National Coalition to Save Our Mall v. Norton

                  United States Court of Appeals

               FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT

       Argued October 10, 2001   Decided November 6, 2001 

                           No. 01-5290

          National Coalition to Save Our Mall, et al., 
                            Appellants

                                v.

           Gale A. Norton, in her official capacity as 
               Secretary of the Interior, et al., 
                            Appellees

      Appeal from the United States District Court for the 
                      District of Columbia 
                         (No. 00cv02371)

     William T. Mayton argued the cause for appellants.  With 
him on the pleadings was Andrea C. Ferster.

     R. Justin Smith, Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, 
argued the cause for appellees.  With him on the pleadings 
were Andrew C. Mergen, Patricia L. Weiss and Sean H. 
Donahue, Attorneys.

     Before:  Sentelle and Tatel, Circuit Judges, and 
Williams, Senior Circuit Judge.

     Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge 
Williams.

     Williams, Senior Circuit Judge:  A group of organizations, 
here collectively called the Coalition, filed suit in October 
2000 seeking an injunction against the construction of a 
proposed World War II Memorial on the National Mall.  The 
defendants were a variety of agencies--the Department of 
the Interior, the National Parks Service, the Commission of 
Fine Arts, the National Capital Planning Commission, and 
the American Battle Monuments Commission--responsible 
either for the construction of the Memorial or for some link in 
the chain of permitting and approval.  The Coalition asserted 
that in approving the design and construction of the Memori-
al, the defendant agencies violated a variety of statutes:  the 
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. 
s 4332(2)(C), the Commemorative Works Act, 40 U.S.C. 
s 1001 et seq., the National Historic Preservation Act, 16 
U.S.C. s 470f et seq., and the Federal Advisory Committee 
Act, 5 U.S.C. App. II, s 10(a).

     In May 2001, while the case was pending in district court, 
Congress enacted Public Law No. 107-11, 115 Stat. 19 (2001) 
(the "Act"), which appears to exempt construction of the 
Memorial from the possible statutory obstacles and to bar 
judicial review of agency decisions underlying the construc-
tion.  The Act's full text is as follows:

     Section 1. Approval of World War II Memorial Site and 
     Design.
     
          Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the World 
     War II memorial described in plans approved by the 
     Commission of Fine Arts on July 20, 2000 and November 
     16, 2000, and selected by the National Capital Planning 
     Commission on September 21, 2000 and December 14, 
     2000, and in accordance with the special use permit 
     issued by the Secretary of the Interior on January 23, 
     2001, and numbered NCR-NACC-5700-0103, shall be 
     
     constructed expeditiously at the dedicated Rainbow Pool 
     site in the District of Columbia in a manner consistent 
     with such plans and permits, subject to design modifica-
     tions, if any, approved in accordance with applicable laws 
     and regulations.
     
     Sec. 2. Application of Commemorative Works Act.
     
          Elements of the memorial design and construction not 
     approved as of the date of enactment of this Act shall be 
     considered and approved in accordance with the require-
     ments of the Commemorative Works Act (40 U.S.C. 1001 
     et seq.).
     
     Sec. 3. Judicial Review.
     
          The decision to locate the memorial at the Rainbow 
     Pool site in the District of Columbia and the actions by 
     the Commission of Fine Arts on July 20, 2000 and 
     November 16, 2000, the actions by the National Capital 
     Planning Commission on September 21, 2000 and Decem-
     ber 14, 2000, and the issuance of the special use permit 
     identified in section 1 shall not be subject to judicial 
     review.
     
Pub. L. No. 107-11.  In passing the statute, Congress acted 
on its October 2000 resolution to ensure that "the completed 
memorial will be dedicated while Americans of the World War 
II generation are alive."  S. Con. Res. 145, 106th Cong. 
(2000);  see also Declaration of William B. Owenby, Director 
of Procurement and Contracting, American Battle Monu-
ments Commission p 2 (Aug. 27, 2001) ("Of the sixteen million 
citizens who served in uniform during World War II only five 
million are alive today and these veterans are dying at the 
rate of approximately 1,100 per day.").

     The district court dismissed the action, explaining that it 
lacked subject matter jurisdiction.  National Coalition to 
Save Our Mall v. Norton, No. Civ. A. 00-2371(HHK) (D.D.C. 
Aug. 16, 2001).  On appeal the Coalition argues that the 
statute did not effect such a broad exemption for the Memori-
al, and that, if its language really did so, it encroached on the 
powers of the federal courts in violation of the separation of 
powers principles of Article III.

     We find that the Act withdrew our subject matter jurisdic-
tion over the statutory claims, and therefore that we lack 
jurisdiction to entertain them.  We further find that it does 
not violate Article III.

                             *  *  *

     The Coalition first contends that the strong presumption 
for judicial review of agency decisions, see, e.g., Bowen v. 
Michigan Academy of Family Physicians, 476 U.S. 667, 670 
(1986), requires us to read the Act as not precluding judicial 
review of the statutory claims.

     But the presumption is only that, and can be overridden by 
specific language or by clear and convincing evidence of 
legislative intent.  Id. at 671-73.  It is hard to see how 
Congress could make it clearer than it has here, providing 
that "[t]he decision to locate the memorial at the Rainbow 
Pool site[,] ... the actions [of the Agencies,] ... and the 
issuance of the special use permit ... shall not be subject to 
judicial review."  Pub. L. No. 107-11, s 3.

     Section 3's preclusion of review of the relevant agency 
decisions, moreover, tracks s 1's direction that the Memorial 
described in those decisions be "constructed expeditiously" in 
accordance with the named permits, "[n]otwithstanding any 
other provision of law."  On its face, the phrase demonstrates 
Congress's clear intent to go ahead with the Memorial as 
planned, regardless of the planning's relation to pre-existing 
general legislation.  This would be clear even if we disregard-
ed the classical but sometimes forgotten purpose of such a 
non obstante clause, namely, to prevent courts from strug-
gling to harmonize a statute with prior ones in the name of 
the presumption against implied repeal.  See Caleb Nelson, 
"Preemption," 86 Va. L. Rev. 225, 237-42 (2000).

     To counter the language of the Act, the Coalition relies 
chiefly on D.C. Federation of Civic Associations v. Volpe, 434 
F.2d 436 (D.C. Cir. 1970).  There we held that a bridge 
construction project of the Department of Transportation 
remained subject to pre-existing law despite a statute direct-
ing its construction "[n]otwithstanding any other provision of 

law, or any court decision or administrative action to the 
contrary."  Id. at 437-38.  But as we stressed in D.C. Federa-
tion, the statute had a savings clause providing that "[s]uch 
construction ... shall be carried out in accordance with all 
applicable provisions of title 23 of the United States Code."  
Id. at 437-38.  We found that this left the construction 
subject to claims based on that title.  Id. at 447.  Public Law 
No. 107-11, in contrast, contains savings clauses directed 
entirely to changes in design or planning that might follow 
the specified approvals and permits:  "design modifications" 
(s 1) (emphasis added), and "[e]lements ... not approved as 
of the date of enactment" (s 2).

     Both the language of s 3, the Act's purpose as shown in 
s 1, and its overall structure evince an unequivocal intent to 
cut off judicial review of all the defendant agencies' past 
actions regarding the Memorial.  Barring some constitutional 
infirmity, we lack jurisdiction over the Coalition's statutory 
claims.

     The Coalition contends that if the Act's language withdrew 
jurisdiction over their statutory claims, then it infringes on 
judicial power under Article III.  We find no such infringe-
ment.

     First we note that the Act does not purport to bar our 
consideration of its own constitutionality.  See Steel Company 
v. Citizens for a Better Environment, 523 U.S. 83, 98-101 
(1998) (holding that, absent special circumstances, a court 
may not reach a merits issue without having first found that 
it has jurisdiction).  Here, s 3 withdraws jurisdiction only 
over the "decision to locate the memorial" and "the actions by 
[various agencies]."  Thus, just as Congress's withdrawal of 
jurisdiction over "decision[s]" of the Veterans' Administration 
left the courts free to adjudicate constitutional claims against 
the VA's enabling statute, Johnson v. Robison, 415 U.S. 361, 
366-74 (1974), so the Act here does not touch our jurisdiction 
over its own constitutionality.

     The Coalition argues that s 3 violates the principles in 
United States v. Klein, 80 U.S. 128 (1871).  That decision 
dealt with a suit for the proceeds of property seized and sold 

by the army in the Civil War.  The administrator of the 
deceased prior owner's estate sued under legislation allowing 
recovery by such owners under proof of loyalty, which the 
Supreme Court had held was satisfied by receipt of a presi-
dential pardon.  After the plaintiff recovered in the Court of 
Claims, Congress passed another statute, denying such par-
dons any effect in showing loyalty and providing that accep-
tance without protest of a pardon referring to the recipient's 
participation in the rebellion would affirmatively prove disloy-
alty.  Congress further directed that on proof of such a 
pardon or its acceptance, the Court of Claims and Supreme 
Court should dismiss the suit for want of jurisdiction.  Id. at 
141-44.  The Supreme Court found the purported limit on its 
jurisdiction invalid and ineffective.

     Klein's exact meaning is far from clear.  One sure precept 
is that a statute's use of the language of jurisdiction cannot 
operate as a talisman that ipso facto sweeps aside every 
possible constitutional objection.  Richard H. Fallon, Daniel 
J. Meltzer & David L. Shapiro, Hart & Wechsler's The 
Federal Courts and the Federal System 368 (4th ed. 1996).  
In Klein itself, the Court noted that the statute was "liable to 
just exception as impairing the effect of a pardon, and thus 
infringing the constitutional Power of the Executive."  Klein, 
80 U.S. at 147.  As the Coalition poses no constitutional 
objection to the substance of Public Law No. 107-11, this 
element of Klein is of no concern.

     There remains the following language of Klein:

          It is evident from this statement that the denial of 
     jurisdiction to this court, as well as to the Court of 
     Claims, is founded solely on the application of a rule of 
     decision, in causes pending, prescribed by Congress.  
     The court has jurisdiction of the cause to a given point;  
     but when it ascertains that a certain state of things 
     exists, its jurisdiction is to cease and it is required to 
     dismiss the cause for want of jurisdiction.
     
          It seems to us that this is not an exercise of the 
     acknowledged power of Congress to make exceptions and 
     prescribe regulations to the appellate power.
     
Id. at 146;  see also id. at 147 ("Can [Congress] prescribe a 
rule in conformity with which the court must deny to itself 
the jurisdiction thus conferred, because and only because its 
decision, in accordance with settled law, must be adverse to 
the government and favorable to the suitor?  This question 
seems to us to answer itself.").

     These passages cannot be read as a prohibition against 
Congress's changing the rule of decision in a pending case, or 
(more narrowly) changing the rule to assure a pro-
government outcome.  Plaut v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc., 514 
U.S. 211 (1995), while holding that Congress may not legislate 
to require federal courts to reopen suits for money damages 
after final judgment, id. at 240, distinguished between pend-
ing cases and final judgments, saying that "[w]hen a new law 
makes clear that it is retroactive, an appellate court must 
apply that law in reviewing judgments still on appeal that 
were rendered before the law was enacted, and must alter the 
outcome accordingly," id. at 226 (citing United States v. 
Schooner Peggy, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 103 (1801)).  A further 
distinction to the advantage of Public Law No. 107-11 is 
between damage awards and injunctions.  Miller v. French, 
530 U.S. 327 (2000), held that although an injunction may be a 
final judgment for purposes of appeal, it is not the "last word 
of the judicial department" because any provision of prospec-
tive relief "is subject to the continuing supervisory jurisdic-
tion of the court, and therefore may be altered according to 
subsequent changes in the law."  Id. at 347;  see also Penn-
sylvania v. Wheeling and Belmont Bridge, 59 U.S. 421 (1855) 
(upholding a statute declaring as lawful a bridge that had 
been previously adjudicated as an unlawful obstruction of 
navigation).  If Congress has the power to impose new stan-
dards for final judgments in the form of injunctions, it must 
have the power to impose new substantive rules on suits such 
as the Coalition's, which sought injunctive relief and had not 
been resolved on the merits when Congress acted.

     Further, to the extent that Klein can be read as saying that 
Congress may not direct the outcome in a pending case 
without amending the substantive law, a proposition on which 
we express no view, Public Law No. 107-11 presents no more 

difficulty than the statute upheld in Robertson v. Seattle 
Audubon Society, 503 U.S. 429 (1992), as Public Law No. 
107-11 similarly amends the applicable substantive law.  See 
id. at 441.

     Finally, the Coalition suggests that Public Law No. 107-11 
is too "narrow," as it affects only the Memorial.  In making 
this argument, the Coalition cites a passage in Seattle Audu-
bon in which the Court refused to address the belatedly 
raised claim that "a change in law, prospectively applied, 
would be unconstitutional if the change swept no more broad-
ly, or little more broadly, than the range of applications at 
issue in the pending cases."  Id.  There Congress had re-
sponded to ongoing spotted-owl litigation relating to 13 na-
tional forests with legislation directing that the various stat-
utes invoked against forestry decisions on the specified areas 
must be deemed satisfied by compliance with the new stat-
ute's provisions.  Id. at 433-35 & nn. 1-2, 440.  Here too 
Congress's direction addresses a specific problem, namely, 
whether specified government decisions about the Memorial 
complied with prior general legislation.

     We find the level of specificity to be unobjectionable.  
There is no independent objection that this Memorial-specific 
legislation violates some substantive constitutional provision 
limiting Congress's power to address a specific problem, such 
as the ban on Bills of Attainder or (in some instances) the 
Equal Protection clause.  Indeed, the Coalition at oral argu-
ment conceded that the legislation would be constitutional 
had it been passed prior to their bringing suit.  In view of 
Plaut, Miller v. French and Wheeling Bridge, we see no 
reason why the specificity should suddenly become fatal 
merely because there happened to be a pending lawsuit.  
This seems particularly sound where Congress is addressing 
a unique public amenity (or disamenity, depending on one's 
viewpoint), such as the Memorial or the bridge at issue in 
Wheeling Bridge.

                             *  *  *

     The judgment of the district court is

                                                                           Affirmed.