GULF OIL CORPORATION, et al. v. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY, et al., Appellants.
No. 80-2096.
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued May 4, 1981. Decided Aug. 24, 1981.
It is therefore concluded that the request for appointment of counsel be DENIED and the appeal be sua sponte DISMISSED.
Judgment accordingly.
Michael T. Scott, Atty., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D. C., with whom Dennis G. Linder, Atty., Dept. of Justice, and Nancy C. Crisman, Atty., Dept. of Energy, Washington, D. C., were on brief for appellants.
Donald B. Craven, Washington, D. C., with whom Mark L. Evans, Craig Miller and James P. Tuite, Washington, D. C., were on brief for appellee, Gulf Oil Corp.
Richard H. Porter, Washington, D. C., with whom Steven H. Brose and Samuel T. Perkins, Washington, D. C., were on brief for appellee, Atlantic Richfield Co.
Roland W. Selman and Nina H. Questal, Washington, D. C., were on brief for appellee, Chevron, U.S.A., Inc.
Before ROBINSON, Chief Judge, and WALD and GINSBURG, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WALD.
Opinion concurring in the judgment filed by Circuit Judge GINSBURG.
WALD, Circuit Judge:
This case raises a difficult question in a troubling and unusual context: whether a district court may intervene in an ongoing administrative adjudicatory proceeding to expand discovery into an alleged pattern of wrongdoing by agency officials that could affect the outcome of the proceeding. The alleged wrongdoing consisted of the destruction of documents of arguable relevance to the administrative proceeding, and
I. THE HISTORY OF THE PROCEEDINGS
A. The Crude Cluster Proceedings
The proceedings before us concern alleged violations by seven major crude oil producers1 of mandatory crude oil pricing regulations2 issued by DOE and its predecessors3 pursuant to the Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act of 1973 (EPAA).4
In 1977 Congress transferred to the newly created Department of Energy (DOE) the functions then exercised by the FEA and its Administrator.5 Pursuant to
On May 1, 1979, in one of its most significant enforcement actions to date, OSC issued seven proposed remedial orders9 (PROs) alleging that major producers of crude oil were guilty between September 1973 and March 1979 of charging prices 1.7 billion dollars in excess of what the Mandatory Petroleum Price Regulations permitted.10
Under the EPAA regulations allegedly violated, the crude oil producers must determine the first sale price of crude oil on the basis of the production from a property during a specified base period.... “[P]roperty” is defined as the right to produce crude oil which arises from a lease or a fee interest....11
Each PRO contains allegations that the producers misclassified “properties” from which crude oil was produced.12 In defense, the producers argue that the EPAA regulations, and in particular the definition of “property,” are ambiguous on their face, and have a history of tortuous agency interpretation and application.13 The producers assert that they should not be (indeed, they cannot be) penalized for failing to adhere to regulations whose precise meaning has neither been intelligently defined nor even agreed upon by agency personnel themselves.14
This alleged inherent ambiguity in the basic definition of “property” constitutes the producers’ major defense to the allegations contained in the proposed remedial orders. Therefore, the several crude oil producers, sometimes acting in concert and sometimes separately, have sought extensive discovery before OHA of the agency‘s15 contemporaneous construction of its regulations and of agency documents relating to the issuance of the PROs.16
1. The Two Incidents of Document Destruction17
The producers sought extensive discovery into two incidents of alleged document destruction that came to their attention in 1979 and 1980. The first incident concerned a file reorganization conducted between August 8 and 15, 1979, by OSC‘s Crude Production Audit Division (CPAD) after the producers had filed for discovery of CPAD‘s audit files. Neil Tonken, Deputy Solicitor to the Special Counsel in charge of the crude cluster enforcement proceedings, and Leigh Manasevit, an Assistant Solicitor, conducted an internal investigation of this incident immediately after learning of it. Although Tonken, in a letter to the parties informing them of the August document destruction incident,18 concluded that most
The second clearly more serious incident involved the alleged destruction in either late 1978 or early 1979 of an issues paper used by CPAD auditors in detailing and discussing interpretative problems confronting them.21 Tonken and Manasevit learned of this incident from an interview with Ron Rosapep, the CPAD auditor who had conducted the August file reorganization and the one selected by Tonken to be deposed as having “principal knowledge” of those events. The most damaging version of the second incident of document destruction is recounted in an October 26, 1979 memorandum from Tonken and Manasevit to Special Counsel Paul Bloom. In May 1979, Rosapep heard rumors that an order had been given to destroy all copies of the issues paper, rumors that were corroborated later that month when Rosapep met with Harry Bayne, Chief Counsel of CPAD.
Rosapep asked if he could keep his copy at his home, and Bayne replied that he could not because they would go into his home and get it. Rosapep told Manasevit that in this statement Bayne was refer-
In the weeks that followed the disclosure of these events, three in-house investigations were conducted within DOE. However, the producers were not informed of the issues paper incident, as they had been informed of the August incident.
Tonken and Manasevit conducted the first of these internal investigations. The Solicitor, Carl Corrallo, denied to both Manasevit and Tonken ever giving such an order to destroy the issues paper, but conceded that he may have directed the participants in a December 1978 meeting concerning the issues paper to destroy their copies.23 In their October 26 memorandum to Paul Bloom, Tonken and Manasevit concluded that “the entire matter of document destruction discussed herein must be referred to the Department of Justice for evaluation and appropriate action.”24
Special Counsel Paul Bloom then proceeded to conduct an independent investigation of these two incidents, interviewing Rosapep, Corrallo and Jimmy Mayberry, the Director of CPAD.25 Bloom met with two attorneys of the Public Integrity Division of the Justice Department, who, when apprised of the facts as told by Bloom, declined to accept the matter for investigation of possible misconduct.26 Bloom also talked about these matters to the DOE Assistant General Counsel for Standards of Conduct.27 In a lengthy memorandum dated January 16, 1980, Bloom disclosed to the Director of OHA, Melvin Goldstein, the results of his in-house investigation.28 He concluded there had been no order to destroy copies of the issues paper. In fact, many copies were and are still in existence. Instead, Corrallo had given only an order to “limit distribution” of the issues paper, so as to prevent the producers from successfully relying upon “erroneous and unauthorized interpretative advice from CPAD audi-
Two months after Special Counsel Bloom was informed by the Tonken memorandum of the two separate incidents of document destruction, Tonken and Manasevit notified the Inspector General of DOE of these matters and urged a separate, additional investigation and evaluation.31 Director Melvin Goldstein in a letter to the Inspector General made a similar request.32
After a six-week investigation into these incidents, the Inspector General issued a report on March 17.33 The Inspector General‘s investigation found that “no documents were improperly destroyed by the Office of Special Counsel; but ... found inadequate the Office of Special Counsel‘s response to internal rumors of such document destruction.”34 Concerning the August 1979 Dallas file reorganization, the Report found that only “Division files” were reorganized by CPAD auditors. No audit or case files—the files used by OSC in its enforcement actions—were destroyed.35
Regarding the issues paper incident, the Report stated that at the end of a policy meeting in February 1979,
[There] was a suggestion by the Solicitor to limit distribution of copies of the papers within the staff of the Office of Special Counsel to prevent misuse of the papers [by OSC personnel].
We also found that although this guidance was intended solely to limit distribution of copies of the discussion papers and involved no intent to destroy copies improperly, some copies of the papers were destroyed. This happened in February, 1979, and in our view, resulted from misconstruction by the Chief Counsel of [CPAD] [Harry Bayne] of the guidance on limiting distribution of copies that had been previously suggested by the Solicitor to OSC. The Chief Counsel informed us that he ordered his staff to destroy their copies of the papers in an attempt to accomplish the purpose of the Solicitor‘s guidance....36
The Report noted that “some copies of the discussion papers cannot be accounted for,”37 and “the original does not exist in its entirety.” Its absence, the Report stated, “could not be accounted for.”38 Finally, the Report concluded that “no order to destroy the papers was given by the Solicitor [Carl Corrallo] at any time.”39
The Inspector General also found OSC‘s internal investigations “were not extensive and thorough enough to lay to rest conclu-
We found that the rumors about possibly improper document destruction remained a festering controversy within the Office of Special Counsel because the internal investigations that were done lacked credibility with many of the attorneys working on the Proposed Remedial Order cases. Moreover, these attorneys felt they were caught in an ethical dilemma because they were being asked to prepare discovery responses to questions about possible document destruction at a time when they were not confident that they were receiving accurate information about what had occurred.42
2. Ex Parte Communications
While remedial order proceedings are pending before OHA, “[n]o person who is not employed or otherwise supervised by [OHA] shall submit ex parte communications to the Director or any other person employed or otherwise supervised by [OHA] with respect to any matter involved in Remedial Order ... proceedings.”43 “[E]x parte communications” are defined to include “oral or written communications relative to the merits of a [PRO] ... proceeding pending before [OHA].”44
If any communication occurs that violates the provisions of this section [OHA] shall promptly make the substance of the communication available to the public and serve a copy of a written communication or a memorandum summarizing an oral communication to all participants in the affected proceeding.45
In handling the producers’ discovery requests concerning the incidents of document destruction, and in conducting their investigations into these events, various OSC personnel engaged in numerous ex parte contacts with the Director of OHA. Paul Bloom‘s January 16 memorandum to Melvin Goldstein, the January 4 meeting of Tonken and Manasevit with Goldstein, and Goldstein‘s memorandum of the same date all were arguably in contravention of the prohibition contained in
3. The Producers’ Attempts to Obtain Meaningful Discovery
The producers did not immediately learn of these incidents of document destruction and were largely unaware of the ex parte communications until twelve Assistant Solicitors within OSC moved before OHA to “clarify the record” to include the various ex parte memoranda concerning these events.48 The producers filed over twenty discovery requests before OHA, seeking extensive deposition and document discovery into both of these incidents49 and at one point requesting the Director of OHA to recuse himself from adjudicating the crude cluster proceedings.50 OHA held several hearings on these discovery requests, but did not rule on them for several months. By the time OHA issued its decision concerning the discovery into document destruction and ex parte communications,51 Gulf and ARCO had already filed a complaint in United States District Court. The sum total of the discovery OHA allowed consisted of two depositions concerning the August file reorganization and four interrogatories, designed by OHA, to be submitted to twenty-four named OSC attorneys and auditors.52
B. Proceedings in the Courts
On March 27, 1980, Gulf and ARCO filed suit in district court for declaratory and
In their amended complaint, plaintiffs requested the district court to enjoin the administrative proceedings and require DOE to prosecute the crude cluster proceedings in district court. As an alternative, plaintiffs sought an order prohibiting the Director of OHA from conducting the proceedings and ordering the Secretary of Energy to appoint an independent ALJ to adjudicate the proceedings, or at least the issues of document destruction and ex parte communications. Plaintiffs also sought document and deposition discovery to be conducted by the district court into the matters of document destruction of ex parte contacts, an order directing the defendants to preserve all documents that may be relevant to the crude cluster proceedings, and a declaration that the OHA Director‘s actions in receiving, soliciting and withholding ex parte communications were in violation of DOE regulations and violated the producers’ due process rights. Plaintiffs asked the district court to retain jurisdiction over the proceedings to monitor the compliance with any order the court should issue.55
The defendants moved for a protective order deferring discovery and moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to exhaust administrative remedies and because the case was not yet ripe for review.56 The plaintiffs opposed dismissal, arguing that immediate judicial intervention of some sort was necessary to preserve their right to a fair hearing before OHA and ultimately before FERC. The court initially met this argument with skepticism.57 However, the court acknowledged that this case, unlike others relied on by defendants, involved more than mere allegations of document destruction and ex parte communications.58
On June 13, the court issued an order granting defendants’ motion for a protective order and also requiring defendants to preserve in one location all documents arguably related to the crude cluster proceedings, pending disposition by the court of the motion to dismiss.59
The court on July 8 granted in part the relief requested by the producers. The court initially noted its reluctance to interfere with the ongoing crude cluster proceedings, and added that the “underlying facts have not been sufficiently developed to enable the Court to resolve the dispute even if it should intervene.”60 However, it stated, “[T]here is need at this time to put these issues to rest.”61 The court denied defendants’ motion to dismiss, stating that
The court noted especially that “plaintiffs have no opportunity to test the issue of recusal or the proper scope of discovery until final consideration of the entire record on administrative appeal to [FERC] at the conclusion of all of the proceedings,” an estimated wait of five years.63 Therefore, the court directed the Secretary of Energy to appoint an independent ALJ “for the sole purpose of supervising such further document and deposition discovery as the [ALJ] determines is appropriate and reasonable to develop fully all facts concerning ex parte contacts with the hearing officer and any destruction of relevant documents by agency personnel....”64
Defendants filed an appeal in the Temporary Emergency Court of Appeals (TECA). The district court granted a stay pending reconsideration,65 but ultimately denied reconsideration, although defendants argued that the intervening resignation of Melvin Goldstein as Director of OHA mooted the case, since the new hearing examiner was free to reconsider all previous OHA discovery rulings. The court saw no reason to believe that the departure of Goldstein brought DOE any closer to compliance with his order to develop an adequate record on the two issues of document destruction and ex parte communications. All OHA discovery rulings are made by a panel of three members, and Goldstein‘s successor, George Breznay, had been a non-dissenting member in all prior rulings in the crude cluster proceedings.66 In its denial of reconsideration, the court removed any doubt that further judicial relief could be anticipated (including the possibility of direct supervision over the agency proceedings): it was repeatedly and emphatically stated that the sole purpose of the court‘s order was the preservation of an adequate administrative record on the alleged destruction of documents and ex parte comments.67
Defendants sought and obtained from TECA a stay pending appeal and filed a protective appeal in this court September 11, 1980.68 TECA eventually dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction,69 and a mo-
Appellees here renew their jurisdictional argument. For several reasons we are satisfied that this court has jurisdiction to hear and decide this appeal.
Appellees’ argument that the district court‘s order set up a discovery procedure ancillary to the pending court action is inconsistent with the court‘s own stated intentions. Appellees refer to the extensive relief requested in their complaint as well as language in the July 8 order that suggests the district court has not yet “finished its business.” Brief for Appellees at 19-20. Although at argument counsel for ARCO conceded that Judge Gesell‘s intent at this time was solely to develop and preserve a record through this ad hoc method of discovery, he argued that the district court would be “obliged” to do whatever was necessary to remove the taint from the crude cluster proceedings should the ALJ‘s discovery reveal misconduct prejudicial to the producers’ defense.
But even if the district court may initially have entertained the notion of granting further relief, the court made it abundantly clear at the September 5 hearing that it had “finished its business.” See text at note 67 supra. In fact, all the court did here was to set up a mechanism for discovery ancillary to the administrative proceedings, not to any court action. An order compelling discovery in an agency proceeding is final and appealable under
This court also has jurisdiction of appeals from interlocutory orders granting “injunctions.”
This is not an “injunction” for purposes of Section 1292(a)(1): it does not affect the rights or behavior of parties outside of the litigation, and does not differ from any other time-consuming requirement imposed on litigants by courts in the interest of obtaining full information.
618 F.2d at 841. See also Socialist Workers 1974 National Campaign Committee v. Jennings, 567 F.2d 1133 (D.C. Cir. 1977) (district court order requiring the FEC to compile a factual record concerning harassment of the SWP held nonappealable “as an ad hoc method of fact finding ... in the nature of an instruction to a master to prepare a record and finding, which order is not appealable”).
The Green and Socialist Workers orders were, however, only incidental measures to the resolution of substantive issues which remained before the court. Not so here where the district court evidenced a clear intention not to get into the substantive issues involved in the agency proceeding.
Mandatory orders affecting preliminary agency action have generally been held to be appealable as injunctions under
Finally, we cannot help but note the irony of appellees’ argument that we lack the power to review the district court‘s actions. It is appellees who have strenuously urged a pragmatic and flexible approach to finality in evaluating the propriety of Judge Gesell‘s order because they would suffer from the delay. But now they would have us adopt a far more rigid approach to finality when deciding whether we may review the district court‘s action. We decline to do so.
II. ANALYSIS
Appellants argue that the district court had no jurisdiction to entertain a suit to
Appellees’ answer to both claims is that although exhaustion and ripeness are normally predicates for judicial review, the facts here make out a highly compelling case for earlier intervention. The proceeding is not expected to end for five years. A delay of that length will irreparably impair the producers’ attempt to develop their major defense. Moreover, they claim, years hence it will be impossible to reconstruct the proceeding to support their allegations of basic structural defects and infirmities. Thus, appellants argue, delay will cause them irremediable injury by depriving them of substantial procedural rights. They also point to prior cases in which courts have allowed limited exceptions to traditional finality and ripeness criteria to protect litigants from “structural flaws” and “fundamental infirmities” in ongoing agency proceedings. In such cases courts have found judicious judicial intercession essential to ensure that the parties will eventually have an adequate remedy at law when the agen-
Appellants counter that if such intervention is ever necessary it must be limited to those situations where the court makes findings that actual wrongdoing has taken place, something it did not do here. And, appellants add, even conceding that some of the agency personnel‘s conduct did violate its own regulations, circumstances have sufficiently changed since the court‘s controversial order was issued to require its vacation now in light of those changed circumstances.
We conclude that the district court was justified on the basis of the evidence presented to it in intervening to assure that a full factual record of any misconduct would be preserved for use by the agency itself in the ongoing proceedings as well as for any later judicial review of that action. We believe the district court accurately appraised the situation and acted in an appropriately limited way to protect the litigants’ rights to a fair proceeding. However, we also find that subsequent events have sufficiently reduced the threat of substantial loss of those rights so that intervention by the court is no longer needed. Because of those changed circumstances, we vacate the court‘s order. Since in our view these new developments do not moot the controversy but rather alter our perception of the need for judicial intervention, and in view of the recurrent and varied situations in which we are presented with appeals from ongoing agency actions, we have decided to explain the reasons why we think the district court‘s unusual action in this case was originally justified.
A. The Trial Court‘s Order and the Exhaustion Requirement71
The Department of Energy Organization Act does not explicitly require ex-
The time-honored purposes of exhaustion—to allow an agency to make a record, apply its expertise, and correct errors in its own processes as it goes along76—do not seem particularly well served here where the district court was dealing with an agency proceeding in which it had reason to believe something may have gone fundamentally awry with the way in which the proceeding itself was being conducted, something that transcended dubious or even patently erroneous legal rulings. The statutory scheme of
B. Ripeness
Appellants also argue that the issues here are not “ripe” for review. The Supreme Court stated in Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 136 (1967):
[T]he basic rationale [of the ripeness doctrine] is to prevent the courts, through avoidance of premature adjudication, from entangling themselves in abstract disagreements over administrative policies, and also to protect the agencies from judicial interference until an administrative decision has been formalized and its effects felt in a concrete way by the challenging parties. The problem is best seen in a twofold aspect requiring us to evaluate both the fitness of the issues for judicial decision and the hardship to the parties of withholding court consideration.77
In contrast with exhaustion which focuses on the agency‘s primary responsibility to decide controversies, ripeness is imposed to assure that the issues are “fit for judicial resolution,” i. e., the questions are essentially legal rather than factual in nature,78 and the challenged agency action is sufficiently final to assure that a real controversy exists. 387 U.S. at 149.
1. The Degree of Finality Required for Review
Appellants argue that because the rulings appellees challenge are admittedly not “final agency action,” they are not ripe for
In determining whether an order is sufficiently final for purposes of judicial review, “the relevant considerations ... are whether the process of administrative decisionmaking has reached a stage where judicial review will not disrupt the orderly process of adjudication and whether rights or obligations have been determined or legal consequences will flow from the agency action.” American Dairy of Evansville, Inc. v. Bergland, 627 F.2d 1252, 1260 (D.C. Cir. 1980) (emphasis supplied), quoting Port of Boston Marine Terminal Ass‘n v. Rederiaktiebolaget Transatlantic, 400 U.S. 62, 71 (1970).80
Appellants contend that finality is necessary in this case because Congress intended there be judicial review only of final remedial orders, an intent expressed in
Appellants also refer us to the Supreme Court‘s recent decision in FTC v. Standard Oil Co., 449 U.S. 232 (1980).84 In Standard Oil, the Court held that the issuance of an FTC complaint which precedes the administrative hearing and adjudication alleging “reason to believe” the Federal Trade Commission Act was being violated is not “final agency action” subject to judicial review. Again, the crucial difference between Standard Oil and this case is the nature of the judicial review sought. In Standard Oil, the plaintiffs sought an order requiring the FTC complaint to be withdrawn because it was issued as a result of political pressures and on the basis of insufficient evidence. Here, appellees are not in court challenging OSC‘s proposed remedial order or asking for its withdrawal. They want help in getting the proceeding tried fairly.
Indeed the Supreme Court in Standard Oil assumed that “a record which would be inadequate for review of alleged
2. Hardship to the Parties if Review is Withheld
The expected hardship to the appellees from withholding judicial insight at this juncture of the agency proceedings was the major predicate for the district court‘s July 8 order. Of course, the district court had no way of accurately predicting just how much postponement of judicial relief for several years would affect the capability of the producers to defend against their estimated potential liability of 1.7 billion dollars, nor whether insisting they play to the end what might be a fundamentally flawed proceeding at high financial cost to themselves (and to agency resources) would result in only a second equally expensive and time-consuming go-round with the agencies and the court. Such is the stuff of which district court judgments are made. We do believe, however, appellees made a sufficient showing before the district court that review five years later would likely not be adequate to protect substantial and substantive rights they concomitantly showed to be in danger.
While the injury here is not like that of a typical party seeking pre-enforcement review of administrative action,85 the immediate and long-term harm to appellees’ interests could be just as great.86 The nature and cognizability of that harm has been defined by a series of decisions of this court permitting interlocutory review of nonfinal administrative action where the agency proceedings suffer from a fundamental infirmity requiring a court to act immediately to protect appellees’ rights to a fair proceeding. Association of National Advertisers, Inc. v. FTC, 627 F.2d 1151 (D.C. Cir. 1979), cert. denied, 447 U.S. 921 (1980) (bias in rule-making proceeding); Fitzgerald v. Hampton, 467 F.2d 755 (D.C. Cir. 1972) (denial of a public hearing); Amos Treat & Co. v. SEC, 306 F.2d 260 (D.C. Cir. 1962) (bias in adjudicatory proceeding). In these and other opinions, we have made it clear that “judicial intervention in uncompleted administrative proceedings, as distinguished from judicial checking by statutorily-established method of review, must remain very much the exception rather than the rule.” Nader v. Volpe, 466 F.2d 261, 268 (D.C. Cir. 1972); Association of National Advertisers, Inc. v. FTC, 617 F.2d 611, 621-22 (D.C. Cir. 1979).87
Judge Leventhal, concurring in Association of National Advertisers, 627 F.2d at 1180, wrote:
[A] federal court, district or appellate ... [may] take jurisdiction before final agency action, ... in a case of a “clear right” such as outright violation of a clear statutory provision [citing Leedom v. Kyne, 358 U.S. 184 (1958)]88 or violation of basic rights established by a structural flaw, and not requiring in any way a consideration of interrelated aspects of the merits—which can only be done appropriately on review of a final order.
(Emphasis in original.)
See also Thermal Ecology Must Be Preserved v. Atomic Energy Commission, 433 F.2d 524, 526 (D.C. Cir. 1970) (“An agency‘s procedural or evidentiary rulings do not justify judicial review except in extreme instances where the action is held to constitute an effective deprivation of appellant‘s rights”).89
In sum, we have here a combination of (1) serious allegations originating in the agency itself of document destruction and prohibited ex parte communications between adjudicator and enforcement counsel, (2) backed by admissions of agency personnel that some such actions had already taken place, (3) along with a history of extremely restrictive discovery permitted to the parties to explore the extent of alleged document destruction or their cover-up and (4) the unavailability for an estimated five years under the agency‘s procedures of any judicial review of proceedings of massive scope and complexity. The totality of these circumstances in our view permitted the district court to make an exception to the normal exhaustion, finality, and ripeness rules and justified its limited order requiring that an agency-appointed ALJ conduct discovery into the allegations and report back to the court.
III. CHANGED CIRCUMSTANCES SINCE THE ISSUANCE OF THE DISTRICT COURT ORDER
Mindful that the predicate for the type of limited relief the district court granted in this case is a substantial showing of possible agency misconduct and that without immediate review, such misconduct is likely to prejudice the right of parties before the agency, we believe that the relief the court ordered is no longer necessary. Several critical events have occurred since the district court issued its July 8 order.
In September 1980, Melvin Goldstein resigned as Director of OHA. Paul Bloom, Special Counsel for Compliance, left DOE at the close of the prior Administration in January 1981. Counsel for appellees conceded at argument that the first reported incident of document destruction, involving CPAD “Division” files, has turned out to be “inconsequential” and is no longer of major concern to them. DOE released pursuant to a FOIA request an unexpurgated copy of the issues paper on the eve of argument in this case. All the written ex parte commu-
These altered circumstances drastically change the factual predicate on which the district court based its determination that the proceeding was sufficiently flawed so as to impose an intolerable danger of irremediable harm on the litigants, unless it ordered evidence of alleged unlawful conduct preserved. The individuals involved in both the ex parte communications and the orders to substitute deponents and limit responses to interrogatories have departed the scene; there is a new chairman of OHA who will preside at the rest of the
Accordingly, we vacate the order of the district court under review.
Vacated and remanded.
GINSBURG, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
Based on the considerations Judge Wald presents in Part III of the court‘s opinion—Melvin Goldstein and Paul Bloom have left their offices, the first incident of document destruction was concededly inconsequential, the Department of Energy has released the issues paper to the producers—I agree that court intervention is unwarranted at this juncture. While there are rare cases in which compelling reasons support judicial intervention in an ongoing administrative proceeding, I find no occasion to reach that issue in this case. It seems to me a close, and now moot, question whether the extraordinary action of the district court was an appropriate response to the unusual, shifting circumstances the parties’ presentations indicated. I therefore concur in the judgment, without joining the court in expressing approval of the district court‘s directions to the Secretary, and would remand the case with instructions to dismiss the complaint.
PATRICIA M. WALD
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
