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 305.82-7
s 305.82-7 Judicial Review
of Rules in Enforcement Proceedings (Recommendation
No. 82-7).
A person adversely
affected by an agency rule may ordinarily obtain
judicial review of that rule either by instituting
a direct review proceeding against the agency in an
appropriate court (pre-enforcement review)
[FN1] or by asserting the invalidity of the
rule as a defense in a civil or criminal proceeding
to apply or enforce the rule (enforcement review).
Prior to the Supreme Court's decision Abbott
Laboratories v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 136 (1967),
direct review was generally difficult to obtain
because of technical defenses such as lack of
ripeness or lack of standing, and most review of
rules took place in the context of enforcement
proceedings.
[FN1] We use the
term "direct review" to refer to judicial review of
a rule of general applicability before the rule is
applied to a particular person in an adjudicative
proceeding. Such review may be by the court of
appeals pursuant to a special statutory review
procedure or by the district court in the exercise
of its power under the Administrative Procedure Act
to review agency action not otherwise reviewable.
See ACUS Recommendations 74-4 (Preenforcement
Judicial Review of Rules of General Applicability)
and 75-3 (The Choice of Forum for Judicial Review
of Administrative Action).
Under Abbott Laboratories
and subsequent decisions, direct review of agency
rules has become increasingly available. Congress
in much recent regulatory legislation has
specifically provided for immediate resort to
judicial review at the conclusion of the rulemaking
proceeding. As a result, direct judicial review of
rules has come to be regarded as the norm and
review in an enforcement proceeding is less common.
In a number of statutes, in fact, Congress has
sought to encourage prompt direct review by
explicitly precluding or limiting the availability
of review at the enforcement stage.
At the same time, and
perhaps largely as a result of the increasing
importance of direct judicial review of rules,
courts have intensified their scrutiny of the
administrative process preceding promulgation of
the rule. Whereas in the pre-Abbott Laboratories
era challenges to rules were most frequently based
on assertions of lack of agency authority or on
inapplicability of the rule to the party's
particular circumstances, today the issues in
direct review proceedings increasingly include
whether the agency made the proper procedural
choices in the rulemaking proceeding and whether
the rule finds adequate support in the
administrative record.
The Administrative
Procedure Act does not by its terms establish
different standards of review for direct review
proceedings and enforcement proceedings, and few
courts have considered the implications for review
in enforcement proceedings of the increasingly
intensive standard developed in direct review
proceedings. Moreover, in adopting statutory
provisions precluding enforcement review Congress
has not distinguished between these process-related
objections and other types of objections to
rules.
In Recommendation 76-4,
the Conference criticized provisions precluding
enforcement review in the Clean Air Act and the
Federal Water Pollution Control Act. In view of the
increasing reliance on direct review and the
proliferation of issues concerning the adequacy of
the rulemaking process rather than the agency's
authority to promulgate a particular rule, however,
the Conference now believes that limitations on
judicial review of rules in enforcement proceedings
may sometimes be appropriate. The purpose of this
recommendation is twofold: to identify factors that
Congress should consider in deciding whether to
preclude enforcement judicial review, and to
distinguish between types of challenges to rules
that should ordinarily be covered by any preclusion
provisions Congress decides to adopt and types of
issues that should ordinarily remain available in
enforcement proceedings even where preclusion
provisions have been adopted.
Sound principles of
administrative law favor prompt and dispositive
resolution of disputed issues arising from an
administrative rulemaking proceeding. Direct review
in the court of appeals is more likely to afford
such a resolution than later enforcement review in
one or more district courts. [FN2] The
uncertainty caused by the potential for conflicting
court decisions and by the possibility that a rule
may be overturned several years after its
promulgation can be extremely disruptive of the
regulatory scheme. In addition, reopening a
rulemaking proceeding to correct any defects will
become increasingly difficult as the original
record grows stale over time and the situation of
the interested parties changes.
[FN2] The
recommendation is based on the assumption that,
where Congress has provided by statute for direct
review of rules, that review will ordinarily lie in
the court of appeals rather than in the district
court. See ACUS Recommendation 75-3.
On the other hand, those
affected by a rule should have a full and fair
opportunity to challenge the rule on all available
grounds. These interests must be balanced in
determining when limitations on enforcement review
of rules are appropriate. The balance will tip in
favor of limitations on enforcement review when the
impact of foreclosing review on those affected by a
rule is the least and when the costs of regulatory
uncertainty or of declaring a rule invalid after
several years are the greatest. Thus one factor
favoring limitations on enforcement review is the
likelihood that the groups affected by rules
promulgated under a particular statute will be well
represented in the agency rulemaking proceeding
because, for example, those groups are well defined
and/or well organized. Widespread participation in
the rulemaking proceeding reduces the probability
that any significant issue concerning the rule,
particularly one pertaining to the rulemaking
process itself, will be overlooked on direct
review.
The likelihood that a
rulemaking proceeding will involve complex
procedures or intensive factual exploration also
militates in favor of limits on enforcement review.
The more elaborate and formal the administrative
rulemaking proceeding such as those required by
hybrid rulemaking statutes [FN3]), the more
likely it is that the rule will be subject to
challenge on the basis of a relatively narrow issue
involving the procedures used or the record support
for some aspect of the rule. As time passes,
reopening such a complex proceeding after a court
reversal will be increasingly burdensome.
Encouraging the dispositive resolution of
challenges to a rule on direct review (perhaps
while effectiveness of the rule has been stayed) is
also advisable when the costs of regulatory
uncertainty are particularly high. Sometimes
compliance with a rule entails substantial expense
that will not be fully recoverable if the rule is
later overturned. Similarly, when Congress
determines that there is a need to achieve
important regulatory goals promptly nationwide, or
when it is particularly important that rules apply
industry-wide in order to avoid unfair competitive
advantage to noncomplying businesses, repeated
litigation over the validity of the rules in
various district courts should be avoided if
possible.
[FN3] See, e.g.,
ACUS Recommendations 79-1 (Hybrid Rulemaking
Procedures of the Federal Trade Commission) and
80-1 (Trade Regulation Rulemaking Under the
Magnuson-Moss Warranty-Federal Trade Commission
Improvement Act).
Even when Congress decides
that limits on enforcement review are warranted, it
should not foreclose all challenges to rules at the
enforcement stage. Some grounds for review can be
precluded with little unfairness to parties who may
be unaware of the original rulemaking proceeding or
are otherwise unable to seek direct review, while
others raise fundamental questions about the
substance of the rule or its application in
circumstances that may have been unforeseen at the
time of promulgation. Challenges based on asserted
errors in the administrative process are those most
suitable for preclusion. When objections on
procedural grounds are raised early, errors may be
remedied promptly and the rulemaking process
recommenced with a minimum of disruption to the
interests of those affected by the rule. And
objections based on asserted inadequacy of the
administrative record may lose their relevance as
that record itself becomes dated. These objections,
moreover, do not ordinarily turn on the situation
of a particular individual or entity or on a
particular interpretation of the rule and can be
raised as well by one party as by another.
On the other hand,
considerations of fairness and judicial economy may
argue for retaining a right to raise in enforcement
proceedings those objections based on asserted lack
of statutory authority or the inapplicability or
unreasonableness of the rule as applied to the
facts of the case. Moreover, there may be
constitutional inhibitions against precluding or
restricting at any time challenges based on the
asserted unconstitutionality of a rule either on
its face or as applied.
The Conference recognizes
that the line between issues of process and those
of statutory authority may not always be a bright
one. For example, the question of whether there is
statutory authority to apply a rule to a particular
situation may tend to converge with the issue of
the adequacy of record support for the rule.
However, if the distinctions suggested below are
made, statutory provisions will afford the courts
adequate guidance in most situations. When
ambiguity nonetheless results, the well established
presumption of reviewability will continue to
apply.
RECOMMENDATION
1. In drafting a statute
that provides for adequate pre-enforcement judicial
review of rules, Congress should consider whether
to limit the availability of review at the
enforcement stage. In deciding whether to limit the
availability of enforcement review in a particular
statute, Congress should consider the following
factors as favoring such a limitation:
(a) The likelihood that
the rulemaking proceeding will attract widespread
participation;
(b) The likelihood that
the proceeding will involve complex procedures or
intensive exploration of factual issues;
(c) The likelihood that
those affected by the rule will incur substantial
and immediate costs in order to comply with it;
and
(d) The need for prompt
compliance with the rule on a national or industry-
wide basis.
2. When Congress decides
to limit the availability of judicial review of
rules at the enforcement stage, it should
ordinarily preclude review only of issues relating
to procedures employed in the rulemaking or the
adequacy of factual support for the rule in the
administrative record. Judicial review of issues
relating to the constitutional basis for the rule
or the application of the rule to a particular
respondent or defendant should be permitted when
these issues are raised in subsequent suits or as
defenses to subsequent enforcement actions (subject
to the principles of collateral estoppel and stare
decisis). Judicial review of issues relating to the
statutory authority for the rule should be
precluded at the enforcement stage only where
Congress has concluded that there is a compelling
need to achieve prompt compliance with the rule on
a national or industry-wide basis.
3. When Congress limits
the availability of judicial review of rules at the
enforcement stage as described in paragraph 2, it
should provide that, in an exceptional case when
foreclosure of issues will work a severe hardship
or otherwise produce a manifestly unjust outcome, a
court may either dismiss or stay the proceedings
and refer the rule to the affected agency for its
reconsideration.
4. Paragraph D of
Recommendation No. 76-4, 1 CFR 305.76-4, Judicial
Review Under the Clean Air Act and Federal Water
Pollution Control Act, is hereby superseded to the
extent that it is inconsistent with this
recommendation.
[47 FR 58208, Dec. 30,
1982]
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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