Pocket Veto Clause ( 1990 )


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  •                                                    Pocket Veto Clause
    T h e w o rd in g o f th e P o c k e t V eto C la u se o f th e C o n stitu tio n th a t a b ill s h a ll n o t b e c o m e la w if
    " th e C o n g re s s b y th e ir A d jo u rn m e n t p re v e n t its R e tu rn ” b y th e P r e s id e n t — e x p re s s e s th e
    a ss u m p tio n th a t a d jo u rn m e n ts o rd in a rily m ak e th e re tu rn o f a b ill im p o s s ib le , b u t th e c le a r
    s tru c tu ra l ru le e s ta b lis h e d b y th e C la u se a p p lie s to all a d jo u rn m e n ts in th e c o n s titu tio n a l
    s e n s e , e v en i f C o n g re s s h a s ta k e n m e a su re s to m ak e th e re tu rn o f a b ill p o s sib le .
    T h e d ra ftin g h is to ry o f th e P o c k e t V eto C la u se sh o w s an in te n t to a v o id e x c e s s iv e p e rio d s o f
    u n c e rta in ty a b o u t th e fate o f b ills p a sse d b y C o n g re ss.
    O rd in a ry le g is la tio n e x p re ss in g C o n g re s s ’ v ie w a b o u t th e c a te g o ry o f a d jo u rn m e n ts c o v e r e d b y
    th e P o c k e t V eto C la u s e is in a p p ro p ria te , b e c a u s e s u c h le g is la tio n c a n n o t c h a n g e th e m e a n in g
    o f th e c o n s titu tio n a l term s.
    P re s id e n ts F o rd a n d C a r te r m a y h a v e p u rp o rte d to re tu rn b ills th a t, u n d e r th e C o n s titu tio n , c o u ld
    o n ly b e p o c k e t v e to e d . T h u s, th e b ills th e y b e lie v ed th e y h a d re tu rn -v e to e d m a y in fa c t h a v e
    b e e n p o c k e t-v e to e d in ste a d . A s fa r a s w e kn o w , h o w e v er, th is h as n o p ra c tic a l e ffect.
    C o n g re s s c a n a v o id a p p lic a tio n o f th e P o c k e t V eto C la u se d u rin g b r ie f a d jo u rn m e n ts b y s c h e d u l­
    in g p re s e n tm e n t o f b ills so th a t th e te n th d a y a fte r p re s e n tm e n t d o e s n o t fa ll d u rin g a n
    a d jo u rn m e n t o f e ith e r H o u se th a t is lo n g e r th a n th re e d a y s.
    May 17, 1990
    L e t t e r f o r a M e m b e r o f t h e H o u s e o f R e p r e s e n t a t iv e s
    The Department very much appreciates your interest in the Pocket Veto
    Clause. As I indicated at the hearing on last Wednesday, I would like to
    present more detailed answers to your thoughtful questions.
    Your first question concerned the text of the clause, which provides that a
    bill becomes a law without the President’s signature if he has not returned it
    to Congress with his objections after ten days (Sundays excepted) “unless
    the Congress by their Adjournment prevent its Return, in which Case it shall
    not be a law.” U.S. Const, art. I, § 7, cl. 2. Our position, as you know, is
    that all adjournments of Congress in the constitutional sense prevent the
    return of a bill. Your question was whether that is a natural reading of the
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    text; in particular, you asked whether if the Framers meant to say that they
    would simply have said “unless the Congress adjourn.”
    We think that the formulation that appears in the Constitution is a very
    natural way to express our understanding. In drafting the Pocket Veto
    Clause, the Federal Convention was primarily concerned with the situation
    in which Congress had made return impossible.1 Adjournment was signifi­
    cant as the reason that return was impossible. If a drafter is referring to a
    particular cause but is principally interested in its effect, it is quite natural
    to refer to both together; indeed, it would be unnatural and confusing to
    refer only to the cause and not to mention the effect, where the effect is the
    prim ary concern. For example, consider a veterans benefit program open
    to all form er service members except those who have lost their American
    citizenship through expatriation. One might refer to such persons as those
    who have been expatriated, but it is more informative and more natural to
    include the reference to loss o f citizenship, because that is the reason expa­
    triation is significant in this context.2
    In addition, if a speaker presupposes that one event necessarily entails a
    consequence, it is quite normal to include that presupposition in the expres­
    sion. Thus, in the example I gave at the hearings, a legal rule might require
    a husband to notify his wife of something, unless her death prevents the
    notification. The fact that the rule is phrased that way, and does not say that
    the husband must notify his wife unless she dies, would not lead us to
    im agine instances in which death might not prevent notification.
    Moreover, our understanding of the text accords with the expectation that
    the Framers, in drafting the structural provisions of the Constitution, sought
    to establish brightline rules that are capable of mechanical application. See
    INS v. Chadha, 
    462 U.S. 919
    , 945 (1983). Clarity is all-important with
    respect to the law-making process itself. We think it unlikely that the Fram­
    ers drafted an open-ended provision that would invite debate as to whether
    an adjournment was of the kind that prevents a return or not. On the con­
    trary, their principles of Constitution writing require clearer rules than that,
    and our reading makes the Pocket Veto Clause clear and mechanical.
    Next, you suggested a possible response to our argument based on the
    drafting history of the Pocket Veto Clause. We pointed out that the Commit­
    tee on Detail of the Federal Convention considered a version of the clause
    under which, if Congress had adjourned after presenting a bill, the President
    would hold the bill until the next session of Congress. The Committee,
    however, rejected that form o f the rule in favor of the Pocket Veto Clause as
    it appears in the Constitution. We suggest that this indicates that the Federal
    1A s w e e x p la in , th at co n ce rn arose b o th because C o n g ress m ight thereby seek to circum vent the veto
    a n d b e ca u se if retu rn is im possible so is p ro m p t reconsideration.
    2 T h is re a d in g is e n tire ly consistent w ith the m axim th at all the w o rd s o f a text sh o u ld h av e m eaning.
    In o u r v iew , th e C o n v e n tio n referred to b o th a d jo u rn m e n t an d p re v e n tio n o f re tu rn fo r g re a te r c larity ,
    n o t in o rd e r to lim it the c la ss o f ad jo u rn m en ts to w h ich th e Pocket V eto C la u se ap p lies. T h e m axim
    d o e s n o t o p e ra te to re q u ire th a t drafters b e as laconic as p o ssib le.
    104
    Convention was concerned, not only with the possibility that Congress might
    seek to evade the President’s veto by passing laws and then adjourning, but
    also with excessive periods of uncertainty concerning the fate o f a vetoed
    bill.3 You suggest that the Convention may instead have wanted to avoid the
    situation in which one Congress passes a bill and the next Congress, with
    different personnel, decides whether to override the President’s veto.
    While that is a possible explanation of the Committee’s decision, we
    think it less plausible than the one we suggest. The Constitution as the
    Convention approved it permits one Congress to override a veto that the
    President returned to the preceding Congress. If one Congress ends within
    ten days of the date on which the next Congress convenes, the President may
    return the bill with his objections to the new Congress, which then could
    conduct an override vote. This is not just a hypothetical possibility. In
    1983, the 98th Congress convened less than ten days after the sine die ad­
    journment of the 97th Congress; in a more extreme case, the 39th Congress
    adjourned sine die the morning of March 4, 1867, and the 40th Congress
    convened that afternoon. Had the Committee been concerned with this prob­
    lem when they were drafting Article I, Section 7, they would have dealt with
    it in its primary manifestation as well as in the context of the pocket veto.
    Third, you suggested that legislation such as H.R. 849, 101st Cong., 1st
    Sess. (1989), may be appropriate as a vindication of Congress’ view of the
    Constitution. We agree wholeheartedly that all three branches have obliga­
    tions to the Constitution and must interpret it in order to perform their
    functions. Naturally, Members of Congress should base their votes on their
    understanding of the Constitution. H.R. 849, however, is not an exercise of
    Congress’ legislative power in the ordinary sense. The part of the bill to
    which we object is a pure statement of a proposition of constitutional inter­
    pretation that can have no independent legal effect: whether any adjournment
    or class of adjournments prevents the return of a bill depends on the mean­
    ing of the Pocket Veto Clause, and that meaning cannot be changed by
    ordinary legislation. Thus, the bill is a statement of congressional position
    rather than an actual legal rule. For that reason, we think it inappropriate
    for Congress to attempt to embody its view in a statute, thereby asking the
    President’s assent to a legal conclusion with which he disagrees.
    You also asked whether our interpretation of the Pocket Veto Clause un­
    dermines the accord that was reached under Presidents Ford and Carter, and
    indeed suggests that many bills may have become laws contrary to the un­
    derstanding of President and Congress. As we understand it, the practice
    under Presidents Ford and Carter was to proceed as if the Pocket Veto Clause
    was applicable only after sine die adjournments of Congress, and to employ
    return vetoes in all other circumstances.
    ’ M oreo v er, as you know , the Suprem e C ourt has also stated that the o p portunity for p ro m p t re c o n sid ­
    eratio n o f a bill is one o f the p u rposes o f the P ocket Veto C lause. The Pocket Veto Case, 2 7 9 U .S. 6 5 5 ,
    684-85 (1929).
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    Congress and the President cannot change the meaning of the Pocket Veto
    Clause by an understanding between themselves, and if they proceed on an
    incorrect premise as to the applicable constitutional rules their actions may
    not have the consequences they anticipate. When Congress is adjourned
    within the meaning of the Pocket Veto Clause on the tenth day after a bill
    has been presented, that bill is pocket vetoed unless the President signs it.
    Because the pocket veto operates automatically and not through any action
    o f the President, this is true even if the President returns the bill to Congress
    in what he believes to be a return veto. The President cannot choose whether
    to use a return veto or a pocket veto; by definition, the Pocket Veto Clause
    operates only when a return veto is impossible. Moreover, the President’s
    views as to the operation of the pocket veto do not affect the meaning o f the
    Constitution. Therefore, if the position we take is correct, it is correct
    whether or not we take it, and the fact that the Department has espoused a
    particular reading o f the Pocket Veto Clause will not effect the validity of
    any statute.
    As a consequence, some bills that Presidents Ford and Carter believed
    they had return-vetoed may in fact have been pocket-vetoed instead. As far
    as we know, however, this has no practical effect. The only difference be­
    tween a return veto and a pocket veto is that a return veto is subject to
    override. We know of no bill that ostensibly became a law through an
    override of a supposed return veto that under our reading of the Constitution
    was in fact a pocket veto.4
    Finally, I would like to expand on what appears to have been some confu­
    sion during the hearing on the practical implications of our position for brief
    adjournments o f Congress.
    The Court explained in W right v. United States, 
    302 U.S. 583
     (1938), that
    Congress, considered as a bicameral body, is adjourned whenever either House
    is adjourned for more than three days. This does not mean, however, that a
    bill will be subject to the Pocket Veto Clause whenever Congress takes a
    brief adjournment while the bill is pending before the President. Rather, the
    pocket veto operates only if the tenth day after presentment falls during an
    adjournment. This is true because, once again, the pocket veto is not a
    power o f the President that he exercises affirmatively. Rather, pocket vetoes
    happen automatically on the tenth day after presentment if the President has
    not signed the bill. Thus, the Court’s reading of the Adjournment Clause
    requires, at most, attention to the scheduling of presentments, so that the
    tenth day after presentment does not fall during an adjournment of either
    House that is longer than three days.
    JOHN O. McGINNIS
    D eputy Assistant Attorney General
    Office o f Legal Counsel
    4 In a d d itio n , if P resid e n ts Ford and C a rte r proceeded o n an incorrect understanding o f the P o c k e t Veto
    C la u se , it is p o ssib le th at b ills may h a v e been pocket v e to e d w hen the P resident thought that th e y had
    b e c o m e law w ith o u t h is signature. W e know o f no su ch instances, how ever.
    106
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 5/17/1990

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/29/2017