Ninth Circuit Confirms its Jurisdiction to Review Individual Issues That Have Been "Definitively Resolved"
Recently, in
California Department of Water Resources v. FERC, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3404 (9th Cir. February 24, 2004), the Ninth Circuit confirmed its jurisdiction to review discrete
issues that have been "definitively resolved" by an agency order, even if other parts of that same order remain pending before
the agency. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ("FERC") had challenged the Ninth Circuit's jurisdiction to review such
decisions, claiming that they were not "sufficiently final" to warrant appellate review.
Id. at *1. FERC asked the Court to follow a District of Columbia Circuit case, which held that "once a party petitions [an] agency
for reconsideration of an order, or any part thereof, the entire order is rendered nonfinal as to that party," and the party
may therefore not seek appellate review of the order.
Id. (quoting
Bellsouth Corp., v. FCC, 17 F.3d 1487, 1489-90 (D.C. Cir. 1994)).
The Ninth Circuit declined to follow the D.C. Circuit, and instead reaffirmed that the Ninth Circuit's previous ruling in
Steamboaters v. FERC, 759 F.2d 1382, 1387-88 (9th Cir. 1985), allowing review of issues that have been finally resolved by an agency, regardless
of whether other issues remain nonfinal, remains the law in the Ninth Circuit. Id. at *3. The Court emphasized that judicial review of final aspects of agency decisions avoids needless delay, while a party
waits "indefinitely" for an agency to resolve all pending issues in one order. Id. at *4. The Court noted that the risk of delay is exacerbated by FERC's "practice of denying motions for reconsideration and
addressing previously unconsidered issues in the same order." Id. Allowing review of final issues, the Court reasoned, avoids the risk that parties would be forced to choose between "forego[ing]
seeking agency reconsideration of issues or postpon[ing] judicial review" in order to get an efficient resolution of their
case. Id. at *5.
This recent decision underscores that, in the Ninth Circuit at least, review of agency decisions can proceed as each issue
is resolved, thus promoting efficiency and clarity for the parties involved.