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United States v. Allocco (1962)

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Central Question

Were presidential recess appointments to the federal courts constitutional?

Historical Context

Article II, section 2 of the U.S. Constitution provided the President with the power to appoint federal judges “by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate.” An additional clause added to the appointment power, however, by permitting the President “to fill up all Vacancies that may happen during the Recess of the Senate, by granting Commissions which shall expire at the End of their next Session.” The Recess Appointment Clause was not the subject of significant debate during the drafting of the Constitution, so the records of the Constitutional Convention do not reveal exactly how the framers intended the clause to be used. There is good reason to believe, however, that the purpose of the clause was to ensure the orderly functioning of the federal government during times when the Senate was not in session and therefore unable to exercise its constitutional role in the appointment process. In Federalist no. 67, Alexander Hamilton described the clause as “nothing more than a supplement . . . for the purpose of establishing an auxiliary method of appointment, in cases to which the general method was inadequate.” It would not have been proper, noted Hamilton, to require the Senate to remain in session at all times for the appointment of officers.

Since 1789, Presidents have used the recess appointment power to appoint federal judges over 300 times, including 12 times for justices of the Supreme Court. (The vast majority of these judges later received regular appointments by presidential nomination and Senate confirmation.) There has always been an inherent tension between Article III of the Constitution, which provides that judges exercising the judicial power of the United States shall remain in office “during good behavior,” and the Recess Appointment Clause, which mandates that appointments made without the advice and consent of the Senate be temporary. Dwight Eisenhower’s recess appointments of Earl Warren, William Brennan, and Potter Stewart between 1953 and 1958 were the last made to the Supreme Court; in 1960, the Senate passed a resolution expressing its disapproval of such appointments. Recess appointments to the lower courts have fallen into disfavor as well, with only four occurring since 1964.

Legal Debates before Allocco

Although the temporary nature of appointments made pursuant to the Recess Appointment Clause appears to conflict with the tenure during good behavior for federal judges provided for in Article III, legal debates over recess appointments prior to the middle of the twentieth century did not focus on this potential conundrum. Instead, disagreements arose over the meaning of two specific terms used in the clause. First, did a vacancy “happen” only when it first occurred, or for as long as it existed? If the former interpretation were adopted, the President could make recess appointments only to fill vacancies that first occurred during a recess of the Senate, and not those simply existing during a recess. Second, there were two types of congressional recesses. One, known as an “intersession” recess, occurred during the break between the end of one session of Congress and the beginning of another (a Congress consists of two sessions, each lasting approximately a year). The second, called an “intrasession” recess, was a break that took place during a congressional session. It was not clear whether the Recess Appointment Clause applied to both intersession and intrasession recesses.

Attorney General William Wirt was the first official called upon to answer the question of what constituted a vacancy for purposes of the Recess Appointment Clause. (Section 35 of the Judiciary Act of 1789 empowered the Attorney General to give opinions on matters of law when requested to do so by the President or the head of an executive department.) In his 1823 opinion, Wirt interpreted the clause to apply to any vacancy existing during a recess of the Senate, rejecting the narrower view that would have limited recess appointments to vacancies first opening during a recess. “[I]t seems to me perfectly immaterial when the vacancy first arose,” he wrote, “for, whether it arose during the session of the senate or during their recess, it equally requires to be filled.” The opinions of succeeding Attorneys General on the matter concurred with Wirt’s. In 1880, the U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia cited these opinions with approval in its ruling in In re Farrow, a dispute regarding the office of U.S. Attorney for the Districts of Georgia.

The question of what constitutes a “recess” for purposes of the clause was not addressed until 1901, when Attorney General Philander Knox expressed the view that the President could make recess appointments only between Senate sessions, and not during adjournments within a session. In 1921, however, Attorney General Harry Daugherty ruled that the Recess Appointment Clause applied to an intrasession recess of approximately a month, explaining that the prior view was overly technical and did not serve the practical purpose of the recess appointment power. Neither that opinion, nor a concurring opinion in 1960, provided a precise definition of how long an intrasession adjournment must last in order to permit the President to make a recess appointment.

The Case

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On October 20, 1955, a jury in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York convicted Dominic Allocco of conspiracy and federal narcotics violations. The trial judge, John M. Cashin, sentenced Allocco to ten years in prison. Allocco appealed, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed the conviction. After both the district court and the court of appeals denied his several motions to have his sentence stayed or reduced, Allocco attempted to take his case to the Supreme Court of the United States, which declined to hear it.

Allocco then filed a motion with the district court to have his conviction overturned on the grounds that Judge Cashin was a recess appointee at the time he presided over the trial, and had therefore been without constitutional authority to hear the case. The motion rested on two alternative arguments: first, that Cashin lacked the tenure during good behavior prescribed by Article III of the U.S. Constitution and therefore could not exercise the judicial power of the United States; and second, that Cashin’s recess appointment was invalid because the vacancy he was appointed to fill first arose during a Senate session rather than a recess. (Cashin’s predecessor, Judge Samuel Kaufman, retired on July 31, 1955, and the Senate adjourned two days later.)

U.S. District Judge Richard H. Levet denied Allocco’s motion on December 1, 1961. Most of Levet’s opinion focused on the long and unbroken line of Attorney General opinions holding that a vacancy need not first arise during a recess of the Senate in order to be filled by a recess appointment. At the very end of his opinion, the judge found it to be “clear” that a recess appointee could exercise judicial power under Article III, noting that if it were otherwise, “no purpose would be served” by the appointment of judges under the Recess Appointment Clause in Article II. Allocco appealed Levet’s decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.

The Ruling of the Court of Appeals

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, consisting of Judges Charles E. Clark, Irving R. Kaufman, and Paul R. Hays, heard the case. In a unanimous opinion authored by Judge Kaufman and issued July 10, 1962, the court ruled against Allocco, affirming the district court’s rejection of each of his two arguments. Like Judge Levet of the district court, the court of appeals dispensed fairly quickly with the argument that the President was not entitled to make temporary appointments of federal judges. The opinion pointed to the plain language of the Recess Appointment Clause referring to “all” vacancies. The only sensible reading of “vacancies” in this context, wrote Kaufman, encompassed vacancies in all of the positions covered by the preceding clause regarding presidential appointments by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. There was no basis, therefore, “to find an implied exception” in this language “to exclude vacancies in judicial offices.” Judge Kaufman also relied on the long history of judicial recess appointments—including George Washington’s 1795 recess appointment of John Rutledge as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court—and the fact that the President’s power in this regard had never before been challenged. Even the U.S. Senate’s 1960 resolution expressing disapproval of recess appointments to the Supreme Court had not denied the President’s constitutional authority to make such appointments. Having found presidential recess appointments of federal judges to be valid, the court held that “it necessarily follows that such judicial officers may exercise the power granted to Article III courts.”

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The court turned next to Allocco’s argument that a vacancy could “happen” in the context of the Recess Appointment Clause only if it first opened while the Senate was in recess. Kaufman’s opinion stressed the impracticality of such an interpretation, pointing out that if it were accepted, a judicial position that became vacant on the day the Senate adjourned would have to remain vacant until the Senate once again convened. The same would be true of vacancies in cabinet positions, ambassadorships, and other important government offices. “It is inconceivable,” wrote Kaufman, “that the drafters of the Constitution intended to create such a manifestly undesirable situation.” Such a result was particularly unworkable in an era in which the Senate’s process of evaluating and confirming a nominee could take several months, which would leave crucial positions unfilled for long periods of time. Allocco’s reading of the recess appointment clause, concluded the court, “would create Executive paralysis and do violence to the orderly functioning of our complex government.” In further support of its ruling, the court cited the long line of Attorney General opinions stretching back to 1823, all of which had come to the same conclusion. As a result, the court held that Judge Cashin was properly appointed a U.S. district judge at the time of Allocco’s trial, and was constitutionally empowered to preside over it. Allocco’s conviction was therefore affirmed. In 1963, the Supreme Court once again declined to hear the case, denying Allocco’s petition for a writ of certiorari.

Aftermath and Legacy

The Allocco case provided some resolution of the central legal questions surrounding recess appointments of federal judges, but the fact that the Supreme Court did not hear the case left the door open for courts in other judicial circuits to rule differently should additional challenges to such appointments arise. Shortly after the case concluded, judicial recess appointments fell into disfavor; Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson made a total of seven such appointments between October 1962 and January 1964, but then the practice nearly ceased entirely. The next judicial recess appointment—Jimmy Carter’s placement of Walter M. Heen on the U.S. District Court for the District of Hawaii just before leaving office in January 1981—once again resulted in litigation.

In U.S. v. Woodley, the defendant was convicted of narcotics offenses in a bench trial before Judge Heen and appealed her conviction to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Although Woodley did not raise the issue in her appeal, a three-judge panel of the court of appeals ruled in 1983 that as a recess appointee, Judge Heen was not able to exercise the judicial power of the United States under Article III. The court therefore reversed the conviction and remanded the case to the district court for a new trial. The opinion, written by Judge William A. Norris, expressly rejected the Second Circuit’s holding in Allocco. The panel reasoned that while the framers’ intent in drafting the Recess Appointment Clause was unclear, the specific language of Article III requiring tenure during good behavior for federal judges took precedence over the vague and general language in Article II regarding recess appointments.

In April 1984, before the case could be retried, a majority of the Ninth Circuit judges voted to rehear the case en banc (before the entire court rather than a three-judge panel). After rehearing, the court in January 1985 voted 7–4 to overturn the panel’s ruling that Judge Heen lacked constitutional authority to hear the case. In an opinion by Judge Robert R. Beezer, the court disagreed with the panel’s conclusion that the language of Article III regarding the tenure of federal judges was more specific than, and therefore took precedence over, the language of Article II addressing recess appointments. The court also accorded the long history of judicial recess appointments more weight than the panel had, particularly because the practice had existed since the founding of the nation “and was acquiesced in by the Framers of the Constitution when they were participating in public affairs.” Regardless of how one viewed the Recess Appointment Clause, concluded the court, “it is not for this court to redraft the Constitution. Changes in that great document must come through constitutional amendment, not through judicial reform based on policy arguments.” As with Allocco, the Supreme Court declined to review the case.

After Woodley, no further judicial recess appointments took place until 2000, when President Bill Clinton appointed Roger L. Gregory to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. In 2004, President George W. Bush made recess appointments of Charles W. Pickering, Sr., and William H. Pryor, Jr., to the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits, respectively. Pryor’s appointment resulted in additional litigation. In Evans v. Stephens, the plaintiff in a civil rights case sought to disqualify Judge Pryor from participating in the court’s en banc rehearing, arguing that his recess appointment was invalid. With Judge Pryor and another judge recusing themselves from considering the question, the court voted 8–2 to deny the plaintiff’s disqualification motion, electing to follow the decisions of other circuits in Allocco and Woodley. One of the dissenting judges, Charles R. Wilson, did not assert an opinion on the merits of the motion, stating that he believed it was improper for the court to rule on the qualification of one of its members, and that the question should have been put before the Supreme Court instead. In 2005, the Supreme Court denied certiorari. Justice John Paul Stevens took care to emphasize that the Court’s refusal to hear the case should not be taken as “a decision on the merits of whether the President has the constitutional authority to fill future Article III vacancies, such as vacancies on this Court, with appointments made absent consent of the Senate during short intrasession ‘recesses.’”

In recent years, the Senate has frequently held pro forma sessions—brief meetings that may be held by one presiding senator and at which no business is transacted—which have prevented the occurrence of an intrasession recess that would enable the President to make recess appointments. In 2014, the Supreme Court ruled in N.L.R.B. v. Noel Canning that pro forma sessions cannot be ignored in calculating the length of a recess and that “for purposes of the Recess Appointments Clause, the Senate is in session when it says it is.” Taking pro forma sessions into account, the recess appointments at issue were made during a recess of three days, which the Court determined to be too short to make the appointments valid. Any recess of less than ten days, the Court held, would be “presumptively too short to fall within the [Recess Appointments] Clause.”

Discussion Questions

  • Why do you think the framers of the Constitution provided for the appointment of federal judges and certain other government officials by presidential nomination and Senate confirmation?
  • What is judicial independence and how does the Constitution seek to protect it?
  • Why might some find it problematic for federal judges to serve under temporary appointments?
  • Has the need for the Recess Appointment Clause changed over time? If so, should courts take that into account when analyzing the constitutionality of recess appointments of federal judges?
  • Should the Senate be able to stop the President from making recess appointments entirely? Why or why not?

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