Atlantic Richfield Company v. United States Department of Energy

769 F.2d 771, 248 U.S. App. D.C. 82
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedAugust 19, 1985
Docket82-2472
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 769 F.2d 771 (Atlantic Richfield Company v. United States Department of Energy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Richfield Company v. United States Department of Energy, 769 F.2d 771, 248 U.S. App. D.C. 82 (D.C. Cir. 1985).

Opinion

SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Chief Judge:

The principal questions before us are whether the Department of Energy has adjudicatory authority over alleged petroleum price-control violations, and, if so, whether, in the exercise of that authority, it can impose remedial sanctions upon parties disobeying its discovery orders.

Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO) brought suit in the District Court for declaratory and injunctive relief from an administrative levy of discovery sanctions in two ongoing departmental proceedings. 1 The court concluded that the Department had power both to adjudicate the issues raised in those proceedings and to impose the sanctions. 2 The court dismissed the case, however, holding that ARCO’s claims were not ripe for judicial review and that ARCO had not exhausted available administrative remedies. 3

On this appeal, ARCO asserts that the Department can exercise only investigatory and prosecutorial functions, and, according *775 ly, that it lacks authority to adjudicate asserted price-control violations. That authority, ARCO says, is conferred exclusively upon the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission by the Department of Energy Organization Act. 4 Even if the Department has some measure of implied adjudicatory power, ARCO argues, nonconformance with its discovery processes may be dealt with only by the courts. ARCO further contends that the doctrines of ripeness and exhaustion are inapposite because its challenge is not to the merits of any departmental decision, but rather to the authority of the Department to pass on allegations of price-control violations to impose the sanctions in question.

We find that ARCO’s claims were ripe for judicial review and that ARCO was not required to resort to any supposed administrative remedy. We sustain, however, the Department’s exertions of adjudicatory power, including the discovery sanctions involved in this case. We hold, as the District Court did, that the Secretary has received a “plenary grant” of adjudicatory authority, which extends to imposition of sanctions when necessary to “ensur[e] fairness and maintain[] the integrity of the [adjudicative] process.” 5

I. The Statutory Scheme

The power of the Secretary of Energy to issue orders remediating petroleum price-control violations derives from Section 503 of the Organization Act. 6 That Act established the Department of Energy, and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission as an independent body within the Department, 7 and transferred to the new Secretary of Energy functions theretofore performed by the Federal Energy Administration. 8 The Administration, itself the successor to the Cost of Living Council, 9 had possessed broad authority to adjudicate charged infringements of price-control regulations promulgated pursuant to the Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act of 1973, 10 which mandated pricing and allocation of crude oil, residual oil and refined petroleum. 11

*776 An important consideration in passage of the Organization Act was a perceived lack of due-process protections in petroleum-price proceedings before the Department’s predecessor, the Federal Energy Administration. Regulations of the Administration specified that, if it had reason to suspect a violation, it would exercise a discretion relative to commencement of a proceeding to “determine the nature and extent of the violation.” 12 Proceedings were launched by issuance of either a notice of probable violation or a notice of proposed disallowance. 13 Recipients of these notices had ten days within which to respond, 14 and after expiration of that period the Administration could issue a “remedial order,” 15 defined by the Administration’s regulations as “a directive ... requiring a person to cease a violation or to eliminate or to compensate for the effects of a violation or both.” 16

Proceedings before the Administration were informal, consisting only of the pleadings and possibly a discretionary conference with Administration officials. 17 The agency had subpoena power, 18 but there were no regulations under which a recipient of a notice of probable violation or of proposed disallowance could obtain discovery respecting the agency’s case. Any remedial order resulting consisted of “a written opinion setting forth the relevant facts and the legal basis” of the order, 19 and was “effective upon issuance,” notwithstanding an administrative appeal. 20 Such appeals had to be filed within ten days with the Administration’s Office of Exceptions and Appeals, 21 which was permitted to convene conferences or hearings in its discretion. 22 Judicial review of the decision of the Office of Exceptions and Appeals then became available in a federal district court. 23

When the Organization Act was adopted in 1977, Congress was aware of industry complaints that this regulatory scheme was not sufficiently protective. Senator Javits, the author and Senate sponsor of the bill ultimately approved, noted that “[t]he procedure that has evolved at [the Administration] is one well-suited for emergency needs and temporary authorities, but it falls short of the due process safeguards *777 and separation of functions requirements included in all other permanent regulatory schemes.” 24 Representative Eckhardt, the House sponsor, voiced the concern that under the Administration’s “peremptory [sic] procedures,” there was no way that “a person ordered to comply with a rule or regulation by a remedial order could get a hearing before the agency.” 25

To ensure that the newly-created Department of Energy would accord industry “basic procedural due process rights in agency adjudicatory proceedings,” 26

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Bluebook (online)
769 F.2d 771, 248 U.S. App. D.C. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-richfield-company-v-united-states-department-of-energy-cadc-1985.