Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge RANDOLPH.
The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAÁ) asked the Copyright Office to engage in a retroactive rulemaking. The Office promulgated the requested regulation, but refused to apply it retroactively. On MPAA’s complaint, the district court found in favor of the Office for a very basic reason. In adjudication, retroactivity is the norm; in legislation it is the exception. In rulemaking, the administrative analogue to legislation, exceptions are fewer still. Agency power is derived from statutes. If Congress has not conferred retroactive rulemaking power on an agency, the agency has none to exercise.
Bowen v. Georgetown Univ. Hosp.,
I
The Copyright Act establishes a compulsory license system permitting cable television operators to retransmit copyrighted broadcast programming without having to secure permission from each individual copyright owner. 17 U.S.C. § 111. The cable operators pay royalties twice a year to the Copyright Office, according to a statutory formula based on the operator’s “gross receipts.” 17 U.S.C. § 111(d)(1)(B). The royalties are then distributed to the copyright owners by the Copyright Royalty Tribunal. 17 U.S.U § 111(d)(2)-(4).
By the early 1980’s, many cable operators were offering packages (called “tiers”) including both broadcast and non-broadcast channels. But the operators’ royalty payments for broadcast programming were based on the “gross receipts” from whatever packages the operators offered, even if the packages included both broadcast and non-broadcast programming. The Office instituted a rulemaking proceeding to address the potential overcompensation to copyright owners inherent in this scheme. In 1984 the Office decided that it would be too difficult to disaggregate these packages so that “gross receipts” would be based only on the broadcast component of the packages. 49 Fed.Reg. 13,029 (1984).
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The old scheme thus survived, and the cable operators sued. They, initially met success. The District Court for the District of Columbia struck down the Office's 1984 rule as inconsistent with, the Act and ordered the Office to revise it.
Cablevision Co. v. Motion Picture Ass’n,
What concerns us here is the period between Cablevision I and Cablevision II, while the appeal was pending. Because the district court’s order remained in effect for these seventeen months, no valid rule existed to govern how operators were to calculate “gross receipts.” The old rule had been invalidated, and the Office had yet to issue a new one. During the void, each cable operator made up its own rule, and paid whatever royalties it saw fit under a formula of its own devising. Naturally, these methods varied widely.
Anticipating reversal, the Office issued an interim rule requiring operators to keep records detailing what they would have paid under the stricken rule. 51 Fed.Reg. 30,214 (1986). After this court restored the Office’s rule in Cablevision II, the Office issued a “Policy Decision” ordering cable operators to make up the difference between what they paid during the pendency of the Cablevision appeal and what they would have paid had the rule been in effect. 53 Fed.Reg. 2493 (1988). The cable operators complied with this order and tendered more than $100 million in “underpayments.”
MPAA, a group including broadcast copyright owners, was not satisfied. The Office had not assessed interest on the “underpayments.” MPAA therefore filed a “Petition for Rulemaking” with the Copyright Office in 1988, seeking a “rule” requiring the cable operators to pay interest on the
Cablevision
payments. MPAA attached a “Proposed Rule,” which was headed “Substance of New § 201.17(l).” The Office duly initiated a rulemaking proceeding in response. It issued a “Notice of inquiry,” and solicited comments on a proposed rule governing interest on late payments. 53' Fed.Reg. 16,567 (1988). The Office also specifically invited comments on the question whether it had the authority to apply such a rule retroactively to the
Cablevision
payments.
Id.
at 16,568. After a period of comment, the Office published a final regulation requiring interest on all future late royalty payments, but declined to . apply the rule retroactively. 54 Fed.Reg. 14,217 (1989). The proceedings again shifted to district court, where MPAA challenged the Office’s ruling on retroactivity. The court upheld the Office’s decision,
II
No one disputes the Office’s authority to promulgate a rule governing interest on late payments. The only issue is retroactivity. Because MPAA wanted some sort of retroactive decision, it doomed itself from the beginning by asking for a rulemaking. Agencies do not have authority to promulgate retroactive rules unless Congress gives them that authority in express terms.
Bowen v. Georgetown Univ. Hosp.,
We recognize that in
Bradley v. Richmond School Board,
MPAA presses several arguments concerning other subjects, only two of which merit discussion. The first is that the Office actually engaged in an adjudication, despite MPAA’s request for a rule-making. It characterizes the proceeding as a hybrid — a rulemaking with respect to future late payments, and an adjudication of the Cablevision payments. MPAA asks us to review what it sees as the merits of this adverse “adjudicatory” outcome.
We reject this argument. From beginning to end, the proceeding had all the characteristics of a rulemaking. MPAA began by petitioning for a rulemaking in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. § 553(e)). It attached its “Proposed Rule,” a “New § 201.17(l).” The Office also adhered to the APA’s rule-making procedures. It issued a notice of inquiry, published in the Federal Register. 5 U.S.C. § 553(b). It gave interested persons an opportunity to participate through the submission of written comments. 5 U.S.C. § 553(c). The Office published the final “rule” in the Federal Register. 5 U.S.C. § 553(d);
see
54 Fed.Reg. at 14,221; 37 C.F.R. § 201.17(l). The decision was of general application only. 5 U.S.C. § 551(4);
see United States v. Florida East Coast Ry.,
MPAA’s second argument is that the statute foreclosed the Office’s decision to proceed solely on a prospective basis (by rulemaking). MPAA is forced to admit up front that section 111 of the Act is silent on the entire question of interest. It seeks to fill in the blank with what it calls “the statutory presumption in favor of interest.” Given this “presumption,” MPAA insists that the Office had no choice but to award the copyright owners the interest retroactively in an adjudication.
The presumption to which MPAA refers is actually the federal common law rule that a court should ordinarily award prejudgment interest when a statute is silent on the matter.
See, e.g., Rodgers v. United States,
In short, once the Office decided to address the question of interest, the statute
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did not require it to do so in a retroactive adjudication. Because the statute did not command either course, the agency was free to proceed by rulemaking or adjudication in its sound discretion under the Supreme Court’s second
Chenery
decision.
SEC v. Chenery Corp.,
One final point. The Office erroneously believed that the question whether its rule could be applied retroactively was governed by
Retail, Wholesale & Department Store Union v. NLRB,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
