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(Slip Opinion) OCTOBER TERM, 2015 1 Syllabus NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued. The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337. SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES Syllabus BANK MARKAZI, AKA CENTRAL BANK OF IRAN v. PETERSON ET AL. CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT No. 14â770. Argued January 13, 2016âDecided April 20, 2016 American nationals may seek money damages from state sponsors of terrorism in the courts of the United States. See 28 U. S. C. §1605A. Prevailing plaintiffs, however, often face practical and legal difficul- ties enforcing their judgments. To place beyond dispute the availabil- ity of certain assets for satisfaction of judgments rendered in terror- ism cases against Iran, Congress enacted the Iran Threat Reduction and Syria Human Rights Act of 2012. As relevant here, the Act makes a designated set of assets available to satisfy the judgments underlying a consolidated enforcement proceeding which the statute identifies by the District Courtâs docket number. 22 U. S. C. §8772. Section 8772(a)(2) requires a court, before allowing execution against these assets, to determine, inter alia, âwhether Iran holds equitable title to, or the beneficial interest in, the assets.â Respondentsâmore than 1,000 victims of Iran-sponsored acts of terrorism, their estate representatives, and surviving family mem- bersârank within 16 discrete groups, each of which brought suit against Iran. To enforce judgments they obtained by default, the 16 groups moved for turnover of about $1.75 billion in bond assets held in a New York bank accountâassets that, respondents alleged, were owned by Bank Markazi, the Central Bank of Iran. The turnover proceeding began in 2008. In 2012, the judgment holders updated their motions to include execution claims under §8772. Bank Marka- zi maintained that §8772 could not withstand inspection under the separation-of-powers doctrine, contending that Congress had usurped the judicial role by directing a particular result in the pending en- forcement proceeding. The District Court disagreed, concluding that §8772 permissibly changed the law applicable in a pending litigation. 2 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON Syllabus The Second Circuit affirmed. Held: Section 8772 does not violate the separation of powers. Pp. 12â 24. (a) Article III of the Constitution establishes an independent Judi- ciary with the âprovince and duty . . . to say what the law isâ in par- ticular cases and controversies. Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch 137, 177. Necessarily, that endowment of authority blocks Congress from ârequir[ing] federal courts to exercise the judicial power in a manner that Article III forbids.â Plaut v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc., 514 U. S. 211, 218. Although Article III bars Congress from telling a court how to apply pre-existing law to particular circumstances, Robertson v. Seattle Audubon Soc., 503 U. S. 429, 438â439, Congress may amend a law and make the amended prescription retroactively applicable in pending cases, Landgraf v. USI Film Products, 511 U. S. 244, 267â 268; United States v. Schooner Peggy, 1 Cranch 103, 110. In United States v. Klein, 13 Wall. 128, 146, this Court enigmatically observed that Congress may not âprescribe rules of decision to the Judicial De- partment . . . in [pending] cases.â More recent decisions have clari- fied that Klein does not inhibit Congress from âamend[ing] applicable law.â Robertson, 503 U. S., at 441; Plaut, 514 U. S., at 218. Section 8772 does just that: It requires a court to apply a new legal standard in a pending postjudgment enforcement proceeding. No different re- sult obtains because, as Bank Markazi argues, the outcome of apply- ing §8772 to the facts in the proceeding below was a âforegone conclu- sio[n].â Brief for Petitioner 47. A statute does not impinge on judicial power when it directs courts to apply a new legal standard to undisputed facts. See Pope v. United States, 323 U. S. 1, 11. Pp. 12â 19. (b) Nor is §8772 invalid because, as Bank Markazi further objects, it prescribes a rule for a single, pending case identified by caption and docket number. The amended law upheld in Robertson also ap- plied to cases identified in the statute by caption and docket number. 503 U. S., at 440. Moreover, §8772 is not an instruction governing one case only: It facilitates execution of judgments in 16 suits. While consolidated for administrative purposes at the execution stage, the judgment-execution claims were not independent of the original ac- tions for damages and each retained its separate character. In any event, the Bankâs argument rests on the flawed assumption that leg- islation must be generally applicable. See Plaut, 514 U. S., at 239, n. 9. This Court and lower courts have upheld as a valid exercise of Congressâ legislative power laws governing one or a very small num- ber of specific subjects. Pp. 19â21. (c) Adding weight to this decision, §8772 is an exercise of congres- sional authority regarding foreign affairs, a domain in which the con- Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 3 Syllabus trolling role of the political branches is both necessary and proper. Measures taken by the political branches to control the disposition of foreign-state property, including blocking specific foreign-state assets or making them available for attachment, have never been rejected as invasions upon the Article III judicial power. Cf. Dames & Moore v. Regan, 453 U. S. 654, 674. Notably, before enactment of the For- eign Sovereign Immunities Act, the Executive regularly made case- specific determinations whether sovereign immunity should be rec- ognized, and courts accepted those determinations as binding. See, e.g., Republic of Austria v. Altmann, 541 U. S. 677, 689â691. This practice, too, was never perceived as an encroachment on the federal courtsâ jurisdiction. Dames & Moore, 453 U. S., at 684â685. Pp. 21â 23. 758 F. 3d 185, affirmed. GINSBURG, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which KENNEDY, BREYER, ALITO, and KAGAN, JJ., joined, and in all but Part IIâC of which THOMAS, J., joined. ROBERTS, C. J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which SOTOMAYOR, J., joined. Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 1 Opinion of the Court NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash- ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press. SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES _________________ No. 14â770 _________________ BANK MARKAZI, AKA THE CENTRAL BANK OF IRAN, PETITIONER v. DEBORAH PETERSON, ET AL. ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT [April 20, 2016] JUSTICE GINSBURG delivered the opinion of the Court.* A provision of the Iran Threat Reduction and Syria Human Rights Act of 2012, 22 U. S. C. §8772, makes available for postjudgment execution a set of assets held at a New York bank for Bank Markazi, the Central Bank of Iran. The assets would partially satisfy judgments gained in separate actions by over 1,000 victims of terror- ist acts sponsored by Iran. The judgments remain unpaid. Section 8772 is an unusual statute: It designates a partic- ular set of assets and renders them available to satisfy the liability and damages judgments underlying a consoli- dated enforcement proceeding that the statute identifies by the District Courtâs docket number. The question raised by petitioner Bank Markazi: Does §8772 violate the sepa- ration of powers by purporting to change the law for, and directing a particular result in, a single pending case? Section 8772, we hold, does not transgress constraints placed on Congress and the President by the Constitution. The statute, we point out, is not fairly portrayed as a âone- case-only regime.â Brief for Petitioner 27. Rather, it covers a category of postjudgment execution claims filed ââââââ * JUSTICE THOMAS joins all but Part IIâC of this opinion. 2 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON Opinion of the Court by numerous plaintiffs who, in multiple civil actions, obtained evidence-based judgments against Iran together amounting to billions of dollars. Section 8772 subjects the designated assets to execution âto satisfy any judgmentâ against Iran for damages caused by specified acts of ter- rorism. §8772(a)(1) (emphasis added). Congress, our decisions make clear, may amend the law and make the change applicable to pending cases, even when the amendment is outcome determinative. Adding weight to our decision, Congress passed, and the President signed, §8772 in furtherance of their stance on a matter of foreign policy. Action in that realm warrants respectful review by courts. The Executive has histori- cally made case-specific sovereign-immunity determinations to which courts have deferred. And exercise by Congress and the President of control over claims against foreign governments, as well as foreign-government-owned prop- erty in the United States, is hardly a novelty. In accord with the courts below, we perceive in §8772 no violation of separation-of-powers principles, and no threat to the independence of the Judiciary. I A We set out here statutory provisions relevant to this case. American nationals may file suit against state spon- sors of terrorism in the courts of the United States. See 28 U. S. C. §1605A. Specifically, they may seek âmoney damages . . . against a foreign state for personal injury or death that was caused byâ acts of terrorism, including âtorture, extrajudicial killing, aircraft sabotage, hostage taking, or the provision of material supportâ to terrorist activities. §1605A(a)(1). This authorizationâknown as the âterrorism exceptionââis among enumerated excep- Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 3 Opinion of the Court tions prescribed in the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976 (FSIA) to the general rule of sovereign immunity.1 Victims of state-sponsored terrorism, like others pro- ceeding under an FSIA exception, may obtain a judgment against a foreign state on âestablish[ing] [their] claim[s] . . . by evidence satisfactory to the court.â §1608(e). After gaining a judgment, however, plaintiffs proceeding under the terrorism exception âhave often faced practical and legal difficultiesâ at the enforcement stage. Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 2. Subject to stated excep- tions, the FSIA shields foreign-state property from execu- tion. §1609. When the terrorism exception was adopted, only foreign-state property located in the United States and âused for a commercial activityâ was available for the satisfaction of judgments. §1610(a)(7), (b)(3). Further limiting judgment-enforcement prospects, the FSIA shields from execution property âof a foreign central bank or monetary authority held for its own account.â §1611(b)(1). To lessen these enforcement difficulties, Congress en- acted the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act of 2002 (TRIA), which authorizes execution of judgments obtained under the FSIAâs terrorism exception against âthe blocked assets of [a] terrorist party (including the blocked assets of any agency or instrumentality of that terrorist party).â §201(a), 116 Stat. 2337, note following 28 U. S. C. §1610. ââââââ 1 The FSIA âprovides the sole basis for obtaining jurisdiction over a foreign state in the courts of this countryâ and renders a foreign gov- ernment âpresumptively immune from the jurisdiction of United States courts unless one of the Actâs express exceptions to sovereign immunity applies.â OBB Personenverkehr AG v. Sachs, 577 U. S. ___, ___ (2015) (slip op., at 3) (internal quotation marks omitted); see 28 U. S. C. §1330(a) (conferring jurisdiction over âany claim . . . with respect to which the foreign state is not entitled to immunityâ); §1604 (on â[i]mmunity of a foreign state from jurisdictionâ). 4 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON Opinion of the Court A âblocked assetâ is any asset seized by the Executive Branch pursuant to either the Trading with the Enemy Act (TWEA), 40 Stat. 411, 50 U. S. C. App. 1 et seq., or the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), 91 Stat. 1625, 50 U. S. C. §1570 et seq. See TRIA §201(d)(2). Both measures, TWEA and IEEPA, authorize the President to freeze the assets of âforeign enemy state[s]â and their agencies and instrumentalities. Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 25. These blocking regimes âput control of foreign assets in the hands of the President so that he may dispose of them in the manner that best furthers the United Statesâ foreign-relations and national-security interests.â Ibid. (internal quotation marks omitted).2 Invoking his authority under the IEEPA, the President, in February 2012, issued an Executive Order blocking â[a]ll property and interests in property of any Iranian financial institution, including the Central Bank of Iran, that are in the United States.â Exec. Order No. 13599, 3 CFR 215 (2012 Comp.). The availability of these assets for execution, however, was contested.3 ââââââ 2 Againexpanding the availability of assets for postjudgment execu- tion, Congress, in 2008, amended the FSIA to make available for execution the property (whether or not blocked) of a foreign state sponsor of terrorism, or its agency or instrumentality, to satisfy a judgment against that state. See §1083 of the National Defense Au- thorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008, 122 Stat. 341, 28 U. S. C. §1610(g). Section 1610(g) does not take precedence over âany other provision of law,â as the TRIA does. See TRIA §201(a). Hence, the FSIAâs central- bank immunity provision, see supra, at 3, limits §1610(g), but not the TRIA. 3 As a defense to execution, Bank Markazi contended that the blocked assets were not assets âofâ Bank Markazi. See TRIA §201(a). Referring to state property law, Bank Markazi asserted that the assets were âofâ a financial intermediary which held them in the United States on Bank Markaziâs behalf. See App. to Pet. for Cert. 96aâ100a. Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 5 Opinion of the Court To place beyond dispute the availability of some of the Executive Order No. 13599-blocked assets for satisfaction of judgments rendered in terrorism cases, Congress passed the statute at issue here: §502 of the Iran Threat Reduc- tion and Syria Human Rights Act of 2012, 126 Stat. 1258, 22 U. S. C. §8772. Enacted as a freestanding measure, not as an amendment to the FSIA or the TRIA,4 §8772 pro- vides that, if a court makes specified findings, âa financial asset . . . shall be subject to execution . . . in order to sat- isfy any judgment to the extent of any compensatory dam- ages awarded against Iran for damages for personal injury or death caused byâ the acts of terrorism enumerated in the FSIAâs terrorism exception. §8772(a)(1). Section 8772(b) defines as available for execution by holders of terrorism judgments against Iran âthe financial assets that are identified in and the subject of proceedings in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York in Peterson et al. v. Islamic Republic of Iran et al., Case No. 10 Civ. 4518 (BSJ) (GWG), that were re- strained by restraining notices and levies secured by the plaintiffs in those proceedings.â Before allowing execution against an asset described in §8772(b), a court must determine that the asset is: â(A) held in the United States for a foreign securi- ties intermediary doing business in the United States; â(B) a blocked asset (whether or not subsequently unblocked) . . . ; and â(C) equal in value to a financial asset of Iran, in- cluding an asset of the central bank or monetary au- thority of the Government of Iran . . . .â §8772(a)(1). In addition, the court in which execution is sought must ââââââ 4 Title 22 U. S. C. §8772(a)(1) applies ânotwithstanding any other provision of law, including any provision of law relating to sovereign immunity, and preempt[s] any inconsistent provision of State law.â 6 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON Opinion of the Court determine âwhether Iran holds equitable title to, or the beneficial interest in, the assets . . . and that no other person possesses a constitutionally protected interest in the assets . . . under the Fifth Amendment to the Consti- tution of the United States.â §8772(a)(2). B Respondents are victims of Iran-sponsored acts of ter- rorism, their estate representatives, and surviving family members. See App. to Pet. for Cert. 52aâ53a; Brief for Respondents 6. Numbering more than 1,000, respondents rank within 16 discrete groups, each of which brought a lawsuit against Iran pursuant to the FSIAâs terrorism exception. App. to Brief for Respondents 1aâ2a. All of the suits were filed in United States District Court for the District of Columbia.5 Upon finding a clear evidentiary ââââââ 5 The 16 judgments include: Wultz v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 864 F. Supp. 2d 24 (DC 2012); Murphy v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 740 F. Supp. 2d 51 (DC 2010); Valore v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 700 F. Supp. 2d 52 (DC 2010) (granting judgment in consolidation of four actions at issue here: Valore, No. 1:03âcvâ01959; Bonk v. Islamic Republic of Iran, No. 1:08âcvâ01273; Spencer v. Islamic Republic of Iran, No. 1:06âcvâ00750; and Arnold v. Islamic Republic of Iran, No. 1:06âcvâ00516); Estate of Brown v. Islamic Republic of Iran, No. 1:08â cvâ00531 (D DC, Feb. 1, 2010); Acosta v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 574 F. Supp. 2d 15 (DC 2008); Beer v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 574 F. Supp. 2d 1 (DC 2008); Kirschenbaum v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 572 F. Supp. 2d 200 (DC 2008); Levin v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 529 F. Supp. 2d 1 (DC 2007); Estate of Heiser v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 466 F. Supp. 2d 229 (DC 2006); Estate of Bland v. Islamic Republic of Iran, No. 1:05â cvâ02124 (D DC, Dec. 6, 2006); Greenbaum v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 451 F. Supp. 2d 90 (DC 2006); Campuzano v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 281 F. Supp. 2d 258 (DC 2003) (awarding judgment in both the Rubin action, Rubin v. Islamic Republic of Iran, No. 1:01âcvâ01655, the plaintiffs of which are respondents here, and the Campuzano action, the plaintiffs of which are not); Peterson v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 264 F. Supp. 2d 46 (DC 2003). Three additional groups of plaintiffs with claims against Iran were voluntarily dismissed from the instant litiga- Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 7 Opinion of the Court basis for Iranâs liability to each suitor, the court entered judgments by default. See, e.g., Peterson v. Islamic Repub- lic of Iran, 264 F. Supp. 2d 46, 49 (2003). The majority of respondents sought redress for injuries suffered in connec- tion with the 1983 bombing of the U. S. Marine barracks in Beirut, Lebanon. App. to Pet. for Cert. 21a.6 âTogether, [respondents] have obtained billions of dollars in judg- ments against Iran, the vast majority of which remain unpaid.â Id., at 53a.7 The validity of those judgments is not in dispute. Id., at 55a. To enforce their judgments, the 16 groups of respond- ents first registered them in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. See 28 U. S. C. §1963 (âA judgment . . . may be registered . . . in any other district . . . . A judgment so registered shall have the same effect as a judgment of the district court of the district where registered and may be enforced in like manner.â). They then moved under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 69 for turnover of about $1.75 billion in bond ââââââ tion after âinforming the [District Court] that none of the plaintiffs in those actions ha[d] obtained judgments for damages against Iran.â App. to Pet. for Cert. 19a. 6 âAt approximately 6:25 a.m. Beirut time, . . . [a] truck crashed through a . . . barrier and a wall of sandbags, and entered the barracks. When the truck reached the center of the barracks, the bomb in the truck detonated. . . .â Peterson, 264 F. Supp. 2d, at 56 (footnote omit- ted). âAs a result of the Marine barracks explosion, 241 servicemen were killed . . . .â Id., at 58. The United States has long recognized Iranâs complicity in this attack. See H. R. Rep. No. 104â523, pt. 1, p. 9 (1996) (âAfter an Administration determination of Iranâs involvement in the bombing of the Marine barracks in Beirut in October 1983, Iran was placed on the U. S. list of state sponsors of terrorism on January 19, 1984.â). 7 Some of these 16 judgments awarded compensatory and punitive damages. See, e.g., Wultz, 864 F. Supp. 2d, at 42; Acosta, 574 F. Supp. 2d, at 31. Both §201(a) of the TRIA and §8772(a)(1) permit execution only âto the extent of any compensatory damages.â 8 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON Opinion of the Court assets held in a New York bank accountâassets that, respondents alleged, were owned by Bank Markazi. See App. to Pet. for Cert. 52aâ54a, 60a, and n. 1; Second Amended Complaint in No. 10âCIVâ4518 (SDNY), p. 6.8 This turnover proceeding began in 2008 when the terror- ism judgment holders in Peterson, 264 F. Supp. 2d 46, filed writs of execution and the District Court restrained the bonds. App. to Pet. for Cert. 14aâ15a, 62a. Other groups of terrorism judgment holdersâsome of which had filed their own writs of execution against the bondsâwere joined in No. 10âCIVâ4518, the Peterson enforcement proceeding, through a variety of procedural mechanisms.9 It is this consolidated judgment-enforcement proceed- ing and assets restrained in that proceeding that §8772 addresses. Although the enforcement proceeding was initiated prior to the issuance of Executive Order No. 13599 and the enactment of §8772, the judgment holders updated their motions in 2012 to include execution claims under §8772. Plaintiffsâ Supplemental Memorandum of Law in Support of Their Motion for Partial Summary Judgment in No. 10â CIVâ4518 (SDNY).10 Making the findings necessary un- ââââââ 8 Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 69(a)(1) provides: âA money judg- ment is enforced by writ of execution . . . . The procedure on execu- tionâand in proceedings supplementary to and in aid of judgment or executionâmust accord with the procedure of the state where the court is located, but a federal statute governs to the extent it applies.â 9 Some moved to intervene; others became part of the proceeding by way of an interpleader motion filed by Citibank. App. to Pet. for Cert. 15a, 52aâ53a, n. 1; Third-Party Petition Alleging Claims in the Nature of Interpleader in No. 10âCIVâ4518 (SDNY), pp. 12â14. One group of respondents intervened much later than the others, in 2013, after §8772âs enactment. See App. to Pet. for Cert. 18aâ19a. 10 Before §8772âs enactment, respondentsâ execution claims relied on the TRIA. Even earlier, i.e., prior to Executive Order No. 13599, which blocked the assets and thereby opened the door to execution under the Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 9 Opinion of the Court der §8772, the District Court ordered the requested turn- over. App. to Pet. for Cert. 109a.11 In reaching its decision, the court reviewed the financial history of the assets and other record evidence showing that Bank Markazi owned the assets. See id., at 111aâ 113a, and n. 17. Since at least early 2008, the court re- counted, the bond assets have been held in a New York account at Citibank directly controlled by Clearstream Banking, S. A. (Clearstream), a Luxembourg-based com- pany that serves âas an intermediary between financial institutions worldwide.â Id., at 56aâ57a (internal quota- tion makes omitted). Initially, Clearstream held the assets for Bank Markazi and deposited interest earned on the bonds into Bank Markaziâs Clearstream account. At some point in 2008, Bank Markazi instructed Clearstream to position another intermediaryâBanca UBAE, S. p. A., an Italian bankâbetween the bonds and Bank Markazi. Id., at 58aâ59a. Thereafter, Clearstream deposited inter- est payments in UBAEâs account, which UBAE then re- mitted to Bank Markazi. Id., at 60aâ61a.12 Resisting turnover of the bond assets, Bank Markazi and Clearstream, as the District Court observed, âfilled ââââââ TRIA, respondents sought turnover pursuant to the FSIAâs terrorism judgment execution provisions. See Second Amended Complaint in No. 10âCIVâ4518 (SDNY), pp. 27, 35â36; supra, at 3â4, and n. 2. 11 In April 2012, the last of the bonds matured, leaving only âcash associated with the bondsâ still restrained in the New York bank account. App. to Pet. for Cert. 61a. 12 Citibank is a âneutral stakeholder,â seeking only âresolution of ownership of [the] funds.â App. to Pet. for Cert. 54a (internal quotation marks omitted). UBAE did not contest turnover of the $1.75 billion in assets at issue here (though it disputed the District Courtâs personal jurisdiction in anticipation of other execution claims not now before us). See Memorandum of Law in Support of Banca UBAE, S. p. A.âs Opposi- tion to the Plaintiffsâ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment in No. 10â CIVâ4518 (SDNY), pp. 1â2. 10 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON Opinion of the Court the proverbial kitchen sink with arguments.â Id., at 111a. They argued, inter alia, the absence of subject-matter and personal jurisdiction, id., at 73aâ104a, asserting that the blocked assets were not assets âof â the Bank, see supra, at 4, n. 3, and that the assets in question were located in Luxembourg, not New York, App. to Pet. for Cert. 100a. Several of their objections to execution became irrelevant following enactment of §8772, which, the District Court noted, âsweeps away . . . any . . . federal or state law im- pediments that might otherwise exist, so long as the ap- propriate judicial determination is made.â Id., at 73a; §8772(a)(1) (Act applies ânotwithstanding any other provi- sion of lawâ). After §8772âs passage, Bank Markazi changed its defense. It conceded that Iran held the requi- site âequitable title to, or beneficial interest in, the assets,â §8772(a)(2)(A), but maintained that §8772 could not with- stand inspection under the separation-of-powers doctrine. See Defendant Bank Markaziâs Supplemental Memoran- dum of Law in Opposition to Plaintiffsâ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment in No. 10âCIVâ4518 (SDNY), pp. 1â 3, 10â16.13 ââââââ 13 In addition, Bank Markazi advanced one argument not foreclosed by §8772âs text, and another that, at least in Bank Markaziâs estima- tion, had not been rendered irrelevant by §8772. First, Bank Markazi argued that the availability of the assets for execution was a nonjusti- ciable political question because execution threatened to interfere with European blocking regulations. App. to Pet. for Cert. 92aâ94a. Second, the Bank urged that execution would violate U. S. treaty obligations to Iran. See Defendant Bank Markaziâs Supplemental Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Plaintiffsâ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment in No. 10âCIVâ4518 (SDNY), pp. 2â3, 21â25. The District Court found these arguments unavailing. The matter was justiciable, the court concluded, because §8772âs enactment demonstrated that the political branches were not troubled about interference with European blocking regulations. App. to Pet. for Cert. 94aâ96a. And treaty provisions interposed no bar to enforcement of §8772 because, the court reiterated, §8772 displaces âanyâ inconsistent provision of law, treaty obligations Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 11 Opinion of the Court â[I]n passing §8772,â Bank Markazi argued, âCongress effectively dictated specific factual findings in connection with a specific litigationâinvading the province of the courts.â App. to Pet. for Cert. 114a. The District Court disagreed. The ownership determinations §8772 required, see supra, at 8â9, the court said, â[were] not mere fig leaves,â for âit [was] quite possible that the [c]ourt could have found that defendants raised a triable issue as to whether the [b]locked [a]ssets were owned by Iran, or that Clearstream and/or UBAE ha[d] some form of beneficial or equitable interest.â App. to Pet. for Cert. 115a. Observing from the voluminous filings that â[t]here [was] . . . plenty . . . to [litigate],â the court described §8772 as a measure that âmerely chang[es] the law applicable to pending cases; it does not usurp the adjudicative function assigned to federal courts.â Ibid. (internal quotation marks omit- ted). Further, the court reminded, âIranâs liability and its required payment of damages was . . . established years prior to the [enactment of §8772]â; â[a]t issue [here] is merely execution [of judgments] on assets present in this district.â Id., at 116a.14 The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit unanimously affirmed. Peterson v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 758 F. 3d 185 (2014).15 On appeal, Bank Markazi again argued that §8772 violates the separation of powers âby compelling the courts to reach a predetermined result in this case.â Id., at 191. In accord with the District Court, the Second ââââââ included. Id., at 101aâ102a. 14 Bank Markazi and Clearstream unsuccessfully sought to defeat turnover on several other constitutional grounds: the Bill of Attainder, Ex post facto, Equal Protection, and Takings Clauses. See id., at 115aâ 119a. Those grounds are no longer pressed. 15 Clearstream and UBAE settled with respondents before the Second Circuitâs decision. Peterson v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 758 F. 3d 185, 189 (2014). 12 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON Opinion of the Court Circuit responded that â§8772 does not compel judicial findings [or results] under old lawâ; ârather, it retroac- tively changes the law applicable in this case, a permissible exercise of legislative authority.â Ibid. Congress may so prescribe, the appeals court noted, âeven when the result under the revised law is clear.â Ibid. To consider the separation-of-powers question Bank Markazi presents, we granted certiorari, 576 U. S. ___ (2015), and now affirm.16 II Article III of the Constitution establishes an independ- ent Judiciary, a Third Branch of Government with the âprovince and duty . . . to say what the law isâ in particu- lar cases and controversies. Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch 137, 177 (1803). Necessarily, that endowment of authority blocks Congress from ârequir[ing] federal courts to exercise the judicial power in a manner that Article III forbids.â Plaut v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc., 514 U. S. 211, 218 (1995). Congress, no doubt, âmay not usurp a courtâs power to interpret and apply the law to the [circum- stances] before it,â Brief for Former Senior Officials of the Office of Legal Counsel as Amici Curiae 3, 6, for â[t]hose who apply [a] rule to particular cases, must of necessity ex- pound and interpret that rule,â Marbury, 1 Cranch, at 177.17 And our decisions place off limits to Congress ââââââ 16 Respondents suggest that we decide this case on the ground that §201(a) of the TRIA independently authorizes execution against the assets here involved, instead of reaching the constitutional question petitioner raises regarding §8772. Brief for Respondents 53. The Court of Appeals, however, did not âresolve th[e] dispute under the TRIA,â 758 F. 3d, at 189, nor do we. This Court generally does not decide issues unaddressed on first appealâespecially where, as here, the matter falls outside the question presented and has not been thoroughly briefed before us. 17 Consistent with this limitation, respondents rightly acknowledged Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 13 Opinion of the Court âvest[ing] review of the decisions of Article III courts in officials of the Executive Branch.â Plaut, 514 U. S., at 218 (citing Hayburnâs Case, 2 Dall. 409 (1792), and, e.g., Chi- cago & Southern Air Lines, Inc. v. Waterman S. S. Corp., 333 U. S. 103, 114 (1948)). Congress, we have also held, may not âretroactively comman[d] the federal courts to reopen final judgments.â Plaut, 514 U. S., at 219. A Citing United States v. Klein, 13 Wall. 128 (1872), Bank Markazi urges a further limitation. Congress treads impermissibly on judicial turf, the Bank maintains, when it âprescribe[s] rules of decision to the Judicial Depart- ment . . . in [pending] cases.â Id., at 146. According to the Bank, §8772 fits that description. Brief for Petitioner 19, 43. Klein has been called âa deeply puzzling decision,â Meltzer, Congress, Courts, and Constitutional Remedies, 86 Geo. L. J. 2537, 2538 (1998).18 More recent decisions, however, have made it clear that Klein does not inhibit Congress from âamend[ing] applicable law.â Robertson v. Seattle Audubon Soc., 503 U. S. 429, 441 (1992); see id., at 437â438; Plaut, 514 U. S., at 218 (Kleinâs âprohibition does not take hold when Congress âamend[s] applicable law.â â ââââââ at oral argument that Congress could not enact a statute directing that, in âSmith v. Jones,â âSmith wins.â Tr. of Oral Arg. 40. Such a statute would create no new substantive law; it would instead direct the court how pre-existing law applies to particular circumstances. See infra this page and 14â19. THE CHIEF JUSTICE challenges this distinction, post, at 11â12, but it is solidly grounded in our precedent. See Robertson v. Seattle Audubon Soc., 503 U. S. 429, 439 (1992) (A statute is invalid if it âfail[s] to supply new law, but direct[s] results under old law.â), discussed in R. Fallon, J. Manning, D. Meltzer, & D. Shapiro, Hart and Wechslerâs The Federal Courts and the Federal System 324 (7th ed. 2015). 18 See also id., at 323 (calling Klein a âdelphic opinionâ); Tyler, The Story of Klein: The Scope of Congressâs Authority to Shape the Jurisdic- tion of the Federal Courts, in Federal Courts Stories 87 (V. Jackson & J. Resnik eds. 2010) (calling Klein âbaffl[ing]â) (Tyler). 14 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON Opinion of the Court (quoting Robertson, 503 U. S., at 441)). Section 8772, we hold, did just that. Klein involved Civil War legislation providing that persons whose property had been seized and sold in war- time could recover the proceeds of the sale in the Court of Claims upon proof that they had ânever given any aid or comfort to the present rebellion.â Ch. 120, §3, 12 Stat. 820; see Klein, 13 Wall., at 139. In 1863, President Lin- coln pardoned âpersons who . . . participated in the . . . rebellionâ if they swore an oath of loyalty to the United States. Presidential Proclamation No. 11, 13 Stat. 737. One of the persons so pardoned was a southerner named Wilson, whose cotton had been seized and sold by Gov- ernment agents. Klein was the administrator of Wilsonâs estate. 13 Wall., at 132. In United States v. Padelford, 9 Wall. 531, 543 (1870), this Court held that the recipient of a Presidential pardon must be treated as loyal, i.e., the pardon operated as âa complete substitute for proof that [the recipient] gave no aid or comfort to the rebellion.â Thereafter, Klein prevailed in an action in the Court of Claims, yielding an award of $125,300 for Wilsonâs cotton. 13 Wall., at 132. During the pendency of an appeal to this Court from the Court of Claims judgment in Klein, Congress enacted a statute providing that no pardon should be admissible as proof of loyalty. Moreover, acceptance of a pardon without disclaiming participation in the rebellion would serve as conclusive evidence of disloyalty. The statute directed the Court of Claims and the Supreme Court to dismiss for want of jurisdiction any claim based on a pardon. 16 Stat. 235; R. Fallon, J. Manning, D. Meltzer, & D. Shapiro, Hart and Wechslerâs The Federal Courts and the Federal Sys- tem 323, n. 29 (7th ed. 2015) (Hart and Wechsler). Affirm- ing the judgment of the Court of Claims, this Court held that Congress had no authority to âimpai[r] the effect of a pardon,â for the Constitution entrusted the pardon power Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 15 Opinion of the Court â[t]o the executive alone.â Klein, 13 Wall., at 147. The Legislature, the Court stated, âcannot change the effect of . . . a pardon any more than the executive can change a law.â Id., at 148. Lacking authority to impair the pardon power of the Executive, Congress could not âdirec[t] [a] court to be instrumental to that end.â Ibid. In other words, the statute in Klein infringed the judicial power, not because it left too little for courts to do, but because it attempted to direct the result without altering the legal standards governing the effect of a pardonâstandards Congress was powerless to prescribe. See id., at 146â147; Robertson, 503 U. S., at 438 (Congress may not âcompe[l] . . . findings or results under old lawâ).19 Bank Markazi, as earlier observed, supra, at 13, argues that §8772 conflicts with Klein. The Bank points to a statement in the Klein opinion questioning whether âthe legislature may prescribe rules of decision to the Judicial Department . . . in cases pending before it.â 13 Wall., at 146. One cannot take this language from Klein âat face value,â however, âfor congressional power to make valid statutes retroactively applicable to pending cases has often been recognized.â Hart and Wechsler 324. See, e.g., United States v. Schooner Peggy, 1 Cranch 103, 110 (1801). As we explained in Landgraf v. USI Film Products, 511 U. S. 244, 267 (1994), the restrictions that the Constitu- tion places on retroactive legislation âare of limited scopeâ: ââââââ 19 Given the issue before the CourtâPresidential pardons Congress sought to nullify by withdrawing federal-court jurisdictionâ commentators have rightly read Klein to have at least this contempo- rary significance: Congress âmay not exercise [its authority, including its power to regulate federal jurisdiction,] in a way that requires a federal court to act unconstitutionally.â Meltzer, Congress, Courts, and Constitutional Remedies, 86 Geo. L. J. 2537, 2549 (1998). See also Tyler 112 (âCongress may not employ the courts in a way that forces them to become active participants in violating the Constitution.â). 16 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON Opinion of the Court âThe Ex Post Facto Clause flatly prohibits retroactive application of penal legislation. Article I, §10, cl. 1, prohibits States from passing . . . laws âimpairing the Obligation of Contracts.â The Fifth Amendmentâs Takings Clause prevents the Legislature (and other government actors) from depriving private persons of vested property rights except for a âpublic useâ and up- on payment of âjust compensation.â The prohibitions on âBills of Attainderâ in Art. I, §§ 9â10, prohibit legis- latures from singling out disfavored persons and met- ing out summary punishment for past conduct. The Due Process Clause also protects the interests in fair notice and repose that may be compromised by retro- active legislation; a justification sufficient to validate a statuteâs prospective application under the Clause âmay not sufficeâ to warrant its retroactive applica- tion.â Id., at 266â267 (citation and footnote omitted). âAbsent a violation of one of those specific provisions,â when a new law makes clear that it is retroactive, the arguable âunfairness of retroactive civil legislation is not a sufficient reason for a court to fail to give [that law] its intended scope.â Id., at 267â268. So yes, we have af- firmed, Congress may indeed direct courts to apply newly enacted, outcome-altering legislation in pending civil cases. See Plaut, 514 U. S., at 226. Any lingering doubts on that score have been dispelled by Robertson, 503 U. S., at 441, and Plaut, 514 U. S., at 218. Bank Markazi argues most strenuously that §8772 did not simply amend pre-existing law. Because the judicial findings contemplated by §8772 were âforegone conclu- sions,â the Bank urges, the statute âeffectivelyâ directed certain factfindings and specified the outcome under the amended law. See Brief for Petitioner 42, 47. See also post, at 12â13. Recall that the District Court, closely monitoring the case, disagreed. Supra, at 10â11; App. to Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 17 Opinion of the Court Pet. for Cert. 115a (â[The] determinations [required by §8772] [were] not mere fig leaves,â for âit [was] quite pos- sible that the [c]ourt could have found that defendants raised a triable issue as to whether the [b]locked [a]ssets were owned by Iran, or that Clearstream and/or UBAE ha[d] some form of beneficial or equitable interest.â).20 In any event, a statute does not impinge on judicial power when it directs courts to apply a new legal standard to undisputed facts. âWhen a plaintiff brings suit to en- force a legal obligation it is not any less a case or contro- versy upon which a court possessing the federal judicial power may rightly give judgment, because the plaintiff âs claim is uncontested or incontestable.â Pope v. United States, 323 U. S. 1, 11 (1944). In Schooner Peggy, 1 ââââââ 20 The District Court understandably concluded that §8772 left it âplenty . . . to adjudicate.â App. to Pet. for Cert. 115a. For one, the statute did not define its key terms, âbeneficial interestâ and âequitable title.â To arrive at fitting definitions, the District Court consulted legal dictionaries and precedent. See id., at 111aâ112a; Zivotofsky v. Clin- ton, 566 U. S. ___, ___ (2012) (slip op, at 7) (Interpretation of statutes âis a familiar judicial exercise.â). Further, §8772 required the District Court to determine whether the Bank owned the assets in question. §8772(a)(2)(A). Clearstream contended that there were triable issues as to whether Bank Markazi was the owner of the blocked assets. App. to Pet. for Cert. 37aâ39a, 111a. The court rejected that contention, finding that Clearstream and UBAE were merely account holders, maintaining the assets âon behalf ofâ the Bank. Id., at 112aâ113a; see id., at 38aâ39a. Next, §8772 required the court to determine whether any party, other than the Bank, possessed a âconstitutionally protected interestâ in the assets. §8772(a)(2)(B). Clearstream argued that it had such an interest, but the court disagreed. App. to Pet. for Cert. 117aâ 118a (determining that Clearstream had no constitutionally protected âinvestment-backed expectatio[n]â in the assets). Finally, prior to the statuteâs enactment, Bank Markazi and Clearstream had argued that the assets in question were located in Luxembourg, not New York. Supra, at 10. Leaving the issue for court resolution, Congress, in §8772(a)(1), required the District Court to determine whether the assets were âheld in the United States.â 18 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON Opinion of the Court Cranch, at 109â110, for example, this Court applied a newly ratified treaty that, by requiring the return of cap- tured property, effectively permitted only one possible outcome. And in Robertson, 503 U. S., at 434â435, 438â 439, a statute replaced governing environmental-law restraints on timber harvesting with new legislation that permitted harvesting in all but certain designated areas. Without inquiring whether the new statuteâs application in pending cases was a âforegone conclusio[n],â Brief for Petitioner 47, we upheld the legislation because it left for judicial determination whether any particular actions violated the new prescription. In short, §8772 changed the law by establishing new substantive standards, entrusting to the District Court application of those standards to the facts (contested or uncontested) found by the court. Resisting this conclusion, THE CHIEF JUSTICE compares §8772 to a hypothetical âlaw directing judgment for Smith if the court finds that Jones was duly served with notice of the proceedings.â Post, at 12â13.21 Of course, the hypoth- esized law would be invalidâas would a law directing judgment for Smith, for instance, if the court finds that the sun rises in the east. For one thing, a law so cast may well be irrational and, therefore, unconstitutional for reasons distinct from the separation-of-powers issues considered here. See, e.g., infra, at 21, n. 27. For another, the law imagined by the dissent does what Robertson says Congress cannot do: Like a statute that directs, in âSmith v. Jones,â âSmith wins,â supra, at 12â13, n. 17, it âcompel[s] . . . findings or results under old law,â for it fails to supply any new legal standard effectuating ââââââ 21 Recall, again, that respondents are judgment creditors who pre- vailed on the merits of their respective cases. Section 8772 serves to facilitate their ability to collect amounts due to them from assets of the judgment debtor. Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 19 Opinion of the Court the lawmakersâ reasonable policy judgment, 503 U. S., at 438.22 By contrast, §8772 provides a new standard clarify- ing that, if Iran owns certain assets, the victims of Iran- sponsored terrorist attacks will be permitted to execute against those assets. Applying laws implementing Con- gressâ policy judgments, with fidelity to those judgments, is commonplace for the Judiciary. B Section 8772 remains âunprecedented,â Bank Markazi charges, because it âprescribes a rule for a single pending caseâidentified by caption and docket number.â Brief for Petitioner 17.23 The amended law in Robertson, however, also applied to cases identified by caption and docket number, 503 U. S., at 440, and was nonetheless upheld. Moreover, §8772, as already described, see supra, at 6â8, facilitates execution of judgments in 16 suits, together encompassing more than 1,000 victims of Iran-sponsored terrorist attacks.24 Although consolidated for administra- ââââââ 22 The dissent also analogizes §8772 to a law that makes âconclusiveâ one partyâs flimsy evidence of a boundary line in a pending property dispute, notwithstanding that the governing law ordinarily provides that an official map establishes the boundary. Post, at 1. Section 8772, however, does not restrict the evidence on which a court may rely in making the required findings. A more fitting analogy for depicting §8772âs operation might be: In a pending property dispute, the parties contest whether an ambiguous statute makes a 1990 or 2000 county map the relevant document for establishing boundary lines. To clarify the matter, the legislature enacts a law specifying that the 2000 map supersedes the earlier map. 23 At oral argument, Bank Markazi clarified that its argument ex- tended beyond a single pending case, encompassing as well âa limited category of cases.â Tr. of Oral Arg. 5. See also id., at 57â58. 24 Section 8772âs limitation to one consolidated proceeding operates unfairly, Bank Markazi suggests, because other judgment creditors âwould be subject to a completely different ruleâ if they âsought to execute against the same assetsâ outside No. 10âCIVâ4518. Brief for 20 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON Opinion of the Court tive purposes at the execution stage,25 the judgment- execution claims brought pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 69 were not independent of the original actions for damages and each claim retained its separate charac- ter. See Mackey v. Lanier Collection Agency & Service, Inc., 486 U. S. 825, 834â835, n. 10 (1988) (postjudgment garnishment action brought under Rule 69 is part of the âprocess to enforce a judgment,â not a new suit (alteration omitted and emphasis deleted)); 10 Cyclopedia of Federal Procedure §36:8, p. 385 (3 ed. 2010) (âProceedings in exe- cution are proceedings in the action itself . . . .â); 9A C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure §2382, p. 10 (3d ed. 2008) (â[A]ctions do not lose their separate identity because of consolidation.â).26 The Bankâs argument is further flawed, for it rests on the assumption that legislation must be generally applic- able, that âthere is something wrong with particularized legislative action.â Plaut, 514 U. S., at 239, n. 9. We have ââââââ Petitioner 26 (citing §8772(c) (âNothing in this section shall be con- strued . . . to affect . . . any proceedings other thanâ No. 10âCIVâ4518)). But nothing in §8772 prevented additional judgment creditors from joining the consolidated proceeding after the statuteâs enactment. Indeed, one group of respondents did so. See supra, at 8, n. 9. 25 District courts routinely consolidate multiple related matters for a single decision on common issues. See, e.g., Securities Investor Protec- tion Corp. v. Bernard L. Madoff Inv. Securities LLC, 476 B. R. 715, 717 (SDNY 2012) (deciding several legal questions arising in over 80 cases concerning âthe massive Ponzi scheme perpetrated by Bernard L. Madoffâ). 26 Questioning this understanding of the proceedings below, THE CHIEF JUSTICE emphasizes that many of the judgment creditors were joined in the Peterson enforcement proceeding by interpleader. See post, at 8, n. 1. That is true, supra, at 8, n. 9, but irrelevant. As ex- plained above, execution proceedings are continuations of merits proceedings, not new lawsuits. Thus, the fact that many creditors joined by interpleader motion did not transform execution claims in 16 separate suits into âa single case.â Post, at 8, n. 1. Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 21 Opinion of the Court found that assumption suspect: âWhile legislatures usually act through laws of gen- eral applicability, that is by no means their only legit- imate mode of action. Private bills in Congress are still common, and were even more so in the days be- fore establishment of the Claims Court. Even laws that impose a duty or liability upon a single individ- ual or firm are not on that account invalidâor else we would not have the extensive jurisprudence that we do concerning the Bill of Attainder Clause, including cases which say that [the Clause] requires not merely âsingling outâ but also punishment, see, e.g., United States v. Lovett, 328 U. S. 303, 315â318 (1946), [or] a case [holding] that Congress may legislate âa legiti- mate class of one,â Nixon v. Administrator of General Services, 433 U. S. 425, 472 (1977).â Ibid.27 This Court and lower courts have upheld as a valid exer- cise of Congressâ legislative power diverse laws that gov- erned one or a very small number of specific subjects. E.g., Regional Rail Reorganization Act Cases, 419 U. S. 102, 158â161 (1974) (upholding Act that applied to specific railroads in a single region); Pope, 323 U. S., at 9â14 (upholding special Act giving a contractor the right to recover additional compensation from the Government); The Clinton Bridge, 10 Wall. 454, 462â463 (1870) (uphold- ing Act governing a single bridge); Pennsylvania v. Wheel- ing & Belmont Bridge Co., 18 How. 421, 430â432 (1856) (similar); Biodiversity Assoc. v. Cables, 357 F. 3d 1152, 1156, 1164â1171 (CA10 2004) (upholding law that abro- ââââââ 27 Laws narrow in scope, including âclass of oneâ legislation, may violate the Equal Protection Clause if arbitrary or inadequately justi- fied. Village of Willowbrook v. Olech, 528 U. S. 562, 564 (2000) (per curiam) (internal quotation marks omitted); New Orleans v. Dukes, 427 U. S. 297, 305â306 (1976) (per curiam). 22 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON Opinion of the Court gated specific settlement agreement between U. S. Forest Service and environmental groups); SeaRiver Maritime Financial Holdings, Inc. v. Mineta, 309 F. 3d 662, 667, 674â675 (CA9 2002) (upholding law that effectively ap- plied to a single oil tanker); National Coalition To Save Our Mall v. Norton, 269 F. 3d 1092, 1097 (CADC 2001) (upholding law that applied to a single memorial). C We stress, finally, that §8772 is an exercise of congres- sional authority regarding foreign affairs, a domain in which the controlling role of the political branches is both necessary and proper. See, e.g., Zivotofsky v. Kerry, 576 U. S. ___, ___ (2015) (slip op., at 19). In furtherance of their authority over the Nationâs foreign relations, Con- gress and the President have, time and again, as exigen- cies arose, exercised control over claims against foreign states and the disposition of foreign-state property in the United States. See Dames & Moore v. Regan, 453 U. S. 654, 673â674, 679â681 (1981) (describing this history). In pursuit of foreign policy objectives, the political branches have regulated specific foreign-state assets by, inter alia, blocking them or governing their availability for attach- ment. See supra, at 3â4 (describing the TWEA and the IEEPA); e.g., Dames & Moore, 453 U. S., at 669â674. Such measures have never been rejected as invasions upon the Article III judicial power. Cf. id., at 674 (Court resists the notion âthat the Federal Government as a whole lacked the powerâ to ânullif[y] . . . attachments and orde[r] the transfer of [foreign-state] assets.â).28 ââââââ 28 THE CHIEF JUSTICE correctly notes that the Court in Dames & Moore v. Regan, 453 U. S. 654, 661 (1981), urged caution before extend- ing its analysis to âother situationsâ not presented in that case. Post, at 15. Much of the Courtâs cause for concern, however, was the risk that the ruling could be construed as license for the broad exercise of unilat- Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 23 Opinion of the Court Particularly pertinent, the Executive, prior to the enact- ment of the FSIA, regularly made case-specific determina- tions whether sovereign immunity should be recognized, and courts accepted those determinations as binding. See Repub- lic of Austria v. Altmann, 541 U. S. 677, 689â691 (2004); Ex parte Peru, 318 U. S. 578, 588â590 (1943). As this Court explained in Republic of Mexico v. Hoffman, 324 U. S. 30, 35 (1945), it is ânot for the courts to deny an immunity which our government has seen fit to allow, or to allow an immu- nity on new grounds which the government has not seen fit to recognize.â This practice, too, was never perceived as an encroachment on the federal courtsâ jurisdiction. See Dames & Moore, 453 U. S., at 684â685 (â[P]rior to the enactment of the FSIA [courts would not have] reject[ed] as an encroach- ment on their jurisdiction the Presidentâs determination of a foreign stateâs sovereign immunity.â). Enacting the FSIA in 1976, Congress transferred from the Executive to the courts the principal responsibility for determining a foreign stateâs amenability to suit. See Verlinden B. V. v. Central Bank of Nigeria, 461 U. S. 480, 488â489 (1983). But it remains Congressâ prerogative to alter a foreign stateâs immunity and to render the altera- tion dispositive of judicial proceedings in progress. See Republic of Iraq v. Beaty, 556 U. S. 848, 856â857, 865 (2009). By altering the law governing the attachment of particular property belonging to Iran, Congress acted comfortably within the political branchesâ authority over foreign sovereign immunity and foreign-state assets. * * * For the reasons stated, we are satisfied that §8772âa ââââââ eral executive power. See 453 U. S., at 688; American Ins. Assn. v. Garamendi, 539 U. S. 396, 438 (2003) (GINSBURG, J., dissenting). As §8772 is a law passed by Congress and signed by the President, that risk is nonexistent here. 24 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON Opinion of the Court statute designed to aid in the enforcement of federal-court judgmentsâdoes not offend âseparation of powers princi- ples . . . protecting the role of the independent Judiciary within the constitutional design.â Miller v. French, 530 U. S. 327, 350 (2000). The judgment of the Court of Ap- peals for the Second Circuit is therefore Affirmed. Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 1 ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES _________________ No. 14â770 _________________ BANK MARKAZI, AKA THE CENTRAL BANK OF IRAN, PETITIONER v. DEBORAH PETERSON, ET AL. ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT [April 20, 2016] CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS, with whom JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR joins, dissenting. Imagine your neighbor sues you, claiming that your fence is on his property. His evidence is a letter from the previous owner of your home, accepting your neighborâs version of the facts. Your defense is an official county map, which under state law establishes the boundaries of your land. The map shows the fence on your side of the property line. You also argue that your neighborâs claim is six months outside the statute of limitations. Now imagine that while the lawsuit is pending, your neighbor persuades the legislature to enact a new statute. The new statute provides that for your case, and your case alone, a letter from one neighbor to another is conclusive of property boundaries, and the statute of limitations is one year longer. Your neighbor wins. Who would you say decided your case: the legislature, which targeted your specific case and eliminated your specific defenses so as to ensure your neighborâs victory, or the court, which pre- sided over the fait accompli? That question lies at the root of the case the Court confronts today. Article III of the Constitution commits the power to decide cases to the Judiciary alone. See Stern v. Marshall, 564 U. S. 462, 484 (2011). Yet, in this case, Congress arrogated that power to itself. Since 2008, re- 2 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting spondents have sought $1.75 billion in assets owned by Bank Markazi, Iranâs central bank, in order to satisfy judgments against Iran for acts of terrorism. The Bank has vigorously opposed those efforts, asserting numerous legal defenses. So, in 2012, four years into the litigation, respondents persuaded Congress to enact a statute, 22 U. S. C. §8772, that for this case alone eliminates each of the defenses standing in respondentsâ way. Then, having gotten Congress to resolve all outstanding issues in their favor, respondents returned to court . . . and won. Contrary to the majority, I would hold that §8772 vio- lates the separation of powers. No less than if it had passed a law saying ârespondents win,â Congress has decided this case by enacting a bespoke statute tailored to this case that resolves the partiesâ specific legal disputes to guarantee respondents victory. I A Article III, §1 of the Constitution vests the âjudicial Power of the United Statesâ in the Federal Judiciary. That provision, this Court has observed, âsafeguards the role of the Judicial Branch in our tripartite system.â Commodity Futures Trading Commân v. Schor, 478 U. S. 833, 850 (1986). It establishes the Judiciaryâs independ- ence by giving the Judiciary distinct and inviolable au- thority. âUnder the basic concept of separation of powers,â the judicial power âcan no more be shared with another branch than the Chief Executive, for example, can share with the Judiciary the veto power, or the Congress share with the Judiciary the power to override a Presidential veto.â Stern, 564 U. S., at 483 (internal quotation marks omitted). The separation of powers, in turn, safeguards individual freedom. See Bond v. United States, 564 U. S. 211, 223 (2011). As Hamilton wrote, quoting Montes- quieu, â âthere is no liberty if the power of judging be not Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 3 ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting separated from the legislative and executive powers.â â The Federalist No. 78, p. 466 (C. Rossiter ed. 1961); see Montesquieu, The Spirit of the Laws 157 (A. Cohler, B. Miller, & H. Stone eds. 1989) (Montesquieu). The question we confront today is whether §8772 vio- lates Article III by invading the judicial power. B âThe Framers of our Constitution lived among the ruins of a system of intermingled legislative and judicial pow- ers.â Plaut v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc., 514 U. S. 211, 219 (1995). We surveyed those ruins in Plaut to determine the scope of the judicial power under Article III, and we ought to return to them today for that same purpose. Throughout the 17th and 18th centuries, colonial legis- latures performed what are now recognized as core judicial roles. They âfunctioned as courts of equity of last resort, hearing original actions or providing appellate review of judicial judgments.â Ibid. They âconstantly heard private petitions, which often were only the complaints of one individual or group against another, and made final judg- ments on these complaints.â G. Wood, The Creation of the American Republic 1776â1787, pp. 154â155 (1969). And they routinely intervened in cases still pending before courts, granting continuances, stays of judgments, ânew trials, and other kinds of relief in an effort to do what âis agreeable to Right and Justice.â â Id., at 155; see Judicial Action by the Provincial Legislature of Massachusetts, 15 Harv. L. Rev. 208, 216â218 (1902) (collecting examples of such laws). The judicial power exercised by colonial legislatures was often expressly vested in them by the colonial charter or statute. In the Colonies of Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island, for example, the assemblies officially served as the highest court of appeals. See 1 The Public Records of the Colony of Connecticut 25 (Trumbull ed. 4 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting 1850); M. Clarke, Parliamentary Privilege in the American Colonies 31â33 (1943). Likewise, for more than a half century, the colonial assembly of Virginia could review and set aside court judgments. Id., at 37â38. And in New Hampshire, where British authorities directed judicial appeals to the governor and his council, those officials often referred such matters to the assembly for decision. Id., at 33. Colonial assemblies thus sat atop the judicial pyramid, with the final word over when and how private disputes would be resolved. Legislative involvement in judicial matters intensified during the American Revolution, fueled by the âvigorous, indeed often radical, populism of the revolutionary legisla- tures and assemblies.â Plaut, 514 U. S., at 219; see Wood, supra, at 155â156. The Pennsylvania Constitution of 1776 epitomized the ethos of legislative supremacy. It estab- lished a unicameral assembly unconstrained by judicial review and vested with authority to â âredress grievances.â â Report of the Committee of the Pennsylvania Council of Censors 42 (F. Bailey ed. 1784) (Council Report); see Williams, The State Constitutions of the Founding Dec- ade: Pennsylvaniaâs Radical 1776 Constitution and Its Influences on American Constitutionalism, 62 Temp. L. Rev. 541, 547â548, 556 (1989). The assembly, in turn, invoked that authority to depart from legal rules in resolv- ing private disputes in order to ease the âhardships which will always arise from the operation of general laws.â Council Report 42â43. The Revolution-era âcrescendo of legislative interference with private judgments of the courts,â however, soon prompted a âsense of a sharp necessity to separate the legislative from the judicial power.â Plaut, 514 U. S., at 221. In 1778, an influential critique of a proposed (and ultimately rejected) Massachusetts constitution warned that â[i]f the legislative and judicial powers are united, the maker of the law will also interpret it; and the law may Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 5 ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting then speak a language, dictated by the whims, the caprice, or the prejudice of the judge.â The Essex Result, in The Popular Sources of Political Authority: Documents on the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780, p. 337 (O. Handlin & M. Handlin eds. 1966). In Virginia, Thomas Jefferson complained that the assembly had, âin many instances, decided rights which should have been left to judiciary controversy.â Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia 120 (Peden ed. 1982). And in Pennsylvania, the Council of Censorsâa body appointed to assess compliance with the state constitutionâdecried the state assemblyâs practice of âextending their deliberations to the cases of individualsâ instead of deferring to âthe usual process of law,â citing instances when the assembly overturned fines, settled estates, and suspended prosecutions. Council Report 38, 42. â[T]here is reason to think,â the Censors observed, âthat favour and partiality have, from the nature of public bodies of men, predominated in the distribution of this relief.â Id., at 38. Vermontâs Council of Censors sounded similar warnings. Its 1786 report denounced the legislatureâs âassumption of the judicial power,â which the legislature had exercised by staying and vacating judgments, suspending lawsuits, resolving property disputes, and âlegislating for individ- uals, and for particular cases.â Vermont State Papers 1779â1786, pp. 537â542 (W. Slade ed. 1823). The Censors concluded that â[t]he legislative body is, in truth, by no means competent to the determination of causes between party and party,â having exercised judicial power âwithout being shackled with rules,â guided only by âcrude notions of equity.â Id., at 537, 540. The Statesâ experiences ultimately shaped the Federal Constitution, figuring prominently in the Framersâ deci- sion to devise a system for securing liberty through the division of power: 6 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting âBefore and during the debates on ratification, Madi- son, Jefferson, and Hamilton each wrote of the fac- tional disorders and disarray that the system of legis- lative equity had produced in the years before the framing; and each thought that the separation of the legislative from the judicial power in the new Consti- tution would cure them.â Plaut, 514 U. S., at 221. As Professor Manning has concluded, âArticle III, in large measure, reflects a reaction against the practiceâ of legis- lative interference with state courts. Manning, Response, Deriving Rules of Statutory Interpretation from the Con- stitution, 101 Colum. L. Rev. 1648, 1663 (2001). Experience had confirmed Montesquieuâs theory. The Framers saw that if the âpower of judging . . . were joined to legislative power, the power over the life and liberty of the citizens would be arbitrary.â Montesquieu 157. They accordingly resolved to take the unprecedented step of establishing a âtruly distinctâ judiciary. The Federalist No. 78, at 466 (A. Hamilton). To help ensure the âcom- plete independence of the courts of justice,â ibid., they provided life tenure for judges and protection against diminution of their compensation. But such safeguards against indirect interference would have been meaningless if Congress could simply exercise the judicial power di- rectly. The central pillar of judicial independence was Article III itself, which vested â[t]he judicial Power of the United Statesâ in âone supreme Courtâ and such âinferior Courtsâ as might be established. The judicial power was to be the Judiciaryâs alone. II A Mindful of this history, our decisions have recognized three kinds of âunconstitutional restriction[s] upon the exercise of judicial power.â Plaut, 514 U. S., at 218. Two concern the effect of judgments once they have been ren- Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 7 ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting dered: âCongress cannot vest review of the decisions of Article III courts in officials of the Executive Branch,â ibid., for to do so would make a courtâs judgment merely âan advisory opinion in its most obnoxious form,â Chicago & Southern Air Lines, Inc. v. Waterman S. S. Corp., 333 U. S. 103, 113 (1948). And Congress cannot âretroactively command[ ] the federal courts to reopen final judgments,â because Article III âgives the Federal Judiciary the power, not merely to rule on cases, but to decide them, subject to review only by superior courts in the Article III hierar- chy.â Plaut, 514 U. S., at 218â219. Neither of these rules is directly implicated here. This case is about the third type of unconstitutional interference with the judicial function, whereby Congress assumes the role of judge and decides a particular pending case in the first instance. Section 8772 does precisely that, changing the lawâfor these proceedings aloneâ simply to guarantee that respondents win. The law serves no other purposeâa point, indeed, that is hardly in dis- pute. As the majority acknowledges, the statute â âsweeps away . . . any . . . federal or state law impediments that might otherwise existâ â to bar respondents from obtaining Bank Markaziâs assets. Ante, at 9â10 (quoting App. to Pet. for Cert. 73a). In the District Court, Bank Markazi had invoked sovereign immunity under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976, 28 U. S. C. §1611(b)(1). Brief for Petitioner 28. Section 8772(a)(1) eliminates that immunity. Bank Markazi had argued that its status as a separate juridical entity under federal common law and interna- tional law freed it from liability for Iranâs debts. See First Nat. City Bank v. Banco Para el Comercio Exterior de Cuba, 462 U. S. 611, 624â627 (1983); Brief for Petitioner 27â28. Section 8772(d)(3) ensures that the Bank is liable. Bank Markazi had argued that New York law did not allow respondents to execute their judgments against the Bankâs assets. See N. Y. U. C. C. Law Ann. §8â112(c) 8 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting (West 2002); see also App. to Pet. for Cert. 126a (agreeing with this argument). Section 8772(a)(1) makes those assets subject to execution. See id., at 97a. Section 8772 authorized attachment, moreover, only for the âfinancial assets that are identified in and the subject of proceedings in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York in Peterson et al. v. Islamic Republic of Iran et al., Case No. 10 Civ. 4518 (BSJ) (GWG), that were restrained by restraining no- tices and levies secured by the plaintiffs in those pro- ceedings . . . .â §8772(b). And lest there be any doubt that Congressâs sole concern was deciding this particular case, rather than establishing any generally applicable rules, §8772 provided that noth- ing in the statute âshall be construed . . . to affect the availability, or lack thereof, of a right to satisfy a judg- ment in any other action against a terrorist party in any proceedings other thanâ these. §8772(c).1 ââââââ 1 Themajority quarrels with the description of §8772 as being di- rected to a single case, noting that the claimants had sought attach- ment of the assets in various prior proceedings. Ante, at 18. Those proceedings, however, were not simply consolidated below, but rather were joined in the single interpleader action that was referenced by docket number in §8772. See §8772(b). See generally 7 C. Wright, A. Miller, & M. Kane, Federal Practice and Procedure §1702 (3d ed. 2001) (explaining that interpleader is a âjoinder deviceâ that brings together multiple claimants to a piece of property in a âsingleâ action to âpro- tect[ ] the stakeholder from the vexation of multiple suitsâ). That is presumably why respondents did not dispute Bank Markaziâs charac- terization of the proceedings as âa single pending caseâ when they opposed certiorari, Pet. for Cert. i, and why the majority offers no citation to refute Wright & Millerâs characterization of an interpleader action as a âsingle proceeding,â 7 Federal Practice and Procedure §1704. In any event, nothing in the majorityâs opinion suggests that the result would be different under its analysis even if it concluded that only a single case were involved. Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 9 ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting B There has never been anything like §8772 before. Nei- ther the majority nor respondents have identified another statute that changed the law for a pending case in an outcome-determinative way and explicitly limited its effect to particular judicial proceedings. That fact alone is â[p]erhaps the most telling indication of the severe consti- tutional problemâ with the law. Free Enterprise Fund v. Public Company Accounting Oversight Bd., 561 U. S. 477, 505 (2010) (internal quotation marks omitted). Congressâs âprolonged reticence would be amazing if such interference were not understood to be constitutionally proscribed.â Plaut, 514 U. S., at 230. Section 8772 violates the bedrock rule of Article III that the judicial power is vested in the Judicial Branch alone. We first enforced that rule against an Act of Congress during the Reconstruction era in United States v. Klein, 13 Wall. 128 (1872). Klein arose from congressional opposi- tion to conciliation with the South, and in particular to the pardons Presidents Lincoln and Johnson had offered to former Confederate rebels. See id., at 140â141; see, e.g., Presidential Proclamation No. 11, 13 Stat. 737. Although this Court had held that a pardon was proof of loyalty and entitled its holder to compensation in the Court of Claims for property seized by Union forces during the war, see United States v. Padelford, 9 Wall. 531, 543 (1870), the Radical Republican Congress wished to prevent pardoned rebels from obtaining such compensation. It therefore enacted a law prohibiting claimants from using a pardon as evidence of loyalty, instead requiring the Court of Claims and Supreme Court to dismiss for want of jurisdic- tion any suit based on a pardon. See Act of July 12, 1870, ch. 251, 16 Stat. 235; see also United States v. Sioux Na tion, 448 U. S. 371, 403 (1980). Kleinâs suit was among those Congress wished to block. Klein represented the estate of one V. F. Wilson, a Con- 10 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting federate supporter whom Lincoln had pardoned. On be- half of the estate, Klein had obtained a sizable judg- ment in the Court of Claims for property seized by the Union. Klein, 13 Wall., at 132â134. The Governmentâs appeal from that judgment was pending in the Supreme Court when the law targeting such suits took effect. The Government accordingly moved to dismiss the entire proceeding. This Court, however, denied that motion and instead declared the law unconstitutional. It held that the law âpassed the limit which separates the legislative from the judicial power.â Id., at 147. The Court acknowledged that Congress may âmake exceptions and prescribe regulations to the appellate power,â but it refused to sustain the law as an exercise of that authority. Id., at 146. Instead, the Court held that the law violated the separation of powers by attempting to âdecideâ the case by âprescrib[ing] rules of decision to the Judicial Department of the government in cases pending before it.â Id., at 145â146. âIt is of vital importance,â the Court stressed, that the legislative and judicial powers âbe kept distinct.â Id., at 147. The majority characterizes Klein as a delphic, puzzling decision whose central holdingâthat Congress may not prescribe the result in pending casesâcannot be taken at face value.2 It is true that Klein can be read too broadly, ââââââ 2 The majority instead seeks to recast Klein as being primarily about congressional impairment of the Presidentâs pardon power, ante, at 14â 15, despite Kleinâs unmistakable indication that the impairment of the pardon power was an alternative ground for its holding, secondary to its Article III concerns. 13 Wall., at 147 (âThe rule prescribed is also liable to just exception as impairing the effect of a pardon, and thus infring- ing the constitutional power of the Executive.â (emphasis added)). The majority then suggests that Klein stands simply for the proposition that Congress may not require courts to act unconstitutionally. Ante, at 14, and n. 19. That is without doubt a good rule, recognized by this Court since Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch 137 (1803). But it is hard to reconstruct Klein along these lines, given its focus on the threat to the Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 11 ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting in a way that would swallow the rule that courts generally must apply a retroactively applicable statute to pending cases. See United States v. Schooner Peggy, 1 Cranch 103, 110 (1801). But Schooner Peggy can be read too broadly, too. Applying a retroactive law that says âSmith winsâ to the pending case of Smith v. Jones implicates profound issues of separation of powers, issues not adequately answered by a citation to Schooner Peggy. And just be- cause Klein did not set forth clear rules defining the limits on Congressâs authority to legislate with respect to a pending case does not meanâas the majority seems to thinkâthat Article III itself imposes no such limits. The same ârecord of historyâ that drove the Framers to adopt Article III to implement the separation of powers ought to compel us to give meaning to their design. Plaut, 514 U. S., at 218. The nearly two centuries of experience with legislative assumption of judicial power meant that â[t]he Framers were well acquainted with the danger of subjecting the determination of the rights of one person to the tyranny of shifting majorities.â INS v. Chadha, 462 U. S. 919, 961 (1983) (Powell, J., concurring in judgment) (internal quotation marks omitted). Article III vested the judicial power in the Judiciary alone to protect against that threat to liberty. It defined not only what the Judici- ary can do, but also what Congress cannot. The Court says it would reject a law that says âSmith winsâ because such a statute âwould create no new sub- stantive law.â Ante, at 12, n. 17. Of course it would: Prior to the passage of the hypothetical statute, the law did not ââââââ separation of powers from allowing Congress to manipulate jurisdic- tional rules to dictate judicial results. See Hart, The Power of Congress To Limit the Jurisdiction of Federal Courts: An Exercise in Dialectic, 66 Harv. L. Rev. 1362, 1373 (1953) (â[I]f Congress directs an Article III court to decide a case, I can easily read into Article III a limitation on the power of Congress to tell the court how to decide it . . . as the Court itself made clear long ago in United States v. Klein.â). 12 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting provide that Smith wins. After the passage of the law, it does. Changing the law is simply how Congress acts. The question is whether its action constitutes an exercise of judicial power. Saying Congress âcreates new lawâ in one case but not another simply expresses a conclusion on that issue; it does not supply a reason. âSmith winsâ is a new law, tailored to one case in the same way as §8772 and having the same effect. All that both statutes âeffectuat[e],â in substance, is lawmakersâ âpolicy judgmentâ that one side in one case ought to pre- vail. Ante, at 18. The cause for concern is that though the statutes are indistinguishable, it is plain that the majority recognizes no limit under the separation of powers beyond the prohibition on statutes as brazen as âSmith wins.â Hamilton warned that the Judiciary must take âall possi- ble care . . . to defend itself against [the] attacksâ of the other branches. The Federalist No. 78, at 466. In the Courtâs view, however, Article III is but a constitutional Maginot Line, easily circumvented by the simplest ma- neuver of taking away every defense against Smithâs victory, without saying âSmith wins.â Take the majorityâs acceptance of the District Courtâs conclusion that §8772 left âplentyâ of factual determina- tions for the court âto adjudicate.â Ante, at 16â17, and n. 20 (internal quotation marks omitted). All §8772 actu- ally required of the court was two factual determina- tionsâthat Bank Markazi has an equitable or beneficial interest in the assets, and that no other party does, §8772(a)(2)âboth of which were well established by the time Congress enacted §8772. Not only had the assets at issue been frozen pursuant to an Executive Order blocking âproperty of the Government of Iran,â Exec. Order No. 13599, 77 Fed. Reg. 6659 (2012), but the Bank had âre- peatedly insisted that it is the sole beneficial owner of the Blocked Assets,â App. to Pet. for Cert. 113a. By that measure of âplenty,â the majority would have to uphold a Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 13 ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting law directing judgment for Smith if the court finds that Jones was duly served with notice of the proceedings, and that Smithâs claim was within the statute of limitations. In reality, the Courtâs âplentyâ is plenty of nothing, and, apparently, nothing is plenty for the Court. See D. Hey- ward & I. Gershwin, Porgy and Bess: Libretto 28 (1958). It is true that some of the precedents cited by the major- ity, ante, at 17â19, have allowed Congress to approach the boundary between legislative and judicial power. None, however, involved statutes comparable to §8772. In Rob ertson v. Seattle Audubon Soc., 503 U. S. 429 (1992), for example, the statute at issue referenced particular cases only as a shorthand for describing certain environmental law requirements, id., at 433â435, not to limit the stat- uteâs effect to those cases alone. And in Plaut, the Court explicitly distinguished the statute before itâwhich di- rected courts to reopen final judgments in an entire class of casesâfrom one that â âsingle[s] outâ any defendant for adverse treatment (or any plaintiff for favorable treat- ment).â 514 U. S., at 238. Plaut, in any event, held the statute before it invalid, concluding that it violated Article III based on the same historical understanding of the judicial power outlined above. Id., at 219â225, 240.3 I readily concede, without embarrassment, that it can sometimes be difficult to draw the line between legislative and judicial power. That should come as no surprise; Chief Justice Marshallâs admonition âthat âit is a constitu tion we are expoundingâ is especially relevant when the Court is required to give legal sanctions to an underlying principle of the Constitutionâthat of separation of pow- ers.â Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U. S. ââââââ 3 We have also upheld Congressâs long practice of settling individual claims involving public rights, such as claims against the Government, through private bills. See generally Pope v. United States, 323 U. S. 1 (1944). But the Court points to no example of a private bill that retro- actively changed the law for a single case involving private rights. 14 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting 579, 596â597 (1952) (Frankfurter, J., concurring) (quoting McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, 407 (1819)). But however difficult it may be to discern the line between the Legislative and Judicial Branches, the entire constitu- tional enterprise depends on there being such a line. The Courtâs failure to enforce that boundary in a case as clear as this reduces Article III to a mere âparchment barrier[ ] against the encroaching spiritâ of legislative power. The Federalist No. 48, at 308 (J. Madison). C Finally, the majority suggests that §8772 is analogous to the Executiveâs historical power to recognize foreign state sovereign immunity on a case-by-case basis. As discussed above, however, §8772 does considerably more than with- draw the Bankâs sovereign immunity. Supra, at 7â8. It strips the Bank of any protection that federal common law, international law, or New York State law might have offered against respondentsâ claims. That is without analogue or precedent. In any event, the practice of apply- ing case-specific Executive submissions on sovereign immunity was not judicial acquiescence in an intrusion on the Judiciaryâs role. It was instead the result of substan- tive sovereign immunity law, developed and applied by the courts, which treated such a submission as a dispositive fact. See Verlinden B. V. v. Central Bank of Nigeria, 461 U. S. 480, 486â487 (1983); Ex parte Peru, 318 U. S. 578, 587â588 (1943). The majority also compares §8772 to the political branchesâ authority to âexercise[ ] control over claims against foreign states and the disposition of foreign-state property in the United States.â Ante, at 21 (citing Dames & Moore v. Regan, 453 U. S. 654 (1981)). In Dames & Moore, we considered whether the President had authority to suspend claims against Iran, and to nullify existing court orders attaching Iranâs property, in order to fulfill Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 15 ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting U. S. obligations under a claims settlement agreement with that country. Id., at 664â667. We held that the President had that power, based on a combination of statutory authorization, congressional acquiescence, and inherent Executive power. See id., at 674â675, 686. The majority suggests that Dames & Moore supports the validity of §8772. But Dames & Moore was self- consciously âa restricted railroad ticket, good for this day and train only.â Smith v. Allwright, 321 U. S. 649, 669 (1944) (Roberts, J., dissenting). The Court stressed in Dames & Moore that it âattempt[ed] to lay down no gen- eral âguidelinesâ covering other situations not involved here, and attempt[ed] to confine the opinion only to the very questions necessary to [the] decision of the case.â 453 U. S., at 661; see also American Ins. Assn. v. Garamendi, 539 U. S. 396, 438 (2003) (GINSBURG, J., dissenting) (âNo- tably, the Court in Dames & Moore was emphatic about the ânarrownessâ of its decision.â). There are, moreover, several important differences between Dames & Moore and this case. For starters, the executive action Dames & Moore upheld did not dictate how particular claims were to be resolved, but simply required such claims to be submitted to a different tribu- nal. 453 U. S., at 660. Furthermore, Dames & Moore sanctioned that action based on the political branchesâ âlongstandingâ practice of âsettl[ing] the claims of [U. S.] nationals against foreign countriesâ by treaty or executive agreement. Id., at 679. The Court emphasized that throughout our history, the political branches have at times âdisposed of the claims of [U. S.] citizens without their consent, or even without consultation with them,â by renouncing claims, settling them, or establishing arbitra- tion proceedings. Id., at 679â681 (internal quotation marks omitted). Those dispositions, crucially, were not exercises of judicial power, as is evident from the fact that the Judiciary lacks authority to order settlement or estab- 16 BANK MARKAZI v. PETERSON ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting lish new tribunals. That is why Klein was not at issue in Dames & Moore. By contrast, no comparable history sustains Congressâs action here, which seeks to provide relief to respondents not by transferring their claims in a manner only the political branches could do, but by com- mandeering the courts to make a political judgment look like a judicial one. See MedellĂn v. Texas, 552 U. S. 491, 531 (2008) (refusing to extend the Presidentâs claims- settlement authority beyond the ânarrow set of circum- stancesâ defined by the â âsystematic, unbroken, executive practice, long pursued to the knowledge of the Congress and never before questionedâ â (quoting Dames & Moore, 453 U. S., at 686)). If anything, what Dames & Moore reveals is that the political branches have extensive powers of their own in this area and could have chosen to exercise them to give relief to the claimants in this case. Cf. 50 U. S. C. §1702(a)(1)(C) (authorizing the President, in certain emer- gency circumstances, to confiscate and dispose of foreign sovereign property). The authority of the political branches is sufficient; they have no need to seize ours. * * * At issue here is a basic principle, not a technical rule. Section 8772 decides this case no less certainly than if Congress had directed entry of judgment for respondents. As a result, the potential of the decision today âto effect important change in the equilibrium of powerâ is âimmedi- ately evident.â Morrison v. Olson, 487 U. S. 654, 699 (1988) (Scalia, J., dissenting). Hereafter, with this Courtâs seal of approval, Congress can unabashedly pick the win- ners and losers in particular pending cases. Todayâs deci- sion will indeed become a âblueprint for extensive expan- sion of the legislative powerâ at the Judiciaryâs expense, Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority v. Citizens for Abatement of Aircraft Noise, Inc., 501 U. S. 252, 277 Cite as: 578 U. S. ____ (2016) 17 ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting (1991), feeding Congressâs tendency to âextend[ ] the sphere of its activity and draw[ ] all power into its impetu- ous vortex,â The Federalist No. 48, at 309 (J. Madison). I respectfully dissent.
Case Information
- Court
- Supreme Court of the United States
- Decision Date
- April 20, 2016
- Citation
- 136 S. Ct. 1310
- Status
- Precedential