from
United States v. Nixon,
supra, at
418 U. S. 706,
as though that language has some relevance to the matter of
immunity from civil damages:
"[N]either the doctrine of separation of powers nor the need for
confidentiality . . . , without more, can sustain an absolute,
unqualified Presidential privilege of immunity from
judicial
process under all circumstances."
Post at
457 U. S. 782.
(Emphasis added.)
First, it is important to remember that the context of that
language is a criminal prosecution. Second, the "judicial process"
referred to was, as in
United States v. Burr, 25 F. Cas.
30 (No. 14,692d) (CC Va. 1807) (Marshall, C.J., sitting at trial as
Circuit Justice), a
subpoena to the President to produce
relevant evidence in a criminal prosecution. No issue of damages
immunity was involved either in
Burr or
United States
v. Nixon. In short, the quoted language has no bearing
whatever on a civil action for damages. It is one thing to say that
a President must produce evidence relevant to a criminal case, as
in
Burr and
United States v. Nixon, and quite
another to say a President can be held for civil damages for
dismissing a federal employee. If the dismissal is wrongful the
employee can be reinstated with backpay, as was done here.
See 457
U.S. 731fn2/5|>n. 5,
infra.
The immunity of a President from civil suits is not simply a
doctrine derived from this Court's interpretation of common law or
public policy. Absolute immunity for a President for acts within
the official duties of the Chief Executive is either to be found in
the constitutional separation of powers or it does not exist. The
Court today holds that the Constitution mandates such immunity, and
I agree.
The essential purpose of the separation of powers is to allow
for independent functioning of each coequal branch of
Page 457 U. S. 761
government within its assigned sphere of responsibility, free
from risk of control, interference, or intimidation by other
branches.
United States v. Nixon, supra; Gravel v. United
States, 408 U. S. 606,
408 U. S. 617
(1972). Even prior to the adoption of our Constitution, as well as
after, judicial review of legislative action was recognized in some
instances as necessary to maintain the proper checks and balances.
Den on the Dem. of Bayard & Wife v. Singleton, 3 N.C.
42 (1787);
Cases of the Judges of the Court of Appeals, 8
Va. 135 (1788).
Cf. 5 U. S.
Madison, 1 Cranch 137 (1803). However, the Judiciary always
must be hesitant to probe into the elements of Presidential
decisionmaking, just as other branches should be hesitant to probe
into judicial decisionmaking. Such judicial intervention is not to
be tolerated absent imperative constitutional necessity.
United
States v. Nixon, supra, at
418 U. S.
709-716. [
Footnote 2/4]
The Court's opinion correctly observes that judicial intrusion
through private damages actions improperly impinges on, and hence
interferes with, the independence that is imperative to the
functioning of the office of a President.
Page 457 U. S. 762
Exposing a President to civil damages actions for official acts
within the scope of the Executive authority would inevitably
subject Presidential actions to undue judicial scrutiny, as well as
subject the President to harassment. The enormous range and impact
of Presidential decisions -- far beyond that of any one Member of
Congress -- inescapably means that many persons will consider
themselves aggrieved by such acts. Absent absolute immunity, every
person who feels aggrieved would be free to bring a suit for
damages, and each suit -- especially those that proceed on the
merits -- would involve some judicial questioning of Presidential
acts, including the reasons for the decision, how it was arrived
at, the information on which it was based, and who supplied the
information. Such scrutiny of day-to-day decisions of the Executive
Branch would be bound to occur if civil damages actions were made
available to private individuals. Although the individual who
claims wrongful conduct may indeed have sustained some injury, the
need to prevent large-scale invasion of the Executive function by
the Judiciary far outweighs the need to vindicate the private
claims. We have decided that, in a similar sense, Members of both
Houses of Congress -- and their aides -- must be totally free from
judicial scrutiny for legislative acts; the public interest, in
other words, outweighs the need for private redress of one claiming
injury from legislative acts of a Member or aide of a Member.
[
Footnote 2/5] The Court's concern
(and the even more emphatic concerns
Page 457 U. S. 763
expressed by JUSTICE WHITE's dissent) over "unremedied wrongs"
to citizens by a President seem odd when one compares the potential
for "wrongs" which thousands of congressional aides, prosecutors,
and judges can theoretically inflict -- with absolute immunity --
on the same citizens for whom this concern is expressed.
See 457
U.S. 731fn2/2|>n. 2,
supra.
Judicial intervention would also inevitably inhibit the
processes of Executive Branch decisionmaking and impede the
functioning of the Office of the President. The need to defend
damages suits would have the serious effect of diverting the
attention of a President from his executive duties, since defending
a lawsuit today -- even a lawsuit ultimately found to be frivolous
-- often requires significant expenditures of time and money, as
many former public officials have learned to their sorrow. This
very case graphically illustrates the point. When litigation
processes are not tightly controlled -- and often they are not --
they can be and are used as mechanisms of extortion. Ultimate
vindication on the merits does not repair the damage. [
Footnote 2/6]
I fully agree that the constitutional concept of separation of
independent coequal powers dictates that a President be immune from
civil damages actions based on acts within the scope of Executive
authority while in office. [
Footnote
2/7] Far from placing
Page 457 U. S. 764
a President above the law, the Court's holding places a
President on essentially the same footing with judges and other
officials whose absolute immunity we have recognized.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Presidential immunity for official acts while in office has
never been seriously questioned until very recently.
Ante
at
457 U. S.
750-752, n. 31. I can find only one instance in which,
prior to our decision in
Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics
Agents, 403 U. S. 388
(1971), a citizen sued a former President for acts committed while
in office. A suit against Thomas Jefferson was dismissed for being
improperly brought in Virginia, thus precluding the necessity of
reaching any immunity issue.
Livingston v. Jefferson, 15
F. Cas. 660 (No. 8,411) (CC Va. 1811).
[
Footnote 2/2]
In their "parade of horribles" and lamentations, the dissents
also wholly fail to acknowledge why the same perils they fear are
not present in the absolute immunity the law has long recognized
for numerous other officials. At least 76,000 public officers have
absolute immunity from civil damages suits for acts within the
scope of their official functions. The dissenting opinions manifest
an astonishing blind side in pointing to that old reliable that "no
man is above the law." The Court has had no difficulty expanding
the absolute immunity of Members of Congress, and in granting
derivative absolute immunity to numerous aides of Members.
Gravel v. United States, 408 U. S. 606
(1972).
We have since recognized absolute immunity for judges,
Stump
v. Sparkman, 435 U. S. 349
(1978), and for prosecutors,
Imbler v. Pachtman,
424 U. S. 409
(1976), yet the Constitution provides no hint that either judges,
prosecutors, or congressional aides should be so protected.
Absolute immunity for judges and prosecutors is seen to derive from
the common law and public policy, which recognize the need to
protect judges and prosecutors from harassment. The potential
danger to the citizenry from the malice of thousands of prosecutors
and judges is at once more pervasive and less open to constant,
public scrutiny than the actions of a President.
[
Footnote 2/3]
In
United States v. Brewster, 408 U.
S. 501 (1972), we held that the Speech and Debate Clause
does not prohibit prosecution of a Senator for accepting a bribe
designed to influence his legislative acts.
[
Footnote 2/4]
JUSTICE WHITE suggests that prior to today, Presidents,
prosecutors, judges, congressional aides, and other officials
"could have been
held liable for the kind of claim put
forward by Fitzgerald -- a personnel decision allegedly made for
unlawful reasons."
Post at
457 U. S. 767,
n. 2 (emphasis added). But the law does not permit a plaintiff to
recite "magic" words in pleadings and have the incantation operate
to make these immunities vanish. JUSTICE WHITE errs fundamentally
in treating all of the above officials as if the scope of their
authority were identical. The authority of a President as head of
the Executive Branch of our Government -- a wholly unique office --
is far broader than that of any other official. As the Court notes,
a President has authority in the course of personnel changes in an
executive department to make personnel decisions. If the decision
is wrong, statutory remedies are provided.
See 457
U.S. 731fn2/5|>n. 5,
infra. This is not to say
that, in a given case, it would not be appropriate to raise the
question whether an official -- even a President -- had acted
within the scope of the official's constitutional and statutory
duties. The doctrine of absolute immunity does not extend beyond
such actions.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Gravel v. United State, 408 U.
S. 606 (1972). The Federal Tort Claims Act of 1946
reflects this policy distinction; in it, Congress waived sovereign
immunity for certain damages claims, but pointedly excepted any
"discretionary function or duty . . . whether or not the discretion
involved be abused." 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a). Under the Act, damage
resulting from discretionary governmental action is not subject to
compensation.
See, e.g., Dalehite v. United States,
346 U. S. 15
(1953). For uncompensated injuries, Congress may, in its
discretion, provide separate nonjudicial remedies such as private
bills.
In this case, Fitzgerald received substantial relief through the
route provided by Congress: the Civil Service Commission ordered
him reinstated with backpay. App. 87a-88a. Similarly situated
persons are therefore not without an adequate remedy.
But see
post at
457 U. S. 797
(WHITE, J., dissenting). In addition, respondent Fitzgerald has
also received a settlement of $142,000. It can hardly be said he
has had no remedy.
[
Footnote 2/6]
Judge Learned Hand described his feelings:
"After now some dozen years of experience, I must say that, as a
litigant, I should dread a lawsuit beyond almost anything else
short of sickness and death."
3 Lectures on Legal Topics, Association of the Bar of the City
of New York 106 (1926).
[
Footnote 2/7]
The Court suggests that "we need not address directly" whether
Congress could create a damages action against a President.
Ante at
457 U. S. 748,
n. 27. However, the Court's holding, in my view, effectively
resolves that issue; once it is established that the Constitution
confers absolute immunity, as the Court holds today, legislative
action cannot alter that result. Nothing in the Court's opinion is
to be read as suggesting that a constitutional holding of this
Court can be legislatively overruled or modified.
Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch 137 (1803).
JUSTICE WHITE, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN, JUSTICE MARSHALL, and
JUSTICE BLACKMUN join, dissenting.
The four dissenting Members of the Court in
Butz v.
Economou, 438 U. S. 478
(1978), argued that all federal officials are entitled to absolute
immunity from suit for any action they take in connection with
their official duties. That immunity would extend even to actions
taken with express knowledge that the conduct was clearly contrary
to the controlling statute or clearly violative of the
Constitution. Fortunately, the majority of the Court rejected that
approach: we held that, although public officials perform certain
functions that entitle them to absolute immunity, the immunity
attaches to particular functions -- not to particular offices.
Officials performing functions for which immunity is not absolute
enjoy qualified immunity; they are liable in damages only if their
conduct violated well-established law and if they should have
realized that their conduct was illegal.
The Court now applies the dissenting view in
Butz to
the Office of the President: a President, acting within the outer
boundaries of what Presidents normally do, may, without liability,
deliberately cause serious injury to any number of citizens even
though he knows his conduct violates a statute or tramples on the
constitutional rights of those who are injured. Even if the
President in this case ordered Fitzgerald fired by means of a
trumped-up reduction in force, knowing that such a discharge was
contrary to the civil service laws, he would be absolutely immune
from suit. By the same token, if a President, without following the
statutory procedures which he knows apply to himself as well as to
other federal
Page 457 U. S. 765
officials, orders his subordinates to wiretap or break into a
home for the purpose of installing a listening device, and the
officers comply with his request, the President would be absolutely
immune from suit. He would be immune regardless of the damage he
inflicts, regardless of how violative of the statute and of the
Constitution he knew his conduct to be, and regardless of his
purpose. [
Footnote 3/1]
The Court intimates that its decision is grounded in the
Constitution. If that is the case, Congress cannot provide a remedy
against Presidential misconduct, and the criminal laws of the
United States are wholly inapplicable to the President. I find this
approach completely unacceptable. I do not agree that, if the
Office of President is to operate effectively, the holder of that
Office must be permitted, without fear of liability and regardless
of the function he is performing, deliberately to inflict injury on
others by conduct that he knows violates the law.
We have not taken such a scatter-gun approach in other cases.
Butz held that absolute immunity did not attach to the office held
by a member of the President's Cabinet, but only to those specific
functions performed by that officer for which absolute immunity is
clearly essential. Members of Congress are absolutely immune under
the Speech or Debate Clause of the Constitution, but the immunity
extends only to their legislative acts. We have never held that, in
order for legislative work to be done, it is necessary to immunize
all of the tasks that legislators must perform. Constitutional
immunity does not extend to those many things that Senators and
Representatives regularly and necessarily do that are not
legislative acts. Members of Congress, for example, repeatedly
importune the executive branch and administrative agencies outside
hearing rooms and legislative halls, but they are not immune if, in
connection with such activity, they deliberately
Page 457 U. S. 766
violate the law.
United States v. Brewster,
408 U. S. 501
(1972), for example, makes this clear. Neither is a Member of
Congress or his aide immune from damages suits if, in order to
secure information deemed relevant to a legislative investigation,
he breaks into a house and carries away records.
Gravel v.
United States, 408 U. S. 606
(1972). Judges are absolutely immune from liability for damages,
but only when performing a judicial function, and even then they
are subject to criminal liability.
See Dennis v. Sparks,
449 U. S. 24,
449 U. S. 31
(1980);
O'Shea v. Littleton, 414 U.
S. 488,
414 U. S. 503
(1974). The absolute immunity of prosecutors is likewise limited to
the prosecutorial function. A prosecutor who directs that an
investigation be carried out in a way that is patently illegal is
not immune.
In
Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch 137,
5 U. S. 165
(1803), the Court, speaking through The Chief Justice, observed
that, while there were "important political powers" committed to
the President for the performance of which neither he nor his
appointees were accountable in court,
"the question, whether the legality of an act of the head of a
department be examinable in a court of justice or not must always
depend on the nature of that act."
The Court nevertheless refuses to follow this course with
respect to the President. It makes no effort to distinguish
categories of Presidential conduct that should be absolutely immune
from other categories of conduct that should not qualify for that
level of immunity. The Court instead concludes that, whatever the
President does and however contrary to law he knows his conduct to
be, he may, without fear of liability, injure federal employees or
any other person within or without the Government.
Attaching absolute immunity to the Office of the President,
rather than to particular activities that the President might
perform, places the President above the law. It is a reversion to
the old notion that the King can do no wrong. Until now, this
concept had survived in this country only in the form of sovereign
immunity. That doctrine forecloses suit against the Government
itself and against Government officials,
Page 457 U. S. 767
but only when the suit against the latter actually seeks relief
against the sovereign.
Larson v. Domestic & Foreign
Commerce Corp., 337 U. S. 682,
337 U. S. 687
(1949). Suit against an officer, however, may be maintained where
it seeks specific relief against him for conduct contrary to his
statutory authority or to the Constitution.
Id. at
337 U. S. 698.
Now, however, the Court clothes the Office of the President with
sovereign immunity, placing it beyond the law. [
Footnote 3/2]
Page 457 U. S. 768
In
Marbury v. Madison, supra, at
5 U. S. 163, The
Chief Justice, speaking for the Court, observed:
"The Government of the United States has been emphatically
termed a government of laws, and not of men. It will certainly
cease to deserve this high appellation if the laws furnish no
remedy for the violation of a vested legal right."
Until now, the Court has consistently adhered to this
proposition. In
Scheuer v. Rhodes, 416 U.
S. 232 (1974), a unanimous Court held that the Governor
of a State was entitled only to a qualified immunity. We reached
this position, even though we recognized that,
"[i]n the case of higher officers of the executive branch . . .
, the inquiry is far more complex, since the range of decisions and
choices -- whether the formulation of policy, of legislation, of
budgets, or of day-to-day decisions -- is virtually infinite. . . .
In short, since the options which a chief executive and his
principal subordinates must consider are far broader and far more
subtle than those made by officials with less responsibility, the
range of discretion must be comparably broad."
Id. at
416 U. S.
246-247.
As JUSTICE BRENNAN observed in
McGautha v. California,
402 U. S. 183,
402 U. S.
252-253 (1971) (dissenting opinion):
"The principle that our Government shall be of laws, and not of
men, is so strongly woven into our constitutional fabric that it
has found recognition in not just one but several provisions of the
Constitution."
(Footnote omitted.) And as THE CHIEF JUSTICE said in
Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Reis, 451 U.
S. 401,
451 U. S. 429
(1981) (dissenting opinion):
"Accountability of each individual for individual conduct lies
at the core of all law -- indeed, of all organized societies. The
trend to eliminate or modify sovereign immunity is not an unrelated
development; we have moved away from 'The King can do no wrong.'
This
Page 457 U. S. 769
principle of individual accountability is fundamental if the
structure of an organized society is not to be eroded to anarchy
and impotence, and it remains essential in civil as well as
criminal justice."
Unfortunately, the Court now abandons basic principles that have
been powerful guides to decision. It is particularly unfortunate,
since the judgment in this case has few, if any, indicia of a
judicial decision; it is almost wholly a policy choice, a choice
that is without substantial support and that, in all events, is
ambiguous in its reach and import.
We have previously stated that "the law of privilege as a
defense to damages actions against officers of Government has
in large part been of judicial making.'" Butz v.
Economou, 438 U.S. at
438 U. S. 501-502, quoting Barr v. Matteo,
360 U. S. 564,
360 U. S. 569
(1959). But this does not mean that the Court has simply "enacted"
its own view of the best public policy. No doubt judicial
convictions about public policy -- whether and what kind of
immunity is necessary or wise -- have played a part, but the courts
have been guided and constrained by common law tradition, the
relevant statutory background, and our constitutional structure and
history. Our cases dealing with the immunity of Members of Congress
are constructions of the Speech or Debate Clause and are guided by
the history of such privileges at common law. The decisions dealing
with the immunity of state officers involve the question of whether
and to what extent Congress intended to abolish the common law
privileges by providing a remedy in the predecessor of 42 U.S.C. §
1983 for constitutional violations by state officials. Our
decisions respecting immunity for federal officials -- including
absolute immunity for judges, prosecutors, and those officials
doing similar work -- also in large part reflect common law views,
as well as judicial conclusions as to what privileges are necessary
if particular functions are to be performed in the public
interest.
Page 457 U. S. 770
Unfortunately, there is little of this approach in the Court's
decision today. The Court casually, but candidly, abandons the
functional approach to immunity that has run through all of our
decisions.
Ante at
457 U. S.
755-756. Indeed, the majority turns this rule on its
head by declaring that, because the functions of the President's
office are so varied and diverse and some of them so profoundly
important, the office is unique and must be clothed with
office-wide, absolute immunity. This is policy, not law, and, in my
view, very poor policy.
I
In declaring the President to be absolutely immune from suit for
any deliberate and knowing violation of the Constitution or of a
federal statute, the Court asserts that the immunity is "rooted in
the constitutional tradition of the separation of powers and
supported by our history." [
Footnote
3/3]
Ante at
457 U. S. 749.
The decision thus has all the earmarks of a constitutional
pronouncement -- absolute immunity for the President's office is
mandated by the Constitution. Although the Court appears to
disclaim this,
ante at
457 U. S.
748-749, n. 27, it is difficult to read the opinion
coherently as standing for any narrower proposition: attempts to
subject the President to liability either by Congress through a
statutory action or by the courts through a
Bivens (Bivens v.
Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents, 403 U.
S. 388 (1971)) proceeding would violate the separation
of powers. [
Footnote 3/4] Such a
generalized absolute immunity cannot be sustained when examined in
the traditional manner and in light of the traditional judicial
sources.
The petitioner and the United States, as
amicus,
[
Footnote 3/5] rely principally on
two arguments to support the claim of absolute
Page 457 U. S. 771
immunity for the President from civil liability: absolute
immunity is an "incidental power" of the Presidency, historically
recognized as implicit in the Constitution, and absolute immunity
is required by the separation of powers doctrine. I will address
each of these contentions.
A
The Speech or Debate Clause, Art. I, § 6, guarantees absolute
immunity to Members of Congress; nowhere, however, does the
Constitution directly address the issue of Presidential immunity.
[
Footnote 3/6] Petitioner
nevertheless argues that the debates at the Constitutional
Convention and the early history of constitutional interpretation
demonstrate an implicit assumption of absolute Presidential
immunity. In support of this position, petitioner relies primarily
on three separate items: first, preratification remarks made during
the discussion of Presidential impeachment at the Convention and in
The Federalist; second, remarks made during the meeting of the
first Senate; and third, the views of Justice Story.
The debate at the Convention on whether or not the President
should be impeachable did touch on the potential dangers of
subjecting the President to the control of another branch, the
Legislature. [
Footnote 3/7]
Gouverneur Morris, for example, complained of the potential for
dependency and argued that
"[the President] can do no criminal act without Coadjutors who
may be punished. In case he should be re-elected, that will be
sufficient proof of his innocence. [
Footnote 3/8]"
Colonel Mason
Page 457 U. S. 772
responded to this by asking if "any man [shall] be above
Justice," and argued that this was least appropriate for the man
"who can commit the most extensive injustice." [
Footnote 3/9] Madison agreed that
"it [is] indispensable that some provision should be made for
defending the Community againt the incapacity, negligence or
perfidy of the chief Magistrate. [
Footnote 3/10]"
Pinckney responded on the other side, believing that, if granted
the power, the Legislature would hold impeachment "as a rod over
the Executive, and by that means effectually destroy his
independence." [
Footnote
3/11]
Petitioner concludes from this that the delegates meant
impeachment to be the exclusive means of holding the President
personally responsible for his misdeeds, outside of electoral
politics. This conclusion, however, is hardly supported by the
debate. Although some of the delegates expressed concern over
limiting Presidential independence, the delegates voted 8 to 2 in
favor of impeachment. Whatever the fear of subjecting the President
to the power of another branch, it was not sufficient, or at least
not sufficiently shared, to insulate the President from political
liability in the impeachment process.
Moreover, the Convention debate did not focus on wrongs the
President might commit against individuals, but rather on whether
there should be a method of holding him accountable for what might
be termed wrongs against the state. [
Footnote 3/12] Thus, examples of the abuses that
concerned delegates were betrayal, oppression, and bribery; the
delegates feared that the alternative to an impeachment mechanism
would be "tumults & insurrections" by the people in response to
such
Page 457 U. S. 773
abuses. 2 Farrand 67. The only conclusions that can be drawn
from this debate are that the independence of the Executive was not
understood to require a total lack of accountability to the other
branches, and that there was no general desire to insulate the
President from the consequences of his improper acts. [
Footnote 3/13]
Much the same can be said in response to petitioner's reliance
on The Federalist No. 77. In that essay, Hamilton asked whether the
Presidency combines "the requisites to safety in the republican
sense -- a due dependence on the people -- a due responsibility."
The Federalist No. 77, p. 520 (J. Cooke ed.1961). He answered that
the constitutional plan met this test because it subjected the
President to both the electoral process and the possibility of
impeachment, including subsequent criminal prosecution. Petitioner
concludes from this that these were intended to be the exclusive
means of restraining Presidential abuses. This, by no means
follows. Hamilton was concerned in The Federalist No. 77, as were
the delegates at the Convention, with the larger political abuses
-- "wrongs against the state" -- that a President might commit. He
did not consider what legal means might be available for redress of
individualized grievances. [
Footnote
3/14]
Page 457 U. S. 774
That omission should not be taken to imply exclusion in these
circumstances is well illustrated by comparing some of the remarks
made in the state ratifying conventions with Hamilton's discussion
in No. 77. In the North Carolina ratifying convention, for example,
there was a discussion of the adequacy of the impeachment mechanism
for holding executive officers accountable for their misdeeds.
Governor Johnson defended the constitutional plan by distinguishing
three legal mechanisms of accountability:
"If an officer commits an offence against an individual, he is
amenable to the courts of law. If he commits crimes against the
state, he may be indicted and punished. Impeachment only extends to
high crimes and misdemeanors in a
public office. It is a
mode of trial pointed out for great misdemeanors against the
public. [
Footnote 3/15]"
Governor Johnson surely did not contemplate that the
availability of an impeachment mechanism necessarily implied the
exclusion of other forms of legal accountability; rather, the
method of accountability was to be a function of the character of
the wrong. Mr. Maclaine, another delegate to the North Carolina
Convention, clearly believed that the courts would remain open to
individual citizens seeking redress from injuries caused by
Presidential acts:
"The President is the superior officer, who is to see the laws
put in execution. He is amenable for any maladministration in his
office. Were it possible to suppose that the President should give
wrong instructions to his
Page 457 U. S. 775
deputies, whereby the citizens would be distressed, they would
have redress in the ordinary courts of common law. [
Footnote 3/16]"
A similar distinction between different possible forms of
Presidential accountability was drawn by Mr. Wilson at the
Pennsylvania ratifying convention:
"[The President] is placed high, and is possessed of power far
from being contemptible; yet not a
single privilege is
annexed to his character; far from being above the laws, he is
amenable to them in his private character as a citizen, and in his
public character by
impeachment. [
Footnote 3/17]"
There is no more reason to respect the views of Hamilton than
those of Wilson: both were members of the Constitutional
Convention; both were instrumental in securing the ratification of
the Constitution. But more importantly, there is simply no express
contradiction in their statements. Petitioner relies on an
inference drawn from silence to create this contradiction. The
surrounding history simply does not support this inference.
The second piece of historical evidence cited by petitioner is
an exchange at the first meeting of the Senate, involving Vice
President Adams and Senators Ellsworth and Maclay. The debate
started over whether or not the words "the President" should be
included at the beginning of federal writs, similar to the manner
in which English writs ran in the King's name. Senator Maclay
thought that this would improperly combine the executive and
judicial branches. This, in turn, led to a discussion of the proper
relation between the two. Senator Ellsworth and Vice President
Adams defended the proposition that
"the President, personally, was not subject to any process
whatever; could have no action, whatever, brought
Page 457 U. S. 776
against him; was above the power of all judges, justices,
&c. For [that] would . . . put it in the power of a common
justice to exercise any authority over him, and stop the whole
machine of government. [
Footnote
3/18]"
In their view, the impeachment process was the exclusive form of
process available against the President. Senator Maclay ardently
opposed this view, and put the case of a President committing
"murder in the street." In his view, in such a case, neither
impeachment nor resurrection were the exclusive means of holding
the President to the law; rather, there was "loyal justice."
Senator Maclay, who recorded the exchange, concludes his notes with
the remark that none of this "is worth minuting, but it shows
clearly how amazingly fond of the old leaven many people are."
[
Footnote 3/19] In his view,
Senator Ellsworth and his supporters had not fully comprehended the
difference in the political position of the American President and
that of the British Monarch. Again, nothing more can be concluded
from this than that the proper scope of Presidential
accountability, including the question whether the President should
be subject to judicial process, was no clearer then than it is
now.
The final item cited by petitioner clearly supports his
position, but is of such late date that it contributes little to
understanding the original intent. In his Commentaries on the
Constitution, published in 1833, Justice Story described the
"incidental powers" of the President:
"Among these must necessarily be included the power to perform
[his functions] without any obstruction or impediment whatsoever.
The President cannot, therefore, be liable to arrest, imprisonment,
or detention, while he is in the discharge of the duties of his
office; and for this purpose, his person must be deemed, in civil
cases
Page 457 U. S. 777
at least, to possess an official inviolability. In the exercise
of his political powers, he is to use his own discretion, and he is
accountable only to his country and to his own conscience. His
decision in relation to these powers is subject to no control, and
his discretion, when exercised, is conclusive. [
Footnote 3/20]"
While Justice Story may have been firmly committed to this view
in 1833, Senator Pinckney, a delegate to the Convention, was as
firmly committed to the opposite view in 1800. [
Footnote 3/21]
Senator Pinckney, arguing on the floor of the Senate, contrasted
the privileges extended to Members of Congress by the Constitution
with the lack of any such privileges extended to the President.
[
Footnote 3/22] He argued that
this was a deliberate choice of the delegates to the Convention,
who
"well knew how oppressively the power of undefined privileges
had been exercised in Great Britain, and were determined no such
authority should ever be exercised here."
Page 457 U. S. 778
Cong. 72 (1800). Therefore, "[n]o privilege of this kind was
intended for your Executive, nor any except that . . . for your
Legislature."
Id. at 74. [
Footnote 3/23]
In previous immunity cases, the Court has emphasized the
importance of the immunity afforded the particular government
official at common law.
See Imbler v. Pachtman,
424 U. S. 409,
424 U. S. 421
(1976). Clearly this sort of analysis is not possible when dealing
with an office, the Presidency, that did not exist at common law.
To the extent that historical inquiry is appropriate in this
context, it is constitutional history, not
Page 457 U. S. 779
common law, that is relevant. From the history discussed above,
however, all that can be concluded is that absolute immunity from
civil liability for the President finds no support in
constitutional text or history, or in the explanations of the
earliest commentators. This is too weak a ground to support a
declaration by this Court that the President is absolutely immune
from civil liability, regardless of the source of liability or the
injury for which redress is sought. This much the majority
implicitly concedes, since history and text, traditional sources of
judicial argument, merit only a footnote in the Court's opinion.
Ante at
457 U. S.
750-752, n. 31.
B
No bright line can be drawn between arguments for absolute
immunity based on the constitutional principle of separation of
powers and arguments based on what the Court refers to as "public
policy." This necessarily follows from the Court's functional
interpretation of the separation of powers doctrine:
"[I]n determining whether the Act disrupts the proper balance
between the coordinate branches, the proper inquiry focuses on the
extent to which it prevents the Executive Branch from accomplishing
its constitutionally assigned functions."
Nixon v. Administrator of General Services,
433 U. S. 425,
433 U. S. 443
(1977).
See also United States v. Nixon, 418 U.
S. 683,
418 U. S. 706
707 (1974);
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer,
343 U. S. 579,
343 U. S. 635
(1952) (Jackson, J., concurring). Petitioner argues that public
policy favors absolute immunity because, absent such immunity, the
President's ability to execute his constitutionally mandated
obligations will be impaired. The convergence of these two lines of
argument is superficially apparent from the very fact that, in both
instances, the approach of the Court has been characterized as a
"functional" analysis.
The difference is only one of degree. While absolute immunity
might maximize executive efficiency, and therefore be
Page 457 U. S. 780
a worthwhile policy, lack of such immunity may not so disrupt
the functioning of the Presidency as to violate the separation of
powers doctrine. Insofar as liability in this case is of
congressional origin, petitioner must demonstrate that subjecting
the President to a private damages action will prevent him from
"accomplishing [his] constitutionally assigned functions." Insofar
as liability is based on a
Bivens action, perhaps a lower
standard of functional disruption is appropriate. Petitioner has
surely not met the former burden; I do not believe that he has met
the latter standard either.
Taken at face value, the Court's position that, as a matter of
constitutional law, the President is absolutely immune should mean
that he is immune not only from damages actions but also from suits
for injunctive relief, criminal prosecutions and, indeed, from any
kind of judicial process. But there is no contention that the
President is immune from criminal prosecution in the courts under
the criminal laws enacted by Congress, or by the States, for that
matter. Nor would such a claim be credible. The Constitution itself
provides that impeachment shall not bar "Indictment, Trial,
Judgment and Punishment, according to Law." Art. I, § 3, cl. 7.
Similarly, our cases indicate that immunity from damages actions
carries no protection from criminal prosecution.
Supra at
457 U. S.
765-766.
Neither can there be a serious claim that the separation of
powers doctrine insulates Presidential action from judicial review
or insulates the President from judicial process. No argument is
made here that the President, whatever his liability for money
damages, is not subject to the courts' injunctive powers.
See,
e.g., Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co., supra; Korematsu v.
United States, 323 U. S. 214
(1944);
Panama Refining Co. v. Ryan, 293 U.
S. 388 (1935). Petitioner's attempt to draw an analogy
to the Speech or Debate Clause, Brief for Petitioner 45, one
purpose of which is "to prevent . . . accountability before a
possibly hostile judiciary,"
Gravel v. United States, 408
U.S. at
408 U. S. 617,
breaks
Page 457 U. S. 781
down at just this point. While the Speech or Debate Clause
guarantees that, "for any Speech or Debate," Congressmen "shall not
be questioned in any other Place," and, thus, assures that
Congressmen, in their official capacity, shall not be the subject
of the courts' injunctive powers, no such protection is afforded
the Executive. Indeed, as the cases cited above indicate, it is the
rule, not the exception, that executive actions -- including those
taken at the immediate direction of the President -- are subject to
judicial review. [
Footnote 3/24]
Regardless of the possibility of money damages against the
President, then, the constitutionality of the President's actions
or their legality under the applicable statutes can and will be
subject to review. Indeed, in this very case, respondent
Fitzgerald's dismissal was set aside by the Civil Service
Commission as contrary to the applicable regulations issued
pursuant to authority granted by Congress.
Nor can private damages actions be distinguished on the ground
that such claims would involve the President personally in the
litigation in a way not necessitated by suits seeking declaratory
or injunctive relief against certain Presidential actions. The
President has been held to be subject to judicial process at least
since 1807.
United States v. Burr, 25 F. Cas. 30 (No.
14,692d) (CC Va. 1807) (Marshall, C.J., sitting as Circuit
Justice).
Burr "squarely ruled that a subpoena may be
directed to the President."
Nixon v. Sirica, 159
U.S.App.D.C. 58, 67, 487 F.2d 700, 709 (1973). Chief Justice
Marshall flatly rejected any suggestion that all judicial process,
in and of itself, constitutes an unwarranted interference in the
Presidency:
Page 457 U. S. 782
"The guard, furnished to this high officer to protect him from
being harassed by
vexatious and
unnecessary
subpoenas, is to be looked for in the conduct of a court after
those subpoenas have issued, not in any circumstance which is to
precede their being issued."
25 F. Cas. at 34 (emphasis added). This position was recently
rearticulated by the Court in
United States v. Nixon, 418
U.S. at
418 U. S.
706:
"[N]either the doctrine of separation of powers nor the need for
confidentiality . . . , without more, can sustain an absolute,
unqualified Presidential privilege of immunity from judicial
process under all circumstances."
These two lines of cases establish, then, that neither
subjecting Presidential actions to a judicial determination of
their constitutionality nor subjecting the President to judicial
process violates the separation of powers doctrine. Similarly,
neither has been held to be sufficiently intrusive to justify a
judicially declared rule of immunity. With respect to intrusion by
the judicial process itself on executive functions, subjecting the
President to private claims for money damages involves no more than
this. If there is a separation of powers problem here, it must be
found in the nature of the
remedy, and not in the
process involved.
We said in
Butz v. Economou, 438 U.
S. 478 (1978), that
"it is not unfair to hold liable the official who knows or
should know he is acting outside the law, and . . . insisting on an
awareness of clearly established constitutional limits will not
unduly interfere with the exercise of official judgment."
Id. 438 U. S.
Today's decision in
Harlow v. Fitzgerald, post, p.
457 U. S. 800,
makes clear that the President, were he subject to civil liability,
could be held liable only for an action that he knew, or as an
objective matter should have known, was illegal and a clear abuse
of his authority and power. In such circumstances, the question
that must be answered is who should bear the cost of the resulting
injury -- the wrongdoer or the victim.
Page 457 U. S. 783
The principle that should guide the Court in deciding this
question was stated long ago by Chief Justice Marshall:
"The very essence of civil liberty certainly consists in the
right of every individual to claim the protection of the laws,
whenever he receives an injury."
Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch at
5 U. S. 163.
Much more recently, the Court considered the role of a damages
remedy in the performance of the courts' traditional function of
enforcing federally guaranteed rights: "Historically, damages have
been regarded as the ordinary remedy for an invasion of personal
interests in liberty."
Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics
Agents, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S. 395.
[
Footnote 3/25] To the extent
that the Court denies an otherwise appropriate remedy, it denies
the victim the right to be made whole and, therefore, denies him
"the protection of the laws." [
Footnote 3/26]
That the President should have the same remedial obligations
toward those whom he injures as any other federal officer is not a
surprising proposition. The fairness of the remedial principle the
Court has so far followed -- that the wrongdoer, not the victim,
should ordinarily bear the costs of the injury -- has been found to
be outweighed only in instances where potential liability is
"thought to injure the governmental decisionmaking process."
Imbler v. Pachtman, 424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 437
(WHITE, J., concurring in judgment). The argument for immunity is
that the possibility of a damages action will, or at least should,
have an effect on the performance
Page 457 U. S. 784
of official responsibilities. That effect should be to deter
unconstitutional, or otherwise illegal, behavior. This may,
however, lead officers to be more careful and "less vigorous" in
the performance of their duties. Caution, of course, is not always
a virtue, and undue caution is to be avoided.
The possibility of liability may, in some circumstances,
distract officials from the performance of their duties and
influence the performance of those duties in ways adverse to the
public interest. But when this "public policy" argument in favor of
absolute immunity is cast in these broad terms, it applies to all
officers, both state and federal: all officers should perform their
responsibilities without regard to those personal interests
threatened by the possibility of a lawsuit.
See Imbler,
supra, at
424 U. S. 436
(WHITE, J., concurring in judgment). [
Footnote 3/27] Inevitably, this reduces the public
policy argument to nothing more than an expression of judicial
inclination as to which officers should be encouraged to perform
their functions with "vigor," although with less care. [
Footnote 3/28]
The Court's response, until today, to this problem has been to
apply the argument to individual functions, not offices, and to
evaluate the effect of liability on governmental decisionmaking
within that function in light of the substantive ends that are to
be encouraged or discouraged. In this case, therefore, the Court
should examine the functions implicated by the causes of action at
issue here and the effect of potential liability on the performance
of those functions.
Page 457 U. S. 785
II
The functional approach to the separation of powers doctrine and
the Court's more recent immunity decisions [
Footnote 3/29] converge on the following principle: the
scope of immunity is determined by function, not office. The
wholesale claim that the President is entitled to absolute immunity
in all of his actions stands on no firmer ground than did the claim
that all Presidential communications are entitled to an absolute
privilege, which was rejected in favor of a functional analysis, by
a unanimous Court in
United States v. Nixon, 418 U.
S. 683 (1974). Therefore, whatever may be true of the
necessity of such a broad immunity in certain areas of executive
responsibility, [
Footnote 3/30]
the only question that must be answered here is whether the
dismissal of employees falls within a constitutionally assigned
executive function, the performance of which would be substantially
impaired by the possibility of a private action for damages. I
believe it does not.
Respondent has so far proceeded in this action on the basis of
three separate causes of action: two federal statutes -- 5 U.S.C. §
7211 (1976 ed., Supp. IV) and 18 U.S.C. § 1505 -- and the First
Amendment. At this point in the litigation, the availability of
these causes of action is not before us. Assuming the correctness
of the lower court's determination that the two federal statutes
create a private right of action, I find the suggestion that the
President is immune from those causes of action to be unconvincing.
The attempt to found such immunity upon a separation of powers
argument is particularly unconvincing.
The first of these statutes, 5 U.S.C. § 7211 (1976 ed., Supp.
IV), states that
"[t]he right of employees . . . to . . .
Page 457 U. S. 786
furnish information to either House of Congress, or to a
committee or Member thereof, may not be interfered with or
denied."
The second, 18 U.S.C. § 1505, makes it a crime to obstruct
congressional testimony. It does not take much insight to see that
at least one purpose of these statutes is to assure congressional
access to information in the possession of the Executive Branch,
which Congress believes it requires in order to carry out its
responsibilities. [
Footnote 3/31]
Insofar as these statutes implicate a separation of powers
argument, I would think it to be just the opposite of that
suggested by petitioner and accepted by the majority. In enacting
these statutes, Congress sought to preserve its own
constitutionally mandated functions in the face of a recalcitrant
Executive. [
Footnote 3/32] Thus,
the separation of powers problem addressed by these statutes was
first of all Presidential behavior that intruded upon, or burdened,
Congress' performance of its own constitutional responsibilities.
It is no response to this to say that such a cause of action would
disrupt the President in the
Page 457 U. S. 787
furtherance of his responsibilities. That approach ignores the
separation of powers problem that lies behind the congressional
action; it assumes that Presidential functions are to be valued
over congressional functions.
The argument that Congress, by providing a damages action under
these statutes (as is assumed in this case), has adopted an
unconstitutional means of furthering its ends must rest on the
premise that Presidential control of executive employment decisions
is a constitutionally assigned Presidential function with which
Congress may not significantly interfere. This is a frivolous
contention. In
United States v. Perkins, 116 U.
S. 483,
116 U. S. 485
(1886), this Court held that,
"when Congress, by law, vests the appointment of inferior
officers in the heads of Departments, it may limit and restrict the
power of removal as it deems best for the public interest."
Whatever the rule may be with respect to high officers,
see
Humphrey's Executor v. United States, 295 U.
S. 602 (1935), with respect to those who fill
traditional bureaucratic positions, restrictions on executive
authority are the rule, and not the exception. [
Footnote 3/33] This case itself demonstrates the
severe statutory restraints under which the President operates in
this area.
Fitzgerald was a civil service employee working in the Office of
the Secretary of the Air Force. Although his position was such as
to fall within the "excepted" service, which would ordinarily mean
that civil service rules and regulations applicable to removals
would not protect him, 5 CFR § 6.4 (1982), his status as a veteran
entitled him to special protections. Veterans are entitled to
certain civil service benefits afforded to "preference eligibles."
5 U.S.C. 2108 (1976 ed. and Supp. IV). These benefits include that
set forth in 5 U.S.C. § 7513(a) (1976 ed., Supp. IV): "[A]n agency
may take [adverse action] against an employee only for such cause
as will promote the efficiency of the service."
Page 457 U. S. 788
Similarly, his veteran status entitled Fitzgerald to the
protection of the reduction-in-force procedures established by
civil service regulation. 5 U.S.C. §§ 3501, 3502 (1976 ed. and
Supp. IV). It was precisely those procedures that the Chief
Examiner for the Civil Service Commission found had been violated
in his 1973 recommendation that respondent be reappointed to his
old position or to a job of comparable authority.
This brief review is enough to illustrate my point: personnel
decisions of the sort involved in this case are emphatically not a
constitutionally assigned Presidential function that will tolerate
no interference by either of the other two branches of Government.
More important than this "quantitative" analysis of the degree of
intrusion in Presidential decisionmaking permitted in this area,
however, is the "qualitative" analysis suggested in
457 U.
S.
Absolute immunity is appropriate when the threat of liability
may bias the decisionmaker in ways that are adverse to the public
interest. But as the various regulations and statutes protecting
civil servants from arbitrary executive action illustrate, this is
an area in which the public interest is demonstrably on the side of
encouraging less "vigor" and more "caution" on the part of
decisionmakers. That is, the very steps that Congress has taken to
assure that executive employees will be able freely to testify in
Congress and to assure that they will not be subject to arbitrary
adverse actions indicate that those policy arguments that have
elsewhere justified absolute immunity are not applicable here.
Absolute immunity would be nothing more than a judicial declaration
of policy that directly contradicts the policy of protecting civil
servants reflected in the statutes and regulations.
If respondent could, in fact, have proceeded on his two
statutory claims, the
Bivens action would be superfluous.
Respondent may not collect damages twice, and the same injuries are
put forward by respondent as the basis for both the statutory and
constitutional claims. As we have said before, "were Congress to
create equally effective alternative
Page 457 U. S. 789
remedies, the need for damages relief [directly under the
Constitution] might be obviated."
Davis v. Passman,
442 U. S. 228,
442 U. S. 248
(1979). Nevertheless, because the majority decides that the
President is absolutely immune from a
Bivens action as
well, I shall express my disagreement with that conclusion.
In
Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents,
403 U. S. 388
(1971), we held that individuals who have suffered a compensable
injury through a violation of the rights guaranteed them by the
Fourth Amendment may invoke the general federal question
jurisdiction of the federal courts in a suit for damages. That
conclusion rested on two principles: first, "
[t]he very essence
of civil liberty certainly consists in the right of every
individual to claim the protection of the laws,'" id. at
403 U. S. 397,
quoting Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch at 5 U. S. 163;
second, "[h]istorically, damages have been regarded as the ordinary
remedy for an invasion of personal interests in liberty." 403 U.S.
at 403 U. S. 395.
In Butz v. Economou, 438 U. S. 478
(1978), we rejected the argument of the Federal Government that
federal officers, including Cabinet officers, are absolutely immune
from civil liability for such constitutional violations -- a
position that we recognized would substantially undercut our
conclusion in Bivens. We held there that, although the
performance of certain limited functions will be protected by the
shield of absolute immunity, the general rule is that federal
officers, like state officers, have only a qualified immunity.
Finally, in Davis v. Passman, supra, we held that a
Congressman could be held liable for damages in a
Bivens-type suit brought in federal court alleging a
violation of individual rights guaranteed the plaintiff by the Due
Process Clause. In my view, these cases have largely settled the
issues raised by the Bivens problem here.
These cases established the following principles. First, it is
not the exclusive prerogative of the Legislative Branch to create a
federal cause of action for a constitutional violation. In the
absence of adequate legislatively prescribed remedies, the general
federal question jurisdiction of the federal
Page 457 U. S. 790
courts permits the courts to create remedies, both legal and
equitable, appropriate to the character of the injury. Second,
exercise of this "judicial" function does not create a separation
of powers problem: we have held both executive and legislative
officers subject to this judicially created cause of action, and,
in each instance, we have rejected separation of powers arguments.
Holding federal officers liable for damages for constitutional
injuries no more violates separation of powers principles than does
imposing equitable remedies under the traditional function of
judicial review. Third, federal officials will generally have a
"qualified immunity" from such suits; absolute immunity will be
extended to certain functions only on the basis of a showing that
exposure to liability is inconsistent with the proper performance
of the official's duties and responsibilities. Finally, Congress
retains the power to restrict exposure to liability, and the policy
judgments implicit in this decision should properly be made by
Congress.
The majority fails to recognize the force of what the Court has
already done in this area. Under the above principles, the
President could not claim that there are no circumstances under
which he would be subject to a
Bivens-type action for
violating respondent's constitutional rights. Rather, he must
assert that the absence of absolute immunity will substantially
impair his ability to carry out particular functions that are his
constitutional responsibility. For the reasons I have presented
above, I do not believe that this argument can be successfully made
under the circumstances of this case.
It is, of course, theoretically possible that the President
should be held to be absolutely immune because each of the
functions for which he has constitutional responsibility would be
substantially impaired by the possibility of civil liability. I do
not think this argument is valid for the simple reason that the
function involved here does not have this character.
Page 457 U. S. 791
On which side of the line other Presidential functions would
fall need not be decided in this case.
The majority opinion suggests a variant of this argument. It
argues not that every Presidential function has this character, but
that distinguishing the particular functions involved in any given
case would be "difficult."
Ante at 756. [
Footnote 3/34] Even if this were true, it would
not necessarily follow that the President is entitled to absolute
immunity: that would still depend on whether, in those unclear
instances, it is likely to be the case that one of the functions
implicated deserves the protection of absolute immunity. In this
particular case, I see no such function. [
Footnote 3/35]
I do not believe that subjecting the President to a
Bivens action would create separation of powers problems
or "public policy" problems different from those involved in
subjecting the President to a statutory cause of action. [
Footnote 3/36] Relying upon
Page 457 U. S. 792
the history and text of the Constitution, as well as the
analytic method of our prior cases, I conclude that these problems
are not sufficient to justify absolute immunity for the President
in general, nor under the circumstances of this case in
particular.
III
Because of the importance of this case, it is appropriate to
examine the reasoning of the majority opinion.
The opinion suffers from serious ambiguity even with respect to
the most fundamental point: how broad is the immunity granted the
President? The opinion suggests that its scope is limited by the
fact that under none of the asserted causes of action "has Congress
taken express legislative action to subject the President to civil
liability for his official acts."
Ante at
457 U. S. 748.
We are never told, however, how or why congressional action could
make a difference. It is not apparent that any of the propositions
relied upon by the majority to immunize the President would not
apply equally to such a statutory cause of action; nor does the
majority indicate what new principles would operate to undercut
those propositions.
In the end, the majority seems to overcome its initial
hesitation, for it announces that
"[w]e consider [absolute] immunity a functionally mandated
incident of the President's unique office, rooted in the
constitutional tradition of the separation of powers and supported
by our history,"
ante at
457 U. S. 749.
See also ante at
457 U. S. 757
("A rule of absolute immunity for the President will not leave the
Nation without sufficient protection against misconduct on the part
of the Chief Executive"). [
Footnote
3/37] While the majority opinion recognizes that
"[i]t is
Page 457 U. S. 793
settled law that the separation of powers doctrine does not bar
every exercise of jurisdiction over the President of the United
States,"
it bases its conclusion, at least in part, on a suggestion that
there is a special jurisprudence of the Presidency.
Ante
at
457 U. S.
753-754. [
Footnote
3/38]
But in
United States v. Nixon, 418 U.
S. 683 (1974), we upheld the power of a Federal District
Court to issue a subpoena
duces tecum against the
President. In other cases, we have enjoined executive officials
from carrying out Presidential directives.
See, e.g.,
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.
S. 579 (1952). Not until this case has there ever been a
suggestion that the mere formalism of the name's appearing on the
complaint was more important in resolving separation of powers
problems than the substantive character of the judicial intrusion
upon executive functions.
Page 457 U. S. 794
The majority suggests that the separation of powers doctrine
permits exercising jurisdiction over the President only in those
instances where
"judicial action is needed to serve broad public interests -- as
when the Court acts not in derogation of the separation of powers,
but to maintain their proper balance."
Ante at
457 U. S. 754.
Without explanation, the majority contends that a "merely private
suit for damages" does not serve this function.
Ibid.
The suggestion that enforcement of the rule of law --
i.e., subjecting the President to rules of general
applicability -- does not further the separation of powers, but
rather is in derogation of this purpose, is bizarre. At stake in a
suit of this sort, to the extent that it is based upon a
statutorily created cause of action, is the ability of Congress to
assert legal restraints upon the Executive and of the courts to
perform their function of providing redress for legal harm.
Regardless of what the Court might think of the merits of Mr.
Fitzgerald's claim, the idea that pursuit of legal redress offends
the doctrine of separation of powers is a frivolous contention
passing as legal argument.
Similarly, the majority implies that the assertion of a
constitutional cause of action -- the whole point of which is to
assure that an officer does not transgress the constitutional
limits on his authority -- may offend separation of powers
concerns. This is surely a perverse approach to the Constitution:
whatever the arguments in favor of absolute immunity may be, it is
untenable to argue that subjecting the President to constitutional
restrictions will undercut his "unique" role in our system of
government. It cannot be seriously argued that the President must
be placed beyond the law and beyond judicial enforcement of
constitutional restraints upon executive officers in order to
implement the principle of separation of powers.
Focusing on the actual arguments the majority offers for its
holding of absolute immunity for the President, one finds
surprisingly little. As I read the relevant section of the
Page 457 U. S. 795
Court's opinion, I find just three contentions from which the
majority draws this conclusion. Each of them is little more than a
makeweight; together, they hardly suffice to justify the wholesale
disregard of our traditional approach to immunity questions.
First, the majority informs us that the President occupies a
"unique position in the constitutional scheme," including
responsibilities for the administration of justice, foreign
affairs, and management of the Executive Branch.
Ante at
457 U. S.
749-760. True as this may be, it says nothing about why
a "unique" rule of immunity should apply to the President. The
President's unique role may indeed encompass functions for which he
is entitled to a claim of absolute immunity. It does not follow
from that, however, that he is entitled to absolute immunity either
in general or in this case in particular.
For some reason, the majority believes that this uniqueness of
the President shifts the burden to respondent to prove that a rule
of absolute immunity does not apply. The respondent has failed in
this effort, the Court suggests, because the President's uniqueness
makes "inapposite" any analogy to our cases dealing with other
executive officers.
Ante at
457 U. S. 750.
Even if this were true, it would not follow that the President is
entitled to absolute immunity; it would only mean that a particular
argument is out of place. But the fact is that it is not true.
There is nothing in the President's unique role that makes the
arguments used in those other cases inappropriate.
Second, the majority contends that, because the President's
"visibility" makes him particularly vulnerable to suits for civil
damages,
ante at
457 U. S. 753,
a rule of absolute immunity is required. The force of this argument
is surely undercut by the majority's admission that "there is no
historical record of numerous suits against the President."
Ante at
457 U. S. 753,
n. 33. Even granting that a
Bivens cause of action did not
become available until 1971, in the 11 years since then, there
have
Page 457 U. S. 796
been only a handful of suits. Many of these are frivolous and
dealt with in a routine manner by the courts and the Justice
Department. There is no reason to think that, in the future, the
protection afforded by summary judgment procedures would not be
adequate to protect the President, as they currently protect other
executive officers from unfounded litigation. Indeed, given the
decision today in
Harlow v. Fitzgerald, post, p.
457 U. S. 800,
there is even more reason to believe that frivolous claims will not
intrude upon the President's time. Even if judicial procedures were
found not to be sufficient, Congress remains free to address this
problem if and when it develops.
Finally, the Court suggests that potential liability "frequently
could distract a President from his public duties."
Ante
at
457 U. S. 753.
Unless one assumes that the President himself makes the countless
high-level executive decisions required in the administration of
government, this rule will not do much to insulate such decisions
from the threat of liability. The logic of the proposition cannot
be limited to the President; its extension, however, has been
uniformly rejected by this Court.
See Butz v. Economou,
438 U. S. 478
(1978);
Harlow v. Fitzgerald, post, p.
457 U. S. 800.
Furthermore, in no instance have we previously held legal
accountability in itself to be an unjustifiable cost. The
availability of the courts to vindicate constitutional and
statutory wrongs has been perceived and protected as one of the
virtues of our system of delegated and limited powers. As I argued
in
457 U. S. our
concern in fashioning absolute immunity rules has been that
liability may pervert the decisionmaking process in a particular
function by undercutting the values we expect to guide those
decisions. Except for the empty generality that the President
should have "'the maximum ability to deal fearlessly and
impartially with' the duties of his office,"
ante at
457 U. S. 752,
the majority nowhere suggests a particular, disadvantageous effect
on a specific Presidential function. The caution that comes from
requiring reasonable choices in areas that
Page 457 U. S. 797
may intrude on individuals' legally protected rights has never
before been counted as a cost.
IV
The majority may be correct in its conclusion that
"[a] rule of absolute immunity . . . will not leave the Nation
without sufficient protection against misconduct on the part of the
Chief Executive."
Ante at
457 U. S. 757.
Such a rule will, however, leave Mr. Fitzgerald without an adequate
remedy for the harms that he may have suffered. More importantly,
it will leave future plaintiffs without a remedy, regardless of the
substantiality of their claims. The remedies in which the Court
finds comfort were never designed to afford relief for individual
harms. Rather, they were designed as political safety valves.
Politics and history, however, are not the domain of the courts;
the courts exist to assure each individual that he, as an
individual, has enforceable rights that he may pursue to achieve a
peaceful redress of his legitimate grievances.
I find it ironic, as well as tragic, that the Court would so
casually discard its own role of assuring "the right of every
individual to claim the protection of the laws,"
Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch at
5 U. S. 163, in
the name of protecting the principle of separation of powers.
Accordingly, I dissent.
[
Footnote 3/1]
This, of course, is not imply a hypothetical example.
See
Halperin v. Kissinger, 196 U.S.App.D.C. 285, 606 F.2d 1192
(1979),
aff'd by an equally divided Court, 452 U.
S. 713 (1981).
[
Footnote 3/2]
It is ironic that this decision should come out at the time of
the tenth anniversary of the Watergate affair. Even the popular
press has drawn from that affair an insight into the character of
the American constitutional system that is bound to be profoundly
shaken by today's decision:
"The important lesson that Watergate established is that no
President is above the law. It is a banality, a cliche, but it is a
point on which many Americans . . . seem confused."
119 Time, No. 24, p. 28 (June 14, 1982). A majority of the Court
shares this confusion.
The majority vigorously protests this characterization of its
position,
ante at
457 U. S. 758, n. 41, arguing that the President remains
subject to law in the form of impeachment proceedings. But the
abandonment of the rule of law here is not in the result reached,
but in the manner of reaching it. The majority fails to apply to
the President those principles which we have consistently used to
determine the scope and credibility of an absolute immunity
defense. It does this because of some preconceived notion of the
inapplicability of general rules of law to the President.
Similarly, THE CHIEF JUSTICE, like the majority, misses the
point in his wholly unconvincing contentions that the Court today
does no more than extend to the President the same sort of immunity
that we have recognized with respect to Members of Congress,
judges, prosecutors, and legislative aides. In none of our previous
cases have we extended absolute immunity to all actions "within the
scope of the official's constitutional and statutory duties."
Concurring opinion of THE CHIEF JUSTICE,
ante at
457 U. S. 761,
n. 4. Indeed, under the immunity doctrine as it existed prior to
today's decision, each of these officials could have been held
liable for the kind of claim put forward by Fitzgerald -- a
personnel decision allegedly made for unlawful reasons. Although
such a decision falls within the scope of an official's duties, it
does not fall within the judicial, legislative, or prosecutorial
functions to which absolute immunity attaches. THE CHIEF JUSTICE's
failure to grasp the difference between the functional approach to
absolute immunity that we have previously adopted and the nature of
today's decision accounts for his misunderstanding of this
dissent.
[
Footnote 3/3]
Although the majority opinion initially claims that its
conclusion is based substantially on "our history," historical
analysis in fact plays virtually no part in the analysis that
follows.
[
Footnote 3/4]
On this point, I am in agreement with the concurring opinion of
THE CHIEF JUSTICE.
[
Footnote 3/5]
The Solicitor General relies entirely upon the brief filed by
his office for petitioners in
Kissinger v. Halperin,
452 U. S. 713
(1981).
[
Footnote 3/6]
In fact, insofar as the Constitution addresses the issue of
Presidential liability, its approach is very different from that
taken in the Speech or Debate Clause. The possibility of
impeachment assures that the President can be held accountable to
the other branches of Government for his actions; the Constitution
further states that impeachment does not bar criminal
prosecution.
[
Footnote 3/7]
The debate is recorded in 2 M. Farrand, Records of the Federal
Convention of 1787, pp. 669 (1911) (hereinafter Farrand).
[
Footnote 3/8]
Id. at 64.
[
Footnote 3/9]
Id. at 65.
[
Footnote 3/10]
Ibid. .
[
Footnote 3/11]
Id. at 66.
[
Footnote 3/12]
In The Federalist No. 65, p. 439 (J. Cooke ed.1961), Alexander
Hamilton described impeachable offenses as follows:
"They are of a nature which may with peculiar propriety be
denominated POLITICAL, as they relate chiefly to injuries done
immediately to the society itself."
[
Footnote 3/13]
The majority's use of the historical record is in line with its
other arguments: it puts the burden on respondent to demonstrate no
Presidential immunity, rather than on petitioner to prove the
appropriateness of this defense. Thus, while noting that the doubts
of some of the Framers were not sufficient to prevent the adoption
of the Impeachment Clause, the majority nevertheless states that
"nothing in [the] debates suggests an expectation that the
President would be subjected to [civil damages actions]."
Ante at
457 U. S. 751,
n. 31. Of course, nothing in the debates suggests an expectation
that the President would not be liable in civil suits for damages,
either. Nevertheless, the debates are one element that the majority
cites to support its conclusion that "[t]he best historical
evidence clearly supports the Presidential immunity we have
upheld."
Ante at
457 U. S. 752,
n. 31.
[
Footnote 3/14]
Other commentary on the proposed Constitution did, however,
consider the subject of Presidential immunity. In fact, the subject
was discussed in the first major defense of the Constitution
published in the United States . In his essays on the Constitution,
published in the Independent Gazetteer in September, 1787, Tench
Coxe included the following statement in his description of the
limited power of the proposed Office of the President:
"
His person is not so much protected as that of a member of
the House of Representatives; for he may be proceeded against like
any other man in the ordinary course of law."
Quoted in 2 The Documentary History of the Ratification of the
Constitution 141 (1976) (emphasis in original).
[
Footnote 3/15]
4 J. Elliot, Debates on the Federal Constitution 48 (1876
ed.).
[
Footnote 3/16]
Id. at 47.
[
Footnote 3/17]
id. at 480.
[
Footnote 3/18]
W. Maclay, Sketches of Debate in the First Senate of the United
States in 1789-1791, p. 152 (1969 reprint).
[
Footnote 3/19]
Ibid.
[
Footnote 3/20]
2 J. Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United
States § 1569, p. 372 (4th ed. 1873).
[
Footnote 3/21]
It is not possible to determine whether this is the same
Pinckney that Madison recorded as Pinkney, who objected at the
Convention to granting a power of impeachment to the Legislature.
Two Charles Pinckneys attended the Convention. Both were from South
Carolina.
See 3 Farrand 559.
[
Footnote 3/22]
Senator Pinckney's comments are recorded at 10 Annals of Cong.
693 (1800). Petitioner contends that these remarks are not
relevant, because they concerned only the authority of Congress to
inquire into the origin of an allegedly libelous newspaper article.
Reply Brief for Petitioner 7. Although this was the occasion for
the remarks, Pinckney did discuss the immunity of Members of
Congress as a privilege embodied in the Speech or Debate
Clause:
"[O]ur Constitution supposes no man . . . to be infallible, but
considers them all as mere men, and subject to all the passions,
and frailties, and crimes, that men generally are, and accordingly
provides for the trial of such as ought to be tried, and leaves the
members of the Legislature, for their proceedings, to be amenable
to their constituents and to public opinion. . . ."
10 Annals of Cong. 71 (1800). This then, was one of the
privileges of Congress that he was contrasting with those extended
(or not extended) to the President.
[
Footnote 3/23]
The majority cites one additional piece of historical evidence,
a letter by President Jefferson, which it contends demonstrates
that Jefferson believed that "the President was not intended to be
subject to judicial process."
Ante at
457 U. S. 751,
n. 31.
Thomas Jefferson's views on the relation of the President to the
judicial process are, however, not quite so clear as the majority
suggests. Jefferson took a variety of positions on the proper
relation of Executive and Judicial authority at different points in
his career. It would be surprising if President Jefferson had not
argued strongly for such immunity from judicial process,
particularly in a confrontation with Chief Justice Marshall.
Jefferson's views on this issue before he became President would be
of a good deal more significance. In this regard, it is significant
that, in Jefferson's second and third drafts of the Virginia
Constitution, which also proposed a separation of the powers of
government into three separate branches, he specifically proposed
that the Executive be subject to judicial process: "[H]e shall be
liable to action, tho' not to personal restraint for private duties
or wrongs." 1 Papers of Thomas Jefferson 350, 360 (1950). Also
significant is the fact that, when Jefferson's followers tried to
impeach Justice Chase in 1804-1805, one of the grounds of their
attack on him was that he had refused to subpoena President Adams
during the trial of Dr. Cooper for sedition.
See E.
Corwin, The President: Office and Powers 113 (4th ed.1957).
Finally, it is worth noting that, even in the middle of the debate
over Chief Justice Marshall's power to subpoena the President
during the Burr trial, Jefferson looked to a legislative solution
of the confrontation:
"I hope however that . . . at the ensuing session of the
legislature [the Chief Justice] may have means provided for giving
to individuals the benefit of the testimony of the [Executive]
functionaries in proper cases."
10 The Works of Thomas Jefferson 407 n. (P. Ford ed.1905)
(quoting a letter from President Jefferson to George Hay, United
States District Attorney for Virginia).
[
Footnote 3/24]
The Solicitor General, in fact, argues that the possibility of
judicial review of Presidential actions supports the claim of
absolute immunity: judicial review "serves to contain and correct
the unauthorized exercise of the President's powers," making
private damages actions unnecessary in order to achieve the same
end. Brief for Petitioners in
Kissinger v. Halperin, O.T.
1980, No. 79-880, p. 31.
See 457
U.S. 731fn3/5|>n. 5,
supra.
[
Footnote 3/25]
See also Justice Harlan's discussion of the
appropriateness of the damages remedy in order to redress the
violation of certain constitutional rights.
Bivens v. Six
Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
407-410 (concurring in judgment).
[
Footnote 3/26]
Contrary to the suggestion of the majority,
ante at
457 U. S. 754
755, n. 37, I do not suggest that there must always be a remedy in
civil damages for every legal wrong, or that
Marbury v.
Madison stands for this proposition.
Marbury does,
however, suggest the importance of the private interests at stake
within the broader perspective of a political system based on the
rule of law. The functional approach to immunity questions, which
we have previously followed but which the majority today discards,
represented an appropriate reconciliation of the conflicting
interests at stake.
[
Footnote 3/27]
The Court has never held that the "public policy" conclusions it
reaches as to the appropriateness of absolute immunity in
particular instances are not subject to reversal through
congressional action. Implicitly, therefore, the Court has already
rejected a constitutionally based separation of powers argument for
immunity for federal officials.
[
Footnote 3/28]
Surely the fact that officers of the court have been the primary
beneficiaries of this Court's pronouncements of absolute immunity
gives support to this appearance of favoritism.
[
Footnote 3/29]
See Supreme Court of Virginia v. Consumers Union of United
States, 446 U. S. 719
(1980);
Butz v. Economou, 438 U.
S. 478,
438 U. S. 511
(1978).
[
Footnote 3/30]
I will not speculate on the Presidential functions which may
require absolute immunity, but a clear example would be instances
in which the President participates in prosecutorial decisions.
[
Footnote 3/31]
See, e.g., 48 Cong.Rec. 4653 (1912) ("During my first
session of Congress, I was desirous of learning the needs of the
postal service and inquiring into the conditions of the employees.
To my surprise, I found that, under an Executive order, these civil
service employees could not give me any information") (remarks of
Rep. Calder);
id. at 4656 ("I believe it is high time that
Congress should listen to the appeals of these men and provide a
way whereby they can properly present a petition to the Members of
Congress for a redress of grievances without the fear of losing
their official positions") (remarks of Rep. Reilly);
id.
at 5157 ("I have always requested employees to consult with me on
matters affecting their interest, and believe that it is my duty to
listen to all respectful appeals and complaints") (remarks of Rep.
Evans). Indeed, it is for just this reason that petitioners in
Harlow v. Fitzgerald, post, p.
457 U. S. 800,
argue that the statutes do not create a private right of action: "5
U.S.C. § 7211 and 18 U.S.C. § 1505 were designed to protect the
legislative process, not to give one such as Fitzgerald a right to
seek damages." Brief for Petitioners, O.T. 1981, No. 80-945, P. 26,
n. 11.
[
Footnote 3/32]
Indeed, the impetus for passage of what is now 5 U.S.C. § 7211
(1976 ed., Supp. IV) was the imposition of "gag rules" upon
testimony of civil servants before congressional committees.
See Exec.Order No. 402 (Jan. 25, 1906); Exec.Order No.
1142 (Nov. 26, 1909).
[
Footnote 3/33]
Thus, adverse action may generally be taken against civil
servants only "for such cause as will promote the efficiency of the
service." 5 U.S.C. §§ 7503, 7513, and 7543 (1976 ed., Supp.
IV).
[
Footnote 3/34]
The majority also seems to believe that, by "function," the
Court has in the past referred to "subjective purpose."
See
ante at
457 U. S. 756
("an inquiry into the President's motives could not be avoided
under the . . .
functional' theory . . ."). I do not read our
cases that way. In Stump v. Sparkman, 435 U.
S. 349, 435 U. S. 362
(1978), we held that the factors determining whether a judge's act
was a "judicial action" entitled to absolute immunity "relate to
the nature of the act itself, i.e., whether it is a
function normally performed by a judge, and to the expectations of
the parties." Neither of these factors required any analysis of the
purpose the judge may have had in carrying out the particular
action. Similarly in Butz v. Economou, 438 U.S. at
438 U. S.
512-516, when we determined that certain executive
functions were entitled to absolute immunity because they shared
"enough of the characteristics of the judicial process," we looked
to objective qualities, and not subjective purpose.
[
Footnote 3/35]
The majority seems to suggest that responsibility for
governmental reorganizations is one such function.
Ante at
457 U. S. 756.
I fail to see why this should be so.
[
Footnote 3/36]
Although our conclusions differ, the majority opinion reflects a
similar view as to the relationship between the two sources of the
causes of action in this case: it does not believe it necessary to
differentiate in its own analysis between the statutory and
constitutional causes of action.
[
Footnote 3/37]
THE CHIEF JUSTICE leaves no doubt that he, at least, reads the
majority opinion as standing for the broad proposition that the
President is absolutely immune under the Constitution:
"I write separately to underscore that the Presidential immunity
[as spelled out today] derives from and is mandated by the
constitutional doctrine of separation of powers."
Concurring opinion of THE CHIEF JUSTICE,
ante at
457 U. S.
758.
Similarly, THE CHIEF JUSTICE dismisses the majority's claim that
it has not decided the question of whether Congress could create a
damages action against the President:
"[T]he Court's holding . . . effectively resolves that issue;
once it is established that the Constitution confers absolute
immunity, as the Court holds today, legislative action cannot alter
that result."
Ante at
457 U. S. 763,
n. 7.
[
Footnote 3/38]
Contrary to the suggestion of the majority,
Mississippi v.
Johnson, 4 Wall. 475 (1866), carefully reserved the
question of whether a court may compel the President himself to
perform ministerial executive functions:
"We shall limit our inquiry to the question presented by the
objection, without expressing any opinion on the broader issues . .
. whether, in any case, the President . . . may be required, by the
process of this court, to perform a purely ministerial act under a
positive law, or may be held amenable, in any case, otherwise than
by impeachment for crime."
Id. at
71 U. S. 498.
Similarly,
Kendall v. United
States, 12 Pet. 524 (1838), also cited by the
majority, did not indicate that the President could never be
subject to judicial process. In fact, it implied just the contrary
in rejecting the argument that the mandamus sought involved an
unconstitutional judicial infringement upon the Executive
Branch:
"The mandamus does not seek to direct or control the postmaster
general in the discharge of any official duty, partaking in any
respect of an executive character; but to enforce the performance
of a mere ministerial act, which neither he nor the President had
any authority to deny or control."
Id. at
37 U. S.
610.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN and JUSTICE MARSHALL
join, dissenting.
I join JUSTICE WHITE's dissent. For me, the Court leaves
unanswered his unanswerable argument that no man, not even the
President of the United States, is absolutely and fully above the
law.
See United States v. Lee, 106 U.
S. 196,
106 U. S. 220
(1882), [
Footnote 4/1] and
Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch 137,
5 U. S. 163
Page 457 U. S. 798
(1803). [
Footnote 4/2] Until
today, I had thought this principle was the foundation of our
national jurisprudence. It now appears that it is not.
Nor can I understand the Court's holding that the absolute
immunity of the President is compelled by separation of powers
concerns, when the Court at the same time expressly leaves open,
ante at
457 U. S. 748,
and n. 27, the possibility that the President nevertheless may be
fully subject to congressionally created forms of liability. These
two concepts, it seems to me, cannot coexist.
I also write separately to express my unalleviated concern about
the parties' settlement agreement, the key details of which were
not disclosed to the Court by counsel until the veritable "last
minute," and even then, only because the Halperins' motion to
intervene had directed the Court's attention to them.
See
ante at
457 U. S.
743-744, n. 24. The Court makes only passing mention of
this agreement in
457 U. S.
For me, the case in effect was settled before argument by
petitioner's payment of $142,000 to respondent. A much smaller sum
of $28,000 was left riding on an outcome favorable to respondent,
with nothing at all to be paid if petitioner prevailed, as indeed
he now does. The parties publicly stated that the amount of any
payment would depend upon subsequent proceedings in the District
Court; in fact, the parties essentially had agreed that, regardless
of this Court's ruling, no further proceedings of substance would
occur in the District Court. Surely, had the details of this
agreement been known at the time the petition for certiorari came
before the Court, certiorari would have been denied. I cannot
escape the feeling that this long-undisclosed agreement
Page 457 U. S. 799
comes close to being a wager on the outcome of the case, with
all of the implications that entails.
Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman, 455 U.
S. 363 (1982), most recently -- and, it now appears,
most conveniently -- decided, affords less than comfortable support
for retaining the case. [
Footnote
4/3] The pertinent question here is not whether the case is
moot, but whether this is the kind of case or controversy over
which we should exercise our power of discretionary review.
Cf.
United States v. Johnson, 319 U. S. 302
(1943).
Apprised of all developments, I therefore would have dismissed
the writ as having been improvidently granted. The Court, it seems
to me, brushes by this factor in order to resolve an issue of
profound consequence that otherwise would not be here. Lacking
support for such a dismissal, however, I join the dissent.
[
Footnote 4/1]
"No man in this country is so high that he is above the law. No
officer of the law may set that law at defiance with impunity. All
the officers of the government, from the highest to the lowest, are
creatures of the law, and are bound to obey it."
[
Footnote 4/2]
"The very essence of civil liberty certainly consists in the
right of every individual to claim the protection of the laws,
whenever he receives an injury. One of the first duties of
government is to afford that protection. In Great Britain, the king
himself is sued in the respectful form of a petition, and he never
fails to comply with the judgment of his court."
[
Footnote 4/3]
The agreement in
Havens was not final until approved by
the District Court, 455 U.S. at
455 U. S.
370-371. In the present case, the parties made their
agreement and presented it to the District Court only after the
fact. Further, there was no preliminary payment in
Havens.
Each respondent there was to receive $400 if the Court denied
certiorari or affirmed, and nothing if the Court reversed. Here,
$142,000 changed hands regardless of the subsequent disposition of
the case, with the much smaller sum of $28,000 resting on the
Court's ultimate ruling. For me, this is not the kind of case or
controversy contemplated by Art. III of the Constitution.