MASSACHUSETTS SCHOOL OF LAW AT ANDOVER, INC., Proposed Intervenor, Plaintiff-Appellant v. UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee; American Bar Association, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 96-5247.
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued May 8, 1997. Decided July 15, 1997.
III. CONCLUSION
Judges must be ever-vigilant to ensure that when enforcing the APA‘s requirement of reasoned decisionmaking they defer to agency expertise. The importance of such deference is most acute in regard to safety determinations, given the potential catastrophic effects of inadequate safety regulations, and it is difficult to imagine an agency decision which judges would be more disposed to accept than one that implicates aviation safety. However, deference to agency expertise cannot be allowed to become toleration of arbitrary agency action—or in this case inaction—even in an area as critical as aviation safety. Because I believe the FAA has failed to provide a reasoned explanation for its decision to retain the Age 60 Rule, I would remand to the agency for further proceedings.
David Seidman, Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, DC, argued the cause for appellee United States of America. With him on the brief were Joel I. Klein, Acting Assistant Attorney General, A. Douglas Melamed, Deputy Assistant Attorney
Roger E. Warin, Washington, DC, argued the cause for appellee American Bar Association. With him on the brief were David L. Roll and David R. Stewart.
Before WALD, WILLIAMS and RANDOLPH, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS.
Opinion concurring in the judgment filed by Circuit Judge WALD.
STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge:
On June 27, 1995 the Department of Justice filed a complaint in district court here against the American Bar Association, alleging that through its control of law school accreditation the ABA had violated § 1 of the Sherman Act by, among other things, fixing law school faculty salaries. Simultaneously, the Department filed a proposed consent decree prohibiting certain conduct and ordering structural changes in the ABA Section on Legal Education. Following the procedure for the entry of consent judgments prescribed by the Tunney Act,
The Massachusetts School of Law at Andover (“MSL” or the “School“) is a state-accredited law school that has unsuccessfully sought ABA accreditation. In November 1993 it filed a private antitrust action against the ABA in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, alleging many of the same anticompetitive practices that the Department later charged the ABA with here. It lost in the trial court and (after this case was argued) on appeal. See Massachusetts School of Law at Andover v. ABA, 107 F.3d 1026 (3d Cir.1997).
Before the district court here MSL objected to the proposed settlement agreement on the grounds that it should go further in remedying the alleged antitrust violations and should contain a more effective enforcement mechanism. MSL also claimed that the Department had failed to, and should be required to, file documents that were “determinative in formulating [the proposed consent judgment],”
MSL used a number of channels to advance its position. It submitted written comments in response to the Federal Register publication, as provided for by
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The Tunney Act provides that before a settlement agreement between the Department and a party charged with violating the antitrust laws can take effect, “the court shall determine that the entry of such judgment is in the public interest.”
[T]he court may ... authorize full or limited participation in proceedings before the court by interested persons or agencies, including appearance amicus curiae, intervention as a party pursuant to the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure, examination of witnesses or documentary materials, or participation in any other manner and extent which serves the public interest as the court may deem appropriate.
The Act directs us to look to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for the legal standard governing intervention. MSL suggests, however, that those rules have no application where intervention is sought solely for purposes of filing an appeal. It notes that
The parties have assumed that we review the district court‘s application of Rule 24 for abuse of discretion. Indeed, that is what we said with respect to intervention in proceedings before the district court in Building & Construction Trades Dept., 40 F.3d at 1282. Although in this case the scope of review makes no difference because of our agreement with the district court, it deserves a brief detour to note some complications.
While in Building & Construction Trades Dept., we did not explicitly distinguish between intervention of right and permissive intervention, other courts and even this court have done so in the past. See Edwards v. Houston, 78 F.3d 983, 995 (5th Cir.1996) (en banc); Foster v. Gueory, 655 F.2d 1319, 1324 (D.C.Cir.1981); Hodgson v. United Mine Workers of America, 473 F.2d 118, 127 n. 40 (D.C.Cir.1972). Yet, except as intervention as of right may be likely to involve more pure issues of law, which would be reviewed de novo, cf. Air Line Pilots Ass‘n Int‘l v. Eastern Air Lines, Inc., 863 F.2d 891, 894-95 (D.C.Cir.1988) (explaining that although formula for review of preliminary injunction is abuse of discretion, issues of law are reviewed de novo), it is not apparent that that distinction should be important. It would seem that it is only at the level of the particular issue (or subissue) that one can make sensible distinctions. Thus, in Hodgson v. United Mine Workers, 473 F.2d 118, 125 n. 26 (D.C.Cir.1972), we noted the existence of district court discretion over the timeliness and adequacy of representation issues under
On the other hand, so far as intervention solely for purposes of appeal is concerned, we note that the effect of a decision on such intervention will often be indistinguishable from the effect of a decision on a motion to intervene in an appeal in the court of ap-
Intervention as of Right
Anticipating the application of Rule 24, MSL claims that it was entitled to intervene as of right under
To be sure, we may assume arguendo that the more zealously the Department had pursued its antitrust claims, the greater the resulting advance in the School‘s interest in being free of anticompetitive behavior. But MSL points to no case equating failure to promote an interest with its impairment. At least if we may take the state of the world without the Department‘s lawsuit as the baseline, mere failure to secure better remedies for a third party (whether because of litigative sloth or some more sinister reason) is not a qualifying impairment. And indeed, our Tunney Act jurisprudence seems to make clear that that is the baseline for the Act‘s substantive purposes—the district court is not to reject an otherwise adequate remedy “simply because a third party claims it could be better treated.” United States v. Microsoft Corp., 56 F.3d 1448, 1461 n. 9 (D.C.Cir.1995).
Of course one can imagine an antitrust consent decree that would affirmatively set the School‘s interests back (i.e., “impair”
Even if we found an interest subject to impairment, we would have to consider whether that interest “is adequately represented by existing parties.”
MSL‘s claim of access to documents, based on its interpretation of the disclosure requirement of
Copies of such proposal [for a consent judgment] and any other materials and documents which the United States considered determinative in formulating such proposal, shall also be made available to the public at the district court and in such other districts as the court may subsequently direct.
Id. On the broad view of this provision espoused by MSL, once the proposed consent decree was filed they acquired a legal entitlement to access to a wide range of documents in the government‘s files. The filing of the proposed consent decree, then, triggers a new baseline against which possible “impair[ment]” is to be measured. District court approval of the decree without insistence on such access would set the School back by denying it documents to which it was entitled. Although the School might be able to gain access through discovery in its own antitrust suit, it might well not, given the various privileges that attach to government documents. See, e.g., Tuite v. Henry, 98 F.3d 1411, 1415 (D.C.Cir.1996) (investigatory
Permissive Intervention
MSL claims in the alternative that it should be allowed permissive intervention under
Once a common question of fact or law is found,
At least for intervention for purposes of appeal of a Tunney Act case, the “delay or prejudice” standard of
Although this circuit has no holding on the standard for intervention for purposes of appeal in a Tunney Act case, our treatment of the subject in United States v. LTV Corp., 746 F.2d 51 (D.C.Cir.1984), meshes well with our recent articulation of our (and the district court‘s) review of antitrust settlement agreements under the Act. In part because of the constitutional questions that would be raised if courts were to subject the government‘s exercise of its prosecutorial discretion to non-deferential review, see United States v. Microsoft Corp., 56 F.3d 1448, 1457-59 (D.C.Cir.1995), we have construed the public interest inquiry narrowly. The district court must examine the decree in light of the violations charged in the complaint and should withhold approval only if any of the terms appear ambiguous, if the enforcement mechanism is inadequate, if third parties will be positively injured, or if the decree otherwise makes “a mockery of judicial power.” See id. at 1462.
Similarly, when we discussed the standard for intervention in Tunney Act proceedings in LTV, we suggested that compliance with the public interest requirement would be determinative. In that case we made clear that intervention was a prerequisite for challenging a district court‘s approval of a consent decree. We observed that the would-be intervenor must first establish that its participation would aid the court, 746 F.2d at 54, and went on to cite
the language of the Sixth Circuit in United States v. Hartford-Empire Co., 573 F.2d 1, 2 (6th Cir.1978), a case which occurred after the passage of the Tunney Act but did not discuss it:
A private party generally will not be permitted to intervene in government antitrust litigation absent some strong showing that the government is not vigorously and faithfully representing the public interest.
LTV, 746 F.2d at 54 n. 7 (quoting 573 F.2d at 2); see also United States v. Associated Milk Producers, Inc., 534 F.2d 113, 117 (8th Cir.1976) (post-Tunney Act case adopting similar formula without explicit discussion of the Act and also cited in LTV). Thus only if the would-be intervenor can point to the specific defects identified by Microsoft, or some discrepancy between the remedy and substantially undisputed facts so broad as to render the decree a “mockery of judicial power,” will intervention under
MSL points to nothing that meets this standard. It claims that the decree was deficient in four areas: it failed (1) to lower the high faculty-student ratio required for ABA accreditation, (2) to require the ABA to abandon its ban on for-credit or required bar preparation courses, (3) to ensure the end of secrecy in the accreditation process, and (4) to make the structural changes in the ABA‘s Section on Legal Education necessary to prevent recurrence of the Sherman Act conspiracy. Of course there is no finding that these practices were illegal, and Microsoft reminds us that it would accordingly be “inappropriate for the judge to measure the remedies in the decree as if they were fashioned after trial.” 56 F.3d at 1461. Nonetheless, even as measured by the Department‘s complaint, the decree clearly represents a material accomplishment.
The complaint identified both the first two items as anticompetitive accreditation stan-
As to structural issues, a heading in the complaint asserts that legal educators “Captured the ABA‘s Law School Accreditation Process,” Complaint at 4, United States v. ABA, Civil Action No. 95 1211 (D.D.C. June 27, 1995), followed by descriptive details. In fact the decree limited the percentage of law school deans and faculty sitting on the numerous bodies that make up the Section on Legal Education, including the Council, the Accreditation Committee, the Standards Review Committee, and the site evaluation teams (which report to the Accreditation Committee). See Final Judgment at 5-7, United States v. ABA, Civil Action No. 95-1211 (D.D.C. June 25, 1996). Finally, although one might logically presume secrecy to be a key tool in pursuit of the alleged conspiracy in restraint of trade, it is never mentioned in the complaint. MSL points out that the Department said in the proposed consent judgment that the accreditation process “was kept from public view.” See Appellant‘s Br. at 13. But continuing secrecy, in an otherwise cleansed process, does not necessarily have anticompetitive implications. There is, in short, no reason to infer a sell-out by the Department. Accordingly, MSL does not satisfy the standards for intervention for purposes of appeal.
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We found earlier that MSL could intervene to secure review of the district court‘s rejection of the claim that the Tunney Act requires the government to disclose whatever documentary evidence it has collected in the course of its investigation. MSL relies first on
Copies of such proposal [for a consent judgment] and any other materials and documents which the United States considered determinative in formulating such proposal, shall also be made available to the public at the district court and in such other districts as the court may subsequently direct.
MSL also invokes
The Committee believes that in the majority of instances the interests of private litigants can be accommodated without the risk, delay and expense of the government going to trial. For example, the court can condition approval of the consent decree on the Antitrust Division‘s making available information and evidence obtained by the government to potential, private plaintiffs which will assist in the effective prosecution of their claims.
S.Rep. No. 93-298, 93rd Cong., 1st Sess. 6-7 (1973); H.R.Rep. No. 1463, 93rd Cong., 2d Sess. 8 (1974). This is a lot of weight to give a piece of legislative history that directly conflicts with the congressional intent to preserve the consent decree as a means of resolving government antitrust cases. As MSL‘s claim of entitlement to the Department‘s trove of evidence has no other basis, we affirm the trial court‘s refusal to order it turned over.
Accordingly we affirm the denial of intervention for purposes of appeal, except with regard to the question of whether the Tunney Act requires the government to make evidentiary material available to the public. On the merits of that claim, we find that the Tunney Act does not require that the government give access to evidentiary documents gathered in the course of an investigation culminating in settlement.
So ordered.
WALD, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
I concur in the judgment and in most of the reasoning of the panel opinion. I do want to stress, however, that in my view, the application of
