MEMORANDUM OPINION
The seven named plaintiffs in the above-captioned case, acting as Trustees of the United Mine Workers of America Combined Benefit Fund (“Trustees”), allege that Kenneth S. Apfel, 1 Commissioner of the Social Security Administration (“Commissioner”), violated the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A), by interpreting § 9704(b)(2) of the Coal Industry Retiree Health Benefit Act (“Coal Act”) in a manner contrary to law. Both the Commissioner and the Intervenor-Defendants, coal companies that are assigned premium-payment obligations under the Coal Act, have moved to dismiss this action for failure to state a сlaim upon which relief may be granted. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). Having carefully reviewed the parties’ well-drafted briefs, controlling law, and the entire record, the Court denies the motions to dismiss.
I. BACKGROUND
To adjudicate the pending motions to dismiss, a cursory review of the facts will suffice.
2
In 1992, Congress enacted the Coal Act, 26 U.S.C. §§ 9701-9722, to ensure that over 100,000 retired miners would continue to receive health-care benefits. This legislative effort is but the latest chapter in the long and storied history of this nation’s coal-mining industry and the labor struggles that it has precipitated. Just recently, the Supreme Court chronicled the morе salient events during the past sixty-plus years that culminated in the Coal Act.
See Eastern Enterprises v. Apfel,
— U.S. —, —-—,
Although the Coal Act preserved the traditional, privately-financed approach to funding retirees’ health-care benefits, Congress assigned an integral role to the Commissioner of Social Security in implementing the substantive promise of the Coal Act. 3 Pursuant *23 to § 9704(b)(2), the Commissioner is instructed to calculate a per-beneficiary premium for each plan year. See § 9704(b)(2). While the Commissioner enjoys broad power to calculate the premium, Congress has delineated the variables that the Commissioner is to apply in conducting this calculus. Under the Coal Act, the per-beneficiary premium for each plan year is to be equal to the sum of
(A) the amount determined by dividing—
(i) the aggregate amount. of payments from the 1950 UMWA Benefit Plan and the 1974 UMWA Benefit Plan for health benefits (less reimbursements but including administrative costs) -for the plan year beginning July 1, 1991, for all individuals covered under such plans for such plan year, by
(ii) the number of such individuals, plus
(B) the amount determined under subpar-agraph (A) multiplied by the percentage (if any) by which the medical component of the Consumer Price Index for the calendar year in which the plan year begins exceeds such component for 1992.
26 U.S.C. § 9704(b)(2)(A)-(B).
For reasons that warrant no elaborate analysis at this point in the litigation, the Commissioner formerly interpreted the term “reimbursements” in a manner that generated per-beneficiary premiums in an amount favorable to the Trustees. Finding this interpretation at odds with congressional design, several contributing coal companies brought suit under the APA to enjoin the Secretary to adopt a less taxing interpretation of “reimbursement.”
See National Coal Ass’n v. Chater,
C.A. No. CV94-H-780-S,
II. Discussion
A. The Trustees, never having participated nor having been joined in the 'prior Eleventh Circuit litigation, are not barred by res jtidicata from prosecuting the present action.
According to the venerable common-law doctrine of res judicata, “a judgment on the merits in a prior suit bars a second suit involving the same parties or their privies based on the same cause of action.”
Parklane Hosiery Co. v. Shore,
Were this general rule an absolute, res judicata obviously would erect no barrier to the Trustees’ present action. While the
National Coal I
litigation addressed the very issues that the Trastees seek to litigate in this forum', the Trustees did not participаte
*24
in the prior proceedings nor did the coal companies attempt to join the Trustees. The Intervenor-Defendants, however, press into action a footnote from
Martin v. Wilks,
Whatever the scope of the Wife-footnote 2 exception is, by the Supreme Court’s own words, it is to be invoked only “in certain limited circumstances.”
Id.
Indeed, the Court cited explicitly just two situations in which the exception might apply; neither of which remotely manifests in this case. The first of these “limited cirсumstances” that the Supreme Court found applicable was the “class” or “representative suits.”
See id.
(citing
Hansberry v. Lee,
The only other “limited circumstance” that the Supreme Court recognized explicitly in
Wilks
was the situation presented by
Montana v. United States,
In contrast to the pervasive presence and control that the 'Untied States exercised in
Montana,
the Trustees in
National Coal I
played virtually no role. Conceding that the Trustees “did not exercise the same degree of control over the prior case that the non-party did in
Montana,”
Intervenors’ Mot. to Dismiss at 10, the Intervenors nonetheless argue that the
Montana
exception governs. Yet the Intervenors struggle to marshal any evidence that the Trustees participated actively in
National Coal I.
That the Trustees were “fully aware of the proceedings and the issues presented,” Intervenors’ Mot. to Dismiss at 10, indicates nothing about whether they played any active role in the case. Indeed, under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, simply being “fully aware” of proceedings will not bind a party to an adverse judgment. As the Supreme Court concluded: “Joinder as a party, rather than knowledge of a lawsuit and an opportunity to intervene, is the method by which potential parties are subjected to the jurisdiction of the court and bound by a judgment or decree.”
Wilks,
Based on the foregoing, the Trustees’ present Complaint does not fall within the four corners of the Wiifcs-footnote 2 exception. Nonetheless, both before and after
Wilks,
the Circuit courts have invoked a theory of “virtual representation” that mirrors substantially the exception that the Supreme Court reduced to a footnote in
Wilks. See, e.g., Gonzalez v. Banco Central Corp.,
The virtual-representation doctrine, however, also illuminates what the Supreme Court may have meant in
Wilks
when it referred to parties that share the “same interests.”
Wilks,
Here, although the Commissioner and the Trustees both advocated the same interpretation of “reimbursements” in
National Coal I,
the incentives that animated their normative conclusions could not be more different. The Coal Act does not assign to the Commissioner any role as surrogate for the Trustees; he is to act impartially to both the Trustees and the coal companies in calculating the per-beneficiary premium. As the intervenors, themselves, state; “The Commissioner’s motivation in the prior case was to protect her power to command judicial deference when implementing statutory responsibilities imposed on her by federal legislation.” Inter-venors’ Mot. to Dismiss at 9. Guided not by administrative zeal, the Trustees are advocates who administer the Combined Fund for the benefit of retirees. As fiduciaries, the Trustees are charged with ensuring the economic vitality of the fund, and derivatively, the health-care needs of thousands of retired mine workers. Whereas the Commissioner lacks any monetary incentive to adopt one interpretation over another, the Trustees have a compelling and palpable interest in advancing an interpretation that will augment the corpus of the Combined Fund by millions of dollars over the coming years. Such disparity of incentives, notwithstanding identity of legal postures, forecloses this Court from invoking res judicata to deny the Trustees their day in court.
See Cleveland County Ass’n for Gov’t by the People,
B. That the Commissioner adopted an interpretation of a congressional statute pursuant to a district court injunction does not insulate the interpretation from APA review for action that is “not in accordance with law”
The APA mandates that a district court “shall ... hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions found to be — arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). Both the Commissioner and the Intervenors. advance the rather interesting argument that, as a matter of law, an agency does not act arbitrarily and capriciously whеn it adopts an interpretation at the behest of a district court injunction. The Trustees do not take issue with this argument. Instead, they assert that, regardless of whether such agency action would be arbitrary or capricious, it nonetheless may violate the APA’s “not in accordance with law” standard. To this, the Commissioner counters that the “central thrust” of his argument “is that an agency’s lawful compliance with an express injunctive order of a federal court cannot, as a matter of law, be deemed to violate any aspect of APA *27 § 706(2)(A); such compliance cannot (and does not) сonstitute agency action that is either ‘arbitrary,’ ‘capricious,’ or ‘not in accordance with law.’ ” Commissioner’s Reply at 5 (emphasis in original).
Defendants rely primarily on the Supreme Court’s decision in
GTE Sylvania, Inc. v. Consumers Union of the U.S., Inc.,
The Supreme Court disagreed and reversed. While holding that the district court injunction did insulate the CPSC from a request to produce documents under FOIA, the Supreme Court’s rationale is not as transcendent as the Defendants portray it. Importantly, the Court framed the issue to be decided in
GTE Sylvania
as: “[T]he sole question is whether the first requirement, that the information has been ‘improperly’ withheld, has been satisfied.”
GTE Sylva-nia,
Though by no measure obvious,
GTE
Sylvania’s superficial similarity to this case does not control. It is crucial to recognize at the outset that the Trustees are not pursuing their claim under the “arbitrary or capricious” standard of review. For if they were, their challenge would fail because, as they concede,
see
Pl.’s Opp’n at 24-25, the Commissioner had no discretion to ignore the injunction of the Alabama district court. Where the judicial inquiry looks to whether the agency acted arbitrarily,
GTE Sylvania
plainly holds that an agency cannot abuse its discretion if it had none to exercise.
See GTE Sylvania,
Unlike the “improperly withheld” standard before the Court in GTE Sylvania, however, it is the APA’s “not in accordance with law” rubric that governs this Court’s review of the Commissioner’s interpretation of “reimbursements.” This Circuit has long recognized the subtle, yet fundamental differences between arbitrary or capricious review and the APA’s “not in accordance with law” standard:
[Chevron analysis], of course, sounds closely akin to plain vanilla arbitrary-and-capricious style review. But it should immediately be made clear that interpreting a statute is quite a different enterprise than policymaking, еspecially as embodied in rules that have the force of law. Funda *28 mental differences under the APA turn on that distinction, and the agency is engaged in an analytically distinct function to the extent that it is engaging in an interpretation of the statute .... In short, much of the “arbitrary and capricious” style analysis concerned with reasoned agency deci-sionmaking ... cannot be applied directly to the question of whether an agency’s interpretation of a statute is “contrary to law.” It would be inappropriate, therefore, to import wholesale that body of law and apply it in a conceptually distinct arena.
Continental Air Lines v. Department of Transp.,
As it was before the Alabama district court when the coal companies mounted their challenge to the Commissioner’s interpretation in
National Coal I,
the task that confronts this court “[i]n determining whether a regulation is ‘in accordance with law' [is to] apply the familiar two-part test of
Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
Because
Chevron
governs whether an agency interpretation is in accordance with law,
see Military Toxics Project,
To adopt the Defendants’ argument in this case would be to emasculate the cardinal tenets of administrative law and separation of powers. The Defendants’ theory potentially subordinates the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress to the injunctive decree of a single district court and, perhaps, a panel of an appellate court. Such a result turns Chevron on its head. For if we were to assume, arguendo, that the Eleventh Circuit’s decision and the Commissioner’s corresponding interpretation contradicted the “unambiguously expressed intent of Congress,” under the Defendants’ proposal, this Court nonetheless would have to defer to the agency’s Article-Ill blessed interpretation despite its manifest tension with the will of the Article I branch. Neither GTE Sylvania nor essential notions of administrative law and *29 constitution design permits this Court to adopt the Defendants’ novel plea.
Not only does the Defendants’ proposal improperly subjugate legislative intent to judicial interpretation, it has the curious effect of elevating a lone district or circuit court to the de facto status of the Supreme Court. That is, were administrative agencies able to insulate themselves from APA attacks by cloaking themselves in the injunctive decree of a single court, paramount issues of national importance would be forever determined by just that lone court. While, of cоurse, the losing party could always petition the Supreme Court for certiorari, rarely will that court agree to hear a case before the issue has percolated in the lower courts and has generated a significant split in authority. See Sup.Ct. R. 10.1(a). As the Chief Justice has explained:
[Bjorne out time and again in our decisions to grant and deny certiorari, is that ordinarily a court of appeals decision interpreting one of Ot; precedents — even one deemed to be arguably inconsistent with it — will not be reviewed unless it conflicts with a decision of another court of appeals. This fact is a necessary concomitant of the limited capacity in this Court.
Hubbard v. United States,
C. Comity does not support dismissal
The doctrine of comity does not, as the Intervenors suggest, warrant dismissal. “The case law of this circuit makes it clear that ‘cоmity’ is rarely employed to justify the dismissal of viable claims that are otherwise properly before the court.”
Northwest Forest Resource Council v. Dombeck,
Here, as in
Northwest Forest Resource Council,
one of the parties to the present litigation never appeared before the first district court. This case also shares with
Northwest Forest Resource Council
the fact that the prior litigation has long since concluded. Under these circumstances, comity’s twin pillars, “to assure judicial efficiency and to reflect abiding respect for other courts,” are wholly absent from this case.
See Consumers Union of U.S., Inc. v. Consumer Prod. Safety Comm’n,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasоns, the Court denies the motions to dismiss filed by the Commissioner and the Intervenors.
Notes
. Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 25(d)(1), Kenneth S. Apfel has been substituted for former Social Security Commissioner Shirley Chater as the Defendant in this litigation.
. When reviewing a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted the Court accepts as true all of the factual allegations in the Complaint.
See United States v. Gaubert,
. Congress initially vested the Secretary of Health and Human Services with the statutory responsibilities that the Commissioner of Social Security now possesses. See Social Security Independence and Program Imрrovements Act of 1994, Pub.L. No. 103-296, § 108(h)(9)(A), 108 Stat. 1481, 1487.
. Based on a quotation taken out of context, the Intervenors suggest that this Circuit concluded in
Frederick County Fruit Growers Ass’n v. Martin,
. The Commissioner fears that were this Court to enter judgment in favor of the Trustees, he would be forced tо navigate the narrow compass between obeying the Scilla of this Court's Order and the Charybdis of the Eleventh Circuit’s injunction. Such concerns are misplaced. The Trustees have proposed that this Court either stay whatever equitable decree it might issue pending appeal or simply grant declaratory relief. See Pl.’s Opp'n at 41. By their own concession, "[b]oth options provide the Trustees with an avenue to meaningful relief.” Because the Trustees have voluntarily limited their prayer for relief to these options, the dilemma that the Commissioner raises need not' be addressed beyond what has been said here.
