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With six federal judges having won their promised "cost-of-living" raises, a group of them led by Senior U.S. District Court Judge Royal Furgeson of Texas, currently President of the Federal Judges Association, now plan to seek class action status in a lawsuit against the U.S. Congress on behalf of other federal judges similarly situated.
The winning case for the 6 federal judges is Beer v. United States, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, No. 2010-5012 (October 5, 2012), which held:
In an en banc review of a suit brought by current
and former Article III judges claiming that Congress violated the Compensation
Clause by withholding the salary adjustments established by the Ethics Reform
Act of 1989, decision of the Court of Federal Claims dismissing the complaint is
reversed, remanded, and Williams v. U.S. is overruled where, in the unique
context of the 1989 Act, the Constitution prevents Congress from abrogating that
statute's precise and definite commitment to automatic yearly cost of living
adjustments for sitting members of the judiciary. Further, because the 1989 Act
was enacted after Section 140, the 1989 Act's automatic cost of living
adjustments control.
[caselaw.findlaw.com/summary/opinion/us-federal-circuit;
www.abajournal.com/news/article/ December 14, 2012/ Matha Neil/ "Group of
Federal Judges Plans to Seek Class Action Status in Suit Over Unpaid
Cost-of-Living Raises"; also see, caselaw.1p.findlaw.com/ Williams,
et al. v. United States, U.S. Ct. of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, Case
No. 99-1572, 00-1254, 1255 (February 16, 2001); www.ky3.com/news/December 14,
2012/ Jesse J. Holland, Associated Press;
www.washingtonpost.com/politics/courts & law/ 12-14-2012/ "Federal Judges
Asking Colleagues To Help Make COngress Pay Promised Cost-of-Living
Increases"]
Congress in 1989 limited federal judges'
ability to earn money outside of their work on the bench and in exchange
provided what was supposed to be automatic cost-of-living increases to judicial
salaries to ensure inflation wouldn't erode the value of those salaries over
time.
But instead of following through, Congress
withheld those cost-of-living increases in 1995, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2007 and
2010, while giving other federal employees their promised cost-of-living
increase adjustments.
The Constitution, the judges say, is on their
side. The Constitution says compensation for federal judges "shall not be
diminished during their continuance in office," so the judges say denying them a
promised cost-of-living increase violates the Constitution's Compensation
Clause.
And now a federal
appeals court agrees with them.
"Congress' acts in 1995, 1996, 1997 and 1999
constitute unconstitutional diminishments of judicial compensation," the appeals
court said in its October order, adding that money also was due that had been
withheld in 2007 and 2010. "As relief, appellants are entitled to monetary
damages for the diminished amounts they would have been paid if Congress had not
withheld the salary adjustments."
However, the appeals court's decision only applied
to those judges who sued in the Beer v. United States case, so Furgeson
and another group of judges are trying to get a class-action lawsuit approved so
they can get the missed salary adjustments for more than 1,000 other current and
former federal judges who court papers say would have been
eligible.
Their success will
depend on whether the Beer decision holds up if challenged at the
Supreme Court. So far, the Justice Department has not yet decided whether to
appeal the federal circuit court's ruling to the Supreme Court.
Stay tuned.
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