Dismissed for lack of jurisdiction by published opinion. Judge WILLIAMS wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge ERVIN and Judge CHASANOW joined.
OPINION
This is an appeal from an order of the Secretary of Labor remanding to the Administrative Law Judge for further negotiation a settlement agreement entered into under § 211 of the Energy Reorganization Act (ERA), 42 U.S.C.A. § 5851 (West 1983 & Supp.1994).
1
Section 211 gives absolute immunity from on-the-job retaliation to “whist-leblowing” employees who report safety violations of their employers to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. In October 1991, James B. DeBose filed a complaint pursuant to § 211 with the Department of Labor against his employer, Carolina Power and Light (CP & L), claiming that CP & L had demoted him because he had engaged in activities protected under the ERA. After DeBose filed the complaint, but before the Secretary of Labor (Secretary) took any action, DeBose and CP & L entered into a settlement agreement, which they submitted for the Secretary’s approval pursuant to § 211(b)(2)(A). Following the recommendation of an Administrative Law Judge, the Secretary refused to approve the agreement because he determined that the agreement not only swore the parties to secrecy, but also bound the Department of Labor to the same promise of confidentiality. This promise, the Secretary concluded, would violate his duties under the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C.A. § 552 (West 1983 & Supp. 1994). Therefore, the Secretary refused to “enter into” the agreement, as mandated by § 211, and remanded the agreement to the Administrative Law Judge for further negotiation. CP & L appealed to this Court to overturn the Secretary’s rejection of the agreement and to delineate the Secretary’s authority to review settlement agreements under § 211. Because we find the Secretary’s remand order was neither a “final order” meriting appellate review under the ERA nor a collateral order within the scope of
Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
I.
In response to the increasing production and consumption of nuclear power in the private sector, Congress passed the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974. Among the many goals of this legislation, Congress intended to promote nuclear safety by encouraging employees at nuclear power facilities to report any safety violations to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. To remove any disincentive to reporting, Congress added § 211 to the Energy Reorganization Act in 1978 to prevent employers from engaging in on-the-job retaliation against employees who report safety violations. If an employer does so discriminate, § 211 provides the employee relief through administrative process in the Department of Labor.
Once a disgruntled employee files a complaint under § 211(b)(2)(A):
Within ninety days of the receipt of such complaint the Secretary shall, unless the proceeding on the complaint is terminated by the Secretary on the basis of a settlement entered into by the Secretary and the person alleged to have committed such violation, issue an order either providing the relief prescribed by subparagraph (B) or denying the complaint- The Secretary may not enter into a settlement terminating a proceeding on a complaint without the participation and consent of the complainant.
42 U.S.C.A. § 5851(b)(2)(A). Under this section, the Secretary must take one of three actions: he must grant relief, deny relief, or enter into a settlement with the parties.
Macktal v. Secretary of Labor,
II.
The Department of Labor argues that the Secretary’s order of remand does not constitute an appealable order under § 211(c). We agree. The Supreme Court has noted “[t]he strong presumption ... that judicial review [of agency decisions] will be available only when agency action becomes final.”
Bell v. New Jersey,
Compared to many other statutes using approximately the same language, § 211(c) is noteworthy in that it does not explicitly limit appeals to “final orders” as do many similar statutes.
See Stevedoring Servs. of Am. v. Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs,
The Eleventh Circuit confronted this question in
Jim Walter Resources, Inc. v. Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Comm’n,
Moreover, Congress wrote the ERA in such a way that the Secretary of Labor’s only option is to issue an order that is inherently “final” in nature. Assuming that a complaint is not terminated by virtue of a settlement, the Secretary must either issue an order providing relief to the complainant or an order denying the complaint. 42 U.S.C. § 5851(b)(2)(A). Whichever decision is made by the Secretary will have the effect of being the final administrative action taken on the matter. The ERA makes no allowances for appellate review other than in those instances when a person has been “adversely affected or aggrieved by an order issued under subsection (b).”
Id.
at § 5851(c). There is no statutory basis upon which we can review an action taken by the
Therefore, any order issued by the Secretary is, in effect, a final one, “end[ing] the litigation on the merits and leav[ing] nothing for the court to do but execute the judgment.”
Jim Walter Resources,
We have held that administrative remand orders similar to this one are not final orders under statutory language almost identical to that contained in § 211(e). For instance, the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act (the “FMSHA”) grants appellate review to “[a]ny person adversely affected or aggrieved by an order of the Commission.”
Monterey Coal Co. v. Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Comm’n,
Therefore, like the orders in Monterey Coal and Fieldcrest Mills, this order does not end the litigation; rather, it does the exact opposite by remanding the case for further proceedings. The finality principle demands that appellate courts refrain from entering disputes until the disputes present definite justiciable issues; therefore, until the Secretary has firmly decided this case on the merits, we must let the Department of Labor resolve the dispute. 2
III.
CP & L asserts that even if the statutory language of § 211 does not allow immediate appeal of the Secretary’s remand, the collateral order doctrine provides an alternative basis for jurisdiction. Whereas the finality principle states that parties can only appeal fully resolved eases, the collateral order doctrine is a narrowly framed cousin to the final order doctrine which allows the appeal of some non-final orders that have such a final and important effect that reviewing courts should treat them as final orders. This is “best understood not as an exception to the ‘final decision’ rule laid down by Congress in [28 U.S.C.] § 1291, but as a ‘practical construction’ of it.”
Digital Equipment Corp. v. Desktop Direct, Inc.,
— U.S. -, -,
The Fourth Circuit has held that orders fall within the collateral order exception
only if the “order [1] conclusively determines the question in the trial court, [2] resolves an important question independent of the subject matter of the litigation, [3] is effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment or so important that review should not wait upon final judgment, and [4] presents a serious and unsettled question upon appeal.”
MDK, Inc. v. Mike’s Train House, Inc.,
Assuming
arguendo
that the first and fourth elements of the collateral order doctrine are satisfied, we are convinced that CP & L has not shown that the order at issue resolves a question unrelated to the underlying litigation or is effectively unreviewable upon final judgment. The collateral order doctrine derives its name from the Supreme Court’s original collateral order case,
Cohen,
CP & L attempts here to appeal the Secretary’s order remanding the settlement agreement that resolved the dispute between CP & L and DeBose. This dispute
was
the underlying cause of action. The parties entered into the settlement agreement at issue “to end forever the pending action, and all present and potential litigation between them in any way relating to or arising out of Mr. DeBose’s employment at CP
&
L or Mr. DeBose’s resignation from that employment.” (J.A. at 10.) If this Court were to accept the appeal, and decide the case for CP & L on the merits, we would resolve the entire case. As the Supreme Court noted in
Cohen,
“[ajppeal gives the upper court a power of review, not one of intervention.”
Id.
at 546,
Furthermore, even if this appeal were independent of its underlying cause of action, the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Digital Equipment
would direct us to find that court orders dismissing settlement agreements are effectively reviewable after their underlying disputes have been litigated, and, therefore, do not satisfy the third element of the collateral order test.
See
— U.S. - at -,
CP & L argues, however, that a remand of the settlement agreement renders it effectively unreviewable. CP & L contends that the ALJ hearing the complaint or reviewing a renegotiated settlement will simply follow the directives in the Secretary’s order, thereby preventing DeBose and CP & L from retaining the objectionable confidentiality provisions. As a result, once the parties enter into the agreement without the confidentiality provisions, or the ALJ hears the case on the merits, the issues CP & L asks us to consider today will become moot because all the parties will have joined in a settlement, and nothing will remain for appeal.
We reject this contention for two reasons. First, § 211 does not prevent CP & L from preserving its objections to the Secretary’s order while renegotiating the agreement. CP & L has the right to retain its objection to the Secretary’s order, enter into a new agreement with the Secretary’s consent, and then appeal the Secretary’s refusal to incorporate the confidentiality provisions initially agreed upon by CP & L and DeBose. Second, CP & L can let the ALJ hear DeBose’s complaint on the merits, and, if judgment is entered against CP & L, appeal the judgment pursuant to § 211(c), arguing that the ALJ should not have heard the case because the settlement agreement was valid.
4
Because CP & L effectively can vindicate its rights upon entry of a final judgment, and because the Secretary’s order is not collateral to, but rather merges with, the underlying dispute, we find that the Secretary’s decision is not a collateral order meriting immediate
IV.
One of the bedrock principles of appellate court jurisdiction is that, with very limited exception, parties may only appeal final orders. It is not the place of appellate courts to scrutinize agency action at every step of an administrative proceeding. Rather, appellate courts must proceed cautiously, allowing lower decision-makers thoroughly to resolve the intricacies of underlying claims. Because the Department of Labor is still processing this administrative complaint, it would be premature for this Court to intervene. Accordingly, we dismiss this appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
DISMISSED.
Notes
. Although the parties below and most of the case law regarding § 5851 refer to the provision as § 210 of the ERA, Congress amended the ERA in 1992, Pub.L. No. 102-486, § 2902(a)-(g), (h)(2), (3), 106 Stat. 3123, 3124 (1992), and changed § 5851 from § 210 of the ERA to § 211.
. Of course, CP & L can preserve any objections, and challenge the Secretary’s order once the issue is fully adjudicated, even if the final action is approval of a revised settlement agreement. A settlement agreement that the Secretary “enters into” pursuant to § 211(b)(2)(A) is, of course, an appealable order.
See Macktal,
. The courts have not clearly determined whether the fourth factor — that the issue presents a "serious and unsettled question”- — is necessary to the determination.
[T]he most frequently quoted Supreme Court restatement of the elements of collateral order doctrine does not require that there be an important question, and some well-settled bases for collateral order appeal clearly rest on the desire to protect individually important interests in circumstances that have no general legal significance.
15A Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper,
Federal Practice and Procedure 2d
§ 3911 at 335 (1992). In fact, as recently as June 1994, the Supreme Court omitted this factor from its collateral order analysis.
Digital Equipment Corp. v. Desktop Direct,
Inc., - U.S. at ---,
. Although this may engender a harsh result by forcing CP & L to litigate DeBose’s complaint on the merits, it is no more harsh than forcing parties who want to appeal an adverse discovery ruling to refuse to comply with discovery and risk receiving a contempt conviction, so that the contempt conviction creates an appealable final order.
See MDK, Inc. v. Mike’s Train House, Inc.,
. DeBose argues that this Court has no jurisdiction to review this appeal because it is not ripe for review, because the appeal itself breached the confidentiality provisions at issue and therefore made the appeal moot, and because the agreement statutorily is committed solely to the discretion of the Secretary of Labor. Because we have determined that we lack jurisdiction under the final order doctrine, we do not address these contentions.
