The Travel Ban Case and Nationwide Injunctions




Legal Sidebari

The Travel Ban Case and Nationwide
Injunctions

May 2, 2018
On Wednesday, April 25, 2018, the Supreme Court heard oral argument in the “travel ban” case, Trump v.
Hawaii
.
While the case presents many significant issues, one that has received relatively less attention,
but extends beyond the immigration context, is the cert petition’s third question: “Whether the global
injunction [issued by the lower court] is impermissibly overbroad.” This question centers on the propriety
of the “nationwide injunction,” (alternatively known as the “national” or “universal” injunction), which is
an issue of rising importance throughout the law.
This Sidebar addresses when, if ever, a regional federal trial judge adjudicating a case involving the
federal government can award nationwide injunctive relief—a court order that commands a party to take
or refrain from taking some action throughout the country. In the context of a suit against the federal
government, an injunction with this type of “universal” effect acts to effectively void the law or policy in
question. When a plaintiff brings a facial challenge to a federal law or policy, courts in recent years have
generally held that district courts have “considerable discretion in fashioning suitable relief,” including
the power to provide for an injunction against enforcing the federal law or policy nationwide. Some
courts and commentators have begun to argue, however, that this approach has gone too far, and district
courts should only have the power to enjoin the government’s conduct with respect to the parties before
the court. Scholarly debate on this question has intensified in recent years as the “nationwide injunction”
has become more common. The issue has become so significant that on March 10, 2018, Attorney
General Jeff Sessions, in remarks to the Federalist Society’s National Student Symposium, called the
nationwide injunction “a threat to our constitutional order.” This Sidebar briefly explores the nationwide
injunction at issue in the travel ban case and surveys a handful of the scholarly and judicial arguments
surrounding the nationwide injunction in general.
Background of the Injunction in the Travel Ban Case. The travel ban case has had a long and winding
road to the Supreme Court, which is discussed in detail in this CRS Sidebar. In its present incarnation, the
travel ban case involves the legality of a proclamation issued by the President on September 24, 2017.
The proclamation was intended to bar certain nationals of certain countries from entering the United
States. Within weeks, following a lawsuit brought by the State of Hawaii on behalf of its University
(among other parties), and a federal district court judge sitting in Hawaii enjoined most of the
Proclamation globally. While the Supreme Court stayed the injunction pending an appeal, the Ninth
Circuit, largely affirmed the district court’s order. The injunction, as revised by the Ninth Circuit, fully
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enjoins the United States from enforcing or implementing six provisions within the proclamation
concerning entry restrictions on certain nationals of five countries “in all places, including the United
States, at all United States borders and ports of entry, and in the issuance of visas” with respect to all
persons who have a credible bona fide relationship with a person or entity in the United States.
The Department of Justice argued before the Ninth Circuit that the remedy should have been narrowly
tailored and limited in application to the named plaintiffs. The Ninth Circuit recognized that, as a general
matter, injunctive relief should be ‘tailored to remedy the specific harms shown by the plaintiffs.”
However, the court concluded that a nationwide injunction, in this case, was “necessary to give Plaintiffs
a full expression of their rights” because, in the immigration context, a uniform policy is necessary—the
Constitution states that Congress can establish a uniform Rule of Naturalization—and, as a result, any
application of the six provisions within the proclamation anywhere would harm the plaintiffs’ interests.
The government’s Supreme Court brief argues that the Ninth Circuit’s ruling “contravenes constitutional
and equitable principles that require limiting injunctive relief to what is necessary to redress a plaintiff’s
own cognizable injuries.” In particular, the government argues that Article III of the Constitution limits a
court’s power to award relief to the plaintiff before the court; a court has no power to award relief to
parties that are not before it. Further, the government argues that historical limitations on courts’ equitable
powers prevent courts from creating injunctions that go beyond protecting the plaintiff, as such
injunctions are “more burdensome to the defendant than necessary” to protect the party seeking judicial
relief. Finally, the government asserts that, by upholding global injunctive relief, the Court would
“disserve the orderly, evenhanded development of the law” by depriving any other court, apart from the
initial court to rule for the plaintiff, from resolving an issue. In turn, the government contends that
universal injunctions allow courts that rule for plaintiffs to necessarily override courts that would rule for
the government, preventing the normal percolation of legal argumentation throughout the lower courts.
In response, the respondents argue that the proclamation is “invalid and should be struck down on its
face.” According to the respondents, whenever a plaintiff launches a successful facial challenge, the
policy at issue should be enjoined in full to avoid needless duplicative litigation. A narrower injunction,
the respondents argue, would lead to “dozens if not hundreds of additional suits seeking relief for the
countless similarly situated parties throughout the United States.” Further, they assert that the need for a
nationwide injunction is particularly acute because the State of Hawaii cannot identify in advance
“precisely which foreign nationals may wish to join or visit” and “targeted relief cannot eliminate the
profound deterrent effect” of the proclamation.
The Rising Use of and Debate Surrounding Nationwide Injunctions. The travel ban case is only the
latest case to involve a nationwide injunction. According to remarks from the Attorney General, the
Trump Administration has been subject to at least 22 nationwide injunctions in his first year in office. As
one scholar has noted, these injunctions are on the rise, but this rise has not been limited to the Trump
Administration or to the context of immigration law. Recent examples of cases involving nationwide
injunctions (including some issued on a preliminary basis), include:
 In 2017, several federal courts’ blocking executive policies purporting to strip so-called
“sanctuary jurisdictions” of federal funding;
 In 2017, the Western District of Washington’s suspending regulations that would have
required immigration attorneys either to (1) appear and assume full representation of pro se
parties in immigration cases or (2) refrain entirely from providing legal advice to those
parties;
 In 2016, the Northern District of Texas’s preventing the enforcement of a “Dear Colleague”
Letter from the Departments of Justice and Education, instructing schools to “immediately


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allow students to use the bathrooms...of the student’s choosing, or risk losing Title IX
funding”;
 In 2015, the Fifth Circuit’s affirming of a preliminary injunction barring implementation of
President Obama’s Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent
Residents (DAPA); and
 In 2015, the Sixth Circuit’s issuing a nationwide stay of the EPA’s Clean Water Rule, which
identified and expanded the waters that are protected under the Clean Water Act.
Along with this rise in the issuance of nationwide injunctions, there has been a concomitant rise in the
scholarly and judicial debate surrounding such injunctions. One recent publication, by UCLA law
professor Samuel L. Bray—which was cited in the government’s Supreme Court brief in Hawaii— argues
that courts should never award national injunctions because (1) historical evidence suggests that the
“national injunction is a recent development in the history of equity,” (2) nationwide injunctions hinder
the development of the law in multiple fora and create the risk of conflicting injunctions, (3) nationwide
injunctions encourage “forum-shopping” (i.e., litigants picking and choosing the most favorable court to
hear their claim); and (4) the case for nationwide injunctions is doctrinally incoherent (especially with
respect to Rule 23(b)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which implies that a nationwide
injunction should only follow class certification). A recent edition of the Harvard Law Review contained
several published responses by other commentators to Bray’s article. While these responses generally do
not rebut Bray’s historical analysis, they argue that the nationwide injunction is nonetheless appropriate in
certain circumstances involving particularly serious harms, and that discretion should be left with the trial
court to determine the appropriate remedy. Other scholars have, however, agreed with Bray that the use of
nationwide injunctions should be curtailed.
The Supreme Court has yet to directly weigh in on this apparent controversy surrounding the use of
nationwide injunctions, although it denied a request to wholly stay a nationwide injunction of an earlier
iteration of the travel ban. The federal appellate courts, however, have begun to address this question with
more frequency. Most recently, on April 19, 2018, the Seventh Circuit issued a divided opinion upholding
a nationwide injunction involving the Justice Department’s attempt to withhold funding to sanctuary
jurisdictions. In that case, City of Chicago v. Sessions, the Seventh Circuit upheld a nationwide injunction
prohibiting the enforcement of two conditions imposed on recipients of certain Justice Department grants,
which would have required state and local authorities to aid certain federal immigration enforcement
activities in order to maintain eligibility for the grants. The majority argued that a nationwide injunction
was appropriate in this case because the issue would not vary from locality-to-locality and there was no
need for duplicative litigation. A partial dissent in that case from Judge Manion agreed with the majority
on the merits, but differed on whether the nationwide injunction was appropriate. Judge Manion asserted
that the duplicative litigation the majority feared would actually be beneficial in this case because it was
entirely possible for another circuit to look at the legal questions posed by the case and reach a different
conclusion. By permitting the injunction, Judge Manion contended that the Seventh Circuit was
effectively acting as the Supreme Court by deciding the issue for the whole country. According to the
dissent, the nationwide injunction could undermine the development of the law by preventing multiple
panels from weighing in on difficult issues. Instead, Judge Manion would have narrowed the injunction to
protect only the plaintiff at issue in the case, the City of Chicago.
Conclusion. Notwithstanding the intense debate over the nationwide injunctive relief, the Supreme Court
may not necessarily reach this issue in the travel ban case. In order for the Supreme Court to reach the
issue of the scope of the injunction, the Court would have to decide both jurisdictional and merits
questions in favor of the respondents. And, even if the Court reaches the question about the appropriate
scope of relief, arguments about the constitutional necessity for uniformity with respect to immigration
law may limit the broad applicability of any ruling. Nonetheless, at oral argument, one Justice—Justice


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Gorsuch—did signal some concern about the broader trend of issuing universal injunctions, noting in a
question for the respondent’s attorney the “troubling rise of [the] nationwide injunction, cosmic injunction
. . . not limited to relief for the parties at issue or even a class action.”
While it is unclear whether the Supreme Court will meaningfully opine on the issue of
nationwide injunctions during the October 2017 term, the issue has already garnered some
legislative attention. At least one bill has been introduced that would provide that “no United
States district court shall issue any order providing for injunctive relief” that applies to parties
apart from those before the court or within the district. Further, there are likely to be other cases
in the pipeline to the Supreme Court—perhaps City of Chicago v. Sessions or another case from
the litigation involving sanctuary jurisdictions—that could pick up the argument about the scope
of injunctive relief from the travel ban case.

Author Information

Wilson C. Freeman

Legislative Attorney




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