Applicability of 18 U.S.C. § 208 to Proposed Appointment of
Government Official to the Board of Connie Lee
A n e x e c u tiv e b ra n c h o ff ic e r o r em p lo y ee a p p o in te d to th e B o ard o f D ire c to rs o f C o n n ie L ee w o u ld be a
“d ir e c to r ” w ith in th e m e a n in g o f 18 U S .C § 2 0 8 (a ) a n d th e re fo re w o u ld b e d is q u a lifie d fro m p a r
tic ip a tin g “ p e rs o n n a lly a n d s u b sta n tia lly ” in an y “p a rtic u la r m a tte r” im p lic a tin g the fin a n c ia l in te r
e s ts o f C o n n ie L e e u n le s s th e c o n d itio n s o f s u b se c u o n 2 0 8 (b ) are s atisfied .
June 22, 1994
M e m o r a n d u m O p in io n f o r t h e A s s i s t a n t G e n e r a l C o u n s e l
D epa r tm en t o f th e T r ea su ry
This memorandum is in response to your request of May 23, 1994, for an opin
ion as to whether the Deputy Assistant Secretary, if appointed to the Board of Di
rectors of the College Construction Loan Insurance Association (“Connie Lee”),
would be subject to the requirements imposed by 18 U.S.C. § 208 on “directors” of
outside organizations. We have concluded that if appointed, the Deputy Assistant
Secretary would be a “director” of an outside organization within the meaning of
§ 208, and accordingly would have to comply with the provisions of that section in
discharging his or her government duties. This conclusion does not preclude the
appointment of the Deputy Assistant Secretary or another Treasury official to the
board of Connie Lee. Rather, it means that if appointed, the official could not par
ticipate in any particular matter in his or her government capacity in which Connie
Lee had a financial interest, unless he or she received a waiver issued pursuant to
§ 208(b).
B ackground
Connie Lee was incorporated as a private, for-profit corporation of the District
of Columbia in 1987 as directed by Title VII of the Higher Education Amendments
of 1986, Pub. L. No. 99-498, sec. 701, § 751, 100 Stat. 1268, 1528 (codified at 20
U.S.C. §§ 1132f-1132f-9).* At that time, many colleges and universities were un
able to obtain private financing for capital improvements and routine maintenance
of their physical plants. By providing financial insurance and guarantees for quali
fying loans, Connie Lee enhances the credit quality of these educational institu-
’ E d i t o r ’s N o te T h e statu to ry provisions co n cern in g C o n n ie Lee that are discussed in this opinion were
su b sequ en tly rep ealed in 1996 and replaced b y the pro v isio n s that are now codified at 20 U .S.C. § 113 2 f-10
See S tu d e n t L oan M ark etin g A ssociation R eo rg an izatio n A ct o f 1996, Pub. L No. 104-208, § 603, 110 Stat
3009-27 5 , 3 0 0 9 -2 0 9 (en a ctm en t o f current sec tio n ), 30 0 9 -2 9 3 (repeal) T he changes to the statute do not
affect the an aly sis o r c o n clu sio n s o f this opinion.
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Applicability o f J8 U.S C § 208 to P roposed A ppointm ent o f G overnm ent O fficial
to the B oard o f Connie Lee
tions, facilitating their access to private credit. H.R. Rep. No. 99-383, at 71-73
(1985), reprinted in 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2572, 2642-44 (“House Rep.”). In form
and function, Connie Lee is similar to the Student Loan Marketing Association
(“Sallie M ae”).
Connie Lee began operating as a joint venture of the Secretary of Education,
Sallie Mae and interested members of the higher education community. Congress
“intended that the Corporation . . . initially operate under the stewardship of the
Student Loan Marketing Association, subject to the direction and control of the
Corporation’s Board of Directors. . . . [T]he direct interest o f the federal govern
ment in the Corporation is expected to diminish and eventually terminate.” House
Rep. at 74, reprinted in 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 2645. The statute authorized the
Secretary o f Education and Sallie Mae to subscribe to voting common stock in a
four to one ratio. See 20 U.S.C. § 1132f-4(a), (b). Congress gave the board the
authority to issue additional shares of voting common stock for sale to the public
and institutions of higher education. Id. § 1132f-4(d). After five years, the statute
authorized the Secretary of Education to sell the stock held by that department, and
gave Sallie Mae a right of first refusal in the event of such a sale. Id. § 1132f-7(a).
Connie Lee is governed by an eleven member board of directors. At present,
two directors are appointed by the Secretary of Education, two by the Secretary o f
the Treasury, and three by Sallie Mae. The remaining four directors are elected by
the holders of the voting common stock. Id. § 1132f-3(a). A director serves for a
term o f one year or until a successor has been appointed and qualified. Id. If Sal
lie Mae acquires enough voting common stock from the Secretary o f Education to
own more than fifty percent o f the outstanding voting shares, the entire board is to
be elected by the shareholders. Id. § 1132f-7(c).
In the past, the individuals appointed by the Secretary o f the Treasury have been
private citizens. The Secretary is now considering appointing a Deputy Assistant
Secretary to the board of Connie Lee. You are concerned that if appointed, the
Deputy Assistant Secretary would no longer be able to participate in the form ula
tion o f the Department’s policies regarding its interests in Connie Lee.
Discussion
Under § 208, no officer or employee in the executive branch may participate
“personally and substantially” in any “particular m atter” in which an “organization
in which he is serving as officer, director, trustee, general partner or employee . . .
has a financial interest” unless he obtains a waiver or satisfies an exception as out
lined in subsection 208(b). 18 U.S.C. § 208(a). However, this Office has previ
ously taken the position that “a federal official serving on the board of an
essentially private entity by virtue of a federal statutory mandate is not an ‘officer,
director or trustee’ o f that entity within the meaning o f section 208.” M em oran
dum for David H. Martin, Director, Office of Government Ethics, from Samuel A.
137
Opinions o f the O ffice o f L egal C ounsel
Alito, Jr., Deputy A ssistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, Re: USIA
D ir e c to r’s S ervice on the Board o f the U nited S tates Telecom m unications Training
Institute at 2 (Dec. 3, 1986) (“USTTI M em o”). You have suggested that the Sec
retary’s appointm ent o f a Deputy Assistant Secretary to the Connie Lee board
would establish a position analogous to an “ex officio” director and therefore
should not trigger the application o f § 208. Unfortunately, we cannot agree.
This O ffice has found that a governm ent official serves on the board of a private
entity in an ex officio rather than personal capacity where that service is expressly
authorized by statute.1 W e have also ruled that a government official’s service as a
director does not violate § 208 where the rules of the private entity designate that
official as a m em ber o f the board and neither the rules or state law appear to im
pose a fiduciary duty to the private entity on that director.2
The proposed arrangem ent for Connie Lee would not fall into either of these
categories. W hile the governing statutes do not prohibit the appointment or elec
tion of federal officers to the Connie Lee board, no government official is desig
nated as a board m em ber in either a personal or official capacity. See 20 U.S.C.
§§ 1132f-3, 1132f-7(c). As we stated in the USTTI opinion:
[S]ection 208 is premised on a concern to avoid any conflict be
tween a federal official’s public and private obligations and inter
ests. . . . [W Jhere a government official is authorized by statute to
serve on the board of a private group as part o f his or her official
governm ental duties, in w hat is essentially an ex officio capacity,
the reasonable inference to be drawn is that the official is to serve
the interests o f the government in the event of any conflict between
those interests and the interests of the private organization.
Id. at 2. Any fiduciary duty the director owes to the organization in question is
clearly subordinate to that director’s duties to his or her government office and the
United States.
1 T h u s this O ffice has d eterm in ed that the restrictio n s o f § 208 did not apply w here a federal statute ex-
phcitly d esig n ated the A tto rn ey G eneral as an ex officio m em ber o f the B oard o f T rustees o f the N ational
T ru st for H istoric P reserv atio n , Q uestions R a ise d by the A tto rn e y G en era l's Service as a T rustee o f the
N a tio n a l T rust f o r H isto ric P reservation, 6 O p . O L C . 443, 4 4 6 (1982), or where the D irector o f the U.S.
Inform ation A g en cy served on the board o f a p riv ate institute pursuant to a federal statute authorizing several
executiv e ag en cies to p ro v id e o fficial support to that in stitute ‘‘including . . . service on the board o f the
In s titu te /’ U ST T I M em o at 2 (quoting the O m n ib u s D iplom atic Security and A nti-T errorism A ct o f 1988,
Pub. L N o 9 9 -3 9 9 , § 1307, 100 S tat 8 5 3 ,8 9 9 ).
*■ N o r did § 208 apply w here the constitution o f the A m erican B ar A ssociation designated the A ttorney
G eneral as an ex o fficio m e m b e r o f the A B A H ouse o f D elegates, M em orandum for T hom as E. Kauper,
A ssistant A tto rn ey G en eral, A n titru st Division, from M ary C L aw ton, D eputy A ssistant A ttorney G eneral,
O ffice o f Legal C ounsel, Re. C ontem plated A B A Suit (M ay 21, 1976), or where every D irector o f the N a
tional B ureau o f Stan d ard s since 1951 had serv ed on the bo ard o f a private standard setting organization and
that org an izatio n am en d ed its b y law s to d esig n ate the D irector as a non-voting ex officio m em ber of the
board L etter fo r the H on. W arren G M agnuson, C hairm an, S enate C om m ittee on C om m erce, S cience and
T ransp o rtatio n , from Leon U lm an, Deputy A ssistan t A ttorney G eneral, O ffice o f Legal C ounsel at 4-6 (Dec.
13, 1977)
138
A p p lic a b ility o f 18 U S C. § 2 0 8 to P ro p o se d A p p o in tm e n t o f G o v e r n m e n t O ffic ia l
to th e B o a r d o f C o n n ie Lee
There is no indication that the fiduciary duty of a Connie Lee director appointed
by the Secretary is subordinate to any duty to the government. Congress expressly
provided that absent a conflict with the provisions o f the Higher Education Act,
Connie Lee was to be subject to the corporation law o f the District of Columbia.
20 U.S.C. § 1132f(c). The language and structure of the statutory provisions gov
erning the board of directors are in no way inconsistent with the proposition that all
Connie Lee directors, including those appointed by the Secretary, owe the fiduci
ary duty dictated by D.C. law to the corporation and its shareholders. W hile the
Secretaries o f Education and the Treasury were both granted the power to appoint
two directors and to replace these directors by appointing replacements anytime
after the end of their one year term because of the “significant interests” of the
government in the early years o f operation, see House Rep. at 73, rep rin ted in
1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 2644; 20 U.S.C. § 1132f-3(a), the articles and bylaws of
Connie Lee vest limited removal power in the board, not in any of the appointing
bodies.3 If a government official appointed by the Secretary resigned or was re
moved from that government position, he or she could retain a seat on the Connie
Lee board for the duration of the term unless he or she resigned or was removed by
the remaining board members.4 This structure suggests that Congress did not in
tend for the Secretary to exercise direct control over his appointees once they were
appointed.
Connie L e e ’s status as a private, for-profit corporation with outstanding voting
shares held by private individuals and institutions strengthens the conclusion that
its directors are bound by a fiduciary duty to the corporation and to these share
holders in their capacity as directors. 20 U.S.C. § 1132f(a),(b); Bylaws, art. Ill,
§ 3.8. Furthermore, directors may receive compensation for their service to the
corporation “in their capacities as Directors or otherw ise.” Bylaws, art. Ill, § 3.8.
W hile you have indicated that a Treasury official appointed to the board would
waive any compensation, this provision is additional evidence o f the directors’
fiduciary duty to the corporation and potentially presents the appearance o f a con
flict of interest. These obligations and the attendant potential for conflict are pre
cisely the circum stances that § 208 is designed to address.
Conclusion
An executive officer or employee appointed to the board of Connie Lee by the
Secretary would be a “director” within the meaning o f 18 U.S.C. § 208(a). Ac-
3 A rticle V II, clause 4 o f the original articles o f incorporation, see D istrict o f C olum bia D epartm ent o f
C onsum er and R egulatory A ffairs, Business R egulation A dm inistration C ertificate o f Incorporation, College
C onstruction L oan Insurance A ssociation (Feb. 13, 1987), and article III, section 3 6 o f the bylaw s, see B y
laws o f the C o lleg e C onstruction Loan Insurance A ssociation (Sept. 11, 19 9 1) ("B ylaw s"), both specify that
“ (a]ny D irector m ay be rem oved for cause by vote o f a m ajority o f the rem aining D irectors.’’
4 T hus, ev en if the Secretary ordered the D eputy A ssistant Secretary to vote in a particular w ay on the
Board, the Secretary could not enforce that o rder by rem oving him or h e r from the Board.
139
Opinions o f th e O ffice o f L egal Counsel
cordingly, he or she would be disqualified from participating “personally and sub
stantially” in any “particular matter” implicating the financial interests o f Connie
Lee unless the conditions o f subsection 208(b) were satisfied.
W ALTER DELLINGER
A ssistan t A ttorn ey G en eral
O ffice o f L egal C ounsel
140