Severability and Duration of Appropriations Rider Concerning Frozen Poultry Regulations

CourtDepartment of Justice Office of Legal Counsel
DecidedJune 4, 1996
StatusPublished

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Severability and Duration of Appropriations Rider Concerning Frozen Poultry Regulations, (olc 1996).

Opinion

Severability and Duration of Appropriations Rider Concerning Frozen Poultry Regulations A provision in the Departm ent o f Agriculture appropriations legislation for Fiscal Year 1996, providing that a regulation otherwise rendered inoperative could be put into effect if a revised version of the regulation submitted by the Secretary of Agriculture was received and approved by two commit­ tees o f Congress, violates the constitutional separation o f powers by purporting to provide for the legislative enactm ent o f a regulation without bicameral passage and presentment, as required by Article I o f the Constitution.

This unconstitutional provision is severable from the remainder o f the section and statute in which it is contained, so that the section’s prohibition against the use o f appropriated funds to implement the subject regulation, and its provision that the regulation may not take effect absent authorizing legislation, are both constitutionally enforceable.

All provisions o f the section, including its prohibition against the regulation taking effect absent future authorizing legislation, are limited in duration to the 1996 Fiscal Year.

June 4, 1996

M e m o r a n d u m O p in io n fo r th e G en er a l Coun sel De p a r t m e n t of A g r ic u l t u r e

This responds to your letter of March 13, 1996, requesting the views of this Office regarding section 726 of the Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-37, 109 Stat. 299, 332 (1995) (“ the Act” ). Specifically, you have asked (1) whether section 726 is unconstitutional in whole or in part; (2) if it is unconsti­ tutional only in part, whether the constitutionally sustainable portions are severable from the unconstitutional portion, and therefore valid and effective; and (3) wheth­ er the sustainable provisions of section 726 constitute permanent or temporary legislation. Section 726 prohibits the use of fiscal year 1996 (“ FY 1996” ) appropriations to implement or enforce a regulation promulgated by the Department of Agri­ culture (“ USDA” ) concerning the labeling of raw poultry products. See Use of the Term “ Fresh” on the Labelling of Raw Poultry Products, 60 Fed. Reg. 44,396 (1995). It also sets forth conditions that must be met before that regulation may legally “ take effect.” Section 726 provides as follows:

None of the funds appropriated or otherwise made available by this Act may be used to develop compliance guidelines, implement or enforce a regulation promulgated by the Food Safety and Inspec­ tion Service on August 25, 1995 (60 Fed. Reg. 44396): Provided, That this regulation shall take effect only if legislation is enacted into law which directs the Secretary of Agriculture to promulgate such regulation, or the House Committee on Agriculture and the

232 Severability and Duration o f Appropriations Rider Concerning Frozen Poultry Regulations

Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry receive and approve a proposed revised regulation submitted by the Sec­ retary of Agriculture.

109 Stat. at 332.' In a statement made upon signing the Act, the President said, “ Section 726 raises constitutional concerns and I have therefore asked the Department of Justice to advise me as to the validity and enforceability of that section.” 2 Pub. Papers of William J. Clinton 1690, 1691 (Oct. 27, 1995). This opinion addresses the constitutional concerns raised by the President and subsequently reiterated in your specific request for an opinion. We conclude that the final proviso of section 726 violates the constitutional separation of powers by purporting to provide for the legislative enactment of a regulation without bicameral passage and presentment, as required by Article I of the Constitution. U.S. Const, art. I, §7; INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919, 952 (1983). We further conclude that this unconstitutional proviso is severable from the remainder of the section and the statute, so that section 726’s prohibition against the use of appropriated funds to implement the subject regulation, and its provision that the regulation may not take effect absent authorizing legislation, are both constitutionally enforceable. Finally, we conclude that all provisions of section 726, including its prohibition against the regulation taking effect absent future authorizing legislation, are limited in duration to the 1996 Fiscal Year.

DISCUSSION

1. Enactm ent o f R egulation by Com m ittee Action

When exercising its power to pass legislation, Congress must act in accordance with the procedures established in Article I, Section 7 of the Constitution: passage by both houses of Congress and presentment to the President for signature or veto. Chadha, 462 U.S. at 951. In Chadha, the Supreme Court struck down a statute that authorized either house of Congress, by passing a concurrent resolution and without presentment to the President, to veto particular decisions by the Attor­ ney General. While acknowledging that Congress had the authority to achieve that same ultimate result through the proper exercise of its legislative power, the Court held the statute unconstitutional because Congress was exercising that au­ thority without following the bicameral passage and presentment procedures speci­ fied in Article I.

‘ We note that this section is not a model o f legislative clarity. For example, the proviso contains an internal contradiction in that it provides that the poultry regulation promulgated by USDA in August 1995 “ shall take effect only if” the House and Senate agricultural committees receive and approve a “ revised regulation’*— i.e., a different regulation.

233 Opinions o f the O ffice o f Legal Counsel in Volume 20

By its terms, the final clause of section 726 provides that an otherwise inoper­ ative regulation proposed by USDA can be validated and enacted as a binding regulation if it is approved by two named committees of Congress. Section 726 would thus authorize these congressional committees, acting independently of the Congress as a whole and without presentment to the President, to enact a rule that governs the actions and conduct of persons outside the legislative branch. While the clause in question speaks in terms of allowing a regulation to “ take effect,” the actual legal effect of the committees’ action would be essentially in­ distinguishable from the enactment of a law or statute. Such legislative action cannot be validly accomplished by mere committees of the Congress. Therefore, the “ committee approval” clause of section 726 is un­ constitutional under the fundamental principles expressed in Chadha. Like the one- house legislative veto invalidated by that decision, section 726 violates Article I’s specific requirements for the enactment of legislation. While Congress has broad authority to grant, limit, or withhold appropriations, that power may not be used — as it would be here— to circumvent the steps required by the Constitu­ tion for Congress to enact a law or regulation binding on persons outside the legislative branch.

2. Severability

Although we conclude that the committee-approval clause of section 726 is in­ valid, the section’s primary clause barring the use of fiscal year 1996 appropria­ tions to implement or enforce the poultry regulation would present no constitu­ tional problem standing by itself. That raises the question whether the otherwise valid restriction on the use of appropriations is severable from the unconstitutional component of section 726. In Alaska Airlines, Inc. v. B rock, 480 U.S. 678

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480 U.S. 678 (Supreme Court, 1987)

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