

Legal Sidebari
Siegel v. Fitzgerald: Supreme Court Makes
Rare Comment on the Bankruptcy Clause’s
Uniformity Requirement
July 1, 2022
On June 6, 2022, the Supreme Court decided Siegel v. Fitzgerald, holding that the Bankruptcy Judgeship
Act of 2017 (the “2017 Act”) violated the uniformity requirement of the U.S. Constitution’s Bankruptcy
Clause. The 2017 Act increased quarterly administrative fees in most, but not all, federal districts,
resulting in different fees on debtors depending on the district in which they filed for bankruptcy. In its
fourth opinion ever on the uniformity requirement, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that the 2017
Act established an arbitrary geographic disparity that contravened the Bankruptcy Clause. In so ruling, the
Court touched on the limits that Congress faces when enacting legislation to address geographic
problems. This Sidebar provides an overview of the uniformity requirement and analyzes the Siegel
decision. It concludes with post-Siegel considerations for Congress.
The Uniformity Requirement
The Bankruptcy Clause bestows upon Congress the power to establish “uniform Laws on the subject of
Bankruptcies throughout the United States.” A bankruptcy statute thus must apply uniformly to a defined
class of debtors to pass constitutional muster.
In three prior opinions, the Court has interpreted the uniformity requirement as flexible, but only to a
point. First, in Moyses v. Hanover National Bank, the Court rejected a challenge to the constitutionality of
the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, a statute that permitted individual debtor exemptions under state laws. The
Court held that the uniformity requirement did not require Congress to eliminate existing state
exemptions in bankruptcy laws, and that the “general operation of the law is uniform although it may
result in certain particulars differently in different States.”
Second, in the Regional Rail Reorganization Act Cases, the Court assessed the Regional Rail
Reorganization Act of 1973, which applied only to rail carriers operating within a defined region of the
country. Although the Act differentiated between regions on its face, there were no railroad
reorganizations pending outside of that region, allowing the Court to conclude that in practice the statute
“operate[d] uniformly upon all bankrupt railroads” in existence. In upholding the statute, the Court also
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relied on the “flexibility inherent” in the Bankruptcy Clause. The Court elaborated that the Bankruptcy
Clause permits Congress to “take into account differences that exist between different parts of the
country, and to fashion legislation to resolve geographically isolated problems.”
Third, in Railway Labor Executives’ Association v. Gibbons, the Court struck down the Rock Island
Railroad Transition and Employee Assistance Act (RITA), where Congress altered the order of priority of
claimants in a single railroad’s bankruptcy. The Court held that RITA was neither responsive to the
problems endemic to the railroad industry nor confined to a geographic area; accordingly, it could not be
construed as applying uniformly to major railroads.
The Path to Siegel: The Dual Administrative Bankruptcy System
The statute at issue in Siegel was the 2017 Act; however, that statute was only the latest iteration of a
bankruptcy system that operated on two distinct tracks. Until 1978, bankruptcy judges handled both
judicial and administrative functions of a bankruptcy proceeding, including the appointment and
supervision of private trustees. Congress piloted the United States Trustee Program that year in several
federal judicial districts in an effort to reduce judges’ workload and eliminate the appearance of bias that
resulted from judges supervising their own appointed trustees. The pilot Trustee Program transferred
administrative functions to the newly created United States Trustees, under the auspices of the
Department of Justice.
In 1986, Congress sought to make the pilot Trustee Program permanent, but met resistance from the six
federal judicial districts in North Carolina and Alabama, primarily on grounds that placing bankruptcy
trustees under the supervision of the executive branch would create a conflict of interest. Congress
implemented the Trustee Program on a permanent basis in all federal judicial districts except for the
judicial districts in North Carolina and Alabama. Congress permitted those districts, also ultimately on a
permanent basis, to continue the judicial appointment of bankruptcy administrators, a system deemed the
“Administrator Program.”
Both the Trustee Program and the Administrator Program perform the same functions, but they differ in
their sources of funding. By statutes, the Trustee Program must be fully funded by user fees paid to the
United States Trustee System Fund (the “UST Fund”). This comes primarily from large Chapter 11
debtors, who pay a fee each quarter of the year that their case remains pending. The rate is set by
Congress and varies based on the amount of funds paid out, or disbursed, from the bankruptcy estate
during that quarter. Congress does not require the Administrator Program to fund itself. Instead, the law
permits the Judicial Conference of the United States to fund the program.
Congress passed the 2017 Act to address a shortfall in the UST Fund. The 2017 Act amounted to a
temporary increase in the fee rates for large Chapter 11 cases, as of the first quarter of 2018. It was
scheduled to sunset at the end of 2022. It applied to both currently pending and newly filed cases. The
2017 Act did not require Administrator Program districts to charge the same fees as Trustee Program
districts. The Judicial Conference ultimately adopted the 2017 fee increase for the Administrator Program
districts. In those six federal districts, the fee increase did not take effect until October 1, 2018, and the
Judicial Conference applied it only to newly filed cases. For existing cases and for new cases filed during
part of 2018, therefore, the quarterly fees were different for debtors with cases in the Trustee Program or
the Administrator Program.
Four years later, in 2021, Congress amended the statute governing the parity of fees between Trustee
Program and Administrator Program Districts. The amended statute provided that the Judicial Conference
“shall require” imposition of fees equal to those imposed in Trustee Program districts.
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Siegel: Case History and the Court’s Decision
The facts giving rise to Siegel began in 2008, when Circuit City Stores, Inc. filed for bankruptcy in the
U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, a Trustee Program district. In 2010, the
Bankruptcy Court approved Circuit City’s joint liquidation plan, overseen by Trustee Alfred H. Siegel.
The bankruptcy was ongoing when the 2017 Act became effective. In the first three quarters of 2018,
Siegel paid $632,542 in fees. Prior to the 2017 Act, Siegel would have paid $56,000.
Siegel filed for relief against John P. Fitzgerald III, the Acting U.S. Trustee for Region 4, also in the
Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. He contended that the 2017 Act’s fee increase was
invalid because it did not apply in both Trustee Program districts and Administrator Program districts. The
Bankruptcy Court agreed and ordered that for fees due from January 1, 2018, onward, Siegel pay the rate
in effect prior to the 2017 Act. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reversed, ruling that
Congress permissibly passed the 2017 Act to replenish the dwindling UST Fund, which affected only
non-Administrator Program districts. The Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve a split that had
developed in several circuits over the 2017 Act’s constitutionality. The Second and Tenth Circuits had
deemed the statute unconstitutional, while the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits had upheld the law.
The Supreme Court unanimously ruled that the 2017 Act violated the Constitution’s uniformity
requirement. As a threshold matter, it held that the uniformity requirement applied to the 2017 Act as a
law “on the subject of Bankruptcies.” The Court disagreed with Fitzgerald’s argument that the 2017 Act
did not implicate the uniformity requirement because it was administrative, rather than substantive, in
nature. The Court reasoned that in prior cases it had interpreted the Bankruptcy Clause to have granted
plenary power to Congress over the entirety of bankruptcy, and that it had never distinguished between
substantive and administrative bankruptcy laws or suggested that the uniformity requirement would not
apply to both.
Having ruled that the 2017 Act must satisfy the uniformity requirement, the Court next held that it failed
to do so. The Court reasoned that the funding disparities between Trustee Program districts and
Administrator Program districts arose not out of a region-specific problem, like the law at issue in the
Regional Rail Reorganization Act Cases, but out of Congress’s own “arbitrary” decision to separate the
districts into two different systems. That decision to separate the districts, the Court held, derived not
from geographical needs, but from a desire of the federal districts in two states to avoid participating in
the Trustee Program.
In addition, the Court identified the limits of its decision. It declined to address the constitutionality of the
dual administrative bankruptcy system. It also preserved Congress’s authority to respond to
geographically isolated bankruptcy problems. It further remanded to the Fourth Circuit to consider the
proper remedy in the first instance.
Analysis and Implications for Congress
Siegel reaffirmed the broad applicability of the uniformity requirement to laws governing bankruptcy.
That includes applicability to administrative requirements, meaning that Congress may exercise its power
under the Bankruptcy Clause to provide for the administration of bankruptcy adjudication, but must also
comply with the Bankruptcy Clause’s uniformity requirements when it does so. A rare Supreme Court
opinion on the uniformity requirement, Siegel also summarizes the doctrine’s history and provides
guidance for Congress moving forward. As Justice Sotomayor wrote for the Court, “our precedent
provides that the Bankruptcy Clause offers Congress flexibility, but does not permit the arbitrary,
disparate treatment of similarly situated debtors based on geography.”
The Court granted certiorari in Siegel only to consider the constitutionality of the 2017 Act, and stopped
at invalidating the different fee arrangements between the Trustee Program districts and the Administrator
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Program districts. However, the dual administrative bankruptcy system itself is a creature of multiple
federal statutes, most recently the Federal Courts Improvement Act of 2000, and establishes different
rules for North Carolina and Alabama bankruptcies compared to the other 48 states.
Although the Court decided Siegel narrowly, its ruling raises the possibility that if challenged directly, the
dual administrative bankruptcy system may not withstand scrutiny. The Supreme Court commented that
“Congress exempted debtors in only two States from a fee increase that applied to debtors in 48 States,
without identifying any material difference between debtors across those States.” The same reasoning
could apply to the differences between the Trustee Program and the Administrator Program more
generally. The lower courts could apply that logic to conclude that the dual administrative bankruptcy
system does not arise out of “certain particulars” unique to those two states (Moyses), and that it does not
respond to geographically isolated needs (Railroad Reorganization Act Cases). In such a case, a debtor
would likely need to allege or establish material differences between the Trustee Program and the
Administrator Program.
In addition to providing a potential argument against the dual administrative bankruptcy system, the Court
also provides Congress with a potential avenue for preserving it. The Court observed that the 2017 Act
was unconstitutional in part because Congress had failed to identify any material difference between
debtors in the Trustee Program districts and the Administrator Program Districts. Articulating a need for
the system grounded in true geographical differences may bolster the system’s constitutional position.
Congress might do this when making periodic updates to the Trustee Program, as it did recently with the
Bankruptcy Administration Improvement Act of 2020.
Author Information
Michael D. Contino
Legislative Attorney
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