Constitutionality of Proposed Regulations of Joint Committee on Printing

CourtDepartment of Justice Office of Legal Counsel
DecidedApril 11, 1984
StatusPublished

This text of Constitutionality of Proposed Regulations of Joint Committee on Printing (Constitutionality of Proposed Regulations of Joint Committee on Printing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Constitutionality of Proposed Regulations of Joint Committee on Printing, (olc 1984).

Opinion

Constitutionality of Proposed Regulations of Joint Committee on Printing

Proposed regulations issued by the Jo in t Committee on Printing, which purport to regulate a broad array o f printing activities o f the Executive Branch, are not authorized by statute.

T he proposed regulations are unconstitutional on tw o grounds. First, because members of the Joint Com m ittee on Printing are n o t appointed in accordance with the Appointments Clause, art. n , § 2, cl.2 o f the Constitution, they may not perform Executive functions, such as rulem aking, which m ay be perform ed only by properly appointed Officers of the United States. Second, the delegation of legislative power to the Joint Committee on Printing violates the constitutional requirements fo r legislative action, bicameral passage and presentment to the President.

April 11, 1984

M em orandum O p in io n for th e C o un sel to the D ir e c t o r , O f f ic e o f M anagem ent and Budget

This responds to your request for our opinion on the constitutionality, in light of the Supreme Court’s decisions in Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1 (1976), and 1 N S \. Chadha, 462U.S.919(1983),of the proposed regulations published by the Joint Committee on Printing on November 11, 1983. For the reasons discussed below, we conclude that the regulations are statutorily unsupported and constitutionally impermissible. The proposed regulations would effect a significant departure from the historical role of the Joint Committee on Printing (JCP).1 Specifically, they would redefine “printing” to encompass virtually all processes by which leg­ ible material is created or stored, thus increasing the number of activities purportedly subject to JCP oversight and control. These activities include, among others, planning and design of government publications (defined to mean any textual material reproduced for distribution to government depart­ ments or to the public), word processing, data storage and document retrieval, apparently subsuming the operation of every copying facility of a department. The proposed regulations would require executive departments to submit an­ nual plans outlining their intended activities and to seek advance approval of all projected goals, policies, strategies, purchases, publications, and means of distribution. In addition, departments would be asked to submit plans for a 1 This is not to say that the current role of the JCP necessarily enjoys statutory authority or constitutional sanction. We have not attempted to evaluate those issues in this memorandum.

42 second and third year, seeking JCP approval of all projections relating to the expanded concept of printing. These obligations would “provide the committee with a broader and better overview of all of the Federal Government’s printing and publishing activities.” 129 Cong. Rec. 32286 (1983) (remarks of JCP Chairman Hawkins). The revised regulations, governing storage, duplication and distribution of information, “seek to replace JCP micro-management pro­ cedures with oversight and policymaking functions.” Id. The JCP is composed of the Chairman and two members of the Committee on Rules and Administration of the Senate and the Chairman and two members of the Committee on House Administration of the House of Representatives. 44 U.S.C. § 101. Vacancies are filled by the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives. Id. § 102. The authorized functions of the JCP are specified in various provisions of 44 U.S.C. This memorandum will address, in turn, the three major legal issues sug­ gested by these regulations: (1) whether there is statutory authority for the proposed regulations, (2) whether the regulations would involve congressional performance of executive functions, and (3) whether a joint committee of Congress is seeking to exercise legislative power. We conclude that the pro­ posed regulations fail on all three grounds.2

I. Statutory Authority

The first issue we address is the statutory basis for promulgation of these “legislative” rules. The Printing and Documents statute, 44 U.S.C., contains three sections upon which the JCP relies for its “regulatory” authority. The first is 44 U.S.C. § 103, which allows the JCP to “use any measures it considers necessary to remedy neglect, delay, duplication, or waste in the public printing and binding and the distribution of Government publications.” Second, § 501 provides that all government printing, binding, and blank book work shall be done at the Government Printing Office (GPO), except: (1) work the JCP considers “to be urgent or necessary to have done elsewhere” and (2) printing in field plants operated by executive or independent departments, “if approved by the Joint Committee on Printing.” Finally, § 502 provides that if the Public Printer is unable to do certain printing work at the GPO, he may enter into contracts to have the work produced elsewhere, “with the approval of the Joint Committee on Printing.” As far as we are aware, these statutory provisions constitute the full extent to which the entire Congress might have been said to empower the JCP to participate in the decisionmaking process involving print­ ing and distribution of materials published by the Executive Branch. The proposed regulations were published in the Congressional Record on November 11,1983, a gesture apparently not mandated by any existing statute. 2 B ecause we conclude that the regulations as a w hole cannot legally be enforced against the Executive Branch, w e do not seek in this m emorandum to discuss the legality o f various provisions o f the regulations individually. C onsequently, we have not attem pted to resolve the specific question raised in your request regarding the regulations’ apparent effect o f transferring to the G PO revenues that ordinarily would be paid into the accounts o f individual agencies o r the U nited States Treasury.

43 Nor are we aware of any other procedural requirements that might apply to promulgation of “regulations” such as these. Although Congress has enacted an elaborate scheme in the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) to control the issuance of regulations by executive agencies and to protect the persons subject to them by requiring broad opportunity for public notice and comment and availability of an administrative record reflecting these comments, we do not know of any analogous protections for those putatively subject to “legislative regulations.” On the one hand, for the reasons stated in Part II of this memoran­ dum, “legislative regulations” can apply only internally in Congress. Therefore one would not necessarily expect a scheme such as the APA to apply. On the other, it could also be assumed that had Congress contemplated or intended to authorize a committee’s issuance of broad, binding regulations that could have an effect on the public and on the Executive Branch, it might have enacted a procedure comparable to the APA to ensure that the practice comports with the principles of due process. Thus, it could be argued that it is doubtful that Congress intended to authorize this committee to assume a regulatory role with respect to persons outside the Legislative Branch. See INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. at 951. At the very least, authority to regulate in a sweeping fashion cannot be presumed without an express indication that Congress has specifically del­ egated regulatory power.3 The three statutory provisions mentioned above fall far short of a clear delegation of regulating authority.

A. 4 4 U.S.C.

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McGrain v. Daugherty
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Buckley v. Valeo
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