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Appointment of Member of Holocaust Memorial Council The process of appointing an individual as a member of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council was not completed. Even if the process of appointing a member of the Council had been completed, the Presidentâs appointment of another individual to that same position effected a removal of that appointee. February 6, 2003 MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE COUNSEL TO THE PRESIDENT You have asked for our opinion whether an individual who claims to occupy a position as a member of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council (âCoun- cilâ) was actually appointed to that position. On the facts presented to us, which we set forth below, this question is indistinguishable from a question we previous- ly answered regarding persons claiming to occupy positions as trustees of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. See Memorandum for Timothy E. Flanigan, Deputy Counsel to the President, from Daniel L. Koffsky, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Re: Kennedy Center Board of Trustees (Oct. 10, 2001) (âKennedy Center Memorandumâ). Consistent with the Kennedy Center Memorandum, we conclude that the process of appointing the putative appointee was never completed. You have further informed us that on May 29, 2002, President Bush appointed another individual to serve as a Council member in the very position to which the putative appointee claims to have been previously appointed. We conclude below that if arguendo (and contrary to our conclusion on your first question) the putative appointee was in fact actually appointed to that position, President Bushâs subsequent appointment of another individual to that same position effected a removal of the putative appointee.* I. The Council operates as the board of trustees of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (âMuseumâ): it has âoverall governance responsibility for the Museum, including policy guidance and strategic direction, general oversight of Museum operations, and fiduciary responsibility.â 36 U.S.C. § 2302(a) (2000). The Council consists of 65 voting members. Of these voting members, 55 are appointed by the President; five are appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives from among members of the House; and five are appointed by the President pro tempore of the Senate from among members of the Senate. Id. * Editorâs Note: We are not identifying in the published version of this opinion the names of the putative appointee to the Council or the other individual appointed to the Council. 51 Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 27 § 2302(b). In addition, the Council has three âex officio nonvoting membersââ one appointed by the Secretary of the Interior, one by the Secretary of State, and one by the Secretary of Education. Id.1 Our opinion rests on the following understanding of the facts: In a memorandum dated May 18, 2000, Bob Nash, who was Assistant to the President and Director of Presidential Personnel, recommended that President Clinton âapproveâ the putative appointee for the vacant position on the Council âvice: Beth Dozoretz.â The memorandum provided lines labeled âApproveâ and âDisapproveâ immediately after the recommendation. President Clinton checked the âApproveâ line. On May 25, 2000, the Office of Presidential Personnel sent the White House Counselâs Office (âCounselâs Officeâ) a memorandum stating that âPresident Clinton has approvedâ the putative appointee and asking that the Counselâs Office âinitiate a preliminary background investigation onâ the putative appointee. Letter for Alberto R. Gonzales, Counsel to the President, from Lanny A. Breuer, Covington & Burling, Tab C (Aug. 9, 2002) (âCovington Memorandumâ). On May 31, 2000, the putative appointee submitted information requested of him for the background investigation. See id., Tabs GâH. By letter dated June 21, 2000, Mr. Nash congratulated the putative appointee âon your selection by the President to be a memberâ of the Council; in that same letter, he advised the putative appointee of forms that needed to be completed âin order for the appointment process to proceed.â Id., Tab I. On June 26, 2000, the Counselâs Office sent a memorandum back to Mr. Nash reporting that it had âcompleted its clearance review of the nominationâ of the putative appointee and advising that âsuch nomination may proceed.â Id., Tab J. On June 29, 2000, the Office of the Press Secretary released a statement that the President had âtoday announced his intent to appointâ the putative appointee and three other individuals to the Council. Id., Tab K. According to White House appointments practice, the following steps remained to be taken after the Counselâs Office memorandum reporting on the background investigation. The Director of Presidential Personnel would then draft a memoran- dum to the President, stating that the appointment could proceed. This memoran- dum would go first to the Executive Clerkâs Office, so that the Executive Clerk could prepare either a commission, if time permitted, or an order of appointment, with a commission to follow. The Executive Clerk would then forward the memorandum and the appointment papers to the President, through the Staff Secretary. The Presidentâs signature would typically be affixed by autopen. The package would then return to the Executive Clerk, who would record the appoint- ment and transmit the appointment papers to the Department of State. 1 The statutory designation of appointing authorities for certain Council members and the inclusion of members of Congress on the Council raise serious constitutional questions that are beyond the scope of the issue that you have asked us to address. 52 Appointment of Member of Holocaust Memorial Council In the case of the putative appointee, a search of documents has not uncovered any memorandum from the Director of Personnel, nor has it uncovered a commis- sion or order of appointment signed by President Clinton. We assume, for purposes of this analysis, that no commission or order of appointment exists. Each of the three other individuals whom the June 29 press release stated that President Clinton intended to appoint to the Council was thereafter appointed by commis- sion. One commission was signed on July 28, 2000, and two other commissions were signed on September 5, 2000. On May 29, 2002, President Bush appointed another individual to serve as a Council member. President Bush appointed that individual to the same seatââfor a term expiring January 15, 2005 (vice Beth E. Dozoretz)ââto which the putative appointee had sought appointment. On January 9, 2003, counsel for the putative appointee provided your Office an affidavit that former President Clinton had signed on November 25, 2002, setting forth his understanding of the facts and law relating to the appointment process for the putative appointee. See Affidavit of William Jefferson Clinton (âClinton Affidavitâ), attached to Letter for David G. Leitch, Deputy Counsel to the Presi- dent, from Robert A. Long, Jr., Covington & Burling (Jan. 9, 2003). In that affidavit, Mr. Clinton states: While serving as President of the United States, I made a final deci- sion to appoint [the putative appointee] to serve as a member of the Holocaust Memorial Council and exercised the authority conferred on me as President of the United States to appoint him to that posi- tion. As described in detail below, I made a record of my decision to appoint [the putative appointee] by placing a check mark next to his name on a Decision Memorandum prepared for me by the Director of Presidential Personnel. My decision to appoint [the putative ap- pointee] was final, subject only to the requirement that [the putative appointee] successfully complete a background check. [The putative appointee] satisfied this requirement, his appointment was publicly announced and he entered into service as a member of the Holocaust Council, where I understand he has served with honor for two years. Clinton Affidavit ¶ 4 (emphasis added). Mr. Clinton further states: As a matter of routine, members of the White House staff took the ministerial steps in connection with an appointment following com- pletion of the background check, including issuing a press release, preparing and delivering a commission to the appointee, etc. These steps were not essential to the valid exercise of my Presidential pow- er of appointment. Id. ¶ 9. 53 Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 27 II. We first address whether the putative appointee was actually appointed a mem- ber of the Council. The definitive statement of many aspects of appointment law is Chief Justice Marshallâs opinion for the Supreme Court in Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137 (1803).2 There, President John Adams had signed a commission to appoint William Marbury as a justice of the peace, and the seal of the United States had been affixed to the commission, but the commission had never been delivered. Although the case had to do with an appointment by the President with the Senateâs advice and consent, the Courtâs analysis of the acts constituting or evidencing an appointment appears equally applicable to appointments by the President alone. According to Marbury, â[t]he appointment being the sole act of the president, must be completely evidenced, when it is shown that he has done everything to be performed by him.â Id. at 157. Typically, that last act is the Presidentâs signing a commission for the appointee. However, because the Constitution treats as separate the making of an appointment and the issuing of a commission, the appointment might âbe evidenced by any public act other than the commission.â Id. at 156. In either caseâthe signature on a commission or the other public act â the âappointment is evidenced by an open, unequivocal act; and being the last act required from the person making it, necessarily excludes the idea of its being, so far as respects the appointment, an inchoate and incomplete transaction.â Id. at 157. We believe that under the White Houseâs regular appointments practice the signing of a commission or an appointment order would be the âopen, unequivocal act,â id. (emphasis added), showing the appointment to be complete; and on the facts as we understand them, no such document was signed. Nor was there any other âopen, unequivocal actâ of appointment. Therefore, the appointment of the putative appointee was never made. The documents made available to us, which were prepared in or issued by officials at the White House, indicate that until the signing of a commission or appointment order, an appointment was still âinchoate and incomplete.â Id. After the President checked âApproveâ on the memorandum conveying the recommen- 2 Whether or not members of the Council appointed by the President are âOfficers of the United Statesâ in the constitutional sense, see U.S. Const. art. II, § 2, cl. 2, the statute providing for their appointment calls for applying the principles applicable to appointment of such officers. Under the statute, these members are âappointed . . . by the President,â 36 U.S.C. § 2302(a), and â[i]n our view, the statute uses the term âappointmentâ in the same sense as does the Constitution.â Federal Election CommissionâAppointment of Members (2 U.S.C. § 437), 2 Op. O.L.C. 359, 359â60 (1977). Furthermore, the practice has been to treat appointment of members in the same way as appointment of officers, both in the signing of commissions or appointment orders and in the affixing of the seal to the commissions. See 5 U.S.C. § 2902(a) (2000) (seal to be affixed to âthe commission of an officer appointed by the Presidentâ). 54 Appointment of Member of Holocaust Memorial Council dations of the Office of Presidential Personnel, a memorandum from the Office of Presidential Personnel to the White House Counselâs Office requested a âprelimi- nary background investigationâ on the candidate approved by the President. See Covington Memorandum, Tab C. When the background investigation was finished, the Counselâs Office notified the Office of Presidential Personnel that the ânomination may proceed.â See id., Tab J. The press release then issued about the putative appointee and the three other persons selected announced the Presidentâs âintent to appointâ those persons. See id., Tab K. These documents are incon- sistent with the view that an appointment had already been made when the President checked the âApproveâ line on the May 18 memorandum or when the press release was issued. Indeed, if a commission had been issued at the end of this process, it would have begun with these words: âKnow ye, that reposing special trust and confi- dence in the Integrity and Ability of [name of appointee], I do appoint him [name of office], and do authorize and empower him to execute and fulfil the duties of that Office according to law.â See E-mail for Daniel L. Koffsky, Office of Legal Counsel, from G. Timothy Saunders, Executive Office of President, Re: Standard Straight Appointment Commission Language (Oct. 1, 2001). If an appointment order had been used, it also would have stated on its face that the President was then making the appointment: âI hereby appoint [name of appointee] to be a Member of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council for a term expiring [date].â The practice of the Executive Clerk, as explained to us, conforms to the conclu- sion that it is the commission or, when an appointment order is used, the appoint- ment order that signifies the appointment: the Executive Clerk records the date of the appointment as the date of the commission or, in cases when an appointment order has first been issued, the date of the appointment order. The issuance of a commission or order of appointment, as well as the Executive Clerkâs recording of the date of appointment, makes up the âpractice of the Executiveâ and provides the framework in which the events surrounding appointments are to be understood. See Bennett v. United States, 19 Ct. Cl. 379, 383 (1884).3 To be sure, the signature on the commission or appointment order might typi- cally, although apparently not invariably, be inscribed by autopen rather than the Presidentâs own hand. But âthe executive practice which existed at that time in such cases . . . must be taken to have been done with the knowledge and consent of the President, if not by his express direction.â Id. at 385. The autopen, like the Presidentâs own hand, could give effect to an instrument signifying that a person had been appointed. âWhere the Presidentâs signature is to appear on a document, the signature generally may be affixed by any means, such as . . . by the use of a 3 Within the framework of the White Houseâs appointments practice, we therefore do not agree with former President Clintonâs legal assertion that the execution of a commission or appointment order was ânot essentialâ to his exercise of his appointment power. Clinton Affidavit ¶ 9. 55 Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 27 mechanical signature device.â Letter for John D. Ehrlichman, Counsel to the President, from William H. Rehnquist, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, Att. at 7 (Mar. 20, 1969). The signing of the commission or appointment order, therefore, was the âlast act required from the person making [the appointment],â Marbury, 5 U.S. at 157, and until that act, the appointment was âinchoate and incomplete,â id. The putative appointee nonetheless contends that he was actually appointed. He appears to rely either on the Presidentâs checking the âApproveâ line on the May 18 memorandum or on the June 29 White House press release stating the Presi- dentâs âintent to appointâ the putative appointee. This argument, we believe, cannot overcome what the documents say. Reliance on the Presidentâs checking the âApproveâ line mistakes the character of the âopen, unequivocal actâ that shows an appointment to have been made. Marbury, 5 U.S. at 157. After such an unequivocal act, there can be no discretion as to the appointment, because the appointment is complete. The Court in Mar- bury, addressing an office with protected tenure, explained: The discretion of the executive is to be exercised until the appoint- ment has been made. But having once made the appointment, his power over the office is terminated in all cases, where by law the of- ficer is not removable by him. The right to the office is then in the person appointed, and he has the absolute, unconditional power of accepting or rejecting it. Id. at 162. Even if the tenure of the office is not protected, the President is still without discretion as to the appointment. Although he may arrest the commission before delivery, he is then removing the officer, not declining to appoint him. Id. And it is, of course, not just the President who has no further discretion over the appointment. To his subordinates, too, are left only ministerial acts, such as putting the seal on the commission. Id. at 158. Here, when the President checked the âApproveâ line on the May 18 memoran- dum, the âpreliminary background investigationâ of the putative appointee had not been completed. Former President Clintonâs own affidavit confirms this point: âMy decision to appoint [the putative appointee] was final, subject only to the requirement that [the putative appointee] successfully complete a background check.â Clinton Affidavit ¶ 4 (emphasis added). The judgment whether, in light of the background investigations, the putative appointee was fit for office had not yet been made. Such judgment can be exceedingly delicate and, in any event, calls for the exercise of discretion. The act of checking the âApproveâ line on the May 18 memorandum, therefore, cannot be the âunequivocal actâ signifying an end to discretion about making an appointment. Nor does the June 29 press release show that the appointment had been com- pleted. The press release announced only the Presidentâs âintent to appointâ the 56 Appointment of Member of Holocaust Memorial Council putative appointee and three other persons. The reference is clearly to a future act, not to one that already had taken place on, or as of, a specified date. Indeed, each of the three other persons was later appointed by commission. For the putative appointee, âthe last act required from the person making [the appointment]â was never performed. Marbury, 5 U.S. at 157. The appointment remained an âinchoate and incomplete transaction.â Id. III. On the assumption arguendo that the putative appointee was properly appoint- ed a member of the Council, we next turn to the question whether he would remain a member. This question is easily answered. It has long been established that appointment of a successor to a removable officer has the effect of displacing the incumbent. See, e.g., Wallace v. United States, 257 U.S. 541, 545 (1922); Mullan v. United States, 140 U.S. 240, 246â47 (1891); Nominations for Prospective Va- cancies on the Supreme Court, 10 Op. O.L.C. 108, 109 (1986). By subsequently appointing another individual to the same position4 that the putative appointee would have occupied, President Bush would have effected the putative appointeeâs removal from that position. Therefore, even if (contrary to our conclusion) he had been properly appointed in the first instance, the putative appointee would no longer be a member of the Council. IV. Applying the same analysis as in the Kennedy Center Memorandum, we con- clude that the putative appointee was never actually appointed to a position as a member of the Council. If he had been, President Bushâs appointment of another individual would have effected the putative appointeeâs removal from that position. M. EDWARD WHELAN III Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Office of Legal Counsel 4 The other individualâs commission states that he was appointed âvice Beth E. Dozoretz.â If, contrary to fact, the putative appointee had previously been appointed to the seat previously occupied by Ms. Dozoretz, it would have been better form for his commission to state that he was appointed âvice [the putative appointee].â But any imperfection in form would not have affected the validity of the other individualâs appointment, so long as it would have been clear (as it would have) to which office he was being appointed. See Marbury, 5 U.S. at 157 (âappointment is evidenced by an open, unequivocal actâ). 57
Case Information
- Court
- OLC
- Decision Date
- February 6, 2003
- Status
- Precedential