MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Plаintiff, a manufacturer of steel and a government contractor, brought this action seeking preliminary and permanent relief from an administrative action commenced against it by the defendants on September 29, 1980. These same parties were before me in 1977 in a suit which resulted in a settlement (civil action nо. 77-2039). Their disagreement over the meaning of and constitutional limitations upon executive order 11246 and accompanying regulations has led again to litigation.
*465 The plaintiff’s complaint is based upon a variety of alleged wrongful acts by the defendants associated with the administrative action. The plaintiff аlleges that the practices upon which defendants purport to base the administrative complaint are the same practices specifically approved by the defendants at an earlier time. 1 The plaintiff also objects to the administrative action because it considers it to be duplicative of a private Title VII action now pending before another judge in this district. It is not disputed that the defendants have been assisting the Title VII plaintiffs and monitoring the progress of that case. The plaintiff’s objection stems from its allegation that until May of 1979 it was the policy of the defendants’ agency to dеfer filing administrative actions until the resolution of related private Title VII actions. Since then, according to the plaintiff, the defendants have reversеd the policy with the result that the plaintiff is forced to defend the same practices in two different forums. Read in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, thesе claims amount to allegations of purposeful harassment which the plaintiff suggests is in retaliation for the plaintiff’s prosecution of civil action no. 77-2039 rеferred to above. Plaintiff apparently contends that this harassment has risen to the level of a deprivation of due process.
In addition to alleging that the sole purpose of the administrative complaint is harassment, plaintiff also alleges that the rules and regulations which the defendants seek to enforce in the administrative action are unconstitutional. For example, the plaintiff contends that some of the regulations promulgated to imрlement executive order 11246 as interpreted and applied by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) are in conflict with Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e as interpreted by the Supreme Court in eases such as
Teamsters v. United States of America,
Finally, the plaintiff alleges that the relief the defendants seek before the administrative agency is constitutionally infirm. The plaintiff challenges the defendants’ right to seek class-wide relief. The plаintiff contends that this will require it to pay compensation in situations in which it is not responsible for the injury found to exist.
The defendants have moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of jurisdiction. The defendants allege that this court lacks subject matter jurisdiction because, before bringing this action, the plaintiff failed to exhаust the available administrative remedies. Alternatively, the plaintiff moves to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure alleging that none of the four counts of the complaint state a cause of action upon which relief can be granted. The defendants have treated the exhaustion questiоn as paramount, and I will turn to it momentarily. The Rule 12(b)(6) motion will be denied because the defendants have failed to demonstrate that the plaintiff can prove no facts which would entitle it to relief when the allegations of the complaint are read in a light most favorable to the plaintiff. C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1357 (1969).
Defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction must likewise be denied. Defendants’ argument that this court lacks jurisdiction because the plaintiff did not exhaust administrative remedies is fundamеntally flawed.
See Susquehanna Valley Alliance v. Three Mile Island,
Although the doctrine does not rоb this court of subject matter .jurisdiction in this case, exhaustion remains a troubling prudential issue. The doctrine is “the universally recognized bar to a petitioner sеeking equitable relief from agency action pri- or to the completion of administrative proceeding.” Id. at 453 (footnote omitted). It provides that
“no one is entitled to judicial- relief from a supposed or threatened injury until the prescribed administrative remedy has been exhausted.” Due largely to its genesis as an equitable principle, еxercise of the exhaustion rule is ... a matter within a court’s discretion and does not bear upon the court’s jurisdiction.
Id.
at 453-54 (footnotes omitted). In this circuit three specific circumstances have been recognized where a court should exercise its discretion not to require exhaustion: (1) “when the challenged agency action presents a clear and unambiguous violation of statutory or constitutional rights,” (2) “when resort to administrative procedures is ‘clеarly shown to be inadequate to prevent irreparable injury,’ ” and (3) “when exhaustion is ‘futile.’ ”
Susquehanna Valley Alliance v. Three Mile Island,
Reading the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, each of the exceptions recognized in this circuit arguably applies. The issues of whether the agency action is clearly contrary to law, whether thе administrative remedy is inadequate and whether delay will cause the plaintiff irreparable harm cannot be decided on this record. Therefore, I reserve my ruling on whether for prudential reasons the plaintiff should be required to exhaust administrative remedies.
The plaintiff’s complaint alleged that the agеncy’s decision to file an administrative complaint was reviewable as “final agency action” within the meaning of section 701 of the Administrative Procedurеs Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. §§ 701-704. The Supreme Court’s decision in
FTC v. Standard Oil Co.,
— U.S. —,
For the reasons stated abovе the defendants’ motion to dismiss will be denied. I reserve my ruling on whether exhaustion is *467 appropnate here until the record has been developed by the рarties.
Notes
.
Cf. Continental Can Co. v. Marshall,
. The
Susquehanna Valley
court explained that exhaustion should not be confused with
congressional
еnactments which can limit subject matter jurisdiction such as when congressional legislation “relegatefs] some matters to the ex-elusive jurisdiction of an administrative agency” and “prohibit[s] private enforcement of federal statutes.”
