Michael Tankersley v. James Almand , 837 F.3d 390 ( 2016 )


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  •                               PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 15-1081
    MICHAEL EDWARD TANKERSLEY,
    Plaintiff − Appellant,
    v.
    JAMES W. ALMAND, in his official capacity as Trustee of the
    Client Protection Fund; DOUGLAS M. BREGMAN, in his official
    capacity as Trustee of the Client Protection Fund; CHARLES
    BAGLEY, IV, in his official capacity as Trustee of the
    Client Protection Fund; JOSEPH B. CHAZEN, in his official
    capacity as Trustee of the Client Protection Fund; CECELIA
    ANN KELLER, in her official capacity as Trustee of the
    Client Protection Fund; PATRICK A. ROBERSON, in his official
    capacity as Trustee of the Client Protection Fund; LEONARD
    H. SHAPIRO, in his official capacity as Trustee of the
    Client Protection Fund; DONNA HILL STATEON, in her official
    capacity as Trustee of the Client Protection Fund; DAVID
    WEISS, in his official capacity as Trustee of the Client
    Protection Fund; CLIENT PROTECTION FUND OF THE BAR OF
    MARYLAND; HONORABLE MARY ELLEN BARBERA, Chief Judge, in her
    official capacity; HONORABLE SALLY D. ADKINS, Judge, in her
    official capacity; HONORABLE CLAYTON GREENE, JR., Judge, in
    his official capacity; HONORABLE MICHELLE D. HOTTEN, in her
    official capacity as Judge of the Maryland Court of Appeals;
    HONORABLE ROBERT N. MCDONALD, Judge, in his official
    capacity; HONORABLE SHIRLEY WATTS, Judge, in her official
    capacity; BESSIE M. DECKER, in her official capacity as
    Clerk of the Court of Appeals; MARYLAND COURT OF APPEALS,
    Defendants − Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
    Maryland, at Baltimore.    Richard D. Bennett, District Judge.
    (1:14−cv−01668−RDB)
    Argued:   May 12, 2016              Decided:   September 13, 2016
    Before KING and DIAZ, Circuit Judges, and DAVIS, Senior Circuit
    Judge.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Diaz wrote the opinion, in
    which Judge King joined.    Senior Judge Davis wrote an opinion
    concurring in part and dissenting in part.
    ARGUED: Scott Matthew Michelman, PUBLIC CITIZEN LITIGATION
    GROUP, Washington, D.C., for Appellant.    Michele J. McDonald,
    OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF MARYLAND, Baltimore, Maryland,
    for Appellees.     ON BRIEF: Julie A. Murray, PUBLIC CITIZEN
    LITIGATION GROUP, Washington, D.C., for Appellant.     Brian E.
    Frosh, Attorney General, Alexis Rohde, Assistant Attorney
    General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF MARYLAND, Baltimore,
    Maryland, for Appellees.
    2
    DIAZ, Circuit Judge:
    All attorneys licensed in Maryland who are not permanently
    retired must pay an annual fee to the Client Protection Fund of
    the Bar of Maryland.             In addition to paying the fee, Maryland
    attorneys must also disclose their social security numbers to
    the Fund.      Relying on federal law, the Court of Appeals of
    Maryland    enacted       this    particular     mandate    in    support   of    the
    state’s efforts to collect back taxes and past-due child-support
    payments from attorneys.
    The    Court    of    Appeals    suspended        Michael    Tankersley’s    law
    license after he refused to provide his social security number
    to the Fund.        In response, Tankersley sued the trustees of the
    Fund and the judges and the clerk of the Court of Appeals (the
    “Defendants”),       all     in    their       official    capacities,      seeking
    injunctive    relief       based     on   his    claim     that    his   suspension
    violated the federal Privacy Act.
    The     district      court     granted     the     Defendants’     motion    to
    dismiss.     Because we find that federal law gives Maryland the
    power (acting through its agents) to compel the disclosure of
    social security numbers in this circumstance, we affirm.
    3
    I.
    A.
    The Court of Appeals of Maryland has the statutory power to
    “establish a Client Protection Fund of the Bar of Maryland,” in
    order    “to     maintain      the   integrity      of   the    legal     profession    by
    paying    money     to    reimburse        losses    caused      by   defalcations      of
    lawyers.”        
    Md. Code Ann., Bus. Occ. & Prof. § 10-311
    .                     As part
    of this principal mission, the Fund is also required by statute
    to “provide a list of lawyers who have paid an annual fee to the
    Fund during the previous fiscal year to . . . the Comptroller,
    to assist the Comptroller in determining whether each lawyer on
    the list has paid all undisputed taxes.”                    
    Id.
     § 10-313(a).         That
    list must include “the federal tax identification number of the
    person     or,     if    the     person      does    not       have   a    federal     tax
    identification          number,      the    Social       Security     number    of     the
    person.”       Id. § 10-313(b)(2)(ii).
    In promulgating rules to enforce this statute, the Court of
    Appeals referenced the power given to the state by 
    42 U.S.C. § 405
    (c)(2)(C)(i).             That provision was enacted as part of the
    Tax Reform Act of 1976, and it allows states to collect social
    security numbers for certain enumerated purposes, including the
    administration of tax laws.
    The Court of Appeals also uses the Fund to comply with the
    Welfare Reform Act, 
    42 U.S.C. § 666
    , which Congress passed in
    4
    1996       to    “increase            the    effectiveness          of    the     [child       support
    enforcement]            program         which     the        State       administers.”            
    Id.
    § 666(a).             To      that     end,     the       Welfare    Reform       Act    conditions
    federal         funding          on    states’        having    in       effect     “[p]rocedures
    requiring that the social security number of . . . any applicant
    for        a     professional               license . . .           be     recorded        on      the
    application.”              Id. § 666(a)(13).
    In 1997, the Maryland General Assembly passed a series of
    statutes to comply with the Welfare Reform Act, including Family
    Law     section 10-119.3(b)(1),                   which        compels          each     “licensing
    authority”         to      “(i)       require    each       applicant      for     a    license    to
    disclose the Social Security number of the applicant; and (ii)
    record          the      applicant’s            Social        Security          number     on     the
    application.”                    If     Maryland’s           Child       Support        Enforcement
    Administration notifies the licensing authority that a licensee
    is    in       arrears      on    a    child    support        order,     it     can    “request    a
    licensing authority to suspend or deny an individual’s license.”
    
    Md. Code Ann., Fam. Law § 10-119.3
    (e)(1).                                The Court of Appeals
    of     Maryland          is      such       a   licensing       authority.               
    Id.
         § 10-
    119.3(a)(3)(ii)(15).
    In 2009, then-Chief Judge Robert M. Bell of the Court of
    Appeals notified all Maryland attorneys that they were required
    to provide their social security numbers to comply with sections
    10-119.3 and 10-313.                    Most Maryland attorneys heeded the Chief
    5
    Judge’s    notice,    but   over    nine      thousand   did    not.       When   the
    General    Assembly   threatened      to      withhold   $1    million     from   the
    judiciary’s budget if it did not move more aggressively against
    the recalcitrant attorneys, the Court of Appeals amended its
    rules to provide for enforcement.
    The resulting Rule 16-811.5 mandated that “each attorney
    admitted     to   practice       before       the    Court     of    Appeals . . .
    shall . . . provide to the treasurer of the Fund the attorney’s
    Social Security number.”           Md. Rules, Rule 16-811.5(a)(1) (2014)
    (current version at Md. Rules, Rule 19-605(a)(1) (2016)). 1                        In
    addition, Rule 16-811.6 provided that the Court could suspend
    the license of any attorney who fails to comply with Rule 16-
    811.5.     Md. Rules, Rule 16-811.6 (current version at Md. Rules,
    Rule 19-606).
    B.
    Tankersley has been licensed to practice law in Maryland
    since 1986 and in the District of Columbia since 1987.                       He has
    practiced primarily in the District of Columbia, while living in
    either    the   District    or   Virginia.          Outside   of    the   suspension
    underlying this case, he has never been disciplined.
    1 The Court of Appeals has since reorganized the relevant
    rules.    Though some parts of Rule 16-811.5 have changed,
    subsection (a)(1) is identical except for updated cross-
    references.
    6
    Tankersley was notified in February 2013 that the Fund had
    never received his social security number, as requested in 2009,
    and that he had until March 22, 2013 to provide it.            Tankersley
    responded that he generally does not share his social security
    number unnecessarily because of concerns about identity theft.
    Tankersley also noted that Maryland state agencies have suffered
    cyberattacks, resulting in the exposure of individuals’ private
    information.
    Citing these concerns, Tankersley refused to provide his
    social security number to the Fund, and questioned the legality
    of Rule 16-811.5.      He was thereafter notified that his license
    had been suspended because of his failure to comply with the
    Court’s rule.
    C.
    Tankersley sued James Almand, the Chair of the Fund, the
    other trustees of the Fund, and the judges and clerk of the
    Court of Appeals, alleging that the suspension of his license to
    practice violated section 7(a)(1) of the Privacy Act.           He sought
    injunctive relief.
    Tankersley moved for summary judgment, and the Defendants
    moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim or for summary
    judgment.      The   district   court,   relying   on   its   decision   in
    7
    Greidinger v. Almand, 
    30 F. Supp. 3d 413
     (D. Md. 2014), 2 granted
    the Defendants’ motion to dismiss.
    The court in Greidinger held that the word “applicant” in
    § 666 was not limited to “those who are applying or reapplying
    for a license,” as “it is clear that under [the Welfare Act] the
    federal government intended to implement a system which required
    complete     disclosure       of    [social       security        numbers]    by      every
    individual who is subject to a licensing authority,” and § 666
    therefore superseded section 7(a)(1).                      30 F. Supp. 3d at 422,
    424.       The court also found that § 405 of the Tax Reform Act
    superseded     section     7(a)(1)     of       the   Privacy      Act,    noting      that
    although     “the    statutory       language         is   less     than     clear,    the
    legislative      history      provides   ample        evidence      that     the    Senate
    Finance      Committee     believed      the      needs      of    State     and      local
    governments         trumped        individual         privacy        in      [the       tax
    administration] context.”            Id. at 426.
    Finding no basis for distinguishing the instant case from
    its    holding      in   Greidinger,        the       district      court      dismissed
    Tankersley’s complaint.            This appeal followed.
    2Like Tankersley, Greidinger is a licensed Maryland
    attorney who declined to provide his social security number to
    the Fund.
    8
    II.
    A.
    Congress passed the Privacy Act of 1974, Pub. L. No. 93-
    579, 
    88 Stat. 1896
    , in light of the government’s “increasing use
    of   computers        and    sophisticated       information         technology,”       which
    “greatly magnified the harm to individual privacy that can occur
    from   any      collection,       maintenance,        use,      or    dissemination       of
    personal information.”            
    Id.
     § 2(a)(2).           To protect against such
    harms, section 7(a)(1) of the Act makes it “unlawful for any
    federal,     state      or     local    government      agency        to   deny    to     any
    individual      any     right,    benefit,       or   privilege        provided    by     law
    because    of    such       individual’s     refusal       to   disclose     his       social
    security account number.”               Important here, however, is section
    7(a)(2),     which       makes    section        7(a)(1)     inapplicable         to     “any
    disclosure       which       is   required       by    federal        statute.”          Id.
    § 7(a)(2)(A).
    Both the Tax Reform Act, 
    42 U.S.C. § 405
    (c)(2)(C)(i), and
    the Welfare Reform Act, 
    42 U.S.C. § 666
    (a)(13)(A), allow states
    to   collect     individuals’          social    security       numbers     in    specific
    situations.          This case turns on whether either provision applies
    to Maryland’s annual collection of social security numbers from
    attorneys       it     has    already     licensed      to      practice.          If    so,
    Tankersley may not rely on the Privacy Act to shield his social
    security number from the Fund.
    9
    B.
    We review de novo a district court’s dismissal of an action
    under    Fed.   R.   Civ.        P.   12(b)(6).         Kensington    Volunteer      Fire
    Dep’t, Inc. v. Montgomery Cty., 
    684 F.3d 462
    , 467 (4th Cir.
    2012).      “[W]e may affirm on any grounds supported by the record,
    notwithstanding the reasoning of the district court.”                           Kerr v.
    Marshall Univ. Bd. of Governors, 
    824 F.3d 62
    , 75 n.13 (4th Cir.
    2016).
    We    also   review       questions    of    statutory       interpretation      de
    novo.       Broughman v. Carver, 
    624 F.3d 670
    , 674 (4th Cir. 2010).
    When     interpreting        a    statute,        our   “objective . . .        is    ‘to
    ascertain and implement the intent of Congress,’ and Congress’s
    intent ‘can most easily be seen in the text of the Acts it
    promulgates.’”        Aziz v. Alcolac, Inc., 
    658 F.3d 388
    , 392 (4th
    Cir.    2011)   (quoting         Broughman,       
    624 F.3d at 674-75
    ).        Where
    Congress has not defined a term, we are “bound to give the word
    its    ordinary     meaning       unless   the     context     suggests   otherwise.”
    Id. at 392-93.
    C.
    We first address whether, as the district court determined,
    the Welfare Reform Act requires Tankersley to provide his social
    security number to the Fund.
    The Welfare Reform Act compels states to have “[p]rocedures
    requiring that the social security number of . . . any applicant
    10
    for   a      professional     license . . .            be     recorded      on       the
    application.”       
    42 U.S.C. § 666
    (a)(13)        (emphasis     added).          We
    agree with Tankersley that “applicant” cannot properly be read
    to include a Maryland attorney who must pay an annual fee to
    maintain his license.
    We are guided here by a fundamental principle of statutory
    interpretation,      which    directs           that   we     “presume      that       a
    legislature says in a statute what it means and means in a
    statute what it says there.            When the words of a statute are
    unambiguous, then, this first canon is also the last: judicial
    inquiry is complete.”        Aziz, 
    658 F.3d at 392
     (quoting Crespo v.
    Holder, 
    631 F.3d 130
    , 136 (4th Cir. 2011)).                   As Congress did not
    define “applicant,” we give the word its ordinary meaning.                           Id.
    at 392-93.
    An applicant is “someone who formally asks for something
    (such as a job or admission to a college)” or “someone who
    applies for something.”           Applicant, Merriam-Webster Dictionary,
    http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/applicant;                     see     also
    Applicant,     Webster’s     Dictionary          (2d    ed.      2001)   (defining
    “applicant” as “a person who applies for or requests something;
    a candidate”).      We think it plain that the ordinary meaning of
    the word does not reach someone like Tankersley who has already
    satisfied    the   requirements     for     a    license    to   practice      law    in
    Maryland but must pay an annual fee to maintain that license.
    11
    As   Tankersley    points     out,    one    would       not   say   that      a    college
    sophomore who must pay the next semester’s tuition before being
    allowed   to    continue       his    studies       is    an    “applicant.”            See
    Appellant’s Reply Br. at 5-6.              So too here.
    Moreover,        the   form    the    Fund     uses      to    direct        Maryland
    attorneys to provide their social security numbers underscores
    how poorly the word “applicant” fits in this context.                              It asks
    simply for the attorney’s name, address, and social security
    number.    See J.A. 30.         Such a bare-bones form can in no way be
    described as an “application,” and, indeed, even the Fund does
    not refer to the form as such.              See J.A. 29-30 (referring to the
    document as the “attached form” and the “completed form”).
    Relying     on    Abramski     v.    United    States,        
    134 S. Ct. 2259
    (2014), the Defendants say that our understanding of “applicant”
    renders the provision absurd because it excludes the majority of
    Maryland attorneys, “alone among covered professions,” from the
    Welfare Act’s coverage.              Appellees’ Br. at 24.                Not so.       In
    Abramski, the Supreme Court chose between two readings of an
    ambiguous provision of the Gun Control Act of 1968.                            The Court
    rejected the reading that would have allowed a straw purchaser
    of a firearm to present himself as the actual buyer, because it
    “would    undermine—indeed,          for    all     important        purposes,       would
    virtually repeal—the gun law’s core provisions,” including “an
    12
    elaborate system to verify a would-be gun purchaser’s identity
    and check on his background.”              
    134 S. Ct. at 2267
    .
    We do not face a similar consequence here.                  It is certainly
    true that our reading of § 666 is under-inclusive in that the
    Fund cannot compel disclosure of social security numbers from a
    subset of Maryland attorneys who were licensed before a certain
    date.     But    that    is    a    far   cry   from   saying   that    it   works   a
    “virtual repeal” of the statute’s core provisions, given that
    the     Fund’s    enforcement         power      nonetheless      extends     to     a
    substantial portion of the Maryland Bar, and expands each year
    as new attorneys are admitted to practice.                       That the statute
    exempts some lawyers from the Fund’s enforcement reach merely
    reflects the reality that “[n]o legislation pursues its purposes
    at all costs,” Mohamad v. Palestinian Auth., 
    132 S. Ct. 1702
    ,
    1710 (2012) (quoting Rodriguez v. United States, 
    480 U.S. 522
    ,
    525-26 (1987)), and the final result “often involves tradeoffs,
    compromises, and imperfect solutions.”                   Preseault v. ICC, 
    494 U.S. 1
    , 19 (1990).
    We hold that the district court erred in relying on § 666
    of the Welfare Reform Act to dismiss Tankersley’s complaint.
    Accordingly,     we     turn   to    consider    whether   the    Tax   Reform     Act
    provides the statutory hook necessary to support the district
    court’s judgment.
    13
    D.
    Section 405(c)(2)(C)(i) of the Tax Reform Act allows “any
    State (or political subdivision thereof)” to use social security
    numbers “in the administration of any tax . . . law within its
    jurisdiction, . . . and may require any individual who is or
    appears to be [affected by the tax law] to furnish to such State
    (or political subdivision thereof) or any agency thereof having
    administrative responsibility for the law involved, [his] social
    security account number.”            See also Schwier v. Cox, 
    340 F.3d 1284
    ,   1290      (11th     Cir.      2003)      (“The    final      version      [of
    § 405(c)(2)(C)(i)]        authorizes      States   to    use   [social     security
    numbers] only ‘in the administration of any tax, general public
    assistance, driver’s license, or motor vehicle registration.’”).
    Recall that Tankersley’s claim is premised on the view that
    the   Fund   violated     his   right      under   the   Privacy     Act    not   to
    disclose his social security number.                But as we noted earlier,
    the Privacy Act does not help Tankersley if the disclosure is
    required     by   federal    law—in       this   case,   say   the    Defendants,
    § 405(c)(2)(C)(i).
    Tankersley     resists       this     conclusion    on      three    grounds.
    First, he says that Maryland’s statutory requirement that the
    Fund furnish the Department of Assessments and Taxation and the
    Comptroller with a list of attorneys who paid the annual fee to
    the Fund does not amount to the use of social security numbers
    14
    “in the administration of any tax.”                  Second, he posits that the
    Fund is not an entity that has administrative responsibility for
    taxes, as contemplated by § 405.                 Third, he argues that he is
    not   an    “individual      who     is    or   appears      to    be”     affected       by
    Maryland’s     tax    laws      because    he   neither       works       nor    lives    in
    Maryland, and he has never owed taxes there.
    We address these contentions in turn.
    1.
    As was the case with the Welfare Reform Act, Congress did
    not   define   “administration”           in    § 405,      thus     we   give    it     its
    ordinary    meaning.         Aziz,   
    658 F.3d at 392-93
    .         The   ordinary
    meaning of “administration” is the process of “manag[ing] the
    operation    of”     something,      or    putting    something         “into    effect.”
    Administering,           Merriam-Webster           Dictionary,             www.merriam-
    webster.com/dictionary/administering;                 see    also       Administration,
    Merriam-Webster        Dictionary,         www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary
    /administration       (defining       “administration”             as     “the    act     or
    process of administering”).
    The breadth of the plain meaning of “administration” is
    consistent with Congress’s treatment of the term as part of the
    broader legislation that enacted § 405.                     See Tax Reform Act of
    1976, Pub. L. No. 94-455 §§ 1202, 1211, 
    90 Stat. 1520
     (codified
    as amended at 
    26 U.S.C. § 6103
    ; 
    42 U.S.C. § 405
    ).                           There, in a
    provision    of    the    Act    expanding      the       Internal      Revenue    Code’s
    15
    regulation      of    the     disclosure       of    tax   returns     and     tax      return
    information,         Congress       defined     “tax       administration”         as     “the
    administration, management, conduct, direction, and supervision
    of     the   execution        and    application       of”     tax     laws,      including
    “assessment,      collection,         enforcement,         litigation,       publication,
    and statistical gathering functions under such laws.”                             
    26 U.S.C. § 6103
    (b)(4);        see    also    
    id.
        § 6103(h)(1)       (“Returns        and      return
    information shall . . . be open to inspection by or disclosure
    to   officers     and      employees      of   the    Department      of    the    Treasury
    whose official duties require such inspection or disclosure for
    tax administration purposes.”).
    The Tax Reform Act of 1976 is comprehensive in scope.                               In
    addition     to      making      changes       to    the    Internal       Revenue      Code,
    Congress also amended, for example, the Social Security Act, the
    Tariff Act of 1930, and the Commodity Exchange Act.                               While the
    Act’s    definition         of   “tax     administration”       as     applied       to    the
    Internal Revenue Code does not speak directly to the definition
    of “administration” in 
    42 U.S.C. § 405
     (which was passed as part
    of the changes Congress made to the Social Security Act), it
    does    inform    our      analysis.      It    not    only   shows     that      the     same
    Congress that enacted § 405 understood “administration” to be an
    expansive term, but it does so in the context of a provision
    balancing individual privacy—there, of tax return information—
    16
    against    the     government’s     need      to   use   private      information    to
    administer taxes, just as § 405 does.
    Given this, we are satisfied that the ordinary meaning of
    the term “administration” in § 405 is sufficiently expansive so
    as to allow the state of Maryland to compel lawyers licensed in
    Maryland      to   disclose      their     social      security    numbers.         The
    practice “assist[s] the Department [of Assessments and Taxation]
    in identifying new businesses within the State” and “assist[s]
    the Comptroller in determining whether each lawyer on the list
    has paid all undisputed taxes,” 
    Md. Code Ann., Bus. Occ. & Prof. § 10-313
    (a), which are functions of collection, enforcement, and
    statistical gathering required to enforce Maryland’s tax laws.
    2.
    We are also not persuaded by Tankersley’s contention that
    the Fund “is not an entity to which [social security number]
    disclosures may be required under § 405,” Appellant’s Br. at 26,
    in that it is not the “State (or political subdivision thereof)
    or [an] agency thereof having administrative responsibility for
    the law involved,” 
    42 U.S.C. § 405
    (c)(2)(C)(i).
    Tankersley      would    have     us   ignore     that   the    “[s]tate     [of
    Maryland] ‘can act only through its officers and agents,’” and
    thus    the      act   of      collecting       social    security       numbers     is
    necessarily carried out by an officer or agent of the state.
    Nevada v. Hicks, 
    533 U.S. 353
    , 365 (2001) (quoting Tennessee v.
    17
    Davis, 
    100 U.S. 257
    , 263 (1879)).                     Moreover, to allow only the
    state agency directly responsible for administering the tax laws
    to collect social security numbers would read the phrase “or
    political subdivision thereof” out of the statute, because it
    would    not   allow    the    state   of    Maryland,       acting    through   other
    agents or political subdivisions, to collect the numbers.                        See,
    e.g., TRW Inc. v. Andrews, 
    534 U.S. 19
    , 31 (2001) (“It is ‘a
    cardinal principle of statutory construction’ that ‘a statute
    ought, upon the whole, to be so construed that, if it can be
    prevented, no clause, sentence, or word shall be superfluous,
    void, or insignificant.’” (quoting Duncan v. Walker, 
    533 U.S. 167
    , 174 (2001))).
    We   also      think    it   clear     that      the   Court    of   Appeals   of
    Maryland (as a subdivision of the state) and the Fund are—at
    least for these purposes—agents of the state.                        “A State acts by
    its legislative, its executive, or its judicial authorities.                         It
    can act in no other way.”               Ex parte Commonwealth of Virginia,
    
    100 U.S. 339
    ,     347    (1879)       (emphasis        added).       Maryland’s
    constitution vests judicial authority in the Court of Appeals,
    Md. Const., Art. IV, §1, and the Court of Appeals has understood
    that power to include “the regulation of the practice of law,
    the admittance of new members to the bar, and the discipline of
    attorneys      who    fail    to   conform       to    the   established    standards
    governing their professional conduct,” Attorney Gen. v. Waldron,
    18
    
    426 A.2d 929
    , 934 (Md. 1981).           The Court of Appeals of Maryland
    is thus an agent of the state.
    So too is the Fund, as an agent of the Court of Appeals.
    The   Court,    through   the   rulemaking    authority    given   to   it    by
    statute, see 
    Md. Code Ann., Bus. Occ. & Prof. § 10-311
    (a) (“The
    Court    of   Appeals   may   adopt   rules   that . . .   provide   for     the
    operation of the Fund.”), has delegated to the Fund the power
    “[t]o perform all . . . acts authorized by these Rules,” Md.
    Rules, Rule 19-604(a)(15).            Of course, the Rules authorize the
    Fund’s collection of social security numbers.              In this capacity,
    the Fund acts as an agent of the Court of Appeals, which is in
    turn an agent of the state.             The Fund is therefore an entity
    under § 405 for purposes of requiring the disclosure of social
    security numbers.
    3.
    Tankersley’s final salvo with respect to the reach of § 405
    is that he is not a person who “is or appears to be” affected by
    Maryland’s tax laws, because in the twenty-eight years that he
    has been licensed to practice law in Maryland, he has never
    lived in or owned property in Maryland, nor has he been required
    to pay taxes or make unemployment insurance contributions to the
    state.
    We take Tankersley at his word when he says that he is
    someone who has not been affected by Maryland’s tax laws.                    But
    19
    the statute reaches further to include individuals who “appear[]
    to be” affected by tax laws.                  Mindful of “our duty ‘to give
    effect, if possible, to every clause and word of a statute,’”
    United States v. Menasche, 
    348 U.S. 528
    , 538-39 (1955) (quoting
    Inhabitants of Montclair Twp. v. Ramsdell, 
    107 U.S. 147
    , 152
    (1883)),    a    fair    reading   of   § 405(c)(2)(C)(i)         extends      to    all
    attorneys licensed to practice law in Maryland.                        Why?   Because
    even though lawyers who live and practice elsewhere are less
    likely to owe taxes to Maryland than those who live and work in
    the state, Tankersley’s ability to earn income in the state (by
    virtue    of     his    license)   is   enough    to      make   him    someone      who
    “appears to be” affected by Maryland tax laws for the purpose of
    § 405.     See 
    Md. Code Ann., Tax-Gen. § 10-401
     (providing for non-
    resident allocation of income, losses, and adjustments for tax
    purposes).
    Accordingly,         § 405    of   the    Tax     Reform     Act    applies      to
    Tankersley, and the state of Maryland may lawfully compel him to
    provide    his    social    security    number       to   the    Fund    on   pain    of
    suspension of his law license.                 The district court’s judgment
    dismissing Tankersley’s complaint is therefore
    AFFIRMED.
    20
    DAVIS, Senior Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting
    in part:
    Maryland Rules of Procedure 16-811.5 and 16-811.6, adopted
    in 2014, require that each attorney admitted to practice as a
    member of the Maryland bar disclose her social security number
    (“SSN”) to the treasurer of the Client Protection Fund (“the
    Fund”)   or   face   suspension   of   her   license   to    practice    law.
    Michael Tankersley, an attorney who has long been admitted to
    practice in Maryland but has apparently never actually lived,
    worked, or practiced in the state, contends that, as applied to
    him, these Maryland Rules violate the federal Privacy Act of
    1974.    Section 7(a)(1) of the Privacy Act provides that “[i]t
    shall be unlawful for any Federal, State or local government
    agency   to   deny   to   any   individual    any   right,    benefit,    or
    privilege provided by law because of such individual’s refusal
    to disclose his social security account number.”               Pub. L. No.
    93-579, § 7(a)(1), 
    88 Stat. 1896
     (codified at 5 U.S.C. § 552a
    note).
    Upon suspension of his law license for refusing to provide
    his SSN, Tankersley brought this suit against all Maryland Court
    of Appeals judges, the Clerk of Court, and the trustees of the
    Fund (together, “Appellees”) in their official capacities.               The
    district court granted Appellees’ motion to dismiss based on its
    determination in a previous case that both the Welfare Reform
    21
    Act, 
    42 U.S.C. § 666
    , and the Tax Reform Act of 1976, 
    42 U.S.C. § 405
    , supersede the Privacy Act’s guarantee that an individual
    may not be denied any legal right, benefit, or privilege for
    failing to disclose her SSN.                    My friends in the majority affirm
    on    the   ground     that    § 405,      but       not    § 666,    supersedes    section
    7(a)(1) of the Privacy Act as applied in this case.
    While     I    agree       with    the    majority       that    § 666   does    not
    supersede      the     Privacy      Act    as     it       pertains    to   Tankersley,    I
    respectfully dissent from its holding that § 405 does supersede
    the    Privacy       Act.     I    would    also       hold    that    Tankersley    has   a
    private right of action to enforce his Privacy Act rights under
    
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    .             Thus, in my view, Tankersley’s suspension
    from practicing law for refusing to disclose his SSN violated
    his    Privacy       Act    rights.        Accordingly,         I     would   reverse   the
    district court’s judgment and remand with instructions to grant
    summary judgment for Tankersley.
    I.
    This Court reviews de novo a dismissal for failure to state
    a claim, Kenney v. Indep. Order of Foresters, 
    744 F.3d 901
    , 905
    (4th Cir. 2014), and we likewise review de novo a denial of
    summary judgment, Nourison Rug Corp. v. Parvizian, 
    535 F.3d 295
    ,
    299 (4th Cir. 2008).                Because I agree with the majority that
    § 666 does not supersede Tankersley’s Privacy Act rights, as
    Tankersley is not an “applicant” for a professional license, I
    22
    begin     by   considering   whether        § 405   supersedes    Tankersley’s
    rights under the Privacy Act.           Unlike the majority, I conclude
    that it does not.
    II.
    Under the Tax Reform Act,
    any State (or political subdivision thereof) may, in
    the   administration   of   any    tax,   general   public
    assistance,   driver’s    license,    or   motor   vehicle
    registration law within its jurisdiction, utilize the
    social   security   account   numbers    issued   by   the
    Commissioner of Social Security for the purpose of
    establishing    the   identification     of    individuals
    affected by such law, and may require any individual
    who is or appears to be so affected to furnish to such
    State (or political subdivision thereof) or any agency
    thereof having administrative responsibility for the
    law involved, the social security account number . . .
    issued to him by the Commissioner of Social Security.
    
    42 U.S.C. § 405
    (c)(2)(C)(i).       The Act also provides that, “[i]f
    and to the extent that any provision of Federal law heretofore
    enacted is inconsistent with the policy set forth in clause (i),
    such provision shall . . . be null, void, and of no effect.”
    
    Id.
         § 405(c)(2)(C)(v).     Appellees        argue,   and     the   majority
    agrees, that § 405 supersedes Section 7(a)(1) of the Privacy Act
    to the extent that it enables states to require individuals to
    furnish their SSNs in the administration of any tax law.                    See
    Appellees’ Br. 26.
    I would hold, however, that § 405 does not supersede the
    Privacy Act in this case for three reasons:               First, the Fund’s
    collection of SSNs is not an effort undertaken by the state “in
    23
    the    administration         of       any   tax”     law.        See    § 405(c)(2)(C)(i).
    Second, the Fund is not an entity to which the state may require
    individuals to furnish their SSNs, as it is not a direct agent
    of    the    state       itself         or     a     state        “agency       . . .     having
    administrative responsibility for” any tax law.                             See id.       Third,
    Tankersley is not an “individual who is or appears to be . . .
    affected” by any Maryland tax law.                          See id.        Thus, § 405 does
    not    authorize        the    Maryland            Court     of     Appeals       to    penalize
    Tankersley for refusing to disclose his SSN, and it does not
    supersede section 7(a)(1) of the Privacy Act as applied here.
    A.
    The   language     of       § 405     is     fairly    limiting.           The    statute
    specifies (1) who may require the disclosure of SSNs (a “State
    (or political subdivision thereof)”); (2) for what purpose (“in
    the administration of any tax . . . law within [the State’s]
    jurisdiction”); (3) to whom an individual may be required to
    make the disclosure (“to such State (or political subdivision
    thereof)      or        any        agency         thereof         having        administrative
    responsibility for the law involved”); and, finally, (4) who may
    be    required     to   disclose         her    SSN      (“any     individual      who    is    or
    appears      to    be    . . .         affected       [by     the       State     tax    law]”).
    § 405(c)(2)(C)(i).                 I    begin       by     examining        the    first       two
    requirements: whether the mandatory disclosure of SSNs at issue
    24
    in this case is an effort undertaken by the state of Maryland
    “in the administration of any tax” law.               See id.
    Maryland    law     requires     that,     each   year,    the    Fund    must
    “provide a list of lawyers who have paid an annual fee to the
    Fund during the previous fiscal year” to the State Department of
    Taxation “to assist the Department in identifying new businesses
    within    the     State”    and    to   the      Comptroller     “to    assist    the
    Comptroller in determining whether each lawyer on the list has
    paid     all      undisputed       taxes        and   unemployment        insurance
    contributions.”       
    Md. Code Ann., Bus. Occ. & Prof. § 10-313
    (a).
    For each person listed, the Fund must provide “the federal tax
    identification number of the person or, if the person does not
    have a federal tax identification number, the Social Security
    number of the person.”            
    Id.
     § 10-313(b)(2)(ii).         In an apparent
    effort to comply with this state law, the Maryland Court of
    Appeals adopted Maryland Rules of Procedure 16-811.5 and 16-
    811.6 and amended the rules of admission to the Maryland bar,
    see Md. Admis. R. 2(b), to require that applicants and members
    of the bar supply their SSNs to the Fund.
    The Fund’s stated purpose, however, is unrelated to the
    state’s administration of any tax law:                “The purpose of the Fund
    is to maintain the integrity of the legal profession by paying
    money to reimburse losses caused by defalcations of lawyers.”
    
    Md. Code Ann., Bus. Occ. & Prof. § 10-311
    (b).                    It is therefore
    25
    dubious       to    conclude      that     Maryland      has     acted    “in     the
    administration of any tax” law by requiring the Fund, an entity
    that       does   not   itself   collect    taxes   and   that    exists    for   an
    entirely distinct purpose, to collect SSNs and supply them to
    the    Comptroller        for    the     Comptroller’s     use     in    monitoring
    compliance with tax laws.
    Relatedly, the Maryland Rules at issue in this case are not
    the state laws requiring the Fund to provide SSNs to state tax
    authorities; instead, the Rules under review are Maryland Rules
    16-811.5 and 16-811.6, which the Court of Appeals promulgated to
    require bar members to furnish their SSNs to the Fund.                            The
    suggestion that the state (through its Court of Appeals) acted
    “in the administration of any tax” law in promulgating Rules
    requiring that the Fund collect SSNs from bar members so that
    the Fund can comply with a separate Maryland law that requires
    it to provide SSNs to Maryland tax authorities so that those
    authorities may check compliance with tax laws is thus all the
    more attenuated. 1         Accordingly, it does not appear that § 405
    authorizes the Maryland Rules at issue.
    1
    Tankersley characterizes the Fund’s duty to pass along
    SSNs to state tax authorities as a “game of telephone across
    state agencies,” Appellant’s Br. 31, that is part of a
    “patchwork” scheme, id. at 32, involving a “hodgepodge of
    statutes through which SSNs wend their way from the [Fund] to
    state taxation authorities,” Reply Br. 13. While the statutory
    scheme might not quite warrant this colorful description, the
    (Continued)
    26
    B.
    In any event, § 405 also specifies the type of entity to
    which a state may require individuals to supply their SSNs: a
    state may mandate SSN disclosure “to [a] State (or political
    subdivision thereof) or any agency thereof having administrative
    responsibility       for     the    law      involved.”          § 405(c)(2)(C)(i).
    Appellees    argue    that    the    Fund,     in    collecting      SSNs    under   the
    Maryland Rules, is acting as an agent of the state, and since
    § 405   authorizes         “the     State”     as     well      as   state    agencies
    responsible    for    administering          tax    laws   to    collect     SSNs,   the
    Maryland Rules comply with § 405.                  See Appellees’ Br. 30–35.         In
    other words, Appellees contend that two groups may collect SSNs
    under § 405—the state, including its direct agents, and state
    agencies     with    “administrative           responsibility         for     the    law
    involved”—and that the Fund belongs in the former group. 2                           See
    id. at 32.    The majority agrees.
    The language of § 405 is not so expansive, however, as to
    allow us to consider the Fund a direct agent of the state of
    scheme is certainly complex, and the Maryland Rules’ connection
    to the state’s administration of tax laws is tenuous at best.
    2 Notably, Appellees expressly concede that the Fund does
    not qualify for the latter group. That is, they do not suggest
    that   the   Fund  is   a   state   agency  with   administrative
    responsibility for any tax law.    See Appellees’ Br. 31 (“[F]or
    purposes of § 405, the Fund is not itself a state ‘agency’ that
    administers a tax, but rather an agent of the State housed in
    the judicial branch.”).
    27
    Maryland.     In interpreting a statute, we must “give effect to
    every    provision     and   word   in   a   statute        and   avoid   any
    interpretation that may render statutory terms meaningless or
    superfluous.”       Discover Bank v. Vaden, 
    396 F.3d 366
    , 369 (4th
    Cir. 2005).     If the phrase “the State (or political subdivision
    thereof)” were to include any state agency, such as the Fund,
    then the next phrase in § 405, authorizing SSN collection by
    “any [state] agency . . . having administrative responsibility
    for     the   law     involved,”    would    be     superfluous.          See
    § 405(c)(2)(C)(i).
    Likewise, by expressly providing that “any [state] agency
    . . . having administrative responsibility for the law involved”
    may collect SSNs, Congress appears to have specifically excluded
    from § 405’s purview state agencies, like the Fund, that are not
    responsible for administering tax laws.           See id.    If it intended
    otherwise, Congress could simply have established that a state
    may require SSN disclosure to “any state agency” and left it at
    that.    See Reyes v. Gaona v. N.C. Growers Ass’n, 
    250 F.3d 861
    ,
    865 (4th Cir. 2001) (“[T]he doctrine of expressio un[ius] est
    exclusio alterius instructs that where a law expressly describes
    a particular situation to which it shall apply, what was omitted
    or excluded was intended to be omitted or excluded.”); cf. Dep’t
    of Homeland Sec. v. MacLean, 
    135 S. Ct. 913
    , 919 (2015) (“Thus,
    Congress’s choice to say ‘specifically prohibited by law’ rather
    28
    than    ‘specifically         prohibited          by   law,      rule,        or   regulation’
    suggests       that        Congress          meant        to      exclude          rules     and
    regulations.”).
    Appellees         argue,    on   the       other    hand,        and     the   majority
    agrees, that the statutory canon requiring that we attempt to
    “give effect to every provision and word in a statute,” Discover
    Bank, 
    396 F.3d at 369
    , cuts the other direction.                              See Appellees’
    Br. 32–33.          They contend that the phrase “State (or political
    subdivision thereof)” must include the state’s direct agents for
    that term to have any meaning, as a state cannot act of its own
    accord.       See id. at 32.            Yet that proposition does nothing to
    demonstrate that the Fund in particular qualifies as a direct
    agent of the state.               Although the Court of Appeals might meet
    this    description,         see     Md.      Const.,          Art.     IV,    § 1     (vesting
    Maryland’s judicial power in the Court of Appeals), I see no
    reason to conclude that the Fund, a subset of the Maryland Court
    of Appeals, may serve as a proxy for the state itself.
    That   Congress,       in    enacting       § 405,        did    not    intend      for    a
    state   agency       to    qualify      as    a    stand-in           for   the    “State    (or
    political subdivision thereof)” is again exemplified by § 405’s
    inclusion      of    a    subsequent       phrase      specifically            pertaining        to
    state   agencies—a         statutory       phrase      that       would       more    naturally
    describe the Fund, if only the Fund were a state agency with
    administrative responsibility for any Maryland tax law.                                      See
    29
    § 405(c)(2)(C)(i).                Accordingly,             the    majority’s      labored
    analysis, reasoning that the Maryland Court of Appeals is an
    agent of the state and the Fund is an agent of the Court of
    Appeals and thus the Fund is an agent of the state, forgets that
    the relevant question is whether the Fund is a direct agent of
    the state—the personification of the state itself—as opposed to
    a state agency organized and managed under the auspices of the
    state.     Because the Fund is neither a direct state agent nor an
    agency with administrative responsibility for any Maryland tax
    law, § 405 does not authorize the Maryland Rules at issue here,
    which require disclosure of SSNs to the Fund.
    C.
    Finally, even if § 405 does authorize the Fund’s collection
    of SSNs in some circumstances, it does not allow Maryland to
    require the collection of Tankersley’s SSN in particular, as
    Tankersley       is    not   an    “individual       who     is   or    appears   to     be”
    affected by any Maryland tax law.                  See id.
    Although Tankersley has been licensed to practice law in
    Maryland       since    1986,     he   has    been     a    resident    of    Virginia    or
    Washington, D.C., and has worked in Washington, D.C., for the
    duration       of     that   time,     J.A.    114—indeed,         he   has    also    been
    licensed to practice law in Washington, D.C., since 1987, J.A.
    10.      For    the    nearly     three      decades       that   Tankersley    has    been
    licensed in Maryland, he has not owned property in Maryland, and
    30
    he has not owed Maryland any taxes or unemployment insurance
    contributions.         J.A. 114.           Moreover, Tankersley has annually
    reported his home and work addresses to the Fund, which uses
    this   information         each    year,    along    with    information         regarding
    Tankersley’s bar memberships outside of Maryland, to determine
    whether he is subject to a mandatory assessment.                          See J.A. 114–
    15;    Regs.   of    the    Client       Protection      Fund    of   the   Bar    of     Md.
    Currently Effective, § (i)(1)–(3), http://www.courts.state.md
    .us/cpf/pdfs/regulations.pdf (last visited Aug. 25, 2016).
    Thus,   not    only        does    Tankersley      not    owe    any      taxes    in
    Maryland (nor has he for nearly thirty years), but he also does
    not appear to owe any taxes in Maryland, as is clear from the
    information that Tankersley provides the Fund on a yearly basis.
    Someone who lives in Virginia and works in Washington, D.C.,
    where he is licensed to practice law, does not “appear[] to be
    affected”      by    Maryland       tax    laws     simply      because     he    is     also
    licensed to practice law in Maryland, particularly when he has
    not practiced law there and has no other apparent connection to
    the state.
    Appellees contend that a more individualized approach to
    SSN    collection      would        “require        an    unworkable,         burdensome,
    administrative       mechanism       to    determine      whether      there     was     some
    basis for taxing the specific individual.”                        Appellees’ Br. 29.
    Perhaps so.         Yet, as mentioned above, the Fund already uses
    31
    individual bar members’ information to determine whether each
    attorney owes a mandatory assessment, so the requisite mechanism
    already exists.           More to the point, § 405 is clear in specifying
    who may be required to disclose her SSN: “any individual who is
    or appears to be” affected by state tax law.                       Appellees cannot
    eschew this language due to policy concerns about inefficiency. 3
    Given that we must, to the extent possible, attempt to construe
    § 405 so as to preserve the Privacy Act, see Morton v. Mancari,
    
    417 U.S. 535
    , 551 (1974) (“[W]hen two statutes are capable of
    co-existence, it is the duty of the courts, absent a clearly
    expressed       congressional       intention   to   the     contrary,   to   regard
    each       as     effective.”),      Appellees’      argument      concerning    the
    relative ease and efficiency of a blanket mandatory collection
    of all licensed attorneys’ SSNs is unpersuasive.
    Lastly, it is ironic that, upon acknowledging that we must
    be “mindful of our duty to give effect, if possible, to every
    clause      and    word    of   a   statute,”   ante    at    20    (citations   and
    3
    Indeed, even if it were necessary to look beyond the
    statutory text, the relevant legislative history demonstrates
    that Congress intended for § 405 to be limited in scope.    When
    advocating the passage of § 405, the Senate Committee on Finance
    stated that it “believe[d] that State and local governments
    should have the authority to use social security numbers for
    identification purposes when they consider it necessary for
    administrative purposes.”   S. Rep. No. 94-938, at 391 (1976)
    (emphasis added). Maryland cannot in good faith consider a more
    efficient system strictly necessary, especially when the state’s
    current administrative system is already capable of the task at
    hand.
    32
    internal    quotation      marks      omitted),    the    majority     ignores      the
    precise     wording      of     § 405—which       authorizes         the   mandatory
    collection of an SSN only from an “individual who is or appears
    to   be”   affected   by      Maryland    tax     laws,    § 405(c)(2)(C)(i)—and
    instead    declares      that    “a    fair     reading    of    § 405(c)(2)(C)(i)
    extends to all attorneys licensed to practice in Maryland,” ante
    at 20.     Congress did not enact such an expansive statute, and we
    should not transform § 405 into one, particularly where we are
    obligated to give effect to every word in a statute and to
    interpret § 405 in a manner that preserves the federal Privacy
    Act (and the important protections it provides), to the extent
    possible.
    Accordingly, I would hold that § 405 does not authorize the
    Fund to penalize Tankersley for failing to supply his SSN, as
    Tankersley    is   not     an   individual       “who     is    or   appears   to    be
    affected” by any Maryland tax law.
    III.
    Having concluded that neither § 666 nor § 405 supersedes
    Tankersley’s rights under section 7(a)(1) of the Privacy Act,
    the question remains whether Tankersley has a private right of
    action to enforce his rights.                  Tankersley argues that he may
    pursue his claim for declaratory and injunctive relief under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    .     See Appellant’s Br. 36–43.              I agree.
    33
    Section 1983 “imposes liability on anyone who, under color
    of state law or regulation, deprives a person ‘of any rights,
    privileges,      or    immunities          secured     by    the    Constitution       and
    laws.’”       Blessing v. Freestone, 
    520 U.S. 329
    , 340 (1997).                          A
    plaintiff      seeking      redress         under     § 1983       “must    assert     the
    violation of a federal right, not merely a violation of federal
    law.”     Id. (citing Golden State Transit Corp. v. Los Angeles,
    
    493 U.S. 103
    ,    106   (1989)).          We    consider   three       factors    when
    determining whether a particular statutory provision gives rise
    to a federal right.             
    Id.
            “First, Congress must have intended
    that    the   provision     in     question        benefit   the    plaintiff.”        
    Id.
    (citing Wright v. City of Roanoke Redevelopment & Hous. Auth.,
    
    479 U.S. 418
    , 430 (1987)).                 The Supreme Court has clarified that
    the    federal   right      must      be    “unambiguously         conferred”;    it    is
    insufficient that “the plaintiff falls within the general zone
    of interest that the statute is intended to protect.”                            Gonzaga
    Univ. v. Doe, 
    536 U.S. 273
    , 283 (2002).                      “Second, the plaintiff
    must    demonstrate      that    the       right    assertedly      protected    by    the
    statute is not ‘so vague and amorphous’ that its enforcement
    would strain judicial competence.”                   Blessing, 
    520 U.S. at
    340–41
    (quoting Wright, 
    479 U.S. at
    431–32).                    “Third, the statute must
    unambiguously impose a binding obligation on the States.                                In
    other words, the provision giving rise to the asserted right
    34
    must be couched in mandatory, rather than precatory, terms.”
    
    Id.
     at 341 (citing cases).
    However, “[e]ven if a plaintiff demonstrates that a federal
    statute creates an individual right, there is only a rebuttable
    presumption that the right is enforceable under § 1983.                 Because
    our inquiry focuses on congressional intent, dismissal is proper
    if Congress ‘specifically foreclosed a remedy under § 1983.’”
    Id. (quoting Smith v. Robinson, 
    468 U.S. 992
    , 1005 n.9 (1984)).
    Congress may do so expressly or impliedly, such as by “creating
    a   comprehensive   enforcement       scheme   that    is   incompatible     with
    individual enforcement under § 1983.”                Id. (citing Livadas v.
    Bradshaw, 
    512 U.S. 107
    , 133 (1994)).
    A.
    While   the   question     of   whether    section      7(a)(1)   of   the
    Privacy Act confers an individual right enforceable under § 1983
    is an issue of first impression in this Circuit, 4 the Eleventh
    Circuit has    answered   this    question      in    the   affirmative.     See
    Schwier v. Cox, 
    340 F.3d 1284
    , 1292 (11th Cir. 2003).                The Ninth
    Circuit, the only other one of our sister circuits to resolve
    4Because the district court below concluded that § 666 and
    § 405 supersede Section 7(a)(1) of the Privacy Act, it did not
    reach this issue.    See J.A. 123–24.     The district court in
    Greidinger v. Almand, which served as the basis for the district
    court’s decision in this case, noted that this is “an open
    question in the Fourth Circuit,” but it also declined to resolve
    the issue. 
    30 F. Supp. 3d 413
    , 426 (D. Md. 2014).
    35
    the   issue, 5    agreed    that      section       7(a)(1)     of     the   Privacy      Act
    creates     an     individual      right,         but     it    held     that     Congress
    intentionally foreclosed § 1983 as a remedy.                            See Dittman v.
    California, 
    191 F.3d 1020
    , 1028–29 (9th Cir. 1999).
    I   would     hold   that,      in    enacting       section      7(a)(1)      of   the
    Privacy Act, Congress created an individual right enforceable
    under § 1983.        Section 7(a)(1) of the Privacy Act provides that
    “[i]t     shall    be   unlawful       for        any    Federal,      State    or    local
    government agency to deny to any individual any right, benefit,
    or    privilege     provided     by     law       because      of    such    individual’s
    refusal     to     disclose     his        social       security     account      number.”
    § 7(a)(1).        Even though this provision proscribes the activity
    of a “Federal, State or local government agency,” the statute is
    unambiguously focused on the right of an individual to retain
    her   legal      rights,   benefits,        and     privileges       when    refusing      to
    disclose her SSN.          See Schwier, 
    340 F.3d at 1292
     (“[T]he Privacy
    Act clearly confers a legal right on individuals: the right to
    refuse to disclose his or her ssn without suffering the loss ‘of
    any right, benefit, or privilege provided by law.’”).                           Moreover,
    Congress explained that it enacted the Privacy Act “to provide
    5 This issue has come before the Tenth Circuit as well, but
    that court acknowledged the existing circuit split and dismissed
    the plaintiff’s Privacy Act claims for other reasons.         See
    Gonzalez v. Vill. of West Milwaukee, 
    671 F.3d 649
    , 662–63 (10th
    Cir. 2012).
    36
    certain   safeguards       for   an    individual          against   an    invasion    of
    personal privacy,” Pub. L. No. 93-579, § 2(b), 
    88 Stat. 1896
    ,
    expressing an intent to create and preserve individual rights.
    Section 7(a)(1) of the Privacy Act differs in this way from
    the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (“FERPA”)
    at issue in Gonzaga University v. Doe.                       See 
    536 U.S. at 276
    .
    The   Supreme    Court     in    Gonzaga       determined       that      FERPA,    which
    provides that “[n]o funds shall be made available . . . to any
    educational     agency     . . .      which    has    a     policy   or    practice    of
    permitting the release of education records . . . of students
    without   the    written        consent       of    their     parents,”     20     U.S.C.
    § 1232g(b)(1), did not contain the requisite “rights-creating”
    language to allow for enforcement under § 1983.                           Gonzaga, 
    536 U.S. at 287
    .      The Court explained that the statute’s focus on
    funding for educational agencies “is two steps removed from the
    interests of individual students and parents and clearly does
    not   confer    the    sort      of    ‘individual          entitlement’      that     is
    enforceable under § 1983.”             Id.     Section 7(a)(1) of the Privacy
    Act, by contrast, establishes that individuals are entitled to
    decline   to    provide     their      SSNs        while    retaining     their     legal
    rights, benefits, and privileges.                   In doing so, section 7(a)(1)
    plainly   confers     an   individual         right    and    satisfies      the    first
    requirement for enforcement under § 1983.                     See Schwier, 
    340 F.3d at 1292
    ; Dittman, 
    191 F.3d at 1028
    .
    37
    Further, the individual right created by section 7(a)(1) is
    not “‘so vague and amorphous’ that its enforcement would strain
    judicial competence.”            Blessing, 
    520 U.S. at
    340–41 (quoting
    Wright, 
    479 U.S. at
    431–32).                 An individual’s right to retain
    “any right, benefit, or privilege provided by law” is clearly
    defined.     See    Dittman,        
    191 F.3d at 1028
         (“[T]he      statutory
    obligation     imposed      on    governmental            bodies    is     clear:        A
    governmental      body     may   not       deny     any     individual      any     right,
    benefit, or privilege because she refuses to disclose her social
    security     number,       unless      otherwise          permitted        by       law.”).
    Moreover, the Act unambiguously imposes a binding and mandatory
    obligation   on    the     states     by    using     the    phrase       “it   shall    be
    unlawful.”     See § 7(a)(1).              Tankersley has thus established a
    rebuttable    presumption        of    enforceability         of    his    Privacy      Act
    rights under § 1983.
    B.
    Appellees      have     failed        to     counter    this     presumption        by
    demonstrating     that     Congress       “specifically       foreclosed        a   remedy
    under § 1983,” see Blessing, 
    520 U.S. at 341
     (quoting Smith, 
    468 U.S. at
    1005 n.9), as their argument rests primarily on their
    38
    contention that the Privacy Act does not confer an individual
    right, 6 see Appellees’ Br. 39–45.
    As it happens, Congress has not foreclosed a remedy under
    § 1983.          In concluding otherwise, the Ninth Circuit reasoned
    that, “[a]lthough the prohibitions of § 7(a)(1) apply to all
    governmental entities, including state and local governments, by
    limiting the scope of the Privacy Act’s civil remedy provision,
    5   U.S.C.       § 552a(g),    Congress       clearly      intended     to   ‘foreclose
    private         enforcement’    against       any      entity   other   than    federal
    agencies.”          Dittman,        
    191 F.3d at 1029
    .     The   civil     remedy
    provision to which the Ninth Circuit referred, however, applies
    only       to   section    3   of    the    Privacy      Act,   which   concerns    the
    maintenance         of    individuals’       records      and   which    itself     only
    regulates federal agencies.                  See 5 U.S.C. § 552a.            The civil
    remedy provision does not apply to section 7, the section at
    issue in this case.             See Schwier, 
    340 F.3d at 1289
     (“Dittman
    6
    Appellees also assert that Tankersley cannot pursue his
    Privacy Act rights under § 1983 because “Congress lacked
    authority to abrogate the Eleventh Amendment immunity of the
    states in the Privacy Act.”     Appellees’ Br. 38.    The Supreme
    Court has consistently recognized, however, that “official-
    capacity actions for prospective relief are not treated as
    actions against the state.”      Will v. Mich. Dep’t of State
    Police, 
    491 U.S. 58
    , 71 n.10 (1989) (quoting Kentucky v. Graham,
    
    473 U.S. 159
    , 167 n.14 (1985)). Accordingly, because Tankersley
    seeks injunctive relief, not damages, from state officials in
    their official capacity, this case does not implicate any
    Eleventh Amendment concerns.      See 
    id.
     (“Of course a state
    official in his or her official capacity, when sued for
    injunctive relief, would be a person under § 1983 . . . .”).
    39
    failed    to    recognize          that    the     remedial         scheme     of    section     3
    applies only to section 3 and has no bearing on section 7.”).
    Appellees acknowledge as much in their brief.                                  See Appellees’
    Br. 38 (“The only private cause of action created under the
    Privacy Act exists under Section 3 of that Act, and is limited
    to   claims     against       federal          entities.”).          As    the    Privacy       Act
    establishes “no enforcement scheme at all” with respect to the
    individual      rights        that      section       7   confers,        Congress        has   not
    foreclosed enforcement of these rights under § 1983. 7                                    Schwier,
    
    340 F.3d at 1292
    .
    IV.
    Thus,         neither        
    42 U.S.C. § 666
        nor        
    42 U.S.C. § 405
    supersedes section 7(a)(1) of the Privacy Act and authorizes the
    enforcement         of   Maryland         Rules    16-811.5         and   16-811.6        against
    Tankersley.          Moreover, 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     confers a private right
    of   action     for      Tankersley        to    enforce      his    Privacy        Act   rights.
    Because this case involves no genuine issue of material fact,
    see Fed.       R.    Civ.     P.    56,    I    would     reverse     and      remand      to   the
    7Tankersley argues in the alternative that a federal court
    may exercise its “inherent equitable power to enjoin violations
    of federal law.”     Reply Br. 19.     Because I conclude that
    Tankersley has a private right of action to enforce his section
    7(a)(1) Privacy Act rights under § 1983, I do not address this
    issue.
    40
    district   court   for   entry   of    summary   judgment 8   in   favor   of
    Tankersley.
    8 The parties have sufficient notice that we may grant
    summary judgment, as Tankersley filed a motion seeking this
    relief and Appellees styled their dispositive motion as a
    “Motion to Dismiss, or, in the Alternative, for Summary
    Judgment.” See J.A. 116.
    41
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 15-1081

Citation Numbers: 837 F.3d 390, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 16737

Judges: King, Diaz, Davis

Filed Date: 9/13/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

Authorities (24)

Abramski v. United States , 134 S. Ct. 2259 ( 2014 )

Department of Homeland Security v. MacLean , 135 S. Ct. 913 ( 2015 )

Montclair v. Ramsdell , 2 S. Ct. 391 ( 1883 )

Golden State Transit Corp. v. City of Los Angeles , 110 S. Ct. 444 ( 1989 )

Preseault v. Interstate Commerce Commission , 110 S. Ct. 914 ( 1990 )

Blessing v. Freestone , 117 S. Ct. 1353 ( 1997 )

Roy Richard Dittman v. State of California State and ... , 191 F.3d 1020 ( 1999 )

Morton v. Mancari , 94 S. Ct. 2474 ( 1974 )

Aziz v. Alcolac, Inc. , 658 F.3d 388 ( 2011 )

Discover Bank Discover Financial Services, Incorporated v. ... , 396 F.3d 366 ( 2005 )

Crespo v. Holder , 631 F.3d 130 ( 2011 )

Livadas v. Bradshaw , 114 S. Ct. 2068 ( 1994 )

Nevada v. Hicks , 121 S. Ct. 2304 ( 2001 )

Gonzaga University v. Doe , 122 S. Ct. 2268 ( 2002 )

Broughman v. Carver , 624 F.3d 670 ( 2010 )

Schwier v. Cox , 340 F.3d 1284 ( 2003 )

luis-reyes-gaona-v-north-carolina-growers-association-incorporated-del-al , 250 F.3d 861 ( 2001 )

United States v. Menasche , 75 S. Ct. 513 ( 1955 )

Kentucky v. Graham , 105 S. Ct. 3099 ( 1985 )

Duncan v. Walker , 121 S. Ct. 2120 ( 2001 )

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