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Home 9 Publication 9 Supreme Court Update: Biden v. Nebraska (No. 22-506), Department of Education v. Brown (No. 22-535), United States v. Texas (No. 22-58)

Supreme Court Update: Biden v. Nebraska (No. 22-506), Department of Education v. Brown (No. 22-535), United States v. Texas (No. 22-58)

July 7, 2023

Greetings, Court Fans!

Weโ€™re back with our final Update of OT22, covering a trio of decisions involving standing and challenges federal agenciesโ€™ authority:

  • And United States v. Texas (No. 22-58), where an 8-1 Court held that Texas and Louisiana lacked standing to challenge the Secretary of Homeland Securityโ€™s immigration-enforcement guidelines prioritizing the removal of certain categories of non-citizens.

Weโ€™ll start with Biden v. Nebraska (No. 22-506) and Department of Education v. Brown (No. 22-535), two challenges to the Biden Administrationโ€™s student-loan forgiveness plan. In 2022, Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona announced that the Biden Administration would cancel up to $10,000 in eligible student debt for any borrower whose adjusted gross income was below $125,000 in 2020 or 2021, and another $10,000 for borrowers who previously received Pell Grants as undergraduates with exceptional financial need. Student debt eligible for forgiveness included loans offered directly by the federal government; other government-subsidized, low-interest loans made by schools to students with significant financial need; and loans made by private lenders and guaranteed by the government, known as Federal Family Education Loans (FFELs). Approximately 43 million borrowers were eligible for forgiveness under the plan, putting its estimated cost at $430 billion.

Secretary Cardona claimed authority for his plan under the Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students Act of 2003, known as the HEROES Act. In the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks, Congress had passed a predecessor statute, the HEROES Act of 2001, to help borrowers (particularly military personnel) by granting the Secretary of Education โ€œspecific waiver authority to respond to conditions in the national emergency.โ€ The 2003 HEROES Act granted the Secretary permanent authority when responding to a war or national emergency to โ€œwaive or modify any statutory or regulatory provision applicable to the student financial assistance programs.โ€ Congress granted the Secretary these powers to ensure that โ€œrecipients of student financial assistance โ€ฆ are not placed in a worse position financially in relation to that financial assistance becauseโ€ they โ€œsuffered direct economic hardship as a direct result ofโ€ a national emergency.

In March 2020, President Trump declared the COVID-19 pandemic a national emergency. Then-Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos promptly suspended loan repayments and interest accrual for all federally held student loans, but the Departmentโ€™s Office of General Counsel advised her that she did not have authority to cancel or forgive student loans across the board. After the change in administrations, the loan forbearance remained in place. But the Office of General Counsel rescinded its prior advice and greenlighted โ€œtargeted loan cancellation directed at addressing the financial harms of the COVIDโ€“19 pandemic.โ€ In August 2022, Secretary Cardona issued his proposal to cancel student debt under the HEROES Act and published the required notice of his โ€œwaivers and modificationsโ€ in the Federal Register.

Six Republican-led statesโ€”Nebraska, Missouri, Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, and South Carolinaโ€”promptly sued, seeking a preliminary injunction against the plan. The District Court found that the states lacked standing to challenge the plan and dismissed their suit. But the Eighth Circuit reversed, concluding (preliminarily) that Missouri likely had standing to sue and that it was entitled to a nationwide preliminary injunction pending resolution of the appeal. In another suit, two individual borrowersโ€”Myra Brown and Alexander Taylorโ€”also sued the administration. In Brownโ€™s case, she alleged that her student-loan debt was โ€œcommercially heldโ€ rather than โ€œheld by the Department,โ€ rendering her ineligible for loan forgiveness under the plan. The other borrower, Taylor, was eligible for $10,000 in loan forgiveness but not the $20,000 offered to Pell Grant recipients, notwithstanding that some of those recipients now had higher incomes than Taylor. These individual borrowers alleged that the Department should have followed a formal rulemaking process that would have allowed them (and others) to express their concerns about the plan before its adoption. They also contended (as did Missouri and its peers in the first suit) that the Secretary lacked authority to promulgate the plan under the HEROES Act. In the individual borrowersโ€™ case, the District Court determined that the plan exceeded the Secretaryโ€™s authority and vacated it, and the Fifth Circuit denied the Department of Educationโ€™s motion for a stay pending appeal. The Supreme Court granted certiorari before judgment in both cases.

Although the result is a bit less interesting, weโ€™ll discuss Department of Education v. Brown first. Writing for a unanimous Court, Justice Alito concluded that the individual plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge the plan. Before the Supreme Court, Brown and Taylor argued they had standing on the theory that if the Department had offered them an opportunity to voice their objections to its plan (including its legality) through rulemaking, the Department might have promulgated a different loan-forgiveness plan, one that relied on the Higher Education Act of 1965 (HEA) instead of the HEROES Act. Alito made short work of that with standing doctrineโ€™s โ€œtraceabilityโ€ requirement: that is, the requirement that the plaintiffโ€™s injury be โ€œfairly traceableโ€ to the defendantโ€™s alleged wrongful conduct. Brown and Taylorโ€™s alleged injuriesโ€”not receiving the loan relief they hoped forโ€”was not fairly traceable to the Departmentโ€™s adoption of this loan forgiveness plan, because the Department could promulgate the program Brown and Taylor envisioned at any time: โ€œ[T]he Departmentโ€™s decision to give other people relief under a different statutory scheme did not cause respondents not to obtain the benefits they want.โ€ While Brown and Taylor could petition the Department for the issuance of a new rule or repeal of its existing rule, they lacked standing in federal court to challenge the loan forgiveness plan on the โ€œtheory that it crowds out the[ir] desired one.โ€ True, the Department had occasionally referred to the plan as a โ€œone-timeโ€ student-loan relief package, but it still had discretion to issue an alternative loan forgiveness plan consonant with Brown and Taylorโ€™s wishes. The Court therefore directed dismissal of their suit for lack of standing.

That leads to Biden v. Nebraska, where a 6-3 Court found that Missouri, at least, had standing to sue and that the plan exceeded the Secretaryโ€™s authority under the HEROES Act. Chief Justice Robertsโ€™s majority decision began with standing. Missouri alleged it had the requisite injury for standing purposes by virtue of the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority (MOHELA), a public corporation that holds and services about five million federal loan accounts, comprising nearly $150 billion in federal loans and over $1 billion in FFELs. For servicing these accounts, MOHELA receives approximately $89 million annually in administrative feesโ€”about $44 million of which it would lose if half of the accounts were closed after the discharge of those borrowersโ€™ debt under the plan. That undisputed financial injury to MOHELA, Roberts concluded, gave Missouri standing, because MOHELA was a โ€œpublic instrumentalityโ€ of the state, subject to its supervision and control, and it was established to perform the โ€œessential public functionโ€ of providing student loans for Missourians attending college. Thus, although MOHELA was technically its own corporate entity, it remained a state instrumentality for purposes of Missouriโ€™s standing to sue.

Here, weโ€™ll jump ahead to Justice Kaganโ€™s dissent, joined by Justices Sotomayor and Jackson. She viewed Missouri as improperly piggybacking on MOHELAโ€™s injury. As she saw it, MOHELA was โ€œa legally and financially independent public corporationโ€ whose revenue did not pass through to Missouri. While it presumably could have sued in its own name based on its loss of administrative fees, it chose not to. Because Missouri and MOHELA are โ€œseparate entities,โ€ and MOHELA could independently represent its own interests, Kagan concluded that Missouri could not rely on MOHELAโ€™s injury for its standing. Moreover, she observed that Missouri and its fellow state plaintiffs didnโ€™t really care about the loss of loan servicing fees to instrumentalities like MOHELA. Instead, they wanted to air generalized grievances with the policy choice of the Administrationโ€™s plan. But because that was not a recognized basis for standing, she would have dismissed the statesโ€™ suit along with the individual plaintiffsโ€™ one.

Turning to the merits, the majority found that the Secretaryโ€™s authority under the HEROES Act to โ€œwaive or modifyโ€ financial assistance provisions in federal education law did not confer on him the authority to rewrite that law โ€œfrom the ground up.โ€ First, in common usage โ€œmodifyโ€ describes incremental change, not fundamental overhaul. Yet the Secretaryโ€™s plan would have repurposed his statutory authority to discharge a borrowerโ€™s liability under extraordinary circumstances (such as the death, disability, or bankruptcy of the borrower) and in defined ways (with โ€œparticular sums to be forgiven and income-based eligibility requirementsโ€) into the power to discharge substantial debt held by 98.5% of all borrowers under entirely new guidelines. As the Chief Justice quipped, invoking a memorable phrase from the late Justice Scalia, this plan โ€œโ€˜modifiedโ€™ the cited provisions only in the same sense that the French Revolution โ€˜modifiedโ€™ the status of the French nobilityโ€”it has abolished them and supplanted them with a new regime entirely.โ€ The Secretaryโ€™s authority under the HEROES Act to โ€œwaiveโ€ provisions was similarly insufficient to permit the Secretary to adopt a freestanding loan forgiveness program, โ€œwaiving provisions root and branch and then filling the empty space with radically new text.โ€ Third, because neither waiver nor modification authorized the plan, the Secretary could not get there by adding โ€œwaiveโ€ and โ€œmodifyโ€ together. Nor could he bootstrap a procedural provision directing that the notice in the Federal Register include โ€œthe terms and conditions to be applied in lieu of [the waived] statutory and regulatory provisionsโ€ to craft his own regulations from whole cloth.

Finally, responding to the argument that emergency powers should be construed broadly, the majority invoked the major questions doctrine as applied last Term in West Virginia v. EPA. As Chief Justice Roberts put it, โ€œ[t]he question here is not whether something should be done; it is who has the authority to do it.โ€ Because the Secretary had never previously claimed the power to discharge the debt of millions of borrowers under the HEROES Act and the statute did not purport to grant him that authority of staggering โ€œeconomic and political significance,โ€ the Court concluded that Congress, rather than the Secretary himself, should decide whether such novel emergency powers were warranted. The Court therefore upheld the Eighth Circuitโ€™s injunction, stalling the loan forgiveness program at the starting gate.

The dissent disagreed, to put it mildly, on the merits too. First, Justice Kagan understood the Secretaryโ€™s โ€œwaiverโ€ power to encompass the elimination of certain requirements altogetherโ€”not in a manner limited by the incremental connotation of the adjoining verb โ€œmodify.โ€ Second, she read the reporting requirement for โ€œterms and conditions in lieu ofโ€ those waived or modified to confirmCongressโ€™s intention that, after eliminating or adjusting statutory requirements, the Secretary could add new provisions in their place. Taken together, the statutory toolbox of waiver, modification, and new terms and conditions meant that โ€œwhen an emergency strikes, the Secretary can alter, so as to cover more people, pre-existing provisions enabling loan discharges,โ€ which โ€œis exactly what the Secretary did in establishing his loan forgiveness plan.โ€ By waiving some requirements, modifying others, and then filling gaps with new terms and conditions, the Secretary was permitted to โ€œcounteract an emergencyโ€™s effects on borrowers.โ€

With respect to congressional intent, Justice Kagan argued that Congress โ€œwould be appalledโ€ if the Secretary failed to use his emergency powers to โ€œscratch the pre-existing conditions for discharge and specify different conditions met by the affected borrowers.โ€ Instead, by summoning the major questions doctrine to its rescue, she charged, the majority had โ€œput[] its own heavyweight thumb on the scalesโ€ and arrogated to itself the power to decide an important national policy question, even though student loans were squarely โ€œin the Secretaryโ€™s wheelhouse.โ€ Reprising her dissent in West Virginia, Kagan argued that the major questions doctrine was in fact a โ€œjudicially manufacturedโ€ device of recent vintage designed to โ€œtrumpโ€ rather than โ€œbetter understand โ€ฆ the scope of a legislative delegation.โ€

In a lengthy concurrence, Justice Barrett defended the major questions doctrine as a context-dependent inquiry consistent with textualism that was neither โ€œmade-upโ€ nor โ€œnew.โ€ In her view, the doctrine simply reflected a common-sense approach to โ€œthe manner in which Congress is likely to delegate a policy decision of [] economic and political magnitude to an administrative agencyโ€ by assuming that Congress would make that delegation clear in the statutory text. After all, the Constitution vests Congress with โ€œall legislative Powers,โ€ so โ€œa reasonable interpreter would expect it to make the big-time policy calls itself, rather than pawning them off to another branch.โ€

The dissentโ€™s accusations that the Court was not โ€œacting like a courtโ€ by deciding โ€œa case [that was] not a caseโ€ and overriding โ€œthe combined judgment of the Legislative and Executive Branchesโ€ drew a response in the majorityโ€™s closing section. The Chief Justice noted the โ€œdisturbing feature of some recent opinions to criticize the decisions with which they disagree as going beyond the proper role of the judiciary.โ€ He cautioned that this โ€œplainly heartfelt disagreementโ€ should not be mistaken by the public as โ€œdisparagement,โ€ as โ€œsuch misperception would be harmful to this institution and our country.โ€ Kagan agreed that no disparagement was intended, but felt it was her duty to โ€œraise[] the alarm when the Court has overreached.โ€

Our last case for the day (and the term) is United States v. Texas (22-58), where the Court addressed whether Texas and Louisiana had standing to challenge immigration enforcement guidelines promulgated in 2021 by the Secretary of Homeland Security that prioritize the arrest and removal from the United States of certain noncitizens, such as suspected terrorists, over others. The States argued that the guidelines were inconsistent with federal law requiring the detention of certain noncitizens upon their release from prison or a final order of removal, because the guidelines resulted in only a subset of those statutory categories being detained and removed. And the States claimed that they had standing to challenge the guidelines because the Executive Branchโ€™s failure to comply with the statutory requirements (and so to arrest and remove larger numbers of noncitizens) caused the States to incur costs for continued incarceration of these individuals or for providing them with social services (such as school or healthcare). The District Court agreed that those economic losses amounted to an injury for standing purpose. And on the merits, the District Court concluded that the Guidelines were unlawful, issuing an order vacating them. The Fifth Circuit declined to stay the District Courtโ€™s mandate, and the Court granted cert before judgment to review the issue.

The Court reversed, issuing several opinions that make the result a bit more complex than the 8-1 vote tally suggests. Justice Kavanaugh penned the majority opinion, joined by the Chief and Justices Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson. In their view, the States lacked standing because they had not alleged the right kind of injury. Standing requires a plaintiff to plead and prove an โ€œinjury in fact,โ€ but not every injury suffices; instead, a plaintiff must suffer a โ€œlegally and judicially cognizableโ€ one. Historically, Kavanaugh explained, courts had concluded that there is no cognizable injury arising from the Governmentโ€™s failure to prosecute another. Further, recognizing standing in such suits would interfere with the Executiveโ€™s Article II authority to determine how to prioritize its limited resources. Courts lack meaningful standards to evaluate the Executiveโ€™s enforcement choices, underscoring that this is not a suitable arena for judicial enforcement. The majority took pains, however, to limit its ruling, explaining that it was not holding that a failure to prosecute claim may never be cognizable. For example, standing might exist for selective prosecution claims under the Equal Protection Clause And the analysis might differ if Congress elevated de facto injuries into legally cognizable injuries or if the Executive wholly abandoned its statutory responsibility to make arrests or adopted a policy of not just declining to arrest but of providing benefits.

Justice Gorsuch, joined by Justices Thomas and Barrett, concurred in the judgment only. In their view, the Court correctly concluded that the States lacked standing, but for the wrong reason. To have standing, a plaintiff must have (1) a concrete and particularized injury; (2) that is traceable to the defendantโ€™s conduct; and (3) can be redressed by a court order. Gorsuch concluded that the States had alleged an injury in fact (financial detriment has long been recognized to be sufficient), and that this injury was traceable to defendantโ€™s conduct (failure to arrest immigrants as required by law directly led to the increased costs). Indeed, in Massachusetts v. EPA (2007), the Court already held that States have standing to challenge the federal governmentโ€™s failure to regulate (in that case, the EPAโ€™s failure to regulate greenhouse gas emissions). But even though the States could establish an injury in fact traceable to the defendantโ€™s conduct, that injury was not redressable by a court order, because federal law provides that โ€œno court (other than the Supreme Court) shall have jurisdiction or authority to enjoin or restrain the operation ofโ€ certain immigration laws, including the laws the States sought to have enforced in this case. That provision had been interpreted to bar โ€œlower courts from โ€ฆ order[ing] federal officials to take or to refrain from taking actions to enforce, implement, or otherwise carry out the specified statutory provisions.โ€ The District Court attempted to skirt that prohibition by vacating the guidelines rather than entering a mandatory injunction requiring the Executive Branch to enforce the statutes as written. But that did not solve the problem because the elimination of the guidelines would not necessarily result in the Executive Branch enforcing the laws as the State would like. This lack of redressability meant the States lacked standing. Gorsuch also doubted that the District Courtโ€™s remedyโ€”vacatur of the guidelinesโ€”was even authorized by the APA, forecasting that this issue raised โ€œseriousโ€ questions that โ€œthis Court will have to address sooner or later.โ€

Justice Barrett joined Justice Gorsuchโ€™s concurrence but penned a short separate concurrence to emphasize her disagreements with the majorityโ€™s opinion and in particular, their reliance on prior precedent to conclude that the States lacked an injury-in-fact here.

Justice Alito alone dissented, explaining that while it may be the case that the Executive often has discretion not to prosecute, that presumption was overcome here. The immigration laws at issue in the case were enacted in direct response to the Executive Branchโ€™s failure to address illegal immigration and to limit the Executive Branchโ€™s discretion by requiring the arrest of certain noncitizens. The statute even provided for a phase-in period, in recognition that the Executive Branch might not have enough resources to immediately adhere to the lawsโ€™ strict requirements. This would have been totally unnecessary if the Executive were free to disregard the legislative mandate. Alito criticized the majority for adopting a vision of sweeping Executive power that is not only inconsistent with the separation of powers between the three branches of government but is inconsistent with the Constitutionโ€™s command that the Executive โ€œtake care that the Laws be faithfully executed.โ€ In Alitoโ€™s view, the States clearly suffered an injury in fact from the Executiveโ€™s failure to enforce the law. And that injury was redressable: The Supreme Court itself could issue an injunction requiring enforcement. And even if the Court could not, vacating the Guidelines itself was likely to redress the injury, given the presumption that the Executive Branch would adhere to the Courtโ€™s authoritative interpretation of the law.

And with that, the Courtโ€™s 2022 Term comes to an end. We want to take this opportunity to thank our colleagues whoโ€™ve helped us summarize this termโ€™s 58 decisions: Aaron Bayer, Anjali Dalal, Ariela Anhalt, Emmett Gilles, Evan Bianchi, Jeff Babbin, Jonathan Freiman, Kim Rinehart, Michael Rondon, Nate Guevremont, and Sean Vallancourt. And we couldnโ€™t have brought these Updates to you without the assistance and support of our marketing and IT colleagues. Weโ€™ll be back this fall to preview some of OT23โ€™s most anticipated cases. Until then, enjoy your summer.

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