Court Opinion

ID: 4120567
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-01-27 22:48:22.221815+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:37:32.423344
License: Public Domain

Applicability of Executive Privilege to
                      Independent Regulatory Agencies
A case cannot be made for absolute exclusion of the so-called independent regulatory agencies from
  the doctrine of executive privilege.
Although free from executive control in the exercise of quasi-legislative and quasi-judicial functions,
   independent regulatory agencies frequently exercise important functions executive in nature.
As to the latter functions, the doctrine of executive privilege is as much applicable to regulatory
  commissions as to the executive departments and officers of the government.

                                                                                  November 5, 1957

                 MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL

   This is with reference to your memorandum of June 29, 1957, concerning the
question raised by Senator Saltonstall in connection with the recent hearings on
the nomination of J. Sinclair Armstrong as Assistant Secretary of the Navy as to
the applicability of the doctrine of executive privilege to members of “independ-
ent” regulatory agencies, such as the Securities and Exchange Commission
(“SEC”). In this regard you have asked us to review Mr. Armstrong’s testimony
and the earlier memorandum* originating from this Office which deals with the
question. We have proceeded on the assumption, which you have asked us to
make, that the President has authorized assertion of the privilege with respect to a
demand for disclosure by a committee of Congress.

                                           I. Summary

   Because the subject is not only important and controversial but also obscure it
has been necessary to canvass and discuss a considerable amount of material. This
discussion is set out in detail below. Because of its length we have deemed it
helpful to precede the discussion with the following summary:
   The issue in the hearing on Mr. Armstrong’s nomination was whether Mr.
Armstrong as chairman of the SEC had properly asserted in 1955 the right to
withhold from an investigating committee of the Senate communications between
himself and the Assistant to the President, Governor Adams, concerning a
proceeding before the SEC for the approval of the financing of the Dixon-Yates
contract. Mr. Armstrong took that position upon the basis of the President’s letter
of May 17, 1954, to the Secretary of Defense advising him that the public interest
required that, in testifying before congressional committees, employees of the

    *
      Editor’s Note: The referenced memorandum is understood to be Assertion of Executive Privilege
by the Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, 1 Op. O.L.C. Supp. 468 (Jan. 5, 1956), included
later in this volume and discussed in the body of this memorandum opinion at page 180.

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Executive Branch must not disclose their internal communications. Finally, upon
written advice from the Attorney General, Mr. Armstrong disclosed the substance
of the communications. The Attorney General stated that the directive of the
President was inapplicable to a quasi-judicial proceeding such as was involved
before the SEC. He assumed, however, that the President’s directive extended to
the internal affairs of the SEC and to communications between the SEC and the
Executive Branch regarding administrative matters.
   At the hearing on Mr. Armstrong’s nomination one Senator (Senator Russell)
went so far as to question whether the SEC as an independent agency had any
right even to consult the Attorney General on such matters. Senator Saltonstall
said he would not attempt to pass on the question.
   In our earlier memorandum, which dealt with the assertion of privilege by
Admiral Strauss as chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission (“AEC”) with
respect to conversations with the White House concerning the repudiation of the
Dixon-Yates contract, the position was taken that the President’s letter was
applicable, whether or not the AEC as a technical matter was part of the executive
branch, since in the Dixon-Yates matter the AEC was exercising an executive
function.
   Some of the so-called independent regulatory commissions appear to take the
view that whether or not the doctrine of executive privilege applies in their case
depends upon the nature of the function involved. They assert that they are entitled
to invoke the privilege where the communication relates to their executive or
administrative functions but not if it involves their quasi-legislative or quasi-
judicial functions. Other agencies, such as the Federal Trade Commission and the
Interstate Commerce Commission, take the position, without attempting to
differentiate between their functions, that as “arms of Congress” they are not
bound by any doctrine of executive privilege.
   Some legislative analysts of the problem, denying that the Executive Branch
can itself properly assert the privilege, state that a fortiori an independent
regulatory body cannot assert it. But apart from this broad proposition, they argue
more narrowly that such bodies, in the information phases of their activities, are
wholly independent from direction by the Executive Branch, and apparently they
make no differentiation on the basis of whether the information relates to execu-
tive, quasi-legislative, or quasi-judicial functions.
   No federal court has passed upon the precise question here involved. The deci-
sion which most nearly bears on the question is Humphrey’s Executor v. United
States, 295 U.S. 602, decided in 1935. Those who deny the applicability of the
doctrine of executive privilege to the so-called independent regulatory agencies
place great reliance on Humphrey’s Executor. In that case the Supreme Court held
that the independent status of the Federal Trade Commission prevented the
President from removing its members within his uncontrolled discretion. But we
think the case cannot be invoked as a complete charter of independence of the

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regulatory commissions from executive control. The Court itself noted one
exception, namely, that the President was vested with the power to select its
members. Accordingly, even under Humphrey’s Executor we believe that the
doctrine of executive privilege could be properly asserted, for example, as to
conversations between the President and members of an independent regulatory
agency concerning the appointment of members. Moreover, where the agency has
important executive functions it is our view that Humphrey’s Executor cannot be
cited to deny the existence of executive privilege at least where it relates to the
exercise of such functions. In some areas Congress has itself subjected the
independent regulatory commissions to executive control. For example, the
President has been authorized to apply the federal employee’s security program to
all departments and agencies of the government. This includes the regulatory
commissions. Hence, it is our opinion that they are also subject to the require-
ments of secrecy governing employee security matters. The President’s power to
remove commission members for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance
(Federal Trade Commission, Interstate Commerce Commission, Atomic Energy
Commission, Civil Aeronautics Board) implies that he may exercise a certain
amount of managerial authority over the commission. It would seem to follow that
in this area the commission would be obligated to respect the President’s wishes as
to the release of communications between the commission and the President of his
staff. That the independent regulatory commissions are not entirely divorced from
the Executive Branch is further supported by the established practice which
regards them as entitled to obtain formal legal advice from the Attorney General.
    While the question of executive privilege has been the subject of considerable
professional comment, no one has centered upon application of the privilege to the
independent regulatory commission. The most comprehensive study and analysis
of the relationship between the independent regulatory agencies and the President
is that made by Professor Robert E. Cushman in The Independent Regulatory
Commissions, published in 1941. The conclusions reached by Professor Cushman
support those reached by us above.
    We conclude in short that no valid case can be stated for excluding absolutely
the so-called independent regulatory agencies from the doctrine of executive
privilege. In many respects their functions and operations are subject to executive
control. In such cases the doctrine of executive privilege should apply to the
independent regulatory commissions to the same extent that it applies to the
executive departments and officers of the federal government.

                          II. The Armstrong Testimony

   On May 14, 1957, a hearing was held before the Senate Committee on Armed
Services on the nomination of J. Sinclair Armstrong to be an Assistant Secretary
of the Navy. Mr. Armstrong was interrogated by Senator Kefauver concerning his
testimony in 1955 before the Subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee on

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         Applicability of Executive Privilege to Independent Regulatory Agencies

Antitrust and Monopoly regarding certain aspects of the Dixon-Yates contract.
Nomination of J. Sinclair Armstrong to Be Assistant Secretary of the Navy:
Hearing Before the S. Comm. on Armed Services, 85th Cong. 6–36 (1957) (“1957
Hearing”). Senator Kefauver stated that on the basis of Mr. Armstrong’s conduct
at that time he would have to oppose Mr. Armstrong’s nomination:

          The grounds on which I oppose Mr. Armstrong’s confirmation
       arise out of his handling of certain important aspects of the Dixon-
       Yates case, in his role as Chairman of the Securities and Exchange
       Commission.

Id. at 6–7.

        A. Armstrong’s Testimony Before the Senate Subcommittee on
                          Antitrust and Monopoly

   In 1955 the Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly initiated an investigation
of the role of the First Boston Corporation, through one of its officers, Adolphe H.
Wenzell, in the negotiations leading up to the Dixon-Yates contract. Mr. Wenzell
had been retained by the Bureau of the Budget as a consultant in connection with
certain features of the contract; it was claimed that there might be a possible
conflict of interest arising from Wenzell’s position with the First Boston Corpora-
tion.
    At this time Armstrong was Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Com-
mission, before which were pending applications of the Dixon-Yates companies
for approval of their proposed financing of the contract project. On June 27, 1955,
Senator Kefauver, who was a member of the subcommittee, wrote Mr. Armstrong
inquiring as to the reasons for postponement of the hearings on the applications:

          On Monday, June 13, representatives of the First Boston Corp.
       and Adolphe H. Wenzell, formerly a vice president of the corpora-
       tion, were scheduled to testify before the SEC in connection with the
       financing plans of the Mississippi Valley Generating Co., better
       known as the Dixon-Yates contract.

          Without notice or explanation the Commission directed the trial
       examiner to suspend the taking of testimony. The hearings were later
       resumed on Thursday, June 16, still with no explanation as to the
       reason for the cancellation.

           I should like to inquire from you whether any request or represen-
       tation was made to the Commission with respect to the suspension of
       the hearings. I should also like to inquire whether any representation
       was made to the Commission by any official or representative of the

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        Government asking that the hearing scheduled for June 13 can be
        canceled, or whether such cancellation was discussed by the Com-
        mission with any officials or representatives of any other branch of
        the Government.

Quoted in Power Policy—Dixon-Yates Contract: Hearings Before the Subcomm.
on Antitrust and Monopoly of the S. Comm. on the Judiciary, 84th Cong., pt. 1, at
326 (1956) (“1955 Hearing”). On July 11, 1955, Mr. Armstrong advised Senator
Kefauver that the SEC could not supply such information because, the application
still being before the Commission, “we do not believe that it would be consistent
with the orderly conduct of the administrative processes of this agency to subject
to concurrent congressional review the manner in which this Commission is
discharging its quasi-judicial functions in this proceeding”; and “this Commission
is bound to respect the privileged and confidential nature of communications
within the executive branch of the Government on the principles as set forth in the
President’s letter of May 17, 1954, to the Secretary of Defense.” Quoted in id. at
327.1
    Following the cancellation of the Dixon-Yates contract by the President, the
proceedings before the SEC lapsed. Mr. Armstrong appeared before the subcom-
mittee on July 12, 1955. He declined, however, to disclose any conversations he
might have had with other officials in the executive branch concerning the
postponement, stating that he was forbidden by the President’s letter of May 17,
1954, to make such disclosure. Id. at 330–34.2 When Senator Kefauver pointed out

    1
      The President in this letter, referring to an attached memorandum of the Attorney General, stated
that “throughout our history the President has withheld information whenever he found that what was
sought was confidential or its disclosure would be incompatible with the public interest or jeopardize
the safety of the Nation.” 100 Cong. Rec. 6621 (1954); Letter to the Secretary of Defense Directing
Him to Withhold Certain Information from the Senate Committee on Government Operations, Pub.
Papers of Pres. Dwight D. Eisenhower 483, 483 (May 17, 1954). And, the President continued,
           Because it is essential to efficient and effective administration that employees of
        the Executive Branch be in a position to be completely candid in advising with each
        other on official matters, and because it is not in the public interest that any of their
        conversations or communications, or any documents or reproductions, concerning
        such advice be disclosed, you will instruct employees of your Department that in all of
        their appearances before the Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Government
        Operations regarding the inquiry now before it they are not to testify to any such con-
        versations or communications or to produce any such documents or reproductions.
        This principle must be maintained regardless of who would be benefited by such dis-
        closures.
           I direct this action so as to maintain the proper separation of powers between the
        Executive and Legislative Branches of the Government in accordance with my re-
        sponsibilities and duties under the Constitution. This separation is vital to preclude the
        exercise of arbitrary power by any branch of the Government.
Id. [Editor’s Note: See also 100 Cong. Rec. 6621–23 (memorandum of Attorney General).]
     2
       Mr. Armstrong declined to answer, among others, the following question put by Senator Kefau-
ver:

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          Applicability of Executive Privilege to Independent Regulatory Agencies

that the President’s letter was directed to the Secretary of Defense, the head of an
executive department, whereas the SEC was “a quasi-judicial agency” and “we are
inquiring about . . . alleged interference, with the judicial work of the Securities
and Exchange Commission,” Mr. Armstrong responded that the President’s letter
applied to administrative functions of the Commission, which included the
scheduling of hearings. Id. at 342.
    Thereafter, the Attorney General advised Mr. Armstrong in response to the
latter’s request as follows:

          With regard to your statement that the Commission is bound to
       respect the privileged and confidential nature of communications
       within the executive branch of the Government on the principles as
       set forth in the President’s letter of May 17, 1954, to the Secretary of
       Defense, I concur. Any communication within the Securities and
       Exchange Commission among Commissioners or the Commissioners
       and employees is privileged and need not be disclosed outside of the
       agency. Likewise, any communication from others in the executive
       branch to members of the Commission or its employees with respect
       to administrative matters comes within the purview of the Presi-
       dent’s letter of May 17, 1954.

          You inquired specifically whether when a proceeding is pending
       before the Commission a request to the Commission for an adjourn-
       ment by someone in the executive branch outside the Commission is
       likewise covered. Because such a proceeding is quasi-judicial in
       nature, it is my opinion that such a request would not be covered by
       the President’s letter of May 17, 1954, and once the proceeding is no
       longer pending before the Commission such information should,
       upon request, be made available by the Commission to an appropri-
       ate congressional committee.

Id. at 379 (quoting letter of Attorney General dated July 12, 1955). Thereupon Mr.
Armstrong revealed that the request for adjournment came from Governor Adams,

       [D]id you receive any communication or did you talk with anyone in the White
       House, Mr. Hughes, Mr. Dodge, Mr. Sherman Adams, or Mr. Bernard Shanley, Mr.
       Brownell, or anyone else, first advising you that a vote was coming up in the House, a
       big administration matter in a close vote, that this testimony might affect what was go-
       ing to go on the Hill?
          That is all I am asking, just whether there was any interference with the hearing or
       not.
Id. at 336. There was pending before the House a bill providing for a $6,500,000 appropriation to
construct a transmission line between the proposed Dixon-Yates plant and the existing TVA power
lines. Id. at 417–22.

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           Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 1

Assistant to the President, in the form of a telephone call on Saturday, June 11. Id.
Mr. Adams stated that the reason for the request was to permit “certain Govern-
ment attorneys” who were out of the city to determine whether they should object
to the testimony of Mr. Wenzell. Id. at 380. Armstrong testified that upon
informing the Commission of Governor Adams’ request the Commission voted to
continue the hearings. Id. He further testified that on June 15, 1955, Governor
Adams advised him that “the Government attorneys” had decided not to partici-
pate, and that upon so informing the Commission it directed the hearings to
resume. Id.
   In the interrogation of Mr. Armstrong concerning the meaning of the Attorney
General’s letter, both Senators Kefauver and O’Mahoney agreed that a privilege
existed as to communications within a Commission by members of the Commis-
sion with the employees. Id. at 383–84, 387–88. However, Mr. Armstrong, on the
basis of the President’s letter of May 17, 1954, refused to state whether or not his
conversation with Governor Adams covered the bill pending before the House:

       [T]he question that you ask . . . has to do with a legislative matter in
       Congress and nothing to do with the pending proceeding before the
       Securities and Exchange Commission. . . . I am relying on the opin-
       ion of the Attorney General.

Id. at 419–20. The subcommittee (Senators Kefauver, O’Mahoney, and Langer)
then asked Mr. Armstrong to obtain an opinion from the Attorney General as to
whether the SEC would be permitted to make

       a full, detailed, and complete disclosure of all meetings, all confer-
       ences, all conversations, no matter where or when they took place, so
       long as they relate to the Dixon-Yates deal, and are outside of the
       purely administrative or housekeeping duties of the Commission as
       defined, and in purview of the Reorganization Act.

         This is the information we want and this is the clearance we hope
       Mr. Armstrong will obtain from the Attorney General.

          The investigation being conducted by this committee goes to the
       question of outside influence or alleged corruption in the Dixon-
       Yates deal. This committee wants to find out how far this outside in-
       fluence or corruption went, what agencies of the Government were
       involved, and what influence or pressure, if any, was brought to bear
       on a quasi-judicial agency with statutory responsibilities under the
       Public Utility Holding Company Act.

          In these circumstances, there can be no privilege in the judicial
       proceedings. . . .

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           Applicability of Executive Privilege to Independent Regulatory Agencies

Id. at 429.3
    At this point the hearing was adjourned to permit Mr. Armstrong to consult the
Attorney General. He did so4 and, upon resumption of the hearing on July 20,
1955, he testified that he was prepared to testify concerning the above matters:
“Everything that I know about, I am prepared to testify to in that regard.” Id. at
624. He then revealed that Governor Adams in connection with the request for a
continuance of the SEC hearing had mentioned the pending appropriation bill, to
which he replied: “Well, I don’t know anything about that. It doesn’t concern the
Commission.” Id. at 625. Governor Adams said: “That’s right,” and, according to
Mr. Armstrong, “[t]hat is all there was to it,” except that “[i]t is my best recollec-
tion today that the Government lawyers that Governor Adams was referring to in
the part of the conversation I testified to the other day were the Attorney General,
Mr. Brownell, and the special counsel for the President, Mr. Morgan.” Id.
Governor Adams said “he wanted these lawyers to consider the problem [of
Wenzell’s testimony], and they were away, and he couldn’t get hold of them.” Id.
at 628.5
    Mr. Armstrong refused, however, to state whether or not he had talked to Gov-
ernor Adams about the matter since he had been summoned to testify at the
hearing; he asserted that any such conversation was privileged under the Presi-
dent’s letter to the Secretary of Defense. Id. at 634–35. On July 21, 1955, Gover-
nor Adams declined the subcommittee’s invitation to testify, stating:

        Since every fact as to which I might give testimony either has been
        or could be testified to fully by other responsible Government offi-

    3
      The Reorganization Act of 1949, Pub. L. No. 81-109, 63 Stat. 203, directs the President to exam-
ine the organization “of all agencies of the Government” to determine the changes necessary to
accomplish more effective management, id. § 2(a)(1) (codified at 5 U.S.C. § 133z(a)(1) (1952)), and
for that purpose to prepare and submit plans of reorganization of any agency to the Congress, id. § 3
(5 U.S.C. § 133z-1). Section 7 of the Act defines the term “agency” to mean “any executive depart-
ment, commission, council, independent establishment, Government corporation, board, bureau,
division, service, office, officer, authority, administration, or other establishment, in the executive
branch of the Government.” 5 U.S.C. § 133z-5. Reorganization Plan 10 of 1950 transferred the
executive and administrative functions of the SEC from the Commission to its Chairman. 15 Fed. Reg.
3175.
    4
      Our files contain a copy of a letter from the Attorney General to Mr. Armstrong dated July 19,
1955, stating:
        As I view the matter, there is no bar by reason of the President’s letter to the Secretary
        of Defense, or the principles involved, to disclosure of the entire conversation with
        Governor Adams, part of which related to his request for a short postponement of the
        Commission hearing in the Dixon-Yates proceedings.
    5
      The Department’s files (No. 115-016, § 3) disclose a letter from Senator O’Mahoney to the
Attorney General dated February 20, 1956, asking whether Governor Adams had discussed the matter
with the Attorney General. The letter replied under date of February 27, 1956, that the Attorney
General had not had any such conversation.

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               Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 1

          cials, and because of my official and confidential relationship to the
          President, I respectfully decline the subcommittee’s invitation.

Id., pt. 2, at 676 (quoting letter). Thereafter, Mr. Armstrong testified that Mr.
Morgan had informed him that the Attorney General had advised Mr. Morgan that
while Mr. Armstrong was free to state that he had talked to Governor Adams since
being summoned as a witness,6 the conversation itself was privileged under the
President’s letter of May 17, 1954. Id. at 751.

            B. Armstrong’s Testimony at the Hearing on His Nomination

   Senator Kefauver, reviewing Mr. Armstrong’s testimony before the Antitrust
and Monopoly Subcommittee, summarized his objection to Mr. Armstrong’s
confirmation as follows:

          [M]y point is that Mr. Armstrong did not live up to his trust in allow-
          ing Sherman Adams or somebody else to have him postpone a hear-
          ing without notice, without giving reasons; and he did not live up to
          his trust in allowing the SEC to be used, keeping information from
          getting to the House of Representatives which would affect legisla-
          tion there, which they had a right to know.

             And, after having told our committee on three occasions that he
          had told the whole story, he came back and told more and more of it
          and then finally, in the end, pleaded executive privilege all over
          again. That is the story.

              I think it should be borne in mind that the Securities and Ex-
          change Commission is a creature of Congress, it is a quasi-judicial
          agency. And my feeling is that anyone who would allow this proce-
          dure, and then refused to testify and pleaded executive privilege, and
          not telling about it, to say that he told the story, and then every time
          it develops that he had not told the full facts, simply is not worthy to
          be confirmed to this high office.

1957 Hearing at 13.
    Mr. Armstrong defended his presentation of Governor Adams’ request for a
postponement of the SEC hearings to the Commission, and stated that he had
withheld no information from the Antitrust and Monopoly Subcommittee with the
exception of the single conversation with Governor Adams occurring after the
subcommittee’s hearing had begun. Id. at 18. He also defended the Commission’s
failure to advise the parties to the SEC proceeding of the reason for the postpone-

   6
       It appears that Governor Adams had telephoned Armstrong. Id. at 756.

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        Applicability of Executive Privilege to Independent Regulatory Agencies

ment, “[b]ecause the request had come from a person with respect to whom the
executive privilege pertained.” Id. at 22.
   Senator Russell, chairman of the committee considering the nomination, stated
that he had some question “as to whether an independent agency of the Govern-
ment ought to consult with the Attorney General as to what is and what is not a
proper matter of Executive privilege,” id. at 34, and “I can conceive of cases
where requests which are highly improper might be made from within the
personnel of the White House to one in charge of an executive agency of Govern-
ment, and I do not think that the opinion of the Attorney General in a case of that
kind ought to bind one who has the responsibilities in connection with an inde-
pendent agency which would preclude him from divulging those facts, either to a
congressional committee or to a grand jury,” id. at 35.
   Subsequently, on May 16, 1957, in executive session, the committee reported
the nomination favorably, by a vote of 9 to 1. The nomination was debated on the
floor of the Senate on May 23, 1957; the SEC incident was again reviewed. 103
Cong. Rec. 7511–25 (1957). The gist of the criticisms was that it was improper for
the executive branch to interfere with the quasi-judicial functions of a regulatory
agency, and consequently that Mr. Armstrong as chairman of the SEC acted
improperly in consenting to such interference. Senator Saltonstall, in supporting
confirmation, stated as follows:

         Another instance in which Mr. Armstrong’s actions have been as-
      sailed is his request of the advice of the Attorney General respecting
      the application of the doctrine of executive privilege and the extent
      to which Mr. Armstrong might testify about his conversation with
      Governor Adams. The Securities and Exchange Commission exer-
      cises quasi-judicial powers, in addition to administrative ones. For
      many purposes this status has served as the basis for differentiating
      the SEC and similar regulatory agencies from purely executive agen-
      cies of the Government. Without attempting to pass judgment on
      whether the Chairman of an Agency such as the SEC should seek his
      legal opinions from the Attorney General, the record will show that
      Mr. Armstrong sought this counsel in compliance with suggestions
      and recommendations of the members of the subcommittee before
      which he was testifying.

Id. at 7518. The debate terminated with confirmation, without a record vote having
been taken. Id. at 7525.

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                   III. The Office of Legal Counsel Memorandum

   Apparently the memorandum which you have asked us to review is that pre-
pared by a member of our staff under date of January 5, 1956.*
   This memorandum was prepared as a result of Admiral Strauss’s request for the
Attorney General’s opinion as to whether he was justified in asserting privilege in
testifying on the repudiation of the Dixon-Yates contract before the Antitrust and
Monopoly Subcommittee in December 1955. At that time he refused to disclose
any conversations he may have had with the President or Governor Adams on the
subject. We did not give him an opinion as he requested; instead a copy of the
memorandum was exhibited to him. It concluded that the restrictions of the
President’s letter of May 17, 1954, applied to the subject of his interrogation.7
   The memorandum reviews in considerable detail the constitutional and histori-
cal basis for the assertion of privilege by officials in the executive branch with
respect to their internal communications. It then makes the following points
concerning the applicability of that privilege to communications between Admiral
Strauss, as Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, and the President or
Governor Adams, concerning the Dixon-Yates matter:

        1. “An examination of the historical precedents and the President’s
        letter concerning the exercise of the executive privilege clearly indi-
        cate that the precedents and letter apply to the entire executive
        branch and function of the Government, and not alone to the ten ex-
        ecutive departments.”

        2. The Atomic Energy Commission, the principal functions of which
        are executive in nature, is for the purpose of the privilege to be
        deemed a part of the Executive Branch.

        3. Whether or not the Atomic Energy Commission is technically a
        part of the executive branch, it is, in the exercise of executive func-
        tions, subject to the requirements of non-disclosure imposed by the
        President’s letter. In the Dixon-Yates matter it was exercising an ex-
        ecutive function.

    *
      Editor’s Note: As noted above, this memorandum is collected later in this volume (Assertion of
Executive Privilege by the Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, 1 Op. O.L.C. Supp. 468
(Jan. 5, 1956)).
    7
      In March 1957, Admiral Strauss renewed his request for an opinion. By memorandum dated April
11, 1957, this Office recommended that no opinion be given.

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            Applicability of Executive Privilege to Independent Regulatory Agencies

             IV. Recent Views of the Executive and Legislative Branches
                     and of the Regulatory Agencies Themselves

   In this part of the memorandum we shall summarize views which have been
recently expressed by the executive and legislative branches and by the regulatory
agencies themselves as to the applicability of the doctrine of executive privilege to
the regulatory agencies.

                     A. Views Expressed by the Executive Branch

   The President’s letter, it should be noted, says nothing about regulatory agen-
cies as such. However, we do find an expression of the views of the Executive
Branch in the Attorney General’s letter to Mr. Armstrong of July 12, 1955. Quoted
in 1955 Hearing, pt. 1 at 378–79. According to that letter, the nondisclosure prin-
ciples set forth in the President’s letter are applicable to administrative agencies,
such as the Securities and Exchange Commission, with regard to (1) internal
communications of the agency and (2) communications between the agency and
others in the executive branch “with respect to administrative matters, but not as to
such communications involving an exercise of the agencies’ quasi-judicial
functions.” Id. at 379.

                   B. Views Expressed by the Regulatory Agencies

    There is considerable material emanating from the agencies themselves, which
is found in their replies to question 15 of the questionnaire submitted to them by
the Special Subcommittee on Government Information of the House Committee
on Government Operations, established in 1955 by the 84th Congress. These
replies are contained in Staff of H. Comm. on Government Operations, 84th
Cong., Replies from Federal Agencies to Questionnaire Submitted by the Special
Subcommittee on Government Information of the Committee on Government
Operations (Comm. Print Nov. 1, 1955).
    Question 15 (to be answered only by “Independent Agencies”) reads as fol-
lows:

        Please indicate your understanding of the application of the doctrine
        of executive communications (as grounds for withholding infor-
        mation) to:

        (a) Communications within the agency and other internal data.

        (b) Communications with other agencies.

        (c) Communications with the Executive Office of the President.

Id. at 3.

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   The views of the different agencies show some doubt and difference of opinion.
Thus, the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) stated that whether or
not the doctrine of “executive communications” applied depended upon the nature
of the agency function involved. It said that, while it was difficult to draw “precise
lines between the Commission’s quasi-judicial, quasi-legislative, and executive
and administrative functions,” it considered the following functions executive and
administrative in nature: “(a) [p]ersonnel, (b) budgetary, (c) matters relating to the
negotiating of treaties and negotiations with foreign governments.” Id. at 167. It
pointed out that it cooperated with the Executive Office of the President and the
State Department with respect to negotiation and administration of treaties dealing
with communications matters. Id.
   As to quasi-judicial or adjudicatory functions the FCC stated that the doctrine
of executive communications had no application and that any such communication
was made a part of the public record. Id. at 168. But with respect to its administra-
tive or executive functions, it was of the opinion that

       communications with other Government agencies and with the Ex-
       ecutive Offices of the President may be withheld under the doctrine
       of executive communications. In this connection there is enclosed a
       copy of the President’s letter of May 17, 1954, to the Secretary of
       Defense to which is attached a copy of a memorandum from the At-
       torney General to the President.

Id. at 168.
    The Federal Trade Commission on the other hand stated that, since it was not
“strictly” an executive agency (citing Humphrey’s Executor), the doctrine of
executive communications presented no serious problem and that “[t]he present
Commission has not withheld any of its own information from Congress on that
basis and does not intend to do so,” including communications with the Executive
Office of the President. Id. at 216. But as to earlier policy of the Commission it
referred to a 1938 letter from the Commission to the Secretary of the President
advising him that it respected the desire of the President against publication of any
correspondence referred to “departments and establishments . . . from the White
House.” Id. The Interstate Commerce Commission stated categorically that “[a]s
the ICC is an arm of Congress rather than part of the executive establishment,
there has been no occasion for the doctrine of executive communications to arise.”
Id. at 303.
    The National Labor Relations Board, after noting that it was uncertain as to the
meaning of the doctrine of “executive communication,” stated that it

       certainly would respect the wishes of another agency or the Execu-
       tive Office of the President to maintain a confidence when requested
       or implied. In sum we assume that an “executive communication” in

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           Applicability of Executive Privilege to Independent Regulatory Agencies

        terms in which that phrase appears to be used, means a “communica-
        tion” that is not for release generally.

Id. at 351. The Securities and Exchange Commission, apparently reluctant to
express itself in detail, merely cited the Attorney General’s letter of July 12, 1955,
the President’s letter of May 17, 1954, and other authorities. Id. at 433.8

                     C. Views Expressed by the Legislative Branch

       1. Study by the Staff of the Committee on Government Operations

    In May 1956, the House Committee on Government Operations (84th Con-
gress) published a study by its staff entitled The Right of Congress to Obtain
Information from the Executive and from other Agencies of the Federal Govern-
ment (Comm. Print May 3, 1956). After suggesting the confusion as to the
President’s control over the independent regulatory commissions, the authors of
the study seem to be of the view that with respect to withholding information from
the Congress it is not necessary to resolve the question of amenability to presiden-
tial direction since a commission can be in no better position than executive
agencies which have no such right: “In this regard they are both in the same legal
status.” Id. at 6.9

          2. Report of the House Committee on Government Operations

   This report states that

        In the information phases of their activities, the independent agen-
        cies must be truly independent from executive pressure.

           This independence is implicit in the legislation establishing the
        agencies and is spelled out in court cases. . . . In their quasi-
        legislative and quasi-judicial functions, the regulatory agencies need
        accept no interference from the executive bureaus. Specifically, the
        Budget Bureau has no authority to veto information or comments on

    8
      For the replies of the Civil Aeronautics Board, the Federal Power Commission and the Federal
Reserve Board, see id. at 71, 190–91, 201–02. These agencies expressed no view, stating that the doc-
trine had never been invoked by them.
    9
      As we understand them, the authors assert that under Humphrey’s Executor it is clear that in
discharging quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative functions the regulatory commissions act independently
of executive control. While recognizing that in some instances there may be executive control as to
administrative functions, this, they say, can be derived only from specific legislative grant. There is no
separate discussion of the precise question which is the subject of this paper. However, we would
assume that the position of the authors is that the regulatory commissions, no more than an executive
department, are entitled to claim a right, even as to conceded executive functions, to withhold
communications with the President or his staff.

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            Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 1

       legislation transmitted from the independent agencies to Congress,
       nor does the Bureau have any final control, under the Federal Re-
       ports Act, over statistical information the independent agencies
       might request from private organizations and individuals.

H.R. Rep. No. 84-2947, at 87 (1956). Here the committee seems to follow sub-
stantially the views of the staff study, and, like that study, it appears to hold to the
position that even as to what might normally be considered purely executive
functions the independent regulatory commission cannot deny to Congress
disclosure of communications with the President or his staff.

              3. Study by the Staff of the Special Subcommittee on
                              Legislative Oversight

    On October 17, 1957, the Special Subcommittee on Legislative Oversight (of
the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 85th Congress)
released its staff study on the question of the subcommittee’s right of access to the
files and records of the Civil Aeronautics Board. Memorandum of Law: Right of
Access by Special Subcommittee on Legislative Oversight to Civil Aeronautics
Board Files and Records (Comm. Print Oct. 17, 1957).10 Included in the 18
conclusions reached in this study is the conclusion that

       “Executive privilege” is not available to an independent agency like
       the Civil Aeronautics Board as a possible basis for the withholding
       of information from the Congress. The Civil Aeronautics Board, as
       the Supreme Court has recognized, is an independent agency whose
       members are not subject to the removal power of the President. Such
       a body cannot in any proper sense be characterized as an arm or eye
       of the Executive. It is instead an arm of the Congress, wholly re-
       sponsible to that body.

Id. at vi. In the discussion of this conclusion, after denying that there is such a
doctrine as “executive privilege,” it is asserted principally on the basis of Humph-
rey’s Executor, which we discuss in detail below, that in any event, administrative
bodies like the Civil Aeronautics Board cannot withhold information from
Congress under the claim of executive privilege. Id. at 4–8.
   The Civil Aeronautics Board has filed with the Subcommittee a memorandum
of its General Counsel dated October 16, 1957, in which it is argued, inter alia,
that the Board “validly may, on behalf of the President and subject to his desires,
withhold disclosure as to those matters which fall within the category of executive

   10
      The memorandum was prepared by the Subcommittee’s Chief Counsel and Staff Director,
Bernard Schwartz. It is under current analysis and study by this Office.

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         Applicability of Executive Privilege to Independent Regulatory Agencies

functions until such time as a determination has been made and communicated to
the Board by the executive branch with respect to disclosure” (p. 8).

     4. Views Expressed at the Hearings Before the Senate Subcommittee
        on Antitrust and Monopoly and on the Armstrong Nomination

   The Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly (consisting of Senators
Kefauver, O’Mahoney, and Langer) took the position that except for “purely
administrative or housekeeping duties” the SEC was not subject to executive
control. Senator Russell, speaking at the hearing on Mr. Armstrong’s nomination,
seemed to think that the independent status of regulatory agencies made it
questionable whether they were even entitled to consult the Attorney General as to
applicability of the doctrine of executive privilege. Senator Saltonstall, speaking in
support of the nomination, stated that he would not attempt to pass judgment on
that question.

               V. Judicial Authorities and Professional Comment

   No federal court has passed upon the precise question here involved. The deci-
sion most nearly bearing on the question is Humphrey’s Executor, decided in
1935. Humphrey’s Executor is usually cited by those who maintain that whatever
may be the doctrine of executive privilege it has no application to the independent
regulatory agencies of the federal government.
   Humphrey’s Executor, involving the Federal Trade Commission, held that the
President could not, in his uncontrolled discretion, remove at his pleasure a
member of the Federal Trade Commission before the expiration of his term. As a
result it was concluded that a member so removed was entitled to recover on a
claim for salary for the balance of his term. After reviewing the Federal Trade
Commission Act, its legislative history, and the general purposes of the Act, the
Court stated that they

       all combine to demonstrate the Congressional intent to create a body
       of experts who shall gain experience by length of service—a body
       which shall be independent of executive authority, except in its se-
       lection, and free to exercise its judgment without the leave or hin-
       drance of any other official or any department of the government.
295 U.S. at 625–26 (emphasis in original).
  Other relevant quotations from the opinion are as follows:

          The commission is to be non-partisan; and it must, from the very
       nature of its duties, act with entire impartiality. It is charged with the
       enforcement of no policy except the policy of the law. Its duties are
       neither political nor executive, but predominantly quasi-judicial and

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              Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 1

       quasi-legislative. Like the Interstate Commerce Commission, its
       members are called upon to exercise the trained judgment of a body
       of experts “appointed by law and informed by experience.”

Id. at 624 (quoting Standard Oil Co. v. United States, 283 U.S. 235, 239 (1931);
Illinois Cent. Ry. Co. v. ICC, 206 U.S. 441, 454 (1907)).

       Such a body cannot in any proper sense be characterized as an arm
       or an eye of the executive. Its duties are performed without executive
       leave, and, in the contemplation of the statute, must be free from ex-
       ecutive control . . . . To the extent that it exercises any executive
       function—as distinguished from executive power in the constitution-
       al sense—it does so in the discharge and effectuation of its quasi-
       legislative or quasi-judicial powers, or as an agency of the legislative
       or judicial departments of the government.

Id. at 628.

       The authority of Congress, in creating quasi-legislative or quasi-
       judicial agencies, to require them to act in discharge of their duties
       independently of executive control cannot well be doubted . . . .

           . . . The sound application of a principle that makes one master in
       his own house precludes him from imposing his control in the house
       of another who is master there. . . .

          The power of removal here claimed for the President falls within
       this principle, since its coercive influence threatens the independence
       of a commission, which is not only wholly disconnected from the
       executive department, but which, as already fully appears, was creat-
       ed by Congress as a means of carrying into operation legislative and
       judicial powers, and as an agency of the legislative and judicial de-
       partments.

Id. at 629–30.11
    In a later decision it was held that Humphrey’s Executor did not apply to the
removal of a director of the Tennessee Valley Authority. Morgan v. TVA, 115 F.2d
990 (6th Cir. 1940), cert. denied, 312 U.S. 701 (1941). Said the Court:

       It is not to be aligned with the Federal Trade Commission, the Inter-
       state Commerce Commission, or other administrative bodies mainly
       exercising clearly quasi-legislative or quasi-judicial functions—it is

   11
      A lower federal court has similarly regarded the National Labor Relations Board. Precision
Castings Co. v. Boland, 13 F. Supp. 877, 884 (W.D.N.Y. 1936).

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           Applicability of Executive Privilege to Independent Regulatory Agencies

        predominantly an administrative arm of the executive department.
        The rule of the Humphrey case does not apply.

Id. at 994.12
    And, in another context, the Supreme Court has recognized that in certain of its
functions the Civil Aeronautics Board was not free of executive control. Chicago
& S. Air Lines, Inc. v. Waterman S.S. Corp., 333 U.S. 103 (1948). Thus, with
respect to the licensing of overseas air transportation, it was said that Congress had
“completely inverted the usual administrative process. Instead of acting inde-
pendently of executive control, the agency is then subordinated to it.” Id. at 109.
    What then is the full import of Humphrey’s Executor? Is it to be interpreted as
meaning that a regulatory commission established by Congress is so completely
independent of the President that the doctrine of executive privilege has no
meaning under any circumstances? In our opinion, the answer must be in the
negative:
    1. It is clear, as the Court itself noted, that where the statute vests in the Presi-
dent the power to appoint the members of the commission, to that extent the
agency is not independent of executive authority. Accordingly, we think that even
under Humphrey’s Executor a member of a regulatory commission could validly
invoke the doctrine of executive privilege as to conversations with the President or
members of his staff concerning appointment of commission members.

    12
       Acting Attorney General Jackson had previously advised the President that Humphrey’s Executor
did not apply. Power of the President to Remove Members of the Tennessee Valley Authority from
Office, 39 Op. Att’y Gen. 145 (1938). The Court of Claims has held that even though the War Claims
Commission exercises quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative functions, nevertheless the President could
remove a member of the commission at his pleasure because Congress had imposed no specific
limitation on the President’s removal power. Wiener v. United States, 142 F. Supp. 910 (Ct. Cl. 1956).
The Supreme Court has granted certiorari and the case is now pending for argument. [Editor’s Note:
The decision of the Court of Claims was reversed by the Supreme Court in Wiener v. United States,
357 U.S. 349 (1958).]
    Several cases of a peripheral interest may be noted: In Appeal of SEC, 226 F.2d 501 (6th Cir.
1955), the court sustained, in a suit between private parties, the validity of a regulation of the
commission making confidential its internal investigative reports. The court did not differentiate
between regulations issued by executive departments and those issued by administrative agencies. In re
Petition of the Finance Committee of the Legislature of the Virgin Islands, 242 F.2d 902 (3d Cir. 1957),
involved a contest between the Governor of the Virgin Islands and its legislature. A legislative
committee was upheld in its claim to examine the records of the Commissioner of Finance as against
the contention that the committee’s authority had expired. The highest court of Massachusetts has
inferentially recognized the existence of the doctrine of executive privilege. In Opinion of the Justices,
102 N.E.2d 79 (Mass. 1951), the state senate was advised that it was entitled, as against the claim of a
violation of the constitutional doctrine of separation of powers, to inspect a report of the state industrial
commission, there not being any question of diplomatic or military secrets. In Morss v. Forbes, 132
A.2d 1 (N.J. 1957), the Supreme Court of New Jersey held that a county prosecuting attorney could not
assert as against the state legislature the doctrine of executive privilege since under New Jersey law it
was not sufficiently clear that he was a part of the executive branch.

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              Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 1

   2. In Humphrey’s Executor, the Court dealt with the power of Congress to limit
the President’s constitutional authority to remove members of the Federal Trade
Commission appointed by him. This question was resolved by the Court on an
evaluation of the President’s control over the exercise of functions vested in the
FTC. Where the primary functions of the commission are, like those of the Federal
Trade Commission, quasi-legislative and quasi-judicial, and Congress has
restricted the President’s power of removal, the commission may be, with respect
to the exercise of its quasi-legislative and quasi-judicial powers, free of executive
control. Hence as to such matters it would seem that the members of the commis-
sion may not invoke the doctrine of executive privilege.
   But what about an agency which has important executive functions? Professor
Robert E. Cushman of Cornell University notes in his work, The Independent
Regulatory Commissions (1941),13 that the Interstate Commerce Commission, for
example,

        carries on the executive task of enforcing the Safety Appliance Acts,
        a task certainly not “incidental” to the quasi-judicial job of rate mak-
        ing. The commission is obviously not purely executive in the sense
        in which the Humphrey opinion uses the term; neither is it purely
        quasi-legislative and quasi-judicial. This is true of most of the regu-
        latory commissions and this means that their constitutional status
        was not determined by the Humphrey cases.

Id. at 457–58.
    For our purposes, a more striking example is the Federal Maritime Board. That
board was established by Reorganization Plan 21 of 1950 (15 Fed. Reg. 3178) as
an agency within the Department of Commerce. The members of the board are
appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. With
respect to its regulatory functions the board is independent of the Secretary of

     13
        Professor Cushman’s book is a comprehensive study of American regulatory commissions. For
our purposes, of particular interest is chapter VI, pages 417–78, dealing with the constitutional status of
the independent regulatory commissions, and more specifically, pages 448–67, dealing with the
relations of the commissions to Congress and the President. Professor Cushman does not discuss the
precise question considered in this memorandum. However, the conclusions reached by him on the
broader questions of the relationship of the commissions to Congress and the President support the
conclusions reached by us in this memorandum. Another study (of little help here) is Wilson Keyser
Doyle, Independent Commissions in the Federal Government (1939).
     None of the commentators who have dealt with the question of executive privilege has, to our
knowledge, discussed the matter from the special standpoint of the regulatory agencies. See, e.g.,
Herman Wolkinson, Demands of Congressional Committees for Executive Papers, 10 Fed. B.J. 103
(pt. 1), 223 (pt. 2), 319 (pt. 3) (1949); Note, Power of the President to Refuse Congressional Demands
for Information, 1 Stan. L. Rev. 256 (1949); Philip R. Collins, The Power of Congressional Committees
of Investigation to Obtain Information from the Executive Branch: The Argument for the Legislative
Branch, 39 Geo. L.J. 563 (1951); Joseph W. Bishop, Jr., The Executive’s Right of Privacy: An
Unresolved Constitutional Question, 66 Yale L.J. 477 (1957).

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        Applicability of Executive Privilege to Independent Regulatory Agencies

Commerce. These functions include the regulation and control of rates, service,
practices, and agreements of common carriers by water, making rules and
regulations affecting shipping in the foreign trade, and investigating discriminato-
ry practices in such trade. They are obviously quasi-legislative and judicial. The
board also has important executive functions, including the making of investiga-
tions and determinations antecedent to the award of ship construction and ship-
operating differential subsidy construction and ship-operating differential subsidy
contracts and awarding such contracts. As to these functions it is expressly
provided that the board is to be guided by the general policies of the Secretary of
Commerce. Id. § 106, 15 Fed. Reg. at 3179.
   It is obvious that an agency like the Maritime Board cannot be characterized,
within the meaning of Humphrey’s Executor, as independent of executive control
or as an agency of the Legislative Branch. In the performance of its executive
functions the Maritime Board must consider the policies of the executive branch as
expressed by the Secretary of Commerce. Since the President therefore, through
the Secretary of Commerce, exercises a supervisory role over the non-regulatory
functions of the Maritime Board it is our opinion that communications between the
board and the President with respect to such matters are privileged.
   Another example, indicated earlier, is the Civil Aeronautics Board, one of
whose statutory functions, 49 U.S.C. § 602, is to consult with and assist the State
Department in the negotiation of agreements with foreign governments for the
establishment or development of air transportation, air navigation, air routes and
services. The conduct of foreign relations is constitutionally vested in the Presi-
dent. It is an area in which Presidents have vigorously asserted the right to
withhold information from the Congress. It may be assumed arguendo that for
purposes of removal of its members the Civil Aeronautics Board, like the Federal
Trade Commission, is independent of executive control within the meaning of
Humphrey’s Executor. But that independence, which is derived from the board’s
exercise of quasi-legislative and quasi-judicial functions, cannot, in our opinion,
extend to its participation in the negotiation of foreign agreements, a matter
constitutionally vested in the President. Accordingly, in our judgment, the board in
this respect would be obliged to respect the President’s wishes concerning the
release of information.
   3. In some areas Congress has itself subjected the independent regulatory
commissions to executive control. For example, under the Act of August 26, 1950,
Pub. L. No. 81-733, § 3, 64 Stat. 476, 477, it has authorized the President to
extend to all departments and agencies of the government the authority vested in
specified department and agency heads to make summary suspensions and
dismissals of their civilian employees in the interest of the national security. See
Cole v. Young, 351 U.S. 536 (1956). Under Executive Order 10450, the President
has extended applications of the provisions of the act to all departments and
agencies, and by section 9(c) of the order the President has imposed a confidential
status on “reports and other investigative material and information developed by

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             Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 1

investigations.” 18 Fed. Reg. 2489, 2492 (1950). We do not think that even though
a regulatory commission may be characterized as “independent” for certain
purposes, it may properly ignore the President’s direction as to the confidential
status of this material on the theory that it is not subject to presidential control.
   4. In some instances Congress has vested in the President the power to remove
members of the regulatory commissions for “inefficiency, neglect of duty, or
malfeasance in office.”14 On this basis Professor Cushman makes the argument,
which we think is a valid one, that the President under penalty of removal “may
exact reasonable efficiency and absolute integrity” and

       can force an independent regulatory commission to comply with ex-
       ecutive orders of general application unless Congress clearly indi-
       cates that such orders should not apply. These executive orders relate
       to a multitude of matters which affect the general efficiency of the
       government. . . . [T]he refusal of the commission to obey the Presi-
       dent’s executive order would constitute neglect of duty or miscon-
       duct, which would justify the removal of the commissioners from of-
       fice.

Independent Regulatory Commissions at 464, 465. It is also to be noted that the
President is vested with managerial responsibility over regulatory agencies by the
Reorganization Act of 1949, 5 U.S.C. § 133z.
   Where the President is vested with general managerial powers over a regulatory
commission it would seem proper to regard the doctrine of executive privilege as
extending to the disclosure of communications between the commission and the
President or his staff concerning managerial matters.
   5. As a matter of practice the independent regulatory commissions have never
been regarded as so divorced from the executive branch as to preclude them from
seeking, with approval of the President, the advice of the Attorney General. Thus,
Attorney General Biddle gave such advice for the benefit of the Interstate
Commerce Commission (Extension of Time to Pay Rail Carriers’ Freight
Charges, 40 Op. Att’y Gen. 353 (1945)); Attorney General Murphy furnished an
opinion for the benefit of the Securities and Exchange Commission concerning the
applicability of statutes regulating the transmission of publications free of postage
(Free Mailing of Publications by the Securities and Exchange Commission, 39 Op.
Att’y. Gen. 405 (1940)); and Acting Attorney General Keenan issued an opinion
for the benefit of the Maritime Commission concerning the applicability of the
civil service laws to appointments of attorneys to its staff (Applicability of Civil
Service Rules to Appointment of Attorneys by United States Maritime Commission,

   14
      See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. § 41 (Federal Trade Commission); 42 U.S.C. § 1802 (Atomic Energy Com-
mission); 49 U.S.C. § 11 (Interstate Commerce Commission); 49 U.S.C. § 421 (Civil Aeronautics
Board).

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         Applicability of Executive Privilege to Independent Regulatory Agencies

39 Op. Att’y. Gen. 50 (1937)). On June 15, 1955, you advised the President, upon
submission of a question by the Federal Communications Commission, regarding
the scope of statutory prohibitions against the disclosure of certain information
(unpublished opinion, File No. 19-2-547).
    These instances reflect the thought that at least with respect to matters not
involving quasi-legislative or quasi-judicial functions it is appropriate to consider
the independent regulatory commissions in administrative matters as part of the
executive branch of the federal government. This would seem to be sound not only
in legal theory but as a matter of good management.

                                   VI. Conclusion

    We conclude in short that a case cannot be made for absolute exclusion of the
so-called independent regulatory agencies from the doctrine of executive privilege.
Although free from executive control in the exercise of quasi-legislative and
quasi-judicial functions, they frequently exercise important functions executive in
nature. As to these they are subject to executive control. From a managerial
standpoint they may also be amenable to executive direction. Whatever may be the
validity of the argument that the doctrine of executive privilege is inapplicable if
attempted to be invoked with respect to the performance of a quasi-legislative or
quasi-judicial function, it does not follow that the doctrine is equally irrelevant in
relation to the performance of executive and managerial functions. As to the latter
we think the doctrine of executive privilege is as much applicable to regulatory
commissions as to the executive departments and officers of the government.

                                                  W. WILSON WHITE
                                                Assistant Attorney General
                                                 Office of Legal Counsel

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