  Exercise of Transfer Authority Under § 110 of H.J. Res. 370

T h e substantive au th o n ty granted the S ecretary o f the Treasury by H.J. Res. 370 to transfer funds
    betw een appropriation accounts is severable from the unconstitutional “com m ittee approval”
    provision in that law, and m ay be exercised by the Secretary within a reasonable period after he has
    inform ed the A ppropriations C om m ittee o f his intent to do so.


                                                                               September 2, 1982

               MEMORANDUM FOR THE GENERAL COUNSEL,
                   DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

   This responds to your request for our opinion whether a “committee approval”
provision contained in § llO ofPub. L. No. 97-92,95 Stat. 1183,1194(1981), is
severable from the substantive authority granted in § 110 to the Secretary of the
Treasury to transfer funds between appropriation accounts. For reasons stated
hereafter, we believe that this substantive transfer authority is severable from the
unconstitutional “committee approval” provision. It follows from this conclusion
that the substantive transfer authority may be exercised notwithstanding the
unconstitutionality of the “committee approval” provision. Thus, the “approval”
of the committee is not, in our view, required in order for the Secretary to exercise
the transfer authority; that power may be exercised after appropriate notice to the
Appropriations Committees has, in the judgment of the Secretary, been given.
   Section 110 was enacted as part of H.J. Res. 370, a joint resolution making
continuing appropriations for many federal departments and agencies that was
enacted on December 15, 1981. Section 110 reads, in pertinent part, as follows:
          [T]he Secretary of the Treasury is authorized to transfer up to 2 per
          centum from any appropriation account provided by this joint
          resolution for the Department of the Treasury . . . to any other
          such appropriation account: . . . Provided further, That approval
          for such transfers is obtained in advance from the House and
          Senate Committees on Appropriations.
95 Stat. 1194. You have informed us that the Secretary of the Treasury, earlier this
year, exercised the transfer authority granted by § 110, with the “approval” of the
House and Senate Committees on Appropriations. In addition, the Secretary has,
by letters to the Committee chairmen of August 27, 1982, informed those

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Committees of his intent to exercise his power under § 110 to make certain
transfers, indicating in his letters the need to do so by September 2 in order to
continue certain activities in the Internal Revenue Service and the United States
Secret Service.1The Secretary has, to date, received no response from either of
the Committees. The general question presented is whether he may execute the
transfers in question, which we assume to be otherwise within the substantive
authority granted by § 110, without having secured “in advance” the “approval”
of the Committees.
   We believe the threshold question which must be addressed is whether the
substantive authority granted in § 110 is severable from the “committee ap­
proval” provision. As you are aware, the Executive has long regarded these kinds
of “committee approval” provisions as unconstitutional. See, e.g., 37 Op. Att’y
Gen. 56 (1933); 41 Op. Att’y Gen. 230 (1955); 41 Op. Att’y Gen. 300 (1957).
Indeed, Presidents Eisenhower and Johnson explicitly instructed their subordi­
nates to disregard such “committee approval” provisions in signing into law bills
that contained such provisions. See Public Papers of the Presidents, Dwight D.
Eisenhower 688,689 (1955); Public Papers of the Presidents, Lyndon B. Johnson
104-05 (1963-64).
   If, however, the “committee approval” provision is not severable from the
substantive authority to which it is attached, here the transfer authority, then the
transfer authority itself may not be exercised by the Secretary. Because the
Secretary has previously exercised his authority under § 110, this Administration
has, at least implicitly, taken the position that the “committee approval” provi­
sion is severable from the Secretary’s substantive authority because if we be­
lieved the provision were inseverable, then it is doubtful that the Secretary could
exercise the substantive transfer authority. We believe that position is correct.
   The courts will generally presume that Congress intends the unconstitutional
portion of a statute to be severed from the remainder of that statute. See Tilton v.
Richardson, 403 U.S. 672, 684 (1971) (plurality opinion), quoting NLRB v.
Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp., 301 U.S. 30 (1937) (“ ‘The cardinal principal of
statutory construction is to save and not to destroy.’ ”). Under the law of sever­
ability, the invalid portions of a statute are to be severed “ ‘[ujnless it is evident
that the Legislature would not have enacted those provisions which are within its
power, independently of that which is n o t. . . .’ ” Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1,
 108 (1976), quoting Champlin Refining Co. v. Corporation Commission, 286
U.S. 210, 234 (1932).
   We believe the presumption of severability governs the “committee approval”
provision in § 110 for several reasons. First, we have found no indication in the
sparse legislative history of the joint resolution that Congress ever focused on the
question whether, assuming the unconstitutionality of the “committee approval”
provision, it would refuse to extend to the Secretary the substantive authority
contained in § 110. Indeed, we have been unable to find any pertinent reference

   1 According to Acting Secretary Sprinkel’s letter, appropriation accounts for these activities will be exhausted on
or about September 2, 1982.

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whatsoever to § 110 in that legislative history. See H.R. Rep. 372, 97th Cong.,
 1st Sess. (1981); 127 Cong. Rec. S 14956-96 (daily ed. December 10, 1981);
id ., H 9102-55. Second, although the literal language of § 110 assumes that the
Secretary will have received the “approval” of the Committees before he exer­
cises the transfer authority, we would not read that language as decisive of the
severability issue. We would not do so for two separate but related reasons.
   First, Congress concededly assumes the constitutionality of such legislative
veto provisions when it includes them in bills. Thus, there is no reason to believe
that such an assumption reflects a congressional determination that it would not
have granted the substantive authority if the legislative veto provision is indeed
unconstitutional. To attribute to Congress such an intent would be to attribute to
Congress the intent to enact meaningless legislation, because Congress includes
such provisions knowing full well the position of the Executive that such
provisions are unconstitutional and at least constructively being on notice that
extant court decisions, including a decision of the Ninth Circuit decided almost a
year before H.J. Res. 370 was enacted, indicate the correctness of the Executive’s
position.2
   Second, and more importantly, there is a long and continuous practice of the
Executive’s refusing to regard identical or similar language contained in appro­
priations acts as being determinative of the severability issue. Indeed, this
longstanding view of the Executive, well known to Congress, records the
Executive as opposing such “committee approval” provisions on constitutional
grounds and as asserting the right to exercise the substantive power attached to
those provisions without first receiving the “approval” of the Appropriations
Committees.
   Thus, in 1955, President Eisenhower, in signing into law the Department of
Defense Appropriation Act, noted that a section of that Act prohibited use of
funds appropriated under it for certain purposes without the approval of the
Appropriations Committees of the Senate and House. In a signing statement
addressed to Congress, President Eisenhower stated to Congress that the legis­
lative veto aspect of that provision “will be regarded as invalid by the executive
branch of the Government . . .       Public Papers of the Presidents, Dwight D.
Eisenhower 688, 689 (1955).
   In 1963, President Johnson signed into law the Public Works Appropriations
Act. That Act contained a provision preventing the Panama Canal Company from
disposing of any real property without first obtaining the approval of the appro­
priate legislative committees of the House and Senate. In a signing statement,
President Johnson stated his view that such “committee approval” provisions
were unconstitutional and he stated that the provision was to be treated as “a
request for information . . .      Public Papers of the Presidents, Lyndon B.

   2 Chadha v. INS, 634 F 2d 408 (9th Cir. 1980), Nos. 80-1832(1983) Shortly after enactment of H.J. Res 370, a
decision was handed down by the D C. Circuit in Consumer Energy Council c f America v. FERC, 673 F 2d 425
(1 9 8 1), a case currently pending on appeal to the Supreme Court, in which that court broadly condemned all types of
legislative veto devices as unconstitutional. Both Houses of Congress parucipated actively in the litigation of that
case as well as Chadha and were thoroughly apprised of the Executive’s position on the constitutional issue
involved.


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Johnson 104 (1963-64). President Johnson by separate memorandum directed
the Secretary of the Army, entrusted with execution of that provision of the Public
Works Appropriations Act, to exercise authority under the Act but to regard the
“committee approval” provision as merely requiring the Secretary to keep the
congressional committees informed of actions taken under the substantive au­
thority of that Act.
   More recently, President Carter signed into law the Foreign Assistance and
Related Programs Appropriations Acts of 1977 and 1978 which contained
“committee approval” provisions attached to transfer authority virtually identical
to the “committee approval” provision in § 110. At the time he signed those bills
into law, President Carter directed the Secretary of State by memorandum to
regard the “committee approval” aspects as unconstitutional and, therefore, not
legally binding. He directed the Secretary to treat the “committee approval”
provision as requiring only that the appropriate committees be consulted. Subse­
quently, as detailed in a letter from the General Counsel of the Agency for
International Development to Chairman Inouye of the Subcommittee on Foreign
Operations of the Senate Committee on Appropriations of February 12, 1980, the
President exercised the transfer authority contained in § 115 without securing in
advance the “approval” of the Appropriations Committees. In doing so, the
President acted on the advice of this Office, provided to the Director of the Office
of Management and Budget on October 28, 1977, that the authority under § 115
could be exercised without the prior approval of the Appropriations Committees.3
   We believe these historical incidents establish a consistent view of the Ex­
ecutive with regard to “committee approval” provisions in appropriations acts
that substantive authority to which such “committee approval” provisions are
attached will be exercised and that the “committee approval” provisions will be
treated essentially as requiring only that the committees be informed of action
taken or to be taken by the Executive. We have no difficulty in concluding that the
language of § 110, without more, cannot be read as expressing a congressional
intent to overturn this established understanding. In a similar vein, we do not
believe that that plain language can, in this overall historical context, be regarded
as expressing a congressional intent that the substantive authority granted by
§ 1 1 0 should fall with the “committee approval” provision— in short, the
“committee approval” provision is, in our view, severable.
   Based on this same historical practice, we believe the Secretary is entitled to
exercise his transfer authority under § 110 within a reasonable period of time
after he has informed the Appropriations Committees of his intent to do so. In
present circumstances, we believe the Secretary could conclude that the Au­
gust 27, 1982, letters to the Appropriations Committees chairmen regarding

  3 We note that shortly after this full ainng of the Executive s position that such authority could be exercised
without the prior approval of the Appropriations Committees, those same Committees acted on the Foreign
Assistance and Related Program Appropriations Act, Pub. L. No. 97-121, 95 Stat. 1647 (1982). In that Act, the
Committees and Congress left intact the transfer authonty which had been the subject of contention in 1980. See
§ 514. 95 Stat. 1655, and § 523, 95 Stat 1657 (1982)


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transfers currently under consideration provide reasonable notice and that the
Secretary may execute such transfers as he determines to be appropriate.

                                           T h e o d o r e B. O lson
                                        Assistant Attorney General
                                         Office c f Legal Counsel




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