Constitutionality of Bill Establishing American Folklife Center in the Library of Congress ( 1975 )


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  •        Constitutionality of Bill Establishing American Folklife
    Center in the Library of Congress
    A bill creating an American Folklife Center in the Library of Congress would violate the separation of
    powers by vesting the Librarian of Congress, a congressional officer, with executive functions.
    The bill would also violate the Appointments Clause by permitting certain members of the Board of
    Directors of the American Folklife Center to be appointed by members of Congress, the Board of
    Directors of the Smithsonian Institution, and the Librarian of Congress.
    December 31, 1975
    MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE COUNSEL TO THE PRESIDENT
    This is in response to the telephone request of Mr. Barry Roth of your staff for
    the views of the Department of Justice on the constitutional aspects of the above-
    entitled enrolled bill, with which the Department has had no prior contact.
    The bill contains findings to the effect that it is appropriate and necessary for
    the federal government to support research and scholarship in American folklife,
    and that the encouragement and support of American folklife is an appropriate
    matter of concern to the federal government. H.R. 6673, 94 Cong., 1st Sess. § 2
    (1975). The bill then sets up an American Folklife Center in the Library of Con-
    gress. 
    Id. § 4(a).
    The Center would be under the direction of a Board of Trustees
    composed as follows:
    (1) four members appointed by the President [of the United States];
    (2) four members appointed by the President pro tempore of the Sen-
    ate . . . and four members appointed by the Speaker of the House of
    Representatives . . . ;
    (3) the Librarian of Congress;
    (4) the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution;
    (5) the Chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts;
    (6) the Chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities;
    and
    (7) the Director of the Center.
    
    Id. § 4(b).
        The Librarian of Congress is empowered to appoint a Director of the Center
    after consultation with the Board. 
    Id. § 4(f).
    The Director would be the chief
    executive officer of the Center, and would have responsibility for carrying out the
    379
    Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 1
    functions of the Center, subject to the direction of the Board and the general
    supervision of the Librarian. 
    Id. § 4(g).
       Section 5 sets forth the functions which the Librarian of Congress is authorized
    to perform under the Act (subsection (a)) and provides that they are to be carried
    out through the Center (subsection (b)).
    In our view the bill presents two important constitutional problems: the first
    involves the doctrine of the separation of powers, which requires that statutes
    assigning executive duties must be administered by the Executive Branch and not
    by congressional officers, such as the Librarian of Congress; the second is the
    principle that functions of an executive nature must be carried out by officers of
    the United States appointed in compliance with the requirements of Article II of
    the Constitution.
    I.
    Article I of the Constitution vests the legislative power of the United States in
    the Congress. Article II vests the executive power of the United States in the
    President and directs him to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.” This
    means that statutes creating functions of an executive nature are to be carried out
    by the Executive Branch of the government under the supervision of the President,
    and not by congressional agencies. This basic constitutional consideration, of
    course, does not preclude the performance of internal congressional functions and
    of congressional services by congressional officers. The bill, however, goes far
    beyond that. Some of the functions to be performed by the Librarian of Congress
    through the American Folklife Center have, it is true, a substantial nexus with the
    Library of Congress (see, e.g., H.R. 6673, § 5(a)(2)–(5))—though even as to these
    it is open to question whether they truly come within the ambit of an institution
    whose primary purpose is to give library and reference service to Congress. This,
    however, cannot under any circumstances be said of the contract authority set forth
    in section 5(a)(1), empowering the Librarian to
    enter into, in conformity with Federal procurement statutes and regu-
    lations, contracts with individuals and groups for programs for the—
    (A) initiation, encouragement, support, organization, and promo-
    tion of research, scholarship, and training in American folklife;
    (B) initiation, promotion, support, organization, and production of
    live performances, festivals, exhibits, and workshops related to
    American folklife;
    (C) purchase, receipt, production, arrangement for, and support of
    the production of exhibitions, displays, publications, and presen-
    tations (including presentations by still and motion picture films,
    380
    Constitutionality of Bill Establishing American Folklife Center
    and audio and visual magnetic tape recordings) which represent or
    illustrate some aspect of American folklife; and
    (D) purchase, production, arrangement for, and support of the
    production of exhibitions, projects, presentations, and materials
    specially designed for classroom use representing or illustrating
    some aspect of American folklife.
    These activities do not appear to be related to any internal congressional func-
    tion or service. While it is true that a few other functions of the Library, such as
    the provision of books and sound production records to the blind and other
    physically handicapped persons, 2 U.S.C. § 135a, are not directly so related either,
    they are at least a logical adjunct of the historical library function which the
    venerable institution has provided. While one may permit this for reasons of
    practicality and historical prescription, the extension of the institution’s activities
    into the entirely unrelated field of funding folklife training and performances is a
    change of qualitative nature. The extension would thus have been made first, from
    an institution which serves the Congress as a library; to one which serves the
    public in the same capacity; and finally, to one which serves the public in capaci-
    ties entirely unrelated either to congressional service or to libraries. This last
    extension moves the Library of Congress into areas now occupied by the National
    Endowment for the Arts, and the National Endowment for the Humanities (both
    executive agencies).
    II.
    The second constitutional problem in the bill concerns the manner in which ten
    members of the Board of Trustees of the American Folklife Center are to be
    appointed.
    Under the bill, the Board would perform important functions in the administra-
    tion of the statutory program; its responsibilities would not be limited to advice.
    For example, it would give direction, not merely advice, to the Director of the
    Center, an official appointed by the Librarian (H.R. 6673, § 4(g)(1)); and certain
    functions of the Center could be undertaken only if the Board considers them
    “appropriate” (id. § 5(a)(5), (6)). Again, certain types of contracts may be entered
    into only with the concurrence of the Board. See, e.g., 
    id. §§ 6(a),
    7(a)(3), 7(a)(8).
    Under section 7(a)(7) a majority of two-thirds of the members of the Board may
    even waive otherwise applicable bonding requirements.
    The Board therefore performs functions of an executive nature. Its activities are
    not merely of an advisory nature or limited to a single task of limited duration, as
    is the case with so-called ad hoc officers. See The Constitution of the United
    States: Analysis and Interpretation, S. Doc. No. 92-82, at 523 (1973).
    381
    Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 1
    It follows that the functions of the members of the Board of Trustees can be
    performed only by persons who are officers of the United States and appointed in
    the manner prescribed by Article II, Section 2, Clause 2 of the Constitution,
    namely, by the President by and with the advice of the Senate, or with congres-
    sional authorization by the President alone, or the courts of law, or the heads of
    departments.
    The bill fails to comply with these constitutional requirements with respect to
    the following members of the Board:
    (a) The eight members appointed by the President pro tempore of the
    Senate and the Speaker of the House, respectively;
    (b) The Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, who is appointed by
    the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution (20 U.S.C. § 44),
    which cannot be viewed as the equivalent of a department head with-
    in the meaning of Article II; and
    (c) The Director of the Center who would be appointed by the
    Librarian of Congress who similarly does not have the status of a de-
    partment head within the meaning of Article II of the Constitution.
    A similar problem arose in connection with the legislation establishing the
    Japan-United States Friendship Commission (Japan-United States Friendship Act,
    Pub. L. No. 94-118, 89 Stat. 603 (1975)) and in the Arts and Artifacts Indemnity
    Act (Pub. L. No. 94-158, 89 Stat. 844 (1975)). There, as indicated in the Presi-
    dent’s signing statements, Statement on Signing the Japan-United States Friend-
    ship Act, 2 Pub. Papers of Pres. Gerald R. Ford 1718, 1719 (Oct. 21, 1975);
    Statement on Signing the Arts and Artifacts Indemnity Act, 2 
    id. 1990, 1991
    (Dec.
    22, 1975), it was possible to obviate the difficulty by considering the members
    appointed by the President pro tempore and the Speaker to be advisory, nonvoting
    members. This approach does not appear to be available here, because the impro-
    perly appointed members would constitute ten out of seventeen of the Board’s
    membership.
    For the above reasons, it is our view that the provisions of this legislation are
    contrary to the strict provisions of the Constitution. It must be acknowledged,
    however, that in the area of cultural and educational affairs, the separation of
    powers may not have been strictly observed. Despite the fact that they do not
    constitute as drastic a departure from the constitutional requirements as the present
    bill, those provisions of the Library of Congress statute which authorize the
    provision of specific services to the public must be considered a technical
    anomaly. Indeed, it is probably demonstrable that from an early date the primary
    function of the Library of Congress has been public service rather than congres-
    sional assistance. Similarly, the makeup of the Smithsonian Institution—if that is
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    Constitutionality of Bill Establishing American Folklife Center
    to be regarded as a federal agency, a point which is subject to some dispute—
    contravenes the constitutional text.
    Complete acceptance of this historical practice runs the risk of inviting further
    transfers to the Library of Congress of cultural and educational functions; and
    perhaps of encouraging more serious encroachments upon executive prerogatives
    through the assignment of entirely different functions to the General Accounting
    Office. Moreover, it appears from our experience with the Japan-United States
    Friendship Commission and the Arts and Artifacts Indemnity Act, discussed
    above, that only a presidential veto directed at this practice will suffice to call the
    attention of Congress to the problem involved. Given the very nature of all of these
    cultural and educational proposals, it may be vain to await an occasion for a
    presidential veto more propitious than the present. Nonetheless, in light of the
    historical practice, we think the President can responsibly sign the present legis-
    lation with the expression of his serious reservation concerning the constitutional
    propriety of placing such functions outside the Executive Branch.*
    ANTONIN SCALIA
    Assistant Attorney General
    Office of Legal Counsel
    *
    Editor’s Note: President Ford signed H.R. 6673 into law as the American Folklife Preservation
    Act, Pub. L. No. 94-201, 89 Stat. 1129 (Jan. 2, 1976). As advised, he expressed “serious reservations
    concerning the constitutional propriety of placing the functions to be performed by the Center outside
    the executive branch and the assignment of executive duties to officers appointed by Congress.”
    Statement on Signing the American Folklife Preservation Act, 1 Pub. Papers of Pres. Gerald R. Ford
    6, 6 (Jan. 3, 1976). “However,” said President Ford, “given historical practice and custom in the area of
    cultural and educational affairs and the potential of H.R. 6673 to enrich the cultural life of the Nation, I
    am granting my approval to the measure.” 
    Id. at 6-7.
    The American Folklife Center remains a part of
    the Library of Congress today. See 20 U.S.C. §§ 2101 et seq.
    A recent D.C. Circuit decision reached a different conclusion regarding the separation of powers
    and Appointments Clause issues addressed in this opinion, holding that the Library of Congress is part
    of the Executive Branch and that the Librarian is a department head, at least with respect to the
    Copyright Office. Intercollegiate Broad. Sys., Inc. v. Copyright Royalty Bd., 
    684 F.3d 1332
    , 1342 (D.C.
    Cir. 2012).
    383
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 12/31/1975

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/29/2017