OPINION ANALYSIS
Court approves early challenge to agency proceedings
To the surprise of few informed observers, Friday’s decision in Axon Enterprise v. Federal Trade Commission confirmed a new avenue for pre-enforcement challenges to the administrative proceedings of federal agencies. Traditionally, when an agency institutes an administrative proceeding, the defendant waits until the end of the proceeding and then challenges the result in a federal appeals court, which applies a deferential standard of review limited to the record that the agency has produced.
The Supreme Court broadened a different path with its decision in Axon, which was consolidated with a similar case involving the Securities and Exchange Commission. The two cases include a variety of challenges to the agency proceedings, but the common thread is a claim that the method of appointing the administrative judges unconstitutionally insulates them from presidential control. Justice Elena Kagan’s opinion for the court allows the defendants in both cases to short-circuit the administrative process and go directly to a district court to challenge the proceedings up front.
Continue Reading
