UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES v. BURWELL et al
Filing
73
OPINION. Signed by Judge Rosemary M. Collyer on 5/12/2016. (lcrmc3)
Case 1:14-cv-01967-RMC Document 73 Filed 05/12/16 Page 1 of 38
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
_________________________________________
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UNITED STATES HOUSE OF
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REPRESENTATIVES,
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Plaintiff,
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v.
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Civil Action No. 14-1967 (RMC)
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SYLVIA MATTHEWS BURWELL in her
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official capacity as Secretary of the United States )
Department of Health and Human Services, et al.)
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Defendants.
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_________________________________________ )
OPINION
This Court previously held that the U.S. House of Representatives “has standing
to pursue its allegations that the Secretaries of Health and Human Services and of the Treasury
violated Article I, § 9, cl. 7 of the Constitution when they spent public monies that were not
appropriated by the Congress.” U.S. House of Reps. v. Burwell, 130 F. Supp. 3d 53, 81 (D.D.C.
2015). The merits of that claim are now before the Court.
This case involves two sections of the Affordable Care Act: 1401 and 1402.
Section 1401 provides tax credits to make insurance premiums more affordable, while Section
1402 reduces deductibles, co-pays, and other means of “cost sharing” by insurers. Section 1401
was funded by adding it to a preexisting list of permanently-appropriated tax credits and refunds.
Section 1402 was not added to that list. The question is whether Section 1402 can nonetheless
be funded through the same, permanent appropriation. It cannot.
“If the statutory language is plain, we must enforce it according to its terms.”
King v. Burwell, 135 S. Ct. 2480, 2489 (2015). Although the “meaning—or ambiguity—of
certain words or phrases may only become evident when placed in context,” id., the statutory
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provisions in this case are clear in isolation and in context. The Affordable Care Act
unambiguously appropriates money for Section 1401 premium tax credits but not for Section
1402 reimbursements to insurers. Such an appropriation cannot be inferred. None of
Secretaries’ extra-textual arguments—whether based on economics, “unintended” results, or
legislative history—is persuasive. The Court will enter judgment in favor of the House of
Representatives and enjoin the use of unappropriated monies to fund reimbursements due to
insurers under Section 1402. The Court will stay its injunction, however, pending appeal by
either or both parties.
I. FACTS
The merits are fully briefed and ripe for resolution.1 The following facts are
undisputed.
A. Constitutional Background
Congress passes all federal laws in this country. U.S. Const. art. I, § 1 (“All
legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States[.]”). Those
“Powers” includes sole authority to adopt laws that authorize the expenditure of public monies
and laws that appropriate those monies. Authorization and appropriation by Congress are
nonnegotiable prerequisites to government spending: “No Money shall be drawn from the
Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law . . . .” Id. art. I, § 9, cl. 7; see also
United States v. MacCollom, 426 U.S. 317, 321 (1976) (“The established rule is that the
expenditure of public funds is proper only when authorized by Congress, not that public funds
may be expended unless prohibited by Congress.”). The distinction between authorizing
1
See Pl. Mot. Summ. J. [Dkt. 53] (House Mot.); Defs. Opp’n [Dkt. 65] (Sec’y Opp’n); Pl. Reply
[Dkt. 69] (House Reply); see also Defs. Mot. Summ. J. [Dkt. 55] (Sec’y Mot.); Pl. Opp’n [Dkt.
66] (House Opp’n); Defs. Reply [Dkt. 70] (Sec’y Reply).
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legislation and appropriating legislation is relevant here and bears some discussion.
Authorizing legislation establishes or continues the operation of a federal program
or agency, either indefinitely or for a specific period. GAO Glossary at 15.2 Such an
authorization may be part of an agency or program’s organic legislation, or it may be entirely
separate. Id. No money can be appropriated until an agency or program is authorized, although
authorization may sometimes be inferred from an appropriation itself. Id.
Appropriation legislation “provides legal authority for federal agencies to incur
obligations and to make payments out of the Treasury for specified purposes.” Id. at 13.
Appropriations legislation has “the limited and specific purpose of providing funds for
authorized programs.” Andrus v. Sierra Club, 442 U.S. 347, 361 (1979) (quoting TVA v. Hill,
437 U.S. 153, 190 (1978)). An appropriation must be expressly stated; it cannot be inferred or
implied. 31 U.S.C. § 1301(d) (“A law may be construed to make an appropriation out of the
Treasury . . . only if the law specifically states that an appropriation is made.”). It is well
established that “a direction to pay without a designation of the source of funds is not an
appropriation.” U.S. Government Accounting Office, GAO-04-261SP, Principles of Federal
Appropriations Law (Vol. I) 2-17 (3d ed. 2004) (GAO Principles). The inverse is also true: the
2
The Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974, Pub. L. No. 93-344,
§ 801(a), 88 Stat. 297, 327 (1974), gives the Government Accountability Office (GAO) specific
duties in the budgetary arena. See generally 31 U.S.C. § 1112(c). One of those duties is to help
“establish, maintain, and publish standard terms and classifications for fiscal, budget, and
program information of the Government, including information on fiscal policy, receipts,
expenditures, programs, projects, activities, and functions.” Id. § 1112(c)(1). The most recent
publication in fulfilment of that duty is GAO-05-734SP, A Glossary of Terms Used in the
Federal Budget Process (2005) (GAO Glossary). “Although GAO decisions are not binding,
[courts] ‘give special weight to [GAO’s] opinions’ due to its ‘accumulated experience and
expertise in the field of government appropriations.’” Nevada v. Dep’t of Energy, 400 F.3d 9, 16
(D.C. Cir. 2005) (quoting United Auto., Aerospace & Agric. Implement Workers v. Donovan,
746 F.2d 855, 861 (D.C. Cir. 1984)).
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designation of a source, without a specific direction to pay, is not an appropriation. Id. Both are
required. See Nevada, 400 F.3d at 13-14. An appropriation act, “like any other statute, [must
be] passed by both Houses of Congress and either signed by the President or enacted over a
presidential veto.” GAO Principles at 2-45 (citing Friends of the Earth v. Armstrong, 485 F.2d
1, 9 (10th Cir. 1973); Envirocare of Utah, Inc. v. United States, 44 Fed. Cl. 474, 482 (1999)).
Appropriations come in many forms. A “permanent” or “continuing”
appropriation, once enacted, makes funds available indefinitely for their specified purpose; no
further action by Congress is needed. Nevada, 400 F.3d at 13; GAO Principles at 2-14.3 A
“current appropriation,” by contrast, allows an agency to obligate funds only in the year or years
for which they are appropriated. GAO Principles at 2-14. Current appropriations often give a
particular agency, program, or function its spending cap and thus constrain what that agency,
program, or function may do in the relevant year(s). Most current appropriations are adopted on
an annual basis and must be re-authorized for each fiscal year. Such appropriations are an
integral part of our constitutional checks and balances, insofar as they tie the Executive Branch
to the Legislative Branch via purse strings.
B. Statutory Background
On December 24, 2009, H.R. 3590 (111th Cong. 2009), as amended and retitled
“Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,” passed the Senate by a vote of 60-39. On March
21, 2010, the House agreed to the Senate amendments by a vote of 219-212. On March 23,
2010, H.R. 3590, as agreed to by both the Senate and the House, was signed into law by the
3
Examples of permanent appropriations include the Judgment Fund (31 U.S.C. § 1304(a)) and
payment of interest on the national debt (31 U.S.C. § 1305(2)).
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President. See Pub. L. No. 111-148, 124 Stat. 119 (2010) (ACA).4 The ACA enacted a host of
reforms and programs; two are relevant here.
1. Section 1401 (“Refundable Tax Credit Providing Premium Assistance for
Coverage under a Qualified Health Plan”)
The thrust of Section 1401 was to add a new section to the Internal Revenue
Code: 26 U.S.C. § 36B. See ACA § 1401(a). Section 36B provides in principal part that “there
shall be allowed as a credit against the [income] tax imposed by this subtitle for any taxable year
an amount equal to the premium assistance credit amount of the taxpayer for the taxable year.”
26 U.S.C. § 36B(a). Those taxpayers “whose household income for the taxable year equals or
exceeds 100 percent but does not exceed 400 percent of an amount equal to the poverty line for a
family of the size involved” are entitled to tax credits to cover their health insurance premiums.
26 U.S.C. § 36B(c). Section 1401 is codified in the Internal Revenue Code, not in Title 42.5
The appropriation for Section 1401 premium tax credits was made in Title 31 of
the U.S. Code, “Money and Finance,” which also sets out basic rules of federal appropriations.
At 31 U.S.C. § 1301(d), the statute specifies that “[a] law may be construed to make an
appropriation out of the Treasury . . . only if the law specifically states that an appropriation is
made.” At 31 U.S.C. § 1324, the law provides for “Refund of internal revenue collections.”
4
Because so much is made of the ACA’s structure and the interrelation of its provisions, the
Court generally will refer to the ACA sections and not the U.S. Code sections where they are
codified. See ACA § 1401 (codified at 26 U.S.C. §§ 36B, 280C); ACA § 1402 (codified at 42
U.S.C. § 18071); ACA § 1412 (codified at 42 U.S.C. § 18082).
5
Section 1401 also disallows deductions for the amount of the tax credits, see ACA § 1401(b),
directs the Comptroller General to study the affordability of health insurance, see id. § 1401(c),
amends 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b), see ACA § 1401(d), and sets an effective date of December 31,
2013, see id. § 1401(e).
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Specifically, it appropriates to the Secretary of the Treasury “[n]ecessary amounts . . . for
refunding internal revenue collections as provided by law.” Id.
The parties agree that 31 U.S.C. § 1324 constitutes a permanent appropriation for
Section 1401 premium tax credits. Specifically, the ACA amended § 1324(b) so that it reads:
Disbursements may be made from the appropriation made by this
section only for—
(1) refunds to the limit of liability of an individual tax account;
and
(2) refunds due from credit provisions of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C. 1 et seq.) enacted before January 1,
1978, or enacted by the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, or from
section 25A, 35, 36, 36A, 36B, 168(k)(4)(F), 53(e), 54B(h), or
6431 of such Code, or due under section 3081(b)(2) of the
Housing Assistance Tax Act of 2008.
31 U.S.C. 1324(b) (emphasis on term added by ACA § 1401(d)). Put simply, ACA tax credits to
subsidize health insurance for eligible taxpayers are permanently funded via the reference to
“36B” in 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b)(2).
2. Section 1402 (“Reduced Cost-Sharing for Individuals Enrolling in
Qualified Health Plans”)
Section 1402 of the ACA provides that “[i]n the case of an eligible insured
enrolled in a qualified health plan—(1) the Secretary shall notify the issuer of the plan of such
eligibility; and (2) the issuer shall reduce the cost-sharing under the plan at the level and in the
manner specified in subsection (c).” ACA § 1402(a). Cost sharing includes “deductibles,
coinsurance, copayments, or similar charges.” ACA § 1302(c)(3)(A)(i). Section 1402 thus
requires insurers offering qualified health plans through ACA Exchanges to reduce deductibles,
coinsurance, copayments, and similar charges for eligible insured individuals enrolled in their
plans. These reductions are referred to in the ACA as “cost-sharing reductions.” See, e.g., ACA
§§ 1331(d)(3)(A)(i), 1402(c)(3)(B), 1412(c)(3).
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The insurers are supposed to get their money back. See ACA § 1402(c)(3)(A)
(“An issuer of a qualified health plan making reductions under this subsection shall notify the
Secretary [of HHS] of such reductions and the Secretary shall make periodic and timely
payments to the issuer equal to the value of the reductions.”). Nothing in Section 1402
prescribes a “periodic and timely payment[]” process, however. Nor does Section 1402
condition the insurers’ obligations to reduce cost sharing on the receipt of offsetting payments.6
To qualify for reduced cost sharing, an individual must enroll in a qualified health
plan and have a household income that “exceeds 100 percent but does not exceed 400 percent of
the poverty line for a family of the size involved.” 42 U.S.C. § 18071(b)(2).7 Individuals with
income between 100 and 250 percent of the poverty line qualify for an “additional reduction.”
Id. § 18071(c)(2).8 Eligibility for premium tax credits under Section 1401 is also a prerequisite
to receiving cost-sharing reductions under Section 1402. See ACA § 1402(f)(2) (“No costsharing reduction shall be allowed under this section . . . unless . . . a credit is allowed to the
insured . . . under section 36B of [the Internal Revenue] Code.”).
6
The Court will refer to these offsetting payments as “Section 1402 reimbursements.”
7
Eligibility proceeds in two steps under Section 1402. To be an “eligible insured” generally
under Section 1402, the individual can have an income up to 400 percent of the federal poverty
level. See 42 U.S.C. § 18071(b)(2). The individual must also enroll in a “qualified health plan
in the silver level.” Id. § 18071(b)(1). But to qualify for “additional reduction for lower income
insureds,” the income cannot exceed 250 percent. Id. § 18071(c)(2).
8
The ACA as passed on March 23, 2010 provided additional reductions only up to 200 percent
of the federal poverty line. See Pub. L. 111-148, §§ 1401(c)(2)(A)-(B). A new subsection,
(c)(2)(C), was added by the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, Pub. L. 111152, § 1001(b)(2)(C), 124 Stat. 1029, 1032 (Mar. 30, 2010). The new subsection raised the
maximum income to 250 percent of the federal poverty line.
7
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Section 1402 is codified not in the Internal Revenue Code, but in Title 42, which
includes federal laws concerning “Public Health and Welfare.” Title 42 includes such programs
as Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and most of the ACA.
3. Section 1412 (“Advance Determination and Payment of Premium Tax
Credits and Cost-Sharing Reductions”)
Section 1412 of the ACA requires the Secretaries to consult and establish a
program under which eligibility determinations are made in advance “for the premium tax credit
allowable under section 36B of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 and the cost-sharing
reductions under section 1402.” ACA § 1412(a)(1). After the Secretary of HHS tells the
Secretary of the Treasury and the pertinent Exchange who is eligible for either benefit, Treasury
“makes advance payments of such credit or reductions to the issuers of the qualified health plans
[on such Exchange] in order to reduce the premiums payable by individuals eligible for such
credit.” Id. § 1412(a)(3).
C. Other Relevant Background
During deliberations over the ACA, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
scored Section 1402’s cost-sharing reductions as “direct spending.” See, e.g., Sec’y Mot., Ex.
6, Letter of Douglas W. Elmendorf, Director, CBO to the Hon. Nancy Pelosi, (Mar. 20, 2010)
[Dkt. 55-8] (CBO Ltr.) at tbl. 2 (listing “Premium and Cost Sharing Subsidies” as “direct
spending”), reprinted in Cong. Budget Office, Selected CBO Publications Related to Health
Care, 2009-2010 at 20 (Dec. 2010)); CBO Ltr. at tbl. 4 (including “Exchange Subsidies &
related spending” in estimating effect of ACA on the federal deficit).
During the same deliberations, several members of Congress described Sections
1401 and 1402 as costing “500 billion dollars,” an estimate that almost certainly combined the
costs of Section 1401’s premium tax credits and Section 1402’s cost-sharing reimbursements.
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See 156 Cong. Rec. S2069, S2081 (Mar. 25, 2010) (Sen. Durbin) (“$500 billion of tax cuts and
cost-sharing”); 155 Cong. Rec. S12565, S12576 (Dec. 7, 2009) (Sen. Enzi) (“this bill will
commit the Federal Treasury to paying for these new subsidies for the uninsured forever”); 156
Cong. Rec. H1891, H1898 (Mar. 21, 2010) (Rep. Paulsen) (“$500 billion … [in] new
entitlement spending”); 156 Cong. Rec. H1891, H1910 (Mar. 21, 2010) (Rep. Diaz-Balart)
(“half a trillion dollars . . . [for] a massive new entitlement program”).
On April 10, 2013, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) submitted the
President’s Fiscal Year 2014 Budget of the U.S. Government. Budget [Dkt. 30-1].9 The
Appendix to the FY 2014 Budget Request contained “more detailed financial information on
individual programs and appropriation accounts than any of the other budget documents.” App.
to Budget [Dkt. 30-2] at 3. The Appendix included, among other things, “explanations of the
work to be performed and the funds needed.” Id. In the FY 2014 Budget Appendix, the
Administration requested the following:
For carrying out, except as otherwise provided, sections 1402
[Reduced Cost-Sharing] and 1412 [Advanced Payments] of the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Public Law 111-148),
such sums as necessary. For carrying out, except as otherwise
provided, such sections in the first quarter of fiscal year 2015
(including upward adjustments to prior year payments),
$1,420,000,000.
Id. at 448.
On the same day, HHS separately submitted to the relevant appropriations
committees in the House and Senate a Justification of Estimates for Appropriations Committees.
Justification [Dkt. 30-3]. In that document, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
9
The federal budget is for fiscal years (FY) that start on October 1. Thus, the FY 2014 Budget
Request was for FY 2014, which began on October 1, 2013.
9
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(CMS) explained:
The FY 2014 request for Reduced Cost Sharing for Individuals
Enrolled in Qualified Health Plans is $4.0 billion in the first year of
operations for Health Insurance Marketplaces, also known as
Exchanges. CMS also requests a $1.4 billion advance appropriation
for the first quarter of FY 2015 in this budget to permit CMS to
reimburse issuers who provided reduced cost-sharing [under Section
1402] in excess of the monthly advanced payments received in FY
2014 through the cost-sharing reduction reconciliation process.
Id. at 7. In its conclusion, HHS referred to “Cost-Sharing Reductions” as one of “five annuallyappropriated accounts.” Id. In a later graphic entitled “Reduced Cost Sharing,” HHS listed “--”
under “Budget Authority” for “FY 2013 Current Law,” id. at 184. The chart reflects a view by
HHS and OMB that no prior appropriation funded Section 1402 reduced cost sharing.10 HHS
compared the Section 1402 program to “other appropriated entitlements such as Medicaid.” Id.
On May 17, 2013, the Administration submitted a number of amendments to the
FY 2014 Budget Request. See Amendments [Dkt. 30-4]. The Secretaries acknowledge that
neither these amendments, nor any other post-budget submission, withdrew the request for an
annual appropriation for Section 1402 reimbursements. See Joint Stipulation [Dkt. 30] at 3 n.1.
On May 20, 2013, OMB issued its Sequestration Preview Report for FY 2014,
which listed “Reduced Cost Sharing” as subject to sequestration in the amount of $286 million,
or 7.2% of the requested appropriation. Report [Dkt. 30-18] at 23. Because permanentlyappropriated programs (such as Section 1401) are exempt from sequestration, OMB’s including
Section 1402 on a list of sequestration-bound programs appears to acknowledge that no
permanent appropriation was available for Section 1402 reimbursements.
10
Interestingly, both Secretaries in this case are former OMB Directors. Secretary Burwell was
nominated one week before the FY 2014 Budget was submitted to Congress and confirmed on
April 24, 2013.
10
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On July 13, 2013, the Senate Appropriations Committee adopted S. 1284, a bill
appropriating monies to HHS and other agencies for FY 2014. An accompanying report stated
that “[t]he Committee recommendation does not include a mandatory appropriation, requested by
the administration, for reduced cost sharing assistance . . . as provided for in sections 1402 and
1412 of the ACA.” S. Rep. No. 113-71, 113th Cong., at 123 (2013). No subsequent
consideration of funding for Section 1402 appears in the record, for FY 2014 or since.
On October 17, 2013, the President signed into law the first of two continuing
resolutions to keep the government running pending a consolidated appropriations act. See
Continuing Appropriations Act for 2014, Pub. L. 113-46, 127 Stat. 558 (2013); Joint Resolution,
Pub. L. 113-73, 128 Stat. 3 (Jan. 15, 2014). Neither resolution included an appropriation for
Section 1402 reimbursements. The October 2013 legislation did, however, require HHS to
certify that a program was in place to verify that applicants were eligible for “premium tax
credits . . . and reductions in cost-sharing” before “making such credits and reductions
available,” Pub. L. 113-46, Div. B, § 1001(a), 127 Stat. 566.
On January 17, 2014, the President signed the Consolidated Appropriations Act
for 2014, Pub. L. 113-76, 128 Stat. 5 (2014). That law similarly did not appropriate monies for
Section 1402 reimbursements to insurers. Indeed, the Secretaries have conceded that “[t]here
was no 2014 statute appropriating new money” for reimbursements under Section 1402. 5/28/15
Hr’g Tr. at 27:9-10.
Since January 2014, Treasury has been making advance payments of premium tax
credits and cost-sharing reimbursements to issuers of qualified health plans to eligible
individuals. Sec’y Mot. at 10 & Ex. 3, CMS Payment Policy and Financial Management
Group, Marketplace Payment Processing (Dec. 6, 2013) [Dkt. 55-5] at 6-7 (discussing plans
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“to make estimated payments to issuers beginning in January 2014 based on data provided by
the December deadline”). These payments have been based on the Secretaries’ determination
that “ the permanent appropriation in 31 U.S.C. § 1324, as amended by the Affordable Care
Act, is available to fund all components of the Act’s integrated system of subsidies for the
purchase of health insurance, including both the premium tax credit and cost-sharing portions
of the advance payments required by the Act.” Sec’y Mot. at 10.
II. LEGAL STANDARD
“Summary judgment is proper when ‘there is no genuine dispute as to any
material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.’ Pursuant to the crossmotions for summary judgment, there is no genuine dispute of material fact; at hand are only
questions of law, which include statutory construction.” Teltech Sys., Inc. v. Bryant, 702 F.3d
232, 235 (5th Cir. 2012) (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a)) (citation omitted). What remains is to
determine which party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
III. ANALYSIS
The question is whether Congress appropriated the billions of dollars that the
Secretaries have spent since January 2014 on Section 1402 reimbursements. The Secretaries rely
on 31 U.S.C. § 1324, which expressly appropriates money for Section 1401 premium tax credits.
In order to explain their paying Section 1402 reimbursements out of a permanent appropriation
for IRS refunds, the Secretaries posit that Sections 1401 and 1402 are economically and
programmatically integrated. A contrary reading of the amended appropriations statute, they
contend, would yield absurd economic, fiscal, and healthcare-policy results.
The only result of the ACA, however, is that the Section 1402 reimbursements
must be funded annually. Far from absurd, that is a perfectly valid means of appropriation. The
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results predicted by the Secretaries flow not from the ACA, but from Congress’ subsequent
refusal to appropriate money. Such an appropriation cannot be inferred, no matter how
programmatically aligned the Secretaries may view Sections 1401 and 1402. See 31 U.S.C.
§ 1301(d) (“A law may be construed to make an appropriation out of the Treasury . . . only if the
law specifically states that an appropriation is made”). “This principle is even more important in
the case of a permanent appropriation.” Remission to Guam & Virgin Islands of Estimates of
Moneys to be Collected, B-114808, 1979 WL 12213, at *3 (Comp. Gen. Aug. 7, 1979).
Paying out Section 1402 reimbursements without an appropriation thus violates
the Constitution. Congress authorized reduced cost sharing but did not appropriate monies for it,
in the FY 2014 budget or since. Congress is the only source for such an appropriation, and no
public money can be spent without one. See U.S. Constitution, Art. I, § 9, cl. 7 (“No Money
shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law . . . .”).
The Secretaries’ textual and contextual arguments fail.
A. The Secretaries’ Textual Arguments
The Secretaries argue that the text of 31 U.S.C. § 1324 and other “relevant
statutory provisions” of the ACA (and other statutes) authorize their expenditures for costsharing reimbursements. Sec’y Mot. at 12. It is a most curious and convoluted argument whose
mother was undoubtedly necessity.
1. The relevant appropriation statute
The Secretaries contend that 31 U.S.C. § 1324 appropriates monies for Section
1402 reimbursements. The text of § 1324 is worth reviewing in full:
Disbursements may be made from the appropriation made by this
section only for—
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(1) refunds to the limit of liability of an individual tax account;
and
(2) refunds due from credit provisions of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C. 1 et seq.) enacted before January 1,
1978, or enacted by the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, or from
section 25A, 35, 36, 36A, 36B, 168(k)(4)(F), 53(e), 54B(h), or
6431 of such Code, or due under section 3081(b)(2) of the
Housing Assistance Tax Act of 2008.
31 U.S.C. 1324(b) (emphasis on portion added by the ACA). The reference to 26 U.S.C. § 36B,
part of the Internal Revenue Code, was inserted by Section 1401(d)(1) of the ACA. There is
nothing in Section 1402 (cost-sharing reductions) or Section 1412 (advance payments) that
amends Title 31, amends the Internal Revenue Code, or purports to appropriate anything. The
Secretaries must therefore squeeze the elephant of Section 1402 reimbursements into the
mousehole of Section 1401(d)(1). See Whitman v. Am. Trucking Ass’ns, 531 U.S. 457, 468
(2001) (“Congress, we have held, does not . . . hide elephants in mouseholes.”).
The Secretaries can only prevail if Section 1402 payments are properly
considered “refunds due . . . from section . . . 36B.” 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b)(2). The Secretaries
first argue that the meaning of “from” depends on context. Sec’y Mot. at 12 (citing Nat’l Ass’n
of Clean Water Agencies v. EPA, 734 F.3d 1115 (D.C. Cir. 2013)). The proposition they borrow
from Clean Water Agencies, that “from” is “a function word to indicate the source or original or
moving force of something,” is accurate but not pertinent. 734 F.3d at 1125. A refund “due
from [26 U.S.C. §] 36B” means a refund due from that section. No amount of context can make
it “due from 42 U.S.C. § 18071.”
If “from” depends on context, moreover, then so must “refunds.” In this case, the
word “refunds” is shorthand for “refunds due from credit provisions of the Internal Revenue
Code.” 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b)(2). To provide a refund or credit under the Internal Revenue Code
means to reduce the tax liability of a taxpayer. That is precisely what Section 1401 does. See
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ACA § 1401(a) (“In General.—In the case of an applicable taxpayer, there shall be allowed as a
credit against the tax imposed by this subtitle for any taxable year . . . .”) (codified at 26 U.S.C.
§ 36B(a)). As such, the credits authorized by Section 1401 are quite naturally appropriated
through 31 U.S.C. § 1324. The cost-sharing reductions mandated by Section 1402, by contrast,
do not reduce anyone’s tax liability. Nor do the reimbursements made to the insurers. Neither is
intended to do so. Rather, Section 1402 reimbursements are made to compensate insurers for the
costs that they bear instead of share. These reimbursements simply are not “refunds” as that
term is used in 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b).
The Secretaries insist that payments under both Sections 1401 and 1402 are
“refunds due . . . from section . . . 36B” because they are both “compensatory payments made to
subsidize an individual’s insurance coverage based on that individual’s satisfaction of the
eligibility requirements in Section 36B.” Sec’y Mot. at 12. The argument relies on ACA
Section 1402(f)(2), which provides: “No cost-sharing reduction shall be allowed under this
section [1402] . . . unless . . . a credit is allowed to the insured . . . under section 36B of [the
Internal Revenue] Code.” In other words, insurers may not reduce cost sharing for anyone who
does not qualify for a premium tax credit.
The Secretaries exaggerate the significance of Section 1402(f)(2). Although it is
true that “[e]ligibility for a premium tax credit under Section 36B is[] a statutory precondition for
receipt of the cost-sharing reductions,” Sec’y Mot. at 13, the sections do have separate eligibility
provisions. Compare ACA § 1401(a), codified at 26 U.S.C. § 36B(c)(1)(A) (making eligible for
premium tax credits any policyholder who earns between 100 and 400 percent of the federal
poverty level) with ACA § 1402(c)(2), codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 18071(c)(2) (making
eligible for additional cost-sharing reductions any policyholder who earns between 100 and 250
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percent of the federal poverty line and who enrolls in a “silver” plan on an exchange). From
these distinct eligibility criteria, it is clear that many policyholders who qualify for Section
1402’s additional cost-sharing reductions will also qualify for Section 1401’s tax credits. But
that is due to an independent criterion: income. The terms of the ACA do not automatically link
eligibility for additional cost sharing reduction to eligibility for premium tax credits.
Section 1402(f)(2) does automatically link ineligibility. It dictates that if an
insured individual becomes ineligible for tax credits, he will automatically become ineligible for
reduced cost sharing. Taxpayers can lose eligibility for the credits for reasons other than income.
Under Section 1401, for example, married couples must file a joint return or else they cannot
qualify as an “applicable taxpayer,” i.e., they cannot qualify for the premium tax credits. 26
U.S.C. § 36B(c)(1)(C). Failure to file a joint return would not, however, disqualify a
policyholder for additional cost-sharing reduction. See generally 42 U.S.C. §§ 18071(b), (c)(2).
Section 1402(f)(2) was likely meant to tie up this and other loose ends. That does not turn a
reimbursement due from 42 U.S.C. § 18071 into a tax credit due from 26 U.S.C. § 36B.
The Secretaries argue that “36B” should be read broadly because its adjacent
terms frequently are. See Sec’y Mot. at 26 (“The Section 1324 appropriation is not limited to
payments made under the provisions listed in that statute.”).11 The Secretaries offer 26 U.S.C.
§ 35 as an example.12 That section is listed among the others permanently appropriated by 31
U.S.C. § 1324(b). By separate enactment, Congress created a new provision in the Code which
11
To be clear, the text actually does limit payments to the provisions listed in the statute. See 31
U.S.C. § 1324 (“Disbursements may be made from the appropriation made by this section only
for . . . .”) (emphasis added).
12
Section 35 provides premium tax credits for individuals receiving a “trade readjustment
allowance” under the Trade Act of 1974 and for individuals receiving a pension from the
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation. See generally 26 U.S.C. § 35(c).
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requires Treasury to make “advance payments” directly to insurers “on behalf of” individuals
eligible for a Section 35 tax credit. See 26 U.S.C. § 7527(a). Section 7527 is not among the
sections listed in 31 U.S.C. 1324(b), and yet “it has never been doubted that the Section 1324
appropriation is available to fund all aspects of the integrated Section 35 subsidy program.”
Sec’y Mot. at 27-28. The Secretaries argue by analogy that “36B” can include all advanced
payments under 42 U.S.C. § 18082, including Section 1402 reimbursements.
The Secretaries’ syllogism is unsound. Section 35 tax credits remain “refunds
due . . . from section . . . 35” even if advanced payment is authorized by Section 7527. Those
credits are not transformed into “refunds due . . . from section . . . [7527]” merely because
Section 7527 allows them to be paid in advance. The same is true of the tax credits provided
under Section 36B, which ACA Section 1412 allows to be paid in advance. The advancefunding mechanism in the ACA, codified at 42 U.S.C. § 18082, does not turn monies paid
through that mechanism into “refunds due . . . from section . . . [42 U.S.C. § 18082].”13 The
source of the credit—i.e., the Internal Revenue Code section “from” which the “refunds” are
“due”—remains 26 U.S.C. § 36B.
While both ACA Sections 1401 and 1402 can be paid in advance via Section
1412, only Section 1401 (in the guise of 26 U.S.C. § 36B) was added to the list of sections
whose refunds or credits are appropriated permanently by 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b). That Section
1402 goes unmentioned suggests no error or maladroit drafting; only Section 1401 provides a
13
It bears repeating here that every other section enumerated in 31 U.S.C. § 1324 comes from
the Internal Revenue Code, Title 26. None of them comes from Title 42 or elsewhere in the U.S.
Code. It would be unprecedented to shoehorn Section 1402 payments—which are due, if at all,
under Title 42—into 31 U.S.C. § 1324.
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refund or credit under the Internal Revenue Code. The Secretaries’ attempt to read “36B” as
“[26 U.S.C. §] 36B [and 42 U.S.C. § 18071]” finds no support in the statutory text.
2. The advance payments program
The Secretaries argue that Sections 1401 and 1402 are “unified” by the advancepayment program authorized by Section 1412. Sec’y Mot. at 13. However, Section 1412 itself
recognizes a separation in payment schemes:
(a) In General.—The Secretary [of HHS], in consultation with the
Secretary of the Treasury, shall establish a program under
which—
(1) upon request of an Exchange, advance determinations are
made under section 1411 with respect to the income eligibility
of individuals enrolling in a qualified health plan in the
individual market through the Exchange for the premium tax
credit allowable under section 36B of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986 and the cost-sharing reductions under section 1402.
ACA § 1412(a)(1) (emphasis added).14 The ACA could not have been clearer: premium tax
credits are payable under Section 36B of the Internal Revenue Code, and cost-sharing reductions
are payable under Section 1402 of the ACA. The two are textually, and thus legally, distinct.
See SW Gen., Inc. v. N.L.R.B., 796 F.3d 67, 75 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (“[W]e have repeatedly held that
where different terms are used in a single piece of legislation, the court must presume that
Congress intended the terms to have different meanings.”) (quoting Vonage Holdings Corp. v.
14
Note that advance payments are triggered only “upon request of an Exchange.” ACA
§ 1412(a)(1). Thus, strictly speaking, nothing mandates that advance payments would ever
materialize. It is therefore difficult to accept the argument that the ACA presumes a “unified”
program for advance payments for both Sections 1401 and 1402. See also Sec’y Reply at 16
(conceding that “neither the premium tax credit nor cost-sharing reduction subsidies must always
be made in advance”).
18
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FCC, 489 F.3d 1232, 1240 (D.C. Cir. 2007) (quotation marks and alteration omitted)). The
Secretaries’ unification argument fails in light of the differentiated text.15
There are other important textual distinctions in Section 1412. See, e.g., ACA
§ 1412(c) (“Payment of Premium Tax Credits and Cost-Sharing Reductions”). Under “Premium
Tax Credit,” that section provides:
The Secretary of the Treasury shall make the advance payment
under this section of any premium tax credit allowed under section
36B of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to the issuer of a qualified
health plan on a monthly basis (or such other periodic basis as the
Secretary may provide).
ACA § 1412(c)(2)(A) (emphasis added). But under “Cost-Sharing Reductions,” it provides:
The Secretary [of HHS] shall also notify the Secretary of the
Treasury and the Exchange under paragraph (1) if an advance
payment of the cost-sharing reductions under section 1402 is to be
made to the issuer of any qualified health plan with respect to any
individual enrolled in the plan. The Secretary of the Treasury shall
make such advance payment at such time and in such amount as the
Secretary [of HHS] specifies in the notice.
Id. § 1412(c)(3) (emphasis added).
Two distinctions are apparent. First, these passages reiterate the difference
between Section 1401 premium tax credits, which are paid “under section 36B of the Internal
Revenue Code,” and payments for Section 1402 cost-sharing reductions, which are payable
“under section 1402.” Compare ACA § 1412(c)(2)(A) with id. § 1412(c)(3). Second, there is a
notable difference in the statutory command to the Secretaries. Regarding Section 1401 credits,
Treasury is directed to make advance payments. ACA § 1412(c)(2)(A) (“The Secretary of the
Treasure shall make . . . .”). But with regard to Section 1402 reimbursements, the Secretary of
HHS is directed only to “notify the Secretary of the Treasury . . . if an advance payment . . . is to
15
The dichotomy is repeated elsewhere in Section 1412, e.g. § 1412(a)(2)(B).
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be made.” Id. § 1412(c)(3) (emphasis added). This language clearly contemplates that some
advance payments might not be made under Section 1402, which evidences the lack of
congressional intent to fuse Sections 1401 and 1402 together through a “unified” program. In
point of fact, the difference in treatment reflects the reality that Section 1402 reimbursements are
subject to the annual appropriations process, making it risky to command advance payments.
Sections 1412(c)(2) and 1412(c)(3), immediately adjacent and yet using
noticeably different language, belie the Secretaries’ textual argument that Section 1412 was
meant to unify Sections 1401 and 1402. See Nat’l Fed’n of Indep. Bus. v. Sebelius, 132 S. Ct.
2566, 2583 (2012) (“Where Congress uses certain language in one part of a statute and different
language in another, it is generally presumed that Congress acts intentionally.”) (citing Russello
v. United States, 464 U.S. 16, 23 (1983)).
3. The Hyde Amendment
The Secretaries base one of their textual arguments on the so-called Hyde
Amendment. Named for former Illinois Representative Henry Hyde, the amendment bars the
use of federal funds to pay for abortions except in specified circumstances. See Harris v.
McRae, 448 U.S. 297, 302 (1980). It routinely has been attached to certain appropriations
legislation, including for HHS, since 1976. “The Hyde Amendment is not permanent
legislation,” but is often “enacted as part of the statute appropriating funds for certain Executive
Departments for one fiscal year.” Dalton v. Little Rock Family Planning Servs., 516 U.S. 474,
477 (1996) (per curiam).
The ACA contains a prohibition on abortion funding that is tied to annual
appropriations restrictions like the Hyde Amendment. Section 1303(a)(2)(A)(ii) provides that an
insurer offering a qualified health plan “shall not use any amount attributable to . . . [a]ny cost-
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sharing reduction under section 1402 of the [ACA]” or the “amount (if any) of the advance
payment of the reduction under section 1412” to pay for “abortions for which the expenditure of
Federal funds appropriated for the Department of Health and Human Services is not permitted,
based on the law as in effect” six months prior to the plan year. ACA § 1303(a)(1)(B)(i). So
long as the Hyde Amendment continues to be attached to HHS appropriations laws, cost-sharing
reduction payments under Section 1402 cannot be used to fund abortion services. That would be
create a redundancy, in the Secretaries’ view, because the Hyde Amendment itself would block
such use if the Section 1402 reimbursements were appropriated annually.
The House points to the term “if any” as evidence that cost-sharing reductions
might never be paid. But the same “if any” language is found in the preceding section on
premium tax credits. ACA § 1303(a)(2)(A)(i). The term refers to the advanced payments, the
Secretaries say, which “can be explained as merely reflecting that neither the premium tax credit
nor cost-sharing reduction subsidies must always be made in advance.” Sec’y Reply at 13.16
The Secretaries are right; the term “if any” appears in both subsections.
Section 1303(a)(2)(ii) does create a redundancy, but not one that trumps
unambiguous text. “Redundancies across statutes are not unusual events in drafting, and so long
as there is no ‘positive repugnancy’ between two laws, a court must give effect to both.” Conn.
Nat. Bank v. Germain, 503 U.S. 249, 253 (1992) (quoting Wood v. United States, 41 U.S. (16
Pet.) 342, 363 (1842) (citation omitted)). In King v. Burwell, the Court specifically rejected the
petitioners’ and the dissent’s redundancy argument. 135 S. Ct. at 2492 (“[O]ur preference for
avoiding surplusage constructions is not absolute.”) (quoting Lamie v. U.S. Trustee, 540 U.S.
16
That is a notable concession, given the Secretaries’ argument that Congress “inextricably
linked” the two programs through the advanced-payment system. Sec’y Mot. at 16. The
Secretaries have conceded that the two programs can, in fact, be extricated.
21
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526, 536 (2004)). The Court added that “specifically with respect to [the ACA], rigorous
application of the canon does not seem a particularly useful guide to a fair construction of the
statute.” King, 135 S. Ct. at 2492.17
There is no positive repugnancy created between ACA § 1303 and the Hyde
Amendment, nor any created within the ACA. The Germain Court explained that “canons of
construction are no more than rules of thumb that help courts determine the meaning of
legislation,” and that “a court should always turn first to one, cardinal canon before all others[:]
courts must presume that a legislature says in a statute what it means and means in a statute what
it says there.” 503 U.S. at 253-54; see also Ali v. Fed. Bureau of Prisons, 552 U.S. 214, 227
(2008) (“In the end, we are unpersuaded by petitioner’s attempt to create ambiguity [by invoking
17
The Supreme Court described in detail why such minor discrepancies might appear:
The Affordable Care Act contains more than a few examples of
inartful drafting. (To cite just one, the Act creates three separate
Section 1563s. See 124 Stat. 270, 911, 912.) Several features of the
Act’s passage contributed to that unfortunate reality. Congress
wrote key parts of the Act behind closed doors, rather than through
“the traditional legislative process.” Cannan, A Legislative History
of the Affordable Care Act: How Legislative Procedure Shapes
Legislative History, 105 L. Lib. J. 131, 163 (2013). And Congress
passed much of the Act using a complicated budgetary procedure
known as “reconciliation,” which limited opportunities for debate
and amendment, and bypassed the Senate’s normal 60-vote
filibuster requirement. Id. at 159-167. As a result, the Act does not
reflect the type of care and deliberation that one might expect of
such significant legislation. Cf. Frankfurter, Some Reflections on
the Reading of Statutes, 47 Colum. L. Rev. 527, 545 (1947)
(describing a cartoon “in which a senator tells his colleagues ‘I admit
this new bill is too complicated to understand. We’ll just have to
pass it to find out what it means.’”).
King, 135 S. Ct. at 2492.
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the rule against superfluities] where the statute’s text and structure suggest none.”). Given the
choice between rewriting plain text and accepting a minor redundancy, the choice is clear.
4. “Conspicuously absent” text
The Secretaries also rely on the absence of certain text. As it often does,
Congress said in certain parts of the ACA that there “are authorized to be appropriated such sums
as are necessary.”18 But that language is not in Section 1402. The Secretaries do not argue—nor
could they—that these words are necessary to appropriate monies in the future. Instead, they
deduce that the absence of this language means that Congress felt it unneeded, ostensibly
because Section 1402 was already funded permanently.
To the extent that this missing language evidences congressional intent, it cannot
surmount the plain text. According to that text, Congress authorized Section 1402 but did not
appropriate for it. That is perfectly consonant with principles of appropriations law. So long as
programs are authorized, Congress may appropriate funds for them, or not, as it chooses. See
GAO Principles at 2-41 (“An authorization act is basically a directive to Congress itself, which
Congress is free to follow or alter (up or down) in the subsequent appropriation act.”). The
absence of the “authorized to be appropriated” language does not give the Court—or the
Secretaries—license to rewrite the plain text of 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b).
5. Post-ACA legislation
18
See, e.g., ACA § 2705(f), 124 Stat. 325. See also Sec’y Mot. at 15 n.5 (citing ACA §§ 1002,
2706(e), 3013(c), 2015, 2501, 3504(b), 3505(a), 3505(b), 3506, 3509(a)(1), 3509(b), 3509(e),
3509(f), 3509(g), 3511, 4003(a), 4003(b), 4004(j), 4101(b), 4102(a), 4102(c), 4102(d)(1)(C),
4102(d)(4), 4201(f), 4202(a)(5), 4204(b), 4206, 4302(a), 4304, 4305(a), 4305(c), 5101(h),
5102(e), 5103(a)(3), 5203, 5204, 5206(b), 5207, 5208(b), 5210, 5301, 5302, 5303, 5304,
5305(a), 5306(a), 5307(a), 5309(b)).
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The Secretaries urge the Court to consider post-ACA legislation to inform the
meaning of the ACA’s text. Specifically, they draw significance from the October 2013
Continuing Appropriations Act, which required HHS to certify eligibility for “premium tax
credits . . . and reductions in cost-sharing” before “making such credits and reductions
available.” Pub. L. No. 113-46, § 1001(a), 127 Stat. 566. The Secretaries posit that a
fundamental inconsistency would arise if the same Congress that “had precluded those payments
from being made by failing to appropriate any funds” also required certification of eligibility for
payment of cost-sharing reimbursements. Sec’y Mot. at 16.
The significance of the October 2013 appropriations act is too ephemeral to
support the Secretaries’ deduction. With FY 2014 funding still unsettled, Section 1402
reimbursements might yet have been funded for that year. In addition, Congress could always
have appropriated monies to fund Section 1402 in the future; nothing about its prior refusal
bound it or a future Congress. And with these ACA provisions set to become effective in mere
months, the temporary appropriations act allowed Congress to require certification of eligibility
prior to monies being distributed under either Section 1401 or 1402. Congress did not give a
reason for its requiring certification in the continuing appropriations act, but the Secretaries’
deduction would create an appropriation for Section 1402 out of thin air. Whatever the
explanation, the October 2013 Continuing Appropriations Act does not alter the meaning of
“refunds due . . . from section . . . 36B.” 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b).
B. The Secretaries’ Contextual Arguments
The thrust of the Secretaries’ argument relies on the ACA’s “structure and
design.” See Sec’y Mot. at 16-23. “Reliance on context and structure in statutory interpretation
is a ‘subtle business, calling for great wariness lest what professes to be mere rendering becomes
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creation and attempted interpretation of legislation becomes legislation itself.’” King, 135 S. Ct.
at 2495-96 (quoting Palmer v. Massachusetts, 308 U.S. 79, 83 (1939)). The relevant text is,
once again, “refunds due . . . from section . . . 36B.” 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b)(2). As discussed
above, none of those words is ambiguous standing alone.19 The Secretaries rely heavily on King
to argue that the full context of the ACA makes the language ambiguous and thus subject to their
interpretation, provided it is reasonable.
1. Structure and design
The Secretaries first posit that the ACA enacted a “closely intertwined” system of
subsidies, citing King, 135 S. Ct. at 2487. The “three key reforms” described in King were:
(1) guaranteed insurance and community rating requirements, 42 U.S.C. § 300gg; (2) an
individual mandate to maintain health insurance, 26 U.S.C. § 5000A; and (3) refundable tax
credits to individuals with household incomes between 100 percent and 400 percent of the
federal poverty line, 26 U.S.C. § 36B. See generally King, 135 S. Ct. at 2486-87. The Court
added, as to the third: “Individuals who meet the Act’s requirements may purchase insurance
with the tax credits, which are provided in advance directly to the individual’s insurer.” Id. at
2487. King did not describe Section 1402 cost-sharing reductions as integral to any of the three
key reforms. In fact, King did not mention Section 1402, discuss payments for cost-sharing
19
The House argues that the Secretaries “seek to flip King on its head” by looking outside the
relevant text to determine ambiguity in the first instance. House Opp’n at 14. But that is, in fact,
what the Court in King did. After acknowledging that “established by the State” has a plain
meaning and that it was statutorily defined to mean “each of the 50 States and the District of
Columbia,” the Court nonetheless looked outside of 26 U.S.C. §§ 36B(b)(2)(A), (c)(2)(A)(i), to
ascertain whether the phrase was ambiguous. See King, 135 S. Ct. at 2490 (“These provisions
suggest that the Act may not always use the phrase ‘established by the State’ in its most natural
sense. Thus, the meaning of that phrase may not be as clear as it appears when read out of
context.”). In other words, the Court determined that a phrase that is unambiguous in isolation
may be ambiguous in greater context. That is the Secretaries’ argument here.
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reductions, or cite 42 U.S.C. § 18071. The Secretaries nevertheless urge that cost-sharing
reductions are “just as closely linked” to the reforms described in King. Sec’y Mot. at 16. For
that reason, they ask this Court to read ambiguity into otherwise plain language.
This case is fundamentally different from King v. Burwell. There, the phrase
“established by the State,” 26 U.S.C. §§ 36B(b)(2)(A), 36B(c)(2)(A)(i), became “not so clear”
when it was “read in context.” King, 135 S. Ct. at 2490 (acknowledging that the ACA had
expressly defined “State” to mean “each of the 50 States and the District of Columbia,” 42
U.S.C. § 18024(d)). This was the “problem” identified by the Court:
If we give the phrase “the State that established the Exchange” its
most natural meaning, there would be no “qualified individuals” on
Federal Exchanges. But the Act clearly contemplates that there will
be qualified individuals on every Exchange. As we just mentioned,
the Act requires all Exchanges to “make available qualified health
plans to qualified individuals”—something an Exchange could not
do if there were no such individuals. § 18031(d)(2)(A). And the
Act tells the Exchange, in deciding which health plans to offer, to
consider “the interests of qualified individuals . . . in the State or
States in which such Exchange operates”—again, something the
Exchange could not do if qualified individuals did not exist.
§ 18031(e)(1)(B). This problem arises repeatedly throughout the
Act.
King, 135 S. Ct. at 2490 (emphasis in original). Simply put, the statute could not function if
interpreted literally; it had to be saved from itself.
The problem the Secretaries have tried to solve here is very different: it is a
failure to appropriate, not a failure in drafting. Congress’s subsequent inaction, not the text of
the ACA, is what prompts the Secretaries to force the elephant into the mousehole. There are no
inherent flaws in the ACA that keep Section 1402 payments from being paid, in advance or
otherwise. None of the operative provisions becomes unworkable, as they did in King, when the
relevant passage (31 U.S.C. § 1324(b)) is read plainly. The minor redundancy created by ACA
Section 1303(a)(2)(ii), discussed above, is nothing compared to the fundamental disconnects that
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would have “arise[n] repeatedly” in King if “the State” were given its most natural reading. 135
S. Ct. at 2490. It simply does not follow from a plain reading of 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b) that “the
Act d[oes] not allow the government to comply with the statutory directive to reimburse those
insurers for the cost-sharing reductions.” Sec’y Mot. at 16. There is nothing in the ACA that
prevents compliance. The funds simply must be appropriated.
The result in King was driven by the Court’s holding “that the Act may not
always use the phrase ‘established by the State’ in its most natural sense,” and thus that “the
meaning of that phrase may not be as clear as it appears when read out of context.” 135 S. Ct. at
2490. The natural sense of the statutory language at issue here (“36B”) does not impede the
operation of the ACA. No “problem arises repeatedly throughout the Act,” id., if 31 U.S.C.
§ 1324(b) (as amended by ACA § 1401(d)) is given its plain meaning. King is inapposite.
2. Unintended consequences
The Secretaries predict a “cascading series of nonsensical and undesirable results”
if 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b) is given its plain meaning. Sec’y Mot. at 17. When interpreting a statute,
“absurd results are to be avoided.” McNeill v. United States, 563 U.S. 816, 822 (2011) (quoting
United States v. Wilson, 503 U.S. 329, 334 (1992)). The Court must therefore consider whether
the ACA’s plain text would cause absurd results.
The Secretaries depict health insurance premiums and cost-sharing
reimbursements as a financial seesaw; as one goes down, the other must go up. Sec’y Mot. at 2.
Insurers cannot escape cost-sharing reductions, which are a mandatory feature of participation in
the Exchanges. If the insurers are not reimbursed, they will charge higher premiums to cover
their expenses. Sec’y Mot. at 17 & Ex. 4, ASPE Issue Brief: Potential Fiscal Consequences of
Not Providing CSR Reimbursements [Dkt. 55-6] (ASPE Br.) at 2. When premiums rise,
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taxpayers become entitled to greater tax credits under Section 1401. Sec’y Mot. at 18 (citing 26
U.S.C. § 36B(b)(2)(B)). On its face, this causes no concern because premium tax credits are
permanently funded. The seesaw would effectively solve the problem.
But the seesaw is asymmetrical. More people qualify for premium tax credits
than for cost-sharing reductions, and tax credits for all health plans are “indexed” to the costsharing-eligible (“silver”) plans. Sec’y Mot. at 19. For these reasons, if federal spending
decreased on the cost-sharing side, it would increase disproportionately on the tax-credit side.
Congress would end up spending more through Section 1401 alone than it would through
Sections 1401 and 1402 working together.
There are other potential consequences if no funds are appropriated for Section
1402 reimbursements. Unreimbursed insurers might sue the government under the Tucker Act,
28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1), to receive the money owed them under ACA Section 1402(c)(3)(A)
(“[T]he Secretary shall make periodic and timely payments to the issuer equal to the value of the
reductions.”).20 Litigation would burden the U.S. Treasury if the insurers won such suits, and
even unsuccessful litigation would impose costs. The Secretaries also worry that prevailing
insurers would receive a windfall: higher insurance premiums (subsidized by Section 1401 tax
credits) and reimbursement for Section 1402 cost-sharing reductions.
The Secretaries also project that annual funding of Section 1402 would cause
uncertainty in the market. Because “plans sold on the [ACA’s] Exchanges are required to set
their premiums for the following year well in advance” of the government’s fiscal year, “insurers
20
The House disputes whether this language confers an actionable right upon the insurers. See
House Opp’n at 19-20. Because the Tucker Act argument is not ultimately dispositive, the Court
does not decide whether insurers could sue under the Tucker Act.
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would be forced to set their premiums for the upcoming year in the face of uncertainty about the
existence and amount of payments they would receive.” Sec’y Mot. at 23.21
Finally, the Secretaries argue that Congress has not adopted an “appropriated
entitlement” since 1997 and surely would not have done so in the ACA without saying so
clearly. Sec’y Mot. at 21-22. They cite the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, Pub. L. 1005-33,
§§ 10101, 10116, 11 Stat. 251, 678 (Aug. 5, 1997) and an accompanying conference report, H.R.
Conf. Rep. 105-217, at 983 (1997). As defined by GAO, an appropriated entitlement is:
An entitlement whose source of funding is in an annual
appropriation act. However, because the entitlement is created by
operation of law, if Congress does not appropriate the money
necessary to fund the payments, eligible recipients may have legal
recourse. Veterans’ compensation and Medicaid are examples of
such appropriated entitlements.
GAO Glossary at 13.
These arguments all focus on the wrong consequences. For purposes of
interpreting the ACA, the relevant question is not whether Congress intended premiums to
skyrocket, deficits to explode, or enrollment to plummet—those are not consequences of the
statute that Congress wrote in 2010. The relevant question is far narrower: Would it have been
“nonsensical” or “absurd” for Congress to authorize a program permanently in 2010 but not
appropriate for it permanently at the same time?
The answer is “no.” Congress once conferred, for example, “permanent
authority” on Treasury “to permit prepayment . . . to territorial treasuries of estimates of moneys
to be collected from certain taxes, duties, and fees.” Remission to Guam & Virgin Islands of
21
Amici in support of the Secretaries agree with these predictions. See generally Br. Amici
Curie for Economic & Health Policy Scholars [Dkt. 64] at 4-5.
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Estimates of Moneys to be Collected, B-114808, 1979 WL 12213, at *1 (Comp. Gen. Aug. 7,
1979). Yet because no subsequent appropriation was made, no such money could be spent:
In sum, although we think that Section[s] 1(c) and 4(c)(2) of Pub. L.
No. 95-348 do establish permanent authority for future
appropriations, we conclude that they do not establish permanent
indefinite appropriations. Thus, the Department of the Treasury
cannot remit funds to Guam and the Virgin Islands under these
sections until Congress makes appropriations for that purpose.
Id. at *4. Interestingly, GAO recognized that “Congress probably did not anticipate that
appropriations would be needed in order to implement the prepayment provisions.” Id. at *2.
That did not alter GAO’s analysis of the statute, however, because “the making of an
appropriation is not to be inferred but must be expressly stated. This principle is even more
important in the case of a permanent appropriation.” Id. at *3 (emphasis added).
The Remission to Guam decision was recently cited by GAO when analyzing
Section 1342(b)(1) of the ACA. See Dep’t of HHS—Risk Corridors Program, B-325630, 2014
WL 4825237, at *2 (Comp. Gen. Sept. 30, 2014). GAO found that “Section 1342, by its terms,
did not enact an appropriation to make the payments specified in section 1342(b)(1).” Id. GAO
ultimately concluded that HHS could spend monies appropriated by another statute, Pub. L. 11376, div. H, title II, 128 Stat. 5, 374 (Jan. 17, 2014), which appropriated funds for the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to carry out its responsibilities. 2014 WL 4825237, at
*3. That appropriating statute does not apply here, so GAO’s final conclusion is irrelevant for
these purposes. More to the point, the Risk Corridors decision illustrates` that a statute (in that
case, ACA § 1342) can authorize a program, mandate that payments be made, and yet fail to
appropriate the necessary funds. Id. at *2 (“It is not enough for a statute to simply require an
agency to make a payment.”). Thus, not only is it possible for a statute to authorize and mandate
payments without making an appropriation, but GAO has found a prime example in the ACA.
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These decisions illustrate well-understood principles of appropriations law. In
decisions spanning 35 years, GAO has consistently emphasized that appropriations—especially
permanent appropriations—must be expressly stated. GAO has also ruled that a mere
requirement to pay is not an appropriation. “Although GAO decisions are not binding, [courts]
‘give special weight to [GAO’s] opinions’ due to its ‘accumulated experience and expertise in
the field of government appropriations.’” Nevada v. Dep’t of Energy, 400 F.3d 9, 16 (D.C. Cir.
2005) (quoting United Auto., Aerospace & Agric. Implement Workers v. Donovan, 746 F.2d 855,
861 (D.C. Cir. 1984)). This Court draws from GAO’s expertise, as well.
Finally, the Secretaries’ “appropriated entitlement” argument fails. Recall that, in
its April 2013 budget justification, HHS called Section 1402 an “appropriated entitlement[]”
while requesting an appropriation for it. Justification [Dkt. 30-3] at 184. The agency now calls
appropriated entitlements a “dormant . . . construct,” Sec’y Mot. at 22, but apparently thought in
2013 that the construct had awoken. Nothing prevented Congress from resurrecting this method
of appropriating, least of all a 13-year old Conference Report. In the end, this argument simply
does not call into question the plain text of 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b) as amended by ACA § 1401(d).
To recapitulate, the consequence at issue here is that a permanently authorized
benefit program was made dependent on non-permanent appropriations. That approach is
perfectly consonant with principles of appropriations law; most federal entities operate in the
same fashion. The Secretaries’ argument, taken to its logical conclusion, is that every permanent
authorization must also constitute a permanent appropriation or else an “absurd result” would
obtain. That is assuredly not the law. Higher premiums, more federal debt, and decreased
enrollment are not consequences of the ACA’s text or structure. Those results would flow—if at
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all—from Congress’s continuing refusal to appropriate funds for Section 1402 reimbursements.
That is Congress’s prerogative; the Court cannot override it by rewriting 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b).
3. The Affordable Care Act’s legislative history
The Secretaries make two points about the legislative history of the ACA. First,
they say that CBO consistently referred to Section 1402 reimbursements as “direct spending.”
CBO would not have used this term, according to the Secretaries, if the money were not already
appropriated. But when CBO scores “laws providing or creating direct spending,” it is required
by law to assume that “funding for entitlement authority [will] be adequate to make all payments
required by those laws.” 2 U.S.C. § 907(b)(1). Thus, the Court draws nothing particularly
meaningful from CBO’s assumption that appropriations would have been made for Section 1402
reimbursements.
Second, the Secretaries point to statements by individual Representatives and
Senators whose description of the “cost” of the ACA presumed that Section 1402 would be
funded.22 This argument, too, fails to establish an actual appropriation. “An agency’s discretion
to spend appropriated funds is cabined only by the ‘text of the appropriation,’ not by Congress’
expectations of how the funds will be spent, as might be reflected by legislative history.”
Salazar v. Ramah Navajo Chapter, 132 S. Ct. 2181, 2194-95 (2012) (quoting Int’l Union, United
Auto., Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers of Am. v. Donovan, 746 F.2d 855, 860-61
22
See 156 Cong. Rec. S2069, S2081 (Mar. 25, 2010) (Sen. Durbin) (“$500 billion of tax cuts and
cost-sharing”); 155 Cong. Rec. S12565, S12576 (Dec. 7, 2009) (Sen. Enzi) (“this bill will
commit the Federal Treasury to paying for these new subsidies for the uninsured forever”); 156
Cong. Rec. H1891, H1898 (Mar. 21, 2010) (Rep. Paulsen) (“$500 billion . . . [in] new
entitlement spending”); 156 Cong. Rec. H1891, H1910 (Mar. 21, 2010) (Rep. Diaz-Balart) (“half
a trillion dollars . . . [for] a massive new entitlement program”).
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(D.C. Cir. 1984)). The Court finds nothing exceptional about legislators assuming that a
program under debate would be fully appropriated if enacted.23
4. The contemporary understanding
The best evidence of the contemporary understanding of the ACA comes from the
parties’ preparation for the effective date of the law. Cf. United States v. Kanchanalak, 192 F.3d
1037, 1045 (D.C. Cir. 1999) (“A[] court will ordinarily give substantial deference to a
contemporaneous agency interpretation of a statute it administers.”) (quoting Sierra Pac. Power
v. EPA, 647 F.2d 60, 65 (9th Cir. 1981)). The only such actions that speak directly to the
question in this case—whether Section 1402 reimbursements were permanently appropriated
for—were taken by OMB in the FY 2014 Budget Request and by HHS when it submitted its
Justification, both of which sought an annual appropriation for Section 1402 reimbursements.
See Budget [Dkt. 30-1]; App. to Budget [Dkt. 30-2] at 3, 448; Justification [Dkt. 30-3] at 7, 184.
These requests “are not in dispute.” Sec’y Opp’n at 4.
The Secretaries argue that these requests are irrelevant, however, because
“[b]udget requests . . . do[] not implement, interpret, or prescribe any law or policy.” Fund for
Animals, Inc. v. U.S. Bureau of Land Mgmt., 460 F.3d 13, 20 (D.C. Cir. 2006) (internal
quotations omitted)). They note that “the particular request at issue here [for FY 2014] did not
purport to analyze the ACA or consider the availability of the permanent appropriation in 31
U.S.C. § 1324.” Sec’y Mot. at 30; see also Sec’y Reply at 4 (“[T]hose documents did not fully
account for the text, structure, design, and history of the ACA.”).
23
The Court thanks amici Members of Congress for their brief. See Br. Amici Curiae Members
of Congress [Dkt. 63]. However, their recollections as to what “everyone at the time
understood,” id. at 22, are anecdotal and not evidentiary.
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As an initial matter, it strains credulity to suggest that OMB or HHS submitted a
multibillion dollar budget request without analyzing the relevant statutes. The Secretary of HHS
is aided by an Assistant Secretary for Financial Resources who manages an Office of Budget.24
The employees in that office “play a lead role in analyzing Congressional budget actions and
appropriations legislation.”25 Within that office’s Division of Budget Policy, Execution, and
Review, the Fiscal and Legal Review Branch “provides expertise in budget execution and
appropriations law” and offers “technical analysis of appropriations bills and authorizing
legislation with an impact on spending authority.”26 The Office of Budget also “maintains active
communication with OMB,”27 whose Budget Review Division “monitors congressional action
on appropriations and other spending legislation.”28
The Administration’s FY 2014 Budget Request and its Appendix reflected the
careful analysis that one would expect from these institutions. Each request accounted
meticulously for every penny sought. Statutory authority was cited for every program, along
with tables detailing the budgetary resources available and the effect of any appropriation or
outlay. See, e.g., App. to Budget [Dkt. 30-2] at 448 (detailing such information for “Reduced
Cost Sharing for Individuals Enrolled in Qualified Health Plans” and the “Consumer Operated
and Oriented Plan Program Contingency Fund”). CMS’s accompanying Justification contained
24
See http://www.hhs.gov/about/agencies/orgchart/index.html (last visited May 11, 2016).
25
http://www.hhs.gov/about/agencies/asfr/budget/index.html (last visited May 11, 2016).
26
http://www.hhs.gov/about/agencies/asfr/budget/divisions/index.html (last visited May 11,
2016).
27
http://www.hhs.gov/about/agencies/asfr/budget/index.html (last visited May 11, 2016).
28
https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/organization_mission/ (last visited May 11, 2016).
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pages of painstaking analysis of various appropriations statutes. See Justification [30-3] at 1113, 129-31, 171-72, 183, 185-86. Clearly these agencies were analyzing appropriations statutes
and were considering the availability of permanent appropriations. Nevertheless, it is true that
the FY 2014 Budget Request and its accompanying documents do not “constrain this Court” or
obviate “the traditional tools of statutory analysis.” Sec’y Opp’n at 4.
The Secretaries cite two cases for the proposition that “Executive Branch
statements have no bearing on questions of statutory interpretation like the one now before this
Court.” Sec’y Opp’n at 5. In Wong Yang Sung v. McGrath, the Supreme Court refused to agree
“that a request for and failure to get in a single session of Congress clarifying legislation on a
genuinely debatable point of agency procedure admits weakness in the agency’s contentions.”
339 U.S. 33, 47 (1950). The Court drew “no inference in favor of either construction of the Act”
merely because the agency sought, but Congress did not pass, certain legislation. Id. In Federal
Trade Commission v. Dean Foods Company, the Court refused to “infer[,] from the fact that
Congress took no action at all on the request of the [FTC] to grant it” preliminary-injunction
powers under the Clayton Act, any intent by Congress “to circumscribe [the] traditional judicial
remedies” provided in the All Writs Act. 384 U.S. 597, 609-10 (1966). Relying on these cases,
the Secretaries tell the Court to ignore their FY 2014 Budget Requests.
The Secretaries have asked this Court to consider statutes that were enacted years
after the ACA; floor statements by individual Members of Congress; an HHS “issue brief” on
potential fiscal consequences; a New York Times article; the Hyde Amendment; a CMS webinar
from 2013; excerpts from the House Budget Committee’s Compendium of Laws and Rules of the
Congressional Budget Process (2015 ed.); CBO scoring terminology; and a House Conference
Report from 1997. It is passing strange that they find the official FY 2014 Budget Request
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related documents to be irrelevant. The Court draws no dispositive inference from the history of
the FY 2014 Budget Request concerning the question of statutory interpretation. But the Court
does find that the budget history is probative of HHS’s contemporaneous interpretation.
The Secretaries ignore their own actions and focus instead on congressional
inaction. Sec’y Mot. at 29 (arguing that the “failure of Congress to provide an annual
appropriation to HHS does not alter the scope of the permanent appropriation to Treasury in
Section 1324”); id. at 30 (“Congress’s failure to provide a specific appropriation requested by an
agency sheds no light on the question whether other appropriations are available to make the
same expenditure.”). Those arguments beg the question. No one disputes that 31 U.S.C. § 1324
is an appropriation; the question is whether that statute, as amended by ACA §1401(d)(1),
permanently appropriates money for Section 1402 reimbursements. The Court concludes that it
does not.
C. Deference to the Secretaries’ Interpretation
The Secretaries argue that “at a minimum,” they deserve deference to their
interpretation of 31 U.S.C. § 1324. Sec’y Mot. at 25-26 (citing Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. NRDC,
467 U.S. 837, 842, 842-43 (1984)). The Supreme Court in King rejected the agency’s Chevron
argument. See 135 S. Ct. at 2488-89. The Court had previously recognized that in
“extraordinary cases,” there “may be reason to hesitate before concluding that Congress has
intended [the] implicit delegation” that underlies Chevron deference. Id. (quoting FDA v. Brown
& Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, 159 (2000)). King was “one of those cases”
because “tax credits are among the Act’s key reforms, involving billions of dollars in spending
each year and affecting the price of health insurance for millions of people.” 135 S. Ct. at 2489.
The Secretaries say the same thing about Section 1402 reimbursements. That being the case,
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“had Congress wished to assign th[e] question to an agency, it surely would have done so
expressly.” Id. There is no express delegation here.
Even if Chevron deference were warranted, the Secretaries would fail at step one.
See W. Minnesota Mun. Power Agency v. Fed. Energy Regulatory Comm’n, 806 F.3d 588, 591
(D.C. Cir. 2015) (“Under step one, the court must determine ‘whether Congress has directly
spoken to the precise question at issue.’ If so, then the court and the agency must ‘give effect to
the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress.’”) (quoting Chevron, 467 U.S. at 842, 842-43
(citation omitted)). As described at length above, Congress spoke directly and unambiguously to
the precise question at issue. See 31 U.S.C. § 1324(b) (appropriating money “only for . . .
refunds due . . . from section . . . 36B.”). The Secretaries insist nonetheless that the Court should
interpret “36B” to include Section 1402 reimbursements. It cannot be done. See 31 U.S.C. §
1301(d) (“A law may be construed to make an appropriation out of the Treasury . . . only if the
law specifically states that an appropriation is made”); Remission to Guam, B-114808, 1979 WL
12213, at *3 (Comp. Gen. Aug. 7, 1979) (“This principle is even more important in the case of a
permanent appropriation.”).
D. Standing
The Secretaries invite the Court to revisit its standing analysis. Sec’y Mot. at 3334. “Standing represents a jurisdictional requirement which remains open to review at all stages
of the litigation.” Nat’l Org. for Women v. Scheidler, 510 U.S. 249, 255 (1994).
The Secretaries believe that they have proven this case to be only about statutory
interpretation and implementation. Sec’y Mot. at 34 (“As should be apparent from the foregoing
discussion, this case indeed involves solely a dispute over the meaning of federal statutes.”).
This argument was raised in their motion to dismiss, Defs. Reply [Dkt. 26] at 10 (“In short, the
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House has described two relatively straight-forward differences of opinion between the
Legislative and Executive Branches as to the interpretation of federal law.”), and addressed in
the Court’s prior opinion, 130 F. Supp. 3d at 74 n.24 (“The Secretaries’ primary defense will be
that an appropriation has been made, which will require reading the statute. But that is an
antecedent determination to a constitutional claim.”) (emphasis in original).
The Court has not changed its mind. While it is true that the Secretaries’ defense
in this case requires interpreting federal statutes, the House of Representatives’ claim under the
Appropriations Clause does not. See U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 7 (“No Money shall be drawn
from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law.”). Instead, the
interpretation of a federal statute only becomes necessary when a defendant raises such a statute
as a defense. Such a defense does not turn a constitutional claim into a statutory dispute. The
House’s injury depends on the Constitution and not on the U.S. Code. The Secretaries’ standing
argument will be denied.
IV. CONCLUSION
The Court will grant summary judgment to the House of Representatives and
enter judgment in its favor. The Court will also enjoin any further reimbursements under Section
1402 until a valid appropriation is in place. However, the Court will stay its injunction pending
any appeal by the parties. A memorializing Order accompanies this Opinion.
Date: May 12, 2016
/s/
ROSEMARY M. COLLYER
United States District Judge
38
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