1. An application for a rehearing before a District Supervisor
of the Alcohol Tax Unit of the Bureau of Internal Revenue, who had
entered orders annulling a permit to operate a wholesale liquor
business and denying applications for importer's and wholesaler's
permits, is not a prerequisite to the judicial review specifically
provided by § 4(h) of the Federal Alcohol Administration Act.
Pp.
326 U. S. 220,
326 U. S. 224.
2. Hearings were held and evidence was taken before a hearing
commissioner, petitioner being represented by counsel. The hearing
commissioner made findings of fact which were approved by the
District Supervisor without affording petitioner an opportunity to
except to them. On the basis of these findings, the District
Supervisor entered orders annulling an existing permit and denying
applications for others, without affording petitioner an
opportunity to argue orally before him. The Treasury regulations
authorize, but do not require, the District Supervisor to grant a
rehearing. Nor do they require him to afford petitioner an
opportunity,
Page 326 U. S. 220
on rehearing, to argue orally before him. Nor was there
satisfactory proof of a publicly established practice assuring that
such opportunities would be afforded.
Held: that petitioner need not apply for such an
administrative rehearing before seeking the judicial review
specifically provided by the statute. P.
326 U. S.
223.
147 F.2d 547, reversed.
Certiorari, 325 U.S. 844, to review a judgment dismissing an
appeal from an order of the District Supervisor of the Alcohol Tax
Unit of the Bureau of Internal Revenue annulling an existing permit
and denying other permits under the Federal Alcohol Administration
Act.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner's permit to operate a wholesale liquor business
under the Federal Alcohol Administration Act, 49 Stat. 977, was
annulled by an order of the District Supervisor of the Alcohol Tax
Unit of the Bureau of Internal Revenue of the United States. At the
same time, the Supervisor denied petitioner's applications for an
importer's and a new wholesaler's permit. The Supervisor was duly
authorized to act in these matters. [
Footnote 1] Section 4(h) of the Act authorizes an
applicant or permittee to appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals
within sixty days after the entry of orders denying or annulling
the permits. A petition for appeal was filed within sixty days. The
Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed the appeal, 147 F.2d 547, on the
ground that petitioner had failed to exhaust his
Page 326 U. S. 221
administrative remedies, since he had not first filed a motion
for reconsideration of the Supervisor's order, as permitted by
Treasury Regulations, 26 C.F.R.Cum.Supp. 182.255, reading in part
as follows: [
Footnote 2]
"(a) . . . Within 20 days after an order is made by the
Commissioner or district supervisor revoking a basic permit, the
permittee may file an application with such Commissioner or
district supervisor, for a reconsideration of such order, on one or
more of the following grounds:"
"(1) The order is contrary to law, or"
"(2) It is not supported by the evidence, or"
"(3) Because of newly discovered evidence which the permittee,
with due diligence, was unable to produce at the hearing."
We thought the question involved important, and granted
certiorari.
Whatever might be the case in other circumstances, it is clear
that, where, as here, judicial review is provided in the Act
itself, the petitioner's right of appeal to the courts is to be
determined by looking to the statute, the valid regulations
promulgated pursuant to it, and proven
Page 326 U. S. 222
administrative practice throwing light upon their meaning. In
construing the Act, however, we must be mindful of the "long
settled rule of judicial administration that no one is entitled to
judicial relief for a supposed or threatened injury until the
prescribed administrative remedy has been exhausted."
Myers v.
Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp., 303 U. S.
41,
303 U. S. 50-51.
But this rule does not automatically require that judicial review
must always be denied where rehearing is authorized but not sought.
This is shown by our past decisions, [
Footnote 3] from which we see no reason to depart.
Government counsel, appearing for respondent, do not defend the
dismissal of petitioner's appeal on such a sweeping assumption. On
the contrary, they assert that motions for rehearing before the
same tribunal that enters an order are, under normal circumstances,
mere formalities which waste the time of litigants and tribunals,
tend unnecessarily to prolong the administrative process, and delay
or embarrass enforcement of orders which have all the
characteristics of finality essential to appealable orders.
But Government counsel insist that the rehearing here involved
is far more than a formality, and that we should therefore read the
Act and regulations as if these barred judicial review prior to an
application for a rehearing. [
Footnote 4] Of course, we recognize that, in a particular
administrative pattern, new opportunities to challenge afforded by
the motion for rehearing may subject an order to such critical
administrative review as to reduce it to the level of a "mere
preliminary or procedural" status, thereby divesting it of those
qualities of administrative finality essential
Page 326 U. S. 223
to invocation of judicial review.
Federal Power Commission
v. Metropolitan Edison Co., 304 U. S. 375,
304 U. S.
384-385. But we do not think that is the case here.
The orders here challenged were entered after a hearing, and
they were "of a definitive character dealing with the merits of a
proceeding."
Federal Power Commission v. Metropolitan Edison
Co., supra, 304 U. S. 384.
The evidence was taken before, and the findings of fact were made
by, a hearing commissioner before whom petitioner was represented
by counsel. These findings were then approved by the district
supervisor who entered the orders. True, the findings were approved
and the orders were made by the district supervisor without an
opportunity to petitioner to except to his adverse findings of fact
or to present oral argument to him. And a rehearing, if granted,
would have afforded petitioner for the first time an opportunity to
see and except to adverse findings of fact, and might also have
given it a chance to present oral argument to the officer who made
the orders. But the regulations only provide that the Supervisor
"may hear the application" for a rehearing. [
Footnote 5] No other language of the regulations,
and no satisfactory proof of publicly established practice under
them, persuades us that the "may" means must, or that the
Supervisors were required to hear oral argument. Thus, despite the
fact that the regulations permit a stay pending the motion, there
is no assurance that a rehearing will be granted so as to afford an
opportunity to except to fact findings or argue orally before the
Supervisor. Consequently,
Page 326 U. S. 224
whatever weight such factors might be accorded in determining
administrative finality of the orders is absent here.
Our conclusion is that the motion is, in its effect, so much
like the normal, formal type of motion for rehearing that we cannot
read into the Act an intention to make it a prerequisite to the
judicial review specifically provided by Congress. Whether the
Circuit Court of Appeals was possessed of power to exercise a
discretion to stay its review until an application was made to the
Supervisor to grant a rehearing is a question which was not
decided, and upon which we express no opinion.
See United
States v. Abilene & Southern Ry. Co., supra, 265 U. S.
282.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
53 Stat. 561; 54 Stat. 1231; 54 Stat. 230, 231; Treasury Order
No. 30, 26 C.F.R.Cum.Supp. 174.1a, 5 Fed.Reg. 2212; Treas.Decision
4982, 26 C.F.R.Cum.Supp. 174.4c, 5 Fed.Reg. 2549.
[
Footnote 2]
The Circuit Court of Appeals also referred to the petitioner's
failure to take an appeal to the Deputy Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, as allowed by Amended Treasury Regulation 182.257. That
regulation provides that:
"Appeal to the Commissioner is not required. However, the
Commissioner may, in his discretion, in order to insure uniformity
of administrative action, entertain an appeal, after review and
reconsideration as provided in § 182.255, from an order of
revocation of a basic permit by a district supervisor, if filed
with the Commissioner within 10 days of the date of the final
order."
The government concedes that the first sentence of this
regulation, "[a]ppeal to the Commissioner is not required," was
added to the regulation as it originally stood for "the deliberate
object of making it unnecessary for a party to appeal to the
Commission before going to Court." Under these circumstances, we do
not discuss it further.
Cf. Peoria Braumeister Co. v.
Yellowley, 123 F.2d 637;
Leebern v. United States,
124 F.2d 505, both decided before the first sentence was added.
[
Footnote 3]
United States v. Abilene & Southern Ry. Co.,
265 U. S. 274,
265 U. S.
280-282;
Prendergast v. New York Tel. Co.,
262 U. S. 43,
262 U. S.
48-49.
[
Footnote 4]
This has been expressly done in several statutes.
See, for
example, 49 Stat. 860; 52 Stat. 831. Of course, the mere fact
that the regulations might bar judicial review is not conclusive,
for the court will consider whether these are consistent with the
legislative intent.
[
Footnote 5]
The only relevant provision, 26 C.F.R.Cum.Supp. 182.255,
reads:
"(b) . . . The Commissioner or district supervisor with whom
such application is filed may hear the application on a date and at
a place to be fixed by him. The Commissioner or district
supervisor, as the case may be, after hearing such application, may
either affirm the order of revocation previously made or may vacate
and set aside such order and dismiss the proceedings or order a new
hearing of the evidence before a designated hearing officer."