Washington A lawsuit protesting the Deficit Reduction Act's constitutionality was dismissed in U.S. district court in late August. Public Citizen, a consumer

Washington

A lawsuit protesting the Deficit Reduction Act's constitutionality was dismissed in U.S. district court in late August.

Public Citizen, a consumer watchdog group, filed the suit in March, claiming the law was invalid because the version passed by the House of Representatives was different from the version passed by the Senate and signed by the president.

As the legislation was passed back and forth between the House and Senate last year, a typo involving the DME rental cap was inserted into the House version. The Senate passed a version of the bill without the typo, which was then signed by the president. Under the constitution, bills passed by both chambers should be identical.

The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia dismissed the lawsuit, citing the “enrolled bill rule” in the 1892 court case Marshall Field v. Clark. Under the rule, the signatures of the Speaker of the House, the president of the Senate and the president of the United States make an enrolled bill “complete and unimpeachable,” the court said, adding that Public Citizen did not “establish that the House passed a bill that differs from the one passed in the Senate.”

Public Citizen said the court “gave an overly broad reading” to the 1892 case and is planning to appeal the decision. “We are disappointed in the decision, which allows a blatant violation of the Constitution to go unaddressed,” Adina Rosenbaum, a Public Citizen attorney, said.