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Earlier this week, the Supreme Court granted the petition for writ of certiorari in American Gas Association v. Department of Energy, vacated the D.C. Circuit’s judgment below, and remanded for reconsideration “in light of the position asserted by the Solicitor General” in the government’s response brief. This move revives the fight over the validity of the Department of Energy’s (“DOE”) efficiency standards for residential furnaces and commercial water heaters. More importantly, the GVR puts front and center on remand a question that courts are already grappling with: can Loper Bright be sidestepped by recasting legal interpretation as an exercise of fact-bound expertise?
Background – The D.C. Circuit Opinion
As I explained last fall, under the Energy Policy and Conservation Act (“EPCA”), DOE may set and adjust energy efficiency standards for certain consumer appliances, including furnaces and water heaters. That authority is cabined in at least two ways. First, whenever DOE proposes more stringent standards, it must consider whether those changes are economically justified. Second, the agency cannot increase standards if an interested party shows the changes would result in a “product type (or class) of performance characteristics” becoming unavailable to consumers.
At the end of the Obama Administration, DOE initiated rulemakings to impose new conservation standards for consumer furnaces and commercial water heaters. As part of that process, the agency determined there was no meaningful difference between condensing and non-condensing appliances. DOE’s position then flip-flopped across the Trump and Biden administrations: first, in 2019, the agency finalized an interpretative rule taking the opposite view, and then again in 2021, when it reverted to its “historical” position. Final rules followed in 2023, along with lawsuits from industry groups and manufacturers, who argued the phase-out of non-condensing appliances was unlawful.
Applying Loper Bright, the D.C. Circuit concluded that Congress had given DOE a “degree of discretion” to decide what constitutes a “performance characteristic” or “feature” under EPCA. Those terms, the majority explained, were quite broad as a matter of plain meaning but needed to be understood as applied in a case-specific context that accounted for DOE’s “evaluation of scientific data within its area of expertise.” Thus, while the parties agreed at the level of broad definitions, the Circuit hesitated to second-guess DOE’s judgment about whether the ability of non-condensing appliances to function with existing venting qualified as part of a “performance characteristic.” Judge Rao, in dissent, cast the majority’s holding a manifestation of “Loper Bright avoidance.” On her view, the parties’ dispute presented a straightforward question of law that could be resolved without any semblance of deference to DOE’s “expertise,” let alone its application of EPCA to a particular set of factual circumstances.
Briefing at the Supreme Court
At the Supreme Court, the petitioners presented two questions for the Court’s consideration, the first of which dealt with Loper Bright:
Whether courts may defer to an agency’s legal interpretation of a statute because an agency applied the statute to undisputed facts, despite this Court’s holding in Loper Bright . . . that courts must construe statutes without deference to agency statutory interpretations.
In fleshing out their argument, the petitioners explained the Circuit had initially acknowledged the phrase in dispute—“performance characteristics”—had a “plain” and “broad” meaning that was ascertainable using traditional tools of statutory construction. Indeed, the majority even recognized that “DOE’s interpretation . . . does not bind us” and could only be “especially informative” so far as it had the “power to persuade”—an explicit nod to Skidmore. Yet it still deferred to DOE because it believed the case involved not just a pure legal question, but the application of EPCA to “undisputed facts purportedly involved [in a] ‘case specific’ judgment.” The petitioners highlighted how the Circuit had confused Loper Bright’s discussion of delegated discretion in this regard. Although Congress can give an agency express authority to regulate by defining terms or implementing inherently broad standards like “reasonable” or “appropriate,” “general administrative responsibility,” as obviously involved in the application of law to facts, “does not allow agencies to redefine statutory limits.”
The Solicitor General’s response to the petition was notable not just for its bottom-line concession, but for its framing of the issues at hand. As my colleague, Michael Pepson, discussed in April, the government declined to defend the split-panel decision and instead conceded that DOE’s understanding of “performance characteristic” was “unduly narrow.” The Solicitor General noted, for example, how the Administration was committed to initiating a “new rulemaking”— one that substantially revises or rescinds the rules at issue. The brief also laid out a second argument for the GVR: giving the D.C. Circuit an opportunity to “clarify its holding,” given its conflation of the parties’ positions and overall imprecision.
Next Steps in Loper Bright Implementation
The Supreme Court honored the Solicitor General’s request but provided no indication whether it agreed with any particular elements of the government’s arguments. Why, exactly, was the GVR appropriate? Abstracting away from the facts of this specific case to the broader implications on remand, there are at least three broad issues that could arise on remand:
First, it remains unclear what Loper Bright requires when judges review agency interpretations that rest on “factual premises within [the agency’s] expertise.” This is the language the majority in American Gas Association latched on to. But in Loper Bright, the Chief Justice’s mention of “factual premises” cited to Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms v. Federal Labor Relations Board—a case that presumed an underlying express delegation of policy-making authority. The notion that, absent an express delegation, the mere application of law to facts could somehow insulate an agency’s judgment from meaningful de novo review, including in cases involving mixed questions of law and fact, is simply wrong. I considered a variation of this argument in my recent review of Professor Matthew Stephenson’s article on implicit delegation.
Second, there is the question of how courts should evaluate the persuasiveness of “expert” interpretations, especially those that involve “predictive or scientific judgments.” Justice Kavanaugh’s endorsement of Baltimore Gas deference in Seven County Infrastructure Coalition v. Eagle County, for example, is difficult to square with Loper Bright, particularly when it is applied in cases that do not involve express delegations, or where the court has otherwise opined on the meaning of the statutory provisions at issue, as in American Gas Association.
Third, the mention of “general administrative responsibility” in the American Gas Association petition raises the issue of “housekeeping” statutes. Following Loper Bright, some courts have tended to treat these provisions, which are arguably meant only to authorize agency to promulgate interpretative or procedural rules, as broad delegations of legislative rulemaking authority. Michael Pepson and I have addressed this problem at length as it remains an occasion for judicial mischief and, indeed, the very “Loper Bright avoidance” that Judge Rao bemoaned in her American Gas Association dissent.
Although the American Gas Association court disclaimed Chevron-style deference, the majority’s reasoning risks reintroducing it through the back door. If a court can simply characterize a question of law as dependent on agency “expertise,” meaningful independent judgment is difficult to sustain as a default rule. The D.C. Circuit’s reconsideration will therefore matter well beyond the proper understanding of DOE’s authority under EPCA.
Ryan P. Mulvey is Senior Policy Counsel at Americans for Prosperity Foundation.
In this final panel from the Gray Center’s October conference, moderator Aaron Nielsen (UT Austin) speaks with Judge Naomi Rao (D.C. Circuit) and Judge Steven Menashi (Second Circuit) about their role as judges after Loper Bright ended Chevron deference.
Last week, in Rutherford v. United States, the Court held 6-3 that certain nonretroactive changes to federal mandatory minimum sentences effectuated by the First Step Act (FSA) do not qualify as an “extraordinary and compelling reason” that can justify a reduced sentence under the “compassionate release” exception to the general rule against district courts modifying imposed sentences. In plain English: the Court’s ruling means the FSA’s sentencing reforms cannot be used to justify reduced sentences and early release for prisoners already convicted of those same offenses, even though they may have been punished more harshly under the old sentencing regime. It does not matter how extreme the difference in penalties may be or how unfair that result is as a policy matter. More theoretically, this decision may provide some insight into how the Court goes about identifying and construing statutes that delegate discretion to agencies, as well as police statutory boundaries on that discretion, in the wake of Loper Bright. In fact, the Rutherford decision is the first this Term in which the Court has meaningfully discussed how delegations of discretion to agencies should be analyzed and addressed.
(more…)Several commentators have noted the potential relevance of the Supreme Court’s consequential decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo to coming fights over the authority of the Federal Communications Commission and Federal Trade Commission.
Ed Whelan in National Review recently suggested the FCC’s attempts to “thwart[] judicial review of the legality of . . . license transfers,” which will soon be considered by the D.C. Circuit, could test Loper Bright’s “promise” of “a new era of bureaucratic accountability.”
(more…)The Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) has rescinded its long-standing Rule 202.5(3) that requires respondents settling allegations with the agency to agree to never “publicly deny the allegations in the complaint or administrative order” or risk having their settled charges reopened.
(more…)Professor Aaron Nielson has published some fascinating commentary over at Civitas Outlook in which he explores the dangers of agencies misusing science—or what they claim to be science—to avoid the impacts of Loper Bright and the end of Chevron deference.
(more…)As highlighted last week, Liberty University Law Review recently published a special issue containing essays submitted as part of its symposium on Loper Bright. But there is other recent scholarship on Loper Bright worth highlighting. One article in particular—“The Gray Area: Finding Implicit Delegation to Agencies After Loper Bright,” by Harvard Law professor Matthew Stephenson—deserves serious engagement.
(more…)Last fall, Liberty University School of Law hosted a special symposium entitled “Loper Bright: A New Era of Administrative Law.” As we previously reported, the event included several panel discussions about the impact of the Supreme Court’s landmark decision, as well as a special keynote address by Chief Judge Jennifer Walker Elrod of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Academic investigation of those impacts is vital for appreciating the ways in which Loper Bright will influence the direction of federal administrative law, as well as the executive branch’s reaction in setting its regulatory agenda and Congress’s possible re-engagement with its vested legislative authority and design of delegations to regulatory agencies.
(more…)Last month, the Supreme Court granted certiorari in Beaird v. United States, indicating it would consider whether Stinson v. United States “still correctly states the rule for the deference that courts must give the commentary to the Sentencing Guidelines.” As I explained at the time, this move not only “opens the door for reconsideration of another judicial-deference doctrine,” but more importantly “positions Beaird as a test case for whether Loper Bright’s underlying reasoning—that judges must provide their independent judgement about the best meaning of the law—extends beyond the administrative-law context.”
(more…)As reported by Cause of Action Institute, which represents the fishermen in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, the head of NOAA Fisheries sent a letter to the New England Fishery Management Council last week directing it to “revise and potentially withdraw” industry-funded monitoring requirements for the Atlantic herring fishery. In the absence of council action, the agency suggested the Secretary of Commerce could initiate a direct amendment to “rescind these measures.”
(more…)
