Dual Office of Chief Judge of Court of Veterans Appeals and Director of the Office of Government Ethics

Dual Office of Chief Judge of Court of Veterans Appeals and Director of the Office of Government Ethics Federal law does not bar a single individual from serving simultaneously as the Chief Judge of the Court of Veterans Appeals and the Director of the Office of Government Ethics. July 21, 1989 M e m o r a n d u m O p in io n f o r t h e D ir e c t o r O f f ic e o f G o v e r n m e n t E t h ic s This responds to your request for the opinion o f this Office whether you can serve simultaneously as the Director o f the Office o f Government Ethics and Chief Judge o f the Court o f Veterans Appeals. For the reasons set forth below, we conclude that you are not barred by federal law from holding both offices, since (we understand) you will receive only a single salary, the two positions are not incompatible, and no appropriation is being directed to any purpose other than that provided by law.1 Background The Court o f Veterans Appeals was created by section 301 o f the Veterans’ Judicial Review Act, Pub. L. No. 100-687, 102 Stat. 4105, 4113, codified at 38 U.S.C. §§ 4051-4092. The court operates under Article I o f the Constitution, and has exclusive jurisdiction to review decisions o f the Board o f Veterans Appeals. 38 U.S.C. § 4052(a). The court consists o f a Chief Judge and from two to six associate judges, who are each to serve terms o f 15 years. Id. § 4053. The President has recently appointed Judge Nebeker to be the Chief Judge o f this court. Judge Nebeker is also the Director o f the Office o f Government Ethics ( “OGE”). The OGE “was established within the Office o f Personnel Management ( “OPM”) by title IV o f the Ethics in Government Act of 1978. The Office was created to ‘provide overall direction o f executive branch policies related to preventing conflicts o f interest on the part o f officers and 1 You have not requested our view s on the appropriateness under the American Bar Association Code o f Judicial Conduct (1972) o f your serving simultaneously in these tw o positions, and w e do not address the issue. 241 employees o f any executive agency.’ The OGE Director was given the authority and responsibility for developing rules and regulations regarding conflicts o f interest, financial disclosure and ethical conduct by officers and employees in the executive branch; monitoring and investigating individual and agency compliance with financial disclosure requirements; interpreting conflict o f interest rules and regulations; providing information on and pro­ moting understanding o f ethical standards in executive agencies; and order­ ing action by agencies and employees to comply with laws, rules, regula­ tions and standards related to conflicts o f interest and ethical conduct.” H.R. Rep. No. 1017, 100th Cong., 2d Sess., pt. 1, at 8-9 (1988), reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4125, 4129-30. Under sections 3(a) and 10(b) of Office of Government Ethics: Reauthorization Act o f November 3, 1988, Pub. L. No. 100-598, 102 Stat. 3031, OGE is to be removed from OPM and to be a sepa­ rate executive agency, effective October 1, 1989. We understand that Judge Nebeker will not be involved in adjudicating any cases before the Court o f Veterans Appeals for some time after assuming his position there, and that his duties at the outset o f his tenure will be largely or entirely administrative. We also understand that Judge Nebeker will have resigned from the Directorship o f OGE before he begins to hear cases on the court. During the overlapping period in which he plans to serve both as Director o f OGE and as Chief Judge, we under­ stand that Judge Nebeker will draw a salary only as Chief Judge, which is the higher-paid o f the two positions. A. Dual Compensation The Dual Compensation Act, 5 U.S.C. § 5533, repealed earlier legisla­ tion directed against dual office holdings and provides that, subject to exceptions, “an individual is not entitled to receive basic pay from more than one position for more than an aggregate o f 40 hours o f work in one calendar week (Sunday through Saturday).” The Act merely prohibits the receipt o f pay for more than one full-time dual government position (sub­ ject to certain exceptions). Accordingly, this Office has repeatedly opined that the Dual Compensation A ct does not prohibit the holding o f two offices simultaneously, and in fact impliedly permits it.2 “The basic prin­ 2See, e g., Memorandum fo r Arnold Intrater, General Counsel, O ffice o f White House Administration, from John O. McGinms, Deputy Assistant A ttorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel, Re- Dual Office o f E x e c u tive Secretary o f N a tio n a l Security C ouncil and Special Assistant (Mar 1, 1988) ( “Intrater Mem orandum ”), Memorandum for Myer Feldman, Special Counsel to the President, from Norbert A. Schlei, Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel, R e • F ix in g o f Salary o f D irector o f Office o f E c o n o m ic O p p ortu n ity (Aug. 19, 1964) (dual appointment as Director o f the Peace Corps and Director o f the O ffice o f Econom ic Opportunity). A pproved dual appointments also include cases in which a job was created by statute and was subject to Senate advice and consent (as is the job o f Chief Judge o f the Court o f Veterans Appeals). See Memorandum for G eorge P. Williams, Associate Counsel to the President, from Leon Ulman, Acting Assistant Attorney General, O ffice o f Legal Counsel, Re. Dual A p p o in tm e n t (June 24, 1974) (Special Representative fo r 'IYade Negotiations and Executive Director o f the Council on International Economic P o licy ) 242 ciple is that there is no longer any prohibition against dual office-holding. It seems to us that it is not material how the dual tenure comes about, whether by successive appointments by and with the advice and consent o f the Senate, by interim designation, or by concurrent nomination and appointment.” Memorandum for John D. Ehrlichman, Counsel to the President, from William H. Rehnquist, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel at 2 (Feb. 13, 1969). Thus, the statute is not a bar to Judge Nebeker’s serving in the two capacities o f Chief Judge o f the Court o f Veterans Appeals and Director o f OGE, so long as he receives only one salary for the work he performs.3 B. Incompatibility Where public policy would make it improper for one person to perform the functions assigned to two distinct offices, a problem o f “incompati­ bility” arises. See Intrater Memorandum at 3. Such a problem could be presented if, for example, one office adjudicated matters in which the other was or was likely to be a party. Id. at 3-4. We perceive no such “incompatibility” problem here, however. The function o f the Court o f Veterans Appeals is to hear appeals from decisions o f the Board o f Veterans Affairs. The Office o f Government Ethics is not a party to such appeals. (In any event, we understand that Judge Nebeker will not be hearing appeals on the court until after he has resigned as Director o f OGE.) Further, the mere fact o f being a federal judge does not prevent someone from holding another federal office. See Mistretta v. United States, 488 U.S. 361, 397^404 (1989) (Article III judges may undertake cer­ tain extrajudicial functions).4 C. Augmentation 31 U.S.C. § 1301(a) provides that “ [appropriations shall be applied only to the objects for which the appropriations were made except as otherwise provided by law.” This is not an absolute barrier to Judge Nebeker’s being compensated by receiving a salary from one position while simultaneously serving in another position. See United States v. Morse, 292 F. 273, 277 (S.D.N.Y. 1922) (A. Hand, J.) (Special Assistant to Attorney General could be compensated by continuing to receive his 3 We have also consistently construed the Dual Compensation Act to require that an individual who holds two offices must be paid the higher salary if it is fixed by law. See Intrater Memorandum at 2 n 3 The theory is that the dual office-holder would otherwise be waiving a nght to compensation established pursuant to statute — which is unlawful. See Glavey v. United States, 182 U.S. 595 (1901), Intrater Memorandum at 3 n 8. We understand that Judge Nebeker will receive the C hief Judge’s salary, which is higher than the salary o f the Director o f OGE, and which is fixed by statute, see 38 U.S.C. § 4053(e)(1). 4By its plain language, the Incompatibility Clause, U S Const art I, § 6, cl 2, applies only to members o f Congress, see 17 Op Att’y Gen. 365, 366 (1882), and so is inapplicable here. An Article I judge is not a member o f Congress 243 salary as special counsel to a government corporation). As we have opined before, see Intrater Memorandum at 6, so long as Judge Nebeker performs substantial responsibilities for both positions, there is no requirement that he devote full time to either position. WILLIAM P. BARR Assistant Attorney General Office o f Legal Counsel 244