Rule of Law

Catholic Charities Fort Worth v. Department of Health and Human Services

In Catholic Charities Forth Worth v. Department of Health and Human Services, the United States District Court for the District of Columbia is considering whether the Trump administration’s unilateral decision to freeze funding appropriated for the Refugee Resettlement Program violates federal law and the Constitution. 

Case Summary

On January 27, 2025, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issued a memorandum directing an immediate “pause” of all federal funding “that may be implicated by any of the President’s executive orders.” Agency officials suspended all congressionally appropriated grants, loans, and financial assistance programs, freezing billions of dollars in federal funding.  

The spending freeze had an immediate and devastating effect on refugee resettlement programs, forcing refugee support programs to close their doors, leading to the eviction of refugees from their housing, and more.  

OMB later rescinded the memorandum, at least in name, but to date, it has not unfrozen $36 million of congressionally appropriated funds owed to Catholic Charities Forth Worth for its work resettling tens of thousands of refugee families. Catholic Charities Fort Worth challenged this unlawful suspension of funding in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, and moved for a temporary restraining order.  

In March 2025, CAC filed an amicus brief in support of the motion for a temporary restraining order. Our brief makes three principal points. 

First, the Framers gave Congress control of appropriations and spending to guard against the risk of a tyrannical president. They took pains to deny the President the sweeping powers that the King of England had historically enjoyed, such as the power to spend without Parliament’s approval. By the time of the Constitutional Convention, there was a clear consensus that the legislative branch would have the power of the purse. In the Taxing and Spending Clause, the Framers granted Congress the affirmative power to raise revenue and to spend funds, while the Appropriations Clause limits the executive, stating that “No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law.” The text of the Constitution is clear that the executive branch cannot make an end-run around the legislative process, including in the realm of spending and appropriations. 

Second, for hundreds of years, Congress has passed federal legislation guarding its control of the purse strings. Since the earliest days of the Republic, when the Tenth Congress passed the Purpose Statue requiring appropriations to be “solely applied to the objects for which they are respectively appropriated,” Congress has made clear that the President cannot disobey its spending decisions. The Anti-Deficiency Act reiterates that the executive branch cannot make spending decisions outside of what is authorized by law. Most significantly, after President Richard Nixon unlawfully refused to spend billions of dollars in federal appropriations, the 1974 Impoundment Control Act (ICA) was passed to rein in the President, creating special procedures the President must follow to seek congressional approval for delays or cancellations of federal funding. Recently, in response to the first Trump administration’s efforts to withhold foreign aid, Congress strengthened the ICA with new transparency requirements. 

Third, centuries of practice and precedent confirm that the President and his subordinates have no authority to defy the will of Congress by refusing to execute laws requiring the disbursement of federal funding. In the 1838 decision Kendall v. United States ex rel. Stokes, the Supreme Court held that the executive branch had no inherent constitutional authority to rescind appropriated funds—a point the Court reiterated 150 years later in Train v. City of New York, rejecting President Nixon’s effort to rescind environmental protection funding. Lower courts across the country have similarly rejected presidential efforts to pause or cancel federal funding in defiance of Congress, as have high-ranking and respected executive branch attorneys, including some who went on to become Supreme Court justices. 

The district court should block President Trump’s unlawful attempt to usurp Congress’s role in appropriations and spending. 

On April 29, 2025, the case was voluntarily dismissed without prejudice.

Case Timeline

  • March 5, 2025

    CAC files amicus brief in the District Court for the District of Columbia

    CCFW Brief FINAL
  • April 29, 2025

    Case voluntarily dismissed without prejudice

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