MEMORANDUM
The Federal Trade Commission has instituted a major trade regulation rulemaking proceeding, captioned Children’s Advertising, under Section 18 of the Magnuson-Moss Federal Trade Commission Improvement Act, Pub.L. 93-637, 88 Stat. 2193 (1974), 15 U.S.C. § 57a (1976). Plaintiffs and plaintiff-intervenor are various trade associations and companies who are parties to the proceeding and who may be adversely affected by the proposed regulations delineated in 43 Fed.Reg. 17967 (April 27, 1978). After unsuccessfully presenting the issue to the Commission, plaintiffs come to this Court seeking an order disqualifying the Chairman of the Commission from further participation in this rulemaking proceeding. Plaintiffs’ motion rests on the grounds that the Chairman has prejudged issues of fact whose resolution will be necessary to a fair determination of the rulemaking and which will come before him in a quasi-judicial capacity, and that by his public and private actions he has also created the appearance of prejudgment and bias. There are no material facts in dispute and the matter is before the Court on cross-motions for summary judgment, after briefs and full argument.
In an adjudicative proceeding an FTC Commissioner must satisfy the standards of conduct laid down in
Cinderella Career and Finishing Schools, Inc. v. FTC,
The test for disqualification [is] . whether ‘a disinterested observer may conclude that [the agency] has in some measure adjudged the facts as well as the law of a particular case in advance of hearing it.’
[An] administrative hearing ‘must be attended, not only with every element of fairness but with the very appearance of complete fairness’ .
Accord, Texaco, Inc. v. FTC,
118 U.S.App. D.C. 366,
Upon examination of the Chairman’s public statements
1
and correspondence of record,
2
a very substantial showing has been made that the Chairman has conclusively prejudged factual issues which will be disputed in the rulemaking proceeding and whose resolution will be necessary for a fair determination of the rulemaking as a whole. Going far beyond general observations of policy and tentative statements of attitude, the Chairman has by his use of conclusory statements of fact, his emotional use of derogatory terms and characterizations, and his affirmative efforts to propagate his settled views made his further participation improper. Plaintiffs’ showing is far more compelling than that found to be sufficient to justify disqualification in the
Cinderella
and
Texaco
cases. Certainly, plaintiffs present such special facts and circumstances as to make “the risk of unfairness . . . intolerably high.”
See Withrow v. Larkin,
This conclusion does not, however, settle the matter. The normal manner of reviewing an FTC trade regulation rule-making proceeding is pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 57a(e) in a United States Court of Ap~ peals. Plaintiffs’ disqualification claim is one aspect of this proceeding which would ultimately be subject to judicial scrutiny in this manner. Plaintiffs, though, are not awaiting the outcome of the agency process, which will be several years hence; they are petitioning this District Court to intervene at this time with respect to the disqualification issue. The general rule in this kind of circumstance — and it is a sound one — is that the District Court stay its hand and let the parties await the termination of the administrative process.
Nader v. Volpe,
151 U.S. App.D.C. 90, 94-97,
There exist, however, settled exceptions to this rule. As stated in
Fitzgerald v. Hampton,
[A] party may bypass established avenues for review within the agency only where the issue in question cannot be raised from a later order of the agency . ., or where the agency has very clearly violated an important constitutional or statutory right.
Amos Treat & Co. v. SEC,
Notes
. In this regard, the Court does not consider (against the interest of defendants) any of the statements made by Chairman Pertschuk at the “sunshine” meeting held on February 28, 1978, at which meeting the Commissioners voted to initiate the Children’s Advertising rulemaking. By law, the Commission must initiate a trade regulation rulemaking proceeding by publishing “a notice of proposed rulemaking stating with particularity the reason for the proposed rule . . . 15 U.S.C. § 57a(b).
. Some of this correspondence was obtained by plaintiffs, through agency responses to plaintiffs’ Freedom of Information requests, after the disqualification issue had been presented to, and rejected by, the Commission. The defendants argue that the Court may not consider these items, by reason of the failure of plaintiffs to exhaust their immediately available administrative remedies. The Court rejects this contention: the information was obtained from the FTC’s own files and is merely cumulative of the evidence that was presented to the Commission.
. The
Amos Treat
decision was discussed and followed in
Fitzgerald v. Hampton, supra,
. In this respect, this case differs from
SEC v. R. A. Holman & Co.,
