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Editing Administrative Law
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* FTC. The court held that Congress may limit President’s removal power to require a finding of cause before an official exercising '''quasi-legislative''' and '''quasi-judicial''' power may be removed. Ct distinguished ''Myers'' because exercised purely executive, whereas ''Humphrey'' exercised legislative rulemaking and adjudicatory powers. Therefore, ''Humphrey'' was likely not an inferior, and so ''Meyers'' did not apply to him. However, the quasi-leg and quasi-judicial nature of the functions he performed provided a sufficient justification for restricting the President’s removal of a principal officer. | * FTC. The court held that Congress may limit President’s removal power to require a finding of cause before an official exercising '''quasi-legislative''' and '''quasi-judicial''' power may be removed. Ct distinguished ''Myers'' because exercised purely executive, whereas ''Humphrey'' exercised legislative rulemaking and adjudicatory powers. Therefore, ''Humphrey'' was likely not an inferior, and so ''Meyers'' did not apply to him. However, the quasi-leg and quasi-judicial nature of the functions he performed provided a sufficient justification for restricting the President’s removal of a principal officer. | ||
* ''President could not remove | * ''President could not remove and FTC commissioner without good caus. Included quasi-legislative and quasi-judicial powers. '' | ||
<nowiki>**Both cases above are formalism**</nowiki> | <nowiki>**Both cases above are formalism**</nowiki> |