727 F.2d 1161
234 U.S.App.D.C. 62
CENTER FOR SCIENCE IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST, et al.
v.
Donald T. REGAN, Secretary of the Treasury, et al.,
Wine Institute, Appellant.
CENTER FOR SCIENCE IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST, et al.
v.
Donald T. REGAN, Secretary of the Treasury, et al.,
Distilled Spirits Council of the United States, Inc., Appellant.
CENTER FOR SCIENCE IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST, et al.
v.
Donald T. REGAN, Secretary of the Treasury, et al., Appellants,
Wine Institute, et al.
Nos. 83-1419 to 83-1421.
United States Court of Appeals,
District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Oct. 26, 1983.
Decided Feb. 7, 1984.
As Amended March 1, 1984.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (Civil Action No. 82-00610).
Michael F. Hertz, Atty., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., with whom J. Paul McGrath, Asst. Atty. Gen., Stanley S. Harris, U.S. Atty., Washington, D.C. (at the time the brief was filed), and Marleigh D. Dover, Atty., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., were on the brief, for Regan, Secretary of the Treasury, et al., appellants in 83-1421 and appellees in 83-1419 and 83-1420. Robert E. Kapp, Atty., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., entered an appearance for Regan, Secretary of the Treasury, et al.
Paul L. Friedman, Washington, D.C., with whom Charles N. Brower, Robert G. Berger, and Lawrence B. Gotlieb, Washington, D.C., were on the brief, for Distilled Spirits Council of the U.S., Inc., appellant in 83-1420 and appellee in 83-1419 and 83-1421.
Arnold M. Lerman, Roger M. Witten, and Kevin Eugene Smith, Washington, D.C., were on the brief for Wine Institute, appellant in 83-1419 and appellee in 83-1420 and 83-1421.
Bruce Silverglade, Washington, D.C., with whom Mitchell Zeller, Washington, D.C., was on the brief, for Center for Science in the Public Interest, appellee in 83-1419, 83-1420 and 83-1421.
Walter G. Ricciardi, Washington, D.C., entered an appearance for Banfi Products Corp., appellee in 83-1419, 83-1420 and 83-1421.
Before WRIGHT and TAMM, Circuit Judges, and MacKINNON, Senior Circuit Judge.
Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge MacKINNON.
Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge J. SKELLY WRIGHT.
MacKINNON, Senior Circuit Judge:
This case involves a rule and two subsequent rescissory rules. The district court held the first rescissory rule to be invalid because the agency did not provide an adequate explanation for the rescission of the initial rule. After the present appeals were taken from the decision of the district court, the agency undertook further rulemaking and promulgated a second, qualified rescission. We conclude that the second rescission eviscerates these appeals, which we hereby dismiss.
I.
On June 30, 1980, the Department of the Treasury promulgated a rule, T.D. ATF-66 (No. 66) that required the labels on containers of alcoholic beverages to list the ingredients, effective January 1, 1983. 45 Fed.Reg. 40538 (1980). The comprehensive labeling rule was promulgated pursuant to the Department's statutory authority to prescribe regulations designed to provide consumers with adequate information concerning the contents of alcoholic beverages. Federal Alcohol Administration Act (FAAA), 27 U.S.C. Sec. 205(e) (1976). On November 6, 1981, the Department, following prior notice of rulemaking and public opportunity to comment, issued T.D. ATF-94 (No. 94), which rescinded T.D. ATF-66 and its labeling requirement. 45 Fed.Reg. 55093 (1981).
The Center for Science in the Public Interest (Center), et al., brought suit complaining of the rescission, and obtained a favorable ruling from the district court on February 8, 1983. The main thrust of the court's ruling was that the rescission by the Department was invalid for failure to comply with the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. Secs. 551-706 (1976 & Supp. V 1981): the district court ruled that the agency had not provided an adequate explanation for its decision rescinding No. 66, and had given undue weight to "cost" concerns. The court required Treasury within thirty days thereof to set a new date, not later than one year from the date of the order, for No. 66 to become effective. Center for Science in the Public Interest, et al. v. Regan, Civ. A. No. 82-00610 (D.D.C. Feb. 8, 1983). The Department complied with the court's order in announcing that No. 66 would become effective on February 8, 1984, subject to possible judicial or administrative intervention. 48 Fed.Reg. 10309 (1983).
That part of the district court's decision which ordered the Department to fix the date for the effectiveness of the comprehensive labeling requirement as not later than February 8, 1984, was appealed by the Department to this Court. The Department contended that this amounted to a usurpation of its statutory authority. This was the only issue raised on appeal by the Department, which took no appeal from the remainder of the court decision, i.e., that Treasury's rescission of No. 66 had been inadequately explained and had given undue weight to costs.
However, the Wine Institute, an intervenor before the district court, appealed the substance of the district court's determination that the rescission had been inadequately explained. After the Department and the Wine Institute had appealed, the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States (Council) was authorized to intervene for the purpose of appealing the court's earlier judgment, and did so.
On August 31, 1983, a Motions Panel of this Court (Wald, J., and Ginsburg, J.) stayed the effective date of No. 66, which Treasury had set at February 8, 1984, without prejudice to action by the merits panel.
While the foregoing described appeals were pending, the Department undertook a new administrative initiative. On June 17, 1983, Treasury gave notice of additional proposed rulemaking on the entire subject of ingredient disclosure. 48 Fed.Reg. 27782 (1983). Comments were solicited on all phases of the proposed regulation, and particularly on the use of FD & C Yellow Dye No. 5, and on the lead time for implementing a new regulation should Treasury decide to issue one. After considering all comments filed on the proposed rule and on the earlier rules Nos. 66 and 94, the Treasury on October 6, 1983, promulgated a new rule, T.D. ATF-150 (No. 150). 48 Fed.Reg. 45549 (1983). The new rule rescinded No. 66, but required the labeling of FD & C Yellow Dye No. 5 by October 6, 1984. The Department found no other ingredient that posed a special health problem, or that justified a label requirement, but stated that the agency would consider on a case-by-case basis any ingredient alleged to cause a potential problem. Id.
The Department, the Wine Institute, and the Council contend that the Center's case challenging No. 94 is now moot because No. 94 has been superseded by No. 150 and no longer has any legal effect. Relying on United States v. Munsingwear, 340 U.S. 36, 71 S.Ct. 104, 95 L.Ed. 36 (1950), those parties have moved the Court to dismiss this appeal as moot, and to vacate the judgment of the district court and remand the case with instructions to dismiss the complaint.
II.
In ruling on these motions, we begin with the established proposition that it is not improper for an agency to engage in new rulemaking to supersede defective rulemaking. See Action on Smoking and Health v. CAB, 713 F.2d 795, 798-99, 802 (D.C.Cir.1983) (Ash II ). Under any conceivable disposition of the instant appeals, it is clear that an ultimate determination of the rights and obligations of the parties concerning ingredient labeling can emerge only upon consideration of the validity of T.D. ATF-150. That is unquestionably a matter for the district court initially, because a determination of the validity of No. 150 necessarily requires review of the new administrative record. Most of the issues presented in these appeals are not necessarily pertinent to examination of the second rescission, and may well prove irrelevant in that context.
The subject matter of these appeals, T.D. ATF-94, no longer has any force, and the controversy surrounding it has been mooted. Any further judicial pronouncement on No. 94 would be purely advisory. Accordingly, we dismiss the appeals. In addition, we vacate that part of the district court decision that required No. 66 to be made effective within one year.
A. The Mandatory Effective Date
The Department appealed only from that portion of the district court order providing:
[T]hat within thirty (30) days of the date of this order the [Treasury] Department shall announce the new date upon which T.D. ATF-66 will be mandatory, the new date not to be any later from one year from the date of this order.
Center for Science in the Public Interest, et al. v. Regan, Civ. A. No. 82-00610 (D.D.C. Feb. 8, 1983) (emphasis added). This part of the judgment is now moot. The mandatory effective date, as prescribed by the agency within the court's order, cannot possibly have any future effect. The Department complied with that part of the court's order when it announced that No. 66 would become effective on February 8, 1984, unless further judicial or administrative action intervened. As a result of its new rulemaking proceedings, the Department promulgated No. 150: that rule became effective on November 5, 1983, and thereby displaced both prior rules. As such, No. 150 constitutes future administrative action of the type that Treasury had referred to in its own order complying with the order of the district court. See 48 Fed.Reg. 10309 (1983).
As we previously emphasized, the Department was legitimately empowered to initiate further rulemaking to correct the deficiencies that the district court found in No. 94. See Ash II, supra; cf. Motor Vehicle Manufacturers Association of the United States, Inc. v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., --- U.S. ----, ----, 103 S.Ct. 2856, 2866, 77 L.Ed.2d 443 (1983) (agency has authority to reconsider past rulemakings by appropriate procedures). The district court was without power to preclude such agency reconsideration, and its order cannot be understood to have done so. Whatever obligation Treasury had to reinstitute No. 66 was subject to the agency's discretion to take appropriate further administrative action.
Accordingly, the district court's order that, in effect, No. 66 be made effective no later than February 8, 1984, no longer has any prospective force. We therefore vacate that portion of the district court order. We do so in order to make it clear that the Treasury is under no present obligation to make No. 66 effective.
B. The Remainder of the District Court Decision
The remaining portions of the district court opinion concern the adequacy of Treasury's explanation of No. 94, and related issues. The Department did not appeal as to these aspects of the decision, though the Wine Institute and the Council have urged this Court to hold the agency's explanation accompanying No. 94 to have been adequate.
There is no reason for this Court to take any action whatsoever with respect to the remainder of the district court decision. Treasury did not appeal from it. The Wine Institute and the Council can no longer complain that the court's ruling has injured them, because the invalidated rule, No. 94, has been superseded by subsequent agency action. See Iron Arrow Society v. Heckler, --- U.S. ----, 104 S.Ct. 373, 78 L.Ed.2d 58 (1983) (dismissing case as moot when an appellate decision could not possibly accord appellant relief from the wrong of which it complains); Simon v. Eastern Kentucky Welfare Rights Organization, 426 U.S. 26, 38, 96 S.Ct. 1917, 1924, 48 L.Ed.2d 450 (1976). No. 94 is a dead letter, and cannot be revived in favor of intervenors. Any appellate pronouncement on the validity of that rule would be meaningless.
Nor should the remaining portion of the district court decision be vacated. Appellants cannot accomplish through a motion to vacate that which they could not achieve through a direct appeal. Each of the appellants urges the Court to remand to the district court, with instructions to vacate the district court decision and dismiss the complaint, in accordance with United States v. Munsingwear, supra. The purpose of the order in Munsingwear, however, was to "clear[ ] the path for future relitigation of the issues between the parties [and to] eliminate[ ] a judgment, review of which was prevented through happenstance." 340 U.S. at 39-40, 71 S.Ct. at 106-107. In the case at bar, review was prevented, not by "happenstance," but by the deliberate action of the losing party before the district court, the Treasury. Circuit courts have recognized that in such a case, the district court should not be ordered to vacate its decision. Ringsby Truck Lines v. Western Conference of Teamsters, 686 F.2d 720, 721-23 (9th Cir.1982); Cover v. Schwartz, 133 F.2d 541, 546-47 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 319 U.S. 748, 63 S.Ct. 1158, 87 L.Ed. 1703 (1942); accord 1B J. Moore, J. Lucas & T. Currier, Moore's Federal Practice p 0.416 at 543-44 (2d ed. 1983); cf. CFTC v. Board of Trade, 701 F.2d 653, 658 (7th Cir.1983) (preliminary district court decision need not be vacated). When the appellant, here the Department, causes the dismissal of its own appeal, it "is in no position to complain that [its] right of review of an adverse lower court decision has been lost." Ringsby, supra, 686 F.2d at 722. Conversely, the prevailing party, here the Center, ought to be left in the same position as if no appeal had been taken.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court dismisses the intervenors' appeals as to the remainder of the district court decision, i.e., the invalidation of the rescission. We do not vacate that part of the decision, but let it stand as is. We express no opinion whatsoever as to the merits of the district court's analysis and conclusions concerning that issue.
III.
Our disposition of these appeals clears the way for future litigation concerning the ingredient labeling controversy. The Department's promulgation of No. 150, which rescinded No. 66, presents a new case. The Treasury's most recent action was the product of a third rulemaking proceeding; it is a different regulation, containing on its face reasoning not previously articulated by the agency as its policy. In addition, No. 150 contains substantive provisions different from those of its predecessors. Whether these differences give rise to a legal distinction between No. 150 and No. 94 remains to be seen. Any person complaining of the procedures or provisions of No. 150 should attack it by a separate action as was done in Ash II, supra.
Judgment Accordingly.
J. SKELLY WRIGHT, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
Though I sympathize with the desire of the majority of the panel to avoid deciding this case on the confused record before us, I cannot concur in today's decision to dismiss this appeal as moot. The majority's finding of mootness permits the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (BATF) to evade legitimate challenges to its purported authority to rescind health and consumer-protection regulations.
We originally were to have reviewed a decision of the District Court in Center for Science in the Public Interest v. Dep't of the Treasury, Memorandum Order in D.D.C. Civil Action No. 82-610 (Feb. 8, 1983). In that decision the trial judge evaluated a 1981 rule promulgated by BATF that rescinded regulations mandating ingredient labeling of all alcoholic beverages. See T.D. ATF-94, 46 Fed.Reg. 55093 (1981). BATF had promulgated the regulations requiring labeling a year earlier. See T.D. ATF-66, 45 Fed.Reg. 40538 (1980).
Concerned about the millions of reported allergic reactions to ingredients in alcoholic beverages (including some deaths), Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) challenged the 1981 rescinding rule, T.D. ATF-94, on grounds that it comported with neither the substantive mandates of BATF's enabling statute, the Federal Alcohol Administration Act (FAAA), 27 U.S.C. Sec. 201 et seq. (1976 & Supp. V 1981), nor the reasoned decisionmaking requirements of Section 10 of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. Sec. 706 (1982). The trial judge agreed; he invalidated the 1981 rescinding rule, T.D. ATF-94, and ordered reinstatement of the 1980 rule requiring labeling, T.D. ATF-66. BATF complied with this order and reissued the labeling rule. See 48 Fed.Reg. 10309 (1983).
BATF then appealed the District Court's decision to this court, and, while appeal was pending, instituted a new rulemaking proceeding on June 27, 1983, to reexamine the question of ingredient labeling in light of the District Court's decision. See 48 Fed.Reg. 27782 (1983). After notice and comment rulemaking, BATF promulgated a new rescinding rule on October 6, 1983. T.D. ATF-150, 48 Fed.Reg. 45549 (1983). The new rule was in substance virtually identical to T.D. ATF-94, the 1981 rescinding rule that the District Court had invalidated. The new rule eliminated all labeling requirements save one; it required labels to disclose the use of Yellow Dye No. 5. Perhaps the most significant alteration came not in the rule itself but in the statement of basis and purpose accompanying the rule. BATF explained its rationale for rescission in much greater detail than it had in 1981.
The new rule fell like a bombshell into this litigation. BATF promulgated the rule on October 6th, three weeks before oral argument was scheduled to take place, and simultaneously made a motion before this court to dismiss the case as moot. The mootness argument was straightforward. CSPI had challenged, and the trial court had invalidated, T.D. ATF-94. The new rule, T.D. ATF-150, superseded T.D. ATF-94. Thus, BATF argued, the rule challenged below was a dead letter and the case should be dismissed as moot. Unfortunately, the issue was not so simple. Nearly identical to T.D. ATF-94, the new rule raised several of the same issues as had its superseded predecessor. For example, the new rule presented the identical question of whether rescission violated the statutory mandates of the FAAA. As a result of this confusion of issues, and the short time the parties had to sort through the changed circumstances that the new rule occasioned, oral argument amounted to something less than a focused and orderly consideration of the decisive issues.
Now that the dust has settled somewhat, it is apparent that this case should not be dismissed as moot even though BATF's decision to promulgate a new rule pending appeal was not necessarily improper. See Action on Smoking and Health v. CAB, 713 F.2d 795 (D.C.Cir.1983) (implicitly approving the possibility of action like that BATF took in this case). We have recognized in other contexts that "intervening changes made by the executive or legislative branches, and particularly by administrative agencies exercising their discretion to improve government programs, may alter the course of litigation midstream." Gray Panthers v. Schweiker, 716 F.2d 23, 33 (D.C.Cir.1983). That an agency may properly conduct new rulemaking to supersede a regulation under challenge in the courts does not, however, compel the conclusion that challenges to regulations are necessarily rendered moot when an agency promulgates rules or regulations that supersede those being challenged. General principles underlying the mootness doctrine, and precedent giving effect to these principles in the context of review of administrative action, preclude such a simple resolution.
The mootness doctrine springs from the language in Article III of the United States Constitution that limits federal court jurisdiction to "cases" or "controversies." This case or controversy limit mandates that questions be "presented in an adversary context and in a form historically viewed as capable of resolution through the judicial process." Flast v. Cohen, 392 U.S. 83, 95, 88 S.Ct. 1942, 1950, 20 L.Ed.2d 947 (1968). Circumstances sometimes shift during the course of a litigation in a way that calls into question whether a concrete dispute between the parties exists any longer. Not every change in circumstance, however, will so erode the adversarial context as to require dismissal. In deciding whether changed circumstances have rendered a case moot, the appropriate question is whether a live controversy between adverse parties still exists at the time the court reviews the case. Franks v. Bowman Const. Corp., 424 U.S. 747, 755, 96 S.Ct. 1251, 1259, 47 L.Ed.2d 444 (1976). In the context of review of agency action, the case law establishes that a sufficiently live controversy may remain in a case even after an agency regulation, order, or practice initially giving rise to the case is no longer in effect. Southern Pacific Terminal Co. v. ICC, 219 U.S. 498, 515, 31 S.Ct. 279, 283, 55 L.Ed. 310 (1911); Associated Third Class Mail Users v. U.S. Postal Service, 662 F.2d 767, 770 (D.C.Cir.1980); Nader v. Volpe, 475 F.2d 916, 917 (D.C.Cir.1973); Big Rivers Electric Corp. v. EPA, 523 F.2d 16, 19 (6th Cir.1975), cert. denied, 425 U.S. 934, 96 S.Ct. 1663, 48 L.Ed.2d 175 (1976); Environmental Defense Fund, Inc. v. Gorsuch, 713 F.2d 802, 810-811 (D.C.Cir.1983).
These cases recognize that certain administrative actions will by their nature or implementation be too short in duration to permit judicial review of their propriety, yet will raise important legal questions that need to be resolved in order to settle the authority of the agency to take similar actions in the future. Such a situation can occur when an agency action is by its terms limited in duration, e.g., Southern Pacific Terminal Co. v. ICC, supra; Delta Airlines, Inc. v. CAB, 674 F.2d 1 (D.C.Cir.1981), when an agency voluntarily ceases a challenged action, e.g., Environmental Defense Fund, Inc. v. Gorsuch, supra, or when, as in the present controversy, new agency regulations supersede challenged regulations, e.g., Associated Third Class Mail Users v. U.S. Postal Service, supra; Big Rivers Electric Corp. v. EPA, supra. In such situations courts find Article III's requirement of a live controversy met if a reasonable expectation exists that the same complaining party will be subject to the same action again. See Murphy v. Hunt, 455 U.S. 478, 102 S.Ct. 1181, 71 L.Ed.2d 353 (1982); cf. County of Los Angeles v. Davis, 440 U.S. 625, 631, 99 S.Ct. 1379, 1383, 59 L.Ed.2d 642 (1979) (a case is dismissable as moot if it can be said with assurance that there is no reasonable expectation that the alleged violation will recur). These situations present live controversies because the party affected by prior regulation has a definite stake in preventing adverse effects from similar actions in the future, while the agency has a distinct and abiding interest in vindicating its authority to undertake such actions. Controversies in these situations are, moreover, concrete; they arise from the likely repetition of a particular set of circumstances, not from hypothesis or abstraction. Most importantly, review in these situations is necessary to ensure that an agency's authority to undertake the challenged actions can be put to the test. See Nader v. Volpe, supra, 475 F.2d at 917 ("to dismiss cases challenging the legality of such exemptions [to safety regulations] simply because the exemption had been withdrawn or had expired would prevent courts from ever deciding the important question of whether or not the Secretary has authority to issue such exemptions").
BATF's promulgation of the new rule, T.D. ATF-150, has left this reviewing court in a somewhat difficult position. The 1981 rescinding rule that CSPI challenged, T.D. ATF-94, is now technically a dead letter. Yet the new rule is in substance identical to the superseded rule. These conflicting pulls make the proper disposition of this appeal a difficult matter. On the one hand, we cannot proceed to review BATF's action under Section 10 of the APA to ensure that the agency has considered all relevant factors, made a rational administrative choice given the record before it, and explained its choice adequately. See Telocator Network of America v. FCC, 691 F.2d 525, 537 (D.C.Cir.1982). Such review of the 1981 rescinding rule, T.D. ATF-94, would be pointless because that rule and its accompanying statement of basis and purpose have been superseded. Such review of the 1983 rescinding rule, T.D. ATF-150, would be premature; the new rule is based on a new administrative record not before this court on appeal, and the parties have had no opportunity to brief the issue. On the other hand, the issues of substantive violation of the FAAA are squarely presented. One of CSPI's challenges to the 1981 rule, T.D. ATF-94, was that the rescission of the ingredient labeling requirement violated the FAAA because that statute mandates ingredient labeling. The identical issue arises with respect to the new rule, T.D. ATF-150. If the FAAA does mandate labeling, then the new rule, which again rescinds labeling requirements, violates the statute in exactly the same manner as the old rule would have. No amount of additional explanation in the statement of basis and purpose can save the new rule on this point.
The condition of the case thus does not admit of complete resolution by this court on appeal. And dismissal of this case as moot will not technically deprive CSPI of the opportunity to challenge the new rescinding rule, T.D. ATF-150, on both procedural and substantive grounds. Nonetheless, a decision to dismiss this case as moot is inappropriate for two reasons. First, a finding of mootness sanctions BATF's effort to evade judicial review of the issue of its statutory authority. Since the mootness doctrine is particularly sensitive to the need to ensure that an agency's authority to take action can be put to the test, and since the issue of BATF's statutory authority to rescind the labeling rule is presented to us in a concrete adversarial context, review of that issue is appropriate. Second, a dismissal of the entire case would amount to an enormous waste of judicial resources.
Evasion of Review. A finding of mootness permits BATF to evade this challenge to its authority to rescind labeling rules, and in effect sanctions any similar future evasions BATF might seek to undertake. When CSPI or any other potential plaintiff challenges T.D. ATF-150 in the future, BATF can simply repeat the tactic that it has already used once in this case: issue a new rule that differs from the superseded rule only in some cosmetic aspect. If T.D. ATF-150 had differed substantially from T.D. ATF-94, this would have been a different case. We would not necessarily have the issue of BATF's statutory authority to rescind re-presented so starkly to us by the new rule, and we would have less reason to view BATF's hasty 1983 rulemaking as an endeavor to preempt appellate review of an unfavorable decision at the trial level. But the near total congruence of the old and new rules, and the timing of the new rule's promulgation, preclude taking a charitable view of BATF's action, and should force us to review T.D. ATF-150 to decide whether it comports with the mandates of the FAAA.
Review of the statutory issue is fully consistent with the general principles of the mootness doctrine as those principles have been applied in the administrative context. The issue presents itself to us in a genuine adversarial context and in a form historically viewed as capable of resolution through the judicial process. See Flast v. Cohen, supra, 392 U.S. at 94-95, 88 S.Ct. at 1949-1950. The adversarial vigor of the parties is beyond question. CSPI faces more than the potential of again being subjected to the superseded agency regulation; the precise statutory violation alleged in the earlier regulation has already recurred to CSPI's detriment. On the other side, BATF certainly has a stake in vindicating its authority under the FAAA to rescind labeling rules. And the issue is posed in a concrete form susceptible of judicial resolution. The court must decide whether a specific decision to rescind labeling rules embodied in T.D. ATF-150 violates the statutory mandates of the FAAA. The parties have briefed and argued the issue fully.
Most importantly, resolution of the issue in this proceeding may well be imperative to ensure that some forum exists for CSPI to challenge BATF's statutory authority to rescind labeling regulations. See Nader v. Volpe, supra, 475 F.2d at 917. The fact that a new regulation, theoretically susceptible to CSPI's future challenge, is now on the books should not alter the analysis. Though most cases approving judicial review of a superseded agency action have done so during a hiatus between regulations, see Southern Pacific Terminal Co. v. ICC, supra, 219 U.S. at 515, 31 S.Ct. at 283, courts have on numerous occasions reviewed the statutory authority of an agency to promulgate a rule even when that rule had been superseded by a new rule. E.g., Big Rivers Electric Corp. v. EPA, supra, 523 F.2d at 19; Associated Third Class Mail Users v. U.S. Postal Service, supra, 662 F.2d at 770.
In Associated Third Class Mail Users a panel of this court (Bazelon, Robinson, and MacKinnon, JJ) faced a situation analogous to that of the present case. Plaintiffs had challenged certain postal rates on the ground that they had not been promulgated in compliance with the requisite procedures established in the by-laws of the Board of Governors of the Postal Service. During the litigation the Board of Governors amended its by-laws in a way that validated the procedures by which the challenged rates were promulgated. Even after that change, however, there remained an issue in the case. Plaintiff had claimed that the initial procedures in the by-laws of the Board of Governors violated that Board's enabling statute. When the challenged procedures were superseded they were replaced with a new set of procedures that raised the identical statutory issue. Although the procedures challenged originally were a dead letter at the time of appellate review, the court went on to decide the statutory issue as it pertained to the new superseding regulations. 662 F.2d at 770-771. The considerations militating in favor of review in the present controversy are even stronger than those in the postal rate case. That case contained no suggestion that the Postal Service would seek to evade review of its new by-laws, whereas BATF's past actions indicate that it may well continue to endeavor to evade review on the issue of its statutory authority.
Judicial Economy. The trial court in this case has already spent a considerable amount of time mastering the intricacies of the FAAA, the complex record before BATF, and the possible justifications for rescission of the labeling requirement. Given the near identity of legal and scientific issues that the old rule, T.D. ATF-94, and the new rule, T.D. ATF-150, raise, a decision to dismiss this case as moot and send CSPI back to the starting block would amount to a remarkable waste of judicial resources. A new trial court would have to duplicate the extensive efforts of the court below, assuming CSPI has the resources to renew its challenge. All this repeated effort would, moreover, take place under the shadow of the possibility that BATF might seek to evade an adverse judgment again, should one appear on the horizon. In light of these facts, a decision to vacate and remand with instructions to dismiss as moot is simply not a sensible resolution to this controversy.
Instead, this court should decide the statutory issue on the record before us. Adverse parties have fully briefed and argued this concrete issue, and no constitutional or prudential concerns weigh against our deciding it. If we decide that the FAAA does indeed mandate ingredient labeling, we must invalidate the 1983 rescinding rule, T.D. ATF-150. If we decide that the FAAA does not mandate labeling, we should remand the case to the District Court for a decision on the issue of whether the new rule comports with the reasoned decisionmaking requirements of Section 10 of the APA. Given the near identity of the old and new rescinding rules, and the great effort the trial court has already expended in understanding the issues, the trial court will be in a position readily to make an informed judgment on the question of compliance with Section 10's requirements.
Though this court is of course reluctant to assume anything less than the utmost integrity on the part of an administrative agency, BATF's action in this case should give us pause. The virtual congruence of the old and new rules, and the timing of the promulgation of the new rule, give strong indication that BATF was seeking primarily not to "improve government programs" but to preempt a possible affirmance of a lower court decision adverse to it. By dismissing this case as moot, the court has permitted BATF to evade review of its statutory authority to rescind a health regulation that the FAAA may mandate. More ominously, the court sanctions a practice that will permit agencies to evade similar challenges to their authority in the future. No constitutional or prudential considerations preclude this court from deciding the issue of BATF's statutory authority to rescind the labeling requirement. In fact, mootness principles are particularly solicitous of such challenges to an agency's authority to act. We should therefore decide this issue.
I respectfully dissent.