CODE OF
FEDERAL REGULATIONS
TITLE 1--GENERAL
PROVISIONS
CHAPTER
III--ADMINISTRATIVE CONFERENCE OF THE UNITED
STATES
PART
305--RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE
CONFERENCE OF THE UNITED STATES
1 C.F.R. s 305.74-4
s 305.74-4 Preenforcement
Judicial Review of Rules of General Applicability
(Recommendation No. 74-4).
(a) With increasing
frequency, rules of general applicability adopted
by agencies informally pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553 are
being reviewed by the courts directly, before they
are applied to particular persons in adjudicative
proceedings. Such review may be by courts of
appeals under statutes, mostly older statutes,
providing generally for judicial review or orders
of specific agencies, or under recent statutes
providing specifically for the direct review of
rules issued by new agencies or by newly created
authority. The district courts also review rules
directly in the exercise of their power under the
Administrative Procedure Act to review agency
action not otherwise reviewable.
(b) The trend toward
immediate review of agency rules has been
accompanied by confusion over the appropriate scope
and standard of review. In particular, conceptual
and practical difficulties have arisen from the use
by Congress and the courts of phrases such as
"hearing," "record" and "substantial evidence on
the record as a whole," traditionally associated
with review of orders entered after a formal
evidentiary hearing, in the new and different
context of preenforcement review of agency rules
adopted informally.
(c) This recommendation,
addressed to Congress, the Judicial Conference and
the agencies, seeks to dispel the confusion by: (1)
Stating what administrative materials should be
included in the record on review and (2) clarifying
the standards for reviewing the adequacy of the
factual basis and rationality of rules. The
recommendation accepts the present pattern of
preenforcement review of rules and does not call
for either more or less of such review. Nor does it
suggest that any particular procedures should be
followed by agencies in adopting rules.
Recommendation
1. In the absence of a
specific statutory requirement to the contrary, the
following are the administrative materials that
should be before a court for its use in evaluating,
on preenforcement judicial review, the factual
basis for rules adopted pursuant to informal
procedures prescribed in 5 U.S.C. 553: (1) The
notice of proposed rulemaking and any documents
referred to therein; (2) comments and other
documents submitted by interested persons; (3) any
transcripts of oral presentations made in the
course of the rulemaking; (4) factual information
not included in the foregoing that was considered
by the authority responsible for promulgation of
the rule or that is proffered by the agency as
pertinent to the rule; (5) reports of any advisory
committees; and (6) the agency's concise general
statement or final order and any documents referred
to therein. [FN1] References to the
"record" or "whole record" in statutes pertaining
to judicial review of rules adopted under section
553 should be construed as references to the
foregoing in the absence of a legislative intent to
the contrary. The Conference does not assume that
the reviewing court should invariably be confined
to the foregoing materials in evaluating the
factual basis for the rule.
[FN1] The court
may of course limit its consideration to those
materials that parties cite. Whether the agency may
withhold from the parties to the judicial review
proceeding or the court on the ground of
confidentiality any materials otherwise called for
is left by the recommendation to be decided under
existing law.
2. The term "substantial
evidence on the record as a whole," or comparable
language, in statutes authorizing judicial review
should not, in and of itself, be taken by agencies
or courts as implying that any particular
procedures must be followed by the agency whose
actions are subject to the statute and, in
particular, should not be taken as a legislative
prescription that in rulemaking agencies must
follow procedures in addition to those specified in
5 U.S.C. 553.
3. The appropriate
standard for determining whether a rule of general
applicability adopted after informal rulemaking
rests on an adequate foundation is stated in 5
U.S.C. 706(2)(A), which provides that a reviewing
court must set aside action found to be "arbitrary,
capricious [or] an abuse of discretion."
Where such a rule is attacked on the ground that an
asserted factual basis does not support it or that
a necessary factual foundation is lacking, this
standard requires a reviewing court to decide, in
light of the information before it (including the
administrative materials described in paragraph 1),
whether the agency's conclusions concerning the
significance of factual information can be said to
be rationally supported.
4. Statutes providing for
judicial review of rules adopted after informal
rulemaking should refer only to the standards for
review of such rules set forth in 5 U.S.C. 706,
including the "arbitrary, capricious, [or]
abuse of discretion" standard of section
706(2)(A)(but not including the "substantial
evidence" standard of section 706(2)(E), which by
its terms is inapplicable to such rules). Properly
applied, those standards are adequate to insure
appropriate judicial scrutiny of rules adopted
informally. Judicial review statutes that speak in
terms of review according to the standard of
"substantial evidence" should be construed as
establishing a standard of review over informal
rulemaking comparable to that set forth in section
706(2)(A), unless a contrary intent clearly
appears.
Editorial Note: One
separate statement was filed concerning the
recommendation.
[39 FR 23044, June 26,
1974]
Authority: 5 U.S.C.
591-596.
SOURCE: 38 FR 19782, July
23, 1973; 57 FR 61760, 61768, Dec. 29, 1992, unless
otherwise noted.
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