Opinion for the Court filed by Chief Judge GINSBURG.
Clifton Power Corporation petitions for review of an order of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission imposing a civil penalty in the amount of $15,000. Because the petition is incurably premature, we dismiss it for want of jurisdiction.
I. Background
Clifton operates a hydroelectric power project on the Pacolet River in South Carolina. In 1991 the Commission issued a Notice of Proposed Penalty against Clifton for failing to install stream-flow monitoring equipment as required by a condition of Clifton’s license.
See Clifton Power Corp.,
54 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,339,
On review we upheld the Commission’s finding that Clifton had violated its license.
See Clifton Power Corp. v. FERC,
On February 26, 2001 Clifton filed with the Commission a second “Request for Rehearing and Reconsideration.” On March 20, 2001, with the second request still pending before the Commission, Clifton filed the instant petition for judicial review. Eight days later the Commission denied the second request for rehearing. 94 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,346,
II. Analysis
Clifton asserts that the penalty of $15,000 violates the mandate in Clifton I, fails to comport with the requirements of the Small Business Regulatory Fairness Enforcement Act, 5 U.S.C. § 601 et seq., is otherwise arbitrary and capricious in violation of the Administrative Procedures Act, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A), and denies it due process of law. The Commission responds that Chiton’s second request for administrative reconsideration, although submitted before Clifton had filed its petition for judicial review, rendered the Agency’s order imposing the penalty non-final, and thereby ousted the court of jurisdiction.
This court is ordinarily without jurisdiction to review an agency action that is not final.
See Cobell v. Norton,
When the Commission denied Chi-ton’s first request for rehearing in January, 2001, the Company had 60 days within which to petition for judicial review.
See
16 U.S.C. § 825i(b). During that time Clifton had to choose “between rehearing
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before the agency or immediate court review.”
Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. v. FERC,
But stop: Clifton contends that the “unique provisions of the FPA distinguish this case” from any we have dismissed before as incurably premature. Section 313(a) of the FPA provides that the Commission may modify or set aside any order, even after a petition for judicial review has been filed, “until the record in [the] proceeding shall have been filed in a court of appeals,” 16 U.S.C. § 825i(a); and section 313(b) declares that “[u]pon the filing of [a] petition [the] court shall have jurisdiction, which upon the filing of the record with it shall be exclusive,” id. § 825i(b). Taken together, these provisions contemplate that the Commission and the court will have concurrent jurisdiction over a matter from the time a party petitions for judicial review until the Agency certifies the record to the court, which the Agency must do within 40 days of the filing of the petition, per Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 17(a). Clifton argues that because the Commission is therefore free to modify its ruling for a time after a petition for review has been filed, no useful purpose is served by forcing the petitioner to wait until the Commission has resolved its pending administrative requests.
This argument is based upon an inaccurate understanding of both § 313(a) and our cases.
*
This court has held already that a petition lodged pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 717r(b) — a provision of the Natural Gas Act identical in all relevant respects to § 313 of the FPA — must be dismissed if filed prematurely.
See Tennessee Gas,
There is good reason to prohibit any litigant from pressing its cause concurrently upon both the judicial and the administrative fronts: a favorable decision from
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the agency might yet obviate the need for review by the court.
See New Orleans,
The Company raises four other arguments, each of which we may reject in short order. First, Clifton contends that the requirement of finality is merely a prudential consideration, with which we may dispense, rather than a jurisdictional prerequisite. Our cases flatly foreclose this argument,
see New Orleans,
Second, Clifton claims that the Commission’s denial of its second request for reconsideration “can be deemed as having ripened Clifton’s petition for review for jurisdictional purposes.” Our precedent, however, makes clear that prematurity is an incurable defect: “even if the agency acts on the administrative reconsideration motion before argument is heard on the judicial review petition,” we must dismiss for want of jurisdiction.
New Orleans,
Third, Clifton refers the court to certain arguments that it presented in preliminary filings before this court, which arguments Clifton omitted from its briefs “due to page constraints.” We will not countenance Clifton’s attempt to circumvent the page limits, however, see Fed. R.App. P. 32(a)(B)(i), and we accordingly will not address any arguments that Clifton has not presented in its briefs, see Fed. R.App. P. 28(a)(9)(A) (requiring petitioner’s brief to contain the litigant’s “contentions and the reasons for them”).
Lastly, the Company contends that it “need not comply with the jurisdictional prerequisites of seeking rehearing under Section 313” because “this proceeding, although styled as a petition for review, calls upon the court to invoke its inherent’ powers of mandamus and enforcement to ensure that the Commission has complied with its order” in
Clifton I.
True it is that a “federal appellate court has the authori
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ty, through the process of mandamus, to correct any misconception of its mandate by a lower court or administrative agency subject to its authority.”
Office of Consumers’ Counsel v. FERC,
Our decision in
Clifton I
instructed the Commission that it may neither punish Clifton because other power projects owned by the same licensee had violated the FPA,
see Clifton,
III. Conclusion
Having determined that we are without jurisdiction to consider Clifton’s petition, and that Clifton is not entitled to a writ of mandamus to enforce our mandate in Clifton I, we do not address Clifton’s arguments on the merits. For the foregoing reasons, the petition for review is
Dismissed.
Notes
On the eve of oral argument, counsel for the Commission advised the court that because Clifton seeks review of a penalty assessment, § 31 of the FPA, 16 U.S.C. § 823b(d)(2)(B), "may govern the procedures for petitioning for review instead of the review provisions of seetion 313.” We need not pass upon the question, however, as we are without jurisdiction under either provision.
