Title: Administrative Law - 24 Oct 2006
1Administrative Law - 24 Oct 2006
2Agency Organization
- Traditional Government Functions
- Legislative (Rulemaking)
- Judicial (Adjudication)
- Executive (Prosecution)
- Why are the separated by the Constitution?
- What is the problem of combining them in an
agency?
3Constitutional v. APA Limits on Combining
Functions in Adjudications
- The APA provides that should be some separation
of functions in adjudications to reduce the
conflict between prosecuting and judging a case - This is not a constitutional requirement
- The United States Supreme Court will allow a
decisionmaker to have other roles - There are limits - you have to argue that the
facts make the appearance of conflict overwhelming
4Protections for ALJs
- Civil Service protections
- Cannot be assigned other duties - no cleaning the
toilet if the Secretary does not like your
rulings - Nash v. Bown, 869 F2d 675 (Cir2 1989)
- Can have performance goals
- Cannot have decisional quotas
- What if quality control guidelines are biased
toward supporting the agency position?
5Bias by Agency Heads - Withrow v. Larkin 421 US
35 (1975)
- Medical board case
- Same agency investigated the case, then pulled
the doc's license - No problem, at the constitutional level
- Is there something special about a medical board
case? - Who usually sits on a medical board?
- What is the notice and record issue?
6Criminal and Civil Law Parallels in Withrow
- Criminal law judges may rule on probable cause
warrants and then also preside over the case
resulting from the warrant - Civil law judges make many decisions in pretrial
proceedings that would bias their ruling in the
case - The problem is that there is a jury making the
final decision in these cases, not the judge
7Valley v. Rapides Parish School Bd., 118 F.3d
1047 (Cir5 1997)
- Firing a school superintendent
- In sum, the record in the case unfolds like a
soap opera. The respective views of the parties
were regularly aired out in the print and
broadcast media in the Rapides Parish area. One
need only make a cursory review of the exhibits
and the testimony to get a clear impression of
the rancor and deeply held views of the
aforementioned school board members prior to the
discharge hearing. Indeed, the district court's
sparing recitation of the facts underlying its
ruling was a tacit acknowledgment of the general
public's and the school board's awareness of the
details of the accusations in the case.
8Court Ruling
- Upheld an injunction reinstating the
superintendent until the board could give an
unbiased hearing - No hint from the court about how that might be
done.
9FTC v. Cement Institute, 333 US 683 (1948)
- FTC issued reports criticizing a certain method
of cost analysis - Plaintiff argued that this showed that the
commissioners were biased against their business,
which relied on this method - Court said this would prevent the agency from
carrying out its legilative mandate
10American Cyanmid v. FTC, 363 F2d 757 (Cir6 1966)
- Chairman of the FTC had investigated drug company
while counsel of a senate committee - When the FTC investigated a complaint on the same
subject against a drug company, the hearing
examiner ruled for the drug company - The Chairman participated in the commission's
overturning of the hearing officer, but his vote
was not critical - The court found that his participation biased the
outcome - Would it have mattered if he had done the same at
the FTC?
11(No Transcript)
12Association of National Advertisers , Inc. v. FTC
- FTC is adopting rules on TV advertising directed
at children - Chairman has written and spoken at length on the
evils of TV ads aimed at children - Plaintiffs seek to disqualify him because of bias
- What happened in Cinderella?
- Cinderella disqualified the same Chairman from
participating in an adjudication because he had
prejudged some of the facts.
13Is the Standard Different for Rulemaking?
- Clear and convincing evidence that he has an
unalterably closed mind on matters critical to
the rulemaking.
14Can the District Court make this into an
Adjudication?
- Said there were aspects of an adjudication to
this rule making because there was a limited
statutory right of cross examination - Did the circuit court buy this?
- Rejected because modifications of rulemaking
procedures do not make them adjudications
15How did the Court Characterize the Commissioner's
Comments?
- Discussion and advocacy
- What is it going to take to disqualify an agency
head from a rulemaking? - Charlton Heston as head of BATF?
16Pillsbury Co. v. FTC
- What was the FTC concerned about?
- Monopoly power in flour
- How did Congress interfere with the agency
action? - What did Senator Kefauver say?
- The court found this improper meddling
- Congress may not require testimony on ongoing
adjudications - Congress may request information as part of its
congressional casework
17Principle of Necessity
- What is the Principle of Necessity?
- Why is the important for small agencies?
18Gibson v. Berryhill, 411 US 564 (1973)
- Optometry board was all independent practitioners
- Made it unprofessional for optometrists to work
for employers - Why?
- Court disqualified the whole agency
- Necessity does not cover illegal behavior
- What if they got the legislature to pass a law
preventing employee optometrists?
19Successor Cases
- Gibson was an extreme case
- Financial conflicts are only one factor to
consider, not the determining factor - Must make a strong factual argument
20Morgan I
- Statute required a formal rulemaking
- Looks like a formal adjudication
- The Secretary had the power to make the decision
- Plaintiffs' submitted written briefs to the
agency - Asst. Secretary conducted the hearing and made
recommendations to the secretary - Secretary made the decision based on the
recommendations
21How is this Different from a Trial?
- What did plaintiffs claim about the Secretary's
decision? - Did the court allow the Secretary to make the
decision if he did not conduct the hearing? - What did it require him to do?
- Why would this be a problem in a modern cabinet
level agency? - This was limited in subsequent cases, which found
that the court should not inquire into the
thinking of the secretary, but only look at the
record
22What can the Secretary Do?
- Delegate the right to decide
- Not always permitted
- Adjudications often make policy, which the
secretary should control - Make the hearing officer's decision final after
30 and intervene if the case is important to
policy - Set up an internal appeal process to flag
important cases - Decide the case on an executive summary
- Approve regulations based on expert staff
recommendations