HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012387.jpg

3.69 MB

Extraction Summary

5
People
3
Organizations
1
Locations
2
Events
3
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Legal/policy memorandum, likely from a collection for a congressional committee, based on the footer 'house oversight 012387'.
File Size: 3.69 MB
Summary

This document is a legal memorandum, identified as 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012387', outlining the constitutional basis for a U.S. President to refuse to enforce a statute believed to be unconstitutional. It details the President's duty to defend executive power and uses the 1926 Supreme Court case Myers v. United States, involving President Wilson, as a key historical precedent. The document contains no information related to Jeffrey Epstein or his associates.

People (5)

Name Role Context
The President President of the United States
The subject of the memorandum, discussing the President's authority and responsibility regarding the constitutionalit...
President Wilson President of the United States
Defied a statute preventing him from removing postmasters without Senate approval, which led to the Supreme Court cas...
President Johnson President of the United States
Vetoed the Tenure of Office Act in 1867.
Justices Holmes Supreme Court Justice
One of three Justices who dissented in the Myers v. United States case.
Brandeis Supreme Court Justice
One of three Justices who dissented in the Myers v. United States case.

Organizations (3)

Timeline (2 events)

1867
The Tenure of Office Act was passed over President Johnson's veto. This act placed restrictions on the President's authority to remove executive branch officials.
United States
1926
The Supreme Court case Myers v. United States (272 U.S. 52) was litigated. The court struck down a statute limiting the President's removal power as unconstitutional.
United States

Locations (1)

Location Context

Relationships (3)

President Wilson Subject of Legal Challenge Supreme Court
President Wilson's defiance of a statute led to the Myers v. United States case, where the Supreme Court ultimately sided with his interpretation of presidential power.
President Johnson Political Opposition Congress
Congress passed the Tenure of Office Act in 1867 over President Johnson's veto.
Justices Holmes Judicial Colleagues Brandeis
Both are mentioned as Justices who dissented together in the Myers v. United States case.

Key Quotes (3)

"The President should presume that enactments are constitutional."
Source
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Quote #1
"If, however, the President, exercising his independent judgment, determines both that a provision would violate the Constitution and that it is probable that the Court would agree with him, the President has the authority to decline to execute the statute."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012387.jpg
Quote #2
"The President has enhanced responsibility to resist unconstitutional provisions that encroach upon the constitutional powers of the Presidency."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012387.jpg
Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (4,576 characters)

corrected in the legislative process.
3. The President should presume that enactments are constitutional. There will be some occasions, however, when a statute appears to conflict with the Constitution. In such cases, the President can and should exercise his independent judgment to determine whether the statute is constitutional. In reaching a conclusion, the President should give great deference to the fact that Congress passed the statute and that Congress believed it was upholding its obligation to enact constitutional legislation. Where possible, the President should construe provisions to avoid constitutional problems.
4. The Supreme Court plays a special role in resolving disputes about the constitutionality of enactments. As a general matter, if the President believes that the Court would sustain a particular provision as constitutional, the President should execute the statute, notwithstanding his own beliefs about the constitutional issue. If, however, the President, exercising his independent judgment, determines both that a provision would violate the Constitution and that it is probable that the Court would agree with him, the President has the authority to decline to execute the statute.
5. Where the President's independent constitutional judgment and his determination of the Court's probable decision converge on a conclusion of unconstitutionality, the President must make a decision about whether or not to comply with the provision. That decision is necessarily specific to context, and it should be reached after careful weighing of the effect of compliance with the provision on the constitutional rights of affected individuals and on the executive branch's constitutional authority. Also relevant is the likelihood that compliance or non-compliance will permit judicial resolution of the issue. That is, the President may base his decision to comply (or decline to comply) in part on a desire to afford the Supreme Court an opportunity to review the constitutional judgment of the legislative branch.
6. The President has enhanced responsibility to resist unconstitutional provisions that encroach upon the constitutional powers of the Presidency. Where the President believes that an enactment unconstitutionally limits his powers, he has the authority to defend his office and decline to abide by it, unless he is convinced that the Court would disagree with his assessment. If the President does not challenge such provisions (i.e., by refusing to execute them), there often will be no occasion for judicial consideration of their constitutionality; a policy of consistent Presidential enforcement of statutes limiting his power thus would deny the Supreme Court the opportunity to review the limitations and thereby would allow for unconstitutional restrictions on the President's authority.
Some legislative encroachments on executive authority, however, will not be justiciable or are for other reasons unlikely to be resolved in court. If resolution in the courts is unlikely and the President cannot look to a judicial determination, he must shoulder the responsibility of protecting the constitutional role of the presidency. This is usually true, for example, of provisions limiting the President's authority as Commander in Chief. Where it is not possible to construe such provisions constitutionally, the President has the authority to act on his understanding of the Constitution.
One example of a Presidential challenge to a statute encroaching upon his powers that did result in litigation was Myers v. United States, 272 U.S. 52 (1926). In that case, President Wilson had defied a statute that prevented him from removing postmasters without Senate approval; the Supreme Court ultimately struck down the statute as an unconstitutional limitation on the President's removal power. Myers is particularly instructive because, at the time President Wilson acted, there was no Supreme Court precedent on point and the statute was not manifestly unconstitutional. In fact, the constitutionality of restrictions on the President's authority to remove executive branch officials had been debated since the passage of the Tenure of Office Act in 1867 over President Johnson's veto. The closeness of the question was underscored by the fact that three Justices, including Justices Holmes and Brandeis, dissented in Myers. Yet, despite the unsettled constitutionality of President Wilson's action, no member of the Court in Myers suggested that Wilson overstepped his constitutional authority -- or
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012387

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