Morison on the Relationship Between the ATS and MCA

Morison on the Relationship Between the ATS and MCA

Samuel Morison, Appellate Defense Counsel with the Office of the Chief Defense Counsel, Department of Defense, has posted a superb new esssay on SSRN entitled “Accepting Sosa‘s Invitation: Did Congress Expand the Subject Matter Jurisdiction of the ATS in the Military Commissions Act?”  Here is the abstract:

The Alien Tort Statute (ATS) provides a federal forum for aliens to seek tort damages for certain violations of customary international law, including war crimes. In Sosa, the Supreme Court admonished the lower courts to exercise caution when creating new causes of action under the ATS, but this is entirely a matter of respecting the separation of powers. If Congress enacts a statute that “occupies the field,” the Court observed, then a judge’s task is to faithfully enforce the norms delineated in the statute. To date, the Military Commissions Act (MCA) has been almost completely ignored in human rights litigation under the ATS, perhaps because it does not, in terms, provide for civil remedies. But this overlooks the fact that the MCA is not an ordinary domestic criminal statute with a long-arm provision. Instead, it purports to “occupy the field” of war crimes, at least for U.S. domestic purposes. Perhaps most importantly, the MCA penalizes terrorism, broadly construed, providing material support for terrorism and conspiracy as war crimes, when committed by private, non-state actors in the context of and associated with an armed conflict. If this is a valid exercise of Congress’s prescriptive authority to define and punish violations against the law of nations, it follows that such norms should be actionable in ATS litigation. Accordingly, if the constitutionality of the MCA is ultimately affirmed by the Supreme Court, the decision will come with a previously unacknowledged systemic cost, namely a sharp increase in the scope of ATS liability.

The essay contains, to my mind, the most sophisticated historical analysis to date of Congress’s ability to “define and punish” violations of the law of nations.  I predict it will have a substantial impact on the field.

I don’t think Sam has sent the essay out to law reviews yet.  An enterprising editor at one of our partner journals may want to drop him a line…

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Topics
International Criminal Law, International Human Rights Law, National Security Law
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Benjamin Davis
Benjamin Davis

Very nice!
Best,
Ben

Jordan
Jordan

Response…
I would caution that a c/a (after Sosa) is not created under the ATS (or ATCA) as such, but is recognized under international law, that one has a right to a remedy under international law.  Further, I doubt that the MCA “occu[pies the field” in the sense of wiping out other legislation, such as the ATS (ATCA) or 10 U.S.C. Sec. 818 (which incoporates ALL of the laws of war as offenses against the laws of the United States — Ex Parte Qurin, In re Yamashita, U.S. v. Schultz, etc. — see 50 Tex. L. Rev. 6).  In any event, there certainly was no clear and unequivocal intent of Congress expressed in the MCA to limit any treaty of the United States as law of the United States, although I am not sure whether that matters with respect to his theme.