The Commissioner of Food and Drugs, by delegation from the
Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, issued three
regulations under the Color Additive Amendments of 1960 to the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, which the respondents
challenge in a pre-enforcement action on the ground that the
Commissioner impermissibly expanded the reach of the statute. The
regulations (1) amplified the statutory definition of color
additives by including diluents therein, (2) included certain
cosmetics within the scope of color additives, and (3) limited the
exemption for hair dyes to those as to which the "patch test" is
effective and excluded from the exemption certain components other
than the coloring ingredient of the dye. The Court of Appeals
affirmed the District Court's judgment that it had jurisdiction to
hear the suit.
See Toilet Goods Assn. v. Gardner, ante, p.
387 U. S. 158.
Held: Under the standards set forth in
Abbott
Laboratories v. Gardner, ante, p.
387 U. S. 136,
namely, the appropriateness of the issues for judicial
determination and the immediate severity of the regulations' impact
on the respondents, the pre-enforcement challenge to these
regulations is ripe for judicial review. Pp.
387 U. S.
170-174.
(a) The issue as framed by the parties, what general
classifications of ingredients fall within the coverage of the
Color Additive Amendments, is a straightforward legal one, the
consideration of which would not necessarily be facilitated if it
were raised in the context of a specific attempt to enforce the
regulations. Pp.
387 U. S.
170-171.
(b) These regulations, which are self-executing, have an
immediate and substantial impact on the respondents, providing
extensive penalties and substantial preliminary paper work,
scientific testing, and recordkeeping for the cosmetic
manufacturers. Pp.
387 U. S.
171-174.
360 F.2d 677, affirmed.
Page 387 U. S. 168
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
In
Toilet Goods Assn. v. Gardner, ante, p.
387 U. S. 158, we
affirmed a judgment of the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
holding that judicial review of a regulation concerning inspection
of cosmetics factories was improper in a pre-enforcement suit for
injunctive and declaratory judgment relief. The present case is
brought here by the Government seeking review of the Court of
Appeals' further holding that review of three other regulations in
this type of action was proper. 360 F.2d 677. We likewise
affirm.
For reasons stated in our opinion in
Abbott Laboratories v.
Gardner, ante, p.
387 U. S. 136, we
find nothing in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (52 Stat.
1040, as amended), 21 U.S.C. § 301
et seq., that
precludes resort to the courts for pre-enforcement relief under the
Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. §§ 701-704 (1964
ed., Supp. II), and the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. §
2201. And for reasons to follow, we believe the Court of Appeals
was correct in holding that the District Court did not err when it
refused to dismiss the complaint with respect to these
regulations.
The regulations challenged here were promulgated under the Color
Additive Amendments of 1960, 74 Stat. 397, 21 U.S.C. §§
321-376. These statutory provisions, in brief, allow the Secretary
of Health, Education, and Welfare and his delegate, the
Commissioner of Food and Drugs, 22 Fed.Reg. 1051, 25 Fed.Reg. 8625,
to prescribe conditions for the use of color additives in foods,
drugs, and cosmetics. The Act requires clearance of every color
additive in the form of a regulation prescribing conditions
Page 387 U. S. 169
for use of that particular additive, and also certification of
each "batch" unless exempted by regulation. A color additive is
defined as
"a dye, pigment, or other substance . . . [which] when added or
applied to a food, drug, or cosmetic, or to the human body or any
part thereof, is capable (alone or through reaction with other
substance) of imparting color thereto . . . ,"
21 U.S.C. § 321(t)(1).
Under his general rulemaking power, § 701(a), 21 U.S.C.
§ 371(a), the Commissioner amplified the statutory definition
to include as color additives all diluents, that is,
"any component of a color additive mixture that is not of itself
a color additive and has been intentionally mixed therein to
facilitate the use of the mixture in coloring foods, drugs, or
cosmetics or in coloring the human body."
21 CFR § 8.1(m). By including all diluents as color
additives, the Commissioner in respondents' view unlawfully
expanded the number of items that must comply with the
pre-marketing clearance procedure.
The Commissioner also included as a color additive within the
coverage of the statute any
"substance that, when applied to the human body results in
coloring . . . unless the function of coloring is purely incidental
to its intended use, such as in the case of deodorants. Lipstick,
rouge, eye makeup colors, and related cosmetics intended for
coloring the human body are 'color additives.'"
21 CFR § 8.1(f). Respondents alleged that, in promulgating
this regulation the Commissioner again impermissibly expanded the
reach of the statute beyond the clear intention of Congress.
A third regulation challenged by these respondents concerns the
statutory exemption for hair dyes that conform to a statutory
requirement set out in § 601(e), 21 U.S.C. § 361(e). That
requirement provides that hair dyes are totally exempt from
coverage of the statute if they display a certain cautionary notice
on their labels
Page 387 U. S. 170
prescribing a "patch test" to determine whether the dye will
cause skin irritation on the particular user. The Commissioner's
regulation recognizes that the exemption applies to the Color
Additive Amendments, but goes on to declare:
"If the poisonous or deleterious substance in the 'hair dye' is
one to which the caution is inapplicable and for which
patch-testing provides no safeguard, the exemption does not apply;
nor does the exemption extend to the poisonous or deleterious
diluents that may be introduced as wetting agents, hair
conditioners, emulsifiers, or other components in a color shampoo,
rinse, tint, or similar dual-purpose cosmetics that alter the color
of the hair."
21 CFR § 8.1(u).
Respondents contend that this regulation too is irreconcilable
with the statute: whereas the statute grants an across-the-board
exemption to all hair dyes meeting the patch-test notice
requirement, the regulation purports to limit that exemption to
cover only those dyes as to which the test is "effective."
Moreover, it is said, the regulation appears to limit the exemption
only to the coloring ingredient of the dye, and to require
clearance for all other components of a particular hair dye.
We agree with the Court of Appeals that respondents' challenge
to these regulations is ripe for judicial review under the
standards elaborated in
Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner,
supra, namely the appropriateness of the issues for judicial
determination and the immediate severity of the regulations' impact
upon the plaintiffs.
The issue as framed by the parties is a straightforward legal
one: what general classifications of ingredients fall within the
coverage of the Color Additive Amendments? Both the Government and
the respondents agree that for any color additive, distribution is
forbidden unless the additive is (1) listed in a Food and Drug
Administration regulation as safe for use under prescribed
conditions, and (2) comes from a "certified" batch, unless
Page 387 U. S. 171
specifically exempted from the certification requirement. The
only question raised is what sort of items are "color additives."
The three regulations outlined above purport to elaborate the
statutory definition; they include within the statutory term
certain classes of items,
e.g., diluents, finished
cosmetics, and hair dyes, that respondents assert are not within
the purview of the statute at all. We agree with the District Court
and the Court of Appeals that this is not a situation in which
consideration of the underlying legal issues would necessarily be
facilitated if they were raised in the context of a specific
attempt to enforce the regulations. [
Footnote 1] Rather,
"to the extent that they purport to apply pre-marketing
requirements to broad categories like finished products and
non-coloring ingredients and define the hair-dye exemption, they
appear,
prima facie, to be susceptible of reasoned
comparison with the statutory mandate without inquiry into factual
issues that ought to be first ventilated before the agency."
360 F.2d at 685.
For these reasons we find no bar to consideration by the courts
of these issues in their present posture.
Abbott Laboratories
v. Gardner, supra; United States v. Storer Broadcasting Co.,
351 U. S. 192;
Frozen Food-Express v. United States, 351 U. S.
40.
This result is supported as well by the fact that these
regulations are self-executing, and have an immediate and
substantial impact upon the respondents.
See Abbott
Laboratories v. Gardner, ante pp.
387 U. S.
152-153. The Act, as noted earlier, prescribes penalties
for the distribution of
Page 387 U. S. 172
goods containing color additives unless they have been cleared
both by listing in a regulation and by certification of the
particular batch. Faced with these regulations the respondents are
placed in a quandary. On the one hand, they can, as the Government
suggests, refuse to comply, continue to distribute products that
they believe do not fall within the purview of the Act, and test
the regulations by defending against government criminal, seizure,
or injunctive suits against them. We agree with the respondents
that this proposed avenue of review is beset with penalties and
other impediments rendering it inadequate as a satisfactory
alternative to the present declaratory judgment action.
The penalties to which cosmetics manufacturers might be subject
are extensive. A color additive that does not meet the
pre-marketing clearance procedure is declared to be "unsafe,"
§ 706(a), 21 U.S.C. § 376(a), and hence "adulterated,"
§ 601, 21 U.S.C. § 361(e). It is a "prohibited act" to
introduce such material into commerce, § 301, 21 U.S.C. §
331, subject to injunction, § 302, 21 U.S.C. § 332,
criminal penalties, § 303, 21 U.S.C. § 333, and seizure
of the goods, § 304(a), 21 U.S.C. § 334(a). The price of
noncompliance is not limited to these formal penalties. Respondents
note the importance of public good will in their industry, and not
without reason fear the disastrous impact of an announcement that
their cosmetics have been seized as "adulterated."
The alternative to challenging the regulations through
noncompliance is, of course, to submit to the regulations and
present the various ingredients embraced in them for pre-marketing
clearance. We cannot say on this record that the burden of such a
course is other than substantial, accepting, as we must on a motion
to dismiss on the pleadings, the allegations of the complaint and
supporting affidavits as true. The regulations in this area require
separate petitions for listing each color additive,
Page 387 U. S. 173
21 CFR §§ 8.1(f), 8.1(m), 8.4(c), at an initial fee,
subject to refunds, of $2,600 a listing. 21 CFR § 8.50(c). One
respondent, Kolmar Laboratories, Inc., in affidavits submitted to
the District Court, asserted that more than 2,700 different
formulae would fall under the Commissioner's regulations, and would
cost some $7,000,000 in listing fees alone. According to the
allegations, the company also uses 264 diluents, which, under the
challenged regulations, must be included as color additives as
well. Moreover, a listing is not obtained by mere application
alone. Physical and chemical tests must be made and their results
submitted with each petition, 21 CFR 8.4(c), at a cost alleged by
Kolmar of up to $42,000,000. Detailed records must be maintained
for each listed ingredient, 21 CFR § 8.26, and batches of
listed items must ultimately be certified, again at a substantial
fee, 21 CFR § 8.51.
Whether or not these cost estimates are exaggerated, [
Footnote 2] it is quite clear that, if
respondents, failing judicial review at this stage, elect to comply
with the regulations and await ultimate judicial determination of
the validity of them in subsequent litigation, the amount of
preliminary paper work, scientific testing, and recordkeeping will
be substantial. The District Court found, in denying the motion to
dismiss:
"I conclude that, in a substantial and practical business sense,
plaintiffs are threatened with irreparable injury by the obviously
intended consequences of the challenged regulations, and that to
resort to later piecemeal resolution of the controversy in the
context of individual enforcement proceedings would be costly
and
Page 387 U. S. 174
inefficient, not only for the plaintiffs but as well for the
public as represented by the defendants."
235 F.
Supp. 648, 651.
Like the Court of Appeals, we think that this record supports
those findings and conclusions. And as in
Abbott Laboratories,
supra, we have been shown no substantial governmental interest
that should lead us to reach a conclusion different from the one we
have reached in that case. We hold that this action is
maintainable.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
We use "necessarily" advisedly, because this case arises on a
motion to dismiss. The District Court also denied respondents'
motion for summary judgment, and called for an evidentiary hearing.
If in the course of further proceedings the District Court is
persuaded that technical questions are raised that require a more
concrete setting for proper adjudication, a different issue will be
presented.
[
Footnote 2]
The Court of Appeals observed that "Very likely these figures
are exaggerated. . . ." 360 F.2d at 682, n. 5. The District Court
stated that,
"While this amount is immediately suspect, there can be little
doubt but that the added recordkeeping and laboratory testing
costs, in themselves, will be extremely burdensome for all of the
plaintiffs."
235 F.
Supp. 648, 652. (Footnote omitted.)
MR. JUSTICE FORTAS, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE
CLARK join, concurring in No. 336, and dissenting in Nos. 39 and
438.
I am in agreement with the Court in No. 336,
Toilet Goods
Assn. v. Gardner, that we should affirm the decision of the
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit holding that the authority
of the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare to promulgate
the regulation there involved may not be challenged by injunctive
or declaratory judgment action. The regulation (hereinafter
referred to as the "access" regulation) was issued under the 1960
Color Additive Amendments to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act. 74 Stat. 397, 21 U.S.C. §§ 321-376. It requires that
manufacturers afford employees of the agency access to all
manufacturing facilities, processes, and formulae involved in the
manufacture of color additives and intermediates, and provides that
the Commissioner of Food and Drugs "may immediately suspend
certification service" so long as access is denied. 28 Fed.Reg.
6446, 21 CFR § 8.28.
I am, however, compelled to dissent from the decisions of the
Court in No. 39,
Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner,
Page 387 U. S. 175
and No. 438,
Gardner v. Toilet Goods Assn. These cases
also involve regulations promulgated under the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act, 52 Stat. 1040, as amended, 21 U.S.C. § 301
et seq. No. 438, like No. 336, arises under the Color
Additive Amendments of 1960. The regulations implement the
statutory definition of color additives to include diluents,
finished cosmetics and certain hair dyes (the "definition"
regulations). The regulation in No. 39 implements amendments to the
Act adopted in 1962 by requiring that "every time" the proprietary
or trademark name of a drug appears on labels and other printed
materials, the "established" or generic name must accompany it (the
"every time" regulation).
The issues considered by the Court are not constitutional
questions. The Court does not rest upon any asserted right to
challenge the regulations at this time because the agency lacks
authority to promulgate the regulations as to the subject matters
involved, or because its procedures have been arbitrary or
unreasonable. Its decision is based solely upon the claim of right
to challenge these particular regulations at this time on the
ground that they are erroneous exercises of the agency's power. It
is solely on this point that the Court in these two cases
authorizes threshold or pre-enforcement challenge by action for
injunction and declaratory relief to suspend the operation of the
regulations in their entirety and without reference to particular
factual situations.
With all respect, I submit that established principles of
jurisprudence, solidly rooted in the constitutional structure of
our Government, require that the courts should not intervene in the
administrative process at this stage, under these facts and in this
gross, shotgun fashion. With all respect, I submit that the
governing principles of law do not permit a different result in
these cases than
Page 387 U. S. 176
in No. 336. In none of these cases is judicial interference
warranted at this stage, in this fashion, and to test -- on a
gross, free-wheeling basis -- whether the content of these
regulations is within the statutory intendment. The contrary is
dictated by a proper regard for the purpose of the regulatory
statute and the requirements of effective administration, and by
regard for the salutary rule that courts should pass upon concrete,
specific questions in a particularized setting, rather than upon a
general controversy divorced from particular facts.
The Court, by today's decisions in Nos. 39 and 438, has opened
Pandora's box. Federal injunctions will now threaten programs of
vast importance to the public welfare. The Court's holding here
strikes at programs for the public health. The dangerous precedent
goes even further. It is cold comfort -- it is little more than
delusion -- to read in the Court's opinion that
"It is scarcely to be doubted that a court would refuse to
postpone the effective date of an agency action if the Government
could show . . . that delay would be detrimental to the public
health or safety."
Experience dictates, on the contrary, that it can hardly be
hoped that some federal judge somewhere will not be moved as the
Court is here, by the cries of anguish and distress of those
regulated, to grant a disruptive injunction.
The difference between the majority and me in these cases is not
with respect to the existence of jurisdiction to enjoin, but to the
definition of occasions on which such jurisdiction may be invoked.
I do not doubt that there is residual judicial power in some
extreme and limited situations to enjoin administrative actions
even in the absence of specific statutory provision where the
agency has acted unconstitutionally or without jurisdiction -- as
distinguished from an allegedly erroneous action. But the Court's
opinions in No. 39 and No. 438 appear to proceed on the principle
that, even where no constitutional
Page 387 U. S. 177
issues or questions of administrative jurisdiction or of
arbitrary procedure are involved, exercise of judicial power to
enjoin allegedly erroneous regulatory action is permissible unless
Congress has explicitly prohibited it, provided only that the
controversy is "ripe" for judicial determination. This is a rule
that is novel in its breadth and destructive in its implications as
illustrated by the present application. As will appear, I believe
that this approach improperly and unwisely gives individual federal
district judges a roving commission to halt the regulatory process,
and to do so on the basis of abstractions and generalities instead
of concrete fact situations, and that it impermissibly broadens the
license of the courts to intervene in administrative action by
means of a threshold suit for injunction, rather than by the method
provided by statute.
The Administrative Procedure Act [
Footnote 2/1] and fundamental principles of our
jurisprudence [
Footnote 2/2] insist
that there must be some type of effective judicial review of final,
substantive agency action which seriously affects personal or
property rights. But,
"[a]ll constitutional questions aside, it is for Congress to
determine how the rights which it creates shall be enforced. . . .
In such a case, the specification of one remedy normally excludes
another."
Switchmen's Union v. Board, 320 U.
S. 297,
320 U. S. 301
(1943). Where Congress has provided a method of review, the
requisite showing to induce the courts otherwise to bring a
governmental program to a halt may not be made by a mere showing of
the impact of the regulation and the customary hardships of interim
compliance. At least in cases
Page 387 U. S. 178
where the claim is of erroneous action, rather than the lack of
jurisdiction or denial of procedural due process, a suit for
injunctive or declaratory relief will not lie absent a clear
demonstration that the type of review available under the statute
would not be "adequate," that the controversies are otherwise
"ripe" for judicial decision, and that no public interest exists
which offsets the private values which the litigation seeks to
vindicate. As I shall discuss, no such showing is or can be made
here.
I
Since enactment of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act in
1938, the mechanism for judicial review of agency actions under its
provisions has been well understood. Except for specific types of
agency regulations and actions to which I shall refer, judicial
review has been confined to enforcement actions instituted by the
Attorney General on recommendation of the agency. As the recurrent
debate over this technique demonstrates, this restricted avenue for
challenge has been deemed necessary because of the direct and
urgent relationship of the field of regulation to the public
health. [
Footnote 2/3] It is this
avenue that applies with respect to the regulations at issue in the
present cases.
The scheme of the Act, in this respect, is as follows:
"Prohibited acts" are listed in § 301, 52 Stat. 1042, as
amended, 21 U.S.C. § 331. Subsequent sections authorize the
Attorney General to institute three types of proceedings. First,
under § 302, 52 Stat. 1043, as amended, 21 U.S.C. § 332,
he may apply to the district courts of the United States for
injunctive relief. If an injunction is violated, jury trial is
assured on demand of the accused. Second, under § 304, 52
Stat. 1044, as
Page 387 U. S. 179
amended, 21 U.S.C. § 334, the Attorney General may
institute libel proceedings in the district courts and seek orders
for seizure of any misbranded or adulterated food, drug, device, or
cosmetic. Third, criminal prosecution is authorized for violations,
but before the Secretary may report a violation to the Attorney
General for criminal prosecution, he must afford the affected
person an opportunity to present his views. §§ 303, 305,
52 Stat. 1043, 1045, as amended, 21 U.S.C. §§ 333,
335.
The present regulations concededly would be reviewable in the
course of any of the above proceedings. Apart from these general
provisions, the Act contains specific provisions for administrative
hearing and review in the courts of appeals with respect to
regulations issued under certain, enumerated provisions of the Act
-- not including those here involved. These appear in § 701(f)
of the Act, 52 Stat. 1055, as amended, 21 U.S.C. § 371(f).
Section 701, by subdivision (a), contains the Secretary's general
authority, exercised in the present cases, to promulgate
"regulations for the efficient enforcement of [the Act]."
Subdivisions (e) and (f) provide for public hearings,
administrative findings, and judicial review in a court of appeals
with respect to those regulations specifically enumerated in
subsection (e). [
Footnote 2/4] The
Court agrees
Page 387 U. S. 180
that this procedure applies only to the enumerated types of
regulations and that the present regulations are unaffected. Then,
as to the enumerated regulations which are subject to judicial
review -- and only as to them -- subparagraph (6) of subsection (f)
specifies that "[t]he remedies provided for in this subsection
shall be in addition to and not in substitution for any other
remedies provided by law." This "saving clause" does not apply or
refer to regulations other than those enumerated, and the Court's
argument to the contrary is inconsistent with the clear wording and
placement of the clause. [
Footnote
2/5]
Page 387 U. S. 181
At various times, § 701 has been amended to include types
of regulations in addition to those initially subjected to §
701(f). Indeed, in the congressional action which included
enactment of statutory provisions here in issue, the 1960 Color
Additive Amendments, 74 Stat. 397, Congress amended § 701(e),
21 U.S.C. § 376(e) to include certain of the regulations
authorized by the Color Additive Amendments. But, significantly,
these did not include the regulations at issue in No. 336 and No.
438. The same is true with respect to the later Drug Amendments of
1962, 76 Stat. 780. Subsection (e) was again enlarged, but the
provision involved in No. 39 was not included. These actions were
taken in the course of vigorous debate as to the enforcement and
review provisions which should be enacted with respect to the 1960
and 1962 amendments.
On a number of occasions, Congress considered and rejected the
proposal that district courts be given power to restrain by
injunction the enforcement of regulations. [
Footnote 2/6] The bill that became law in 1938
originally contained provisions for hearings and judicial review in
the district courts of certain specified types of regulations
(substantially those later enacted as § 701,
supra).
District courts were also empowered to enjoin "any regulation
promulgated in accordance with section 24" (which would include the
regulations at issue in these cases,
Page 387 U. S. 182
promulgated under § 701(a)). S. 5, 75th Cong., 1st Sess.
(1937). The House Committee eliminated the latter provision and
substituted what became subsection (f). This draft authorized
review in a district court of regulations under subsection (e) and
of those orders only. [
Footnote
2/7] Even this restricted provision for enjoining certain
regulations met with bitter opposition because it "would postpone
indefinitely the consumer protection" or would "hamstring" the
Act's enforcement and "amount to a practical nullification . . . of
the bill." [
Footnote 2/8] The
Conference Committee then drafted the bill which was enacted,
including the House revision of the review provision which became
§ 701 except for a significant change: so concerned was the
Congress lest the administration of the law should be subject to
judicial intervention that, even with respect to the specified
regulations in subsection (e), the reviewing power was placed in
the courts of appeals, rather than in the district courts.
[
Footnote 2/9] This was to meet the
criticism that "a single district judge could be found who would
issue an injunction." But this is exactly what the Court today
decrees. Rejected along with the original House proposal was the
suggestion from the Department of Justice, set out at 83 Cong.Rec.
7892 (1938), that the Congress should leave review in the hands of
the district courts' traditional injunctive powers -- although the
Court today resuscitates that lost cause, too.
As this Court held in
Ewing v. Mytinger &
Casselberry, 339 U. S. 594,
339 U. S.
600-601 (1950),
"This highly selective manner in which Congress has provided [in
this Act] for judicial review reinforces the inference that the
only review of the issue of probable cause [for seizure] . . . was
the one provided in the libel suit. "
Page 387 U. S. 183
In evaluating the destructive force and effect of the Court's
action in these cases, it is necessary to realize that it is arming
each of the federal district judges in this Nation with power to
enjoin enforcement of regulations and actions under the federal law
designed to protect the people of this Nation against dangerous
drugs and cosmetics. Restraining orders and temporary injunctions
will suspend application of these public safety laws pending years
of litigation -- a time schedule which these cases illustrate.
[
Footnote 2/10] They are
disruptive enough, regardless of the ultimate outcome. The Court's
validation of this shotgun attack upon this vital law and its
administration is not confined to these suits, these regulations,
or these plaintiffs -- or even this statute. It is a general
hunting license, and, I respectfully submit, a license for
mischief, because it authorizes aggression which is richly rewarded
by delay in the subjection of private interests to programs which
Congress believes to be required in the public interest. As I read
the Court's opinion, it does not seriously contend that Congress
authorized or contemplated this type of relief. It does not rest
upon the argument that Congress intended that injunctions or
threshold relief should be available. The Court seems to announce a
doctrine, which is new and startling in administrative law, that
the courts, in determining whether to exercise jurisdiction by
injunction, will not look to see whether Congress intended that the
parties should resort to another avenue of review, but will be
governed by whether Congress has "prohibited"
Page 387 U. S. 184
injunctive relief. The Court holds that
"judicial review of a final agency action by an aggrieved person
will not be cut off unless there is persuasive reason to believe
that such was the purpose of Congress."
As authority for this, the Court produces little support.
Board of governors v. Agnew, 329 U.
S. 441 (1947), involved removal from office of certain
bank directors. Had the Court not authorized review, the aggrieved
individuals could only test the correctness of the administrator's
decision by ignoring it and risking a prison term of five years. No
evidence of congressional hostility to review was adduced.
[
Footnote 2/11]
Heikkila v.
Barber, 345 U. S. 229
(1953), does not even remotely support the Court's contention. On
the contrary, it holds that a provision in the Immigration Act of
1917 to the effect that the decision of the Attorney General is
"final" in deportation cases precludes direct attack upon a
deportation order by means of suits for injunction or declaratory
relief. What might be termed the other personal liberties cases
relied upon by the Court are discussed below. But, in cases like
the present, where courts and administrative agencies both
function, it has always -- to this date -- been accepted that the
intention of Congress -- not its mere failure to prohibit -- will
be faithfully searched out by the courts and will be implemented
except in the unusual and extraordinary situations where the result
would be essentially to leave the parties without any adequate
right to judicial review.
Compare Leedom v. Kyne,
358 U. S. 184
Page 387 U. S. 185
(1958),
with Switchmen's Union v. Board, supra; Myers v.
Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp., 303 U. S.
41 (1938),
and Adams v. Nagle, 303 U.
S. 532 (1938).
In effect, the Court says that the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
has always authorized threshold injunctions or declaratory judgment
relief: that this relief has been available since the enactment of
the law in 1938, and that it would have been granted in appropriate
cases which are "ripe" for review. I must, with respect,
characterize this as a surprising revelation. Despite the highly
controversial nature of many provisions of such regulations under
the Act, this possibility has not been realized by ingenious and
aggressive counsel for the drug and food and cosmetics industries
until this time. The Court's opinion and the briefs cite only a
single case in which such relief has been granted prior to the
present cases, and that preceded enactment of the present statutory
scheme.
Morgan v. Nolan, 3 F.
Supp. 143 (D.C.S.D. Ind.1933),
aff'd, 69 F.2d 471
(C.A. 7th Cir.1934). The fact of the matter is that, except for the
instances enumerated in §§ 701(e) and (f), the avenue for
attack upon the statute and regulations has been by defense to
specific enforcement actions by the agency. Congress has been well
aware of this for more than a generation that the statute has been
in effect. [
Footnote 2/12]
Where a remedy is provided by statute, I submit that it is and
has been fundamental to our law, to judicial administration, to the
principle of separation of powers in our Constitution, that the
courts will withhold equitable or discretionary remedies unless
they conclude that the statutory remedy is inadequate. Even then,
as the
Page 387 U. S. 186
Court recognizes, the case must be "ripe" or appropriate for
threshold judicial review. Any other doctrine than this -- any
doctrine which so far departs from judicial restraint and judicial
recognition of the power of the Congress and the administrative
agencies -- is bound to be disruptive. It would mean that
provisions in regulatory statutes and regulations of a wide variety
of administrative agencies would be subject to threshold attack
because Congress has not, in addition to providing judicial review
by prescribed procedures, also said to the courts, "thou shalt not
enjoin
in limine."
The limited applicability of the Administrative Procedure Act in
these cases is entirely clear. That Act requires that, unless
precluded by Congress, final agency action of the sorts involved
here must be reviewable at some stage, and it recognizes that such
review must be "adequate." It merely presents the question in these
cases. It does not supply an answer. Certainly, it would be
revolutionary doctrine that the Administrative Procedure Act
authorizes threshold suits for injunction even where another and
adequate review provision is available. The Court refers to the
Administrative Procedure Act as "seminal." It is, in a real sense,
but its seed may not produce the lush, tropical jungle of the
doctrine that the Court will permit agency action to be attacked
in limine by suit for injunction or declaratory action
unless Congress expressly prohibits review of regulatory action.
See 3 Davis, Administrative Law Treatise § 22.08
(1958).
I submit that, if we are to judge and not to legislate policy,
we should implement, and not contradict, the program laid out by
the Congress. Congress did not intend that the regulations at issue
in this case might be challenged in gross, apart from a specific
controversy, or in the district courts, or by injunction or
declaratory judgment action. On the contrary, the clear intent was
that
Page 387 U. S. 187
the regulations, being to protect the consumer from unsafe,
potentially harmful, and "misbranded" foods, drugs, devices, and
cosmetics, were to be subject to challenge only by way of defense
to enforcement proceedings. It was Congress' judgment, after much
controversy, that the special nature of the Act and its
administration required this protection against delay and
disruption. We should not arrogate to ourselves the power to
override this judgment. Not a single case cited by the majority in
which agency action was held reviewable arose against this kind of
background of legislative hostility to threshold review in the
district courts.
The Court is in error, I submit, in its approach to this
problem; and, as I shall attempt to show, it is in error in its
decision that, even given this permissive approach to the use of
judicial injunctive power, these controversies are "ripe" or
appropriate for decision.
II
I come then to the questions whether the review otherwise
available under the statute is "adequate," whether the
controversies are "ripe" or appropriate for review in terms of the
evaluation of the competing private and public interests. I discuss
these together because the questions of adequacy and ripeness or
appropriateness for review are interrelated. I again note that no
constitutional issues are raised, and, indeed, no issues as to the
authority of the agency to issue regulations of the general sort
involved. The only issue is whether that authority was properly
exercised.
There is, of course, no abstract or mechanical method for
determining the adequacy of review provisions. Where personal
status or liberties are involved, the courts may well insist upon a
considerable ease of challenging administrative orders or
regulations.
Cf. Rusk v Cort, 369 U.
S. 367 (1962);
but cf. 345 U.
S.
Page 387 U. S. 188
345 U. S. 229
(1953). [
Footnote 2/13] But in
situations where a regulatory scheme designed to protect the public
is involved, this Court has held that postponement of the
opportunity to obtain judicial relief in the interest of avoiding
disruption of the regulatory plan is entirely justifiable.
Ewing v. Mytinger & Casselberry, 339 U.
S. 594 (1950);
cf. Myers v. Bethlehem Shipbuilding
Corp., 303 U. S. 41
(1938). [
Footnote 2/14] The
Ewing case dramatically illustrates the point. It involves
the same statute and enforcement plan as are now before us.
Appellee filed suit in the United States District Court to restrain
enforcement of the provision of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
which authorizes multiple seizure of misbranded products. Appellee
claimed that the provision was unconstitutional under the Due
Process Clause, and that the agency had acted arbitrarily "in
instituting" (through the Attorney General) multiple seizures
without affording appellee an opportunity for hearing as to whether
there was "probable cause" for the seizures. A three-judge district
court was convened. It held for appellee on both issues and granted
an injunction. This Court reversed on the grounds that no hearing
is necessary for the administrative determination of probable
cause, and that, in any event, the District Court had no
jurisdiction to review that determination. [
Footnote 2/15]
Page 387 U. S. 189
It is no answer to
Ewing to point out, as the Court
does, that the precise determination attacked by the plaintiff was
that of probable cause for recommending multiple seizures. The
important point is that the Court held that the processes of the
District Court could not be invoked except in the enforcement
action provided by Congress. The following quotation from MR.
JUSTICE DOUGLAS' opinion for the Court demonstrates the controlling
force of
Ewing in the present case:
"Judicial review of this preliminary phase of the administrative
procedure does not fit the statutory scheme nor serve the policy of
the Act. Congress made numerous administrative determinations under
the Act reviewable by the courts. . . . This highly selective
manner in which Congress has provided for judicial review
reinforces the inference that the only review of the issue of
probable cause which Congress granted was the one provided in the
libel suit.
Cf. Switchmen's Union v. Board, 320 U. S.
297,
320 U. S. 305-306. . . . If
the District Court can step in, stay the institution of seizures,
and bring the administrative regulation to a halt until it hears
the case, the public will be denied the speedy protection which
Congress provided by multiple seizures."
339 U.S. at
339 U. S.
600-601.
In
Ewing, the company's only recourse was to defend in
the seizure actions, availing itself of consolidation of the
multiple suits if it so desired. 339 U.S. at
339 U. S.
602.
Page 387 U. S. 190
Despite the hardship and destructive publicity of multiple
seizures -- a more serious variety of the kind of hardship which
seems profoundly to affect the Court in the present cases -- this
Court refused to hold that the remedy of judicial review by defense
in these actions was inadequate. On the contrary, it held that
"Congress weighed the potential injury to the public from
misbranded articles against the injury to the purveyor of the
article from a temporary interference with its distribution and
decided in favor of the speedy, preventive device of multiple
seizures."
339 U.S. at
339 U. S.
601.
I submit that this Court's action in Nos. 39 and 438 sharply
departs from
Ewing and from the principles of judicial
restraint and respect for congressional enactments and
administrative agencies which have to this day been fundamental to
our jurisprudence. The Court refers in passing to the injunctions
here as "traditional avenues of judicial relief." But there is
nothing "traditional" about the courts providing injunctive relief
against agency action in situations where the Congress has
prescribed another avenue which is available to the plaintiffs.
Eloquent testimony of this is the paucity of pertinent
precedents.
The three decisions of this Court principally relied upon by the
majority here are primarily noteworthy for their difference, rather
than their analogy. In each of them the particular statutory scheme
involved expressly provided for the jurisdiction of the court in
which the suit was brought. In none of them is the action
maintained despite congressional provision of another and different
remedy.
Columbia Broadcasting System v. United States,
316 U. S. 407
(1942), concerned a regulation promulgated by the FCC which would
have refused a license to any station which entered into defined
types of network contracts. CBS, a network and not a station
licensee,
Page 387 U. S. 191
brought an action to enjoin enforcement of the regulation,
claiming that it was beyond the Commission's power. The action was
brought under 402(a) of the Communications Act itself (48 Stat.
1093) which makes applicable the provisions of the Urgent
Deficiencies Act to "suits to enforce, enjoin," etc., any order of
the Commission with certain exceptions not here relevant. Thus, the
statute itself provided for injunctive action against orders of the
Commission. The only problem in the case was whether the particular
order was "reviewable" at all on suit of CBS and, if so, whether
the action was premature -- not whether the courts might,
consistently with the congressional scheme, entertain suit for
injunction in proper circumstances, because that was settled by
specific provisions in the Act. The Court held that the action
could be maintained. And it held that CBS had no adequate
alternative remedy. At most, CBS could have intervened in a
proceeding controlled by a station applying for a license -- if
there were such a proceeding. [
Footnote 2/16] The Court therefore held that CBS could
challenge the regulation before it was invoked against a licensee.
This is a far cry from the present cases, in which, despite the
absence of statutory authorization of district court jurisdiction
over the injunctive procedure, and in face of the regulatory
design, the manufacturers seek to invoke the courts' general equity
power to override what appears to be the studied and deliberate
intention of the Congress.
In
United States v. Storer Broadcasting Co.,
351 U. S. 192
(1956), the FCC promulgated a rule limiting to five the number of
television stations which would be licensed to a single person. The
same day it denied, on the basis of the rule, an application by
Storer, which owned five stations, for an additional station.
Storer appealed, not
Page 387 U. S. 192
to the District Court, but to the Court of Appeals, for review
of the Commission's rulemaking order. The Court of Appeals had
jurisdiction by specific statutory provision to entertain petitions
to review final orders of the Commission upon application of "[a]ny
party aggrieved." 64 Stat 1130, 5 U.S.C. 1034. This Court held that
Storer had standing to maintain the petition for review, that the
rule was a "final order" for review purposes, and that the
controversy with respect to the limitation rule was "ripe" for
review. Again, the important point to note is that the case did not
involve the assertion of district court jurisdiction in the absence
of statute, or the overriding of administrative design or
congressional intent. Storer utilized a procedure expressly made
available by the statute. It sought review in the Court of Appeals,
where the Commission action was reviewed on the basis specified by
statute, including the weight given to the agency findings and
record. It did not commence a separate action, not provided for in
the statute, in which the District Court's original jurisdiction
was invoked.
Storer, in brief, involves an action pursuant
to the statute, and not in conflict with its plan as is true of the
present cases.
The third case is
Frozen Food Express v. United States,
351 U. S. 40
(1956). The ICC issued an order, after investigation and hearing,
listing commodities which it found not to be "agricultural" for
purposes of an exemption from the requirement of obtaining a
certificate of convenience and necessity under the Interstate
Commerce Act. A motor carrier sued in the United States District
Court to enjoin and set aside the Commission's order. The statute
under which the suit was brought expressly gives the district
courts jurisdiction to enjoin, etc., "any order of the Interstate
Commerce Commission." 28 U.S.C. § 1336. Accordingly, here,
too, there was no question of the courts furnishing a forum which
the
Page 387 U. S. 193
regulatory statute did not provide. This case, like
Columbia
Broadcasting and
Storer, supra, therefore, does not
touch the key problem of the instant cases. It is relevant only on
the issue of "ripeness" -- an intensely particularized inquiry
involving considerations which, as I shall discuss, should lead to
rejection of the instant actions. [
Footnote 2/17]
Considering the impact of these three cases on the problem of
"ripeness" in the instant cases, I first note that each of these
three cases is, in effect, two-dimensional. The meaning, effect,
and impact of the accused rule or decision are clear, simple, and
obvious. None is part of the warp and woof of an elaborate
administrative pattern, intimately woven into the congressional
design. None of them is apt to take different shape or to be
modified by practical administrative action. None of them is
subject to the give-and-take of the administrative process as it
works, for example, in the realities of the complex world of food,
drug, and cosmetic regulation. None of them is subject to exception
upon application. None of them depends upon the independent
judgment of the Attorney General for enforcement. These are stark,
simple, two-dimensional regulations which do not depend upon the
specifies of a particular situation for judgment as to their
consonance with statutory authority nor are they subject to change
in the process of administrative application. In short, in the
three cases the courts proceeded within the procedural framework
enacted by Congress, and the circumstances were such that the
courts could make a sensible, realistic judgment as to whether the
administrative rule matched the statutory
Page 387 U. S. 194
authority. [
Footnote 2/18]
These factors are entirely absent in the present cases. Analysis of
the regulations in the present cases will, I believe, demonstrate
the point.
In No. 336 (involving the regulation requiring "free access" to
plants, processes, and formulae with respect to all "color
additives") the Court concludes "that the legal issue as presently
framed is not appropriate for judicial resolution." It bases its
conclusion upon two factors: (1) that the Secretary may or may not
order inspection, and, if denied access, he may or may not decide
to use the authority of the regulation to withdraw or suspend
certification without which the manufacturer may not continue his
business in the products, and (2) that judgment as to whether the
regulation is authorized depends upon an understanding of the types
of enforcement problems encountered by FDA, the need for
supervision and the safeguards devised to protect legitimate trade
secrets. The Court also says that it is an adequate remedy for the
manufacturer to defer challenge until after access is demanded and
denied and further certification services by the agency are
suspended. The suspension of certification services means a
shutdown, at least
pro tanto, but the Court says, with an
optimism which is probably not shared by the industry, that
"prompt" challenge through administrative procedure and court
review can then be had.
Precisely the same considerations demonstrate, I submit, that
the regulations in No. 39 and No. 438 should similarly be immune
from attack in these suits. In No. 438, the accused regulations
were also issued under § 701(a), the general power to
promulgate regulations for the efficient administration of the Act,
specifically the 1960 amendments to promote "safety-in-use" of
color
Page 387 U. S. 195
additives. As the Court states, by the regulations in No. 438,
the Commissioner "amplified the statutory definition" of color
additives to include dilutents and certain cosmetics and hair dyes.
By provisions in the statute, 74 Stat. 399, 21 U.S.C. §
376(a)(1)(A), a product containing a "color additive" shall be
deemed "adulterated" unless the color additive and its proposed use
have been submitted to FDA tested and listed in an FDA regulation
as safe and unless the particular additive comes from a certified
batch, or has been exempted from certification. Distribution of a
product without compliance runs the risk of seizure, injunction, or
criminal prosecution upon action of the Attorney General. Again,
there is no question that the Commissioner could refine and
"amplify" the definition of "color additives." The argument is
whether he could do it in this particular way, to include these
particular items.
Now, with all respect, I submit that this controversy is
clearly, transparently and obviously unsuited to adjudication by
the courts
in limine or divorced from a particular
controversy. Every reason advanced in No. 336 (the "access"
regulation) is applicable here with equal or greater force to repel
this effort to secure judicial review at this stage. (1) In No.
336, the Court pointed out that the Commissioner might or might not
demand access and withdraw certification in a particular case.
Similarly, in the present case, it is impossible to ascertain at
this stage how and whether, in a particular situation, the
regulation will apply to that situation. First and most obvious is
the fact that any manufacturer may apply for an exemption from the
regulation if, as applied to his particular situation, it is unfair
or unduly burdensome or -- more significantly -- if it falls
outside of the statutory intendment. And, even more than in the
case of the access regulation, the definitional regulation is not
self-enforcing. Indeed, in respect of the access
Page 387 U. S. 196
regulation, the Commissioner may resort to a measure of
self-help by withholding certification services, whereas, if the
FDA wishes to take action against a manufacturer who refuses to
submit a "color additive" to the agency on the ground that it is
not covered, the agency must institute an independent proceeding in
court, which it can do only if the Attorney General agrees with its
conclusions.
(2) In No. 336, the Court was influenced by the obvious fact
that adjudication of the legality of the access regulation requires
an understanding of the enforcement problems of the agency and the
actual needs for supervision. I agree. But I respectfully suggest
that, if this is true of a simple investigatory and enforcement
regulation like that requiring access to plants and processes, it
is much more compelling in respect of a complex regulation defining
"color additives." How, for example, can a court possibly judge
whether a substance should be included in the definition outside of
the context of a specific controversy and in the absence of
detailed information as to the agency problem?
The Court, however, describes the issue in No. 438 as "a
straightforward legal one: what general classifications of
ingredients fall within the coverage of the Color Additive
Amendments?" The Court says that
"this is not a situation in which consideration of the
underlying legal issues would necessarily be facilitated if they
were raised in the context of a specific attempt to enforce the
regulations."
With all respect, these statements are totally divorced from
reality. For example, the statute itself includes within the
definition of a "color additive" any "other substance" which,
"when added or applied to a food, drug, or cosmetic, or to the
human body or any part thereof, is capable (alone or through
reaction with another substance) of imparting color thereto."
§ 201(t)(1), 74 Stat. 397, 21 U.S.C. § 321(t)(1). Can
it be seriously
Page 387 U. S. 197
contended that the question, for example, whether a particular
diluent -- solvent or substance serving to dilute -- meets this
definition is "a straightforward legal one," decision of which
would not "necessarily be facilitated" if raised in specific
context? I note that the Court recognizes the frailty of its
pronouncement in a footnote in which it says that,
"If, in the course of further proceedings, the District Court is
persuaded that technical questions are raised that require a more
concrete setting for proper adjudication, a different issue will be
presented!"
But I submit, with respect, that this question which, even
standing alone, would dictate our rejection of the action in No.
438, can and must be faced, here and now, and the answer to it is
clear and obvious. It is clear beyond question, merely on the basis
of the nature of the agency action, that these regulations, on
their face, raise questions which should not be adjudicated in the
abstract and in the general, but which require a "concrete setting"
for determination. A threshold injunction is entirely unsuitable in
these circumstances. It places the administration of a public
safety statute at the mercy of counsel's ability to marshall and
deploy horrible examples which logic may accommodate, but the
reality of administration would repel. Our training as lawyers and
judges, our respect for the administrative process, and our
awareness of the complexities of life should warn us not to fall
into the trap of abstract, generalized, gross review.
The regulation in No. 39 relates to a 1962 amendment to the Act
requiring manufacturers of prescription drugs to print on the
labels or other printed material, the "established name" of the
drug "prominently and in type at least half as large as that used
thereon for any proprietary name or designation for such drug."
§ 502(e)(1), 76 Stat. 790, 21 U.S.C. § 352(e)(1).
Obviously, this requires some elucidation, either case-by-case or
by general
Page 387 U. S. 198
regulation or pronouncement, because the statute does not say
that this must be done "every time," or only once on each label or
in each pamphlet, or once per panel, etc., or that it must be done
differently on labels than on circulars, or doctors' literature
than on directions to the patients, etc. This is exactly the
traditional purpose and function of an administrative agency. The
Commissioner, acting by delegation from the Secretary, took steps
to provide for the specification. He invited and considered
comments and then issued a regulation requiring that the
"established name" appear every time the proprietary name is used.
A manufacturer -- or other person who violates this regulation --
has mislabeled his product. The product may be seized; or
injunction may be sought; or the mislabeler may be criminally
prosecuted. In any of these actions he may challenge the regulation
and obtain a judicial determination.
The Court, however, moved by petitioners' claims as to the
expense and inconvenience of compliance and the risks of deferring
challenge by noncompliance, decrees that the manufacturers may have
their suit for injunction at this time and reverses the Third
Circuit. The Court says that this confronts the manufacturer with a
"real dilemma." But the fact of the matter is that the dilemma is
no more than citizens face in connection with countless statutes
and with the rules of the SEC, FTC, FCC, ICC, and other regulatory
agencies. This has not heretofore been regarded as a basis for
injunctive relief unless Congress has so provided. The overriding
fact here is -- or should be -- that the public interest in
avoiding the delay in implementing Congress' program far outweighs
the private interest, and that the private interest which has so
impressed the Court is no more than that which exists in respect of
most regulatory statutes or agency rules. Somehow, the Court has
concluded
Page 387 U. S. 199
that the damage to petitioners if they have to engage in the
required redesign and reprint of their labels and printed materials
without threshold review outweighs the damage to the public of
deferring during the tedious months and years of litigation a cure
for the possible danger and asserted deceit of peddling plain
medicine under fancy trademarks and for fancy prices which, rightly
or wrongly, impelled the Congress to enact this legislation. I
submit that a much stronger showing is necessary than the expense
and trouble of compliance and the risk of defiance. Actually, if
the Court refused to permit this shotgun assault, experience and
reasonably sophisticated common sense show that there would be
orderly compliance without the disaster so dramatically predicted
by the industry, reasonable adjustments by the agency in real
hardship cases, and where extreme intransigence involving
substantial violations occurred, enforcement actions in which
legality of the regulation would be tested in specific, concrete
situations. I respectfully submit that this would be the correct
and appropriate result. Our refusal to respond to the vastly
overdrawn cries of distress would reflect not only healthy
skepticism, but our regard for a proper relationship between the
courts on the one hand and Congress and the administrative agencies
on the other. It would represent a reasonable solicitude for the
purposes and programs of the Congress. And it would reflect
appropriate modesty as to the competence of the courts. The courts
cannot properly -- and should not -- attempt to Judge in the
abstract and generally whether this regulation is within the
statutory scheme. Judgment as to the "every time" regulation should
be made only in light of specific situations, and it may differ
depending upon whether the FDA seeks to enforce it as to doctors'
circulars, pamphlets for patients, labels, etc.
Page 387 U. S. 200
I submit, therefore, that this invitation to the courts to rule
upon the legality of these regulations in these actions for
injunction and declaratory relief should be firmly rejected. There
is nothing here approaching the stringent showing that should be
required before the courts will undertake to provide a remedy that
Congress has not authorized but which, on the contrary, it has
deliberately declined to afford. Those challenging the regulations
have a remedy, and there are no special reasons to relieve them of
the necessity of deferring their challenge to the regulations until
enforcement is undertaken. In this way, and only in this way, will
the administrative process have an opportunity to function -- to
iron out differences, to accommodate special problems, to grant
exemptions, etc. The courts do not and should not pass on these
complex problems in the abstract and the general -- because these
regulations peculiarly depend for their quality and substance upon
the facts of particular situations. We should confine ourselves --
as our jurisprudence dictates -- to actual, specific,
particularized cases and controversies, in substance as well as in
technical analysis. And we should repel these attacks, for we have
no warrant and no reason to place these programs, essential to the
public interest, and many others which this Court's action today
will affect, at the peril of disruption by injunctive orders which
can be issued by a single district judge. In short, the parties
have an "adequate remedy" to test the regulations; these
controversies are not "ripe" for judicial decision, and it is not
appropriate that the courts should respond to the call for this
private relief at disproportionate burden to the public interest.
With all respect, we should refuse to accept the invitation to
abandon the traditional insistence of the courts upon specific,
concrete facts, and instead entertain this massive onslaught in
which it will be utterly impossible to make the kind of discrete
judgments which are
Page 387 U. S. 201
within judicial competence. With all respect, we should not
permit the administration of a law of the Congress to be disrupted
by this nonadjudicable mass assault.
[
Footnote 2/1]
5 U.S.C §§ 701-704 (1964 ed., Supp. II).
[
Footnote 2/2]
See St. Joseph Stock Yards Co. v. United States,
298 U. S. 38,
298 U. S. 84
(1936) (concurring opinion of Mr. Justice Brandeis). Hart &
Wechsler, The Federal Courts and the Federal System 312-340 (1953).
Compare 4 Davis, Administrative Law Treatise § 28.18
(1958).
[
Footnote 2/3]
See Ewing v. Mytinger & Casselberry, 339 U.
S. 594,
339 U. S. 601
(1950).
[
Footnote 2/4]
21 U.S.C. § 371(e) refers only to regulations under §
401, 52 Stat. 1046, as amended, 21 U.S.C. § 341 (identity and
quality standards for food), § 403(j), 52 Stat. 1048, as
amended, 21 U.S.C. § 343(j) (misbranded food purporting to
serve special dietary purposes), § 404(a), 52 Stat. 1048, as
amended, 21 U.S.C. § 344(a) (conditions imposed on manufacture
of food as the result of health requirements), § 406, 52 Stat.
1049, as amended, 21 U.S.C. § 346 (tolerances for pesticides),
§ 501(b), 52 Stat. 1049, as amended, 21 U.S.C. § 351(b)
(deviations from strength, quality, or purity standards, for
drugs), § 502(d), 52 Stat. 1050, as amended, 21 U.S.C. §
352(d) (warnings with respect to habit-forming drugs) and §
502(h), 52 Stat. 1051, as amended, 21 U.S.C. § 352(h) (packing
and labeling of deteriorative drugs). In addition, particular
sections expressly incorporate the §§ 371(f) and (g)
procedures: § 506, 55 Stat. 851, as amended, 21 U.S.C. §
356 (certain portions of regulations pertaining to certification of
drugs containing insulin), § 507, 59 Stat. 463, as amended, 21
U.S.C. § 357 (with respect to regulations dealing with
antibiotic drugs). Finally, § 505(h), 52 Stat. 1053, as
amended, 21 U.S.C. § 355(h) provides that denials of
certification for new drugs may be reviewed in the courts of
appeals.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The saving clause, subdivision (6) of subsection (f),
specifically and carefully refers to the "remedies provided for in
this subsection." (Emphasis added.) Its wording and
placement would be anomalous if the saving clause were intended to
have general applicability. The legislative history of the saving
clause, and particularly the failure of more broadly conceived
provisions to obtain acceptance by the Congress, corroborates the
evidence of the clause's ultimate language and position that it was
to have restricted application.
See Dunn, Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act, A Statement of Its Legislative Record 184,
225, 609-610 (1938) (hereinafter cited as Dunn).
Contrary to the majority's contention, the reason for the clause
and for its location in subsection (f) is clear and
common-sensical. It was intended to save the remedies of injunction
and declaratory judgment where the agency promulgated a subsection
(e) regulation without the hearings and findings needed to permit
review in the Court of Appeals. In short, as its placement
indicates, it was intended to complete the scheme of
pre-effectiveness review as to those carefully enumerated
regulations with respect to which Congress deemed pre-enforcement
review to be advisable. It has no broader application.
It will come as a shock to the agency, Congress, and
practitioners that, for almost 30 years, this undetected, omnibus
"saving clause" has slumbered in the Act.
[
Footnote 2/6]
Section 23 of S. 2800, introduced in the 73d Cong., 2d Sess.
(1934), for example, was such a provision, and was expressly
discussed on the floor of the Senate. 78 Cong.Rec. 8958-8959
(1934); Dunn 157-159. A successor bill, S. 5, 74th Cong., 1st Sess.
(1935), contained a similar provision, § 702, and was approved
by the Senate. 79 Cong.Rec. 8356 (1935).
See Dunn 330-331,
510.
[
Footnote 2/7]
H.R.Rep. No. 2139, 75th Cong., 3d Sess. (1938).
[
Footnote 2/8]
Id., Pt. II (minority statement).
[
Footnote 2/9]
H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 2716, 75th Cong., 3d Sess. (1938).
[
Footnote 2/10]
The "every time" regulation was published about four years ago,
on June 20, 1963, 28 Fed.Reg. 6375. As a result of litigation begun
in September of 1963, it has not yet been put into force. The
"definition" regulations and the "access" regulation with respect
to color additives were published on June 22, 1963, 28 Fed.Reg.
6439, 6446. Litigation was begun in November of 1963, and the
regulations are not yet operative.
[
Footnote 2/11]
As to the other nonpersonal liberty cases cited by the Court: in
Shields v. Utah Idaho Central R. Co., 305 U.
S. 177 (1938), the Government did not oppose resort to
the injunction remedy, and the Court enumerated special
circumstances why that remedy was peculiarly needed.
Id.
at
305 U. S.
183-184. And in
Stark v. Wickard, 321 U.
S. 288 (1944), the Court noted that the aggrieved
parties had no other forum in which to contest the order in
question, and it found "plain" evidence of a congressional intent
to allow review.
[
Footnote 2/12]
Indeed, Congressman Lea, principal floor manager for the bill
which became the 1938 Act, told his colleagues that the review
provisions of the new bill were not retroactive, and that
preexisting regulations were therefore unreviewable unless
reenacted. 83 Cong.Rec. 7776-7777 (1938).
[
Footnote 2/13]
See Jaffe, Judicial Control of Administrative Action
372.
[
Footnote 2/14]
In
Ewing, 339 U.S. at
339 U. S. 599,
a case under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, the Court
held
"it is not a requirement of due process that there be judicial
inquiry before discretion can be exercised. It is sufficient, where
only property rights are concerned, that there is at some stage an
opportunity for a hearing and a judicial determination.
Phillips v. Commissioner, 283 U. S.
589,
283 U. S. 596-597;
Bowles v. Willingham, 321 U. S. 503,
321 U. S.
520;
Yakus v. United States, 321 U. S.
414,
321 U. S. 442-443."
[
Footnote 2/15]
Where Congress has created a right but provided no avenue for
judicial protection against its obliteration, suit for injunctive
relief may be available under 28 U.S.C. § 1337, relating to
proceedings "arising under any Act of Congress regulating commerce
or protecting trade and commerce against restraints and
monopolies."
See Leedom v. Kyne, 358 U.
S. 184 (1958), where this Court authorized suit in the
district courts to set aside an NLRB certification of a bargaining
unit in which the Board had included both supervisory and
nonsupervisory personnel -- concededly without authority of
statute.
But cf. Switchmen's Union v. Board, 320 U.
S. 297 (1943).
[
Footnote 2/16]
As a leading commentator has noted, the basic issue was that of
CBS' standing. Jaffe,
op. cit. supra, at 394.
[
Footnote 2/17]
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN dissented in
Frozen Food Express on
the ground that
"the case falls squarely within those carefully developed rules
which require that judicial intervention be withheld until
administrative action has reached its complete development."
351 U.S. at
351 U. S.
45.
[
Footnote 2/18]
Although
Frozen Food Express involved problems of
definition, they were not comparable to the complex, subtle,
technical considerations involved in the "definition" or "every
time" regulations here.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK, dissenting.
I join my Brother FORTAS' dissent. As he points out the
regulations here merely require common honesty and fair dealing in
the sale of drugs. The pharmaceutical companies, contrary to the
public interest, have through their high-sounding trademarks of
long-established medicines deceitfully and exorbitantly extorted
high prices therefor from the sick and the infirm. Indeed, I was so
gouged myself just recently when I purchased some ordinary eyewash
drops and later learned that I paid 10 times the price the drops
should have cost. Likewise, a year or so ago, I purchased a brand
name drug for the treatment of labyrinthitis at a cost of some $12,
which later I learned to buy by its established name for about
$1.
The Court says that its action in so sabotaging the public
interest is required because the laboratories will have to
"change all their labels, advertisements, and promotional
materials . . . destroy stocks of printed matter, and they must
invest heavily in new printing type and new supplies."
I submit that this is a lame excuse for permitting the
continuance of such a dishonest practice. Rather than crying over
the plight that the laboratories have brought on themselves, the
Court should think more of the poor ailing folks who suffer under
the practice. I dare say that the practice has prevented millions
from obtaining needed drugs because of the price. The labels
involved here mislead the public by passing off ordinary medicines
as fancy cures. The Commissioner was right in directing that the
practice be stopped.
I hope that the Congress will not delay in amending the Act to
close this judicial exition that the Court has unwisely opened up
for the pharmaceutical companies.