Posted by Jonathan Adler:
The AIG Bonus Tax and the Spending Clause:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_03_22-2009_03_28.shtml#1237830998


   Even if courts are unwilling to strike down a 90 percent tax on
   bonuses paid to AIG executives as a unconstitutional Bill of
   Attainder, might the provision be vulnerable on other grounds? [1]As
   written, the provision would seem to present Equal Protection and ex
   post facto issues -- though such arguments might well be losers in
   court. I am also wondering whether the tax could run afoul of the
   constitutional limits on the spending power.

   There are not too many judicially enforceable limitations on the
   spending power. One of the few is that Congress must impose conditions
   on the receipt of federal funds "unambiguously." This requirement
   ensures that the recipient of federal funds has, in fact, consented to
   the conditions when accepting the federal money, and prevents the
   federal government from altering the terms of the deal after the fact.
   Congress may impose new conditions going forward, but it may not
   impose new conditions on federal grants after the fact or interpret
   ambiguous language in order to impose limitations that were not clear
   to the recipient up front.

   In this case, there is no question that the tax on bonuses was imposed
   after the fact. So the question would be whether the tax can be viewed
   as a condition placed on the receipt of federal funds. While not put
   forward as a condition, the tax would seem to operate that way. The
   tax would explicitly apply only to those who receive federal TARP
   funds. So, in effect, the tax is a condition on the receipt of federal
   money: If you take TARP money, you cannot reward executives with
   bonuses that the federal government deems to be exorbitant. If
   Congress could not explicitly impose such a condition after the TARP
   money went out, why should Congress be able to achieve the same end by
   labeling the condition a "tax" on bonuses paid by fund recipients?

   Most of the relevant cases in this area involve grants to state
   governments (see, e.g., [2]Pennhurst, [3]Dole, [4]Va. Dept. of
   Education v. Riley), but it is not clear to me why the principle
   should not carry over to the private context. Insofar as Congress is
   using the spending power to regulate (or punish) behavior, it seems to
   me that this restriction should apply. Congress may be free to tax all
   exorbitant bonuses paid by financial firms, and it is free to limit
   the payment of such bonuses by future recipients of federal funds, but
   why should Congress be able to selectively "tax" bonuses paid by TARP
   recipients after the fact.

   Another potential difficulty would be that the individual challenging
   the tax would be a bonus recipient, and not a direct recipient of
   federal TARP funds. Again, however, I am not sure why this should make
   a principled difference. (Whether a court would ever accept this
   argument is another matter entirely.)

References

   1. http://www.businessinsider.com/full-text-of-the-90-bonus-tax-bill-2009-3
   2. 
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cgi-bin/getcase.pl?navby=case&court=us&vol=451&invol=1#17
   3. 
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=483&invol=203
   4. http://openjurist.org/106/f3d/559

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