The President’s Power to Remove the Board of Directors of
the Pennsylvania Avenue Development Corporation
In the absence o f a clear legislative intent to the contrary, the President may remove his
appointees at will. The Pennsylvania Avenue Developm ent Corporation Act o f 1972, 40
U.S.C. §§ 871 et seq., provides for appointm ent o f a board o f directors by the President, but is
silent on rem oval.
A lthough the A ct provides for a six-year term o f office, a provision for a term , by itself, is not a
restriction on the President’s rem oval authority, but rather, is a limitation on the period for
which an appointee may serve w ithout reappointm ent.
N othing in the statutory scheme, legislative history, or in the nature of the Board’s functions,
indicates an intent to restrict the P resident’s removal power. Therefore, the board o f directors
may be rem oved by the President at will.
May 18, 1983
M em o ran d um O p in io n fo r th e C oun sel to the P r e s id e n t
This memorandum responds to your request for our opinion whether the
President has the power to remove the directors of the Pennsylvania Avenue
Development Corporation (PADC). We assume that your inquiry is directed to
those directors who are appointed by the President pursuant to 40 U.S.C.
§ 872(c)(8), as opposed to those who serve ex officio. We conclude that the
President does have the power to remove the directors of the PADC appointed
by him under § 872(c)(8).
I. The Board
• The Board was established pursuant to the provisions of the Pennsylvania
Avenue Development Corporation Act of 1972, Pub. L. No. 92-578, 86 Stat.
1266 (codified at 40 U.S.C. §§ 871 et seq. (1976)) (Act). Section 872 creates
the Corporation as a wholly owned government corporation, and vests its
powers and management in a Board of Directors consisting of the Secretaries
of the Interior, Treasury, Housing and Urban Development, and Transporta
tion, the Administrator of General Services, the Mayor of the District of
Columbia, the Chairman of the Council of the District of Columbia, and “eight
[additional members], at least four of whom shall be residents and who are
registered voters of the District of Columbia, appointed by the President from
private life, who shall have knowledge and experience in one or more fields of
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history, architecture, city planning, retailing, real estate, construction, or gov
ernment.” 40 U.S.C. § 872(c)(8).
Section 872(e) provides in part that each member appointed pursuant to
§ 872(c)(8) “shall serve for a term of six years from the expiration of his
predecessor's term.” Subsection (e) also provides for staggered terms, and for
the appointment of directors to serve out the remainder of terms. Directors may
continue to serve until their successors are qualified. Subsection (f) provides
that the President is to designate a Chairman and Vice Chairman from among
the private members. Subsection (g) provides for eight ex officio non-voting
members. The Act contains no provision concerning the removal of directors.1
II. Statutory Interpretation
The determination whether the President has the power to remove a Presi
dential appointee presents initially a question of statutory interpretation. If the
statute is interpreted to reflect an intention to restrict the President’s removal
power, it is then necessary to reach the constitutional question whether the
Congress had the power to do so. Here, we find it unnecessary to reach the
constitutional question because we conclude that there is no persuasive evi
dence of a congressional intent to restrict the President’s power to remove the
directors of the PADC.
A. Governing Law
In the absence of a provision to the contrary, the power to appoint carries
with it the power to remove.2 Accordingly, if a statute provides for appoint
ment by the President, but is silent on the subject of removal, the President may
remove an appointee unless the statutory scheme and legislative history dem
onstrate that Congress intended implicitly to limit the President’s removal
power. A statute is silent on the subject of removal if it contains neither an
express provision restricting removal nor other provisions relating to the
appointee’s tenure in office or terms of removal which must be interpreted as
intended to restrict the removal power. Provisions for a term, such as the
provision for a six-year term in the PADC Act, by themselves, have not been
interpreted as intended to restrict the removal power, but rather as limitations
on the period for which an appointee can serve without reappointment.3 A
provision for a term, coupled with a provision setting forth the bases for
1 The bylaw s o f the Corporation, which appear at 36 C.F.R. §§ 901.1-901.7 (1982), also contain no
provision concerning the rem oval o f directors.
2 Jam es M adis6n announced this rule during the first session o f the First C ongress. 1 A nnals o f Cong. 479
(J. G ales ed. 1789). The courts have consistently upheld the applicability o f the rule. M atter o f Hennen, 38
U.S. (13 Pet.) 230, 2 5 9 -6 0 (1839); Blake v. U nited States, 103 U.S. 227, 231 (1880); Myers v. United States,
272 U.S. 52, 119 (1926); Cafeteria Workers v. McElroy, 367 U.S. 886, 896-97 (1961); Sam pson v. M urray,
415 U.S. 61, 70 n.17 (1974); N ational Treasury Em ployees Union v. Reagan, 663 F.2d 239, 246-48 (D .C .
Cir. 1981); Kalaris v. Donovan, 697 F.2d 376 (D.C. Cir.), cert, denied, 462 U.S. 1119 (1983).
>See e.g., Parsons v. U nited States, 167 U.S. 324, 338 (1897); M artin v Tobin, 451 F.2d 1335, 1336 (9th
Cir. 1971).
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removal for cause, may be interpreted as a restriction on the President’s
removal power.4
1. Quasi-judicial or Quasi-legislative Functions
If it is concluded that a statute providing for Presidential appointment is
silent on the subject of removal, it is necessary next to determine whether
Congress intended implicitly to restrict the President’s removal power. The
starting point in making this determination is an examination of the functions
of the appointee’s office. For example, the performance primarily of quasi
judicial functions will support the inference that Congress intended to restrict
the President’s removal power. See W iener v. United States, 357 U.S. 349
(1958); cf. H um phrey’s Executor v. U nited States, 295 U.S. 602 (1935).5 The
W iener case involved a challenge to the removal of a member of the War
Claims Commission. The statute which created the Commission provided for
appointment by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate, but
was silent on the subject of removal. The Court said that “the most reliable
factor for drawing an inference regarding the President’s power of removal in
our case is the nature of the function that the Congress vested in the War
Claims Commission.” 357 U.S. at 353. The Court referred to “the sharp line of
cleavage” it had drawn in H um phrey’s Executor “between officials who were
part of the Executive establishment. . . and those who are members of a body
‘to exercise its judgment without the leave or hindrance of any other official or
any department of the government’ . . . . ” Id. at 353. In Wiener, the Court relied
on the War Claims Commission’s performance of adjudicative functions to
infer that Congress intended to restrict the President’s power to remove its
members. 357 U.S. at 356. Because the Commission was established to adjudi
4 In H u m p h rey's E xecu to r v. United States, 295 U.S. 602 (1935), the provision for a term was coupled with
a provision for rem oval fo r cause; the C ourt also em phasized legislative history indicating that Congress
intended the Federal Trade Commission to be independent o f executive control
5 T he Suprem e C ourt cases addressing the President’s pow er to rem ove persons appointed by him consists
o f the trilogy o f M yers v. United States, 272 U.S. 52 (1926); H um phrey's Executor, 295 U.S. 602 (1935); and
W iener v. U nited States, 357 U.S. 349 (1958). M yers held th at C ongress cannot lim it the President’s pow er to
rem ove the persons appointed by him by and w ith the advice and consent o f the Senate. H um phrey's Executor
held that C ongress can lim it the P resid en t's pow er to rem ove quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative officers,
restricted th e scope o f M yers to purely executive officers, and left open the question w hether and to what
extent C ongress can lim it the President’s pow er to rem ove those o f his appointees who perform neither quasi-
ju d icial, quasi-leg islativ e, nor purely executive functions: ‘T o the extent that, betw een the decision in the
M yers case, w hich sustains the unrestrictable pow er o f the President to rem ove purely executive officers, and
our present decision that such power d o es not extend to an office such as that here involved, there shall
rem ain a field o f doubt, w e leave such cases as may fall w ithin it for future consideration and determ ination as
they m ay arise.” 295 U .S. at 632. Finally, Wiener sustained the restriction on the President’s removal power
w hich it held could be inferred from the W ar C laim s C om m issioner’s perform ance o f adjudicative functions
T he M yers case is lim ited to officers appointed by the President by and with the advice and consent of the
Senate. U nited States v. Perkins, 116 U .S . 483 (1886) held that where Congress vests the appointm ent power
in a D epartm ent head under Article II, § 2 o f the C onstitution, it may lim it the removal power. M yers did not
decide w h eth er Perkins applies where th e pow er o f appointm ent is vested in the President alone, because the
issue w as not before it. It strongly suggested, however, that the question was to be answ ered in the negative.
272 U .S. at 161-62. In M artin v. Reagan, 525 F. Supp. 110 (D. Mass. 1981), the C ourt held that an officer
appointed by the P resident alone may b e rem oved by the President at w ill.
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cate according to law, and “one must take for granted” that the statute “pre
cluded the President from influencing the Commission in passing on a particu
lar claim, a fo rtio ri must it be inferred that Congress did not wish to have hang
over the Commission the Damocles’ sword of removal by the President.” Id. In
Humphrey’s Executor, the Court stated that “the very nature of the Federal
Trade Commission duties” require it to “act with entire impartiality . . . . Its
duties are neither political nor executive, but predominantly quasi-judicial and
quasi-legislative.” 295 U.S. at 624. H umphrey’s Executor rested its conclusion
that Congress intended to restrict the President’s power to remove the Commis
sioners only in part on the Commission’s performance of those functions.
The opinions in Wiener and H um phrey’s Executor do not attempt to define
the terms “adjudicatory” or “quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative” with any
precision. However, some functions are clearly within the scope of those terms.
In Wiener, the Court characterized the War Claims Commission’s function as
“adjudication] according to law,” “that is, on the merits of each claim, sup
ported by evidence and governing legal considerations.” 357 U.S. at 355. In
Humphrey's Executor, the Court pointed to the FTC’s function to “exercise the
trained judgment of a body of experts ‘appointed by law and informed by
experience,” ’ its “duties as a legislative or as a judicial aid,” and its responsi
bilities for “investigations and reports thereon” to Congress. 295 U.S. at 624,
628. The Court also discusses the FTC’s adjudicative functions. Id. at 628.
Thus, the assignment to an official of the performance of quasi-judicial and
quasi-legislative functions, at least including “adjudication] according to law,”
supports an inference that Congress intended to restrict the President’s removal
power. Performance of quasi-legislative functions, including substantive
rulemaking, cf. id. at 624, may not by itself support such an inference, but is
some evidence of intent to restrict.
2. Presumption that Officer is Removable
If the statute is silent on removal and the officer performs neither quasi
judicial nor quasi-legislative functions as those terms are used in Wiener and
Humphrey's Executor, the presumption that the President may remove him at
will controls. Only strong and unambiguous evidence of congressional intent is
an adequate basis for concluding that Congress intended implicitly to restrict
the President’s removal power. As the Court said in S h u rtleff\. United States,
189 U.S. 311 (1903):
It cannot now be doubted that in the absence of constitutional
or statutory provision the President can by virtue of his general
power of appointment remove an officer, even though appointed
by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. . . . To take
away this power of removal in relation to an inferior office
created by statute, although that statute provided for an appoint
ment thereto by the President and confirmation by the Senate,
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would require very clear and explicit language. It should not be
held to be taken away by mere inference or implication.
Id. at 314-15.6
Legislative history suggesting that Congress looked favorably on the con
cept that a particular official would be “independent” of executive control
ordinarily will not be enough. The concept of “independence,” in the abstract,
has connotations that are appealing, and the term is often used in floor debates
and legislative history without any specificity as to what precisely is intended.
However, “independence” is less attractive if it comes at the cost of account
ability. Congress presumably recognizes that an official who is not removable
may act beyond the control of elected officials. Perhaps for this reason, the
discussion of “independence” during legislative debates often goes no further
than the abstract concept and seldom ripens into a clear specification of a
legislative intent to make an appointed official non-removable.
Because Congress knows how to provide expressly for restrictions on re
moval if it chooses,7 the serious constitutional questions raised by congres
sional attempts to restrict Presidential removal of such appointees should be
avoided unless it is clear that Congress intended squarely to face the constitu
tional issue and affirmatively desires that an official be independent of and not
accountable to the President. The burden of demonstrating intent to restrict the
President’s removal power is heaviest when the officer performs “purely
executive” functions, and an attempt to restrict the power to remove such an
officer would be unconstitutional under M yers. The burden is also heavy when
an officer performs a mixture of executive and other functions, and his func
tions cannot be described as “predominantly quasi-judicial and quasi-legisla
tive,” or where his functions fall in the “field of doubt” between purely
executive and quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative functions. A restriction on
the President’s power to remove such an officer would raise serious and
unsettled questions of constitutional law under Myers, Humphrey’s Executor
and Wiener. See supra note 5.
B. A pplication o f the Governing Law
The application of these principles to the PADC Board is straightforward.
The Act provides for appointment by the President, but is silent on the subject
of removal: there is no express restriction on removal nor is there any legisla
tive history on the subject of removal, and the only provision relating to tenure
in office is the provision for a six-year term.8 As noted, a provision for a term,
6 In S h u r tle ff the C ourt concluded that a provision for rem oval fo r cause did not constitute such language. In
H u m p h re y 's Executor, the C ourt distinguished S h u rtle ff on the ground that the statute there contained no
provisio n fo r a term . 295 U .S. a t 621-23.
7 See, e.g., 42 U .S.C . § 2996c(e) (Board o f th e Legal Services C orporation).
8 T he H ouse R eport, the only Committee R ep o rt subm itted w ith the 1972 legislation, makes no mention of
rem oval o f m em bers o f the Board. See H.R. R ep. No. 1445, 92d C ong., 2d Sess. (1972).
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by itself, is not a restriction on removal. Thus, nothing in the Act or its
legislative history suggests an intent to restrict the removal power.
Having concluded that the statute is silent on removal, we turn next to an
examination of the functions of the PADC Board to determine whether it
performs quasi-judicial or quasi-legislative functions. It does neither. In estab
lishing the PADC, Congress found “that it is in the national interest that the
area adjacent to Pennsylvania Avenue between the Capitol and the White
House,” which has been designated a national historic site, “be developed,
maintained, and used in a manner suitable to its ceremonial, physical, and
historic relationship to the legislative and executive branches of the Federal
Government and to the governmental buildings, monuments, memorials, and
parks in or adjacent to the area.” 40 U.S.C. § 871(a). Congress further found
“that to insure suitable development, maintenance, and use of the area and the
elimination of blight, it is essential that there be developed and carried out as an
entirety plans for this area which will specify the uses, both public and private,
to which property is to be put, the programming and financing of necessary
acquisitions, construction, reconstruction, and other activities.” Id. § 871(c).
The two chief functions of the PADC under the statute are to develop such a
plan and to carry it out. Section 874 governs the content of the redevelopment
plan and the procedures for its preparation, approval and revision.9 Section 875
sets forth the powers conferred on the corporation to carry out the development
plan, including the powers to acquire land by, inter alia, condemnation pro
ceedings, id. § 875(6); to establish by covenants, regulation and otherwise
“such restrictions . . . as are necessary to assure development, maintenance, and
protection of the development area in accordance with the development plan,”
id. § 875(8); to “borrow money from the Treasury of the United States” as
authorized in appropriations acts, id. § 875(10); to “contract for and accept
gifts or grants or property or other financial aid . . . from any source,”
governmental or other, id. § 875(13); and “utilize or employ the services of
personnel of any agency . . . of the Federal Government.” Id. § 875(21).
As the foregoing review demonstrates, the functions of the Board are neither
quasi-judicial nor quasi-legislative within the meaning of H um phrey’s Execu
tor and Wiener. Because there is nothing in the statutory scheme or legislative
history to overcome the presumption that the President has authority over such
officials whom he appoints, and that the directors are therefore removable at
will, we conclude that the President may remove the directors of the PADC.
HI. Conclusion
The Act provides for appointment of the directors of the PADC Board by the
President, but is silent on the subject of removal: no provision in the Act
9 The plan must include, inter alia, the types o f uses perm itted, criteria for design o f buildings and open
spaces, an estim ate o f the re-use values o f the properties to be acquired, a determ ination o f the m arketability
o f the developm ent, and the procedures for insuring continuing conform ance to the developm ent plan. Id. at
§ 874(a).
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expressly restricts the President’s removal power, nor is there any provision
bearing on the directors’ tenure in office or terms of removal which must be
interpreted as intended to restrict the President’s removal power. Moreover,
because the PADC Board’s functions are neither quasi-judicial nor quasi
legislative as those terms are used in the Supreme Court cases addressing the
President’s removal power, no inference can be drawn from the functions
assigned to the Board that Congress intended implicitly to restrict the removal
power. In these circumstances, a presumption arises that the President may
remove his appointees at will. As our discussion of the PADC Act and its
legislative history have demonstrated, there is nothing in either that history or
the statutory scheme to overcome this presumption. We therefore conclude that
the directors of the PADC may be removed by the President at will.
Theodore B. O lson
Assistant Attorney General
Office o f Legal Counsel
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