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This was the decision which allowed Pryor's appointment to stand. The court addressed your concerns. While you may disagree with this decision, the Ninth, Eleventh and Second Circuits support this view. The Supreme Court denied review of the case, which makes it binding in those circuits, and persuasive authority in the other circuits. I'm not sure if the 2nd or DC Circuit would have jurisdiction over this matter. The appointment was in DC, but the positon is n NY. In teh Pryor case, the 11th Circuit did not grant objections to jurisdiction since Pryor was appointed to a job under their jurisdiction.
Sorry I can't link to the case but I got it off lexis, which is a pay site.
US COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT --------------------------------- No. 02-16424, D. C. Docket No. 01-00009-CV-JTC-3 PETER EVANS et al v. DENIS STEPHENS
“Vacancies” Need Not Arise During the Recess in Order to be Filled
About the phrase in the Recess Appointments Clause that speaks of filling “Vacancies that may happen during the Recess,” we accept this phrase, in context, means that, if vacancies “happen” to exist during a recess, they may be filled on a temporary basis by the President. This view is consistent with the understanding of most judges that have considered the question, written executive interpretations from as early as 1823, and legislative acquiescence. See United States v. Woodley, 751 F.2d 1008, 1012 (9th Cir. 1985) (en banc) (noting that contrary interpretation “conflicts with a common sense reading of the word happen, as well as the construction given to this word by the three branches of our government”); United States v. Allocco, 305 F.2d 704, 709-15 (2d Cir. 1962); see also In re Farrow, 3 F.112 (N.D. Ga. 1880).
On its face, the phrase is open to more than one interpretation. For example, the word “happen” can be defined as “befall” which has been defined as “happen to be.” Compare 6 Oxford English Dictionary 1096 (2d ed. 1989) (1928) with 2 Oxford English Dictionary at 62. Therefore, the phrase’s most accepted interpretation (upon which the President has relied and that we too accept) does not contradict the plain meaning rule.
In addition, as we understand the history, early Presidents -- when delegates to the Constitutional Convention were still active in government -- made recess appointments to fill vacancies that originated while the Senate was in Session. For example, President Washington, during a Senate break in 1789, appointed Cyrus Griffin to fill a judgeship created during a previous Session; and President Jefferson, during a Senate break in 1801, appointed three judges to fill vacancies created during a previous Session.
Congress at least implicitly agrees with this view of recess appointments. That Congress is willing, under certain circumstances, to pay recess appointees filling vacancies that had existed while the Senate was in Session suggests to us that it is the view of the majority of Congress that the President’s making of such appointments is likely not unconstitutional. To interpret the statute’s significance any other way would seem to attribute to Congress an intent to countenance what they saw as an unlawful practice.
We do not agree that the different language of Article I, Section 3, Clause 2 (addressing the filling of Senate vacancies during recesses of state legislatures) shows that what has long been the common interpretation of the Recess Appointments Clause is wrong. Nor do we agree that Hamilton's capitalization or italicization of the words “during the recess of the Senate” in Federalist 67 and 76 indicates that the vacancy to be filled (as opposed to the appointment itself) must occur in the recess. See 5 U.S.C. § 5503 (1996) (discussing salary requirements for officers appointed to fill a vacancy that existed while Senate was in session). Furthermore, interpreting the phrase to prohibit the President from filling a vacancy that comes into being on the last day of a Session but to empower the President to fill a vacancy that arises immediately thereafter (on the first day of a recess) contradicts what we understand to be the purpose of the Recess Appointments Clause: to keep important offices filled and the government functioning.
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