*2
Before: H ENDERSON , R OGERS and B ROWN ,
Circuit Judges
.
Opinion for the Court filed by
Circuit Judge
R OGERS .
R OGERS ,
Circuit Judge
: This appeal concerns the
continuing challenge by the Chamber of Commerce of the
United States to the rule promulgated on July 27, 2004 (“the
Rule”) by the Securities and Exchange Commission amending
the Exemptive Rules under the Investment Company Act of
1940 (“ICA”), 15 U.S.C. § 80a-1
et seq
. (2000). The Rule
requires that mutual funds relying on the Exemptive Rules adopt
certain governance practices, including those set forth in two
conditions: a fund must have (1) a board with no less than 75%
independent directors and (2) an independent chair.
See
Investment Company Governance, Release No. 26,520, 69 Fed.
Reg. 46,378, 46,381 (Aug. 2, 2004) (“Adopting Release”). In
Chamber of Commerce v. SEC
,
The Chamber now challenges the Commission’s decision not to modify the two conditions in response to Chamber I . See Investment Company Governance, Release No. 26,985, 70 Fed. *3 Reg. 39,390, 39,398 (July 7, 2005) (“Response Release”). We again hold that the Chamber has standing, and we hold that the Commission had authority to consider whether to modify the Rule prior to issuance of the mandate in Chamber I . We further hold that, although the Commission was not constrained by Chamber I in how to estimate the costs of the conditions, the Commission failed to comply with section 553(c) of the APA, 5 U.S.C. § 553(c), by relying on materials not in the rulemaking record without affording an opportunity for public comment, to the prejudice of the Chamber. On August 10, 2005, the court stayed the two conditions.
I.
Section 2(c) of the ICA requires that when the Commission “engage[s] in rulemaking and is required to consider or determine whether an action is consistent with the public interest, [it] shall . . . consider . . . whether the action will promote efficiency, competition, and capital formation.” 15 U.S.C. §80a-2(c). In Chamber I , the court held:
With respect to the 75% independent director condition, the Commission, although describing three methods by which a fund might comply with the condition, claimed it was without a “reliable basis for determining how funds would choose to satisfy the [condition] and therefore it [was] difficult to determine the costs associated with electing independent directors.” 69 Fed. Reg. at 46,387. That particular difficulty may mean the Commission can determine only the range within which a fund’s cost of compliance will fall, depending upon how it responds to the conditions but, as the Chamber contends, it does not excuse the Commission from its statutory obligation to determine as best it can the economic *4 implications of the rule it has proposed.
412 F.3d at 143 (citing
Pub. Citizen v. Fed. Motor Carrier
Safety Admin
.,
The Commission responded within a matter of days to the
release of
Chamber I
. The Commission explained that prompt
action was required to avoid postponing the January 15, 2006
date for compliance with the Rule in order to ensure protection
of fund investors “in the wake of the discovery of serious
wrongdoing at many of the nation’s largest fund complexes and
by officials at the highest levels of those complexes.” Response
Release,
The Commission decided it was unnecessary to reopen the rulemaking record for further comment. Observing that it had previously given notice and called for comment on the costs of complying with the two conditions, the Commission concluded that “the information in the existing record, together with publicly available information on which we may rely , is a sufficient base on which to rest the Commission’s consideration of the deficiencies identified by the Court.” Id. at 39,390-91 (emphasis added). Based on materials not in the rulemaking record, including what the Commission described as a “widely used industry survey” of mutual fund directors’ compensation, the Commission determined a range of costs for each of the options that a fund might use to meet the 75% independent director condition. See id. at 39,392 n.28, 39,391-94. The Commission viewed the costs to an individual fund of the independent chair condition to derive principally from the increased compensation for the independent chair and the costs of additional staff, the latter cost estimated based on extra- record salary surveys by the Securities Industry Association, a source on which the Commission stated it “commonly rel[ies] in its rulemakings.” Id. at 39,394. The Commission stated that it did not expect small funds would hire additional staff. See id.
The Commission concluded, based on these cost estimates,
that the costs of complying with the two conditions “are
*6
extremely small relative to the fund assets for which fund boards
are responsible, and are also small relative to the expected
benefits of the two conditions.”
Id.
at 39,395. “Whether the two
conditions are viewed separately or together,” the Commission
stated, “even at the high end of the ranges, the costs of
compliance are minimal.”
Id.
This was true as well for small
funds.
See id.
at 39,396 n.77. Accordingly, regarding section
2(c) of the ICA, the Commission concluded: “[W]e do not
expect the amendments to the Exemptive Rules to have a
significant adverse effect on efficiency, competition or capital
formation because the costs associated with the amendments are
minimal and many funds have already adopted the required
practices.”
Id.
at 39,396. The Commission noted that as of the
time it proposed the Rule, it estimated that “nearly sixty percent
of all funds currently me[t] [the 75% independent director]
requirement.” Adopting Release,
The Commission also set forth its reasons for rejecting the
alternative proposal to the independent chair condition: “[I]n
light of the nature of investment companies and the purposes of
the statutory prohibitions to which the Exemptive Rules apply,”
the Commission concluded that the condition requiring an
independent chair was superior to an expansion of disclosure
requirements.
See
Response Release,
II.
The Chamber petitions for review, challenging the Commission’s decision not to modify the Rule’s two conditions on procedural and substantive grounds. Before reaching the merits of the Chamber’s challenge, we address the Chamber’s standing and the Commission’s authority to consider whether to modify the two conditions before issuance of the mandate in Chamber I .
A.
The Commission maintains that the court lacks jurisdiction
to consider the Chamber’s petition because the Chamber lacks
standing under Article III of the Constitution. Specifically, the
Commission maintains that the Chamber has failed to show a
continuing injury-in-fact and to address the implications of
DH2, Inc. v. SEC
, 422 F.3d 591 (7th Cir. 2005), which the
Commission presents as being in conflict with our holding in
Chamber I
that the Chamber has standing.
See Chamber I
, 412
F.3d at 138. Whatever may be said of the injury-in-fact analysis
in
DH2
, the holding in
Chamber I
is the law of this circuit.
See
LaShawn A. v. Barry
,
In
Chamber I
, the court held that the Chamber had standing
in light of sworn declarations regarding its investment in, and
continuing desire to invest in, mutual funds that are not
governed in accordance with the Rule’s two conditions.
See
Chamber I
,
The Chamber seeks in its current petition for review to
challenge the same two conditions it challenged in
Chamber I
.
It has substantiated its claim of continued injury through the
September 19, 2005 sworn declaration of Stan M. Harrell,
Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Chief
Information Officer of the Chamber.
See Sierra Club v. EPA
,
B.
The Chamber, in turn, challenges the Commission’s authority to consider modifying the Rule prior to issuance of the court’s mandate in Chamber I . It advances this challenge based on an analogy to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 41, which effects a limit on the jurisdiction of a district court while a case is pending on appeal, and like Article III standing, might be viewed as a threshold jurisdictional issue. However, the *9 Chamber’s challenge is, in effect, a merits challenge based on section 706(2)(C) of the APA.
Essentially, the Chamber makes a policy argument by
analogy. It points to Rule 41, which addresses when the
mandate of a court of appeals issues, and to authorities holding
that the pendency of an appeal “‘divests the district court of
control over those aspects of the case involved in the appeal,’”
United States v. DeFries
,
The Chamber’s contention is unpersuasive. Admittedly,
some of the reasons underlying the general principle, expressed
in
Griggs v. Provident Consumer Discount Co.
,
The court has previously recognized that agencies possess
authority to address issues identified by the court prior to the
issuance of its mandate.
See, e.g., Hazardous Waste Treatment
Council v. EPA
,
In Alabama Power , the court observed that although “[l]imitations on the [agency’s] power to modify an order during the pendency of an appeal may be inferred from Section 313 of the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. § 825l [(1970)] . . . . [t]he precise scope of these limitations has not been fully defined.” 511 F.2d at 388. Section 313 authorized the agency, upon application for rehearing, to set aside or modify an order until the record in the proceeding had been filed in the court of appeals and stated that, upon the filing of a petition for review, the appellate court has exclusive jurisdiction to affirm, modify, or set aside the order. Concluding that it was unnecessary “to define the precise contours of Section 313,” the court held that
[a]ssuming the [agency’s] remedial powers [are] limited during the pendency of appeal, it nevertheless retains power to consider a petition for amendment and to defer until disposition of the appeal any modification found appropriate or, in a case of urgency, to apply to the reviewing court for a remand order so as to permit amendment.
Id
. The court cited
Smith v. Pollin
,
Alabama Power
is dispositive here because
the
*12
jurisdictional provisions of section 43(a) of the ICA, 15 U.S.C.
§ 80a-42(a),
[1]
are substantially the same as section 313 of the
Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. § 825l, as construed in
Alabama
Power
. Assuming, as in
Alabama Power
, that the statute limited
*13
the Commission’s remedial power prior to the issuance of the
mandate in
Chamber I
, the Commission was not disabled from
sua sponte
considering whether to modify the Rule’s two
conditions.
See
ICA § 6(c), 15 U.S.C. § 80a-6(c). Because the
Commission decided not to modify the Rule, there is no need to
consider whether, prior to issuance of the mandate, the
Commission retained authority to adopt amendments to the Rule
without first seeking a remand of the proceeding. While there
was a small risk that the Commission’s response would have
become wasted effort had the court granted the Chamber’s
petition for rehearing in
Chamber I
, this risk is balanced against
the benefits of allowing an agency broad scope to carry out its
mission,
cf. Alabama Power
,
Accordingly, we hold that the Chamber has standing under Article III to bring its petition challenging the Rule’s two conditions and that the Commission had authority to consider whether to alter the conditions in response to Chamber I prior to the issuance of the mandate.
III.
Section 553 of the APA requires that an agency give notice
of a proposed rule setting forth “either the terms or substance of
the proposed rule or a description of the subjects and issues
involved,” 5 U.S.C. § 553(b), and “give interested persons an
opportunity to participate in the rule making through submission
of written data, views, or arguments with or without opportunity
for oral presentation,”
id.
§ 553(c). Among the information that
must be revealed for public evaluation are the “technical studies
and data” upon which the agency relies.
See Solite Corp. v.
EPA
,
Congress may vest broad rulemaking authority in an
agency, and even charge the agency with “swiftly and
effectively implementing [a] national policy,”
Natural Res. Def.
Council, Inc. v. SEC
, 606 F.2d 1031, 1050 (D.C. Cir. 1979)
(“
NRDC
”), but on remand the agency remains bound by the
APA’s notice and comment requirements,
see Simmons v. ICC
,
Where the court does not require additional fact gathering
on remand, as in
Chamber I
,
However, further notice and comment are not required
when additional fact gathering merely supplements information
in the rulemaking record by checking or confirming prior
assessments without changing methodology,
see Solite,
952
F.2d at 485, by confirming or corroborating data in the
rulemaking record,
see Community Nutrition Inst. v. Block
, 749
F.2d 50, 57–58 (D.C. Cir. 1984);
cf. Building Indus. Ass’n of
Superior Cal. v. Norton
,
In essence, the question is whether “at least the most
critical factual material that is used to support the agency’s
position on review . . . [has] been made public in the proceeding
and exposed to refutation.”
Ass’n of Data Processing
, 745 F.2d
at 684;
see Air Transp. Ass’n
,
The Commission maintains that section 553 did not require
further notice and comment in response to
Chamber I
for two
reasons: First, the Rule’s two conditions were set out in
materially the same terms in the notice of proposed rulemaking,
see
Investment Company Governance, Release No. 26,323, 69
Fed. Reg. 3472, 3473 (Jan. 23, 2004) (“NOPR”), thus providing
all interested parties the opportunity to comment on the
proposed amendments and specifically on their costs,
see id.
at
3481. Second, although the Commission relied on materials not
made subject to public comment under section 553(c), the
*17
materials were “publicly available” and merely supplemented
data in the rulemaking record that had been subject to public
comment.
See
Response Release,
In
Chamber I
, the court held that the Commission, in order
to satisfy “its statutory obligation” under ICA § 2(c), 15 U.S.C.
§ 80a-2(c), would need “to do what it can to apprise itself —
and hence the public and the Congress — of the economic
consequences of a proposed regulation before it decides whether
to adopt the measure.”
Chamber I
,
We do not anticipate that these proposals will have a significant effect on efficiency, competition and capital formation with regard to funds because the costs associated with the proposals are minimal and many funds have already adopted some of the proposed practices. . . . We request comments on whether the proposed rule amendments, if adopted, *18 would promote efficiency, competition, and capital formation. Will the proposed amendments or their resulting costs materially affect the efficiency, competition, and capital formation of funds? Comments will be considered by the Commission in satisfying its responsibilities under section 2(c) of the Investment Company Act. Commenters are requested to provide empirical data and other factual support for their views to the extent possible.
Id.
The NOPR thus fully informed interested parties of the two
conditions and expressly requested comments on costs so that
the Commission would be in a position to comply with ICA
section 2(c).
See Envtl. Integrity Project
,
The Commission’s extensive reliance upon extra-record
materials in arriving at its cost estimates, and thus in
determining not to modify the two conditions, however,
required further opportunity for comment under section 553(c).
The Commission justified its decision not to reopen the
comment period on the ground that “the information in the
existing record,
together with publicly available information
upon which we may rely
, is a sufficient base on which to rest the
Commission’s consideration of the deficiencies identified by the
Court.” Response Release,
To develop cost estimates for the Rule’s two conditions, the Commission relied on privately produced “Management Practice Inc. Bulletin[s],” id. at 39,392 nn. 24, 28, 30; id. at *19 39,393 nn. 33, 43; id. at 39,394 n.48; id. at 39,395 n.73, and a nonpublic survey of compensation and governance practices in the mutual fund industry that is summarized in one of these bulletins, id. at 39,392 n.28. Neither the bulletins nor the survey were part of the rulemaking record. Nor did the Commission identify the bulletins as materials on which it typically relies in rulemakings. Compare id. at 39,394. Yet these extra-record materials supply the basic assumptions used by the Commission to establish the range of costs that mutual funds are likely to bear in complying with the two conditions. See id . at 39,392. The bulletins constitute the only source of information on the number of directors serving on the boards of most mutual funds, id. n.24, the median annual salaries for directors, id. n.28 (summarizing the “widely used” survey), and the rough breakdown between boards overseeing a large number of individual funds and boards overseeing a small number of funds, id. n.30. With these three assumptions — average number of board members, average salary, and average number of funds overseen by an individual director — the Commission was able to “estimate the annual compensation cost per fund” of the 75% independent director requirement from $4,779 for large fund complexes to $37,500 for boards overseeing only one fund. Id. at 39,392-93.
When the Commission does refer to information in the rulemaking record with regard to the per fund cost calculation for the 75% independent director condition, see id. at 39,393 n.31, the Commission uses this data to bolster estimates based upon the extra-record materials, and not the other way around. Specifically, the Commission, in referring to two letters in the rulemaking record, “note[s] that commentators’ estimated costs of paying new independent directors ranged from $4000 to $20,000, which are roughly comparable with and do not exceed our estimated ranges.” Id . (citing letters of New Alternatives Fund, Inc. (Feb. 9, 2004) and Independent Directors of Flaherty *20 & Crumrine Preferred Income Opportunity Fund Inc. (Feb. 23, 2004)). But comparing the range derived from the record data with the range derived from the extra-record data implies that the two ranges are comparable. The ranges are not comparable because the two letters, which are cited as the source of the $4,000 and $20,000 figures, refer only to boards overseeing “small” and “small to mid-sized funds.”
Hence, the $4,000 to $20,000 range derived from the rulemaking record is comparable only to the $37,500 figure that the Commission estimated as the per fund cost for boards overseeing a single fund. This comparison of the $37,500 estimate and the $4,000 to $20,000 range suggests that the Commission, acting conservatively, may have overestimated the per fund cost for boards overseeing only a few funds. See Response Release, 70 Fed. Reg. at 39,392. However, the Commission points to no data in the rulemaking record to support its per fund cost estimate for compensation of independent directors overseeing a large number of funds. At best, the rulemaking record supports only one end of the Commission’s estimated range; the cost estimate for boards overseeing a large number of funds appears entirely derived from the extra-record materials. See id. 39,392 n.28. The rulemaking record, then, serves to supplement the extra-record data by providing a cross-check for only the Commission’s estimate for small fund families.
Other aspects of the Commission’s decision illustrate that it treated extra-record data as primary, rather than supplementary, evidence. Extra-record sources are essential to the Commission’s cost estimate for the independent chair condition, which is based on estimates of the cost of compensation for independent directors. See id. at 39,395. With respect to the ancillary, non-compensation costs of the conditions, while the nature of the Commission’s estimates is *21 somewhat different — because they are largely based upon such things as the prevailing rates for legal, financial, and other services, matters with which Commission Members are likely to be familiar and which are less susceptible to reasonable disagreement — extra-record data is similarly essential to these estimations to the extent they are affected by the Commission’s predictions about how funds would come into compliance and how independent directors will behave. See , e.g. , id . at 39,394. Thus, even with respect to ancillary costs, section 553(c) required that interested parties have the opportunity to comment prior to the agency’s final decision.
On appeal, the Commission maintains, relying on
Solite
,
Rather, for extra-record data to be “supplementary,” it must
clarify, expand, or amend other data that has been offered for
comment.
See Air Transp. Ass’n
,
The Commission also maintains that it was free to use
extra-record data in its response because the Chamber has not,
as we have required, shown that it was prejudiced by its lack of
opportunity to comment.
See Solite
,
To be clear, the requirement, deriving from sections 553(c)
and 706 that an agency may rely on supplemental materials to
fill gaps in the rulemaking record only when there is no
prejudice to the interested parties does not mean parties can
withhold relevant data and blindside the agency on appeal.
When, after an agency explains the basis for its preliminary
conclusions by reference to the information on which it has
relied and requests data regarding its conclusions, and the
agency concludes no such data (or no data the agency concludes
is reliable) has been produced during the comment period, the
agency may develop data along the lines it has proposed to
fulfill its statutory obligations without further public comment.
See Solite
,
This is not the situation here. The Commission’s bare request for information on costs and its expectation that these costs would be “minimal” did not place interested parties on notice that, in the absence of receiving reliable cost data during the comment period, the Commission would base its cost estimates on an extra-record summary of extra-record survey data that, although characterized as “a widely used survey,” was not the sort, apparently, relied upon by the Commission during the normal course of its official business. For purposes of section 553(c), it is one thing to suggest that members of the mutual fund industry are familiar with an extra-record survey and quite another thing to give notice that the Commission would rely on a summary of that survey as set forth in the bulletins. The Chamber’s failure to critique the extra-record bulletins and summarized survey until this appeal indicates that it had no reason to anticipate the Commission’s ultimate reliance on those materials.
Moreover, the rulemaking record closed almost a year before the Commission returned to the cost issue in July 2005, and during that period more funds had adopted the Rule’s conditions. See Response Release, 70 Fed. Reg. at 39,391, 39,398; see id. at 39,407 & n.23 (Atkins, Comm’r, dissenting). When the Commission decided not to reopen the rulemaking record, individual mutual funds had offered to provide information on their actual implementation costs and the Investment Company Institute had offered to gather such data from its membership. See id . The Chamber alerted the Commission that the actual implementation data would identify how funds had adopted the 75% independent director condition and could indicate whether independent director’s fees had increased and whether additional staff had been hired in light of *25 the added costs for the fund.
The Commission would rebut the Chamber’s assertions of
prejudice by pointing out that the Chamber has not suggested
the
implementation cost data would show
that
the
Commission’s cost estimates are materially inaccurate. This is
not the relevant test of prejudice under our precedent, which
does not require a showing that the Commission would have
reached a different result.
See, e.g., Sprint
,
In sum, the combination of circumstances — inadequate
notice that the Commission would base its cost estimates for the
two conditions on “publicly available” extra-record materials on
which it did not typically rely in rulemakings; the
Commission’s acknowledgment that the rulemaking record
contained gaps and did not include reliable cost data; the
availability of additional implementation data for the period
between the close of the rulemaking record and the
Commission’s response to
Chamber I
as more funds adopted
the conditions; the Chamber’s colorable claim that the
Commission’s failure to consider such implementation data
harms its investment choices — suffices to show that the
Chamber has been prejudiced by the Commission’s reliance on
materials not in, nor merely “supplementary” to, the rulemaking
record.
See Solite
,
The Commission seeks to mitigate its procedural burdens
in two ways. First, the Commission suggests that public
comment was not necessary because the extra-record materials
on which it relied were “publicly available.”
See
Response
Release,
On appeal, the Commission characterizes the extra-record
survey as a “widely used industry survey,” Response Release,
Nor are the Chamber’s claims of prejudice materially
diminished because the bulletins are “publicly available.” The
NOPR did not indicate that the Commission intended to rely on
these bulletins if reliable cost data was not produced during the
comment period, much less indicate that the Commission
considered the bulletins to be a source of reliable data for
estimating the costs of the two conditions. The fact that the
dissenting Commissioners cited a news article that summarized
an extra-record survey conducted by the publisher of the
bulletins,
see
Adopting Release,
Nor does public access to the bulletins alter the fact that the
*29
Commission had acknowledged the inadequacies of the
rulemaking record with respect to estimating costs. The
Commission’s recourse to extra-record materials indicates that
even for the more refined task of estimating direct costs
described in
Chamber I
, 412 F.3d at 144, the Commission
continued to view the rulemaking record as lacking reliable cost
information. Nor, finally, does the availability of the “widely
used survey” alleviate the prejudice to the Chamber when the
Commission, in light of its prior acknowledgment of the
inadequacies of the rulemaking record and the period during
which more funds had adopted the conditions, declines to
reopen the record to allow the Chamber to submit actual
implementation cost data. Although the Commission’s
judgment in relying on these extra-record sources may be well-
founded, the bulletins themselves acknowledge “wide
divergence” among the funds represented in the summarized
extra-record survey “in the methodologies used to calculate
director compensation.” Management Practice Inc. Bulletin:
More Meetings Means More Pay for Fund Directors at 1 (April
2004) (cited at
Second, the Commission justifies its choice to act without re-opening the record by invoking the need to act swiftly:
We find that any further delay or ambiguity surrounding implementation of the rules would disadvantage not only investors but also fund boards and management companies, most of which have already begun the process of coming into compliance with the rules. By acting swiftly and deliberately to *30 respond to the Court’s remand order, the Commission will reduce uncertainty, facilitate better decision-making by funds, and ultimately serve the interests of fund shareholders.
Id.
at 39,398. The Commission’s preference to proceed with the
same five Commission Members who were familiar with the
rulemaking in considering the cost estimates described in
Chamber I
,
see id.
at 39,391, is not the type of exigent
circumstance that comes within the narrow “good cause”
exception of section 553(b)(B).
See Tennessee Gas Pipeline
Co. v. FERC
,
Therefore, because the Commission relied on extra-record material critical to its costs estimates without affording an opportunity for comment to the prejudice of the Chamber, we hold that the Commission violated the comment requirement of section 553(c).
IV.
The question remains what is the appropriate remedy for the Commission’s procedural violation under section 553(c). The APA provides that the court shall “hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions found to be . . . without observance of procedure required by law,” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(D), with “due account . . . taken of the rule of prejudicial error,” id . § 706. Under circuit precedent, the decision to remand or vacate hinges upon court’s assessment of “the seriousness of the . . . deficiencies (and thus the extent of doubt whether the agency chose correctly) and the disruptive consequences of an interim change that may itself be changed.” Allied-Signal, Inc. v. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Comm’n , 988 F.2d 146, 150-51 (D.C. Cir. 1993) (citations omitted).
When the Rule was proposed, the Commission estimated
that nearly 60% of mutual funds already complied with the 75%
independent director condition.
See
Response Release, 70 Fed.
Reg. at 39,391 & n.18. The court stayed the effectiveness of the
Rule’s two conditions on August 10, 2005; the other
amendments to the Exemptive Rules,
see
Adopting Release, 69
Fed. Reg. at 46,381, were scheduled to take effect on January
15, 2006.
See
17 C.F.R. § 270.0-1(a)(7)(v), (vi), & (vii) (2005).
In the meantime, more mutual funds have voluntarily adopted
the challenged conditions.
See
Response Release, 70 Fed. Reg
at 39,407 (Atkins, Comm’r, dissenting). In other words, the two
conditions, which were part of a larger program of regulatory
reforms adopted by the Commission to address serious conflicts
*32
of interest in the mutual fund industry by changing the
“boardroom culture,” Response Release,
The Commission’s reliance on extra-record materials to fulfill its statutory obligation under ICA § 2(c), 15 U.S.C. § 80a-2(c), effectively acknowledges gaps in the rulemaking record that could not be properly supplemented without further opportunity for comment under section 553(c). Given the circumstances described in Part III of this opinion, a further remand to the Commission without the opportunity for comment would be unproductive. This suggests that vacation of the 75% independent director and independent chair conditions would be appropriate.
However, although vacating the two conditions would be
less disruptive than if they had taken effect on January 15, 2006,
see Allied Signal
,
The Commission is in a better position than the court to
assess the disruptive effect of vacating the Rule’s two
conditions. Therefore, the court will vacate the 75%
independent director and independent chair conditions of the
*33
Rule but, given the court’s expectation in
Chamber I
that the
Commission could “readily” address costs, 412 F.3d at 144,
withhold the issuance of its mandate pursuant to Rule 41(b) for
ninety days. Such an approach is not unprecedented.
See
Hazardous Waste Treatment Council
,
Accordingly, we grant the Chamber’s petition, without reaching its other challenges to the Remand Release, vacate the two conditions, but withhold the issuance of the mandate for ninety days as set forth in this opinion.
Notes
[1] Section 43(a) of ICA provides: Any person or party aggrieved by an order issued by the Commission . . . may obtain a review of such order in the United States court of appeals within any circuit wherein such person resides or has his principal place of business, or in the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia . . . . Upon the filing of such petition such court shall have jurisdiction, which upon the filing of the record shall be exclusive, to affirm, modify, or set aside such order, in whole or in part. 15 U.S.C. § 80a-42(a). It further provides for a modified remand procedure for further findings of fact: If application is made to the court for leave to adduce additional evidence, and it is shown to the satisfaction of the court that such additional evidence is material and that there were reasonable grounds for failure to adduce such evidence in the proceeding before the Commission, the court may order such additional evidence to be taken before the Commission and to be adduced upon the hearing in such manner and upon such terms and conditions as to the court may seem proper. The Commission may modify its findings as to the facts by reason of the additional evidence so taken, and it shall file with the court such modified or new findings, which, if supported by substantial evidence, shall be conclusive, and its recommendation, if any, for the modification or setting aside of the original order.
