- Justice Kavanaugh says legal doctrine feeds instability
- Conservatives mull overturning Chevron, but Barrett is wary
The
The court is considering overturning a watershed 1984 ruling that often requires judges to defer to agencies when they offer a reasonable interpretation of a statute. Democratic administrations have relied heavily on the ruling, using it to justify mandates on energy, the environment and the workplace.
Although it wasn’t clear after 3 1/2 hours of argument whether the court had the votes to overturn the ruling, the conservative majority generally signaled skepticism toward it.
Justice
“Chevron itself ushers in shocks to the system every four or eight years when a new administration comes in, whether it’s communications law or securities law or competition law or environmental law,” he said. “It’s just a massive change that is at war with reliance.”
Another conservative, Justice
“Maybe nothing happens immediately to those cases, but isn’t the door then open for litigants to come back?” she asked. “Isn’t it inviting a flood of litigation, even if for the moment those holdings stay intact?”
The court could choose to limit the reach of the Chevron doctrine, rather than overturn it altogether.
Artificial Intelligence
The case could be especially important for efforts to regulate new industries and issues, including cryptocurrency and artificial intelligence. Justice
Even if Congress passed a law regulating AI, “Congress knows that there are going to be gaps, because Congress can hardly see a week in the future with respect to this subject, let alone a year, or a decade in the future,” Kagan said. “Does the Congress want this court to decide those questions — policy-laden questions — of artificial intelligence?”
Justice
The cases involve a National Marine Fisheries Service requirement that some herring boats cover the cost of government-approved observers aboard their vessels. Fishing companies based in New England and New Jersey are challenging the estimated $710 daily fee, though it isn’t in effect currently.
The challengers say that while federal law lets the Fisheries Service require monitors, Congress didn’t authorize the agency to demand boat owners pay the cost.
Fishing Law
In each case, a federal appeals court invoked Chevron and said the payment requirement was based on a reasonable interpretation of the 1976 Magnuson-Stevens Act, a law that governs the management of marine fisheries in federal waters.
The Biden administration is defending the requirement and urging the court to leave the Chevron doctrine intact. Solicitor General
“There are 800 district court judges around the nation, and I think it’s fair to say they will likely have different takes about what to do,” she said.
“Chevron is really a reliance-destroying doctrine,” he said. “If you’re a person or regulated entity and you’re trying to figure out what the law is, you should be able to rely on the best interpretation of the law and not have to check” for updates every few years.
The appeals also offer the court a narrower path for backing the fishing companies without directly overturning Chevron. The fishing companies say the court alternatively could rule that, because the 1976 law doesn’t say anything about requiring the industry to pay for the cost of inspectors, Chevron doesn’t even apply.
The challengers drew support from several of the court’s conservatives, including Justice
These are people “who have no power to influence agencies, who will never capture them, and whose interests are not the sort of things on which people vote,” Gorsuch said.
The court is scheduled to rule by late June. The cases are Relentless v. Department of Commerce, 22-1219, and Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, 22-451.
(Updates with comments from lawyers starting in 15th paragraph.)
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