Representative Stewart B. McKINNEY, et al.,* Appellants,
v.
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF the TREASURY; John M. Walker,
Jr., Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Enforcement and
Operations); United States Customs Service; and William
Von Raab, Commissioner of Customs, Appellees.
Appeal No. 85-2806.
United States Court of Appeals,
Federal Circuit.
Aug. 8, 1986.
Paul D. Kamenar, Washington Legal Foundation, Washington, D.C., argued for appellants. With him on brief was Daniel J. Pepeo.
David M. Cohen, Director, Commercial Litigation Branch, Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., argued for appellees. With him on brief were Richard K. Willard, Asst. Atty. Gen. and Velta A. Melnbrencis. Terry Thiele, Atty.-Advisor, Office of General Counsel, Dept. of the Treasury, of counsel.
Before BISSELL and ARCHER, Circuit Judges, and RE, Chief Judge.**
ARCHER, Circuit Judge.
Appellants appeal from the judgment entered in Representative Stewart B. McKinney, et al. v. United States Department of the Treasury, et al.,
Background
Section 307 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended,2 provides that:
All goods, wares, articles, and merchandise mined, produced, or manufactured wholly or in part in any foreign country by convict labor or/and forced labor or/and indentured labor under penal sanctions shall not be entitled to entry at any of the ports of the United States, and the importation thereof is hereby prohibited, and the Secretary of the Treasury is authorized and directed to prescribe such regulations as may be necessary for the enforcement of this provision. The provisions of this section relating to goods, wares, articles, and merchandise mined, produced, or manufactured by forced labor or/and indentured labor, shall take effect on January 1, 1932; but in no case shall such provisions be applicable to goods, wares, articles, or merchandise so mined, produced, or manufactured which are not mined, produced, or manufactured in such quantities in the United States as to meet the consumptive demands of the United States.
"Forced labor", as herein used, shall mean all work or service which is exacted from any person under the menace of any penalty for its nonperformance and for which the worker does not offer himself voluntarily.
The United States Department of State, in February 1983, furnished the Congress with a report entitled "Report on Forced Labor in the U.S.S.R." Accompanying this report was a letter of the Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs which stated that forced labor3 was used to produce large amounts of primary and manufactured Soviet goods for both domestic and export markets.4
In September 1983, the Commissioner of Customs sought approval from the Secretary of the Treasury to publish5 in the Federal Register his findings that certain products from the U.S.S.R. may have been produced by forced labor, which would have the effect of prohibiting the entry of such products into the United States. See 19 CFR 12.42(g). In May 1984, the Secretary of the Treasury notified the Commissioner that such a determination was not warranted at that time, but should be deferred pending a study by the International Trade Commission.6
Thereafter in May 1984, eighty-four members of Congress and several associations petitioned the United States Customs Service7 to bar importation of goods produced in the U.S.S.R. wholly or in part by forced labor.8 The Assistant Secretary for Enforcement and Operations of the Treasury subsequently notified these petitioners that the Department of the Treasury would not act on their petition until such time as additional evidence became available.
In January 1985, the Secretary of the Treasury, on the available evidence,9 determined that there was no reasonable basis upon which to establish a nexus between Soviet forced labor practices and specific imports from the U.S.S.R. or to bar importation of any goods produced in the U.S.S.R. In doing so, the Secretary declined to adopt the Commissioner's proposed findings of late 1983.10
Appellants filed the present action on September 26, 1984 seeking declaratory and injunctive relief and filed an amended complaint on February 20, 1985. They alleged that the denial of their May 1984 petition constituted a final agency action, 5 U.S.C. Sec. 704 (1982), which was arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with the law. 5 U.S.C. Sec. 706(2)(A), (D) (1982). The appellants further alleged that agency action on their petition was unlawfully withheld or unreasonably delayed. 5 U.S.C. Sec. 706(1).
The court concluded that, with the exception of the congressional appellants in their capacities as workers and producers, none of the appellants possessed standing.11
The court also concluded that the action must be dismissed as moot. Id. at 1241. It determined that the decision by the Secretary of the Treasury in 1985 superseded the 1983 findings of the Commissioner of Customs, and that the relief sought by appellants--a declaration that the Commissioner made findings pursuant to 37 C.F.R. Sec. 12.42(e), a mandatory injunction implementing these findings in accordance with Sec. 12.42(e), and a determination that the Commissioner improperly denied the appellant's May 1984 petition--was mooted by the Secretary's decision.
On appeal it is argued that all of the appellants in the capacities now asserted have standing, viz., that, either directly or as a representative of their members or constituency, all have suffered injury. As consumers, the injury is that they do not wish to purchase these illegal products and subsidize Soviet human rights violations. They also claim injury "as stockholders in U.S. companies which compete with the illegal imports, as members of the International Longshoremen's Association which are forced to handle these products; as public interest organizations which have a specialized interest in this area; and as Congressmen who are affected by the defendants' actions in their personal, representative and legislative capacities." Appellants also argue that the court committed error in holding that the present case is moot.
OPINION
* Fundamentally, the question of standing involves the determination of whether a particular litigant is entitled to invoke the jurisdiction of a federal court to decide the merits of a dispute or of particular issues. Warth v. Seldin,
When the standing of a litigant is placed in issue, the court must undertake a two-step analysis which involves both the constitutional limitations and the prudential limitations that circumscribe standing. Warth,
Article III confines the role of the federal courts to adjudication of actual "cases" and "controversies." Allen v. Wright,
The principal limitation imposed by Article III is that a litigant seeking to invoke the court's authority must "show that he personally has suffered some actual or threatened injury as a result of the putatively illegal conduct of the defendant." Gladstone, Realtors,
The nature of the actual or threatened injury that must be established by the litigant has been described by the Supreme Court variously as: a "judicially cognizable" injury, Allen,
But the Court has cautioned that "abstract," "conjectural," or "hypothetical" injury is insufficient to meet the Article III requirement for injury. City of Los Angeles v. Lyons,
The Supreme Court has also recognized that an organization may have standing to assert the claims of its members, even where the organization itself has not suffered an injury from the putatively unlawful action. Hunt v. Washington State Apple Advertising Commission,
In addition to the constitutional requirements, the Supreme Court has articulated several prudential limitations that may be relevant in addressing the issue of standing. A litigant must generally assert his own legal rights or interests, and cannot rest his claim to relief on the legal rights or interests of third parties. Warth,
II
Appellants have variously alleged standing as consumers, workers and producers, shareholders, handlers, public interest organizations, and legislators who are adversely affected by the importation of Soviet goods in contravention of Sec. 307. We consider below each of these classes of appellants and their particular claims of injury as suggested by the Supreme Court in Allen:
Typically ... the standing inquiry requires careful judicial examination of a complaint's allegations to ascertain whether the particular plaintiff is entitled to an adjudication of the particular claims asserted.
A. Consumers
Congressional appellants, in their personal capacities14 as consumers, have alleged that they are adversely affected by the purchase of, or risk of purchasing, Soviet goods produced by forced labor.15 The congressional appellants appear to be asserting an alleged Article III injury which they believe reflects both economic injury16 and non-economic ethical injury.17 We address both aspects of such alleged injury.
For the purpose of this analysis, it is assumed that the economic detriment alleged is sufficient to satisfy the injury requirement imposed by Article III. We conclude, however, that this court should refrain from exercising jurisdiction over appellants' complaint as it relates to their status as consumers because of the "zone of interests" prudential limitation.
Section 307 was enacted by Congress to protect domestic producers, production, and workers from the unfair competition which would result from the importation of foreign products produced by forced labor. No stated or implied intention is evident in the statute or its legislative history to protect the consuming public from the importation of goods produced by forced labor. Although Sec. 307 also regulates the importation of products produced by forced labor, it does so in a manner that will afford domestic consumers a supply of such products through importation when there is insufficient domestic production to satisfy consumer demand. Thus, Sec. 307 only affords consumers a legal right or interest to have access to such products by relaxation of the import ban when they are in short supply domestically. This legal interest, however, is not implicated or asserted by any of the appellants claiming consumer status.
The plain language of Sec. 307, accordingly, will not support an interpretation that it was enacted to afford consumers a legal right or interest in preventing, for economic, moral, or ethical reasons, the importation of foreign goods produced by forced labor.18 Had Congress intended such protection to flow from Sec. 307, it would likely have imposed an absolute bar, i.e., precluding importation of foreign products found to have been produced by forced labor under all conditions, rather than a conditional exclusion to be lifted in the event of unfulfilled domestic demand. See McKinney,
As to the non-economic injury claimed by appellants as consumers, we do not agree with appellants' assertion that this is the kind of injury that satisfies the Article III requirement. The alleged non-economic injury is founded on the adverse psychological consequences arising from inadvertent support of immoral conduct with which appellants disagree. Id. at 485,
Even if this non-economic injury satisfied Article III, prudential limitations counsel against standing for appellants as consumers. In view of the above analysis of economic injury, it is even more unlikely that Congress intended Sec. 307 to shield the psyche of domestic consumers against foreign products produced through human rights violations. Such a conclusion would be anomalous in the face of the exception provided by Sec. 307 for short-supply importation of goods produced by forced labor. Appellants as consumers and their claimed non-economic injury are not within the "zone of interests" protected or regulated by Sec. 307.
Moreover, appellants are also prudentially limited from asserting standing as injured consumers because their injury is not peculiar to a distinct group. Gladstone, Realtors,
B. Producers
The WLF asserts standing on the basis of its members and supporters20 who include "manufacturers or producers or workers employed by manufacturers or producers of products which are similar to and compete with goods or products being imported unlawfully from the Soviet Union." To rely on derivative or associational standing, the WLF must show that it meets the requirements for standing articulated by the Supreme Court in Hunt v. Washington State Apple Advertising Commission,
One of the Hunt requirements is that an organization must demonstrate that the interests it seeks to protect are germane to the organization's purpose.
Additionally, WLF has failed to show that its producer and worker members have standing to sue in their own right.21 International Union, --- U.S. at ----,
WLF admits in the amended complaint that Soviet forced labor products are "not readily identifiable," although it does mention four broad categories of such products, viz., wood products, refined oil products, gold ore, and farm machinery.23 The products set forth in the Sec. 12.42(e) findings of Commissioner of Customs von Raab24 are likewise not sufficiently specific for the most part to clearly delimit Soviet-made products that would contravene Sec. 307.25 Even if it is assumed that these products have been satisfactorily identified in the amended complaint,26 standing for WLF on the basis of its member producers and workers would still have to be denied because the complaint has not "alleged facts sufficient to make out a case or controversy had the members themselves brought suit." International Union, --- U.S. at ---- - ----,
C. Shareholders
Several of the appellants28 assert standing on the basis of stock ownership in companies that manufacture or produce goods that compete with the Soviet products allegedly made with forced labor. They argue that an allegation of competitive injury to a corporation in which stock is owned is a sufficient basis for shareholders to have standing and, further, that the extent of the competitive injury need not be substantial.29
While allegations showing competitive injury may be appropriate to confer standing in appropriate circumstances, see, e.g., Arnold Tours, Inc. v. Camp,
Moreover, a corporation is a legal entity capable of asserting its own legal rights and interests. There has been no demonstration by any of the appellants claiming shareholder status of need or reason for assisting a corporation or for pursuing remedies to which the corporation may be entitled. As a result, the appellants would be prudentially limited from asserting a claim for relief based upon the legal rights or interests of these third parties. Valley Forge,
D. International Longshoremen's Association
The International Longshoremen's Association, AFL-CIO, (ILA) has asserted standing for itself and through its members31 on the basis of both economic and non-economic injuries. We have addressed the non-economic injury question, see supra Section A. Consumers, and the same reasoning applies with equal force to that type of injury claimed for ILA and its members. Accordingly, we conclude that the ILA does not possess standing on the basis of the alleged non-economic ethical injury, either in itself or derivatively through its members. See McKinney,
The economic injury alleged by the ILA is based upon damages assessed, or which may be assessed, against ILA as a result of civil suits arising from the ILA's refusal to handle allegedly illegal Soviet imports. Even if sufficient to satisfy the injury requirement of Article III, the alleged economic injury is not fairly traceable to the challenged action of the Customs Service. Allen,
The court, citing to International Longshoremen's Association, AFL-CIO v. Allied International, Inc.,
E. Public Interest Organizations
The WLF, the Union Mutual Foundation (UMF), the Constitutional Institute of America (CIA), the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America, Inc. (UCCA), and the Ukrainian Student Association of Michnowsky (TUSM) argue that they are parties having such a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy to assure the concrete adverseness which sharpens the presentation of issues upon which a court so largely depends for illumination of the issues. Flast v. Cohen,
The WLF alleges34 that, because of the refusal of the Customs Service to enforce Sec. 307 with respect to Soviet forced-labor products, it is required to engage in extensive research and related activities, at its own expense, to obtain information needed to advise and inform its members and clients on the nature and extent of such products. The cases cited by the WLF35 appear to support its contention that this type of injury would satisfy Article III. Where the injury in fact is not obviously within the reach of the particular statutory provision upon which the litigant has founded his claim, Allen,
We find no basis for concluding that the WLF's injury is obviously within the reach of Sec. 307. The question, therefore, is whether this statutory provision, i.e., Sec. 307,36 can properly be understood as granting a person in the WLF's position a right to judicial relief, Warth,
The UMF, in the amended complaint, avers that it undertakes "activities to protect and promote the welfare of the American worker," and objects to the importation of Soviet forced-labor products. Other than the terse objection to the importation of Soviet products allegedly produced by forced labor,37 the UMF has singularly failed to set forth any allegation of injury, actual or threatened, as mandated by Article III. Allen,
With respect to the CIA the amended complaint states only that it is a joint project of the WLF and the UMF through which these foundations petitioned the Customs Service to prohibit the importation of Soviet forced-labor products. No allegation of injury having been made, there is no predicate for standing for the CIA. Valley Forge,
The amended complaint avers that the UCCA and the TUSM, and their members, object to and are adversely affected by the continued importation of Soviet forced-labor products as are the other appellants. The facts alleged in the complaint, taken as true for purposes of a standing analysis, must be sufficient to show that a party has suffered, or is likely to suffer, an injury in fact. Valley Forge,
The amended complaint also alleges that the Ukrainian appellants "are particularly injured in that a large portion of the political prisoners in labor camps in the Soviet Union are from the Ukraine." Leaving aside the question of whether this alleged injury complies with the injury requirement of Article III, this alleged injury is not causally connected to any conduct, let alone putatively illegal conduct of the Customs Service. Allen,
CONCLUSION
We have examined in some detail, as suggested by Allen,
For the reasons discussed, we find the appellants' amended complaint inadequate to show that appellants possess standing in any of the capacities that they have asserted or for any of the injuries they have claimed. As appellants who are consumers, the economic injury asserted, which in truth may be nothing more than an ethical or moral injury, is not within the zone of interests covered by Sec. 307 and the non-economic injury claimed is neither of a type that would satisfy Article III nor within the protection or regulation of the statute. As appellants who are shareholders, sufficient facts showing Article III injury have not been set forth and the prudential bar applies to the assertion of third party rights. WFL in its association or derivative status has failed to demonstrate the Hunt requirements of germaneness to the organization's purposes and judicially cognizable injury to members. Moreover, its direct injury is clearly not within the "zone of interests" of Sec. 307. ILA does not allege facts sufficient to claim associational standing and, as an organization, any injury it suffers is due to the action of parties not before the court rather than from the putative illegal acts of the Customs Service. Finally, with respect to the other organizations, the amended complaint of the appellants is not sufficient to show Article III injury.
Having concluded that none of the appellants possesses standing, we need not, and do not, address the mootness issue.
Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the Court of International Trade on the basis that none of the appellants has standing, either directly or in any representative capacity, to maintain this action.
AFFIRMED.
APPENDIX OF APPELLANTS
Representative Stewart B. McKinney
Representative Andrew Jacobs, Jr.
Representative Bob Livingston
Representative Thomas N. Kindness
Representative Philip M. Crane
Representative Robert A. Roe
Representative Eldon RuddRepresentative Daniel B. Crane
Representative James H. Scheuer
Representative Peter H. Kostmayer
Representative Norman D. Shumway
Representative Dan Burton
Representative Gerald B.H. Solomon
Representative Raymond J. McGrath
Representative Norman F. Lent
Representative Mickey Edwards
Representative Webb Franklin
Representative William F. Clinger, Jr.
Representative George C. Wortley
Representative William J. Hughes
Representative Antonio Borja Won Pat
Representative Dan R. Coats
Representative Edward J. Markey
Representative Larry E. Craig
Representative Thomas J. Bliley, Jr.
Representative Tom Lewis
Representative Manuel Lujan, Jr.
Representative Bill McCollum
Representative Robert E. Badham
Representative Wayne Dowdy
Representative Nancy L. Johnson
Representative Edward F. Feighan
Representative Tom Corcoran
Representative Mark Siljander
Senator Jesse A. Helms
Senator Steven D. Symms
Washington Legal Foundation
Union Mutual Foundation
Constitutional Institute of America
Ukrainian Congress Committee of America, Inc.
Ukrainian Student Association of Michnowsky (TUSM)
International Longshoremen's Association, AFL-CIO
Constance Claffey
Notes
Appellants are individually listed in the Appendix
The Honorable Edward D. Re, Chief Judge, United States Court of International Trade, sitting by designation
19 Cust. B. & Dec. No. 33, at 57 (August 14, 1985)
19 U.S.C. Sec. 1307 (1982)
For purposes of the opinion no distinction is drawn between convict labor, forced labor, or indentured labor, herein referred to as "forced labor." The amended complaint generally uses the term "slave labor."
This report and the accompanying letter are reprinted in Forced Labor in the Soviet Union: Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Human Rights and International Organizations of the House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, 98th Cong., 1st Sess. 96-125 (Comm.Print 1983)
The proposed publication was entitled "Withholding of Release of Merchandise from Soviet Union Which May be Produced by Convict, Forced, or Indentured Labor." The Commissioner sought to publish these findings as provided by 19 CFR Sec. 12.42(f). Although not explicitly found by the court the Commissioner of Customs appears to have made the necessary condition-precedent findings under 19 CFR Sec. 12.42(e) that "merchandise within the purview of section 307 is being, or is likely to be, imported" from the U.S.S.R. The court opinion indicates only that the Commissioner, citing the State Department report, see supra note 4, and congressional and public concern, sought approval from the Secretary of the Treasury to publish a finding pursuant to Sec. 12.42(f). McKinney, No. 85-73, slip op. at 58
Memorandum of May 16, 1984, from Donald T. Regan, Secretary of the Treasury, to William Von Raab, Commissioner of Customs, stated in pertinent part that:
I have decided that no determination of any kind is warranted at this time. As you are aware, the Senate Finance Committee has directed the International Trade Commission to review this matter in depth. I think it necessary, given the current paucity of reliable information, to withhold any determination until we have the benefit of the International Trade Commission's study.
It appears, on the basis of the May 23, 1984, letter from congressional petitioners to the Commissioner of Customs, that their action was initiated based upon the belief that the Commissioner had already made the necessary finding under 19 CFR Sec. 12.42(e). See supra note 5 and accompanying text
Based upon information (which may come from a Customs official, from any person, or otherwise be available, 19 CFR Sec. 12.42(a), (b) and (e)), which reasonably, but not conclusively, indicates that goods within the purview of Sec. 307 are being, or are likely to be imported, the Commissioner may make a finding to such effect. 19 CFR Sec. 12.42(e). If the Commissioner makes such a finding, Sec. 12.42(e) directs him to promptly advise district directors of the Customs Service, who shall withhold release of such goods until further advised by the Commissioner as to their disposition. Since the Commissioner appears to have made a sua sponte finding pursuant to Sec. 12.42(e) with respect to certain U.S.S.R. imports, see supra note 5 and accompanying text, these petitioners were requesting the Commissioner to carry out his further duty as set forth in Sec. 12.42(e)
This evidence included the ITC report issued in December 1984, see supra note 6, entitled International Practices and Agreements Concerning Compulsory Labor and U.S. Imports of Goods Manufactured by Convict, Forced, or Indentured Labor, Inv. No. 332-178, Public. No. 1630, and an informational letter from William J. Casey, Director of the CIA, to Donald T. Regan, Secretary of the Treasury
Memorandum of January 28, 1985, from John M. Walker, Jr., Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Enforcement and Operations, to William von Raab, Commissioner, U.S. Customs Service. See also Letter of February 28, 1985 from John M. Walker, Jr., Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Enforcement and Operations, to The Honorable Stewart McKinney
It has been clarified on brief that the congressional appellants do not claim standing as "workers and producers."
Others include mootness, ripeness, political question and the like
Associational standing requires that the organization show that:
(1) its members would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right;
(2) the interests it seeks to protect are germane to the organization's purpose; and
(3) neither the claims asserted nor the relief requested requires the participation of the individual members in the lawsuit.
These principles were recently reaffirmed by the Supreme Court in International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America v. Brock, --- U.S. ----, ----,
The congressional appellants also contend that, in their representative capacities, they may assert the legal rights or interests of their constituents as consumers. The only precedent cited in support of this proposition is the concurrence of Senior Circuit Judge Fahy in Kennedy v. Sampson,
As a United States Senator he represents a sovereign State whose people have a deep interest in the Act and look to their Senators to protect that interest; and he, as Senator, it seems to me, has a legal right not only to seek judicial protection of those interests,....
Id. at 446. The congressional appellants rely upon these statements for the broad proposition that congressmen have standing to assert the legal rights or interests of their constituents in their representative capacities. We disagree. Since the issue in Kennedy was whether the Family Practice of Medicine Act had been enacted as law, Judge Fahy's comments can be construed as implying standing to a legislator in his representative capacity only when the case or controversy involves a legislative function or procedure.
The Washington Legal Foundation (WLF), on behalf of itself, its members and supporters, and Constance Caffey, a member and Executive Director of WLF, assert standing based upon their status as consumers. WLF may assert a claim to relief based upon its alleged rights as a consumer, but may not assert a claim to relief on the basis of third parties, i.e., its supporters. Valley Forge,
The alleged economic injury as consumers appears to be that they are making expenditures for Soviet products which they do not wish to purchase, and that these expenditures subsidize the respective Soviet industries. It is doubtful that either should be classified as an economic injury for there is no suggestion that full economic value has not been obtained from the expenditure. Thus the stated injury seems to fall into the non-economic category. See infra note 17
The alleged non-economic ethical injury as consumers appears to lie in the trauma induced in appellants by the unwitting purchase of Soviet products produced in contravention of moral and legal principles held by such consumers
In statutory interpretation, the language of an enactment will be given its plain meaning unless this reading would lead to a result at variance with the policy of the legislation as a whole. Trans Alaska Pipeline Rate Cases,
But see supra note 16
See supra note 15. The congressional appellants similarly argue that they have a right to sue in their representative capacities on behalf of their constituents who are workers and producers. But, as discussed in note 14 supra, the congressional appellants, in their representative capacities, cannot assert a third party's legal right or interest in the enforcement or execution of Sec. 307 inasmuch as this question does not involve a legislative function or procedure
See Hunt,
Valley Forge,
These are the only Soviet products set forth in the amended complaint. The complaint, however, avers that such Soviet products "have been particularly identified by defendant," which we take to mean the Sec. 12.42(e) findings by Commissioner von Raab. See supra note 5; infra note 25; but see infra note 26. For the purpose of analysis we will presume that all of the products identified in the Commissioner's Sec. 12.42(e) findings are intended to be incorporated by reference in the amended complaint
See supra note 5; infra note 25
Commissioner von Raab identified the Soviets goods as lumber, furniture, clock cases (wood), radio-tv cabinets, chess pieces (wood), wooden souvenirs, wooden crates, cardboard boxes, cathode ray tubes and components, resistors, camera lenses, glassware including chandeliers, auto parts, wheel rims, agricultural parts, gold ores, iron ore and manganese ore, bauxite, uranium ore, lignite coal, asbestos, crushed limestone, construction stone, gravel, ornamented coats (male and female, of various materials), non-ornamented coats, and gloves
This presumption is tenuous at best due to the gross generalizations in categorizing the Soviet goods. That a more precise particularization of goods alleged to be imported in contravention of Sec. 307 may be inherently more difficult in the case of a closed society such as the Soviet Union does not abrogate the requirement of Article III to allege a judicially cognizable injury. Valley Forge,
Relevant information might include one or more of the following: (1) reduction in product pricing; (2) decline in domestic sales; (3) decline in domestic production; (4) drop in producers' share prices; (5) decline in the number of producers; (6) producer bankruptcies; (7) worker layoffs or cutback; or (8) reduction in workers' wages
Constance Claffey, the WLF, and several of the congressional appellants
In support of these propositions appellants have cited: United States v. SCRAP,
The competitive injury alleged in the amended complaint is a form of economic injury
While a labor organization such as the ILA may assert derivative or associational standing based upon its members, the ILA must allege sufficient facts to show that "its members would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right." Hunt,
On appeal ILA has conceded that criminal prosecution of the ILA under 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1761 (1982) for handling convict goods is remote. Accordingly, the injury from threat of criminal prosecution is clearly conjectural or speculative and insufficient to meet the injury requirement of Article III. City of Los Angeles,
The court correctly concluded that ILA does not have standing to assert the interests of non-ILA members. See supra note 15
The WLF's arguments that it has standing to sue as a consumer, shareholder, or in a representative capacity have been addressed supra
To support its argument that this type of direct economic detriment is a sufficient basis for standing, the WLF relies primarily on Pacific Legal Foundation v. Goyan,
Appellants have asserted that this cause of "action arises under 19 U.S.C. Sec. 1307, and a right of judicial review is provided by.... 5 U.S.C. Sec. 702." Section 702 provides, in pertinent part, that:
A person suffering legal wrong because of agency action, or adversely affected or aggrieved by agency action within the meaning of a relevant statute, is entitled to judicial review thereof....
Thus, even though a right to review may be asserted under Sec. 702, the standing question must focus on the scope of the legal rights or interests devolving from the relevant statute. Cf. Data Processing Service,
To the extent that this objection could be construed as asserting a basis for standing as a consumer, Warth,
