The general rule is that a judgment by a district court remanding a case to an administrative agency is nonfinal and hence nonappealable, 28 U.S.C. § 1291, unless all that remains to be done on remand is a mechanical or otherwise “ministerial” task, requiring no judgment or discretion.
In re Riggsby,
We believe
Daviess
and
Occidental
state the better view, and shall therefore adhere to those decisions; the Supreme Court has granted certiorari in
Finkelstein
to resolve the conflict. The reason for our position is intensely practical. If on remand the Secretary awards benefits satisfactory to Mrs. Crowder, she will not bring a suit in federal district court and there will be no mechanism by which the Secretary can obtain appellate review of the district court’s order invalidating the general standard on the basis of which it refused her application for benefits. The Secretary might of course decide not to award Mrs. Crowder benefits even if she is entitled to them under the district court’s view of the law. She would then bring a fresh suit, leading to a fresh remand. If the Secretary persisted in its refusal to award benefits to her, the district court would hold the Secretary or the pertinent officials in contempt, and they would appeal and might by that route bring up the issue of the legality of the standard for our consideration — contempt is a last-ditch or safety-valve device for obtaining appellate review of unappealable orders.
United States v. Ryan,
We shall therefore not dismiss the Secretary’s appeal, but instead process it on the merits in the usual way.
