Intergovernmental immunity

In United States Constitutional Law, intergovernmental immunity is a doctrine that prevents the federal government and individual state governments from intruding on each other's sovereignty. It is also referred to as a Supremacy Clause immunity or simply federal immunity from state law.

The doctrine was established by the United States Supreme Court in McCulloch v. Maryland (1819),[1] which ruled unanimously that states may not regulate property or operations of the federal government. In that case, Maryland state law subjected banks not chartered by the state to restrictions and taxes. In McCulloch's case, state law had attempted to impose these restrictions on the Second Bank of the United States.[2] The Court found that if a state had the power to tax a federally incorporated institution, then the state effectively had the power to destroy the federal institution, thereby thwarting the intent and purpose of Congress. This would make the states superior to the federal government.

Traffic and parking violations

In some cases, the federal government may voluntarily subject itself to local regulations. For example, the policy of the General Services Administration is that federal employees must obey state and local laws "except when the duties of your position require otherwise", and are personally responsible for paying parking fines and moving violation fines not required for official purposes.[3] A 2008 Congressional report found the federal government's lack of effective enforcement of this policy was creating traffic hazards in Washington, D.C., and New York City.[4]

See also

References

  1. 'McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316, at 426 (1819).
  2. Law Library - American Law and Legal Information
  3. 41 CFR 102-34.235-245
  4. Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, U.S. House of Representatives (2008-10-24). "Lax Fleet Management Practices Enable Government Employees to Ignore Local Parking Laws and Evade Fines" (PDF). Retrieved 2015-09-06.
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