Accra Pac abandoned an aerosol-can facility following an explosion and fire. The United States filed suit demanding that Accra Pac remove hazardous wastes from the site. The parties settled; Accra Pac did not concede liability but promised to cleanse the site under a plan agreeable to the Environmental Protection Agency. In 1997 the epa ratified Accra Pac’s proposal. Dissatisfied with mere approval, Accra Pac asked the district judge who is supervising compliance with the consent decree to take a blue pencil to the epa’s decision. Stripped of its details, Accra Pac’s objection is that the epa used the occasion to trumpet that it had been right all along, and that Accra Pac’s data (and proposed cleanup plan) confirmed the need for action. Accra Pac ■ asked the judge to require the epa to be more neutral, reflecting the fact that the case was settled without an adjudication of liability. But the judge decided that the epa’s characterizations have some factual support and refused to require any change.
Before oral argument, we called for supplemental memoranda to address two issues that the parties’ briefs slighted: whether there is appellate jurisdiction and, if so, whether the district court itself had
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jurisdiction. Appellate jurisdiction is problematic because its only potential source is 28 U.S.C. § 1291, which authorizes appeal from a “final decision.” One of many orders interpreting or implementing a consent decree cannot readily be called “final”, and we have held accordingly that housekeeping orders in long-running cases are not appealable. E.g.,
Bogard, v. Wright,
Suppose Accra Pac had filed suit under the apa seeking review of the epa’s order. The district court would have dismissed that suit without reaching the merits, because Accra Pac could not have established the first requirement: that it be “adversely affected or aggrieved” by the administrative decision. 5 U.S.C. § 702. Unwelcome language in a substantively favorable decision is not the kind of adverse effect that meets the requirement of actual injury.
CH2M Hill Central, Inc. v. Herman,
Reluctance to review language divorced from results has a sound footing in the statutory requirement of an adverse effect — not to mention the constitutional requirement of a “case or controversy” — and has practical support too. Few victors in litigation or the administrative process are thrilled with the opinion; almost everyone perceives that different language could have produced benefits — perhaps ammunition for some future dispute (a particular concern of institutional litigants and those involved in long-running disputes), perhaps psychic gratification. It is work enough to resolve claims made by losers; review of claims made by
winners
could double the caseload, and to what end? Judicial time devoted to what may be a litigant’s will-o’the-wisp is time unavailable to resolve other, more concrete, disputes. No wonder appellate courts do not issue Writs of Erasure to change language in district judges’ opinions, when the judgments are uncontested. When the speaker is part of the Executive Branch, there is even less justification for altering the language used to explain a decision. The President and his aides are entitled to express their views in their own words, without supervision by the Judicial Branch. Not even Accra Pae would dream of asking the district court to edit the brief filed by the Department of Justice in this case. It is no more sup
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portable for a judge to edit the epa’s memorandum explaining its decision to approve Accra Pac’s cleanup proposal. Although it is possible to imagine situations in which language alone would meet the adverse effect requirement, a litigant’s allegations do not cross that threshold even if they portend long and costly wrangling.
FTC v. Standard Oil Co.,
An unreviewable accusation that a tract of land is polluted by toxic wastes could cause injury by diminishing the land’s market value. Cf.
Mead Corp. v. Browner,
Surprisingly, however, the United States believes that normal rules of justiciability do not apply to applications under consent decrees. Its supplemental memorandum states that a court’s authority to superintend the implementation of a consent decree dissolves all obstacles to judicial review. The judge himself was of this view, writing: “There is no requirement that Accra Pac articulate a new injury to have standing; it is sufficient for jurisdictional purposes to identify a dispute related to the consent decree.” That can’t be right. Suppose the consent decree had a clause dispensing with the need for an Article III case or controversy and appointing the district judge ombudsman for all quarrels related to Accra Pac’s site. That clause would be ineffectual: district judges can’t suspend the application of Article III or grant themselves the power to issue advisory opinions one case at a time, and litigants can’t stipulate to the enlargement of federal jurisdiction. A case or controversy must be present at every moment of the litigation. That’s the point of the mootness doctrine, which is as applicable to consent decrees as to other judgments.
Like many another decree, this one reserved to the court the power of enforcement. But general language about continuing jurisdiction must be limited to enforcement of the decree when the parties are at loggerheads about some concrete subject, lest it condone a violation of Article III. When drafting the decree, the parties must have shared this assumption. Paragraph 55 establishes a dispute-resolution procedure for “disputes that neither pertain to the selection or adequacy of any response action nor are otherwise accorded review on the administrative record”, a category that includes this dispute about the contents of the epa’s memorandum of decision. Subparagraph 55(a) entitles Accra Pac to complain to the Director of the epa’s Waste Management Division, a step it took in this dispute (with partial sue- *634 cess); subparagraph 55(b) continues: “Judicial review of any dispute governed by this Paragraph shall be governed by applicable provisions of law.”
There you have it. The district court did not approve a settlement that dispenses with the requirements of Article III and the apa; the judgment instead insists that these requirements be respected. Neither side has pointed to any “applicable provision[ ] of law” authorizing judicial resolution of a dispute about language in an administrative order that is substantively favorable to the party seeking review. The district judge therefore should not have entertained Accra Pac’s request for review. Its decision is vacated, and the case is remanded with instructions to dismiss Accra Pac’s application for want of jurisdiction.
