Legislation and Regulation Outline
Legislation and Regulation Outline
Legislation and Regulation Outline
Main objective of course: To understand how courts interpret and apply law(mostly
statutes and regulations) specified in non-case sources.
A focal point when studying should be: Distilling, analyzing, and critiquing the
reasoning of individual cases to understand the law
Objectives of Course:
1.
To familiarize yourself with these non-case sources of law
2.
Teach ourselves how these sources of law are created
3.
Teach ourselves various approaches to interpreting such sources of law
4.
Also to evaluate the propriety of applying these approaches in particular contexts
By end of semester I need to be able to:
1.
Identify statutes and regulations and know how they apply relative to each other
and to case law
2.
I should be able to evaluate whether these sources of law (especially
administrative regulations) were created by proper procedures
3.
I must be able to interpret statutes and regulations, and when there is
controversy about how these sources should be interpreted, to structure arguments
about why one or another approach to interpretation and application is better than
others
Products and Tort Law
Regulatory State how does the government go about the business of telling people
what they can or cannot do.
- The Market has some influence
Tort Law as Regulation
Regulation of private activity is pervasive in our society. The goal of such regulation is to
allow societally beneficial activity while prohibiting or at least discouraging activities that
create a net harm to society.
The legal system also recognizes that tort liability has the effect of deterring conduct for
which a person may be held liable to another.
Points made by Professor:
Learned hand formula
We want to maximize the benefits at the least cost (monetary value)
we want an efficient level of care
we give people benefits and incentives not to harm
Tort law is acting like a regulator. Better than the government trying to figure out
regulating means for each product.
2 Things Tort Law Does
1.
Takes care of some of the information costs. The manufacturers are in a better
position to make products safer.
2.
Takes care of the externality problem.
Ways in which Tort law can work to induce the cares that we wont (we still want it
to be cost efficient)
Torts affecting laws through internalization
Negligence and Strict Liability
Administrative Costs
Insurance
The Market as a means of inducing spending on safety
The advantages of the market: The ability to cater to individual preferences.
The limits of the market: Four major factors impair the ability of the market to create
optimal spending patterns; these are externalities; transaction costs; limited cognitive
ability of participants; and the relationship of market choices to pre-existing patterns of
wealth distribution
Externalities problem can be described as when two have a bilateral contract that
affects a third party whose interests are not represented in the contract.
Transaction costs make it too expensive for people to internalize externalities.
Educating people and disseminating information is costly as well, in addition there still is
a question of people acting rationally once learning of new information.
Final flaw is that the outcome of any market-based transaction depends heavily on the
preexisting distribution of wealth
Tort Law as an aid to the market
Advantages of tort law:
Causes individuals and firms to internalize the costs of accidents, thus
encouraging spending on safety
Internalization of accident costs can enhance the operation of the safety market in two
related ways:
1.
By forcing individuals and firms to absorb the cost of accidents results in an
incentive to reduce the accident rate, the consequences of the accidents, or both.
2.
By forcing the prices of goods and services to reflect all costs required to make
them available including accident costs.
Class ActionsPros is that the cost of litigation can be mitigated through a class action suit
Big companys want to win early so that they can create precedent so that other claims
wont be brought, so they will spend lots of money. The answer to this is a class action
suit. Class Actions give incentives to lawyers to invest if the see a big judgment.
Agent Orange Case
Court decides to spread the damages amongst the 1100 who were exposed to Agent
Orange (they expected that 1000 people would have gotten cancer anyway).
Corrective Justice- even though people who werent specifically injured get damages
however you make the company pay. However courts dont do this in general. If done
however you would reduce the costs of torts as a regulatory system??
Statutory Interpretation
Finding Textual Meaning
The general background purpose of the statute is known as the spirit of the law also
known as the soul of the law
Sir William Blackstones Commentaries offer five signs to interpret the will of the
legislator, by exploring his intentions when the law was made (p.29):
Words
Context
Subject Matter
Effects and Consequences where words bear either none, or a very absurd
signification, if literally understood, we must deviate from the received sense of them.
Puffendorf example that whoever drew blood in the streets should be punished with
the utmost severity
Spirit and Reason of the Law the cause which moved the legislator to enact it
Riggs v. Palmer Case about the testator who got murder by beneficiary nephew.
Letter of the law would give Elmer the property but the spirit of the law would not allow
Elmer to receive the property.
Hard to figure out the testators intent
We could fall back on a common law axiom
Arguments that common law should be used in interpretation of statute, however
sometimes statutes are created to move away from the common law (Professor
Dickerson).
Purpose behind rule is to cut down on arguments and make it easier to decide who gets
what.
Interesting thing about Riggs and the purpose they give is just loosely tied to the
purpose. Main thing is the policy behind deciding it that way.
The majority in Riggs concluded that despite the clarity of the statutory text, the
legislatures intention ran counter to the expressed meaning of its chosen words in this
situation
Church of the Holy Trinity v. United States (Strong Purposivism Case) Case where
the statute that made it unlawful to prepay the transportation or in any way assist
migration of any alien into the United States, under contract to perform labor or service
of any kind in the United States, its territories, or the District of Columbia
Holy Trinity has become the most important marker for the idea that when the letter of
the law and spirit of the law conflict, the former must yield to the latter.
They get around the language of the bill by looking at the committee and what the
committee said
The court looks at the motives and history of the Act, the history and the
circumstances that preceded the act where one in which capitalist were paying
for foreigners to come in the country and work for low wages. The act was passed
to prohibit foreigners that could not come on their on wages.
Court basically says that the Act was intended to keep pastors and intelligent
people out.
Committee Report(s)- The case only cites the Senate report. Manual Labor not put in
because the bill might have gotten passed. This is proof that some people did not agree
with manual labor in the bill.
The Court looks at classic precedents- Puffendorf letting blood in the streets
Five ways in which the Court in Holy Trinity went about discerning the
legislatures purpose.
a.
the statutes title
b.
the mischief - If the interpreter can identify the mischief the statute was
trying to remedy, that fact will say a great deal about the purpose of the legislation.
c.
legislative history
d.
societal values- In Holy Trinity there was a major religious value component in
justification
e.
other evidence of statutory purpose-
Christian Nation- the ethos of the nation or the people. Government actors are no
suppose to make their decisions based on being a Christian nation. The legislator
should be the one deciding based on religion because they are voted by the people.
How do you know what the purpose was? Look at the debates. Another problem with
purpose, ex. Clean Air Act. One problem with purposvism is how far do we go
Purposes dont tell us where to draw the line
Court does ignore the language of the Act
Intent is different from the purpose. Purpose is broader such as this purpose was to
prevent competition in labor.
The summary a statute, language isnt perfect and sometimes the legislators misses
things or expresses thing that suggest that the legislators is saying something that they
didnt intend
Hart & Sacks- Legal Process
Here is the evil and we want to stop the evil, we want people to stop killing people,
impoverished people excluding
Legislation isnt coherent, there are arguments, conflict???
New Textualism
What is the textualist approach and assumption? How does a textual interpret a statute?
Statutes embody ends and means which is another way of saying they draw lines
that make tradeoffs between goals.
Textualist looks at the meaning of the text, the best meaning taking into account
context (how has legislator used this in the past), they are perfectly willing to look at
the context (Macbeth ex.), context matters, the meaning at the time the statute was
enacted, (Puffendorf ex.) any statute cannot be single purpose,
Political battles, strategic behavior, compromises and even logrolling and vote
trading (Vote trading are like trading one want or desire traded with another if the
exchange things they can do, there is no middle ground you just trade. Under this you
cant look at coherent ). Textualist say even if the purposivist were right
Purposovist statutes that are more public interest in a sense.
Textualist if they can get the language than thats what is. The only way they stop it is by
politicians calling them out on it.
Disadavantage to purpo is that you cant just ignore the langauge
But many textualist dont like absurd results, just so absurd, also some absurd results
that would cause so many cases, even would dislike it
Once you have a purpose you still need to draw a line. Before there are countervailing
things that suggest we gone to far. Purpose does not tell you where the line is intended
to be drawn
If you change the baseline than the circumstances can change???
Penalty default rule by seidenfeld???
Intent is what is the particular meaning, Purpose is what is the general goal.
Purpose is what is the broad goal of this statute.
West Virginia University Hospitals, Inc. v. Casey Case where expert fees were asked
to included with attorney fees.
Scalia (Scalia is a textualist)the majority opinion:
Court says it is not like the attorney fees inherently include expert witnesses
Scalia Courts response in support it decision: One thing they say is that we dont give
credence because that is not what has passed
Second thing is that things that legislator did not intend may slip through
This language is what was passed and got through the house and senate
Scalia says that 1988 would not have overturned Alyeska is an irrelevant precedent
Dissent Stephens (Purposivist View):
Dissent: Civil Rights cases sometimes allow expert fees so they can bring cases and
win them basically equalize the playing field
The other purpose of the Act was to undo Alyeska case then this would indicate that
they intend to.
Stephens suggested that we do society a disservice when judges dont apply the
purpose interpretation and instead just apply textual interpretation. Consequently
Congress will have to take the time and revisit the matter and restate its purpose in
more precise language.
While purposivist see a mismatch between a statutes text and apparent purpose,
textualist are more likely to see such a mismatch as the consequence of the
inevitable conflit, bargaining, and compromise of hundreds of elected officials
and countless constituents.
Facts: The defendants were indicted for knowingly and wilfully obstructing and retarding
the passage of mail and of a mail carrier when def. (officers) arrested the mail man for
committing murder
Court:
Talks about the statute itself only applies to those who knowing and wilfully
obstruct or retard the passage of the mail. That the statute has no reference to acts
lawful in themselves, from the execution of which temporary delay to mails
unavoidably follows.
General terms should be so limited in their application as not to lead to injustice,
interpretation that offends widely and deeply held social values represent failure of
foresight of Congress which they would have never intended
Textualist critique purposivism because statutes embody legislative
compromises, and so a statute may not have a single and coherent purpose.
Most modern textualists would accept Kirby but not Holy Trinity, on the basis of
judicial ursurpation.
Public Citizen v. United States Department of Justice (Justice Brennan)
Supreme Court of the United States, 1989
Facts/Suit:
President used ABA to help advise him on making judiciary nominations
FACA was born to access the needs of numerous committees, boards, etc.
Purpose was to minimize committees and only establish them when they would be
essential. Part of FACA was being able to have management controls over these
advisory committees
WLF (Washington Legal Foundation) brought suit against the ABA after ABA
refused to WLF request for the names of potential judicial nominees,
WLF asked the District of Colombia to consider ABA an advisory committee
under FACA and sought injunctive relief for the Justice Department to cease utilizing
the ABA committee as an advisory committee until it complied with FACA
Court:
Under the FACA statutes language it defined advisory committee among other
things as any committee which is established or UTILIZED by the President.
Court focused on the word utilized and concluded that if the ABA was utilized by
the President than it would be under FACA regulations.
Court construed the word utilize as being undefined by the statute. That the
plain reading of utilize would produce results that the Court found absurd like
NAACP and Political Party consultations could be reviewable (Dissent disagrees
that this are absurd results). Court looks to the purpose of FACA which was to
eliminate wasteful spending, Court thinks that FACA was not intended to cover
every formal and informal consultation between the President or an Executive
agency and a group rendering services.
Court: Looking beyond the naked text for guidance is perfectly proper when the result it
apparently decrees is difficult to fathom or where it seems inconsistent with Congresss
intention, since the plain meaning rule is rather an axiom of experience than a rule of
law, and does not preclude consideration of persuasive evidence if it exists.
Court decides to go against a literal meaning of utilize because it would go
against what they believe that Congress intended.
Justice Kennedy Concurrence:
Believes that FACA does cover ABA activities
Agrees with judgment but believes Court could have gotten to the same outcome
by a different analysis.
Disagrees with Court rejecting the literal meaning of utilize. Believes that ABA
would fall under FACA under the utilize description but would be found
unconstitutional.
bound to it. However where the plain language would lead to patently absurd
consequences than language should not be applied.
Does not embrace the principle of Holy Trinity which says that a thing may be
within the letter of the statute and yet not within the statute, because not within its
spirit, nor within the intention of its makers. Believes that when a statute is clear and
where it would not be patently abusrd to apply the statute to such conduct, it does not
foster a democratic exegesis for this Court to rummage through unauthoritative
materials consult to the spirit of the legislation in order to discover an alternative
interpretation of the statute with which the Court is more comfortable.
1.
- Justice Kennedy (concurrence) argued that the Court should limit the exception
(absurdity doctrine) to situations where the result of applying the plain language would
be, in a genuine sense absurd, where it is quite impossible that Congress could have
intended the result, and where the alleged absurdity is so clear as to be obvious to most
anyone.
2.
In Public Citizen Justice Brennan did not focus on the alleged absurdity of the
particular application of FACA at issue. Rather the court focused on the word utilize
and that its conventional meaning would imply other results that are absurd.
Justice Brennan opinion was that the identification of absurd applications that
are not before the court CANNOT empower the court to conclude, more generally, that
the language of the statute cannot be read in its ordinary sense, thereby opening the
door for consideration of extra-textual indicia of intent or purpose?
-
Argument for majority view Then again perhaps the Court was getting at the
following argument: If a straightforward reading of a statutory term would lead to a
range of absurd results, this may be prima facie evidence that the term itself must have
a narrower then it would first appear.
New Textualist view that statutes are a result of the bargaining process and we
must take them as they are
Modern textualists have emphasized the fact that introducing clarifying
amendments to address absurdities may open a Pandoras box, that ultimately scuttles
proposed legislation-but does alter the reality that inherent imperfections in the
legislative process sometimes lead to absurd results that no rational legislature would
have endorsed
-
Moskal changed the mileage on used cars and sent them to Virginia. Virginia
authorities unaware of the alterations issued Virginia titles incorporating the false
mileage figures.
Moskal indicted under statute 2314 which basically made it a crime to falsely
unknown of the altered mileage and thus was not falsely made
Issue on analysis: Whether a valid title that contains fraudulently tendered odometer
readings may be a falsely made security for purposes of 2314 presents a
conventional issue of statutory construction, and we must therefore determine whats
cope Congress intended 2314 to have...
Court supports it reasoning that falsely made includes Moskals behavior
because:
Court believed that Congress had the purpose of enacting 2314 in order to
come to aid the states in detecting criminals who try to escape detection by channels
of interstate commerce
Finds that the plain meaning of falsely made and the legislative purpose give
reason to believe that the statute applies to a fraudulent scheme for washing vehicle
titles.
Dissent Scalia:
Believed that falsely made ordinary meaning that was used by majority was
wrong. That falsely made would reasonably be someone who knew they were
making a false document.
Accuses court of wordplay
Justice Scalia uses a more technical meaning of the phrase falsely made which is
more to forged and applies to an inauthentic document rather than an authentic
document that contains false information.
2.
-
Justice Frankfurters statement that the choice between ordinary and technical
meaning depends upon the identity of the audience to whom the statutory provision is
directed. However there are various audiences some statutes are tailored to lawyers
and some more tailored to none lawyers.
for cocaine.
Courts:
Court decided that Smith behaviors fell within the statute because the gun was
2.
Disagreement and Clear MeaningTextualism presupposes that interpreters can discern and agree upon the clear
import of a statutory text.
3.
Earlier Examples Revisited
The dispute in Smith shows that reasonable people (and Justices) can disagree
about the ordinary meaning of language, and that the assertions about statutory clarity
are often more problematic than they appear
North Haven Board of Education v. Bell
Supreme Court of the United States (1982)
(Justice Blackmun)
Issue: Does Title IX reach the employment practice of educational institutions?
Holding: Relying on legislative hearings the court concluded that it did.
Notes from Book:
The Courts decision in Bell relied on a variety of different forms of legislative
history. Some parts of legislative history that Courts use...
Get info on four topics from pages 152-162!!!
1.
Committee Reports- conventional wisdom has said that this is the most
reliable form of legislative history
2.
Statements of Individual Legislators- problem here is that one persons
view might not have reflected the majority of views
3.
Successive versions of a statute
4.
Subsequent Legislative Action-
violation of 42 U.S.C. 1983 which it was found that he was deprived of his civil rights
District Court awarded $7,500 in attorney fees under 42 U.S.C. 1988,
The COA REDUCED award to $4,000 in attorney fees, ruling that petitioners
than was contracted with attorney (what lower court used which was dicta),
HOWEVER court says that Congress pointed to the three district court cases
(holdings) in which the factors were correctly applied. Those cases clarify that
the fee arrangement is but a single factor and not determinative.
Court finds upon analyzing cases which used Johnson factors that
contingent-fee factor was just one factor and was not dispositive and could not
serve as a ceiling on an award of attorneys fees.
Johnson cases
Says that Senate referred to district cases, and the House referred to Johnson
Doesnt believe that Congress spent much time pouring over the Johnson cases
at all, so when the majority talks about Congress looking at the cases, he is skeptical
Continental Can Company, Inc. v. Chicago Truck Drivers, Helpers and Warehouse
Workers Union Court here is interpreting the meaning of substantially all in a statute
that involved pension fund assets.
US Court of Appeals
Judge Easterbrook
Issue: What does substantially all mean in 1383?
Court:
Looks to the legislative history
Takes into account Representative Thompson statements which were made
before the bill became law, that substantially all means 85% as commonly
understood by the IRS
Court also looks at Senator Durenbergers statements which were that
Thompson was not there when the amendment orginated and did not participate in
writing it, and that substantially all means 50.1 %
Court looks at the fact that the statements made by Thompson were before the
bill was enacted and that Durenbergers statements were made after senate adopted
4203 and the second statement came two months after the bill was enacted
Courts main basis for finding that substantially all mean 85% was the
fact that Thompsons view of 85% was accepted by Congress and the President,
as well as the common legal meaning of substantially all as being 85% (tax
statutes, IRS, and regulations they could find though substantially all was
85%)
text is the law and not the subjective intentions of individual legislators.
Scalia believes that the greatest defect of legislative history is its illegitimacy, that
legislative history unlike a statute has not gone through the constitutionality mandatory
processes of a bicameral passage by the House and Senates and a presentment to
the President for approval or veto
Easterbrook argues that opinions of legislatures are not the law, so why should
we make them the law? opinion poll among members of Congress shall have the
effect of law p.170
Justice Breyer a critic of textualist says that legislative history is useful in
trying to understand the meaning of the words that do make up the statute or the law.
2.
piece of legislation, rely on details from members who actually sat on committees, and
adopt these committee wills as their own. Scalia does not like this because he
considers the powers assumed by Congress under Article 1 of the constitution are
nondelegable.
3.
4.
-
5.
Does Legislative History Expand Judicial Discretion
One worry by textualist is judge activism which is a concern about judges
going beyond the legitimate exercise of judicial discretion, using an overly loose and
undisciplined form of interpretation to implement their own views of sound public
policy and the expense of the legislative and executive branches.
Critics of the above statement say that judges would be more confined to the
purpose and public policy of the legislature. They argue that legislative history may on
balanc, constrain rather than liberate judges
6.
Legislative History and Congressional Expectations
Professors Eskridge and Ferejohn make the point that legislator assumptions
involve their understanding of how courts and agencies will go about interpreting
statutes. This premise is reflected with knowledge of our basic rules of statutory
construction.
7.
-
other side Justice Stevens nor other justices decline to join an opinion if it fails to be
grounded in an interpretation based on the legislative history
Courts in general now are relying less on legislative history
Professor William Eskeridge a critic of textualism says that three positive
developments might emerge from textualists efforts and thus improve the
practice of using legislative history:
1.
Textualists remind courts and attorneys that they must first analyze the text of a
statute first before going to legislative history
2.
The textualist might encourage reliance solely on the text when it is clear
3.
Also textualist will encourage courts to make sure that the legislative history is
reliable
Exxon Mobil v. Allapattah Services
Supreme Court of the United States
2005
Justice Kennedy
Background: The origins of 1367 Supplemental jurisdiction came about after Finley v.
United States a federal-question jurisdiction case in which the P. wanted to bring in state
claims against other defendants that arose out of the same underlying dispute but could
not qualify on its on. The Supreme Court held that the Federal courts could not exercise
supplemental jurisdiction. Subsequently 1367 was developed in which people thought
it overturned Finley.
The question was did 1367 overturn Zahn which involved a diversity action
which basically said that a federal court could not have supplemental claims over the
claims with a value below 75k?
Def. and dissent: Want to look to other tools beside the text and structure of statute,
basically wanted to look at the legislative history, which they believed showed that
Congress did not intend 1367 to overrule Zahn
Rely on the House Judiciary Committee Report on the Judicial Improvement Act
which said that 1367 would authorize jurisdiction in a case like Finley, and they also
remarked that 1367(b) is not intended to affect the jurisdictional requirements of 1332
cited Zahn and Ben-Hur
Court decides to go with a text interpretation because:
Two criticisms that the court uses to refute the def. and dissenters arguments
about the use of the legislative history:
1.
Court says that there has been an acknowledgment by parties that have specific
knowledge of the statute and the drafting process, that the the plain text of 1367
overruled Zahn and that the House Report was a post hoc attempt to alter that result
Court does not give much weight to the House Report, but put some weight in
the Subcommittee Working paper because the three jurist and three participants in
drafting 1367 agree that on its face 1367 overrules Zahn
Court considers the claim that if Congress intended 1367 to overrule Zahn
which is the what the court s suggesting then there would have been more
controversy than there was. The court responds to this claim that they dont
think Congress would have been upset about this result, because any
competent legislative aide would have flagged the issue if they thought it of
importance to their boss.
Dissent of Stevens, Breyer:
Disagrees that there was manipulation
That Congress clearly did not want to overrule Zahn by the language
Refers to the fact that there was contradictory evidence only highlights that the
Legislative History and Statutory AmbiguityModern Doctrinal Line on the use of legislative history is that legislative history is
ok to use when the statute is ambiguous. (Justice Kennedy in Exxon Mobil). On this
view, although legislative history may be used to resolve statutory ambiguity, it
may not be used to create statutory ambiguity or to overcome the clear
semantic meaning of the text.
Problem with modern doctrinal line on the use of legislative history is that even if
justices dont find a statute ambiguous they all might interpret it to mean different
things
2.
Close scrutiny of the particular legislative history3.
-
Issue: Whether Corning Glass Works violated the Act by paying a higher base wage to
male night shift inspectors than it paid to female inspectors performing the same tasks
on the day shift, where the higher was was paid in addition to a separate night shift
differential paid to all employees for night work?
Facts:
Court:
Congresses purpose in enacting the Equal Pay Act was to remedy a serious and
endemic problem of employment discrimination in private industry
Congress intended equal work to be paid by equal wages
Court said that the secretary needed to show that an employer pays
different wages to employees of opposite sexes for equal work on jobs the
performance of which requires equal skill, effort, and responsibility, and which
are preformed under similar working conditions.
Corning argues that the Secretary has failed to prove that Corning ever violated
the Act because the day and night shifts are different working conditions.
Court says that Congress acknowledged that job evaluations needed to be
outside the purview of the bill
Court says that working conditions according to Congress contains two
elements: surroundings and hazards, and both of the night shift and day
shift contain the same things
-
word are different than using the legislative history for the intent of the legislator.
Easterbrook says that legislative history may show that words with a denotation
clear to an outsider are terms of art, with an equally clear but different meaning to an
insider.
Easterbrook is worried about manipulation of the legislative history by the court in
just choosing what they want to use, also worried about savvy legislators describing
terms in favorable ways in the legislative history in order to manipulate the court, thus
he warns that we must be careful and verify the representations made in the material,
rather than taking them at face value or giving them additional weight because of their
congressional source.
2 Narrow contexts in which textualists have relied on legislative history:
1.
2.
Scalia also said in Green v. Bock that he wanted to use legislative history to help
determine the existence of absurdity, that Congress could not have meant it and that
Congress overlooked its application in someway, and that if someone in the legislative
process had mentioned the application then the Court might find it difficult to conclude
that the absurd result was overlooked. (Counter-argument here is that Scalia
always argues that legislators dont read legislative history)
2.
3.
One possibility that many courts would probably endorse is that the change of
the industry usage does not matter for the purposes of the Act (equal payment act in
this particular situation), because the relevant interpretive question is what the statute
was intended or understood to mean at the time of enactment.
Another argument could be that by incorporating a broad term (In this case
working conditions Corning Glass) that congress meant to incorporate by reference
whatever meaning that term had in the relevant community at the time of enforcement?
p, 201
Justice Stone takes the non to prevalent view that judges should treat a statute
like we treat a precedent, as a declaration and a source of law, and as a premise for
legal reasoning.
after the solvent evaporates its cut into squares either on the paper or the gelatin and
gelatin and paper weigh much more than the drug itself.
Marshalls (one of the defs with the most possession) doses weighed 113.2
grams; the LSD amounted to 670mg, not enough to activate the 5 year
mandatory sentence, let alone the 10 year minimum.
The other defendants possession did not even make the one-gram
Court says that the drugs are not sold pure but have fillers
Court looks at the fact that Sentencing Commission says that they consider
LSD to be sold in a dilute form and thus far less than the 100% ingredient
Court eliminates LSD being considered a substance because the LSD does
not react chemically with the gelatin or the blotter paper
BUT court does find that LSD is a mixture because tiny crystals of LSD mix
Says that Congress had consulted DEA agents to help with sentencing
3 rational basis that the Court thinks Congress had for making the penalties
depend on gross rather than net weight:
1.
Carrier medium is the tool of the trade of selling drugs thus it is reasonable to
incorporate the tool of distribution in the penalties
2.
In 99% of the cases LSD is sold on a blotted paper (Tiya, thus all of the cases
should be applied pretty much the same)
3.
Weighing the actual weight of the LSD minus the carrier would be a difficult
process
Weight of the carrier greater than LSD, as well as irrelevant to its potency
Disparity in sentences
Feels that Congresss only worry is the cost of weighing the LSD minus its carrier
Says that there will be different sentences when there shouldnt be based on
what carrier was used that could discriminately affect sentencing
Positivistic view (affirms harsh sentences in this case): The what the
legislatures produce is clear, explicit, and definite enactments
2.
A. The Expressio Unius Canon- the principle that when a statutory provision
explicitly expresses or includes particular things, other things are implicitly
excluded
B.
Majority decides to skip 2(10) and read 10 first which they determine that
information contained in the registration statement must be contained in prospectus
which they suggest is for public offerings because only public offerings require
registration statements. So theyc onclude that the prospectus must deal with
public hearings and this meaning of prospectus must be used throughout
interpretation of provision.
Majority attacks Alloyds claim by saying they just focus on the one word
Majority says that we should look at communication in relation to the other words
in the text circular, notice, advertisements
Dissent:
Dissent suggest that 2(10) would suggest that prospectus is merely the first
A great deal of both the initial lawmaking and the subsequent law-implementing
work is done by administrative agencies located (at least nominally) in the Executive
Branch of government.
The APA establishes the basic default rules of procedure for federal agencies to
use when promulgating and enforcing regulations
The APA is a framework statute laying out the basic structure and procedures
for a set if important government institutions, and subjecting these institutions to legal
and political controls. Courts have relatively felt free to adapt the APA to changed
APA defines two major types of agency action as a rulemaking and adjudication
Rule- an agency statement of general or particular applicability and future effect
designed to implement, interpret, or prescribe law or policy or describing the
organization, procedure, or practice requirement
Rulemaking- An agency process for formulating, amending, or repealing a rule
Adjudication- Agency process for the formulation of an order
Any process producing fial agency action that is not a rule is an adjudication
for APA purposes, including many actions such as licensing that do not fit the
model of an adversarial adjudicative hearing that resembles a trial.
APA divides the universe of possible agencies into four major categories and
specifies different procedural requirements for each1.
2.
Informal rulemaking
3.
Formal adjudication
4.
Informal adjudication
Formal Rulemaking
Section 556 and 557 provide:
issue, and must show that the proposed rule is supported by reliable, probative, and
substantial evidence.
-
Informal Rule making a.k.a. notice and comment rulemaking governed by 553
553 does not require elaborate hearing process
An agency that proposes to make a rule through this process must give public
notice by publishing its notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM)
The NPRM must include
1. a statement of the time, place, and nature of the public rule making
proceedings;
2. reference to the legal authority under which the rule is proposed
3. either the terms or substance of the proposed rule or a description of the
subjects and issues involved
2.
The agency must provide the public with an opportunity to comment on the
agencys proposal.
After the agency publishes its NPRM in Federal Register, the agency shall give
If the agency decides to finalize a rule, it must publish an explanation of the rule;
that is, agencies must incorporate in the rules adopted a concise general statement
of their basis and purpose.
In contrast with the express terms of the formal rulemaking provisions, however 553
contains no requirement that a final rule be based on any record compiled during the
proceedings
Formal Adjudication governed by 556 and 557, and additional requirements
described in 554
Trial like adversarial hearings that typically involve an agency seeking to impose
some sort of penalty on a regulated party, or to resolve a dispute between two or more
parties under a regulatory scheme administered by the agency
Formal adjudication requires an opportunity for oral presentation
Informal Adjudication
There is no section of the APA that specifies particular procedures for informal
adjudication
Informal adjudications are subject to procedural restrictions found in other
statutes, the agencys own regulations, and the constitution, but overall the procedural
requirements for informal adjudication are fairly minimal
In order to figure out which APA procedures apply to a given agency action, one
must ask two questions.
1.
2.
Rulemaking is typically about prescribing new law or making new policy, typically
policy considerations concerned
chooses???
Get 551, 1, 4-9
553
This section applies, according to the provisions thereof, except to the extent that there is
involved
(1) a military or foreign affairs function of the United States; or
(2) a matter relating to agency management or personnel or to public property, loans, grants,
benefits, or contracts.
(b) General notice of proposed rule making shall be published in the Federal Register, unless
persons subject thereto are named and either personally served or otherwise have actual notice
thereof in accordance with law. The notice shall include
(1) a statement of the time, place, and nature of public rule making proceedings;
(2) reference to the legal authority under which the rule is proposed; and
(3) either the terms or substance of the proposed rule or a description of the subjects and issues
involved.
Except when notice or hearing is required by statute, this subsection does not apply
(A) to interpretative rules, general statements of policy, or rules of agency organization,
procedure, or practice; or
(B) when the agency for good cause finds (and incorporates the finding and a brief statement of
reasons therefor in the rules issued) that notice and public procedure thereon are impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.
(c) After notice required by this section, the agency shall give interested persons an opportunity
to participate in the rule making through submission of written data, views, or arguments with or
without opportunity for oral presentation. After consideration of the relevant matter presented,
the agency shall incorporate in the rules adopted a concise general statement of their basis and
purpose. When rules are required by statute to be made on the record after opportunity for an
agency hearing, sections 556 and 557 of this title apply instead of this subsection.
(d) The required publication or service of a substantive rule shall be made not less than 30 days
before its effective date, except
(1) a substantive rule which grants or recognizes an exemption or relieves a restriction;
(2) interpretative rules and statements of policy; or
(3) as otherwise provided by the agency for good cause found and published with the rule.
(e) Each agency shall give an interested person the right to petition for the issuance, amendment,
or repeal of a rule.
Get 554, 556, and 556!!!
Get notes from text pgs 358-60 583-87; APA, 551, 1,4-9, 553, 554, 556 & 557. Gotta get
statutes listed under the APA
Notice and Comment Rulemaking: Casebook at 604-17; APA 553
Policy Making by Adjudication: Casebook at 643-62, 668-70 (excluding note 1);
671 (note 3) 672; APA 553 Get book notes!!! Need to read Bell Aerospace p.
668-70 also on pgs. 666-68
Agency Guidance Documents: Casebook at 677-89; 690 (note 3) 694; 704-714;
APA 553 Read!!!
An Example of Rulemaking Gone Awry: Materials at 60-90 (time permitting)
Practice Problem 3:
1.
Rulemaking or Adjudication?
- I would say rulemaking because we are dealing with a new policy that is being
implemented.
2.
Informal or Formal?
Because there is no on the record after opportunity for a hearing I would say
that this is an informal rule making
3.
Informal Rule making a.k.a. notice and comment rulemaking governed by 553
553 does not require elaborate hearing process
An agency that proposes to make a rule through this process must give public
notice by publishing its notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM)
The NPRM must include
1. a statement of the time, place, and nature of the public rule making
proceedings;
2. reference to the legal authority under which the rule is proposed
3. either the terms or substance of the proposed rule or a description of the
subjects and issues involved
2.
The agency must provide the public with an opportunity to comment on the
agencys proposal.
After the agency publishes its NPRM in Federal Register, the agency shall give
If the agency decides to finalize a rule, it must publish an explanation of the rule;
that is, agencies must incorporate in the rules adopted a concise general statement
of their basis and purpose.
In contrast with the express terms of the formal rulemaking provisions, however 553
contains no requirement that a final rule be based on any record compiled during the
proceedings
What record does a reviewing court look to? The reviewing court should look at
the administrative record already in existence and not some new record made initially
in the reviewing court.
2.
How much of what the agency relied on should have been disclosed to interested
parties? Court thinks that agency should have made known the data that it was using
and relying on to the public because the pertinent information was readily available.
Thinks that agencys failure to disclose to interested persons the scientific data upon
which the FDA relied was procedurally erroneous.
3.
To what extent must the agency respond to criticism that is material? Court thinks
general statement is inadequate here. Court says under the circumstances the
agency needed to answer vital questions.
553 (b) suggest that a general statement is fine. However courts have read the
notice requirement in conjunction with providing an opportunity for comment. Basically
saying how could be comment if statement is not specific enough.
553(b)(2) explicitly requires that the agencys notice include reference to the
legal authority under which the rule is proposed
643-72
Adjudication
Notes from text:
APA divided into rule making and adjudication
-
SEC v. Chenery:
-
Reasons court gave why SEC could create a rule through an adjudication:
-
(Justice Jackson thought they were just giving court license to make up rules as
they went along)
under the statute it could approve a reorganization plan only if that plan was fair and
equitable and the SEC further asserted for the first time in any binding agency
statement- that a reorganization plan would not be fair and equitable.
Rulemaking Procedures and the Circumvention Concern
-
elicit input from a broad range of constituencies, and to encourage the agency to view
its proposed rule from a more general holistic perspective
Adjudication rulemaking may enable agencies to make general policy decisions
rule to apply in a particular case would have to suspend the adjudication and intiate a
separate rulemaking process
Retroactivity- Sec applied its new rule even though Chenery group had no way of
anticipating that the SEC would impose such a requirement
The Court in Chenery instead emphasized that retroactivity was not per se
unlawful, as every case of first impression has a retroactive effect, whether the new
principle is announced by a court or by an administrative agency. Retroactivity would
render an adjudicative order invalid, according to the Court, only when the ill effect of
the retroactive application of a new standard outweighs the mischief of producing a
result which is contrary to a statutory design or to legal and equitable principles.
Wholesale & Dept. Store Union v. NLRB explained that an assessment of the
2.
whether the new rule represents an abrupt departure from well established
practice or merely attempts to fill a void in an unsettled area of law
3.
the extent to which the party against whom the new rule is applied relied on the
former rule
4.
5.
the statutory interest in applying a new rule despite the reliance of a party on the
old standard (Aerospace Workers v. NLRB reformulating the five-factor test as a
three-factor test but without substantively changing the inquiry)
Agencies recognize that they will be able to make higher-quality decisions if they
solicit broad public input associated with rulemaking
NLRB v. Aerospace
-
Supreme Court said Board is not precluded from announcing new principles in
an adjudicative proceeding and that the choice between rulemaking and adjudication
lies in the first instance within the Boards discretion. Although there may be situations
where the Boards reliance on adjudication would amount to an abuse of discretion or
a violation of the ACT nothing in the present case would justify such a conclusion.
regulated entities to new liability, an agency cannot announce that new policy in an
adjudication.
Notes from pgs 677-89
b.
553(b)(a) says that notice and comment requirements do not apply to an agencys
general statements of policy. An agencys policy statement (sometimes referred to as
a guidance document)is an agency memorandum, letter, speech, press release,
manual or other official declaration by the agency of its agenda, its policy priorities, or
how it plans to exercise its discretionary authority. These provide advance warning
about how the agency is likely to resolve questions that come before it.
Problem with them is that they can bypass the safeguards built in notice
shortage. Policy statement was issued by the FPC in which they suggested that
residential users should have priority
Pros listed of statements of policy in this case:
Encourages public dissemination of the agencys policies prior to their
actual application
-
The rulemaking process has a more thorough exploration of the relevant issues.
And a policy statement when it is encountered with judicial review may be the
first time it is subjected to full criticism by interested parties. Consequently a
policy judgment expressed as a general statement of policy is entitled to less
deference than a decision expressed as a rule or an adjudicative order.
1.
The Force of Law Test- Substantive rules have the force of law meaning
that the only question in the subsequent administrative proceedings is whether
the regulated parties conformed their conduct to the rule. In contrast a policy
statement merely declares in advance how the agency intends to exercise its
discretion in the future; the agency cannot rely on the policy statement in
subsequent proceedings.
P&G E explained that when the agency applies the policy they must be
able to support the policy just as if the policy had never been issued.
If the agency rejects based on a policy statement then they need to be able
as an interpretive rule than then the fact that the agencys statement is inflexible,
mandatory, and coercive may not matter.
-
found the height requirements for the animal cages arbitrary thus there
was the question of whether it really was an interpretive rule (bright-line
numerical rule)
Posner held that such arbitrary decisions need to go through notice and
comment
the more terms are looked at as being presumptive rather than absolute
more likely to be found to be interpretive rules (one counter to this is that this
does not help because if the underlying statute is rigid than the interpretation
will be rigid and also the other way around)
much more detailed and specific commands? Secondly what is the purpose of
the requiring the agency to go through a notice and comment if they can just
easily announce it in an enforcement action.
Notes from 473-76, 551-66, 572-78
Congress and Presidential Influence over Agency Policy
Power of the purse gives Congress 3 important sources of influence over
agencies.
1.
2.
3.
Illustrates that sometimes you have to consider these factors when you are
interpreting a statute.
(b)Principles of Regulation.:
1.
2.
One critic is that neither the President nor the OMB have the requisite
expertise in the substantive policy areas to second-guess the programmatic
agencies, yet in practice this is precisely the sort of second-guessing that OMB
oversight both allows and encourages
OMB supervises interagency review process, and OIRA gets the executive
branch agencies submitted proposals for major regulations
-Separate and apart from OIRAs letters the President sometimes issues
directives to specific agencies. These directives usually have the effect of
encouraging or demanding that the agency take some regulatory action.
Memorandum on Clean Water Protection- Directive
1. Does the President have the legal authority to direct agency action?
Materials pgs 92-99
Spirit of the Sage Council v. Norton (shows that agency should have presented
PRR through rule making instead of saying it was an interpretive rule)
United States District Court for the District of Columbia, 2003.
Finding that the PRR was promulgated in violation of the APA's notice and comment
requirements, the Court will vacate and remand the PRR for further consideration by the
Services.
because the government explicitly relies on the PRR to bolster its contention that the No
Surprises Rule is consistent with the requirements of the ESA, it is remands the No
Surprises Rule for consideration as a whole with the PRR.
1. Public Notice and Comment
Under the APA, federal agencies generally must publish notice of proposed
rulemaking in the Federal Register to give interested persons an opportunity to comment
and participate in the rulemaking. 5 U.S.C. 553(b). That notice-and-comment provision
applies to "legislative" or "substantive" rules that establish legal requirements, but not to
"interpretive rules, general statements of policy, or rules of agency organization,
procedure, or practice." 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(A).
Notes from pgs 756-75- Review of Agency Policy Choices:
C.
Modern Hard Look Review- means the court hard look at the agencys
reasoning
(a)
Agency action is arbitrary and capricious if the agency has entirely failed to
consider an important aspect of the problem.
arbitrary and capricious if the agency has failed to address a significant
criticism of, or proposed alternative to, the agencys final policy choice.
NHTSA failed to consider other alternatives (this raises two issues 1. what
counts as an important aspect of the problem 2. under what conditions has an
agency completely failed to consider an important aspect of the problem)
(b)
ISSUE: WHETHER THE EPAS DECISION TO ALLOW STATES TO TREAT ALL OF THE
POLLUTION-EMITTING DEVICES WITHIN THE SAME INDUSTRIAL GROUPING AS THOUGH THEY
WERE ENCASED WITHIN A SINGLE BUBBLE IS BASED ON A REASONABLE CONSTRUCTION OF
THE STATUTORY TERM STATIONARY SOURCE?
HOLDING: COURT CONCLUDES THAT CONGRESS WAS SILENT AND THAT THE LEGISLATIVE
HISTORY DID NOT SHOW CONGRESS SPECIFIC INTENTION ON THE APPLICABILITY OF THE
BUBBLE CONCEPT AND THAT THE EPAS USE OF THAT CONCEPT HERE IS REASONABLE
POLICY CHOICE FOR THE AGENCY TO MAKE
(IF COURT DETERMINES THAT CONGRESS HAS NOT SPOKEN ON THE PRECISE ISSUE AT HAND
THAT COURT DOES NOT IMPOSE ITS OWN CONSTRUCTION OF THE STATUTE, AS WOULD BE
NECESSARY IN THE ABSENCE OF AN ADMINISTRATIVE INTERPRETATION. IF STATUTE IS SILENT
THAN COURT DETERMINES IF THE AGENCIES ANSWER IS BASED ON A PERMISSIBLE
CONSTRUCTION OF THE STATUTE.)
COURT:
THE LEGISLATIVE HISTORY ILLUSTRATES THE POLICY CONCERNS THAT MOTIVATED THE
ENACTMENT AND THAT THE PLANTWIDE DEFINITION FALLS WITHIN ONE OF THE CONCERNS
OF CONGRESS WHICH WAS THE ALLOWANCE OF REASONABLE ECONOMIC GROWTH AND
CHEVRON DOES NOT REQUIRE THAT AGENCIES USE A VALID INTERPRETIVE METHOD
SOME HAVE ARGUED THAT THE TWO STEP STRUCTURE IS REDUNDANT AND
MISLEADING
2.
IF COURTS WERE LEFT TO INTERPRET NOT A GOOD IDEA BECAUSE THEY HAVE LESS
ACCOUNTABILITY AND AGENCIES HAVE MORE
MCI V. ATT
CASE WHERE THE FCC INTERPRETED MODIFY MEANING THAT THEY COULD CHANGE
THE REQUIREMENTS OF FILING TARIFFS IN ORDER TO ALLOW OTHER COMMUNICATION
2.
-
PAGES 853-67, 885-88- CANONS, TERMS OF ART, AND LEGISLATIVE HISTORY AT STEP 1 OF
CHEVRON
B.
CHEVRON, SEMANTIC CANONS AND TERMS OF ART
TERM OF ART VERSUS ORDINARY MEANINGS, AN AGENCY COULD HAVE APPLIED THE
ORDINARY MEANING OF A WORD TO THE STATUTE WHEN THE EVIDENCE WOULD SUPPORT
TERMS AT THE END OF A LIST ARE TO BE CONSTRUED AS INCLUDING ONLY ITEMS OF THE
SAME GENERAL TYPE AS THOSE SPECIFICALLY LISTED (EJUSDEM GENERIS).
BABBIT V. SWEET HOME (SECRETARY KINDA READS BROADLY BUT IT WAS WITHIN THE
INTENT OF CONGRESS)
FACTS: ESA UNDER SECTION 9 IT SAYS THAT IT IS UNLAWFUL FOR A PERSON TO TAKE ANY
ENDANGERED OR THREATENED SPECIES. THE SECRETARY PROMULGATED A REGULATION IN
WHICH TAKING INVOLVE SIGNIFICANT HABITAT MODIFICATION OR DEGRADATION WHERE IT
ACTUALLY KILLS OR INJURES WILDLIFE.
RESPONDENTS WANT TO LOG BUT THIS ACTIVITY WOULD MESS WITH THE NATURAL HABITAT
OF THE SPECIES
ILLUSTRATES THAT GIVEN THE CANONS YOU CAN COME UP WITH TWO DIFFERENT VIEWS ON
HOW YOU THINK THE OUTCOME SHOULD BE DECIDED.
NOTES FROM TEXT:
2. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN OPERATIVE PROVISIONS AND STATUTORY DEFINITIONS
SCALIAS MAIN ARGUMENT IS THAT TAKE SHOULD NOT BE EXPOUNDED TO INCLUDE
THINGS THAT ARE NOT CONTAINED IN ITS TRADITIONAL MEANING. THAT THE OPERATIVE
WORD SHOULD BE FOCUSED ON RATHER THAN THE RATHER THAN THE DEFINITIONAL TERMS.
3.
-
COURT SAYS THAT NORMALLY AGENCYS ARE GIVEN DEFERENCE UNLESS THERE
INTERPRETATIONS WERE CLEARLY CONTRARY TO THE INTENT OF CONGRESS.
COURT SAYS THAT WHERE A CONSTRUCTION OF A STATUTE WOULD RAISE SERIOUS
CONSTITUTIONAL PROBLEMS, THE COURT WILL CONSTRUE THE STATUTE TO AVOID SUCH
PROBLEMS UNLESS SUCH CONSTRUCTION IS PLAINLY CONTRARY TO THE INTENT OF
CONGRESS
COURT SAYS PASSING THE HANDBILLS WERE DONE PEACEFULLY AND THAT WERE
WITHIN THEIR RIGHTS UNDER THE 1ST AMENDMENT
RUST V. SULLIVAN:
FACTS: FACIAL CHALLENGE TO DEPT. OF HEALTH AND HHS REGULATIONS WHICH LIMIT THE
ABILITY OF TITLE X FUND RECIPIENTS TO ENGAGE IN ABORTION-RELATED ACTIVITIES
THE CHANGES TO THE ACT PROHIBITED ANY ABORTION ADVICE AND DID NOT HAVE
PRENATAL OR PREGNANCY CARE
B.
FEDERALISM - CHEVRON AND FEDERALISM PGS. 900-16
(A) TRADITIONAL STATE FUNCTIONS
SUPREME COURT USES THE SUBSTANTIVE CANON CALLED CLEAR STATEMENT
RULES- TO SAFEGUARD WHAT ARE SOMETIMES DESCRIBED AS CONSTITUTIONAL VALUES.
THE COURT WILL NOT READ A FEDERAL STATUTE TO INTRUDE INTO CORE ASPECTS OF
STATE SOVEREIGNTY, OR TO DISPLACE TRADITIONAL STATE AUTHORITY, UNLESS THE
STATUTE CLEARLY MANDATES SUCH A RESULT
CHEVRON MAY COME INTO CONFLICT WITH THESE CLEAR STATEMENT RULES
COURT DOES NOT ALLOW THE PETITIONER TO INTERPRET THE TERM NAVIGABLE IN
A WAY THAT WOULD LET IT INFRINGE ON STATE RIGHTS, AND GET AT WATERS THAT ARENT
NAVIGABLE???
2.
(B )
-
COURT LOOKS TO THE AGENCYS INTERPRETATION ONCE THEY DECIDE THAT THE
TERM IS AMBIGUOUS AND DECIDE THAT LATE FEES ARE INCLUDED IN THE STATUTORY
TERM. SAYS THAT THE COMPTROLLERS REGULATION IS REASONABLE AND THUS IS NOT
ARBITRARY AND CAPRICIOUS TO IGNORE THE CHEVRON DEFERENCE.
SAYS THAT PREEMPTION DOES NOT APPLY BECAUSE THE ISSUE AT HAND DID NOT
DEAL WITH IT (OVERALL ACT DOES PREEMPT STATE LAW THOUGH BUT THAT WAS NOT THE
ISSUE AND THE REVIEW WAS NOT DE NOVO)
-
V.