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Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time? Ripeness Finality Exhaustion

Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

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Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?. Ripeness Finality Exhaustion. Ripeness. Ripeness, finality, and exhaustion are hard to separate in many cases Ripeness is whether it is the appropriate time for the court to review the claim APA The APA is silent on ripeness and exhaustion - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Ripeness Finality Exhaustion

Page 2: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Ripeness

Ripeness, finality, and exhaustion are hard to separate in many cases Ripeness is whether it is the appropriate time

for the court to review the claim APA

The APA is silent on ripeness and exhaustion However, APA 704 only authorizes the review

of final agency actions

Page 3: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Instant Ripeness

The agency has brought an enforcement action against your client

The agency has promulgated an unconstitutional regulation

Page 4: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

CBS v. U.S., 316 U.S. 407 (1942)

FCC issues a regulation restricting the network exclusivity provisions in affiliate contracts with radio stations

CBS says that this will cause the affiliates to demand different terms in their contracts, and thus the dispute is ripe because they are harmed

The FCC says it will not be ripe until there is an enforcement action

Page 5: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Is the Regulation Ready for Review?

The FCC says it is just policy, and no more reviewable than a press release Think about this in terms of the modern cases

The court finds that it is final and that it is affects the behavior of the regulated party What would the affiliate station lawyer say

about the reg? It is self-enforcing in that the parties must

change their behavior or risk legal action

Page 6: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Frozen Foods Express v. US, 351 US 40 (1956)

The Court found that a 71 page report detailing the ICC's interpretation of a narrow statutory provision was reviewable.

This was despite the agency arguing that the interpretation was not binding

Remember, however, that getting the right to stay in court is not the same as winning.

This is also a legal question, which the courts are more likely to review

Page 7: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Abbot Labs v. Gardner

What did the statute require? Generic names had to be on labels and other

printed material What did the FDA require through a regulation?

FDA promulgated a reg that required that the generic name of a drug be used every time the brand name was

This is facial challenge

Page 8: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Why did Abbot and others want pre-enforcement judicial review?

Compliance would be very costly, but they could not risk the enforcement penalty.

Abbot claimed great hardship if it had to choose between complying and getting nailed for a violation Think about relabeling stuff in inventory, and

how much stuff you have to thow out because it expires while you are working out the new label

Page 9: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

What did plaintiffs argue was wrong with the regulation?

Overstepped agency authority Why did the FDA claim the action was not ripe?

FDA claimed it was not ripe because it had not been applied to any given product

Page 10: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

What is the first question in a ripeness analysis?

First question is always - does the enabling act limit pre-enforcement review?

Page 11: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

What is the test?

What is the fitness of the issue for review? What is the harm from not doing pre-enforcement

review? Is this a question of law or fact? Does it depend on agency discretion?

Page 12: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Does defendant have a significant injury?

Must the petitioner make significant changes in its behavior or risk severe penalties?

Is there an alternative means of review - say through an agency process?

Page 13: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Toilet Goods v. Gardner

FDA required inspector access to the plants as a condition of certification of the safety of the agents in the product

Page 14: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

How was the injury requirement different in this case and Abbott?

In this case the court said the injury requirement was not met - what would it cost to let the inspector in?

What is the equitable problem with defendant's complaint? More to the point - why would you want to

exclude the inspector?

Page 15: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Gardner v. Toilet Goods

Companion case Did the agency exceed its authority in a regulation

establishing definitions for food additives? This is like Abbott

Page 16: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Policy Implications

How does expanding pre-enforcement review interfere with agency practice?

Is it better for regulated parties to be allowed pre-enforcement review? What is the downside of post-enforcement

review?

Page 17: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Statutory Limits

Congress can encourage pre-enforcement review by requiring that challenges to discretionary judgment in making a reg be brought within 60-90 days after the order is final

Can you attack the reg later? If the agency brings an enforcement action, you

can challenge the then You can ask for a new or changed reg and appeal

the denial

Page 18: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

What if Your Client Did not Know About the Reg?

Just not knowing is not enough Must show that you client had a good reason for

not knowing or that the agency blocked his efforts to get into court

What if the agency changed the definitional section years later, make all of the reg apply to your client?

Page 19: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

High or Low Point – National Automatic Laundry v. Shultz, 443 F2d 689 (1971)

The court allowed the review of an advisory letter

Page 20: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Why Does Hardship Matter?

If the matter is otherwise reviewable, why does it matter if there is hardship?

Shouldn’t the court go ahead and review the agency action when it is ready, without regard to hardship?

Page 21: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

NPHA v. Interior, 538 US 803 (2003)

Court backs down from National Automatic Lanudry

Finds the hardship is important in judicial economy

Finds that making the defendant wait until there is an enforcement action allows the agency to add more factual material to the record, facilitating review

Page 22: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Finality

What are the requirements for a final order under sec. 704 of the APA? 1) the action must mark the consummation of

the agency's decisionmaking process - it must not be tentative or interlocutory

2) it must be one by which legal rights and obligations have been determined or from which legal consequences will flow

Page 23: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

How does the court distinguish finality from exhaustion?

You have nothing left to do, but the agency is not finished

Court says 704 specifically allows intermediate agency actions to be reviewed when the final action is reviewed.

Page 24: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

FTC v. Standard Oil of California (1980) – (not in the book)

FTC issued a complaint saying it had reason to believe that the oil companies were engaging in unlawful competition Why does Socal want to contest this

intermediate finding? United States Supreme Court said it had to be a

final action or otherwise reviewable under 704

Page 25: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

Western Illinois Home Health Care v. Herman, 150 F3rd 659 (1998)

Asst. District Director sent a letter to a regulated party – probably an administrative order

The party moved for review Was it final?

Not tentative or interlocutory Established legal duties with penalties Thus was final for review purposes

Page 26: Is Your Claim Ready for Prime Time?

What is the Catch 22 in Franklin v. MA?

What if the agency action must be approved by the president?

The census is only a recommendation by the agency to the president, so it is not final

The order is not final until approved The president's decision cannot reviewed under

the APA because he is not an agency