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Legal Services Corp. v. Velazquez

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Legal Services Corp. v. Velazquez
Seal of the United States Supreme Court.svg
Argued October 4, 2000
Decided February 28, 2001
Full case name Legal Services Corporation v. Carmen Velazquez, et al.
Citations 531 U.S. 533 (more)
Prior history Plaintiffs' motion for injunction denied, 985 F. Supp. 323 (E.D.N.Y. 1997); aff'd in part, rev'd in part, 164 F.3d 757 (2d Cir. 1999)
Subsequent history Permanent injunction granted, 349 F.Supp.2d 566 (E.D.N.Y. 2004)
Holding
A restriction on advocacy by the Legal Services Corporation (LSC) seeking to change welfare law is an unconstitutional viewpoint restriction, even though the LSC is a quasi-government entity.
Court membership
Case opinions
Majority Kennedy, joined by Stevens, Souter, Ginsburg, Breyer
Dissent Scalia, joined by Rehnquist, O'Connor, Thomas
Laws applied
U.S. Const. Amend. I; 42 U.S.C. § 2996e(d)(4)

Legal Services Corp. v. Velazquez, 531 U.S. 533 (2001), was a decision of the Supreme Court of the United States concerning the constitutionality of funding restrictions imposed by the United States Congress. At issue were restrictions on the Legal Services Corporation (LSC), a private, non-profit corporation established by Congress. The restrictions prohibited LSC attorneys from representing clients attempting to amend (or challenge) existing welfare law. The case was brought by Carmen Velazquez, whose LSC-funded attorneys sought to challenge existing welfare provisions, believing it was the only way to get Velazquez financial relief.

The Court ruled that this specific restriction violated the free speech guarantees of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. Because LSC facilitated "private" speech—that of its grantees—the restrictions did not simply regulate government speech. Because the restrictions blocked attempts to change only a specific area of law, the Court held, they could not be considered viewpoint-neutral; the government is prohibited from making such viewpoint-based restrictions of private speech.

Reactions to the decision were mixed within Congress, with Republicans and Democrats disagreeing on the propriety of the decision. Several law review articles argued that the use of a "distortion principle" to decide violations of free speech was an unreasonable and unconstitutional rule whose conditions on funding might "distort" speech advocacy; others contended that the Court mishandled the interpretation of the statute at issue.

Background

History of funding restriction jurisprudence

The first major test of the federal government's power over funding restrictions based on speech was the 1991 case Rust v. Sullivan. In Rust, the Supreme Court upheld a restriction on the use of Department of Health and Human Services funds for counseling, referring patients to, or advocating the use of abortion services. The Court reasoned that the restriction at issue "merely [chose] to fund one activity to the exclusion of the other."[1] Here, the government was using private speakers to transmit information pertaining to the government's own program.[2]

Six years later, the Court reviewed another restriction, this time concerning funding restrictions imposed by a public university. In the 1997 case Rosenberger v. University of Virginia, a government supported university sought to withhold funds from religious student publications despite funding similar secular publications. While the Court said the government could seek to shape funding to support a government message, such restrictive steps could not be imposed to the exclusion of a particular viewpoint.[3]

Legal Services Corporation

In 1974 the United States Congress passed the Legal Services Corporation Act, which established the LSC. The purpose of the act was to provide government-funded legal aid to indigent clients, funded through grants to regional entities throughout the country. In 1996 Congress amended the act with that year's appropriations bill, imposing restrictions on the LSC. These restrictions included prohibitions against filing class action lawsuits, providing legal assistance to immigrants in particular types of cases, collecting attorney's fees, soliciting clients, providing advocacy training programs and attempting to reform welfare laws.[4] The restrictions affected only a small portion of the caseload.[5] The restrictions prohibited funding cases:

... initiating legal representation or participating in any other way, in litigation, lobbying, or rulemaking, involving an effort to reform a Federal or State welfare system, except that this paragraph shall not be construed to preclude a recipient from representing an individual eligible client who is seeking specific relief from a welfare agency if such relief does not involve an effort to amend or otherwise challenge existing welfare law in effect on the date of the initiation of the representation.[6]

Lower-court proceedings

In 1997, Carmen Velazquez lost welfare benefits from the government under the provisions of the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Act (TANF). An attorney from an LSC grantee, Bronx Legal Services, litigated her claim.[7] Bronx Legal Services, on behalf of Velazquez, filed suit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York seeking a declaration that the provision of the act prohibiting challenges to existing welfare law was unconstitutional under the First Amendment.[4] It argued that there was no way to help Velazquez without challenging the welfare system itself,[7] and sought to challenge the provisions of TANF under which Velazquez lost her benefits; a challenge they could not make due to the 1996 restrictions.[8] The district court denied an injunction.[9]

The court's decision was affirmed in part and reversed in part by the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. The Second Circuit unanimously held that the welfare-advocacy restriction was unconstitutional,[10] but upheld other restrictions that Bronx Legal Services had challenged (such as the lobbying restriction) by a 2–1 vote.[7] The Second Circuit also rejected the claim that any funding conditions would be illegitimate, instead preferring a restriction-by-restriction analysis.[11] The national LSC asked the Supreme Court for review by petitioning for a writ of certiorari, arguing that the Second Circuit was wrong in striking down the welfare-advocacy restriction.[12]

Supreme Court decision

The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the case on October 4, 2000, issuing its decision four months later.[13]

The Court affirmed the decision of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, holding that the restriction on pursuing welfare advocacy was unconstitutional under the First Amendment by a vote of 5–4.[14]

Justice Kennedy
Justice Kennedy wrote the majority opinion in Velazquez.

Justice Kennedy delivered the majority opinion. It distinguished a 1991 Supreme Court case, Rust v. Sullivan, which upheld a prohibition on federally funded family planning services from discussing abortion with their patients. The majority reasoned that in Rust the government was attempting to use its funds to express its own message, but the purpose of the act was to promote a diversity of private views with its funding; not an attempt to restrict any views. The Court said that the government can only issue "content-neutral" conditions on such speech,[15] and that the specific prohibition on welfare-reform litigation was viewpoint-based, as it restricted only support for welfare-reform advocacy. "If the restriction on speech and legal advice were to stand, the result would be two tiers of cases ... there would be lingering doubt whether the truncated representation had resulted in complete analysis of the case, full advice to the client, and proper presentation to the court."[16]

The Court also criticized the fact that the restriction functionally barred attorneys from participating in the courts.[17] Any attorney receiving LSC funding would not be able to litigate welfare claims that challenged welfare rules, thereby preventing certain cases from being filed.[4] "The restriction imposed by the statute here threatens severe impairment of the judicial function ... We must be vigilant when Congress imposes rules and conditions which, in effect, insulate its own laws from legitimate judicial challenge."[11]

Dissent

Justice Scalia dissented from the decision of the Court, due to the belief that Rust mandated a ruling upholding the restriction. Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Associate Justices Sandra Day O'Connor and Clarence Thomas joined the dissent. Scalia wrote, "The [act] is a federal subsidy program, not a federal regulatory program ... regulations directly restrict speech; subsidies do not."[18] He disagreed with the majority's contention that there was viewpoint discrimination, arguing that no specific viewpoint was restricted. Scalia was also concerned with dicta within the majority opinion that seemed to him to indicate a "fondness" for the concept of reform through the courts.[19] His dissent argued that the majority's holding was "unprecedented" because it was the first time the government would be limited in advocating its own message.[18][4]

Reaction

The immediate reaction was mixed among members of Congress.[20] Democratic supporters of the ruling were optimistic of future victories against funding restrictions, stating that, while they were glad the restriction fell, "[the decision] opens the LSC up to even more attacks".[20] Republicans in Congress condemned the decision, agreeing to work against it. Representative Steve Largent (R-OK) said, "It'll be on the radar screen for sure ... Why are we giving taxpayer money to sue taxpayers?"[20] The New York Times described the decision as the end of the "latest chapter, although almost certainly not the last, in a long political struggle over the federally financed program of civil legal services for the poor."[11]

Parties involved in the case also had mixed reactions. The Legal Services Corporation, which had sought to protect the restrictions, said it would "immediately review [their] regulations and then modify them to adhere to the Court's ruling", which it did quickly after the decision.[11] Burt Neuborne, the lawyer who argued against the restriction before the Supreme Court, said the ruling "really reads like a First Amendment textbook".[11]

Subsequent developments

In the weeks following the Velazquez decision, the Supreme Court rejected appeals related to other LSC restrictions.[21] LSC has engaged in welfare-reform litigation since the original injunction was lifted.

The case provided the basis for other challenges to restrictions imposed on LSC, such as bans against lobbying or class action.[22] These challenges were rejected by the Ninth Circuit and the Second Circuit in separate suits.[23][24] The challenges failed because the relevant provisions do not regulate a specific type of advocacy; for example, the restriction on LSC grantees from collecting attorney's fees would not raise a speech issue because there is no speech involved in such a process. The argument raised in these challenges was that the Court articulated a new "conditions" principle in Velazquez—a distortion-of-speech test—which, they argued, would require the restrictions to be struck down. Both courts of appeal reviewing this claim have rejected this reading of Velazquez. Instead of a distortion-of-speech test, the decision was based on the application of limited public forum principles: when the government provides funds to an entity, and this funding's purpose was to encourage a diversity of private views, it must act in a viewpoint-neutral way.[25] Programs funded in this manner are treated as a public forum, where the ability of the government to restrict speech is highly limited.

The implications of these subsequent rulings mandated two new rules, one narrow and one broad. First, restrictions may be imposed on LSC so long as they do not discriminate on the basis of "viewpoint" or "opinion".[26] Because the other restrictions were not based on viewpoint, they were upheld. Second, on a broader scale the government may not discriminate against viewpoints in any instance where it is funding a private entity to promote a diversity of views. For this reason, the decision in Velazquez set an important precedent for how the government may act as subsidizer and speaker.[27]

Analysis and commentary

A Journal of Law and Politics article was critical of the decision, criticizing the Court's claimed distinction between the speech restriction in Rust and the one on the Legal Services Corporation and contending that there was no functional difference between the two.[28] The article highlighted a problem with the Court's interpretation of the statute's purpose at hand, stating: "Even assuming the propriety of invoking legislative purpose in statutory interpretation, the text of the [Act] does not support the Court's understanding of the Act's purpose."[29] The article noted that, although the Court looked at a section of the Act discussing attorneys "protecting the best interest of their clients", the same section noted that the program must be free of "political pressures".[6][30] Because a factor in the Court's reasoning was its understanding of the Act's purpose,[31] this alleged error purportedly misguided the rest of the Court's analysis.[32]

Further criticism from the article was that the Court unduly rested its decision on a separation of powers determination.[33] The Court held in Velazquez that the restriction on welfare advocacy cases disrupted the "vital relationship between the bar and the judiciary".[34] This finding, the article argued, is baseless because there is no connection between preventing some government lawyers from arguing a single point and the deprivation of due process rights.[35] It concluded that the fundamental problems of statutory interpretation and a lack of a credible distinction with Rust in Justice Kennedy's analysis renders the opinion "unconvincing".[36]

An article in the Maryland Law Review authored by Christopher Gozdor (a lawyer in the Maryland Attorney General's office) was also critical of the decision, although he was concerned instead with an alleged lack of clarity in the majority opinion. It discussed the case law relating to government speech and examined what it described as the "conditions doctrine",[37] where certain conditions on receiving federal funds were upheld or struck down. The article then turned to the Rust distinction. Gozdor explained: "The Court distinguished Velazquez from Rust because Rust involved a subsidy to facilitate private expression of the government's message, while Velazquez involved LSC funding that was designed [for] private speech."[38][39] The critical question for the court was the characterization of the speech that the law promoted. Because advocacy by LSC grantees to change welfare laws was not in advance of the government's own message, the restriction placed on it essentially prohibited a form of private speech. The relationship, Gozdor asserted, that the Court set forth was that the restriction "distorted" private speech. This "distortion principle" was the main criticism of the article (as was Scalia's dissent).[18][40] Gozdor, agreeing with Scalia's dissent, wrote that the restriction did not create such a distortion of private speech because Congress had still permitted LSC to form affiliate organizations which would be considered "legally separate".[41] Notwithstanding the difficulty of an organization to classify itself as an "affiliate entity" of LSC, Gozdor argued that there was no real prevention of speech when there were ample alternative means of relaying the message.[42]

Further, in attacking the distortion principle's application, Gozdor also argued against the principle as a legal concept in the first place.[43] He wrote, "Regardless of the Court's rationale for its distortion principle, determining a First Amendment violation by measuring whether the government used a subsidy 'in ways which distorted the medium's usual functioning' suggests that forum functions become unchangeable once created."[44] He claimed the unworkability of the distortion principle in a hypothetical example, which would moot the very existence of the Legal Services Corporation. "Taking the Velazquez rationale to its logical ends", he wrote, "the LSC subsidy itself could become an unconstitutional speech restriction. If Congress substantially increased LSC appropriations in order to allow LSC to take all of its cases ... the functioning of the legal system would be distorted because such a subsidy likely would result in a dramatic increase in the federal courts' caseloads."[45] With this in mind, he concluded with a process by which the Court should have decided the case: a process leading to the upholding of the restriction by finding that LSC's purpose was in promoting the government's message, in contrast to a diversity of private views.[46]

An article in the North Carolina Law Review argued that Kennedy's majority opinion wrongly set forth the understanding of the role of an attorney.[47] The author, Jessica Sharpe, criticized the Court's thesis that the role of the attorney is that of an advocate such that a restriction on the attorney served as a direct restriction of advocacy. This rationale, Sharpe argued, could undermine the balance of abortion restrictions because state regulations on abortion access also could be seen as an intrusion into doctor–patient speech. Because Velazquez "blurred" this distinction, the privileged nature of doctor–patient conversations could be subjected to future regulations and limitations.[48]

See also

Notes

  1. 531 U.S. at 541–543.
  2. 531 U.S. at 541–542.
  3. 531 U.S. at 542.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 "Legal Services Corp. v. Velazquez, Carmen, et al.", "Oyez: Supreme Court Media", May 7, 2012, accessed May 8, 2012.
  5. Houseman, Alan W. "What Can and Cannot Be Done: Representation of Clients by LSC-Funded Programs", "Center for Law and Social Policy", August 9, 2001.
  6. 6.0 6.1 U.S.C §2996(1)
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 "Supreme Court: Welfare Challenges Curb Rejected", World News Digest, February 28, 2001.
  8. 164 F.3d at 764 (2d Cir. 1999).
  9. 164 F.3d at 762 (2d Cir. 1999).
  10. 531 U.S. 535 at 537
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 Greenhouse, Linda, "Justices Reject Congress's Curbs on Welfare Suits", New York Times, March 1, 2001.
  12. 531 U.S. 535 at 537, 540.
  13. 531 U.S. at 535.
  14. 531 U.S. at 549.
  15. 531 U.S. at 542.
  16. 531 U.S. at 546.
  17. 531 U.S. at 548.
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 532 U.S. at 557. Scalia, J., dissenting.
  19. 531 U.S. at 563.
  20. 20.0 20.1 20.2 "Supreme Court Strikes Down Limits on Legal Services Corporations's Suits, Re-Energizing Program's Detractors", Congressional Quarterly Weekly, March 2, 2001.
  21. "Legal Services Corporations restrictions to stay put; High court denies certiorari over remaining questions", The Indiana Lawyer, April 25, 2001.
  22. Schwinn, Steven D. "Ninth Circuit Declines Further Review of Legal Services Funding Restrictions", Constitutional Law Prof Blog, June 4, 2010, accessed January 1, 2011
  23. Oregon v. Legal Services Corp., 552 F. 3d 965 (9th Cir., 2009; dismissing challenge against restrictions)
  24. Brooklyn Legal Services Corp. v. Legal Services Corp., 462 F. 3d 219 (2nd Cir., 2006; dismissing challenge to attorney fee restriction)
  25. Volokh 2008, pp. 410–412
  26. Volokh 2008, p. 434
  27. Volokh 2008, p. 410
  28. Johnson 2001, p. 355
  29. Johnson 2001, p. 357
  30. Johnson 2001, p. 358
  31. Johnson 2001, p. 360
  32. Johnson 2001, p. 362
  33. Johnson 2001, p. 365
  34. 531 U.S. 535 at 545-546
  35. Johnson 2001, p. 367-368
  36. Johnson 2001, p. 372
  37. Gozdor 2002, p. 459–467
  38. Gozdor 2002, p. 467
  39. 531 U.S. 535 at 541–542.
  40. Gozdor 2002, p. 471–472
  41. Gozdor 2002, p. 472
  42. Gozdor 2002, p. 472–473
  43. Gozdor 2002, p. 474
  44. Gozdor 2002, p. 475
  45. Gozdor 2002, p. 476
  46. Gozdor 2002, p. 477–481
  47. Sharpe 2002, p. 1324
  48. Sharpe 2002, p. 1331–1332

References

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External links