September 08, 2011

Fourth Circuit Good News and Bad News
— Gabriel Malor

There were two ObamaCare decisions today out of the Fourth Circuit. In both majority decisions, the judges disposed of the lawsuits without reaching the merits of the law.

This is not a double-post, by the way. Just my usual sum-up of legal issues and response to other posts. I talk about the issue that Ace raised about nullification waaaaay down there below the fold. The first decision (PDF), in a case brought by Liberty University, was predictable. It is also easily dismissed because it is so farfetched. Unlike all other judges to have considered ObamaCare litigation, the judges in this case decided that the individual mandate is actually a tax because it is enforced by a penalty that is kinda-sorta like a tax. The judges' discussion isn't all that instructive (and similar reasoning hasn't persuaded any other Democratic judges who have ruled on the law), so I won't repeat it. You can click the link to my prior post on the issue, if you like.

As I said before, if these liberal judges are reaching for the tax argument, you can bet they couldn't bring themselves to agree that ObamaCare would pass constitutional muster on the merits. When the Supreme Court considers ObamaCare, you can bet that they won't consider the individual mandate to be a tax.

The second decision (PDF), in a case brought by Virginia AG Ken Cuccinelli, was, well, also predictable, though not dismissed so easily.

The background: Politically ambitious AG Cuccinelli was so eager to be first in line with an ObamaCare lawsuit that he went to court on only one issue -- the individual mandate -- and with only one plaintiff -- the Commonwealth of Virginia. Of course, the Commonwealth of Virginia won't be subjected to the individual mandate, only its residents will. And Cuccinelli didn't bother to name any residents of Virginia in his lawsuit.

This obvious error (fortunately not at issue in the very promising multi-state litigation which found the individual mandate unconstitutional in the Eleventh Circuit) means that Virginia had to find some other way to demonstrate standing to sue.

The ruling: Standing is a legal doctrine Ace and the cobs have discussed for years here. It's the idea that to sue, a party must have an actual stake in the outcome. The party can demonstrate standing by alleging an injury in fact, a causal connection between the injury and the complained-of action, and that judicial intervention can remedy the injury.

Virginia tried to manufacture standing in this case by passing a law that says its residents shall not "be required to obtain or maintain a policy of individual insurance coverage." Virginia claims that the state law will conflict with ObamaCare and, as a result, the state has standing to sue because if ObamaCare were enforced Virginia, the Commonwealth itself, would be injured when its law is overridden by the federal government.

The judges didn't buy it. They didn't for several reasons, but primary among them: (1) individual states do not have the authority to defend their residents from the laws of the United States; (2) state authority to make laws within a state's jurisdiction does not preempt the United States' authority to make laws within its jurisdiction; and (3) state laws cannot restrain federal officials from performing federal duties. The judges reasoned that because of these long-standing principles of federalism (and federal supremacy) any injury to Virginia is merely illusory.

Gabe's analysis: I think the judges are right. Consider this hypothetical law of Virginia: "No resident of this Commonwealth shall be prosecuted for growing or possessing marijuana, regardless of whether he intends to consume it himself or sell it." Can Virginia then sue the federal government to attempt to demonstrate the federal law is unconstitutional? In other words, would such a state law give Virginia standing to sue to invalidate federal marijuana law? Of course not. Virginia --- the state --- doesn't suffer any "injury in fact" from the federal government's drug laws and any injury to its sovereignty is illusory because Virginia's residents are also the United States' citizens. The hypothetical Virginia law protects its residents from being prosecuted by Virginia for growing or possessing marijuana; it does not protect U.S. citizens from being prosecuted by the U.S. for growing or possessing marijuana.

Virginia's attempt to manufacture standing in the ObamaCare lawsuit is analogous. When Virginia law says "No resident shall be required to maintain health insurance", at most, it has sovereign authority to mean: "No resident shall be required by the state of Virginia to maintain health insurance." It would make an absolute mockery of the concept of the United States as a country if Virginia had the sovereign authority to say "No resident shall be required by the United States to maintain health insurance." I avoided the obvious comparison to the series of state and federal laws that led up to the Civil War, but please note they are equally instructive on this point.

Nullificiation: With respect to the issue Ace raises below, that the judges made a factual error in claiming that the Virginia anti-mandate law was enacted after ObamaCare rather than before ObamaCare, the error is irrelevant to the reasoning or the conclusion of the Court. Virginia lacks the authority to override federal law and Virginia law will give way if federal law overrides it.

Appellate courts make factual errors like this (assuming they did here, I don't know actually what the order of the laws was) with unfortunate regularity. The usual course is for the party who wants the error fixed to file a motion for rehearing specifying the error. An amended opinion is then issued.

Finally: I said in the headline there was good news. There is. The multi-state lawsuit, which has a much better procedural and substantive foundation, is on track to be considered by the Supreme Court. It challenges not just the individual mandate, but several other portions of the law. And it has states, individuals, organizations, and employers as plaintiffs, so none of this pesky manufactured standing business will distract the justices.

AG Cuccinelli took a great big swing at ObamaCare. No doubt that will serve him well when he runs for governor. But if I were to put any money on these ObamaCare cases, I'd stick with the multi-state lawsuit.

Posted by: Gabriel Malor at 11:57 AM | Comments (42)
Post contains 1064 words, total size 7 kb.

1 Obama is a stuttering clusterf*ck of a miserable failure.

Posted by: steevy at September 08, 2011 12:00 PM (fyOgS)

2 ....and the threads keep a comin'

Posted by: phoenixgirl at work s.o.b. barbarian tea party terrorist at September 08, 2011 12:00 PM (IpiZb)

3 So the "date error" is easily fixed. But I still say it doesn't matter. The law is what SCOTUS says it is and that boils down to Kennedy.

As far as I am concerned the SC is a frakin joke, and a bad one at that.

Posted by: Vic at September 08, 2011 12:02 PM (M9Ie6)

4 OT Why Mila,why?Another hottie displays her stupidity.

Posted by: steevy at September 08, 2011 12:02 PM (fyOgS)

5 3 An entirely too powerful bad joke.

Posted by: steevy at September 08, 2011 12:03 PM (fyOgS)

6 Elections count, they won. 

Posted by: Billy Bob, the guy who drinks in SC at September 08, 2011 04:03 PM (hXJOG)

Elections count only when Democrats win them.  We need to win the next cycle of elections, then  take measures ( I  love that term 'take measures ) to ensure that what we voted for actually get done


Posted by: SantaRosaStan at September 08, 2011 12:07 PM (UqKQV)

7 Vic, it's good to see you back. I hope the treatment goes well. I was pleased that your brother (?) gave us an update on you while you were gone.

Posted by: Gabriel Malor at September 08, 2011 12:07 PM (XVaFd)

8 I can't wait until Pelosi, Reid, O and all these judges have to live under Obammycare.  Wait. What?

Posted by: dogfish at September 08, 2011 12:08 PM (NuPNl)

9 BTW, welcome back Vic.

Posted by: dogfish at September 08, 2011 12:08 PM (NuPNl)

10

Faced with judicial tyranny of this magnitude, do the American people have any choice but to vote for the only true conservative running for president?

RAWN PAWL!!!1!

Posted by: The Guy Who Brings Up RAWN PAWL!!!1! at September 08, 2011 12:08 PM (Vy1lZ)

11 As long as I keep waking up with Huma, everythings Okay here.

Posted by: Hillary Clinton at September 08, 2011 12:10 PM (d04ac)

12 Jeebus - it would seem that the courts find all sort of technicalities for citizens objecting to teh dem healthcare takeover, but when technicalities of the bill itself are considered (see severability) then there is some magic legal consideration that makes the problem go away. Anyone notice this phenomena? This is especially odd given most of the judge asshats are all en fuego for social justice. It would seem the Federal government is a victim that requires special dispensation by the courts. Odd.

Posted by: Sub-Tard at September 08, 2011 12:11 PM (0M3AQ)

13 Gabriel,
That's "nullification" (spelling error in one of the paragraph headers above).

Posted by: looking closely at September 08, 2011 12:11 PM (6Q9g2)

Posted by: antisocialist at September 08, 2011 12:12 PM (DMvUp)

15 So I'm playing golf with Obama yesterday and he keeps slicing and can't figure out why so I told him, "You've got a chunk of shit on the end of your club, Mr. President." So he bends down to look and I says, "No, the other end."

Posted by: Empire of Jeff at September 08, 2011 12:13 PM (fWg4t)

16 This is why that not only is the presidential race important, but the senate, house, governorships, state legislatures are just as critical.  If the SCOTUS rules in the dems favor, we need to have people in place to repeal it immediately in 2013.

Posted by: Soona - Tearorrist at September 08, 2011 12:14 PM (RtRFD)

17 Bush's nominees were BS.

Alito and Roberts were BS?!  Or did you mean Bush the elder.

Posted by: Tami at September 08, 2011 12:16 PM (X6akg)

18 Vic, it's good to see you back. I hope the treatment goes well. I was pleased that your brother (?) gave us an update on you while you were gone.

Thanks Gabe. Yeah that was my brother. He has been a lurker for a while and I have been working on him to get him out of "lurker status" for a while.

Posted by: Vic at September 08, 2011 12:16 PM (M9Ie6)

19 19 This is why that not only is the presidential race important, but the senate, house, governorships, state legislatures are just as critical.  If the SCOTUS rules in the dems favor, we need to have people in place to repeal it immediately in 2013.

Posted by: Soona - Tearorrist at September 08, 2011 04:14 PM (RtRFD)

I have a feeling if the SCOTUS rules in the dems' favor, they will find themselves trapped in their chambers by angry mobs with torches and pitchforks. 

Posted by: MWR, Proud Tea(rrorist) Party Hobbit at September 08, 2011 12:18 PM (4df7R)

20 Vic, it's good to see you back. I hope the treatment goes well. I was pleased that your brother (?) gave us an update on you while you were gone.

Posted by: Gabriel Malor at September 08, 2011 04:07 PM (XVaFd)

Ditto.


Posted by: Barbarian at September 08, 2011 12:20 PM (EL+OC)

21 The law is what SCOTUS says it is and that boils down to Kennedy.

In this case, Kennedy only gets to decide if it's 6-3 or 7-2.

Maybe 8-1. Scalia doesn't think the Commerce Clause has words in it that mean things.

But I'd bet 7-2.

Posted by: oblig. at September 08, 2011 12:21 PM (xvZW9)

22 Frankly, I think Cuccinelli demonstrated terrible judgment and this "shoot from the hip" stuff ought to hurt him in a goober election.  (Ironically, I grew up/did time in Annandale, Va.)

Posted by: SFGoth at September 08, 2011 12:21 PM (dZ756)

23 But if I were to put any money on these ObamaCare cases, I'd stick with the multi-state lawsuit. Wonder how long that will take... The amicus briefs from the LiberalNation killed a forest or two on that last one. GAIA be praised.

Posted by: tasker at September 08, 2011 12:24 PM (WE7lX)

24 23 @20

I meant the lower court nominees, but yes, Bush I was much worse.
Posted by: Billy Bob
///
Fuck Bush junior.  He took Janice Rogers Brown, a brilliant and conservative CA Supreme Court justice (oh, did I mention she's a black female???) and put her on the fucking Federal Circuit Court of Appeals, where I'm certain she's doing a bang-up job....  Should have nominated her for S.C.  Instead, she languishes in D.C. and CA is deprived of her awesomeness.

Fukk the Bush family, all of them.  No one related to Prescott Bush should ever be president again.

Posted by: SFGoth at September 08, 2011 12:25 PM (dZ756)

25 Kagan will have to recuse

Posted by: James Shatner at September 08, 2011 12:25 PM (e8kgV)

26 #27, I don't go back that far, but I remember when Tyson's Corner was a regional mall and everyone who could get there went to Springfield Mall.  I remember when they were building the Metro.  Amazing how well that turned out.

Posted by: SFGoth at September 08, 2011 12:26 PM (dZ756)

27 this decision is a whole lot of meh.

Posted by: MikeTheMoose Camellia Sinensis Operative at September 08, 2011 12:27 PM (0q2P7)

28 Cripes I lost my Latin I should have said Amici Curiae, Here's just a partial list-really I cut it because I'm sweet like that....natch. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES; THE ARC OF THE UNITED STATES; BREAST CANCER ACTION; FAMILIES USA; FRIENDS OF CANCER RESEARCH; MARCH OF DIMES FOUNDATION; MENTAL HEALTH AMERICA; NATIONAL BREAST CANCER COALITION; NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR RARE DISORDERS; NATIONAL PARTNERSHIP FOR WOMEN AND FAMILIES; NATIONAL SENIOR CITIZENS LAW CENTER; NATIONAL WOMEN'S HEALTH NETWORK; THE OVARIAN CANCER NATIONAL ALLIANCE; AMERICAN NURSES ASSOCIATION; AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS, INCORPORATED; AMERICAN MEDICAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION; CENTER FOR AMERICAN PROGRESS, d/b/a Doctors for America; NATIONAL HISPANIC MEDICAL ASSOCIATION; NATIONAL PHYSICIANS ALLIANCE; CONSTITUTIONAL LAW PROFESSORS; YOUNG INVINCIBLES; KEVIN C. WALSH; AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY; AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY CANCER ACTION NETWORK; AMERICAN DIABETES ASSOCIATION; AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION; DR. DAVID CUTLER, Deputy, Otto Eckstein Professor of Applied Economics, Harvard University; DR. HENRY AARON, Senior Fellow, Economic Studies, Bruce and Virginia MacLaury Chair, The Brookings Institution; DR. GEORGE AKERLOF, Koshland Professor of Economics, University of California−Berkeley; DR. STUART ALTMAN, Sol C. Chaikin Professor of National Health Policy, Brandeis University; DR. KENNETH ARROW, Joan Kenney Professor of Economics and Professor of Operations Research, Stanford University; DR. SUSAN ATHEY, Professor of Economics, Harvard University; DR. LINDA J. BLUMBERG, Senior Fellow, Urban Institute, Health Policy Center; DR. LEONARD E. BURMAN, Daniel Patrick Moynihan Professor of Public Affairs, The Maxwell School, Syracuse University; DR. AMITABH CHANDRA, Professor of Public Policy, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University; DR. MICHAEL CHERNEW, Professor, Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School; DR. PHILIP COOK, Dr. Philip Cook, ITT/Sanford Professor of Public Policy, Professor of Economics, Duke University; DR. MICHAEL T. FRENCH, Professor of Health Economics, University of Miami; DR. CLAUDIA GOLDIN, Henry Lee Professor of Economics, Harvard University; DR. TAL GROSS, Department of Health Policy and Management, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University; DR. JONATHAN GRUBER, Professor of Economics, MIT; DR. JACK HADLEY, Associate Dean for Finance and Planning, Professor and Senior Health Services Researcher, College of Health and Human Services, George Mason University; DR. VIVIAN HO, Baker Institute Chair in Health Economics and Professor of Economics, Rice University; DR. JOHN F. HOLAHAN, Ph. D., Director, Health Policy Research Center, The Urban Institute; DR. JILL HORWITZ, Professor of Law and −Co Director of the Program in Law & Economics, University of Michigan School of Law; DR. LAWRENCE KATZ, Elisabeth Allen Professor of Economics, Harvard University; DR. GENEVIEVE KENNEY, Senior Fellow, The Urban Institute; DR. FRANK LEVY, Rose Professor of Urban Economics, Department of Urban Studies and Planning, MIT; DR. PETER LINDERT, Distinguished Research Professor of Economics, University of California, Davis; DR. ERIC MASKIN, Albert O. Hirschman Professor of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University; DR. ALAN C. MONHEIT, Professor of Health Economics, School of Public Health, University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey; DR. MARILYN MOON, Vice President and Director Health Program, American Institutes for Research; DR. RICHARD J. MURNANE, Thompson Professor of Education and Society, Harvard University; DR. JOSEPH P. NEWHOUSE, John D. MacArthur Professor of Health Policy and Management, Harvard University; DR. LEN M. NICHOLS, George Mason University; DR. HAROLD POLLACK, Helen Ross Professor of Social Service Administration, University of Chicago; DR. MATTHEW RABIN, Edward G. and Nancy S. Jordan Professor of Economics, University of California−Berkeley; DR. JAMES B. REBITZER, Professor of Economics, Management, and Public Policy, Boston University School of Management; DR. MICHAEL REICH, Professor of Economics, University of California

Posted by: tasker at September 08, 2011 12:28 PM (WE7lX)

29 \

Posted by: mrmmosh at September 08, 2011 12:28 PM (K332w)

30 Wait, so if states can't protect against the law being practiced, how in the SHIT does LA get away with being a "sanctuary city" (and California with having a ton of sanctuary cities)?

Posted by: mrmmosh at September 08, 2011 12:29 PM (K332w)

31 See that's just a *partial* list of the people willing to *help* the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals come to the right conclusions against- Cuccinelli.

Posted by: tasker at September 08, 2011 12:30 PM (WE7lX)

32 So states can nullify the second amendment by saying that citizens can't bear arms?

Posted by: Lifeisdeath at September 08, 2011 12:32 PM (xSy4H)

33

In this case, Kennedy only gets to decide if it's 6-3 or 7-2.

Maybe 8-1. Scalia doesn't think the Commerce Clause has words in it that mean things.

But I'd bet 7-2.

----------

What?

Posted by: Rich at September 08, 2011 12:33 PM (ldOlo)

34 37 @29

WTF?  I am not following you. 

Bush made some good appointments, but he did not go to the well for a lot of guys who sat in the Senate waiting for the push.  AKA 4th circuit.

We did stop a lot of crazies, so that counts for something.
Posted by: Billy Bob
///
Janice Rogers Brown should be on a Supreme Court, preferably the U.S. one, but she was on the CA S.C.  Bush, with some behind the scenes hinting at a U.S. S.C. appt, nominated her to the Federal Circuit, where she languishes.  Her replacement in CA was the whitest Hispanic ever -- whiter than ME, and I'm a Jewish goth.  HIS recent replacement was the Berkeley law professor (Liu).  Great.

No, fukk Bush.  Family full of wankers.

Posted by: SFGoth at September 08, 2011 12:34 PM (dZ756)

35  No, Justice Kagan will not have to recuse and, in fact, hasn't recused from denial of the ObamaCare petitions that have already come before the Court.

Posted by: Gabriel Malor at September 08, 2011 12:40 PM (XVaFd)

36 Gabe

Any chance on individuals intervening for standing or substitution of parties at this stage?

Thanks always for your legal take on matters legal. 

Mike

Posted by: observer at September 08, 2011 01:11 PM (fys1l)

37 The State of Virginia is responsible for thousands of people who are wards of the state, will have to manage the mandate for thousands of inmates, and be responsible for economic impacts of the mandate on tens, if not, hundreds of thousands of employees and retirees. That is exposure and standing. Even without that risk, the concept that a State cannot have standing to sue the Republic to which it belongs is insane.

Posted by: Jean at September 08, 2011 02:09 PM (X6eYN)

38 Your standing argument is question-begging.  Whether federal law allows an individual mandate, and therefore trumps Virginia law, depriving Virginia of any actual injury, goes to the actual merits of the suit.  No way to determine the jurisdictional question in this one without reaching the merits.

Posted by: Emperor of Icecream at September 08, 2011 03:04 PM (epBek)

39 Any chance on individuals intervening for standing or substitution of parties at this stage?

No chance. But it hardly matters. The multi-state suit (11th Cir.) and the 6th Cir. suit are SCOTUS-bound.

Posted by: Gabriel Malor at September 08, 2011 04:03 PM (XVaFd)

40
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