Title: Access to Judicial Review
1Access to Judicial Review
2Informational Injury
- What is the injury if the agency fails to provide
a document that the law makes available under
FOIA? - What if the agency fails to collect required
information that would be available to the
public? - Would a member of the public have standing to
contest this?
3Example - FEC Classification Decision
- FEC does not classify an organization as one that
must make public reports of its finances - Does a plaintiff who wants info on the group have
standing to contest the classification? - What is FEC's argument against standing?
- How did the Court use the purpose for collecting
the information to support the plaintiff's
standing claim? - What is your argument if the required information
is not reported to the public?
4Procedural Violations and CausationAgency Fails
to get an EIS for a Dam
- What is the causation problem?
- What is the harmless error doctrine from civil
procedure? - Do you have to show that that they gotten the
EIS, that the dam would not have been built? - What is the correct showing?
- What would the agency have to argue to rebut the
standing claim? - Why should this be a problem for the agency?
5Can you get standing because of the effect of an
action on a third party?
- Simon v. Eastern Ky. Welfare Rights Organization,
426 U.S. 26 (1976) - Group challenged the tax exemption for a
hospital, saying it did not deliver charity care - Would denying the exemption increase charity
care? - What would they need to show?
- What if this was an order from HHS to comply
EMTALA, which requires emergency care be provided
without regard to the patient's ability to pay?
6Redressability
- You have to be able to show that the remedy you
seek from the court would address your problem - Like Simon
- If you have stated a concrete action for injury,
you probably have also met this standard - The problem is if the agency does not have the
power to do what you want
7Procedural Violations and Redressability
- Assume you have stated a real injury in a
procedural violation case - Is there still a redressablity problem because
the plaintiff cannot show that fixing the
violation would result in a favorable result? - In Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, the Court
said, the person who has been accorded a
procedural right to protect his concrete
interests can assert that right without meeting
all the normal standards for redressability and
immediacy." - Do you still have to show a theoretical chance of
a change in agency action if the procedure is
fixed?
8Representational Standing
- When can associations bring actions on behalf of
their members? - At least one member must have standing
- It must fit the organization mission
- The remedy must not require the participation of
individual plaintiffs - Why is this important for environmental and
poverty action groups?
9Injunctions and Declaratory Relief
- If one plaintiff has standing, the action can go
forward, even if others do not. - Why is this different from a damage action with
several plaintiffs?
10Prudential Standing
- This is an umbrella over several different
theories created by judges - The unifying theme is that these are designed to
limit the number of persons who can bring a claim
when the constitutional standing requirements are
vague or overbroad - Since this a court created doctrine and not a
constitutional doctrine, the legislature can
override it.
11Problems with Generalized Standing
- If an injury is suffered by a very large group of
people, it may be better addressed by legislative
action - This is related to the political question
doctrine - Why might it better for the claims related to
Katrina to be decided by legislation, rather than
the courts?
12Zone of Interests
- Are the plaintiff's interests protected by the
statute? - This is a court created doctrine to ensure that
claims made under a statute actually advance the
purpose of the statute, including the intended
beneficiaries - Similar to the test in torts for negligence per se
13Air Courier Conference of America v. American
Postal Workers Union, 498 U.S. 517 (1991)
- Do postal workers have a right to challenge
changes in the rules giving a monopoly on 1st
class mail? - What was the purpose of the law?
- Were there any postal worker unions when the law
was passed?
14Bennett v. Spear, 520 U.S. 154 (1997)
- Ranchers want to contest rules under the
Endangered Species Act limiting the release of
water from dams - What is their interest?
- Does the ESA protect ranching?
- Why were they able to use the provision that the
agency rely on the best data? - Does their claim improve the application of the
ESA? - How does their case depend on the welfare of the
suckers?
15Association of Data Processing Service
Organizations, Inc. v. Camp, 397 U.S. 150 (1970)
- Just to keep things confused, in this case the
court allowed competitors of banks to contest
rule changes that would have let banks do data
processing - The intent of the law was to protect banks from
bad business decisions, not to protect
competitors - The court found that the plaintiffs challenge to
the law would further its purpose - limit the
conflicts for banks - even if they were not the
intended beneficiaries
16Hazardous Waste Treatment Council v. Thomas, 885
F.2d 918 (D.C. Cir. 1989)
- Trade group represents providers of advanced
waste treatment services - EPA adopts rule requiring less complete treatment
of waste - Why does plaintiff want to contest the rule?
- What is the purpose of the rule (remember CBA)?
- Did the court find plaintiff in the zone of
interest?
17Honeywell International, Inc. v. EPA, 374 F.3d
1363 (D.C. Cir. 2004)
- Plaintiff contests the EPA allowing a product
made by a competitor to be substituted for a CFC. - What is plaintiff's interest?
- How is plaintiff's interest different from
plaintiff in trade group case? - What is the plaintiff's argument for why the
environment is harmed by the substitution? - Why does the specificity of the standard help
plaintiff's case, compared to the trade group
case?
18Example Internet Book Stores
- IRS allows non-profit college book stores to
operate on the Internet - Other Internet books stores object
- What is the analysis?
- What is the purpose of the exception and the
underlying law? - How might the analysis shift if Amazon is the
plaintiff and does not pay sales taxes itself?
19Is There an Agency Action to Contest?
- Section 702 of the APA allows claims if someone
is harmed by an agency action - 551 defines agency action
- 'agency action' includes the whole or a part of
an agency rule, order, license, sanction, relief,
or the equivalent or denial thereof, or failure
to act - This makes it hard to force an agency to do
something that is not specifically required by
statute or regulation. - For example, general claims that the BLM is not
protecting the environment do not work
20Statutory Preclusion of Judicial Review
- Congress has the power to limit judicial review
of agency actions - What if Congress is silent on the availability of
judicial review in a particular statute?
21Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 136
(1967)
- This was a dispute over the authority of the FDA
to require certain labeling changes on
prescription drugs, - The plaintiffs claimed that the FDA exceeded its
statutory authority - FDA said that this was not reviewable because the
enabling act provided for specific review and
this was not included - The Court found that judicial review is favored,
and that it would not hold it precluded unless
the congressional intent was clear.
22Block v. Community Nutrition Institute, 467 U.S.
340 (1984)
- Clarified Abbott's policy on reviewability
- Consumers wanted to challenge rules under the
milk price support law, which was intended to
protect milk producers - The court found that Congress had specified who
could appeal these orders and how - Coupled with the purpose of the act, this was
enough to show intent to prevent consumer claims
23Complete Preclusion Smallpox Emergency Personnel
Protection Act 2003
- (2) JUDICIAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW- No court
of the United States, or of any State, District,
territory or possession thereof, shall have
subject matter jurisdiction to review, whether by
mandamus or otherwise, any action by the
Secretary under this section. No officer or
employee of the United States shall review any
action by the Secretary under this section
(unless the President specifically directs
otherwise)
24When Is Review Appropriate?(Prelude to the later
ripeness discussion)
- Should the plaintiff be able to get review of an
agency regulation before the agency takes
enforcement action? - What is a facial review of a statute?
- What are the problems with a facial review?
- How are these similar to the problems of
pre-enforcement review? - Why does the agency prefer post-enforcement
review? - What happens with compliance?
- What if the penalties are so Draconian that no
one will risk enforcement?
25Committed To Agency Discretion By Law
- 5 U.S.C. 701(a)(2)
- (a) This chapter applies, according to the
provisions thereof, except to the extent that - - (2) agency action is committed to agency
discretion by law. - This is related to the political question
doctrine - The courts recognize that agencies are charged
with making policy under the direction of the
legislature and the executive branches - The proper review of a policy choice is through
the ballot box
26Citizens to Preserve Overton Park v. Volpe, 401
U.S. 402 (1971)
- Congress said no federal money to build roads in
parks if there was a "feasible and prudent"
alternative - The Secretary authorizes a road in a park and
tells plaintiffs that it is within his discretion
and cannot be reviewed by the courts - Does the Court have a standard to review this
decision, or is it a pure policy choice? - The court found that "feasible and prudent"
provided adequate law to guide judicial review - Committed to agency discretion was held to be
very narrow, unless specified by statute
27Heckler v. Chaney, 470 U.S. 821 (1985) - Lethal
Injection Case
- The FDA Act directs the agency to require that
drugs be approved for specific uses before they
can be sold in interstate commerce - The agency does not police the use of drugs for
unapproved purposes, once they are approved for
at least one use - The court rejected a challenge to this, say this
was classic prosecutorial discretion, which an
agency did not have to justify
28American Horse Protection Assn., Inc. v. Lyng,
812 F.2d 1 (D.C. Cir. 1987)
- Can you get to court to require an agency to make
or modify a rule, in the absence of a
congressional mandate to make the rule? - The APA requires that an agency respond to a
request to make or modify a rule - The court found that this response, or lack of
one, was reviewable - The court may allow review, but it almost always
defers to the agency - Remember this for Mass. EPA
29Webster v. Doe, 486 U.S. 592 (1988)
- National Security Act allows CIA employees to be
fired without due process or judicial review - Court says this is within congressional power,
especially for national security - Court says that the plaintiff's constitutional
law claim can be reviewed because no agency is
above the constitution - Dissents say this makes no sense because it
undermines the agency discretion
30Lincoln v. Vigil, 508 U.S. 182 (1993)
- Indian health service has the discretion to
decide how to spend certain funds - Court says this cannot be reviewed, it is a
classic policy choice - However, whether the policy has to be announced
through notice and comment versus a simple policy
statement, is reviewable - The procedure may be reviewable, even if the
policy is not
31Final Agency Action
32Is there a Final Agency Action?
- Same principles as the rules on appealing orders
by trial judges - Bennett v. Spear, 520 U.S. 154, 177-178 (1997)
- It must be the consummation of the agency process
- It must affect legal rights or have legal
consequences
33Federal Trade Commn. v. Standard Oil Co. of
California, 449 U.S. 232 (1980)
- FTC finds that Standard Oil is engaging in
anticompetitive practices - Standard wants to appeal this
- Can be used in private antitrust actions
- Court says this alone does not have legal
consequences - Standard must wait until the agency brings an
enforcement action
34National Automatic Laundry and Cleaning Council
v. Shultz, 443 F.2d 689 (D.C. Cir. 1971)
- Agency opinion letters
- This was to an association explaining how the
agency would interpret a new law - Detailed explanation
- From the secretary's office
- In this case, the court found that the opinion
was sufficiently specific and from a high enough
level to affect the plaintiff's rights
35Taylor-Callahan-Coleman Counties Dist. Adult
Probation Dept. v. Dole, 948 F.2d 953 (5th Cir.
1991)
- The opinion was to an individual party, based on
that party's specific facts - like an IRS letter
ruling - The plaintiff was a third party who wanted to
challenge the opinion as it would be applied to
others - The court found that this was not a final agency
action, at least as to other parties
36Franklin v. Massachusetts, 505 U.S. 788 (1992)
- MA wants to contest the method the Department of
Commerce used to correct the census numbers - Why does this matter?
- The President is charged with determining the
final count, and Congress does the reallocation
of representatives - The court found that the report from Commerce was
only a recommendation to the President
37Western Ill. Home Health Care, Inc. v. Herman,
150 F.3d 659 (7th Cir. 1998)
- This was an opinion letter to two specific
parties about whether they were subject to the
joint employer doctrine - The letter said they were, and that they were now
on notice so they would be subject to the
penalties for a willful violation - The court found this was a final agency action
- This was influenced by the harsh results
38Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies
39Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies
- This is another timing issue
- Does the plaintiff have to go through the agency
process before going to court? - Does the plaintiff have to present the same
issues to the agency as will be challenged later
in court? - How does Wooley affect this in LA?
40APA - 5 U.S.C. 704
- . . . Except as otherwise expressly required by
statute, agency action otherwise final is final
for purposes of this section whether or not there
has been presented or determined an application
for a declaratory order, for any form of
reconsideration, or, unless the agency otherwise
requires by rule and provides that the action
meanwhile is inoperative, for an appeal to
superior agency authority.
41Is Exhaustion Required by Statute or Regulation?
- The key question is whether the enabling act or
an agency regulation requires exhaustion - If exhaustion is not required, then the party may
go to court directly - However, if there is an agency process available,
and you lose in court, you may have waived your
agency appeal
42Exceptions to Exhaustion
- Will requiring exhaustion prevent the court from
properly reviewing the action? - Has the enforcement been stayed?
- Will the plaintiff suffer irreparable harm?
- Can the agency process provide the requested
relief? - Is the agency so biased or prejudiced that it
cannot give a fair review?
43Example HUD Regulations
- HUD regulations allow, but do not require that an
administrative appeal be filed - The granting of the appeal is discretionary with
the secretary - The ruling of the ALJ becomes final in 30 days
and is not stayed by a request for a hearing - Must a litigant request an administrative appeal
before going to court?
44Portela-Gonzalez v. Secretary of the Navy, 109
F.3d 74 (1st Cir. 1997)
- Plaintiff is fired from a civilian Navy job
- Plaintiff appeals through 3 levels, but skips
last level. - Firing is in force during appeal
- Why does it matter whether the APA applies?
- Just knowing that you are going to lose through
the agency process is not enough - You have to show that the agency is biased or
prejudiced (which is nearly impossible)
45Administrative Issue Exhaustion
- Sims v. Apfel, 530 U.S. 103 (2000)
- Social Security disability benefits
- The court held that the general rule is that
plaintiffs who are subject to exhaustion of
remedies must also present the issues they want
to appeal to the agency - In the specific case, the court found that the
special nature of SS mitigated against preclusion - Informal, and applicants seldom have counsel