The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
Making Sense of Chrysafis v. Marks
Who rules in favor of the Constitution, but then pulls his punches to avoid doing anything progressives will dislike?
On Thursday, the Court decided Chrysafis v. Marks. A majority of the Court granted an application for injunctive relief against the enforcement of part of New York's eviction protections. Justices Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan dissented. We cannot be certain the Court split 6-3, as a justice in the majority may have declined to note his or her dissent. In this post, I will try to make sense of this perplexing entry on the shadow docket.
On July 27, landlords filed an emergency application for injunctive relief. They are represented by Randy Michael Mastro of Gibson Dunn's New York office. Mastro also successfully represented the Roman Catholic of Brooklyn against (almost former-)Governor Cuomo. He has scored two huge COVID-19 victories on the shadow docket.
The writ presented two questions:
1. Whether New York's eviction moratorium law, which continues to block property owners from pursuing eviction proceedings or otherwise challenging their tenants' bald claims of COVID-19 "hardship," and compels them to serve as the government's mouthpieces in transmitting government-drafted messages, declaration forms, and lists of recommended legal service providers to their tenants, deprives these property owners of their due process rights and violates their First Amendment rights against compelled speech.
2. Whether the courts below erred in concluding that Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U.S. 11 (1905), requires the application of deferential, rational basis review in evaluating constitutional challenges to government action taken in response to a public health emergency, particularly where, as here, New York has declared its "state of emergency" to be over.
But the Court declined to decide these questions. Instead, the Court limited the Plaintiffs to the "only reliefs applicants" sought in their application:
Applicants therefore respectfully request that the Circuit Justice—or the full Court after referral—grant this application to enjoin Part A of CEEFPA, as extended, pending disposition of Applicants' expedited appeal in the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and disposition of any petition for a writ of certiorari and, if such writ is granted, until the rendering of this Court's judgment.
What is Part A of CEEFPA? The Court explains in one sentence:
If a tenant self-certifies financial hardship, Part A of CEEFPA generally precludes a landlord from contesting that certification and denies the landlord a hearing.
The landlords made two primary arguments why Part A is unconstitutional. First, Part A violates the landlords' procedural due process rights.
CEEFPA deprives Applicants of their procedural due process rights by mandating that a tenant's mere submission of a hardship declaration establishes a categorical bar to the commencement or continuation of an eviction proceeding until at least August 31, 2021. CEEFPA Part A §§ 4-6, 8; CEEFPA Extension §§ 2-3. Property owners are given no opportunity to rebut tenants' hardship declarations, for which tenants need only check a box asserting that eviction would result in either a "significant health risk" or a "financial hardship" to the tenants, with the latter category covering several vague and undefined subcategories. Property owners are not given a chance to be heard at a "meaningful time" or in a "meaningful manner," because they are not given a chance to be heard at all through at least August 31, 2021, with further extensions possibly to follow. And even when CEEFPA eventually expires, a tenant's unsubstantiated claim of financial hardship creates an indefinite rebuttable presumption of such hardship in any eviction proceedings that are based on failure to pay rent during the pandemic. CEEFPA Part A § 11.
The District Court, of course, relied on Jacobson and upheld the policy.
Second, the landlords argued that Part A violates their free speech rights:
Here, because CEEFPA mandates speech that Applicants would not otherwise make, and compels them to speak a particular message—outside the context of a proposed commercial transaction—strict scrutiny applies. And, because the State cannot possibly establish that CEEFPA's requirements are narrowly tailored to a compelling government interest, CEEFPA cannot withstand that strict scrutiny
The New York Attorney General (who does not work for the Governor) argued that the equities do not support an injunction. The regime expires "in just a few weeks"--26 days to be precise. I think we can characterize a duration of less than a month as a "few weeks." But a full month is not a "few weeks." Here, the AG made an obvious play for Justice Kavanaugh's vote, who treated a month as a "few weeks" in the Alabama case:
Although some members of this Court expressed doubts about the CDC's statutory authority to issue such a moratorium, the equities nonetheless weighed against any stay of the moratorium in light of its scheduled expiration "in only a few weeks" and the need for time to ensure "more orderly distribution of the congressionally appropriated rental assistance funds." (Kavanaugh, J., concurring).
The landlords filed their reply brief on August 5. It took the Court exactly one week to put out a shadow docket order, with a four-page dissent by Justice Breyer. (This brisk pace supports my suspicion that the Alabama petition was held to moot the case). Had the Court waited three more weeks, the case arguably would have been mooted out. At that point, Chief Justice Roberts--keeping with his Roman Catholic Diocese vote--would have opposed an injunction.
The Court's analysis is exactly one sentence long with two citations:
This scheme violates the Court's longstanding teaching that ordinarily "no man can be a judge in his own case" consistent with the Due Process Clause. In re Murchison, 349 U. S. 133, 136 (1955); see United States v. James Daniel Good Real Property, 510 U. S. 43, 53 (1993) (due process generally requires a hearing).
What happened here? Here are my completely unfounded theories.
First, the Court did not address either of the applicant's arguments. The Court did not decide whether the landlords' procedural due process rights were violated. Nor did the Court decide if their free speech rights were violated. And Jacobson remains undisturbed.
Second, the Court fashioned an argument out of whole cloth that the parties did not raise: the entire "scheme" violates the Due Process of Law because "no man can be a judge in his own case." Huh? Who is the judge here? No one argues that the hearing judge in the eviction process is biased. Instead the judge, apparently, is the tenant. By indicating that he suffers a financial hardship, the landlord is (almost) automatically denied a hearing. In other words, the tenant gets to judge his own case of whether he suffers a financial hardship. This argument is bizarre. If the landlord cannot rebut the tenant's claims, then the landlord's procedural due process rights are violated. But a tenant is not the judge in his own case because he can make a self-certification that yields an automatic continuance.
And I agree with Justice Breyer's dissent that a small delay in a proceeding is not an "indisputably clear" violation of Due Process:
Respondent argues, how-ever, that the law is best viewed not as a deprivation of the right to challenge a tenant's hardship claim but as simply delaying the exercise of that right—as of now for less than three weeks until the law expires. After August 31, New York's eviction proceedings will be conducted exactly as they were before CEEFPA's enactment. Our precedents do not make it "indisputably clear" that this delay violates the Constitution.
It can take six months to evict someone in New York!
Third, none of the parties cited In re Murchison (1955). This precedent is obscure. And it doesn't come close to supporting the Court's rule. Michigan used a strange system where a single judge served as a one-man grand jury, and then presided over a criminal contempt trial for a witness who perjured himself before that one-man grand jury. The same person literally judged his own case. Justice Black's majority opinion rejected this scheme:
A fair trial in a fair tribunal is a basic requirement of due process. Fairness of course requires an absence of actual bias in the trial of cases. But our system of law has always endeavored to prevent even the probability of unfairness. To this end no man can be a judge in his own case and no man is permitted to try cases where he has an interest in the outcome. That interest cannot be defined with precision. Circumstances and relationships must be considered.
In Murchison, the concern was about bias. The judge who presided over the grand jury is potentially biased, and not a neutral arbiter to assess the perjury trial. Thus, no man can be a judge in his own cause.
How does this case relate to Section A? There is no allegation of any sort of bias. The tenant merely checked a box on a form. And there was a continuance by operation of law. The problem, if there is one, is that the landlords are denied their rights to rebut the evidence presented against them.
It is painfully obvious here the Court did not want to make an actual decision about constitutional law. Instead, it reached for an ancient Latin maxim, nemo iudex in causa sua, and called it a day. Indeed, the Supreme Court has never cited Murchison for this proposition. The case has only been cited by the Court five times, ever.
Fourth, the Court spent far more time explaining what it was not deciding than what it was deciding:
This order does not enjoin the enforcement of the Tenant Safe Harbor Act (TSHA), which applicants do not challenge. 2020 N. Y. Laws ch. 127, §§1, 2(2)(a). Among other things, TSHA instructs New York courts to entertain a COVID-related hardship defense in eviction proceedings, assessing a tenant's income prior to COVID, income during COVID, liquid assets, and ability to obtain government assistance. §2(2)(b). If the court finds the tenant "has suffered a financial hardship" during a statutorily-prescribed period, then it "shall [not] issue a warrant of eviction or judgment of pos-session." §2(1).
In other words, tenants can still fight eviction by demonstrating they have a "financial hardship." It is not enough to simply check a box on a form. The tenant must provide some evidence of the income, liquid assets, and other benefits. At the margin, some people subject to eviction may not be able to make this showing. But I speculate that most people who would have benefited from Section A would also benefit from the TSHA.
How can we explain this opinion? Why did the Court go out of its way to explain there are so many other ways tenants can postpone evictions? What could possibly explain such sappy virtue signaling? Who feels the need to apologize when he reaches a conservative result? Who rules in favor of the Constitution, but then pulls his punches to avoid doing anything progressives will dislike? Who's been messing up everything? It's been Kavanaugh all along.
I suspect Justice Kavanaugh proposed this nonsensical, hyper-technical ruling, based on a precedent no one even remembers, to avoid making any sweeping rulings on procedural due process, Jacobson, and the First Amendment. And this narrow decision appealed to the Chief Justice's obsession with judicial independence--even when the judge is not a judge, but actually a tenant. Didn't Roberts's icon John Marshall say "no man should be a judge in his own case?" Nevermind, Marshall failed to recuse in Marbury, where he personally failed to deliver the commission. In any event, it isn't clear that Roberts actually joined the opinion. He could have simply declined to note his dissent. But I'm inclined to think Kavanaugh got Roberts's vote with this proffer. I would have much preferred a 5-4 decision that actually gave guidance to the lower courts. This decision likely will not have any application outside of New York's unique regime.
I still have one more lingering question. Why didn't Kavanaugh, once again, sit on the New York application for a few weeks so it moots out on August 31? After all the federal eviction moratorium remains in place. Even if the New York landlords get relief from the state law, the state courts are still barred from hearing eviction cases. Me thinks the Roberts Court is clearing the deck to enjoin the federal eviction moratorium, soon.
Then we have Justice Breyer's four-page dissent. He cites Chief Justice Roberts's South Bay concurrence twice.
Under these circumstances, such drastic relief would only be appropriate if "the legal rights at issue [we]re indisputably clear and, even then, sparingly and only in the most critical and exigent circumstances." South Bay United Pentecostal Church v. Newsom, 590 U. S. ___, ___ (2020) (ROBERTS, C. J., concurring) (slip op., at 2) (internal quotation marks omitted). . . . .
The legislature does not enjoy unlimited discretion in formulating that response, but in this case I would not second-guess politically accountable officials' determination of how best to "guard and protect" the people of New York. South Bay United Pentecostal Church, 590 U. S., at ___ (ROBERTS, C. J., concurring) (slip op., at 2) (quoting Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U. S. 11, 38 (1905)).
Roberts doesn't even bother to respond--not even to the Jacobson citation. Thankfully, the super-precedent is no more.
My new article, The Irrepressible Myth of Jacobson v. Massachusetts should be on SSRN and Scholastica by Monday. I am putting the finishing touches on the article now.
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Fascinating....they did not sue under 'Takings', but rather free speech and overreach of powers. Why is that? That has to be a tactical decision, no?
I would have thought the landlords would sue and prevail on: Yo, you took my stuff and deprived me of the use of my property. And oh, while we are at it, you're upending contract law too.
But no...free speech and overreach of powers. Can someone much smarter than me please help me understand the rationale of this approach? What is the tactical thinking behind arguing these questions, and not Takings or contract law?
Takings- they deprived me of the use of my property and I want money.
Injunction- please stop them from doing what they are doing.
They were asking for injunctive relief.
Who? Traitor filth of the lawyer profession. They are all the same. All must be arrested to save our nation.
I suspect Justice Kavanaugh proposed this nonsensical, hyper-technical ruling, based on a precedent no one even remembers, to avoid making any sweeping rulings on procedural due process, Jacobson, and the First Amendment. And this narrow decision appealed to the Chief Justice's obsession with judicial independence–even when the judge is not a judge, but actually a tenant
This has just become hate-fiction of the justices who have betrayed you by not owning the libs enough.
Yep.
This really turning into some kind of slash fiction, more appropriate for a reddit subform than a legal blog.
"And then Kagan and Roberts totally hooked up, and Kagan whispered in his ear ... you don't like injunctions, baby, do you?"
I have devoted at least 4,000 hours since 2000 to defeating Republicans and conservatives (and some lesser Democrats and liberals) in court, at polling places, in boiler rooms, at legislatures, with committees, at training sessions, etc.
Reading these contributions from Prof. Blackman vindicates that effort and is worth every foregone penny (more than 200 million pennies at rack rate, just under 200 million pennies at realization rate).
I have watched people whose dedication to this important cause has dwarfed mine, through times that could be fun, exciting, interesting, depressing, boring, and trying. Every person who has helped the liberal-libertarian mainstream defeat right-wingers in the American culture war has my admiration, respect, and thanks.
Artie: Traitor filth going to re-education camp in 2025.
Every American who votes Republican prays that, if their guy is elected President, he will appoint judges who will uphold the Constitution -- i.e., stand up for our rights. Unfortunately, half the time they don't. And when they do, Sarcastr0 dismisses it as "owning the libs." Antonin Scalia did not "own the libs." He stood up for the Constitution, for our rights. The Constitution is sacred to us. Your deprecating remark reveals the depth of your contempt for it.
You whimper like an unreconstructed loser, Ed Grinberg. You chose your fate when you went with ignorance, backwardness, downscale superstition, and intolerance. Now you must live with it.
Until replacement.
Artie: traitor filth to re-education camps in 2025.
And Democrats likewise want judges who will uphold the Constitution. We just disagree with you as to what the Constitution means.
Yeah, your idea of "what the Constitution means" perfectly lines up with your policy preferences. You think "shall not be infringed" allows for de facto gun bans, and you think general notions of due process creates a right to kill a third trimester baby and a right to ejaculate into another man's colon.
Oh, and you don't think your idea of what the Constitution means lines up with your policy preferences?
It doesn't for me. I hate the fact that a woman can illegally enter the country and give birth to child immediately after crossing the border and that child is born a citizen of the U.S. But the Constitution says that's the way it works so I'm stuck with it unless there is an amendment to change that.
No. It doesn't. My policy preference would limit the 14th Amendment's application to whites only, but that's not what the Constitution says.
If nothing else, your candor is refreshing
I know making a Constitutional argument when I see it, and I know a partisan tantrum when I see it.
And this is the latter.
"justices who have betrayed you "
You just have no experience with justices [Stevens, Souter, O'Connor, Kennedy, Roberts] who ought to be with with you but who screw you on important, even vital, issues. Its tiring.
Big worries about Kav.
Gorsuch of course did a Kennedy on Bostock, plus his Oklahoma tribal decision was bad too.
Or, maybe they're right on the law.
This is the attitude of someone who is into outcome-oriented reasoning - owning the libs.
Alito isn't an originalist, but he does own the libs. And he is therefore 'with you.'
Your attempt to defend Blackman has revealed what you think of as being a good justice, and it's not about the Constitution.
They call it 'owning the libs.'
It is nothing more than ankle-nipping.
"you think of as being a good justice, and it’s not about the Constitution."
The courts have not followed the Constitution since Marbury really. The court really stated burning it down starting with the New Deal court and the Warren court buried the ashes.
Politicians in robes should be treated as such.
Hold that thought for the Court enlargement discussions . . .
W/R/T the McGirt decision Bob from Ohio, are you displeased because of Gorsuch's constitutional reasoning, or because of the chaos that has ensued in the aftermath of the decision?
The chaos mainly but it was weak reasoning too. Came down to Tail of Tears was bad appeal to vague fairness. I don't think there is a conservative consensus on it though.
Its Bostock that made people sit it up about Gorsuch. He's on probation basically with a lot of people.
Ok, I understand that = The chaos mainly
The constitutional reasoning part....I leave that to the law professors and lawyers like you and Sarcastr0. To me, the core issue was always much simpler and direct: Yo...a deal is a deal. Live with it. Negotiate a better deal next time.
Sometimes it really sucks having to live up to the terms of a contract. I bet you see that a lot in your line of business (real estate, right?).
At first I was amazed that Josh would see how bizarre the reasoning here is.
Then I saw that it was really just a gripe about the conservatives on the Court still letting him down.
My money is on Gorsuch, for this one. I don't think the Court is particularly afraid of upsetting the liberals. I think this is a case where they have a principled objection to the moratorium, and they reached for a half-baked rationale to block it. Seems like a classic Gorsuch move.
Fallout from the CDC moratorium: Justices look for any reason to strike, even a hypertechnical one, and even on something that expires soon.
They are probably all on vaca in Cabo and were like "Yeah whatever random quote you can find, we are sick and tired of this shit and ain't got time. Dooo it."
The dissent is well thought out. Might have even got a few more votes had the Biden admin just played them like fools.
Basically its a signal to Judge Friedrich who is handling the CDC moratorium. Hopefully he issues his orders soon. Anyone want to place bets whether the DC circuit stays the order? I bet not. I think that Tribe convinced Biden to basically burn a bridge .
Apparently, he didn't get the memo.
Denied the Realtors' application to bar the new moratorium, saying it was too similar to the previous one which had been upheld by the DC Circuit.
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/08/13/biden-eviction-ban-survives-initial-court-challenge-504415
In a strictly legal sense, not an indefensible decision to take. The new moratorium IS nearly identical to the last one. The DC Circuit did uphold the last one. And, as a district court judge, he is bound by DC Circuit decisions, seeing as how they are that funny thing called "precedent". So now it will go to the DC Circuit, who presumably will sit upon it (if they can get a Democratic appointee majority on the panel) until it's going to be moot. Dutiful servants of the party what appointed them.
Realtors may take a flier on petitioning for cert before the Circuit gets to rule, maybe ask for stays both in the district and circuit, get denied and go to the SCt for one. Since Roberts is the Circuit Justice for the DC Circuit, it lands in his lap.
yep, let the games begin.
I agree this was the right decision, but I don't see why she waited a week if she was going to do this.
“Basically its a signal to Judge Friedrich who is handling the CDC moratorium. Hopefully he issues his orders soon.”
‘He’ is a she: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dabney_L._Friedrich
Although I suppose one may need to check on a daily basis these days.
Why should a constitutional scholar have to make unfounded speculation about a supreme court decision?
Because the least dangerous branch morphed into the most dangerous decades ago.
Yes, nothing happens until the Black Robed Masters deem to bless it.
Seems to me all this would be unnecessary if whomever is withholding the appropriated assistance funds for whatever reason would release the appropriated assistance funds.
That has occurred to me too. The landlords are suffering terribly, and their suffering could be alleviated by releasing the funds and paying them. Why has this not been done?
K_2,
My understanding, based on cursory readings, is that the tenants have to cooperate in some manner to release the funds.
Some claim that would be to the disadvantage of the tenants in future actions to recoup the potion of unpaid rent that is still owed about the moratorium finally lapses.
I may be way off base, but that is what I recall from hasty reading.
If that's the case, then the moratorium should have included language that it only applies to tenants who cooperate.
Could be, but as I said I am far from sure.
Anybody else find this post to be largely incomprehensible?
The 'lamentations of their women' stage is rarely marked by its elegance or meticulous reasoning.
"We cannot be certain the Court split 6-3, as a justice in the majority may have declined to note his or her dissent."
Huh? How can a Justice in the majority dissent?
He meant "dissent" instead of "majority".
The order was unsigned. We only assume it was 6-3. There could have been a fourth dissenter who did not join Breyer's dissent but did not care to note his/her disagreement.
How does this case relate to Section A? There is no allegation of any sort of bias. The landlord merely checked a box on a form. And there was a continuance by operation of law. The problem, if there is one, is that the landlords are denied their rights to rebut the evidence presented against them.
I think you meant "the TENANT merely checked a box on a form".
Every tenant has had every incentive to check the box on the form, and no incentive to not check the box on the form, for a year and a half. On the average NYC apartment rental, we're talking pocketing tens of thousands of dollars in that time. I'd judge that checking the box was the way to go.
Why is NY not distributing the money appropriated for the purpose of getting the landlords paid? Two reasons: (1) they're generally inept at getting anything done in their bureaucracy, a tendency exacerbated by the excuse of "corona"; (2) the money is supposed to go directly to the landlords and that would not comport with the NYC Democrats' principle of "smash the landlords and take their land", because it would allow them to continue paying their mortgages.
And, as to "politically accountable officials", we all saw what it took to get Governor Cuomo. Nice timing on the case, FWIW.
"What happened here? Here are my completely unfounded theories."
-A self-purported "scholar" who then proceeds, per usual, to grace this website with whatever errant thoughts flit through his mind.
Self purported? Perhaps. But also widely recognized as such.
Biden wins CDC round 1:
https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/567753-federal-judge-rejects-effort-to-block-eviction-moratorium
Will the shadow docket strike again?
His only point was to delay, and "win" that way. So unless the Supreme Court enjoined it the same day, it was a "win."
These people should be gassed. I hope Biden's remaining son dies of cancer too.
Flagged
Prof. Volokh established long ago that calling for people (liberals, at least) to be gassed, shot in the face, placed face-down in landfills, shot in the rectum, sent to Zyklon showers, and the like are well within this blog's self-described "civility standards."
He repeatedly censors those who describe conservatives as "sl_ck-j_wed" or "c_p succ_rs," or those who make fun of Republicans too deftly, however. And he is nonetheless a libertarian-leaning champion of free expression and liberty . . . just ask him. Or his incel fanboys.
Volokh: The most important First Amendment issue of our times is my right to say the N-word, hard r.
Also Volokh: I see no problem with the State steamrolling anyone who objects to the IDF no-scoping Palestinian teenagers.
What is no-scoping?
I'm no expert on these technicalities. However, I have to question your judgement on this matter because you bring up several points that are nonsensical. Perhaps you are letting your emotions get the better of you.
1: "Why didn't they just let it expire like Kavanaugh said?" This is obvious. Because Kavanaugh allowed the moratorium due to the imminent expiration and then it was extended, perhaps it will be extended indefinitely. Once bitten twice shy. There is no reason to think that this will not be a similar situation
2: Secondly, your vitriol makes no sense. The application of the "a man may not judge his own case" maxim is obvious. The renter can make a declaration and there is no hearing, objection, appeal, or even a counterpoint. It's no a perfect fit, but it's close enough for the point.
As for why it isn't tailored to this case, to be honest, I highly suspect that one of the justices had much of this opinion pre-written for when this occurred. It stinks of a rush job.
I'm so confused.
Read the questions presented again. The first one is worded in an extremely political manner to just barely be something the court can decide judicibly, and the second is a complete non-starter! Like imo whoever filed this ought to be sued for malpractice and the landlords should have had a much better lawyer. And yet they won!
Not on those grounds, because those grounds are stupid, but they won nonetheless. Even though the argument they won on is somewhat incomprehensible ad well! And this isn't a pyrric victory either.
Randy Mastro, the lawyer who won this case and the Brooklyn Diocese case, is nothing if not political. Everything he does is informed by political posturing.
And for that matter, this whole moratorium thing is "political". It's a matter of Democrats buying votes with sob stories.
I think you missed the point.
Yes, actions by the legislature and the executive are ... supposed to be political. That is the political branch. Right? Political isn't just an epithet people toss around. It means a lot of things, such as ... accountable to the voters. We not only expect, we want those decisions to be informed by political concerns. Not controlled, but informed.
On the other hand, the judicial branch is supposed to be non-political, and attorneys should not winning appellate court arguments with political posturing. That is, for lack of a better word, bad.