J. SKELLY WRIGHT, Chief Judge:
Appellants, members of the Jewish Defense League (JDL), sued former Attorney General John N. Mitchell and nine agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) for damages for wiretapping of the JDL’s New York office in 1970 and 1971. The District Court dismissed the case because it refused to apply retroactively the constitutional requirement of a warrant for national security wiretaps that was articulated in
United States v. United States District Court (Keith),
407 U.S. 297, 92 S.Ct. 2125, 32 L.Ed.2d 752 (1972), and in
Zweibon v. Mitchell (Zweibon I),
170 U.S.App.D.C. 1, 516 F.2d 594 (1975) (en
banc), cert. denied,
425 U.S. 944, 96 S.Ct. 1684, 48 L.Ed.2d 187 (1976). Similarly, the District Court limited to prospective effect the conclusion of the plurality in
Zweibon I
that some of the procedures and remedies of Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968
are relevant to those national security surveillances that violate the Fourth Amendment. Since both holdings dispose of only part of appellants’ complaint, however, there was no basis for dismissing the entire suit. Moreover, we de
cline to restrict the constitutional warrant requirement of
Keith
and
Zweibon I
to prospective effect in damage suits like this one. Finally, we affirm the District Court’s ruling on the
Zweibon I
plurality’s view of the statutory question.
I
The facts underlying this action are set out in detail in our opinion in
Zweibon I,
so we will note only the salient points here. In the late 1960s the JDL staged occasionally violent demonstrations against Soviet installations and personnel in New York to protest the treatment of Jews in Russia. The JDL program drew complaints from the Soviets, along with thinly veiled threats of reprisal against Americans in the Soviet Union.
In addition, suspected and anticipated JDL actions constituted violations of several criminal statutes.
In October 1970, and between January and July 1971, the Government wiretapped six telephones at JDL headquarters.
The existence of the JDL wiretaps came to light in June 1971 during the trial of several JDL members on criminal charges,
and this suit for damages under the Fourth Amendment and Title III followed. The District Court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants on July 20,1973,
but this court, acting
en banc,
reversed that ruling in
Zweibon I.
Drawing on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Keith,
we found that the Government could not constitutionally place a wiretap on appellants’ telephones without first acquiring a judicial warrant.
In September 1977 we also reversed the District Court’s decision that the plaintiffs were not entitled to a jury trial.
The ruling we consider today came in response to renewed motions for summary judgment by appellees.
II
The problem of determining the retroactive effect of a “new” judicial ruling goes to the heart of what courts do. Chief Justice Hughes described such decisions as “among the most difficult of those which have engaged the attention of [the] courts.”
The traditional view is that decisions overruling prior holdings or announcing novel doctrine must be applied to all subsequent cases, even if the later cases involve incidents that took place before the crucial judicial ruling.
In such cases, ac
cording to Blackstone, “judges do not pretend to make a new law, but to vindicate the old one from misrepresentation.”
Thus for Blackstone judicial overruling reflects not the decision that the previous approach was
“bad law,
but that it was
not
law.’’
For many years the Supreme Court only occasionally ignored the Blackstonian view of retroactivity by restricting reversal of earlier law to prospective effect.
In the 1960s, however, the Court established prospectively a number of constitutional rules protecting the rights of criminal defendants.
Prospective overruling can preserve the flexibility of judge-made law without causing unacceptable social upheaval, but the technique has two substantial drawbacks. First, it carries all the earmarks of legislative action with none of the democratic procedures.
Second, it is difficult as a logical proposition to maintain that a new doctrine should be established, yet that prior doctrine applies to cases reaching the courts after that decision so long as they involve events that occurred before that point. As Justice Harlan wrote:
If a “new” constitutional doctrine is truly right, we should not reverse lower courts which have accepted it; nor should we affirm those which have rejected the very arguments we have embraced. * * *
Historically, prospectivity has been less common in civil than in criminal cases.
This is at least partly due to the potential flood of
habeas corpus
petitions that looms if a court recognizes retroactively a procedural or substantive right of criminal defendants.
No such threat arises in civil litigation where a retroactive decision can affect only suits pending in the courts or not yet brought, but cannot be raised by previously unsuccessful litigants. The prospectivity determination in both civil and criminal cases, however, remains a pragmatic one that turns on the expected impact of a retroactive overruling on the society and legal system. Retroactivity is the rule, but not at the expense of other important values.
Our disagreement with the District Court can be traced in part to the complexity of this suit. Appellants do not present one cause of action, but rather seek damages under both Title III and the Fourth Amendment. And the constitutional basis for their suit involves both the warrant requirement of
Keith
and
Zweibon I
and the question whether the wiretap was reasonable even if no warrant was necessary. We think the retroactivity decision must be tailored to each particular cause of action.
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J. SKELLY WRIGHT, Chief Judge:
Appellants, members of the Jewish Defense League (JDL), sued former Attorney General John N. Mitchell and nine agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) for damages for wiretapping of the JDL’s New York office in 1970 and 1971. The District Court dismissed the case because it refused to apply retroactively the constitutional requirement of a warrant for national security wiretaps that was articulated in
United States v. United States District Court (Keith),
407 U.S. 297, 92 S.Ct. 2125, 32 L.Ed.2d 752 (1972), and in
Zweibon v. Mitchell (Zweibon I),
170 U.S.App.D.C. 1, 516 F.2d 594 (1975) (en
banc), cert. denied,
425 U.S. 944, 96 S.Ct. 1684, 48 L.Ed.2d 187 (1976). Similarly, the District Court limited to prospective effect the conclusion of the plurality in
Zweibon I
that some of the procedures and remedies of Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968
are relevant to those national security surveillances that violate the Fourth Amendment. Since both holdings dispose of only part of appellants’ complaint, however, there was no basis for dismissing the entire suit. Moreover, we de
cline to restrict the constitutional warrant requirement of
Keith
and
Zweibon I
to prospective effect in damage suits like this one. Finally, we affirm the District Court’s ruling on the
Zweibon I
plurality’s view of the statutory question.
I
The facts underlying this action are set out in detail in our opinion in
Zweibon I,
so we will note only the salient points here. In the late 1960s the JDL staged occasionally violent demonstrations against Soviet installations and personnel in New York to protest the treatment of Jews in Russia. The JDL program drew complaints from the Soviets, along with thinly veiled threats of reprisal against Americans in the Soviet Union.
In addition, suspected and anticipated JDL actions constituted violations of several criminal statutes.
In October 1970, and between January and July 1971, the Government wiretapped six telephones at JDL headquarters.
The existence of the JDL wiretaps came to light in June 1971 during the trial of several JDL members on criminal charges,
and this suit for damages under the Fourth Amendment and Title III followed. The District Court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants on July 20,1973,
but this court, acting
en banc,
reversed that ruling in
Zweibon I.
Drawing on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Keith,
we found that the Government could not constitutionally place a wiretap on appellants’ telephones without first acquiring a judicial warrant.
In September 1977 we also reversed the District Court’s decision that the plaintiffs were not entitled to a jury trial.
The ruling we consider today came in response to renewed motions for summary judgment by appellees.
II
The problem of determining the retroactive effect of a “new” judicial ruling goes to the heart of what courts do. Chief Justice Hughes described such decisions as “among the most difficult of those which have engaged the attention of [the] courts.”
The traditional view is that decisions overruling prior holdings or announcing novel doctrine must be applied to all subsequent cases, even if the later cases involve incidents that took place before the crucial judicial ruling.
In such cases, ac
cording to Blackstone, “judges do not pretend to make a new law, but to vindicate the old one from misrepresentation.”
Thus for Blackstone judicial overruling reflects not the decision that the previous approach was
“bad law,
but that it was
not
law.’’
For many years the Supreme Court only occasionally ignored the Blackstonian view of retroactivity by restricting reversal of earlier law to prospective effect.
In the 1960s, however, the Court established prospectively a number of constitutional rules protecting the rights of criminal defendants.
Prospective overruling can preserve the flexibility of judge-made law without causing unacceptable social upheaval, but the technique has two substantial drawbacks. First, it carries all the earmarks of legislative action with none of the democratic procedures.
Second, it is difficult as a logical proposition to maintain that a new doctrine should be established, yet that prior doctrine applies to cases reaching the courts after that decision so long as they involve events that occurred before that point. As Justice Harlan wrote:
If a “new” constitutional doctrine is truly right, we should not reverse lower courts which have accepted it; nor should we affirm those which have rejected the very arguments we have embraced. * * *
Historically, prospectivity has been less common in civil than in criminal cases.
This is at least partly due to the potential flood of
habeas corpus
petitions that looms if a court recognizes retroactively a procedural or substantive right of criminal defendants.
No such threat arises in civil litigation where a retroactive decision can affect only suits pending in the courts or not yet brought, but cannot be raised by previously unsuccessful litigants. The prospectivity determination in both civil and criminal cases, however, remains a pragmatic one that turns on the expected impact of a retroactive overruling on the society and legal system. Retroactivity is the rule, but not at the expense of other important values.
Our disagreement with the District Court can be traced in part to the complexity of this suit. Appellants do not present one cause of action, but rather seek damages under both Title III and the Fourth Amendment. And the constitutional basis for their suit involves both the warrant requirement of
Keith
and
Zweibon I
and the question whether the wiretap was reasonable even if no warrant was necessary. We think the retroactivity decision must be tailored to each particular cause of action. More important, we emphasize that the suit before us is not a criminal case, but a civil damage action alleging a constitutional tort. We must take care that in considering retroactivity we appreciate the context of our determination.
There can be no question of novelty, and hence no retroactivity problem, as to two features of this case. First, because the “reasonableness” requirement of the Fourth Amendment was recognized at the time of the wiretap as a controlling standard for national security surveillances,
the District Court should have applied that standard to the wiretap as initiated and as conducted for six months. Second, in
Zweibon I
we assumed without deciding that the
j
surveillance concerned national security 3 matters,
and suggested that the District! Court might inquire into this issue on re-| mand.
Since then appellants have mar-! shaded additional evidence suggesting that the primary motive behind the wiretap was criminal investigation, not national security.
If this proposition can be established at trial, the violation of the terms of Title III would be apparent, because appellees do not contend that they followed statutory procedures; and since the statute was enacted two years before the JDL surveillances, there would be no retroactivity question.
Ill
With respect to the retroactivity of the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement announced by
Keith
and
Zweibon I,
more extended analysis is required. In
Chevron
Oil Co. v.
Huson
the Supreme Court' offered a useful three-step test for prospectivity which was followed by the District Court in the case before us: (A) Did the court directly overrule precedent or announce a rule “not clearly foreshadowed”? (B) Is prospective application consistent with the “purpose and effect” of the rule? (C) Are there equitable considerations requiring prospective application? Because each of these considerations will have different effect in different cases, no single factor is controlling.
A
Appellants dispute the District Court’s view that the application of the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement to national security surveillances was “not clearly foreshadowed” by judicial decisions before these wiretaps were installed. Before
Keith
the Supreme Court had never ruled on the need under the Constitution for a warrant in national security surveillances,
but appellants urge that the trend of Supreme Court decisions was clear and that disagreement among the lower courts on this question could not justify the assumption that warrantless wiretapping was constitutional.
Moreover, appellants point to a memorandum to appellee Mitchell from the Solicitor General in 1969 that noted the Supreme Court’s “great hostility” to attempts to limit the rights of those “suspected of engaging in subversive activities,” and counselled against a court test of Executive power to wiretap without a warrant.
Since
Keith
and
Zweibon I
did not overrule any earlier decisions, we must determine whether application of the warrant requirement to national security cases was “not clearly foreshadowed.” The Supreme Court has phrased this question in terms of whether a new rule represents the resolution of “complex issues of first impression”
or “an avulsive change which caused the current of the law thereafter to flow between new banks.”
Keith
and
Zweibon I
were cases of first impression, but the complexity and avulsiveness of their holdings on the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement are not manifest. Statements by the Supreme Court in the late 1960s certainly demonstrated great concern over unrestrained warrantless wiretapping.
Extension of that concern to the national security sphere was certainly likely, though perhaps not inevitable.
We think the approach taken by the Seventh Circuit in
Dasho v. Susquehanna Corp.
is appropriate here. That appeal challenged the trial court’s refusal to permit a trial to the jury in a stockholder’s derivative action. Then-Judge Stevens’ opinion for the panel applied retroactively the Supreme Court’s holding in
Ross v.
Bernhard
that stockholders have a right to a jury trial in such cases. Even though
there had previously been a split among the circuits on that issue, the
Dasho
court concluded that
Ross
“did not establish a new principle of law,” but “merely resolved a conflict in the circuits consistently with the Court’s interpretation of prior law.”
We believe that
Keith
and
Zweibon I
also did not announce a new principle of law, but simply applied the constitutional warrant requirement to national security situations.
As a result, we cannot say that the outcome in those cases was not clearly foreshadowed.
B
The second
Chevron Oil
standard focuses on whether retroactive overruling will promote or hinder the substantive rule announced in the crucial decision. Echoing the leading case on prospectivity of criminal rules, the District Court concluded that “[n]o amount of monetary damages can restore the privacy which was improperly invaded by the action of defendants *
Accordingly, retroactive application of the warrant rule of
Keith
and
Zweibon I
in this case was not deemed to support the purpose of that rule. The court suggested that there might be a stronger basis for retroactive application of the warrant requirement in a criminal case where the exclusionary rule “constitutes a substantial and persuasive deterrent of government activity which is questionably illegal.”
The District Court’s overemphasis on criminal law concepts in rejecting retroactivity in this
civil
case has led it into error. The principle announced in
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of
Narcotics
is that monetary damages are an entirely appropriate remedy for Fourth Amendment violations. After
Bivens
the Fourth Amendment cannot be said to be restricted to procedural rights in a criminal prosecution or to civil injunctive proceedings. In this suit the terms of that constitutional provision, including the warrant requirement, function like any standards for conduct that might involve tort liability. Unlike the District Court, we think that a stronger case for prospectivity, rather than retroactivity, might be made in a criminal case involving the exclusionary rule, where the prophylactic purpose of that rule cannot be served by retroactive application and where the costs to society of
retroactivity may be far greater.
In a damage action the effect of the warrant rule articulated in
Keith
and
Zweibon I
is to recognize a substantive right to compensation for injury.
Retroactive application would therefore seem fully consonant with those decisions and
Bivens.
That our ruling might have an incidental deterrent effect on official conduct in the future hardly establishes that retroactive application is improper because it will retard the effectiveness of the
Bivens
doctrine.
But the analogy between this case and traditional tort doctrine may not be complete. Courts have indeed held tort defendants to a standard of conduct they could not have known before they performed the actions giving rise to liability
The basis for such rulings, however, is the conviction that the standards for tort liability probably have little impact on actual conduct,
and that if a retroactive standard is reasonable, “the conduct of right-minded men would not have been different if the rule embodied in the decision had been announced by statute in advance.”
The analogous proposition that Fourth Amendment rules have only a minor impact on conduct may not be apt, since the standards of the Fourth Amendment were considered, though perhaps incorrectly gauged, in establishing the Government’s policy on national security wiretaps.
Moreover, a clear purpose of the Fourth Amendment is to affect official conduct.
Thus on this second
Chevron Oil
criterion we find that conflicting considerations yield no clear answer to the prospectivity question. As a standard of conduct to be applied in a civil tort suit, the warrant requirement is presumed to apply retroactively. To the extent that the earlier standard, as understood, was the actual basis for the challenged surveillance, equitable concerns might be seen to require prospectivity only. Accordingly, we must explore the fairness of retroactivity in this situation.
C
The central equitable concern in prospectivity decisions in damage actions is whether the defendants had notice of the new rule. If a truly new standard for liability has been promulgated, how can people be held to that rule for conduct preceding its announcement? In this case,
however, where there was no “avulsive” change of law, the qualified immunity available to appellees ensures that no such inequitable result can occur. As we state today in
Halperin v. Kissinger,
Government officials sued for alleged violations of Title III or the Constitution in the performance of their official duties may offer as an affirmative defense (1) that they had reasonable grounds to believe their actions were legal, and (2) that there is no evidence that they acted in bad faith.
The first ground clearly covers the fairness problems we might face with this case. By establishing immunity for actions reasonably thought to be legal, there can be no danger that a defendant will be held to a standard of conduct he could not have known, so long as there is no showing that he acted in bad faith. And if bad faith were demonstrated there would be little weight to any individual’s equitable claim for restricting
Keith
and
Zweibon I
to prospective effect.
Consequently, we refuse to bar application of the warrant requirement of
Keith
and
Zweibon I
to this case. To do so would deny appellants the opportunity to seek compensation for constitutional deprivations they may have suffered while providing only a redundant protection for appellees. In such a situation there is no basis for straying from the presumption that judicial decisions operate both prospectively and retroactively.
IV
The District Court also denied retroactive effect to the conclusion of the plurality in
Zweibon I
that the “procedures and remedies” of Title III should apply to unconstitutional national security wiretaps.
We believe that the
Chevron Oil
standards support that ruling.
We think it is plain from the opinion of the
Zweibon I
plurality that its position on the statutory question was not clearly foreshadowed. The plurality noted that
Keith,
the closest precedent, “offers only ambiguous guidance” on the impact of Title III on unconstitutional national security surveillances, and acknowledged “some merit” in the District Court’s view that
Keith
completely bars application of Title III to national security wiretaps.
According to the plurality, the language of the statute and the legislative history are also “somewhat ambiguous” on this point.
In addition, there had been no judicial comment on the relationship between the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement in national security situations and the provisions of Title III. The statutory issue was thus one of
first impression, and was quite complex, involving sophisticated analysis of
Keith
and of the legislative record.
The plurality’s application of Title III to unconstitutional national security surveillance represented the sort of sharp break in the law which should be restricted to prospective effect.
In light of our conclusion in this case that the constitutional warrant requirement should have retroactive effect, the second and third
Chevron Oil
criteria support only prospective application of the position that Title III procedures and remedies are relevant to unconstitutional national security surveillances. Like the
Bivens
doctrine discussed above, the procedures and remedies of Title III have two dominant purposes: (1) to prevent or deter improper invasions of privacy, and (2) to provide compensation when such invasions occur. The deterrent purpose of Title III is necessarily forward-looking and hence not contingent upon retroactive application. And so long as plaintiffs have the opportunity to seek redress under the
Bivens
line of cases, we will not frustrate the compensatory purpose of the statute by denying retroactive effect to the view of the
Zweibon I
plurality involved here.
Finally, the availability of the constitutional remedy dilutes any equitable claim of these plaintiffs on this point.
Accordingly, the judgment of the District Court is reversed on the retroactivity of the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement and affirmed on the statutory question, and the case is remanded for further proceedings.
So ordered.