The Volokh Conspiracy
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Who Would Win?: APA Vacatur Versus National Injunction
If you have elementary school age children, you probably know about the "Who Would Win?" books. The conceit is straightforward: posit two animals, and ask which of them would prevail in a struggle. Lion versus tiger, whale versus giant squid, tyrannosaurus rex versus velociraptor. For those who have followed the debate over national injunctions, we now have a new entry in this genre: APA vacatur versus national injunction.
In May, a district court issued a national injunction prohibiting the Biden administration from lifting Title 42, a COVID-related public health order that allows the expulsion of migrants. Yesterday, another district court purported to vacate Title 42 and issued a permanent injunction prohibiting the government from applying Title 42 to members of the plaintiff class.
The injunctions themselves are not quite conflicting: "don't lift Title 42" and "don't apply Title 42 to this class" are not in conflict, because the government can obey both. The former goes to an action the administration might take with regard to the order itself, while the latter goes to actions regarding its enforcement against specified people. (It's standard equity practice to distinguish between the legal rule and its application.) And because the injunction protects the plaintiff class, it is not a "national injunction" or "nationwide injunction" as defined in Multiple Chancellors and other literature on the subject. So we don't yet have two conflicting national injunctions, though once again it's a close run thing.
But there is a stronger inconsistency between the purported vacatur and the injunction. The purported vacatur says that Title 42 for legal purposes does not exist, i.e., it is void and of no effect, annulled. If vacatur is a remedy, then that is exactly what it means. But the injunction says the administration is not allowed to terminate Title 42, which is gobbledygook unless there is such a thing as Title 42.
When I say "if vacatur is a remedy," that's because I don't think it is. Despite its flourishing in the DC Circuit in recent decades, there is no traditional remedy of "vacatur." Scour the legal and equitable remedies and you won't find it. Vacating is an action taken with respect to a judgment. It is not an action taken with respect to a legal norm like a statute or a rule. This is first principles stuff: see Mellon v. Massachusetts, or as Justice Breyer said in his opinion for the Court in California v. Texas, remedies "do not simply operate on legal rules in the abstract."
If you want to read more, the leading work on this is a series of recent pieces by John Harrison, including Vacatur of Rules Under the Administrative Procedure Act and Remand Without Vacatur and the Ab Initio Invalidity of Unlawful Regulations in Administrative Law. The leading source on the other side is Mila Sohoni's The Power to Vacate a Rule.
Saddle up!
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Why not address the underlying issue -- a District Court purporting to have NATIONAL authority.
I thought that only the US Supreme Court had national authority...
What happened to Emmet Sullivan?
Superman vs The Hulk??? explain your reasoning, and no fair using Kryptonite (or it's many Allotropes, Red, Green, Blue Orange, Bizarro)
Biden vs Corn Pop. No chains allowed.
Superman, absolutely. Even assuming they're equally strong and durable, Superman has super speed, and flight. He can just keep sucker punching the Hulk until he's in LEO, and the Hulk can only hold his breath for so long.
It's not even a close thing, unless Sups stupidly lets the Hulk get a grip on him. Then it could get dicey, but Sups can still fly up into space.
OK. Next up DC superheroes vs Marvel superheroes in a battle royal.
Superman punches out planets all the time. Hulk only did that once, in the 1960s, and never came close again.
Gay Superman or straight Superman?
Gay Superman vs straight Superman; who would win?
Wasn't Gay Superman Straight Superman's son? On the one hand, Straight Superman has vastly more experience, and isn't as concerned about his face getting messed up. OTOH, he might not have his heart in it.
remedies "do not simply operate on legal rules in the abstract."
And yet common law courts in many jurisdictions have, for many decades or even longer, happly granted the remedy known as a quashing order in England, which appears to be the equivalent of a vacatur in the US, i.e. an order which has the legal effect of removing the offending legal act from the body of the law. Quashing something is not the same thing as giving a declaration that the legal act cannot be applied or enforced (because it is ultra vires in some way, or was prepared using an unlawful process, etc.). Quashing something means removing it from the statute book.
Of course, while the way courts give effect to laws created by the legislature and the executive branch is inevitably based on common law lawmaking to some extent, the exact nature in which remedies can be developed will vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, depending on separation of powers considerations. But in principle I see no reason why the courts couldn't develop a remedy of vacating unlawful executive branch actions.
You would think the case should be moot because if the plaintiffs had COVID when they sued in January, 2021 they must be over it by now. But I guess the rule says once infected, forever infected.
Great topic! how about
1: Supergirl vs Wonder Woman?
2: Catwoman vs Batwoman?
3: Lois Lane vs Lana Lang?
4: Ginger vs Mary Ann?
5: Betty vs Veronica?
and what was Catwoman's "Super Power"? retractable claws? Foot pads to allow her to ambush Super Villains? Ability to land on her feet?
Frank
My son really liked the T-Rex v. Velociraptor one when he was younger. I'm not so sure that vacatur v. national injunction would've captured his interest the same way.
He hasn't become you, yet.
Werewolf or Vampire???? Herschel Walker's definitely got that Issue down....https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/nov/17/herschel-walker-republican-georgia-werewolf-vampire
Still voting for him (again)
Frank