Consent of the Governed or Consent of the Government? The Problems with Consent Decrees in Government-Defendant Cases
CONSENT OF THE GOVERNED OR CONSENT OF THE
GOVERNMENT? THE PROBLEMS WITH CONSENT DECREES IN
GOVERNMENT-DEFENDANT CASES
*
Michael T. Morley
ABSTRACT
Consent decrees raise serious Article III concerns. When litigants agree on their rights and jointly
seek the same relief from a court, they are no longer adverse and a justiciable controversy no longer
exists between them. In the absence of an actual controversy between opposing parties, it is both
inappropriate and unnecessary for a court to issue a substantive order declaring or modifying the
litigants’ rights. Whether Article III’s adverseness requirement is seen as jurisdictional or
prudential, federal courts should decline to issue consent decrees and instead require litigants that
wish to voluntarily resolve a case to execute a settlement agreement, which, as a private contract,
does not implicate the same justiciability problems.
Consent decrees raise unique separation-of-powers issues in lawsuits against government entities
concerning the validity, proper interpretation, or enforcement of statutes or regulations.
Government agencies and officials may accede to such decrees to entrench their policy preferences
against future change, impose legal restrictions and obligations on their successors, and constrain
those successors’ discretion—all without a court determining that such relief is legally necessary.
Such concerns would not arise if government defendants resolved such cases through settlement
agreements, because the reserved powers doctrine and general prohibition on specific enforcement of
government contracts prevent government entities from using settlement agreements to improperly
limit their (and their successors’) discretion and authority.
If courts are not willing to refuse to categorically decline to issue consent decrees on Article III
grounds then, at a minimum, they should require litigants in government-defendant cases to
demonstrate that the plaintiff has stated valid claims and that the requested relief is required to
remedy the legal violations at issue. Courts must ensure that government defendants do not use
consent decrees to circumvent the traditional legislative and regulatory processes and establish
binding requirements for which there is not actually any constitutional or legal basis.
*
Climenko Fellow and Lecturer-in-Law, Harvard Law School. J.D., Yale Law School; B.A.,
Princeton University, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. The
author wishes to thank Seth Davis, Anthony DiSarro, Richard Fallon, Jacob Gersen, Jack
Goldsmith, Ryan Greenwood, Sharon Jacobs, Michael McConnell, Daniel Meltzer, Robert
Pushaw, Peter Shane, Seth Stoughton, Susannah Barton Tobin, and the participants at
Albany Law School’s Sharing Scholarship, Building Teachers workshop and the and Society Association’s 2013 annual meeting.
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JOURNAL OF CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
[Vol. 16:3
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION ............................................................................. 639
I. CONSENT DECREES IN CONTEXT .............................................. 646
A. The Law of Consent Decrees .............................................647
B. Other Means of Avoiding Adversarial Adjudication ............ 652
II. CONSENT DECREES, ADVERSENESS, AND JUSTICIABILITY ......... 657
A. Consent Decrees and Article III Precedent ...........................661
B. Functional Analysis of Adverseness ...................................664
C. Judicial Attempts to Reconcile Consent Decrees with Article
III ..............................................................................666
D. Article III’s Adverseness Requirement and Other Judicial
Practices ......................................................................668
1. Naturalization Proceedings ..................................... 668
2. Default Judgments ................................................. 670
3. Uncontested Bankruptcies ....................................... 671
E. Other Arguments for the Justiciability of Consent Decrees ....... 673
III. CONSENT DECREES AND SEPARATION OF POWERS ................. 675
A. Consent Decrees and Executive Powers Conferred by the
Constitution ................................................................676
B. Consent Decrees and Executive Powers Conferred by Statute
or Regulation ...............................................................677
IV. NEW APPROACHES TO CONSENT DECREES IN GOVERNMENTDEFENDANT CASES ................................................................. 682
A. Settlement Agreements as a Replacement for Consent Decrees.. 682
B. Procedural Safeguards for Consent Decrees in GovernmentDefendant Cases ...........................................................688
1. Standards for Approval............................................ 689
2. Facilitating Intervention .......................................... 692
CONCLUSION................................................................................. 695
Feb. 2014]
PROBLEMS WITH CONSENT DECREES
639
INTRODUCTION
In 1996, Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt ordered the Bureau of Land Management (“BLM”) to prepare an inventory of 5.7
million acres of federal land in Utah to determine whether any of it
1
was “wilderness.” The State of Utah and other plaintiffs sued to enjoin the inventory, but the United States Court of Appeals for the
Tenth Circuit held that they lacked standing to bring their challenge
2
because the inventory would not cause them any injury-in-fact.
A few years later, shortly before the end of Secretary Babbitt’s
tenure, BLM issued a handbook that extended the rules and protections governing wilderness areas to other BLM-designated regions
that were similar to wilderness, but did not meet certain technical
3
statutory requirements for being categorized as such. The State of
Utah challenged both BLM’s designation of these quasi-wilderness
4
areas and its decision to treat them like wilderness. Several environmental groups moved to intervene in the case to defend BLM’s
5
actions.
The day after the environmental groups filed their intervention
motion, the State of Utah and BLM—now under a new presidential
administration—submitted a proposed consent decree declaring that
BLM lacked statutory authority to continue conducting wilderness inventories, prohibiting BLM from designating new wilderness or quasiwilderness areas, rescinding the handbook, and stipulating that the
rules and protections governing wilderness could not apply to quasi6
7
wilderness areas. The district court entered the proposed order.
By entering into the consent decree, the new Administration attempted to lock in its narrow interpretation of the federal laws gov8
erning wilderness areas and allow the plaintiffs to obtain broader relief than the court itself could have ordered. For example, BLM
agreed in the consent decree that it lacked the authority to perform
9
new wilderness inventories, despite the facts that it recently had (...truncated)