UC Law Journal
Abstract
The Appointments Clause permits Congress to opt out of the Article II procedure of presidential nomination and Senate advice and consent by vesting the appointment of "inferior officers" in "the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in the Heads of Departments." Congress exercised this option when it vested the power to appoint bankruptcy judges in the United States Courts of Appeals, implicitly categorizing these judges as "inferior officers" and thereby exposing a potential Achilles' heel. Although the Courts of Law have appointed bankruptcy adjudicators since the earliest bankruptcy laws, this Article advances the position that bankruptcy judges have gradually accrued tenure, safeguards against removal, expansive jurisdiction, and duties that are incompatible with inferior officer status under the balancing approach of Morrison v. Olson. Accordingly, they are not amenable to being opted out of advice and consent, and they must be appointed pursuant to the default Article II procedure. The appointments of present bankruptcy judges are consequently suspect, and their judgments and orders are of questionable validity.
An Article II challenge has escaped the attention of academic commentators and (largely) that of the courts. Resolution of the challenge will require the Supreme Court to clarify its Appointments Clause jurisprudence. This Article argues that the Court's pronouncements on inferior officers in Morrison and Edmond v. United States are irreconcilable. Which authority controls likely would dictate the outcome of any challenge. Accordingly, the Court must either acknowledge that Justice Scalia's majority opinion in Edmond has overruled its landmark decision in Morrison, or declare unconstitutional the present method of appointing bankruptcy judges. Thus, the challenge could be similar in scale to the Court's 1982 Marathon decision, which struck down, on separation-of-powers grounds, the bankruptcy courts' key jurisdictional provision.
Beyond charting a roadmap to the challenge, this Article suggests legislative remedies that could save bankruptcy judges from an Appointments Clause challenge. But, were the Court to resolve the challenge by abandoning Morrison in favor of Edmond, this Article suggests two policy implications: bankruptcy judges could be granted Article III tenure while retaining their present methods of appointment, and all inferior court Article III judges could be appointed in the same manner.
Recommended Citation
Tuan Samahon,
Are Bankruptcy Judges Unconstitutional? An Appointments Clause Challenge,
60 Hastings L.J. 233
(2008).
Available at: https://repository.uclawsf.edu/hastings_law_journal/vol60/iss2/2