Petitioner, a merchant who prevailed as respondent in an administrative action brought by the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (DCRA), claims the administrative law judge (AU) erred as a matter of law when she denied his motion for attorney’s fees and punitive damages because she concluded that she did not have authority to impose such a remedy. We agree with the AU. The DCRA enabling statute does not authorize AUs to grant attorney’s fees or punitive damages in favor of DCRA respondents, and AUs have no inherent authority to authorize such relief. We therefore affirm.
I.
Petitioner (the merchant) is a shoe and leather goods repairman and the owner of Corrective Shoe Repair. DCRA, acting on behalf of a disgruntled customer (the complainant), filed an eight count claim against the merchant alleging unlawful trade practices in violation of the Consumer Protec *1071 tion Procedures Act, D.C.Code § 28-3901 et seq. (1991) (CPPA). The AU dismissed the complaint with prejudice after concluding that the claim was baseless and that complainant had willfully disobeyed the AU’s order to refrain from communicating with the merchant’s witnesses. Both because of the complainant’s behavior and because of the AU’s dissatisfaction with DCRA’s investigation and handling of complainant’s allegations, the AU invited the merchant to submit a motion “for further relief.” In her Decision and Order Re Costs, however, the AU denied the merchant’s motion for attorney’s fees and punitive damages and concluded that “[t]he only relief the [CPPA] empowers the Administrative Law Judge to order on behalf of the innocent [merchant] is the dismissal of the ease with prejudice.” 1
II.
“The Consumer Protection Procedures Act is a comprehensive statute designed to provide procedures and remedies for a broad spectrum of practices which injure consumers.”
Atwater v. Dept. of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs,
(A)damages in contract, and orders for restitution, rescission, reformation, repair, and replacement,
(B) stipulations, conditions, and directives, both temporary and permanent, of all kinds,
(C) enforcement of orders and decrees, collection of civil penalties, and other activities, in the courts,
(D) and other lawful methods.... ”
The DCRA’s Office of Adjudication and its AUs “may use any power granted to [DCRA] in section 28-3903,” including the powers to provide the remedies listed above, but may not dispose of any case “in a manner not expressly authorized in this section.” Id. at § 28-3905(Z). Of relevance here, the Office of Adjudication may order remedies against the merchant, “including punitive damages, treble damages, or reasonable attorney’s fees, as are reasonable and necessary to identify, correct, or prevent the conduct which violated District law.” Id. at § 28-3905(g)(5). 2 But the CPPA does not expressly authorize an AU to grant attorney’s fees or punitive damages in favor of a respondent-merchant.
In addition to enacting the comprehensive and explicit statutory language both granting and restricting the AU’s remedy powers 3 — which do not include an express power to award merchants attorney’s fees or punitive damages — the Council of the District of Columbia has authorized the Superior Court, not an AU, to award attorney’s fees to merchants under the CPPA in specified situations not involved in this case. Section 28-3905(i)(3)(B) allows the respondent-merchant, as well as the consumer-complainant and the DCRA, to bring a cause of action in the Superior Court “for a remedy, enforcement, or assessment or *1072 collection of a civil penalty, when any violation, or failure to adhere to a provision of a consent decree [between the parties], or an [administrative] order has occurred.” The Superior Court “shall levy the appropriate civil penalties, and may order, if supported by evidence, ... damages, treble damages, reasonable attorney’s fees, consumer redress, or other remedy.” Id. The District Council, therefore, has addressed the question of attorney’s fees and extra damages for respondent-merchants and has expressly authorized them only in connection with a Superior Court adjudication under the CPPA, not as part of an administrative adjudication.
By expressly providing that ALJs may award punitive damages and attorney’s fees against merchants for trade practices violating District law, D.C.Code § 28-3905(g)(5), and by further expressly providing that the Superior Court may award treble damages and attorney’s fees to merchants in other circumstances,
id.
§ 28-3905(i)(3)(B), the Council indicated it knew how to authorize and withhold damages and fees for merchants depending on the situation. The Council made even clearer its intention not to permit such fees and damages in unspecified situations by providing that “[n]o case may be disposed of in a manner not expressly authorized in ... section” 28-3905. We accordingly conclude that the Council left no room for awards of attorney’s fees and punitive damages to merchants in unprescribed circumstances. The enabling statute is clear and unambiguous: there is no statutory authority granting ALJs the power to award a victorious merchant any relief beyond dismissal of the consumer’s complaint.
See, e.g., Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
III.
Because there is no statutory authority for the merchant’s claim of attorney’s fees and punitive damages, we turn to the merchant’s argument that the AU had inherent authority to award such relief, 5 despite the exclusivity clause in the CPPA:
No case may be disposed of in a manner not expressly authorized in this section. Every complaint case filed with the Department and within its jurisdiction shall be decided in accordance with the procedures and sanctions of this section....
D.C.Code § 28-3905(Z). He argues that this court should construe a recent Supreme Court decision,
Chambers v. NASCO, Inc.,
— U.S. -,
In Chambers the Supreme Court affirmed the equitable power of federal courts to draw upon common law principles in ordering certain non-statutorily prescribed remedies and sanctions:
It has long been understood that certain implied powers must necessarily result to our Courts of justice from the nature of their institution, powers which cannot be dispensed with in a Court because they *1073 are necessary to the exercise of all others.... These powers are governed not by rule or statute but by the control necessarily vested in courts to manage their own affairs so as to achieve the orderly and expeditious disposition of cases.
Id.
Ill S.Ct. at 2132 (quotations, brackets, and citations omitted). “Indeed, ‘[t]here are ample grounds for recognizing ... that in narrowly defined circumstances federal courts have inherent power to assess attorney’s fees against counsel’.... ”
Id.
at 2133 (quoting
Roadway Express, Inc. v. Piper,
In contrast with judicial tribunals, however, administrative law tribunals — created by the legislature to serve dispute resolution and rulemaking-by-order functions within agencies of the executive branch — by definition and design do not have the inherent “equitable authority” that courts in the judicial branch have derived from common law traditions and powers. Administrative law judges only possess narrowly defined statutory and regulatory powers; they do not have the traditional equity power of courts to formulate remedies. “The sanctioning authority of an agency may include a specific sanction, or may be stated in general terms. In either case, the agency may exceed neither the specific nor general grant of power authorized by [the legislature].” J. Stein, G. Mitchell & B. Mezines, 4 Administrative Law § 41A.01 (1991 ed.) (footnotes omitted);
see also Ass’n of Admin. Law Judges, Inc. v. Heckler,
This is not to say that administrative tribunals do not have some discretionary power — implied by authority expressly granted to them under organic statutes — in the regulation of the parties and proceedings before them. For example, in
Brown v. District of Columbia Bd. of Zoning Adjustment,
The merchant has not cited, and we have not found, any authority even remotely suggesting that the imposition of attorney’s fees
8
or punitive damages
9
as remedy and sanction after a decision on the merits — without statutory or regulatory authorization and in spite of statutory language barring unspecified relief — is a “well established rule[] of procedure generally applicable to agency adjudications.”
Brown,
IV.
We therefore conclude that the AU was correct in denying merchant’s motion for attorney’s fees and punitive damages. The AU does not have the statutory or inherent authority to award such relief or to impose such sanctions.
Affirmed.
Notes
. In his brief and argument to this court, the merchant does not readily distinguish the AU’s alleged power to order the DCRA and the complainant, respectively, to pay punitive damages and attorney’s fees. Because we conclude the AU has no power to award such relief against either the DCRA or complainant, we have no need to sort through merchant’s arguments.
. The Council of the District of Columbia amended the Act to include the pertinent language on attorney’s fees and punitive damages in subsection (g)(5) after the AU had entered the order denying attorney’s fees and punitive damages in this case. See District of Columbia Consumer Protection Procedures Act Amendment of 1990, D.C.Law 8-234.
.Further evidence of the legislature’s intent to carefully circumscribe the remedy powers of the Office of Adjudication is found in the CPPA provisions which state that the Department may not “order damages for personal injury of a tortious nature," D.C.Code § 28-3903(c)(l), and may not apply the remedy provisions of § 28-3905 to "an action of an agency of government,” id. at § 28-3903(c)(2)(E).
. The plain meaning we discern comports with the agency’s own interpretation of its statute, as pronounced by both the AU and the DCRA in this case.
See, e.g., Pro-Football Inc.
v.
Dep’t of Employment Servs.,
. The merchant also claims Superior Court Civil Rule 11 gives the AU authority to award punitive damages and attorney’s fees. This argument is frivolous. The court rules only apply “in all suits of a civil nature in the Civil Division of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia whether cognizable as cases at law or in equity_” Super.Ct.Civ.R. 1.
. Although the Superior Court and the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia were established by Congressional Act and are thus Article I courts, we do not assume that in creating such courts "Congress ... intended to depart from established principles such as the scope of a [judicial] court's inherent power.”
Chambers,
. The
Brown
case has a rather tortuous subsequent history, none of which relates directly to the principle for which we cite it here.
See Brown v. District of Columbia Bd. of Zoning Adjustment,
. We note that "[g]enerally, under the 'American Rule,' absent express statutory authorization or a contractual provision, each party is responsible for its own attorney’s fees.”
Schlank v. Williams,
. We note “[t]he clear weight of authority ... is that as a general rule there can be no recovery of punitive damages against a municipality absent a statute expressly authorizing it.”
Smith v. District of Columbia,
