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 305.75-3
s 305.75-3 The Choice of
Forum for Judicial Review of Administrative Action
(Recommendation No. 75-3).
(a) This recommendation
states criteria for use by the Congress in
determining the appropriate forum for judicial
review of federal administrative action.
(b) The present forum for
the review of most agency actions taken on formal
evidentiary records is the court of appeals under
specific statutory provisions. There are some
exceptions. An important one concerns decisions of
the Social Security Administration on claims of
old-age, survivors' and disability benefits, which
are reviewable in the first instance by district
courts with subsequent recourse to the courts of
appeals.
(c) The jurisdictional
picture is less clear with respect to informal
administrative action, both notice-and-comment
rulemaking and non-record adjudication.
(d) Some recent statutes
provide specifically for review by courts of
appeals of rules of general applicability
promulgated without an evidentiary hearing. There
is much uncertainty, and conflicting authority, as
to whether older statutes providing for direct
appellate review of agency "orders" apply to such
rules. In the case of agencies not subject to
specific court of appeals review provisions, rules
are ordinarily reviewed by district courts under
the general review provisions of the Administrative
Procedure Act.
(e) Orders entered after
non-record adjudications by agencies whose "orders"
generally are subject to court of appeals review
typically are reviewed in the courts of appeals,
although there is some old and more-or-less
neglected authority that casts doubt on the
practice. Orders of other agencies entered after
non-record adjudications are reviewed in the
district courts under the general review provisions
of the Administrative Procedure Act.
(f) Legislation that
conformed to the criteria set forth in this
recommendation would not significantly alter the
pattern described above but would clarify the
pattern at its edges. Such legislation would
eliminate the uncertainty and consequent needless
jurisdictional litigation that have resulted from
the ambiguity of existing statutory review
provisions in their application to informal agency
actions, rules and orders. It would have the
additional desirable effect, particularly important
now because of the acute and increasing caseload
pressure on the courts of appeals, of helping to
avoid burdening these courts with administrative
review cases that are less suitable for them than
others.
(g) This recommendation
rests on three basic premises. First, direct review
by the courts of appeals, where feasible, is
generally desirable in the interest of efficiency
and economy, as respects both litigants and the
judicial system. The classic case for the courts of
appeals is review of agency action taken on an
evidentiary record. A second premise, however, is
that direct review by the courts of appeals is not
necessarily rendered unfeasible by the absence of
such a record; the records generated by the
processes of notice- and-comment rulemaking and of
informal adjudication are frequently adequate to
the purpose of judicial review and, also, can
usually be supplemented without the necessity of a
judicial trial. The third, and qualifying, premise
is that review by the courts of appeals, even when
review is of a purely appellate nature or, if not
so, can feasibly be conducted by the courts of
appeals, is not invariably desirable. The courts of
appeals, burdened by rapidly increasing caseloads
that threaten the quality of their decisions,
constitute a scarce resource that should be
reserved, to the extent possible, for the
resolution of issues of law or policy issues of
major impact; administrative review cases that do
not present such issues and that would not
ordinarily reach the courts of appeals unless
brought there initially should be assigned instead
to the district courts.
(h) Before the study on
which the recommendation is based was made the
Conference necessarily passed upon particular
questions of choice-of-forum for judicial review in
connection with individual studies and the
recommendations emanating therefrom. Instances are
Recommendations 72-6 (court of appeals review of
civil money penalties prescribed on a record); 72-7
(district court review of non-record selective
service preinduction orders); 74-3 (court of
appeals review of mining claims decided on a
record). The Conference has not caused these
recommendations to be restudied in the light of the
new criteria but believes that the recommendations
remain appropriate.
Recommendation
1. Adjudications based on
trial-type hearings and rules required by statute
to be based on a hearing with a determination on
the record should generally be made directly
reviewable by courts of appeals. For certain types
of formal administrative action, however, initial
district-court review may be appropriate in the
interest of conserving the scarce and over-extended
resources of the federal appellate system. The
district court should not be interposed unless the
administrative action to be reviewed is of a type
(a) that rarely involves issues of law or of broad
social or economic impact warranting routine review
by a multi-member court and (b) such that district
court review would significantly reduce the
workload of the appellate courts. The latter
condition is met only where the class of orders to
be reviewed is numerous and, if reviewed initially
by district courts, would infrequently give rise to
further appeal.
2. For any class of formal
administrative action that, even after initial
district-court review, generates a large and
burdensome volume of appeals, only a small
proportion of which involve legal issues or issues
of broad social or economic impact, Congress should
consider the advisability of making appeals
discretionary or of allowing appeals only upon
certification by the district court. Under a system
of discretionary appeals, leave to appeal, either
by the agency or by an aggrieved party, should be
granted only in cases where issues of law or of
broad impact are involved.
3. Orders of the Social
Security Administration with respect to claims for
disability, health insurance, retirement or
survivors' benefits should continue to be reviewed
in the first instance by district courts. If the
volume of social security appeals increases as
dramatically as projected, Congress should consider
the advisability of placing appellate review on a
discretionary basis.
4. Orders of the
Department of Labor Benefits Review Board with
respect to black-lung compensation claims under the
Black Lung Act of 1972 are now subject to direct
review by courts of appeals in accordance with the
provisions of the Longshoremen's and Harbor
Workers' Compensation Act. Congress should consider
the advisability of providing for initial
district-court review of such orders.
5. The appropriate forum
for the review of rules promulgated pursuant to the
notice-and-comment procedures of 5 U.S.C. 553
should be determined in the light of the following
considerations:
(a) Absence of a formal
administrative record based on a trial-type hearing
does not preclude direct review of rules by courts
of appeals because: (i) Compliance with procedural
requirements of 5 U.S.C. 553, including the
requirement of a statement of reasons for the rule,
will ordinarily produce a record adequate to the
purpose of judicial review, and (ii) the
administrative record can usually be supplemented,
if necessary, by means other than an evidentiary
trial in a district court.
(b) Direct review by a
court of appeals is appropriate whenever: (i) An
initial district court decision respecting the
validity of a rule will ordinarily be appealed or
(ii) the public interest requires prompt,
authoritative determination of the validity of the
rule.
(c) Rules issued by
agencies that regularly engage in formal
adjudication and whose "orders" are subject by
statute to direct review by the courts of appeals
will normally satisfy the criteria of (b) above and
in any event should be reviewable directly by the
courts of appeals.
(d) Rules of other
agencies that do not satisfy the criteria of (b)
above should generally be reviewable in the first
instance by the district courts.
6. (a) Informal
administrative actions, other than rules, should
generally be reviewable in the first instance by
the district courts.
(b) The court of appeals
is the appropriate reviewing forum for informal
actions that, as a class, fulfill all of the
following conditions:
(i) Typically involve
issues of law or of broad social or economic
impact,
(ii) Typically do not
require an evidentiary trial at the judicial level
to determine either the underlying facts or the
grounds or evidence on which the agency based its
actions; and
(iii) Are either few in
number or, if numerous, would in most cases be
likely to reach the appellate courts eventually
even if reviewed initially by district courts.
Informal orders issued by agencies that mainly
engage in formal adjudication and the formal orders
of which are now subject by statute to direct
review by the courts of appeals will normally
satisfy these conditions and should therefore be
reviewable by the courts of appeals. There is,
however, at least one exception. Informal,
discretionary orders of immigration officials
related to deportation, but not issued as part of
any formal deportation proceeding, should continue
to be reviewable in the first instance by the
district courts.
7. Statutes that give
courts of appeals jurisdiction to review informal
orders or rules should contain provisions, similar
to that now contained in the Administrative Orders
Review Act, 28 U.S.C. 2347, authorizing transfer of
proceedings to a district court where a factual
issue requiring a judicial trial is presented.
8. A Federal court which
determines that it does not have jurisdiction of a
judicial review proceeding should be authorized to
transfer the proceeding, in the interests of
justice and expedition, to a Federal court
appearing to have jurisdiction.
Editorial Note: A separate
statement was filed concerning this
recommendation.
[40 FR 27926, July 2,
1975]
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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