           Presidential Authority to Direct Departments and
               Agencies to Withhold Expenditures From
                         Appropriations Made
Neither the Economy Act of 1933 nor any other statute authorizes the President to direct departments
  and agencies, either on a percentum basis or with reference to specific items, to withhold expendi-
  tures from appropriations made.
In the absence of legislative sanction, an executive order withholding expenditures from appropriations
   made would not be binding on the disbursing officers in the event that a department head or other
   authorized official should desire funds from the amount ordered to be withheld.
The President may request or direct the heads of the departments and agencies to attempt to effect such
  savings as may be possible without violation of a duty prescribed by law.

                                                                                       May 27, 1937

THE PRESIDENT
     THE WHITE HOUSE

My Dear Mr. President:
    I have the honor of referring to your memorandum of May 17, 1937, in which
you inquire as to the scope of your authority to direct departments and agencies,
either on a percentum basis or with reference to specific items, “to withhold
expenditures from appropriations made.”
    The statute to which you particularly refer is the Economy Act of March 3,
1933 (47 Stat. 1513). I do not find in that Act, or in any other, authorization for the
President to direct the withholding of such expenditures.
    To answer your inquiry, it is, therefore, necessary to consider the extent, under
the Constitution, of the President’s powers over the various departments and
agencies of government and the officers thereof. The scope of such powers, while
long the subject of discussion, has not yet been absolutely defined, and perhaps is
susceptible of delimitation only as particular powers are drawn into question.
However, it seems quite clear that the Constitution confers on the Congress the
power to establish departments and agencies in the Executive Branch of the
government and to define the duties and functions of the officers who are to
administer them; and that, when the Congress has so done, the President, in the
absence of legislative authority, has no legal power to interfere with the admin-
istration of such departments or agencies, further than to “take Care that the Laws
be faithfully executed.” U.S. Const. art. II, § 3.
    Several opinions of the Attorneys General have pointed out that, when a statu-
tory duty devolves primarily upon an officer other than the President, the latter’s
sole obligation is to see that the officer performs such duty or to replace him.
Thus, in The President and Accounting Officers, 1 Op. Att’y Gen. 624, 625–26
(1823), Attorney General Wirt said:



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        Presidential Authority to Direct Departments to Withhold Expenditures


          The constitution of the United States requires the President, in
      general terms, to take care that the laws be faithfully executed; that
      is, it places the officers engaged in the execution of the laws under
      his general superintendence: he is to see that they do their duty faith-
      fully; and on their failure, to cause them to be displaced, prosecuted,
      or impeached, according to the nature of the case. . . . But it could
      never have been the intention of the constitution, in assigning this
      general power to the President to take care that the laws be executed,
      that he should in person execute the laws himself. For example: if a
      marshal should either refuse to serve process altogether, or serve it
      irregularly, that the President should correct the irregularity, or sup-
      ply the omission, by executing the process in person. To interpret
      this clause of the constitution so as to throw upon the President the
      duty of a personal interference in every specific case of an alleged or
      defective execution of the laws, and to call upon him to perform such
      duties himself, would be not only to require him to perform an im-
      possibility himself, but to take upon himself the responsibility of all
      the subordinate executive officers of the government—a construction
      too absurd to be seriously contended for. But the requisition of the
      constitution is, that he shall take care that the laws be executed. If
      the laws, then, require a particular officer by name to perform a duty,
      not only is that officer bound to perform it, but no other officer can
      perform it without a violation of the law; and were the President to
      perform it, he would not only be not taking care that the laws were
      faithfully executed, but he would be violating them himself. The
      constitution assigns to Congress the power of designating the duties
      of particular officers: the President is only required to take care that
      they execute them faithfully. . . . He is not to perform the duty, but to
      see that the officer assigned by law performs his duty faithfully—that
      is, honestly: not with perfect correctness of judgment, but honestly.

  In Power of the President Respecting Pension Cases, 4 Op. Att’y Gen. 515,
516 (1846), Attorney General Mason, referring with approval to the opinion from
which the above quotation is taken, said:

      It is the constitutional duty of the President to take care that the laws
      be faithfully executed. But the constitution assigns to Congress the
      power of designating the duties of particular subordinate officers;
      and the President is to take care that they execute their duties faith-
      fully and honestly. He has the power of removal, but not the power
      of correcting, by his own official act, the errors of judgment of in-
      competent or unfaithful subordinates.




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           Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 1


  The same conclusion is found in the words of Attorney General Miller, Eight-
Hour Law, 19 Op. Att’y Gen. 685, 686–87 (1890):

      The President has, under the Constitution and laws, certain duties to
      perform, among these being to take care that the laws be faithfully
      executed; that is, that the other executive and administrative officers
      of the Government faithfully perform their duties; but the statutes
      regulate and prescribe these duties, and he has no more power to add
      to, or subtract from, the duties imposed upon subordinate executive
      and administrative officers by the law, than those officers have to
      add or subtract from his duties.

   These views are confirmed by the opinion of the Circuit Court in United States
v. Kendall, 26 F. Cas. 702, 752, 754 (C.C.D.C. 1837) (No. 15,517), wherein the
court said:

         In the United States, by the constitution, all offices are to “be es-
      tablished by law.” The president cannot appoint an officer to any of-
      fice not established by law. The legislature may prescribe the duties
      of the office, at the time of its creation, or from time to time, as cir-
      cumstances may require. If those duties are absolute and specific,
      and not, by law, made subject to the control or discretion of any su-
      perior officer, they must be performed, whether forbidden or not, by
      any other officer. If there be no other officer who is, by law, specifi-
      cally authorized to direct how the duties are to be performed, the of-
      ficer, whose duties are thus prescribed by law, is bound to execute
      them according to his own judgment. That judgment cannot lawfully
      be controlled by any other person. He is the officer, not of the presi-
      dent who appoints him, but the officer of the sovereign power of the
      nation. He is the officer of the United States, and so called in the
      constitution, and in all the acts of congress which relate to such of-
      ficers. He is responsible to the United States, and not to the presi-
      dent, further than for his fidelity in the discharge of the duties of his
      office, unless the president is, by express law, authorized to assign
      him duties over and above those specially prescribed by the legisla-
      ture. Such an officer is the postmaster-general. As the head of an ex-
      ecutive department, he is bound, when required by the president, to
      give his opinion, in writing, upon any subject relating to the duties of
      his office. The president, in the execution of his duty, to see that the
      laws be faithfully executed, is bound to see that the postmaster-
      general discharges, “faithfully,” the duties assigned to him by law;
      but this does not authorize the president to direct him how he shall
      discharge them. In that respect, the postmaster-general must judge




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        Presidential Authority to Direct Departments to Withhold Expenditures


      for himself, and upon his own responsibility, not to the president, but
      to the United States, whose officer he is. . . .

         ....

         The court, therefore, is confirmed in its opinion, . . . that the
      postmaster-general, in the faithful discharge of those duties which
      are prescribed by law, is not lawfully subject to the control of the
      president. The president’s power of controlling an officer in the ex-
      ercise of his official functions, is limited, we think, to those func-
      tions which are by law to be exercised according to the will of the
      president . . . .

  In affirming the decision of the lower court, the Supreme Court said:

         The executive power is vested in a President; and as far as his
      powers are derived from the constitution, he is beyond the reach of
      any other department, except in the mode prescribed by the constitu-
      tion through the impeaching power. But it by no means follows, that
      every officer in every branch of that department is under the exclu-
      sive direction of the President. Such a principle, we apprehend, is
      not, and certainly cannot be claimed by the President.

          There are certain political duties imposed upon many officers in
      the executive department, the discharge of which is under the direc-
      tion of the President. But it would be an alarming doctrine, that con-
      gress cannot impose upon any executive officer any duty they may
      think proper, which is not repugnant to any rights secured and pro-
      tected by the constitution; and in such cases, the duty and responsi-
      bility grow out of and are subject to the control of the law, and not to
      the direction of the President.

Kendall v. United States, 37 U.S. (12 Pet.) 524, 610 (1838).
  As the Supreme Court said in United States v. Midwest Oil Co., 236 U.S. 459,
505 (1915):

      The Constitution does not confer upon him [the President] any pow-
      er to enact laws or to suspend or repeal such as the Congress enacts.
      Kendall v. United States, 12 Pet. 524, 613. The President’s powers
      are defined by the Constitution of the United States, and the Gov-
      ernment . . . freely concedes the general proposition as to the lack of
      authority in the President to deal with the laws otherwise than to see
      that they are faithfully executed.




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           Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 1


   It appears to follow from these authorities that in the absence of legislative
sanction an order by you withholding expenditures from appropriations made
would not be binding on the disbursing officers in the event that a department head
or other authorized official should desire funds from the amount ordered to be
withheld. Further doubt regarding the existence of the power to make such an
order arises from the fact that the power would in effect enable the President to
overcome the well-settled rule that he may not veto items in appropriation bills.
   Opinions of the Attorney General indicate that presidential power over appro-
priations must find its source in legislation. While there has apparently been no
ruling on the particular point here presented, various Attorneys General in a long
line of opinions have uniformly decided questions of presidential power over
appropriations by reference to legislation to ascertain whether the power sought
has been conferred upon the President by Congress. Authority of President to
Reallot Unexpended Balances of Appropriations, 32 Op. Att’y Gen. 359 (1920);
Samoan Islands—Appropriation, 20 Op. Att’y Gen. 484 (1892); Transfers of
Surplus of Appropriations, 5 Op. Att’y Gen. 273 (1850); Transfers of Surplus of
Appropriations, 5 Op. Att’y Gen. 90 (1849); Transfers of Appropriations for the
Naval Service, 4 Op. Att’y Gen. 310 (1844); Transfers of Appropriations for the
Navy Department, 4 Op. Att’y Gen. 266 (1843); Transfers of Specific Appropria-
tions of House of Representatives to Contingent Fund, 3 Op. Att’y Gen. 442
(1839).
   The opinions just cited clearly indicate, however, and there would appear to be
no doubt, that Congress can validly authorize you to direct withholding of
expenditures. Even in the absence of legislative authority, it is, of course, entirely
legal for you in an endeavor to accomplish the desired ends to request or direct the
heads of the departments and agencies to attempt to effect such savings as may be
possible without violation of or interference with the proper performance of any
duty prescribed by law.

                                               HOMER S. CUMMINGS
                                                 Attorney General




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