“Grossly Short of Prudent Decision-Making”: Court halts Kennedy Center Construction and Name Change

In a ruling Friday, District Judge Christopher Cooper ordered the cessation of all repair plans for the Kennedy Center and the removal of Trump’s name from the building within two weeks. It is a detailed and comprehensive opinion, but I believe that Judge Cooper is wrong on the cessation of repairs. I previously expressed skepticism over the claim that the board could order such a change unilaterally.

I have previously addressed the naming controversy, which raised the very issues that Judge Cooper cited in his rejection of the right to rename the Center without congressional approval.

However, the opinion becomes more challengeable when the court addresses the decision to close the Center for two years to carry out major renovations. The opinion is rife with digs at President Donald Trump for his social media postings and his unilateral plan for a ballroom. Judge Cooper editorializes that “Especially after the demolition of the East Wing of the White House— which occurred out of the blue a few months after President Trump pledged that construction would not ‘interfere with’ and would ‘pay[] total respect to the existing building’—there has been understandable concern that the Kennedy Center may be the next target of the wrecking ball.”

Judge Cooper accepts that the Center is long overdue for major renovations and that the Board had the authority to order them.  He further rejects the sweeping claims of litigants that Trump was planning to effectively raze the Center: “The evidence before the Court does not demonstrate that the Center is poised for wholesale destruction and rebuilding, à la the East Wing.”

However, Cooper rules that the Board could not have given the decision sufficient time or attention in carrying out the plan. He declared that “None of the board members had sufficient information in advance of the March 16 meeting to make a well-considered decision to close the center.”

The court’s tight analysis is lost in supporting the cessation of repairs. While he acknowledges that such repairs have long been planned and studied, he cites differing statements on the plan to continue operations before a later decision to close the Center. The court finds that the record illustrates a failure to fulfill the fiduciary duty of the board and Chair:

“Whatever happened during that purported four-month incubation period, Board input was, most evidently, an afterthought. Trustees learned about the plan to close the Center at the same time as the general public, by social media post. Deprived of time and information, they had no meaningful opportunity to consider perhaps the most momentous decision in the Center’s lifetime since it opened in 1971.”

That analysis is heavily laden with assumptions on the lack of consideration of the Board. The same approach could be used to set aside an array of board decisions that do not evidence sufficient concern or scrutiny for the satisfaction of a judge.

Judge Cooper seems to recognize how far the court was taking its own authority in countermanding the decision:

“The Court appreciates that, in both the charitable and corporate spheres, board meetings are often scripted affairs… The Court should not be heard to suggest that trustees must scrutinize every piece of prefatory work that has been done, or labor through the night debating the relative merits of their decisions in order to discharge their fiduciary duties— especially where, as here, a board is large and comprised of members who may not be well schooled in the subject matter before them. “

Yet, the court still concludes that this Board “seems to have fallen grossly short of prudent decision-making.” That seems far too subjective and fluid a standard for federal courts to micromanage executive branch decision-making.

For his part, President Trump was equally sweeping and unrestrained in his response. He declared that he would order the Commerce Department to transfer the Center to Congress “so they can make a determination as to what to do with it.”

Given that Judge Cooper’s order on the cessation of repairs may be reversed, it is unnecessary unless the naming of the Center is the overriding consideration. In either case, it would make little sense for the Center to be placed under the supervision of Congress. It would be appropriate for Congress to address the naming question as well as potentially being heard on the need for a closure.

In the end, I thought that the court’s cessation analysis conveyed ample reasons, but Judge Cooper himself (and others) may be unhappy with how the decision was made. It is less clear why that should matter. There are ample reasons to close the Center to facilitate what the court acknowledges will be extensive and major renovations. That construction can only be facilitated and expedited if there is not a simultaneous need to keep a substantial part of the Center operating for the public.

The Administration should appeal the decision and may soon be able to resume work on the Center, regardless of its name.

Here is the opinion: Beaty v. Trump

9 thoughts on ““Grossly Short of Prudent Decision-Making”: Court halts Kennedy Center Construction and Name Change”

  1. While I support Trump in most ways, I surely do wish he would not name things after himself. Had he called the ballroom after Thomas Jefferson, or another founding farther, there would be little controversy.

  2. In the immortal words of Susan Wild at the GW Law graduation: “Do what you know is right, and let the law catch up to you.” Ignore the judge like any good Dem would do. . .

  3. The judge says “comprised of members who may not be well schooled in the subject matter before them.”

    So I guess that means the judge is well schooled on the subject matter of construction and renovations?

  4. Come On Man! That’s why we have Black Robe Illuminati, right? Only they have the Oracle type wisdom for All-Knowing or EVERYTHING!! Whew, what would we do with these legal geniuses that can see deep into the future like Nostradamus with the Historical Wisdom of Solomon to ensure all of the Peasantry and Great Unwashed Swine are herded like moronic sheep into a direction ONLY THEY CAN UNDERSTAND! Oh wait, we never agreed to have a legal half-wit rule over us nor did we vote for these Black Robe Scumbags.

    1. If Biden tried it, you conservatives, ie. judges, would respond the same way.
      Legal geniuses? I’ll take that to mean you have zero legal training, or experience.

      1. It’s pretty clear that we have reached a point where legal training and the rule of law are irrelevant.

      2. Right, Democrats never make anything better. Any Biden claim for renovation would be prima facie fraudulent.

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