Lead Opinion
Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge BRYSON. Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge DYK.
Appellants Cathedral Candle Company (“Cathedral”) and The A.I. Root Company (“Root”) filed this action in the Court of International Trade seeking to compel the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection (“Customs”) to distribute payments to them pursuant to the Continued Dumping and Subsidy Offset Act of 2000, Pub.L. No. 106-387, § 1(a) [tit. X, § 1003(a)], 114 Stat. 1549, 1549A-72 (2000), which is known as the Byrd Amendment. Cathedral and Root applied for Byrd Amendment distributions from funds derived from antidumping duties collected on petroleum wax candles imported from the People’s Republic of China in the years 2000 and 2001. Customs determined that Cathedral and Root were ineligible for those distributions because the two companies had not made timely requests for payment. The Court, of International Trade sustained Customs’ ruling. We affirm.
I
In 1985, the National Candle Association filed an antidumping petition alleging that the importation of petroleum wax candles from China was causing and threatening to cause material injury to the domestic candle industry. The Department of Commerce and the International Trade Commission initiated an investigation, in the course of which the Commission sent questionnaires to domestic producers of candles. Both Cathedral and Root received and responded to the questionnaires, and both indicated their support of the petition. The questionnaires were marked “Business Confidential” on the top of each page, and the “General Information and Instructions” portion of the questionnaires explained that the commercial and financial information furnished in response to the questionnaires would be treated as confidential. Following the investigation, Commerce issued an antidumping order covering Chinese candle imports. ' That antidumping order has remained in effect since that time.
The Byrd Amendment, enacted in late 2000, requires Customs annually to distribute funds collected pursuant to antidumping and countervailing duty orders to certified “affected domestic producers.” 19 U.S.C. § 1675c. The statute defines an affected domestic producer as a party
On December 29, 2000, the Commission sent Customs a list that included the names of the petitioners and petition supporters for each pending antidumping and countervailing duty order that was in effect as of January 1, 1999, except for those orders that were subsequently revoked. Along with the list, the Commission sent a letter to Customs in which the Commission chairman stated that because section 777 of the Tariff Act of 1930, 19 U.S'.C. § 1677f, “prohibits the Commission from disclosing business proprietary information, with certain specifically enumerated exceptions not applicable here, the list only includes those persons referenced by section 754(d)(1) [19 U.S.C. § 1675c(d)(l) ] that indicated public support for the petition.” Thus, parties such as Cathedral and Root that had stated their support for a petition under a promise of confidentiality and had not waived confidentiality as to the information were not included on the Commission’s list. Customs published the Commission’s list and the accompanying letter from the Commission chairman on its website in early 2001.
In June 2001, Customs published a notice in the Federal Register of its proposed rules for distributing funds under the Byrd Amendment. 66 Fed.Reg. 33,920 (June 26, 2001). That publication contained a notification that Customs had received the initial list of affected domestic producers from the Commission; a statement that the resolution of any dispute regarding the list of affected domestic producers in any given case was the responsibility of the Commission, not Customs; a reference to the Customs website address where the Commission list could be found; and a statement that continued updates to the list would be processed as necessary. Id. at 33,920-21.
In August 2001, Customs .published in the Federal Register a notice of proposed distribution of Byrd Amendment funds for 2001 along with an updated list of affected domestic producers. 66 Fed.Reg. 40,782 (Aug. 3, 2001). That publication put potential distribution recipients on notice that they must file their certifications of
In July of 2002, Customs published in the Federal Register an announcement of its intention to distribute offsets for fiscal year 2002. 67 Fed.Reg. 44,722 (July 3, 2002). That publication included an updated list of affected domestic producers. The new list included seven domestic candle producers, but not Cathedral and Root. Customs announced that written certifications to obtain a distribution would have to be received by September 3, 2002.
After the September 2002 , deadline passed, Cathedral and Root discovered from informal contacts within the candle industry that they might be eligible for Byrd Amendment distributions. They sent letters to the Commission waiving confidentiality with respect to their support of the antidumping petition and requesting that they be added to the Commission’s list of affected domestic producers. When it received the letters, the Commission added Root and Cathedral to the list and forwarded the new information to Customs. Cathedral and Root ' then submitted certifications to Customs seeking Byrd Amendment distributions for 2002. Customs rejected their certifications as untimely because the September 3 deadline had already passed. Accordingly, Cathedral and Root received no Byrd Amendment distributions for fiscal year 2002. However, they were included on the list of affected domestic producers for 2003, and they received distributions for that year.
Cathedral and Root filed this action in the Court of International Trade, contending that the Commission and Customs had wrongfully deprived them of their right to Byrd Amendment distributions for 2001 and 2002. The plaintiffs moved for judgment on the agency record. For reasons set forth in a detailed opinion, the trial court denied the plaintiffs’ motion and entered judgment for the defendants.
The trial court held that Customs had properly dismissed the certifications as untimely. The court noted that Cathedral and Root had ample notice of the deadline for filing certifications of eligibility for distributions, giving them time to discover that they were not on the list of affected domestic producers and to seek an amendment to the list before the certifications were due. With regard to the appellants’ argument that the Commission violated the requirements of the Byrd Amendment when it failed to include their names on the list of affected domestic producers that it forwarded to Customs, the court, noted that the Commission was confronted with a statutory ambiguity arising from the interplay between the Byrd Amendment and section 777. On the one hand, the Byrd Amendment required the Commission to forward a list of all affected domestic producers, while on the other hand section 777 required the Commission to accord confidential treatment to proprietary business information submitted to the Commission in the course of antidumping and countervailing duty investigations. The court explained that the Commission interprets section 777 and its regulation on confidentiality, 19 C.F.R. § 201.6, to require it to keep confidential whether questionnaire respondents had expressed support for an-
The court ruled that even if the list of affected domestic producers was incomplete, Cathedral and Root were on constructive notice of the list’s existence and could have petitioned to be added to the list at any time before the deadline for filing certifications. Their failure to meet the regulatory deadlines, the court held, cannot be excused because of the failure of the Commission and Customs to provide explicit notice in the Federal Register as to why certain names were excluded from the list of affected domestic producers. Cathedral and Root were on notice that there was such a list, that they might be eligible for inclusion on the list, and that there was a specific deadline for filing their certifications. Under those circumstances, the court held that Cathedral and Root were not legally entitled to receive Byrd Amendment distributions for 2001 and 2002.
II
Cathedral and Root argue that the Commission violated the requirements of the Byrd Amendment when it failed to include their names on the list of potential affected domestic producers for 2001 and 2002 and that the omission excused their failure to file certifications for distributions on a timely basis. In their view, the Byrd Amendment imposes an unqualified duty on the Commission to forward the names of all petition supporters to Customs for publication in the Federal Register. That duty, according to Cathedral and Root, is not in any way limited or qualified by the Commission’s duty under section 777 not to disclose, without consent, proprietary information that a party has submitted to the Commission.
The Commission and Customs contend that the Commission properly omitted from the list of petition supporters those parties that had indicated their support for the antidumping petition in their responses to confidential questionnaires and had not waived their right to confidentiality. They argue that the disclosure requirement of the Byrd Amendment conflicts with the confidentiality requirement of section 777, as construed by the. Commission and the Department of Commerce through published regulations and longstanding practice. The Commission argues that it acted reasonably in attempting to accommodate the two statutory directives by construing the Byrd Amendment not to require disclosure of information protected by section 777.
The Byrd Amendment requires that the Commission forward a list of petitioners and petition supporters to Customs. It does not address whether that requirement applies to information that has been provided under a promise of confidentiality. Section 777 requires that, except in limited circumstances, information submitted to the Commission or the Commerce Department that is “designated as proprietary by the person submitting the information” shall not be disclosed without the consent of the person submitting the information. 19 U.S.C. § 1677f(b)(1)(A).
A
The Commission contends that its construction of the Byrd Amendment in light of section 777 is entitled to deference under the standard set forth in the Supreme Court’s decision in Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
The Supreme Court has stated that the Chevron standard of deference applies if Congress either leaves a gap in the construction of the statute that the administrative agency is explicitly authorized to fill, or implicitly delegates legislative authority, as evidenced by “the agency’s generally conferred authority and other statutory circumstances.” United States v. Mead Corp.,
To be sure, the Supreme Court has explained that Chevron deference to an agency’s legal determination may be appropriate in some instances even if the agency has not reached its legal conclusion through notice and comment rulemaking or formal adjudication. See Barnhart v. Walton,
In Barnhart, for example, the Court noted that the administrative interpreta
B
The deference question in this case is complicated because it involves multiple statutory provisions, multiple agencies with responsibility for administering the statutory scheme, multiple pertinent regulations, and multiple forms of informal agency action that bear on the questions before us. Thus, the Commission, Customs, and the Commerce Department all have roles to play either under the anti-dumping and countervailing duty statutes or under the Byrd Amendment or both; the Commission and Commerce both have formal regulations that bear on the proper interpretation of section 777; and in addition to the formal regulations, the Commission points to various informal indications of agency policy regarding the interpretation of the statutes at issue, including the letter from its chairman that was sent to Customs and posted on Customs’ website. Finally, the case requires us to address two separate but related deference issues: the proper construction of section 777; and the proper interpretation of the Byrd Amendment in light of section 777, as properly construed.
1
As a first step, we must decide whether the Commission properly construed section 777 to apply to information regarding the appellants’ support for the petition. We begin by noting that section 777 is ambiguous with regard to its application to expressions of petition support provided under a pledge of confidentiality. Because the language of section 777 and the traditional tools of statutory construction do not make it clear whether the statute covers such information, the case cannot be resolved on the basis of what is referred to as “step one” of Chevron, which requires the court to decide questions of statutory construction “if Congress has directly spoken to the precise question at issue.” Chevron,
In arguing- that section 777 applies to confidential information regarding petition support, the Commission relies heavily on its regulation regarding business confidential information, 19 C.F.R. § 201.6. The Commission promulgated that regulation following formal notice and comment procedures and pursuant to con
2
Granting Chevron deference to the Commission’s regulation, however, does not answer the question whether the Commission’s interpretation of section 777 as applying to information regarding petition support is entitled to deference. That is because the Commission’s regulation, on its face, does not refer to information regarding a questionnaire respondent’s support for a petition. Instead, the regulation contains a more general definition of confidential information, which includes “information of commercial value, the disclosure of which is likely to have the effect of either impairing the Commission’s ability to' obtain such information as is necessary to perform its statutory functions, or causing substantial harm to the competitive position of the person, firm, partnership, corporation, or other organization- from which the information was obtained, unless the Commission is required by law to disclose such information.” 19 C.F.R. § 201.6.
The gap between the text of the regulation and the Commission’s interpretation of section 777 is filled by the Commission’s interpretation of the' regulation. The Commission states in its brief that it interprets the regulation to include information regarding a questionnaire respondent’s support for a petition. It bases that interpretation on its contention that such information can be highly sensitive and that the disclosure of such information can result in competitive injury to the party from which the information was obtained. Although the Commission points to some prior Commission statements and precedents to support that interpretation, the specific interpretation of the regulation as applying to information regarding support for a petition is found only in the Commission’s brief. Nonetheless, Supreme Court precedents indicate that such an interpretation is sufficient to warrant deference. ■
To begin with, it is well settled that an agency’s- interpretation of its own regulations is entitled to broad deference from the courts. See Thomas Jefferson Univ. v. Shalala,
Applying that standard, we uphold the Commission’s interpretation of its regulation as covering information regarding a questionnaire respondent’s support for a petition. While that interpretation is by no means compelled by the language of the regulation, it is not contrary to the express terms of the regulation, nor is it at odds with the purposes served by the regulation. Moreover, adding significant force to the reasonableness of the Commission’s interpretation of section 777 is the plain language of 19 C.F.R. § 351.105(c)(10), a regulation of the Department of Commerce, the other agency that Congress has assigned, along with the Commission, to administer the antidump-ing and countervailing duty laws. That regulation specifically defines business proprietary information to include “the position of a domestic producer ... regarding a petition.” Although the Commerce regulation was not promulgated by the Commission, and although Congress has created a clear division of- labor between the Commission and Commerce under the antidumping and countervailing duty laws, see Hosiden Corp. v. Advanced Display Mfrs. of Am.,
3
The next step in the analysis is to determine whether, in light of the Com
To be sure, we do not believe that the Commission’s interpretation of the Byrd Amendment is entitled to Chevron deference, for several reasons. First, the Commission did not adopt its interpretation of the Byrd Amendment through the issuance of a regulation or through other formal process of the sort normally required to invoke Chevron deference. Congress did not authorize the Commission to construe the Byrd Amendment either through regulation or adjudication, and the Commission has not done so. Instead, the Commission’s interpretation is embodied in its practice, as recited in the chairman’s letter sent to Customs along with the initial Byrd Amendment list of petitioners and supporters. Second, the Commission’s construction of the Byrd Amendment is only as old as'the Byrd Amendment itself, and thus dates only to late 2000. Although consistently adhered to since that time, the Commission’s position is not a “longstanding” agency interpretation of the sort presented in Barnhart. Finally, there is no indication that Congress foresaw that the Commission would need to make policy determinations in the course of applying the Byrd Amendment. Accordingly, we conclude that the Commission’s interpretation of the Byrd Amendment in light of section 777 is not entitled to full Chevron deference.
.Even if Chevron deference does not apply, an agency’s construction of a statute that it is charged with adminisT tering is still subject to some deference under -the standard set forth by the Supreme Court in Skidmore v. Swift & Co.,
In other cases, the Court has described the range of deference encompassed within the Skidmore standard in varying ways. It has noted that “reasonable” agency interpretations carry “at least some added persuasive force,” Metro. Stevedore Co. v. Rambo,
Beyond these general statements, the Court has not made clear the precise degree of deference owed to such informal agency interpretations of statutes, a task that may be impossible in light of the wide range of administrative actions that are subject to analysis under the Skidmore standard. At times, the Court has characterized the degree of deference to particular agency interpretations of statutes as depending on “the extent that the interpretations have the ‘power to persuade.’ ” Christensen,
The agency action at issue in this case has many of the characteristics that the Supreme Court has identified as favoring deference to the agency’s interpretation of the statute at issue. First, the Commission’s interpretation of the
C
Contrary to the dissent, we do not believe the Supreme Court’s decision in FCC v. Nextwave Personal Communications, Inc.,
The Nextwave case involved the construction of a single statute; it did not present a situation, as does this case, in which two statutes are in tension and the court is called on to resolve the tension between them. The Court readily disposed of the government’s argument in Nextwave that the Bankruptcy Act conflicted with the Communications Act, by noting that nothing in the latter statute required that cancellation be the sanction for failure to make agreed-upon periodic payments for FCC licenses.
This case, by contrast, presents a conflict between two statutory provisions, not a conflict between a statute and an agency’s policy preference. This case would be similar to Nextwave if the Commission had decided as a policy matter to refrain from disclosing the identity of parties who expressed support for a petition. The Commission’s position, however, was not the product of a policy preference, but was the result of a statutory directive as the Commission interpreted it. In that setting, it is our task to construe the two statutes in a way that best resolves any possible conflict between them, which is what we have sought to do. See Morton v. Mancari,
More pertinent than Nextwave is the Supreme Court’s decision in Traynor v. Turnage,
Cathedral and Root next argue that the Commission’s policy of withholding the identity of petition supporters was not adopted in accordance with section 4 of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 553, which requires agencies to publish certain rules and policy decisions in the Federal Register for notice and comment. As an initial matter, however, the procedures of section 4 do not apply to matters “relating to ... benefits,” 5 U.S.C. § 553(a)(2), which would appear to include Byrd Amendment distributions. Moreover, the section 4 procedures for rulemaking do not apply to “interpretative rules, general statements of policy, or rules of agency organization, procedure or practice.” 5 U.S.C. § 553(b)(3)(A). As an informal interpretation of the requirements of the Byrd Amendment in light of section 777, the Commission’s position did not constitute a substantive rule having the force and effect of law and therefore was not subject to the notice and comment requirements of section 553 of the APA. See Shalala v. Guernsey Mem’l Hosp.,
A more difficult question is presented by the appellants’ alternative argument that the Commission failed to comply with the requirement of section 3 of the Administrative Procedure Act, as amended by the Freedom of Information Act, that each agency publish in the Federal Register “statements of general policy or interpretations of general applicability formulated and adopted by the agency.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(1)(D). See generally Morton v. Ruiz,
The line between matters falling within section 552(a)(1)(D) and matters falling within section 552(a)(2)(B) is notoriously difficult to draw. See Nat’l Leased Hous. Ass’n v. United States,
On appeal, the Commission argues, inter alia, that it was not required to publish the Commission chairman’s letter because it was simply an application of the “clear requirements” of section 777. We do not share the Commission’s view that its interpretation of section 777, as applied to the publication requirements of the Byrd Amendment, is “simply the direct application of an unambiguous statute.” Nonetheless, although we have found the statutory provisions less than “clear,” we have construed section 777, in light of the Commission’s interpretation, to bar the Commission from including those companies that had not waived their right to confidentiality on the Byrd Amendment list of affected domestic producers.
An agency interpretation that merely restates the requirements of a statute, on its face or as construed, need not be published, since it is the statutory directive, not the agency’s interpretation, that governs in such cases. See, e.g., Kaspar Wire Works, Inc. v. Sec’y of Labor,
To be sure, when an agency’s interpretation of a statute plays a role in a court’s construction of the statute, as it does here, it may appear to be a distinction without a difference to say that we are not applying the unpublished interpretation, but are applying a statute that we have construed with the aid of that same unpublished interpretation. Yet that analytical approach necessarily follows from the proposition that we give Skidmore deference to unpublished agency interpretations of statutes. If we were to interpret 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(1)(D) to mean that an agency’s unpublished interpretation of a statute cannot be used in our construction of that
The Sixth Circuit has suggested, at least in the context of Chevron deference, that an agency interpretation of a statute that does not satisfy the publication requirement of 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(1)(D) is not entitled to judicial deference. D & W Food Ctrs., Inc. v. Block,
In Knutzen, the court gave “some weight” to certain unpublished agency memorandums in the course of construing the statute in dispute. The court then noted that the appellants objected to the agency’s reliance on the memorandums on the ground that they were not published in accordance with 5 U.S.C. §. 552(a)(1)(D). The court answered that objection by stating that in light of its analysis of the statute, the pertinent regulations, and the memorandums in question, the memorandums merely applied the governing statutory and regulatory rule and that they were therefore not required to be published. Knutzen,
The Supreme Court’s decision in Morton v. Ruiz, although not explicit on the point, is consistent with this approach. The Court determined in that case that the Bureau of Indian Affairs (“BIA”) had violated 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(1)(D) when it failed to publish a statement of its policy regarding the eligibility of certain Indian tribal members for health services. As a consequence, the Court held that the BIA could not rely on that policy as a basis for “a legislative-type rule,” rendering certain otherwise eligible Indians ineligible for the statutory benefits.
Employing a similar approach, we treat the availability of Skidmore deference as not dependent on agency compliance with the publication requirement of section 552(a)(1)(D). As such, we conclude that section 777, as we have construed it in light of the Commission’s consistent administrative interpretation, bars the inclusion of non-public petition supporters on the Commission’s list of affected domestic producers. For that reason we hold that the Commission was not required to publish the chairman’s letter in the Federal Register pursuant to section 552(a)(1)(D). Accordingly, we conclude that the conduct of the Commission and Customs in creating and publishing the Byrd Amendment list of affected domestic producers for 2001 and 2002 did not excuse the failure of Cathedral and Root to file timely certifications for those years. The appellants are therefore not entitled to retroactive consideration for those two Byrd Amendment distributions.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Other courts of appeals have employed a similar approach in resolving apparent conflicts between statutes. See, e.g., Beckert v. Our Lady of Angels Apartments, Inc.,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Despite the majority’s extensive and sophisticated analysis, I respectfully suggest that it has reached the wrong result in holding that the claims are time barred. In my view, the majority’s approach to statutory construction directly conflicts with the approach required by the Supreme Court’s decision in F.C.C. v. Nextwave Personal Communications, Inc.,
The Byrd Amendment itself establishes no time limit for the filing of claims. 19 U.S.C. § 1675c(d) (2000). A Customs Regulation establishes a 60-day time limit, providing that “each affected domestic producer must submit a certification ... that must be received within 60 days after the date of publication of the notice in the Federal Register.” 19 C.F.R. §§ 159.62-63 (2004). Here the claimants did not file within the 60-day period. Like the majority, I think that this 60-day time limit is generally valid. However, where, as here, Customs has failed to provide the statutorily required notice of eligibility to affected domestic producers, I think the time limit cannot be enforced.
The plain language of the Byrd Amendment requires notice to affected domestic producers of their eligibility, specifying that Customs must publish “a notice of intention to distribute the offset and the list of affected domestic producers potentially eligible for the distribution based on the list obtained from the Commission.” 19 U.S.C. § 1675c(d)(2) (emphasis added). In those cases where “the Commission’s records do not permit an identification of those in support of a petition,” the statute imposes an affirmative duty on the International Trade Commission (“ITC”) to “consult with the administering authority to determine the identity of the petitioner,” when compiling the list of affected domestic producers. 19 U.S.C. § 1675c(d)(l). Customs is also required to “request a certification from each potentially eligible affected domestic producer.”
In concluding that the Byrd Amendment does not require notice to all potentially eligible producers, the majority affords Skidmore deference to the ITC’s interpretation of the statute as not requiring such notice. Skidmore v. Swift & Co.,
At the end of the day, the majority justifies its result by finding that section 777 conflicts with the Byrd Amendment. But there is no conflict. Section 777 of the Tariff Act of 1930, 19 U.S.C. § 1677f, prohibits disclosure of information “designated as proprietary by the person submitting the information” absent consent. 19 U.S.C. § 1677f (b)(1)(A) (2000). The plain language of section 777 does not require that the identity of affected domestic producers who supported anti-dumping petitions be kept confidential unless confidentiality was waived. Much less does it require that these names be kept confidential when the Byrd Amendment requires their disclosure. The supposed conflict with the Byrd Amendment arises solely because the ITC has interpreted section 777 to protect the identity of the supporting parties even in those situations where the Byrd Amendment requires disclosure. The majority defers to that interpretation under Chevron and finds that the Byrd Amendment must give way. In other words, the" majority reaches the somewhat astonishing conclusion that the agency’s interpretation of section 777 impliedly takes precedence over the explicit provisions of the Byrd Amendment. Maj. Op. ante at 1364-65.
By allowing an agency interpretation of section 777 to trump the plain language of the Byrd Amendment, the majority contravenes this court’s obligation to interpret the ambiguous language of section 777 so as to accommodate the explicit notice requirement of the Byrd Amendment.
In the Nextwave case, the Supreme Court held in similar circumstances that the explicit command of the Bankruptcy Code overcame the agency’s interpretation of the Communications Act.
So here, we have a situation where the Byrd Amendment is explicit; and section 777 contains no explicit requirement of confidentiality as to the identity of persons supporting antidumping petitions. The Byrd Amendment’s explicit notice requirement cannot be defeated by an “administrative preference” for interpreting section 777 to require confidentiality in such circumstances. None of the courts of appeals cases cited by the majority found an implied repeal of a statutory command based on a Chevron interpretation of a second statute. Maj. Op. ante at 1368-69 n. 1.
The majority’s reliance on Traynor v. Turnage,
If the required notice was not provided, the agency cannot enforce the time limit. See Wood v. Office of Pers. Mgmt.,
. In order to obtain a distribution, the certification must include: a statement of the producer’s desire to receive a distribution; demonstration of their eligibility to receive the distribution as an affected domestic producer; and the qualifying expenditures incurred by the producer during the relevant distribution period. 19 U.S.C. § 1675c(d)(2); see also 19 C.F.R. § 159.63(a).
. In two of the cited cases, the agency-adopted an interpretation of an ambiguous statute to avoid a conflict with another explicit statutory command. See Mowbray v. Kozlowski,
. As the Court noted:
[W]e must assume that Congress was aware of the Veterans’ Administration’s interpretation of "willful misconduct" at the time that it enacted § 1662(a)(1), and that Congress intended that the term receive the same meaning for purposes of that statute as it had received for purposes of other veterans’ benefits statutes.... In these cases, however, we need not rely only on such assumptions. The legislative history confirms that Congress intended that the Veterans’ Administration apply the same test of "willful misconduct” in granting extensions of time under § 1662(a)(1) as the agency already was applying in granting disability compensation .... Specifically, the [Senate Report] states:
"In determining whether the disability sustained was a result of ... 'willful misconduct,’ the Committee intends that the same standards be applied as are utilized in determining eligibility for other VA programs .... In this connection, see 38*1375 CFR, part III, paragraphs 3.1(n) and 3.301, and VA Manual M21-1, section 1404." S.Rep. No. 95-468, pp. 69-70 (1977) [U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1977, pp. 3747, 3805, 3806].
The cited regulations ... characterize[ ] primary alcoholism as "willful misconduct.”
Traynor,485 U.S. at 546 ,108 S.Ct. 1372 (some internal citations omitted).
