Plaintiff-appellant G. & T. Terminal Packaging Co., Inc. (“G. & T.”) appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Mary Johnson Lowe, Judge), granting defendants-appellees’ motion to dismiss as untimely G. & T.’s appeal under the Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act of 1930, 7 U.S.C. § 499g(c) (1982) (“PACA”), and for costs and attorneys’ fees. G. & T. sought review in the district court of a decision and amended order of the Secretary of Agriculture, awarding reparation to appellees in the amount of $33,-220.30. At issue in this appeal is whether the amended order or its predecessor was the final order for purposes of review in the district court. Because we find the Secretary’s amended order was the final order, we reverse.
BACKGROUND
On March 5, 1985, Phillip A. Hawman and Hawman Farms, Inc. (“the Hawmans”) initiated proceedings before the United States Secretary of Agriculture pursuant to PACA section 499f(a), in which they sought $67,740.78 from G. & T. in connection with the sale on August 3 and August 4, 1984 of five carlots of potatoes. G. & T. answered that it had paid the Hawmans the undisputed amount due of $34,520.30, and denied further liability. A hearing was held on August 19, 1985, on the basis of which the Secretary determined that a portion of the payment was still outstanding. Two years later, by order dated September 11, 1987, the Secretary directed that G. & T. pay the Hawmans $33,220.30 “with interest thereon at the rate of 13% per an-num from 1984 until paid.”
On September 22, 1987 the Secretary, acting sua sponte, issued an “Amended Order.” The amended order stated that, through the Secretary’s inadvertence, the month from which interest was to be paid had been omitted from the September 11 order. Accordingly, the September 11 order was amended to read as follows:
Order
Within 30 days from the date of this order, [G. & T.] shall pay to [the Haw-mans], as reparation, $33,220.30 with interest thereon at the rate of 13% per annum from September 1, 1984 until paid....
G. & T. received the amended order on September 28,1987, along with an attached letter from J.D. Flanagan, Chief of the Department of Agriculture PACA Branch Fruit and Vegetable Division (“PACA Branch”). The letter stated, in pertinent part, that “[t]he reparation awarded in the order of September 11, 1987, as thus *79 amended, shall be paid within 30 days from the date of this order or on or before October 22, 1987.” (Emphasis added). The letter went on to state that “[u]nless we are advised of payment of the reparation award or that an appeal has been filed in United States District Court, the order becomes final on October 22, 1987.” The Hawmans received the amended order, but not the cover letter. Subsequently, G. & T. received a mailgram from the PACA branch dated October 16, 1987 indicating that unless the order was “appealed to court by October 22, or paid by October 28,” G. & T.’s license would be suspended.
Under section 499g(c) of PACA, a party who is “adversely affected” by the entry of a reparation order is entitled to appeal the decision in the district court. The appeal is perfected by filing a petition and bond in an amount double that awarded by the Secretary within 30 days of the date of the order. G. & T. filed its notice of appeal and supersedeas bond on October 22, 1987. The appeal was filed within 30 days of the amended order, but 41 days from the date of the original order. The Hawmans moved in the district court to dismiss the appeal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. They argued that the Secretary's September 11 decision was the final order from which the appeal should have been taken, and the appeal was therefore untimely.
Notwithstanding the apparent position of the Secretary that the amended order was properly appealable, the district court deemed the final order to be the one dated September 11. Relying on
Carter/Mondale Presidential Comm., Inc. v. Federal Election Comm’n.,
On appeal from the judgment of dismissal, G. & T. contends that the court erred as a matter of law in finding the September 11 decision to be the agency’s final order. It argues that under the “pragmatic approach to finality” articulated by various courts, the September 22 decision was properly appealable.
DISCUSSION
It is undisputed by the parties that the statutory time limit imposed by section 499g(c) of PACA is jurisdictional.
Cf. Texas Mun. Power Agency v. Administrator, EPA,
This court follows the pragmatic approach to questions of the finality of agency decisionmaking articulated in
Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner,
In the instant case, G. & T. was assessed a substantial amount of interest. As unamended, the order left entirely ambiguous the total amount of the award. The amended decision thus served as a
*80
material revision of the prior order. When a judgment previously entered has been revised as to substantive matters, or to resolve a genuine ambiguity, the practical effect is to render the later decision final for purposes of review.
See FTC v. Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co.,
An analogous situation was presented by
United States v. F. & M. Schaefer Brewing Co.,
While
Schaefer
was not concerned with agency action, we find its reasoning persuasive here.
Cf. Pepsico, Inc. v. FTC,
In finding that the initial order was “final” for purposes of appeal, the district court looked to whether the September 11 decision settled the practical relationship between the parties. See Carter/Mondale, 711 F.2d at 288-89. The district court found that G. & T. was appealing solely from the Secretary’s factual determination of liability. Since G. & T.’s appeal was based on the liability finding in the initial order, the court found that order to have been the agency’s final action.
It is true that the September 11 decision had some indicia of finality. Insofar as it contained a factual determination of G. & T.’s contractual obligation and liability under PACA, the order was a definitive statement of the agency’s position.
See FTC v. Standard Oil,
Where legal rights and obligations do not flow from an agency’s decision, the agency has not taken final action.
Cf. Capital Telephone Co., Inc. v. FCC,
To illustrate, if G. & T. had failed to comply with the September 11 order, G. & T. could have persuasively argued to the Secretary that without the material term which was omitted from the September 11 order, compliance with that order was impossible. The only consequence of its noncompliance would have been that the Secretary would be required to amend the order. If, on the other hand, G. & T. failed to comply with the September 22 order, it would have lost its license until such time as it complied. Thus, the September 22 order and not the September 11 order mandated G. & T.’s obligation to the Hawmans.
Compare FTC v. Standard Oil,
Although our holding that the September 22 order was final is dispositive of this appeal, we also briefly address the situation posed by the letters sent to G. & T. from the PACA branch. The district court ruled that the letters should not have been used to calculate the thirty day appeal period, characterizing them as “an ill-concocted blend of courtesy and misstatement.” We think it is understandable that G.
&
T. was confused by the letters. We note that the problems presented by this case would have been significantly reduced if the agency had notified both parties of the proper appeal period. Courts have encouraged agencies to inform the parties clearly and accurately when the period for a petition for review begins to run.
See Carter/Mondale,
CONCLUSION
We find that the Secretary’s amended order of September 22, 1987 was the final agency action in this case. G. & T.’s appeal dated October 22, 1987 therefore was timely filed. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment granting the Hawmans’ motion for dismissal, costs and attorneys’ fees, and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
