Lead Opinion
This case involves a challenge by petitioners American Library Association, et al. to a rule adopted by the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC” or “Commission”) requiring digital television receivers and related electronic equipment manufactured on or after July 1, 2005 to give effect to the “broadcast flag,” a code that broadcasters can insert into digital television content, which signals reception equipment to limit the redistribution of that content. See In the Matter of Digital Broadcast Content Protection, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 18 F.C.C.R. 23,550 (2003). Although petitioners have an obvious interest in the rule, and they plausibly contend that they will be adversely affected by its implementation, a question has arisen about their standing to pursue this petition for review.
The present petition for review poses an unusual situation with respect to the court’s consideration of standing. In Sierra Club v. EPA,
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In their initial submissions to the court, both petitioners and the Commission apparently assumed that petitioners’ standing was “self-evident” under Sierra Club. Petitioners included a jurisdictional statement in their opening brief in which they generally asserted a basis for Article III standing. See Petitioners’ Br. at 1 (stating that “[e]ach of the petitioners ... has members whose right to make use of copyrighted information will be adversely af-‘ fected, and who will very likely have to pay higher prices for certain consumer electronics equipment, as a result of the Commission’s Order.”). This statement was not contested by the Commission. After petitioners filed their opening brief, MPAA suggested in a single paragraph of its brief that petitioners had failed to comply with Sierra Club. It was unclear, however, whether MPAA merely meant to suggest that, because in its view standing was not self-evident, petitioners had failed to satisfy the “pleading requirements” of Sierra Club or, additionally, meant to contend that petitioners lacked Article III standing. See MPAA Br. at 1. Petitioners responded to MPAA’s argument in their reply brief, asserting in general and eonclusory terms that they did have standing and providing some citations to case law and the administrative record. See Petitioners’ Reply Br. at 6 n.l. The FCC did not weigh in on the issue, apparently viewing petitioners’ standing as self-evident. And the court did not seek additional information from the parties before oral argument.
During the course of oral argument, counsel for the FCC confirmed that the Commission was not challenging petitioners’ standing in this case. Recording of Oral Argument at 29:01-: 17. When members of the court questioned petitioners’ counsel regarding standing, petitioners cited portions of the administrative record in support of their standing. After oral argument, petitioners provided additional citations in a letter to the court. See Petitioners’ Letter Providing Citations of 2/28/05. These citations give some indications that petitioners’ members will suffer concrete and particularized injuries from the Commission’s disputed broadcast flag rule. See, e.g., Joint Comments of American Library Association, et al, 12/6/02, reprinted in Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 654, 669-70 (comments submitted by five petitioners to the FCC before the adoption of the order in dispute, asserting that a broadcast flag regime would impair libraries’ capacity to make legitimate use of digital content to promote research by making copies of television broadcasts available to distant locations and would hinder educators’ capacity to make legitimate use of digital content to facilitate distance learning). But the information to which petitioners pointed was not compiled to address standing and thus does not fully illuminate the issue. Apparently understanding this, petitioners suggested that an expedited briefing order would be warranted if the court determined that further argument regarding standing would be useful. See Petitioners’ Letter Providing Citations of 2/23/05.
In short, petitioners — like the Commission — reasonably assumed that their standing was self-evident and, as a result, did not support their standing with anything more than a general jurisdictional statement in their opening brief and citations to portions of the administrative record. Although we now require more from petitioners, we find that they did not defy any commands of Sierra Club in their initial submissions to the court.
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It is well established that a federal court cannot act in the absence of jurisdiction, see B & J Oil & Gas v. FERC,
Associations such as petitioners have representational standing if: (1) at least one of their members has standing to sue in her or his own right, (2) the interests the association seeks to protect are germane to its purpose, and (3) neither the claim asserted nor the relief requested requires the participation of an individual member in the lawsuit. Cmtys. Against Runway Expansion, Inc. v. FAA,
In order to meet this prong of the -associational standing test, petitioners must demonstrate that at least one of their members satisfies the three elements that form the “irreducible constitutional minimum of standing.” Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
First, [at least one of petitioners’ members] must have suffered an “injury in fact” — an invasion of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and partic*211 ularized, and (b) “actual or imminent, not ‘conjectural’ or ‘hypothetical.’ ” Whitmore [v. Arkansas,495 U.S. 149 , 155,110 S.Ct. 1717 ,109 L.Ed.2d 135 (1990) ]. Second, there must be a causal connection between the injury and the conduct complained of — the injury has to be “fairly ... trace[able] to the challenged action of the defendant, and not ... th[e] result [of] the independent action of some third party not before the court.” Simon v. Eastern Ky. Welfare Rights Organization,426 U.S. 26 , 41-42,96 S.Ct. 1917 ,48 L.Ed.2d 450 (1976). Third, it must be “likely,” as opposed to merely “speculative,” that the injury will be “redressed by a favorable decision.” Id., at 38, 43,96 S.Ct. 1917 .
Id. at 560-61,
With regard to the injury-in-fact prong of the standing test, petitioners need not prove the merits of their ease in order to demonstrate that they have Article III standing. Sierra Club,
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Before we turn to what is required of petitioners in this case, a further word about Sierra Club is in order. The decision in Sierra Club reminds petitioners challenging administrative actions that, when they have good reason to know that their standing is not self-evident, they should explain the basis for their standing at the earliest appropriate stage in the litigation. In other words, Sierra Club makes it clear that a party who knows or should know that there are doubts about its standing should address those doubts before oral argument. See Sierra Club,
MPAA apparently reads Sierra Club to go significantly further, creating an inflexible rule under which the court, in assessing Article III standing, can-look only to submissions accompanying petitioner’s opening brief or those filed in response to a motion to dismiss for lack of standing. See MPAA Br. at 1; MPAA Letter of 2/25/05 (arguing that further briefing on standing is not warranted as “[p]etitioners have already had two opportunities to brief the issue”). MPAA’s interpretation of Sierra Club rests on a faulty construction of the opinion and is inconsistent with the law of this circuit. Nothing in Sierra Club suggests that it is intended to create a “gotcha” trap whereby parties who reasonably think their standing is self-evident nonetheless may have their cases summarily dismissed if they fail to document fully their standing at the earliest possible stage in the litigation. And Sierra Club surely does not purport to address a situation like the one we face in this case,
Moreover, Sierra Club did not alter the precedent of this circuit, which makes it clear that the court may sua sponte seek supplemental submissions after oral argument if it determines that more information is necessary to satisfy itself that a petitioner has Article III standing. See, e.g., United States Telecom Ass’n v. FCC,
While Sierra Club lays out the general rule that petitioners whose standing is not self-evident should demonstrate their standing at the first appropriate point in the litigation, our case law is clear that the court retains the discretion to seek supplemental submissions from the parties if it decides that more information is necessary to determine whether petitioners, in fact, have standing. Depending on the circumstances of the case, the court may allow petitioners to support their standing in their reply brief, in affidavits submitted along with the reply brief, through citations to the existing record at oral argument, or through additional briefing or affidavits submitted to the court after oral argument. To prevent the sandbagging of opposing parties, the court may also, as appropriate, allow parties challenging a petitioner’s standing to respond to the petitioner’s additional submissions.
MPAA’s “gotcha” construction of Sierra Club is inconsistent with our precedent and would have the undesirable effect of causing parties to include long jurisdictional statements in practically all opening briefs for fear that the court might find their standing less than self-evident. This would waste, rather than conserve, judicial resources and place an unnecessary burden on litigants.
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Obviously, a petitioner’s claim that its standing is self-evident is not dispositive of the issue. There may be a disjunction between what a petitioner assumes that
As we have already noted, this case poses a situation not expressly contemplated by Sierra Chib. Petitioners’ jurisdictional statement in their opening brief asserted a basis for standing. The Commission did not contest standing, either in its brief or when pressed at oral argument, lending some credence to the reasonableness of petitioners’ assumption that standing was self-evident. MPAA challenged standing in its brief, but the challenge was at best cryptic and focused more on the pleading requirements of Sierra Chib than on the requirements of Article III standing. Nonetheless, as was clear from some of the questioning at oral argument, the judges struggled with the issue. It became clear during oral argument that petitioners believed that the information in the administrative record conclusively confirmed the nature of their organizations and the injury that they would suffer if the FCC’s new rule was implemented. This was made even more clear by petitioners’ post-hearing submissions which simply pointed the court to the administrative record. Having reviewed the administrative record, we can now understand why petitioners may have thought that standing was self-evident. Nonetheless, we remain dubitante.
In the future, petitioners whose standing is challenged should be more precise in their response, no matter how cryptic the challenge may appear to be. However, Sierra Club gives no clear guidance with respect to a case like this, i.e., a case in which neither petitioners nor the Commission were unreasonable in assuming that petitioners’ standing was self-evident and the intervenor’s challenge was vague and unfocused. As we have noted, the court clearly has the authority to seek information from a party, either before, during, or after oral argument, to clarify standing. Indeed, even if Sierra Club did apply here, the circumstances of this case would implicate Sierra Club’s statement that the court may allow petitioners to submit post-argument affidavits addressing the issue of standing when “good cause [is] shown.” Sierra Club,
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We turn now to what is required of petitioners in this case. We note that, in joint comments submitted to the FCC pursuant to a notice of proposed rulemaking on the broadcast flag regime, see In Matter of Digital Broadcast Copy Protection, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 17 F.C.C.R. 16,027 (2002), and in various submissions to this court, the American Library Association, the American Association of Law Libraries, the Association of Research Libraries, the Medical Library Association, and the Special Library Association raised the possible effects of the adoption of a broadcast flag regime on the ability of libraries to make legitimate uses of digital content related to their research and educational missions. See Joint Comments of 12/6/02, J.A. 669-70. The court now seeks amplification of these points and, in particular, requests that petitioners address several matters in affidavits we request with this opinion.
Second, petitioners must explain whether there is a substantial probability that the Commission’s broadcast flag regime will hinder the ability of any of petitioners’ members to engage in otherwise permissble copying and distribution of television broadcasts to distant locations and, if so, in precisely what way such hindrance is likely to occur.
Third, in their Joint Comments of 12/6/02, American Library, et al. stated: “A broadcast flag ... would hinder precisely what the TEACH Act is designed to promote. For example, an educator who wishes to use excerpts from a television news program to illustrate a lesson in the electronic classroom might not be able to record the pi'ogram, nor to incorporate the material into a lesson designed for students in a class whose access is through the Internet.” J.A. 670. Do any of petitioners’ members qualify as “accredited nonprofit educational institution[s]” under 17 U.S.C. § 110? If so, petitioners must explain precisely how the broadcast flag regime will hinder these members in their ability to engage in distance learning or other electronic teaching covered by the TEACH Act. See Technology, Education, and Copyright Harmonization Act, Pub.L. No. 107-273, § 13301, 116 Stat. 1758, 1910 (2002).
Finally, are there any injuries (not including the potential increased cost of consumer electronics), not addressed.by the foregoing questions, that identifiable members of petitioners’ organizations will face as a result of the broadcast flag regime? If so, petitioners must identify the relevant member or members and describe the precise nature of the injury that will be caused by the FCC’s adoption of the broadcast flag regime.
Petitioners should file affidavits addressing the questions raised above within two weeks of the issuance of this opinion, along with an accompanying brief of no more than 4,000 words. We remind petitioners that, in order for them to establish injury in fact, these affidavits must include specific facts demonstrating that there is a substantial probability that the FCC’s order will “directly affect[ ]” the ability of at least one of petitioners’ members to make legitimate use of digital content in relation to its research or educational missions or that the FCC’s order will directly affect some other judicially cognizable interest. Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc.,
So ordered.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I dissent from what appears to me to be provision of an opportunity to a petitioner before this Court to create a new record establishing justiciability and jurisdiction not present in the record before us. As the majority notes, this Court, like all federal courts, “cannot act in the absence of jurisdiction.” See, e.g., B & J Oil & Gas v. FERQ
I therefore would find the governing precedent not in ASH, but rather in such cases as America West Airlines, Inc. v. Burnley,
