delivered the opinion of the Court.
The issue in this case is whether certain documents— documents generated by the Renegotiation Board (Board) and by its Regional Boards in performing their task of deciding whether certain Government contractors have earned, and must refund, “excessive profits” on their Government contracts — are “final opinions” explaining the reasons for agency decisions already made, and thus expressly subject to disclosure pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act (Act), 5 U. S. C. § 552 (a)(2)(A), or are instead predecisional consultative memoranda exempted from disclosure by § 552 (b)(5). See NLRB v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., ante, p. 132.
I
Essential to the consideration of whether the documents at issue in this case must be disclosed pursuant to the relevant provisions of the Act is an understanding of the renegotiation process, a process that itself serves to define the documents in issue and hereinafter described.
1
Persons holding contracts or subcontracts with certain departments of the Government were required to file financial statements as prescribed by the Board, 50 U. S. C. App. § 1215 (e)(1) (1964 ed.); 32 CFR Part 1470, if their receipts from those contracts met the requisite jurisdictional amount, 50 U. S. C. App. § 1215 (f). These state
After reference to a Regional Board, a case was usually assigned to a staff team consisting of an accountant and a renegotiator.
8
This team, after determining what further information from the contractor was required, secured such information and received any sub
“A. Sources of Information
“B. Application of Statutory Factors:
“1. Character of Business
“2. Capital Employed
“3. Extent of Risk Assumed
“4. Contribution to the Defense Effort
“5. Efficiency
“6. Reasonableness of Costs and Profiits
“(a) Costs
“(b) Pricing
“(c) Profits
“C. Special Matters
“D. Conclusion and Recommendation.”
After a Report of Renegotiation was prepared, but
After reviewing the Report of Renegotiation and the case file, the Regional Board would make a “tentative recommendation with respect to the amount of excessive profits realized in the fiscal year under review.” 32 CFR § 1472.3 (e). 10 This “tentative recommendation” could “be in an amount greater than, equal to, or less than the amount recommended in the Report of Renegotiation.” Ibid. After a “tentative recommendation” was made, the contractor, unless he declined, attended a meeting with the renegotiation team at which he was informed of the tentative recommendation of the Regional Board, as well as the Regional Board’s reasons therefor, and was afforded the opportunity to respond. The Regional Board would then enter a “final recommendation” either that a clearance be issued or that excessive profits be found in an amount greater than, equal to, or less than the. tentative recommendation reached previously. If this final recommendation of the Regional Board corresponded to that of the staff team or panel, the report would be signed by the chairman of the Regional Board, signifying the approval of the staff or panel recommendation; if the Regional Board’s final recommendation differed from the prior recommendation, an addendum would be attached to the report. The Report of Renegotiation with addenda, if any, will hereafter be referred to for convenience as the Regional Board Report.
Assuming the Regional Board did not recommend a clearance, it notified the contractor of its final recommendation in an effort to obtain an agreement. Toward this end, the contractor, upon request, would be furnished a “summary of the facts and reasons” (Summary) upon which the recommendation was based. 32 CFR § 1472.3 (i). 11 If a contractor did not request such a document, there is no indication that one was ever prepared in his case.
If the contractor declined to enter into an agreement, the case was then reassigned to the Board, to which the case file including the Regional Board Report was transmitted. The case was then assigned to a “division” of the Board, usually consisting of three of its five members, which would undertake a study of the case. Staff personnel would go over both Part IA and Part II of the Regional Board Report and indicate, in memoranda, their
The Board would then meet, each member having had the opportunity to study the case file and the report submitted on behalf of the division, discuss the case, and vote on a final disposition. Neither the Board nor any of its members were bound by any prior recommendations. The Board was free, after discussion, to reject the proposed conclusion reached in the Division Report, or to accept it for reasons other than those set forth in the report. 32 CFR § 1472.4 (d). Assuming the Board did not decide that a clearance should issue, the contractor was then notified of the Board’s conclusion and would be given, at his request, a Summary to enable him to decide whether to enter into an agreement with the Board. If an agreement was not reached, the Board would then enter a
unilateral
order within a specified time, 32 CFR Part 1475, and would issue, pursuant to statute, at the request of the contractor, a “statement of such determination, of the facts used as a basis therefor, and of its reasons for such determination.” 50 U. S. C. App.
(Ü)
If the Regional Board concluded that no excessive profits had been realized by a particular contractor and that a clearance should therefore issue — or if the contractor agreed with the Regional Board as to an amount of excessive profits before the case was reassigned to the Board — then a Division Report was never created in that case. Instead, a “final recommendation” that a clearance be issued or that the agreement be consummated was sent to the Board, and the Board considered the case on the basis of the Regional Board Report, together with comments made by the Board’s accounting and review divisions. After meeting and discussing the case on the basis of these documents, the Board decided whether to approve the Regional Board’s conclusion. If it did, appropriate closing documents were prepared by the
II
Against the foregoing backdrop, respondent filed a complaint, pursuant to the Act, in the District Court on June 27, 1968, seeking disclosure of “certain final opinions, orders and identifiable records” related to or issued during renegotiation proceedings involving 14 other companies during the period 1962-1965. 14 Respondent additionally sought certain documents related to its then-pending renegotiation proceedings before the Board for 1965, but later agreed that it was not seeking access to “ [i]ntraagency memoranda and communications consisting of ad-
On the question whether these documents were “final opinions, including concurring and dissenting opinions, as well as orders, made in the adjudication of cases,” 5 U. S. C. § 552 (a)(2)(A), the District Court permitted respondent to take the deposition of the then Chairman of the Board. That deposition of the Chairman constitutes almost the only evidence of record in this case bearing on this question other than the pertinent statutes and regulations. Although conceding, as it had to on the basis of the Chairman's deposition, that only the Board had final decisional authority, and that it studies and considers, but does not adopt Regional Board or Division Reports, the District Court held that these reports were “final opinions” for purposes of the Act and rejected the Board’s contention that the documents were specifically exempted from disclosure under subsection (b) (5) of the Act, 5 U. S. C. §552 (b)(5) (Exemption 5), which encompasses:
“inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or letters which would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with the agency.”
The Board brought the case to this Court and we granted certiorari,
Ill
Strictly speaking, the issue in this case is whether the Division Reports and the Regional Board Reports fall
A. Regional Board Reports
It is undisputed that the Regional Boards had no legal authority to decide whether a contractor had received “excessive profits” in Class A cases. 22 In such cases, the Regional Boards could investigate and recommend, but only the Board could decide. 32 CFR §§ 1472.3-1472.4. The reports were prepared long before the Board reached its decision. The Board used the Regional Board Report as a basis for discussion and, even when it agreed with the Regional Board’s conclusion, it often did so as a result of an analysis of. "the flexible statutory factors completely different from that contained in the Regional Board Report. Chairman Hartwig testified:
“[W]hen the recommendation clearance of the Regional Board comes up on the Board agenda, the Board simply approves or disapproves the clearance. It does not adopt any of the memoranda that are before it. It does not ratify or adopt any of these staff memoranda. It simply, in the exercise of its judgment, says it is a clearance or it isn’t a clearance.And there is no Board-adopted document which you could call an opinion.” App. 79.
The Regional Board Reports are thus precisely the kind of predecisional deliberative advice and recommendations contemplated by Exemption 5 which must remain uninhibited and thus undisclosed, in order to supply maximum assistance to the Board in reaching its decision. Moreover, absent indication that its reasoning has been adopted, there is little public interest in disclosure of a report. “The public is only marginally concerned with reasons supporting a [decision] which an agency has rejected, or with reasons which might have supplied, but did not supply, the basis for a [decision] which was actually adopted on a different ground.”
NLRB
v.
Sears, Roebuck & Co., ante,
at 152. Indeed, release of the Regional Board’s reports on the theory that they express the reasons for the Board’s decision would, in those cases in which the Board had other reasons for its decision, be affirmatively misleading.
Sterling Drug, Inc.
v.
FTC,
146 U. S. App. D. C. 237, 246-247,
The Court of Appeals’ attempt to impute decisional authority to Regional Boards by analogizing their final recommendations to the final decisions of United States district courts must fail. The decision of a United States district court, like the decision of the General Counsel of the NLRB discussed in
NLRB
v.
Sears, Roebuck & Co., ante,
at 158-159, n. 25, has real operative effect independent of “review” by a court of appeals: absent appeal by one of the parties, the decision has the force of law; and, even if an appeal is filed, the court
In concluding that the Regional Board Reports are within the scope of Exemption 5, it is unnecessary to
It is equally clear that a division of the Board has no legal authority to decide. Once again, it may analyze and recommend, but the power to decide remains with the full Board. The evidence is uncontradicted that the Division Reports were prepared before the Board reached its decision, were used by the full Board as a basis for discussion, and, as the Chairman testified, were “prepared for and designed to assist the members of the Board in their deliberations”; nor is the discussion limited to the material and analysis contained in the Division Report. Following the discussion, any Board member may disagree with the report’s conclusion or agree with it for reasons other than those contained in the report. Indeed, as Chairman Hartwig testified, it is likely that this will occur because of the highly judgmental nature of the Board’s decisions given the number and generality of the statutory criteria. In any event, the reasoning of the Division Report is never adopted — though its conclusion may be — and no effort is made to reach agreement on anything but the result.
It is true that those who participate in the writing of the Division Report are among those who participate in the Board’s decision, and that, human nature being what it is, they may not change their minds after discussion by the full Board. This creates a greater likelihood that the Board’s decision will be in accordance with the Division Report than is the case with respect to a Regional Board Report and that, where the Board’s decision is different, the Division Report will reflect the final views of at least one of the Board’s members. See
NLRB
v.
Sears, Roebuck & Co., ante,
at 158-159, n. 25. However, this is not necessarily so. The Board obviously considers its discussion following the creation of the Division Report to be of crucial importance to its decision for, not
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is
Reversed.
Notes
See generally S. Rep. No. 93-927, pp. 1-2 (1974); Staff Review of Recommendations Made on the Renegotiation Process: A Preliminary Report 3-5 (1974) (prepared for the use of the House Committee on Ways and Means and the Senate Committee on Finance by the staff of the Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation (hereinafter Staff Review)).
Title 50 U. S. C. App. § 1213 (e) reads as follows:
“(e) The term ‘excessive profits’ means the portion of the profits derived from contracts with the Departments and subcontracts which is determined in accordance with this title [§§ 1211 to 1224 of this Appendix] to be excessive. In determining excessive profits favorable recognition must be given to the efficiency of the contractor or subcontractor, with particular regard to attainment of quantity and quality production, reduction of costs, and economy in the use of materials, facilities, and manpower; and in addition, there shall be taken into consideration the following factors:
“(1) Reasonableness of costs and profits, with particular regard to volume of production, normal earnings, and comparison of war and peacetime products;
“(2) The net worth, with particular regard to the amount and source of public and private capital employed;
“ (3) Extent of risk assumed, including the risk incident to reasonable pricing policies;
“(4) Nature and extent of contribution to the defense effort, including inventive and developmental contribution and cooperation with the Government and other contractors in supplying technical assistance;
“(5) Character of business, including source and nature of materials, complexity of manufacturing technique, character and extent of subcontracting, and rate of turn-over;
“(6) Such other factors the consideration of which the public interest and fair and equitable dealing may require, which factors shall be published in the regulations of the Board from time to time as adopted.”
These statutory “factors” were developed by the War Contracts Price Adjustment Board during World War II, were incorporated.by Con
Prior to July 1971, de novo review was by the Tax Court. See 85 Stat. 98.
Through June 30, 1970, 3,524 out of 4,006 eases not resulting in clearances terminated by agreement. Of the remaining 482 cases, the Board’s unilateral orders were challenged in court in 203 cases.
The description of the renegotiation process is of the process existing between 1962 through 1965 — the period in which the documents relevant to this case were generated within the Board — notwithstanding changes made since. Unless otherwise indicated, all citations to the Code of Federal Regulations throughout this opinion are to the Renegotiation Board’s regulations in efféct during this period (i. e., the Code as revised January 1, 1967).
The reference is normally made on the basis of geographical considerations, 32 CFR § 1471.2 (a). These Regional Boards were established in 1952 by regulation, 32 CFR § 1451.32, pursuant to statutory authorization, 50 U. S. C. App. § 1217 (d). Unlike members of the Board, who are appointed to the Board by the President, Regional Board members are civil servants.
Under certain circumstances, cases may be redesignated after their initial designation.. 32 CFR § 1471.2 (f).
During the years 1962-1965, a renegotiator might be a staff member employed by the Regional Board or a member of the Regional Board itself. Under the Board’s current regulations, a member of the Regional Board who acts as a renegotiator in a specific case is thereafter barred from participation in the case as a member of the Regional Board. 32 CFR § 1472.3 (d) (1974). There was no comparable regulation in effect during the period relevant to this case.
32 CFR §1472.3 (d). Under 1972 amendments to the regulations, the Report of Renegotiation was discontinued and was replaced by other reports not relevant to this case. See generally 32 CFR §§ 1472.3 (e)-(g), and (i) (1974).
Under current regulations, the Regional Board no longer makes this “tentative recommendation” in Class A cases, 32 CFR §§ 1472.3 (k) and (1) (1974).
This document was made available to the general public by regulation on February 24,1971. 32 Fed Reg. 3808,32 CFR § 1480.5 (a) (1972). When the Board first made the summaries of facts and reasons available to the public by regulation, it specifically stated that its action was taken “[w]ithout regard to the provisions of 5 U. S. C. [§] 552 (a) (2)____”
Ibid.
Subsequent to the effective date of that regulation, the District Court in this case, notwithstanding the fact that the controversy over respondent’s access to the summaries of facts and reasons sought in this action had apparently been mooted, held that these documents must be made available under the Act as “final opinions’’ of either the Board or the Regional Board, except in certain circumstances.
The “Summaries” and “Statements” were similar in both format and content. App. 35-41; 32 CFR § 1477.4. Under current Board regulations, the Regional Board now issues to the contractor a “Proposed Opinion,” in lieu of the “summary of facts and reasons” discussed above, and furnishes to the contractor a “Regional Board Opinion” when the Regional Board’s recommendation is forwarded to the Board. 32 CFR §§ 1477.3 (a) and (c) (1974). The Board also issues a “Final Opinion” in place of the Statement at the same time as it enters a unilateral order. 32 CFR §1477.3 (b) (1974). All of these documents are available to the public. 32 CFR § 1480.5 (a) (1974).
A dissatisfied contractor had the right at this point to bring an action in the Tax Court, which had jurisdiction to determine
de novo
whether excessive profits had been realized (see n. 3, supra); jurisdiction of these cases has subsequently been transferred to the Court of Claims. See
Renegotiation Board
v.
Bannercraft Clothing Co.,
By reference in its complaint to correspondence between it and the Board of April 26, 1968, respondent requested access to “final opinions, determinations, unilateral orders, agreements, . clearance notices and letters not to proceed issued in the adjudication of renegotiation cases” and “written summaries of the facts and reasons upon which such final opinions, determinations, unilateral orders and agreements have been reached.” Nothing in the complaint or the letter suggests that, at that time, respondent sought the Regional Board Report, or the Division Report, ill any of these renegotiation cases.
Title 32 CFR § 1480.8 read in pertinent part:
“Except as authorized . . . opinions and orders will not be published or made available to the public . . . inasmuch as they are regarded as confidential ... by reason of the confidential data furnished by contractors. ... For the purposes of this paragraph, the term ‘opinion’ includes a statement furnished pursuant to [32 CFR Part 1477] and the term ‘order’ includes an agreement to eliminate excessive profits, as well as a unilateral determination. Opinions and orders are not cited as precedents in any renegotiation proceedings.”
Part 1477, as written during the period 1962-1967, included only Statements and Summaries.
Title 5 U. S. C. § 552 (b) (4) exempts from disclosure “trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a person and privileged or confidential matters.”
138 U. S. App. D. C., at 149,
A more detailed description of the documents sought is set out in the opinion written by the District Court after the initial remand from the Court of Appeals,
The District Court had held the reports of Regional Boards to be disclosable only in instances where a Regional Board made a final recommendation for a clearance and the Board concurred in the recommendation. Id., at 1154. The Court of Appeals did not purport to extend the holding of the District Court to Regional Board Reports in other contexts.
157 U. S. App. D. C. 121, 126-127, and nn. 20 and 23,
Grumman claims that the documents are “final opinions” expressly made disclosable, pursuant to 5 U. S. C. § 552 (a) (2) (A). However, as we noted in the companion case of NLRB v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., ante, at 147-148, a conclusion that the documents are within Exemption 5 would be dispositive in the Government’s favor, since the Act “does not apply” to such documents; and a contrary conclusion would be dispositive against the Government, since it concedes that the documents are “identifiable records” otherwise disclosable pursuant to 5 U. S. C. § 552 (a) (3). Thus, strictly speaking, the question whether the documents are “final opinions” is relevant only in deciding whether Exemption 5 applies to them and is important only because we have construed Exemption 5 in NLRB v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., ante, at 153-154, not to include “final opinions” within the meaning of 5 U. S. C. § 552 (a) (2) (A).
We decline to consider whether this case would be different if the Regional Boards had de facto decisional authority — i. e., if, instead of making up its own mind in each case, the Board "reviewed” the Regional Board’s recommendation under a clearly erroneous or some other deferential standard; or if the Board failed even to review the vast bulk of the reports, absent special circumstances. There is no evidence in the record indicating that the Regional Boards had such de facto authority. Indeed, the evidence is to the contrary. In a recent review by the Comptroller General of 209 cases, the Board concurred in the Regional Board’s recommendation only 85 times. Comptroller General, Report to the Congress: The Operations and Activities of the Renegotiation Board 33-34 (B-163520 — May 1973).
Fact determinations, for example, are reviewable under a “clearly erroneous” standard and certain legal judgments only for abuse of discretion.
The distinction, between “recommendations” and “final opinions” subject to review, for Exemption 5 purposes is compelling. In order that a decisionmaker consider all the arguments in support of all the options, those who recommend should be encouraged to make arguments which they would not make in public and with which they may even disagree. However, if their recommendations were to have operative effect and thus qualify as decisions — even though subject to review — they should be discouraged from basing their decisions on arguments which they would not make publicly and with which they disagree.
We note in passing that, while the conclusion of the court below that the Regional Board’s status as ah agency stemmed from its power to issue “orders” in Class B cases finds support in the cases,
International Paper Co.
v.
FPC,
Since all of the members of the division are free to change their minds after deliberation and are free to place thoughts or arguments in the Division Reports which were only tentative in the first place, we need not reach .the question whether a concurring or dissenting opinion must be disclosed even where no opinion expressing the view of the agency is written.
Respondent argues that Division Reports, as well as concurrences or dissents thereto, constitute “final opinions” of the Board or individual members of the Board, relying on a specific reference, assertedly made to such documents, in the House Report which accompanied the Act, H. R. Rep. No. 1497, 89th Cong., 2d Sess. (1966). That report, in speaking to the Committee’s understanding of what is now codified as 5 U. S. C. § 552 (a) (2) (A), stated:
“[Subsection (A)] requires concurring and dissenting opinions to be made available for public inspection. The present law, requiring most final opinions and. orders to be made public, implies that dissents and concurrences need not be disclosed. As a result of a Government Information Subcommittee investigation a number of years ago, two major regulatory agencies agreed to make public the dissenting opinions of their members, but a recent survey indicated that five agencies — including . . . the Renegotiation Board — do not make public the minority views of their members.” H. R. Rep. No. 1497, supra, at 8.
This statement from the legislative history of the Act supports the proposition that Congress intended the Board to be subject to the
“Except as authorized in Renegotiation Board Regulations 1480.4 (a) (attached), opinions and orders of the Renegotiation Board are not published or made available to the public (see RBR [32 C. F. R. §] 1480.8)
As our prior discussion of 32 CFR § 1480.8, n. 15, supra, makes clear, the “opinions” to which the Board referred were Statements and Summaries. Thus, the reference to concurring and dissenting opinions in the House Report, with respect to the Renegotiation Board, was not to Division Reports but was to nonexistent concurrences to and dissents from Statements and Summaries which were already being made public.
