Buildеrs Bank is insured and regulated by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which conducts a “full-scope, on-site examination” every 12 to 18 months, 12 U.S.C. § 1820(d). After an examination in June 2015 the FDIC assigned the Bank a rating of 4 under the Uniform Financial Institutions Rating System. The parties call this a CAMELS rating, after the System’s six components: capital, asset quality, manаgement, earnings, liquidity, and sensitivity. The highest rating is 1, the lowest 5. The Bank contends in this suit under the Administrative Procedure Act that its rating should have been 3 and that the lower rating is ai-bitrary and capricious. But the district court dismissed the suit for want of jurisdiction, ruling that the assignment of ratings is committed to agency discretion by law. 5 U.S.C. § 701(a)(2).
Some circuits have called rulings under § 701(a)(2) jurisdictionаl, see, e.g., Flint v. United States,
Decades ago this court sometimes used the word “jurisdiction” to refer to all doctrines that foreclose judicial review. Arnow v. NRC,
Maintaining the distinction between jurisdictional and other rules is important, because courts must enforce the limits on subject-matter jurisdiction even when the litigants prefer a decision on the merits. If § 701(a)(2) curtails jurisdiction, then courts must decide in every сase under the APA whether some statute or doctrine provides the agency with discretion. The court would have to raise the issue on its own, comb the statute books fоr grants of discretion, and so on, even if the agency never contended that its action came within § 701(a)(2). Congress could require this, but the language of § 701(a)(2) does not forеclose the possibility of waiver or forfeiture. We do not see a reason to depart from Vaharais conclusion that the extent of agency discretion concerns the merits, not jurisdiction—unless a particular statute designates the subject as jurisdictional.
The distinction between jurisdiction and the merits matters here not only becausе the district court (wrongly) concluded that it lacks jurisdiction but also because the FDIC has bypassed two other procedural reasons why it might prevail. First, APA review normally is limited to final agency actions. See, e.g., FTC v. Standard Oil Co. of California,
As we understand the law, however, the absence of a final decision would be just another reasоn to dismiss the suit—provided that there is a live controversy between the Bank and the FDIC. The effect of CAMELS ratings on insurance premiums creates a concrete stake that makes the current dispute justiciable. Cf. Sackett v. EPA,
Apart from its jurisdictional argument, the FDIC maintains that the CAMELS rating is unreviewable because it has discretiоn to set appropriate levels of capi
Instead the Bank reminds us that CAMELS stands for “capital, asset quality, management, earnings, liquidity, and sensitivity”. Each of the six factors is rated separately on a scale of 1 to 5, and the rating as a whole aggregates those six factors. The FDIC’s statement of policy, see 62 Fed. Reg. 752 (Jan. 6, 1997), explains the process. Suppose the FDIC’s team of examiners were to conclude that the Bank had adequate capital desеrving a rating of 1 but that other components were unfavorable, leading to an overall rating of 4. The examiners may be right or wrong about those other issues, but a district cоurt could ask whether the FDIC’s final rating was arbitrary, or supported by substantial evidence, without making any inroad on the agency’s discretion to evaluate a bank’s capital adequacy.
That’s what happened in Frontier State Bank, which in the course of reviewing a cease-and-desist order reviewed management, liquidity, and interest-rate-sensitivity issues while concluding that capitаl adequacy is unreviewable.
Indeed, it would be possible for a court to review the capital rating itself without transgressing § 3907(a)(2). Suppose the FDIC were to decide that Builders Bank needs $5 million in net capital in order to operate safely but has only $4 million. Section 3907(a)(2) puts the $5 million floor beyond judicial questioning. But the statute does not insulate the agency’s math. If the Bank were to contend that the examiners found that it fell short of $5 million because they had mistakenly treated a $1 million asset аs a $1 million liability, turning $6 million of net capital into $4 million by error, a court would not impinge on the statutory discretion by insisting that assets go in one column of the balance sheet аnd liabilities in the other. Putting assets in the liability column is not part of a bank examiner’s remit.
Builders Bank insists that it takes the FDIC’s capital requirements as given and seeks to challenge only its application of the “asset quality, management, earnings, liquidity, and sensitivity” factors. The FDIC maintains that the Bank is just trying to disguise a challenge to a capital decision protected by § 3907(a)(2). The district judge did not decide which side is right about this, and the papers filed in this court do not enable us to do so reliably. The district court should take up this topic on remand. All we hold today is that the presence of capital as one of six components in a CAMELS rating does not necessarily mean that the rating as а whole is committed to agency discretion for the purpose of § 701(a)(2). We do not decide whether one or more components of a CAMELS rating other than сapital may be committed to agency discretion; the parties have not briefed that question.
