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Another important ruling by the Supreme Court - 727Sky - 06-29-2024

Quote:Supreme Court strikes down Chevron, curtailing power of federal agencies
[Image: amy-howe.jpg] By Amy Howe
on Jun 28, 2024 at 12:37 pm
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[Image: supremecourt3.jpg]The court ruled in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo and Relentless, Inc. v. Department of Commerce on Friday. (Thomas Hawk via Flickr)
This article was updated on June 28 at 3:46 p.m.
In a major ruling, the Supreme Court on Friday cut back sharply on the power of federal agencies to interpret the laws they administer and ruled that courts should rely on their own interpretion of ambiguous laws. The decision will likely have far-reaching effects across the country, from environmental regulation to healthcare costs.
By a vote of 6-3, the justices overruled their landmark 1984 decision in Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council, which gave rise to the doctrine known as the Chevron doctrine. Under that doctrine, if Congress has not directly addressed the question at the center of a dispute, a court was required to uphold the agency’s interpretation of the statute as long as it was reasonable. But in a 35-page ruling by Chief Justice John Roberts, the justices rejected that doctrine, calling it “fundamentally misguided.”
Justice Elena Kagan dissented, in an opinion joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson. Kagan predicted that Friday’s ruling “will cause a massive shock to the legal system.”
When the Supreme Court first issued its decision in the Chevron case more than 40 years ago, the decision was not necessarily regarded as a particularly consequential one. But in the years since then, it became one of the most important rulings on federal administrative law, cited by federal courts more than 18,000 times.
Although the Chevron decision – which upheld the Reagan-era Environmental Protection Agency’s interpretation of the Clean Air Act that eased regulation of emissions – was generally hailed by conservatives at the time, the ruling eventually became a target for those seeking to curtail the administrative state, who argued that courts, rather than federal agencies, should say what the law means. The justices had rebuffed earlier requests (including by one of the same lawyers who argued one of the cases here) to consider overruling Chevron before they agreed last year to take up a pair of challenges to a rule issued by the National Marine Fisheries Service. The agency had required the herring industry to pay for the costs, estimated at $710 per day, associated with carrying observers on board their vessels to collect data about their catches and monitor for overfishing.
The agency stopped the monitoring in 2023 because of a lack of funding. While the program was in effect, the agency reimbursed fishermen for the costs of the observers.
After two federal courts of appeals rebuffed challenges to the rules, two sets of commercial fishing companies came to the Supreme Court, asking the justices to weigh in.
The justices took up their appeals, agreeing to address only the Chevron question in Relentless v. Department of Commerce and Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo. (Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented in the Relentless case but was recused from the Loper-Bright case, presumably because she had heard oral argument in the case while she was still a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.)
Chevron deference, Roberts explained in his opinion for the court on Friday, is inconsistent with the Administrative Procedure Act, a federal law that sets out the procedures that federal agencies must follow as well as instructions for courts to review actions by those agencies. The APA, Roberts noted, directs courts to “decide legal questions by applying their own judgment” and therefore “makes clear that agency interpretations of statutes — like agency interpretations of the Constitution — are not entitled to deference. Under the APA,” Roberts concluded, “it thus remains the responsibility of the court to decide whether the law means what the agency says.”
Roberts rejected any suggestion that agencies, rather than courts, are better suited to determine what ambiguities in a federal law might mean. Even when those ambiguities involve technical or scientific questions that fall within an agency’s area of expertise, Roberts emphasized, “Congress expects courts to handle technical statutory questions” – and courts also have the benefit of briefing from the parties and “friends of the court.”
Moreover, Roberts observed, even if courts should not defer to an agency’s interpretation of an ambiguous statute that it administers, it can consider that interpretation when it falls within the agency’s purview, a doctrine known as Skidmore deference.
Stare decisis – the principle that courts should generally adhere to their past cases – does not provide a reason to uphold the Chevron doctrine, Roberts continued. Roberts characterized the doctrine as “unworkable,” one of the criteria for overruling prior precedent, because it is so difficult to determine whether a statute is indeed ambiguous.
And because of the Supreme Court’s “constant tinkering with” the doctrine, along with its failure to rely on the doctrine in eight years, there is no reason for anyone to rely on Chevron. To the contrary, Roberts suggested, the Chevron doctrine “allows agencies to change course even when Congress has given them no power to do so.”
Roberts indicated that the court’s decision on Friday would not require earlier cases that relied on Chevron to be overturned. “Mere reliance on Chevron cannot constitute a ‘special justification’ for overruling” a decision upholding agency action, “because to say a precedent relied on Chevron is, at best, just an argument that the precedent was wrongly decided” – which is not enough, standing along, to overrule the case.
The Supreme Court is expected to rule on Monday on when the statute of limitations to challenge agency action begins to run. The federal government has argued in that case, Corner Post v. Federal Reserve, that if the challenger prevails, it would open the door for a wide range of “belated challenges to agency regulation.”
Justice Clarence Thomas penned a brief concurring opinion in which he emphasized that the Chevron doctrine was inconsistent not only with the Administrative Procedure Act but also with the Constitution’s division of power among the three branches of government. The Chevron doctrine, he argued, requires judges to give up their constitutional power to exercise their independent judgment, and it allows the executive branch to “exercise powers not given to it.”
Justice Neil Gorsuch filed a longer (33-page) concurring opinion in which he emphasized that “[t]oday, the Court places a tombstone on Chevron no one can miss. In doing so, the Court returns judges to interpretative rules that have guided federal courts since the Nation’s founding.” He sought to downplay the impact of Friday’s ruling, contending that “all today’s decision means is that, going forward, federal courts will do exactly as this Court has since 2016, exactly as it did before the mid-1980s, and exactly as it had done since the founding: resolve cases and controversies without any systemic bias in the government’s favor.”
Kagan, who read a summary of her dissent from the bench, was sharply critical of the decision to overrule the Chevron doctrine. Congress often enacts regulatory laws that contain ambiguities and gaps, she observed, which agencies must then interpet. The question, as she framed it, is “[w]ho decides which of the possible readings” of those laws should prevail?
For 40 years, she stressed, the answer to that question has generally been “the agency’s,” with good reason: Agencies are more likely to have the technical and scientific expertise to make such decisions. She emphasized the deep roots that Chevron has had in the U.S. legal system for decades. “It has been applied in thousands of judicial decisions. It has become part of the warp and woof of modern government, supporting regulatory efforts of all kinds — to name a few, keeping air and water clean, food and drugs safe, and financial markets honest.”
By overruling the Chevron doctrine, Kagan concluded, the court has created a “jolt to the legal system.”
Kagan also pushed back against the majority’s suggestion that overruling the Chevron doctrine would introduce clarity into judicial review of agency interpretations. Noting the majority’s assurances that agency interpretations may be entitled to “respect” going forward, she observed that “f the majority thinks that the same judges who argue today about where ‘ambiguity’ resides are not going to argue tomorrow about what ‘respect’ requires, I fear it will be gravely disappointed.”
Similarly, she questioned the majority’s assertion that Friday’s decision would not call into question decisions that relied on the [i]Chevron
doctrine to uphold agency action. “Courts motivated to overrule an old Chevron-based decision can always come up with something to label a ‘special justification,’” she posited. “All a court need do is look to today’s opinion to see how it is done.”
But more broadly, Kagan rebuked her colleagues in the majority for what she characterized as a judicial power grab. She lamented that, by overruling Chevron, the court had, in “one fell swoop,” given “itself exclusive power over every open issue — no matter how expertise-driven or policy-laden — involving the meaning of regulatory law.”
Roman Martinez, who argued the case on behalf of one of the fishing companies, applauded the decision. “By ending Chevron deference,” he said in a statement, “the Court has taken a major step to preserve the separation of powers and shut down unlawful agency overreach. Going forward, judges will be charged with interpreting the law faithfully, impartially, and independently, without deference to the government. This is a win for individual liberty and the Constitution,”
But Kym Meyer, the litigation director for the Southern Environmental Law Center, decried the ruling in a statement. “[T]he Supreme Court today says individual judges around the country should decide the best reading of a statute. That is a recipe for chaos, as hundreds of federal judges — who lack the expertise of agency personnel — are certain to reach inconsistent results on the meaning of federal laws as applied to complex, technical issues.”
Friday’s ruling came in one of three cases during the 2023-24 term seeking to curtail the power of federal agencies – a conservative effort sometimes dubbed the “war on the administrative state.” In October, the court heard arguments in a challenge to the constitutionality of the mechanism used to fund the consumer watchdog Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Last month the court upheld the CFPB’s funding by a 7-2 vote. And on Thursday, the justices pared back the power of the Securities and Exchange Commission and other administrative agencies, holding that the SEC cannot continue to use in-house proceedings to impose fines in securities fraud cases.  
The fishermen in both cases were represented at no cost by conservative legal groups, the Cause of Action Institute and the New Civil Liberties Alliance, linked to funding from billionaire and longtime anti-regulation advocate Charles Koch.  
[/i]https://www.scotusblog.com/2024/06/supreme-court-strikes-down-chevron-curtailing-power-of-federal-agencies/
https://x.com/Not_the_Bee/status/1806709138225050060


RE: Another important ruling by the Supreme Court - Ninurta - 07-03-2024

This is clearly a proper decision. The SCOTUS is tasked, Constitutionally, with determining the constitutionality of laws - whether laws passed are in compliance with the firm particularities of the Constitution.

The constitution clearly assigns particular powers to particular branches of government, powers which other branches are not allowed to usurp. Administrative agencies are arms of the Executive Branch, and therefore are not allowed to usurp the powers of Congress, which is tasked with creating new laws. Administrative agencies have routinely become accustomed to "interpreting" laws passed by congress in a manner that effectively created NEW laws, which the Executive is not allowed to do. The Executive Branch's remit is to execute congressionally created laws, not create new ones itself. It is called the Executive branch because it executes law, it is not supposed to create new law.

So the various "rulings" and "interpretations" of administrative agencies under the Executive Branch carry the FORCE of law, without having ever been passed by the authorized lawmaking body, Congress. That is clearly against the Constitution.

As an example, the FDA has "deemed" batteries to be tobacco, and that ruling carries the force of law without ever having been authorized by Congress. Batteries are made of metals and chemicals, like nickel, cadmium, cobalt, and lithium. I have never encountered a battery that contains so much as a molecule of tobacco, but legally the FDA "made it so" with the whisk of a pen when logically it is an absurdity.

Striking down Chevron Deference also has massive implications for agencies such as BATFE, which regularly creates new "laws" out of whole cloth simply by making a "ruling" or "determination". Congress clearly defines what constitutes a "firearm" in the Gun Control Act of 1968, and ever since then the BATFE has been creating new "machineguns" and "firearms" out of nothing. For example, a so-called "bump stock" has been classified as a "machinegun" by BATFE despite the fact that it has no bolt, no trigger, no receiver, no barrel, no chamber - in fact nothing at all that will fire a single round of ammunition by itself, much less multiple rounds of ammunition with a single pull of the trigger as the written and passed by Congress law requires.

A bump stock has no trigger to pull at all, much less one that will fire multiple rounds of ammunition with a single pull of the trigger it does not posses. Furthermore, a bump stock REQUIRES a separate pul of the trigger on a firearm to  which it is attached for EACH round fired, which is specified in the law as written to NOT be a machinegun.

Now, I give no shits about bump stocks. I've never owned one, and never will. They are wasteful and turn a fine firearm into a useless and inaccurate spray hose. What I DO care about, however, is the law, who makes it, who enforces it, and that there is an eternal separation of powers between those two.

This ruling by the Supreme Court goes a long way to restore that constitutionally mandated separation of powers. I applaud it.

To those who make the spurious claim that "courts do not have the technical expertise to determine legality", they are simply and completely full of shit. The courts are the ONLY ones qualified to interpret what a law says. All judges started their careers as lawyers and worked their way up. A judge has a much more intimate knowledge of law and legal procedures than any other governmental agency, and the ONLY thing that matters in the interpretation of law  is law itself. Other "technical matters" DO NOT, NEVER HAVE, and NEVER WILL enter into the equation of whether a law is legal or not.

That's my legal treatise for the day.

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RE: Another important ruling by the Supreme Court - Bally002 - 07-03-2024

(07-03-2024, 01:28 AM)Ninurta Wrote: .Now, I give no shits about bump stocks. I've never owned one, and never will. They are wasteful and turn a fine firearm into a useless and inaccurate spray hose. What I DO care about, however, is the law, who makes it, who enforces it, and that there is an eternal separation of powers between those two.

I don't mind a good bump stock. Carved one meself aye.  Fitted it to my Woomera.  Taking out more 'hoop snakes' and 'drop bears' than ever.  Rilly Trilly.

Oops, sorry.  I'm an Aussie with no gun.

Kind regards and in jest only,

Bally)


RE: Another important ruling by the Supreme Court - Ninurta - 07-03-2024

(07-03-2024, 02:40 AM)Bally002 Wrote:
(07-03-2024, 01:28 AM)Ninurta Wrote: .Now, I give no shits about bump stocks. I've never owned one, and never will. They are wasteful and turn a fine firearm into a useless and inaccurate spray hose. What I DO care about, however, is the law, who makes it, who enforces it, and that there is an eternal separation of powers between those two.

I don't mind a good bump stock. Carved one meself aye.  Fitted it to my Woomera.  Taking out more 'hoop snakes' and 'drop bears' than ever.  Rilly Trilly.

Oops, sorry.  I'm an Aussie with no gun.

Kind regards and in jest only,

Bally)

Watta concept! A rapid-fire spear-chucker! I gotta get me one of THOSE!

I bet it comes in handy for those wave attacks that Hoop Snakes are known to do!

But in all seriousness, the other example, the one where the FDA declared batteries to be "tobacco" probably affects more people in the US. For example, all of my vape devices employ 18650 batteries, which are "tobacco" under the deeming ruling. Fair enough, the vapes deliver nicotine clouds, so, "tobacco"... BUT most of my flashlights and lasers also use 18650 batteries, with nary a flake of tobacco in sight, yet those flashlights are now "tobacco" too, because of their batteries.

.