                                                            June 15, 1977


77-38     MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE
          COUNSEL TO THE PRESIDENT
          Power of the President to Designate Acting Member
          of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board


   This is in response to your inquiry as to whether the President has
the power to designate an individual to perform the duties of and act as
a member of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (hereafter “the
Board”) pending the appointment of a member of the Board by the
President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. We believe
that the President has this power, but that its exercise may be subject to
judicial or congressional challenge absent the submission of a nomina­
tion for that office prior to or within a reasonable time after the
designation of the acting member.
   The Board is an independent Agency in the executive branch. 12
U.S.C. § 1437(b). It consists of three members appointed by the Presi­
dent by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The members
serve staggered terms expiring on June 30 of the relevant year. Reorga­
nization Plan No. 3 of 1947, §2, 12 U.S.C. § 1437, note. There is no
holdover provision.
   There is now a vacancy on the Board. We understand that the
President is about to submit a nomination for the position to the Senate.
It is possible, however, that the Senate may not confirm the nominee
prior to June 30. On that date the term of another Board member will
expire. It thus may be that beginning July 1, 1977, there will be only a
single member o f the Board. It generally is recognized that a collective
body is empowered to act only if a quorum consisting of a simple
majority is present. See, F T C v. Flotill Products, 389 U.S. 179, 183
(1967).
   We assume that many, especially routine, functions of the Board have
been delegated to subordinate officers. Still, the Board will not be able
to make the more important decisions that it has reserved to itself. This
raises the question of whether the President has the power to prevent
such an incapacity of the Board by making temporary designations of
acting members.

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   As stated above, the Board is an independent Agency within the
executive branch. W hatever the term “independent” may mean in this
context, the continued functioning of the Board is plainly included in
the constitutional responsibility of the President as the head of the
executive branch to take care that the laws be faithfully executed.
   In the Vacancy Act (5 U.S.C. §§ 3345-3349) Congress has given the
President specific authority to make such temporary designations in the
executive and military departments for a period not in excess of 30
days. The Board, however, is not such a department. See 5 U.S.C.
§§ 101, 102. It is necessary to consider, therefore, whether the President
has the power to make such designations with respect to agencies other
than those departments, absent statutory authority.
   This Office has taken the position that the power to make such
interim designations flows from the President’s responsibility to keep
executive branch agencies in operation; hence, that the Vacancy Act is
not a source, but rather a regulation of that power. This view was
challenged in Williams v. Phillips, 360 F. Supp. 1363 (D.C.C. 1973). In
that case the District Court took the position that the President could
make a temporary designation to the position of Director of the Office
of Economic Opportunity, a position that required Senate confirmation,
only in the presence of a statutory authorization. This view apparently
was based on the assumption that such a temporary designation consti­
tuted an appointment; it also ignored a governmental practice going
back more than a century.            ,
   The Government sought a stay in the Court of Appeals pending
appeal. While that court denied the stay (482 F. 2d 669), it did indicate
that it did not necessarily agree with the theory of the District Court.
It said that it could be argued that the President had the “implied
[constitutional] power in the absence of limiting legislation . . . to
appoint an acting director,” for a reasonable period of time before
submitting the nomination of a new director to the Senate. 482 F. 2d at
670. But even if that view were sustained, it would not establish that
the President was entitled to wait for 4-1/2 months before submitting
such nomination. At 670-671. The Court of Appeals said that the
measure of a reasonable period for the submission of a nomination
would be the 30-day period provided by the Vacancy Act. It therefore
denied the stay because it was not likely to hold that the President was
entitled to retain the acting official in office for a 4-1/2 month period
without any nomination. Ibid. It stated:
    “. . . Assuming, without deciding, that the court on the merits
    might disagree with the District Court’s approach and might con­
    clude that Phillips’ appointment was not invalid ab initio, this
    would not undercut the determination as to the prospective inva­
    lidity of his holding office.” 482 F. 2d at 671.
  The opinion of the Court of Appeals can perhaps be read as disagree­
ing with the approach of the District Court, namely, that no designa­
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tion to fill a vacancy can be made in the absence of an authorizing
statute; similarly, as perhaps agreeing with the Government’s view that
the President does have the power to fill a vacancy pending confirma­
tion in the absence of a limiting statute, subject, of course, to the
condition that he must submit a nomination within a reasonable time. It
is to be noted that this condition is far less rigid than the 30-day
limitation o f the Vacancy A ct.1 It permits service beyond that period
where the President has submitted a nomination within the period but
the Senate has not acted on the nomination before the period has
expired.
   It may be safe, but obviously not absolutely so, to regard the Court
of Appeals opinion as indicating that the court would be chary about
holding that the President lacks the power to fill vacancies temporarily,
in the absence of authorizing legislation, if he submits a nomination
prior to or within a reasonable time following the designation. The 30-
day period of 5 U.S.C. 3348 would be considered a guideline as to what
constitutes a reasonable period. This view would certainly be strength­
ened if the person designated by the President were, in analogy to 5
U.S.C. 3347, a current official appointed after Senate confirmation.
   In recent months this Office has given similar advice respecting the
Community Services Administration and the United States Arms Con­
trol and Disarmament Agency. We may mention that, as far as we
know, this question has not arisen in the past in connection with a
multimember agency. The reason for this is probably that, as a rule, a
vacancy in such an agency does not deprive it of a quorum and thus
does not impede its operations in a substantial way. However, where, as
here, a vacancy in the Agency has the effect of seriously impeding its

    1 T h e A tto rn ey G eneral has interpreted 5 U.S.C. 3348 in its application to the executive
departm ents to the effect that the p o w e r o f an acting official com es to its end o n the 30th
da y follow ing the d a y on which th e vacancy arose even though a nom ination is pending.
F o r the o peration o f the V acancy A ct in such a situation, see 32 O p. A .G . 139 (1920),
w hich involved the following: U p o n the resignation o f the Secretary o f State, the U nder
S ecretary o f State becam e Acting S ecretary by operation o f the V acancy Act. T hereafter
a nom ination for Secretary o f S ta te was subm itted. O n M arch 13, 1920, th e A cting
S e c retary advised the A ttorney G en eral that the 30-day period o f the V acancy A ct had
expired w ith o u t th e confirm ation o f the nom inee and asked for advice about his status.
T h e A tto rn ey G eneral advised th e U nder S ecretary that in view o f the expiration o f the
30-day period it w ould be “probably safer to say that you should not take action in any
case o u t o f w hich legal rights m ig h t arise w hich w ould be subject to review by the
c o u rts.”
    In 1880 the A tto rn ey General advised the S ecretary o f the T reasury that because the
office o f the S ecretary o f the N a v y had been vacant in excess o f the statutory period
(then 10 days), no person in th e D epartm ent o f the N avy was authorized to sign
requisition on th e D epartm ent o f the T reasury on account o f N avy paym ents. 16 Op.
A .G . 596(1880).




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functions the reasons which, in our opinion, authorize the President to
designate a person to perform the duties of an office filled by a single
official should apply with equal force to a multimember agency.

                                                 L eon U lm an
                                  Deputy Assistant Attorney General
                                                 Office o f Legal Counsel




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