

 
 Legal Sidebari 
 
Notable Administrative Law Developments 
from 2018  
January 29, 2019 
Last year featured a host of significant developments in the realm of administrative law, from the Trump 
Administration’s continued deregulatory efforts to one (now former) Supreme Court Justice’s call to 
reconsider the foundational Chevron doctrine. Some developments from 2018, however, may be of 
particular interest to Congress, especially those involving such foundational concepts as the separation of 
powers and the boundaries of presidential and agency authority. Such developments include (1) the 
Supreme Court’s treatment of agency deference doctrines, most notably the Court’s consistently narrow 
application of the Chevron doctrine last term; (2) the Court’s decision in Lucia v. SEC and related 
consequences stemming from it for the federal administrative adjudicatory system; (3) federal lower court 
decisions concerning whether the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and Federal Housing 
Finance Agency (FHFA) are structured in a constitutionally permissible way; (4) the fate of the Trump 
Administration’s rule-delay initiatives in the federal courts; and (5) Congress’s regulatory reform 
initiatives. This Sidebar offers a brief overview of these developments. 
1. The Supreme Court and Judicial Deference to Agency Legal Interpretations  
In recent years, there has been significant interest in whether the Supreme Court would reexamine 
precedent concerning the degree of judicial deference given to agencies’ interpretations of the statutes and 
regulations they administer. This interest seems likely to grow in response to Court activity in 2018, 
which might affect the future application and vitality of two important doctrines governing judicial 
deference to agency legal interpretations: the Chevron and Auer (or Seminole Rock) doctrines.  
The Chevron doctrine—articulated by the Court in Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense 
Council, Inc.—requires courts to defer to an agency’s reasonable interpretation of an ambiguous statute it 
administers in certain instances. If Chevron applies, courts engage in a two-step analysis. First, a 
reviewing court determines whether the underlying statute being interpreted is silent or ambiguous on the 
particular issue (Chevron Step One). If it is not, then “the court . . . must give effect to the unambiguously 
expressed intent of Congress.” But if the statute is silent or ambiguous, the court moves to the second step 
(Chevron Step Two), and will defer to the agency’s interpretation, so long as it is a “permissible” (or 
“reasonable”) construction of the statute. Several Justices have criticized Chevron in judicial opinions or 
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other contexts, both with regard to the doctrine’s application in specific situations (such as when an 
agency is interpreting the extent of its own authority under an authorizing statute) and more broadly as 
potentially violating separation-of-powers principles. (See this Sidebar for a more extensive discussion of 
judicial criticisms of Chevron.) 
While some commentators have speculated about Chevron’s future, the Court’s recent treatment of the 
doctrine has focused less upon its continued existence than whether a statute is sufficiently ambiguous to 
trigger review of an agency’s interpretation under Chevron Step Two. In each of the five cases decided in 
2018 in which Chevron deference was potentially relevant, the Court did not reach Chevron Step Two. 
Notably, while Justice Gorsuch—who has expressed broad, foundational concerns with Chevron—
authored three of the five decisions from last year, the remaining two were written by Justices Ginsburg 
and Sotomayor, who have not raised the same fundamental doubts about the doctrine’s constitutionality. 
Although the controlling opinions in each of these cases did not call Chevron into question, some have 
suggested the Court’s engagement in a more searching (or “muscular”) inquiry under Chevron’s Step One  
may effectively narrow the scope of the doctrine, as determining a statute is unambiguous under Chevron 
Step One means that the reviewing court does not reach the question of whether to defer to an agency’s 
interpretation under Step Two.  
Some judges, including Justice Kavanaugh, have stated they are more likely than other judges to conclude 
that a statute is clear under Chevron Step One and therefore are less likely to defer under Chevron Step 
Two. With the ascension to the High Court of Justice Kavanaugh —a jurist who generally favors a 
circumscribed role for Chevron—it seems possible that the Court may continue its trend of engaging in a 
searching Chevron Step One inquiry, meaning that the deferential standard of review involved in Step 
Two is less likely to come into play, all without formally limiting the doctrine’s applicability.  
The past year was also significant in setting the stage for the Court to consider the continued vitality of 
the Auer (or Seminole Rock) doctrine this term. Auer instructs courts to defer to an agency’s interpretation 
of its own ambiguous regulation (as opposed to a statute) “unless it is plainly erroneous or inconsistent 
with the regulation.” Some  Justices and commentators have expressed unease with the doctrine based on 
separation-of-powers and other concerns; Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Thomas and Alito have all 
written opinions expressing a willingness or desire to reconsider Auer, and Justice Gorsuch joined Justice 
Thomas’s dissent from the denial of a petition for certiorari last year that asked the Court to overrule 
Auer. The Justices will soon have a chance to reassess the doctrine. Shortly after Justice Kavanaugh 
joined the Court in October 2018, it granted certiorari in Kisor v. Wilkie  to consider “[w]hether the Court 
should overrule Auer and Seminole Rock.” However, while the newest Member of the Court once 
predicted favorably that the Court would one day overrule Auer, it is an open question whether the Court 
will do so in Kisor. Oral argument in Kisor has been scheduled for March 27, 2019. 
2. Lucia v. SEC and the Status of Agency Adjudicators under the Appointments Clause 
Another significant administrative law development from 2018 was the Supreme Court’s decision in 
Lucia v. SEC, in which the Court held that the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC’s) 
administrative law judges (ALJs) were “Officers of the United States” under the Constitution’s 
Appointments Clause. Under the Appointments Clause, Congress may authorize “the President,” “the 
Courts of Law,” or “the Heads of Departments” to appoint a subset of officers called “inferior Officers” to 
positions within the federal government. The Supreme Court has held that an individual who “exercise[s] 
significant authority pursuant to the laws of the United States” and holds a “‘continuing’ position 
established by law” is an officer pursuant to the Clause. At issue in Lucia was whether the SEC’s ALJs 
were inferior officers and, therefore, required to be appointed by the Commission (i.e., the relevant 
department head) as opposed to members of the SEC staff. 
  
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The critical question in Lucia was whether the SEC’s ALJs exercised “significant authority.” Although 
the Court acknowledged that the “significant authority” standard is “no doubt framed in general terms,” it 
declined to expand on the standard’s meaning. Instead, the Court concluded that the SEC ALJs were 
“near-carbon copies” of adjudicators whom the Court had previously held were officers—the special trial 
judges of the U.S. Tax Court. After ruling that the SEC ALJs were officers under the Appointments 
Clause, the Court then addressed the petitioner’s remedy. Noting that he had raised a “timely” 
Appointments Clause challenge before the Commission, the Court held that the appropriate remedy for 
the petitioner was a new hearing before a different (and properly appointed) adjudicator. 
Although the Lucia decision concerns SEC ALJs, it has raised legal questions regarding the constitutional 
status of ALJs in other agencies and other non-ALJ adjudicators employed by the federal government. 
Several agencies, either prior to or in the aftermath of the Lucia decision, have had their department heads 
ratify the appointment of their ALJs or issued guidance on how to respond to Appointments Clause 
challenges. In addition, on July 10, 2018, the President issued an executive order changing the selection 
procedures for ALJs throughout the executive branch, citing concerns about constraints on agency heads’ 
discretion in selecting candidates.  
The Lucia decision is also potentially consequential for the questions the Court declined to answer, 
including what constitutes a “timely” Appointments Clause challenge and the effect of a department 
head’s ratification of an official’s appointment. Lucia also left for another day the question of whether the 
dual layers of removal protections enjoyed by SEC ALJs—who, like all ALJs, may only be removed “for 
good cause established and determined by” the Merit Systems Protection Board, whose members are also 
protected from at-will removal—are constitutional. This latter question is significant in light of the 
Supreme Court’s 2010 decision holding that the dual for-cause removal protections enjoyed by the Public 
Company Accounting Oversight Board unconstitutionally “impaired” the President’s authority under 
Article II of the Constitution to “hold[] his subordinates accountable for their conduct” and “subvert[ed] 
[his] ability to ensure that the laws are faithfully executed.”  
3. Constitutionality of the CFPB and FHFA 
One of the most notable judicial developments of 2018 did not emanate from the Supreme Court, but 
rather from several lower federal courts faced with assessing the constitutionality of two executive branch 
agencies charged with regulating important aspects of the U.S. economy: the CFPB and FHFA. Both 
entities are “independent” agencies—that is, they are federal agencies imbued with certain statutorily 
prescribed indicia of independence from executive branch control. Among other features, both agencies 
are led by a single Director (as opposed to a multi-member board or commission) who may only be 
removed by the President “for cause.” A line of Supreme Court decisions holds that while Article II of the 
Constitution confers upon the President the ability to remove certain executive branch officers at-will, for-
cause removal protections may be appropriate for officials of certain independent agencies, so long as 
such protections do not “impede the President’s ability to perform his constitutional duty.” A central 
question in decisions evaluating the CFPB and FHFA’s structural features of independence, therefore, is 
whether such features unconstitutionally constrain the President’s powers under Article II.  
Three decisions issued by two federal courts of appeals and a federal district court last year involving the 
CFPB and FHFA are of particular note. In January 2018, the en banc U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. 
Circuit held in PHH Corp. v. CFPB that the CFPB was structured in a constitutionally permissible 
manner, determining, among other things, that the CFPB Director’s for-cause removal protections were 
“squarely within the bounds of [] precedent and history.” However, in June 2018, a judge for the U.S. 
District Court for the Southern District of New York reached the opposite conclusion in CFPB v. RD 
Legal Funding, LLC. In that case, the judge adopted the portion of then-Judge Kavanaugh’s dissent from 
the D.C. Circuit’s en banc PHH Corp. decision, which argued that the agency “‘is unconstitutionally 
structured because it is an independent agency that exercises substantial executive power and is headed by 
  
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a single Director.’” And roughly a month later, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit entered the 
fray in Collins v. Mnuchin, where a three-judge panel held that the “combined effect” of the FHFA 
Director’s for-cause removal protection and the agency’s other features of independence (e.g., single-
director leadership, independent funding stream) unconstitutionally “insulated the FHFA to the point 
where the Executive Branch cannot control the [agency] or hold it accountable.”  
With several courts of appeals poised to render additional decisions on this topic in 2019, the decisions 
from 2018 will play a significant role in the continued development and, perhaps, eventual resolution of 
the important separation-of-powers questions these cases present. 
4. Judicial Treatment of the Trump Administration’s Rule-Delay Attempts 
A theme from 2018 that carried over from 2017 was continued litigation over the Trump Administration’s 
efforts to delay or suspend regulations originally issued by the previous administration. A list maintained 
by one organization which displays the results of court challenges to the administration’s deregulatory 
actions indicates that all of the rule-delays challenged in court in 2017 were either struck down or 
voluntarily rescinded by the relevant agency. Similarly, in 2018, at least one study indicated that the 
majority of courts rendering decisions on challenges to rule-delays concluded that the administration’s 
efforts were not in accordance with governing legal requirements. Such decisions generally held that 
agencies engaging in rule-delays had ignored or acted in excess of their underlying statutory authority or 
had contravened the Administrative Procedure Act by, for example, failing to adequately explain changes 
in agency positions from those articulated under the prior administration or engage in notice-and-
comment proceedings. That said, not all challenges to the administration’s rule-delays were successful 
last year. The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia dismissed a challenge to the Environmental 
Protection Agency’s indefinite stay of a rule after the agency issued a final rule ending the stay and 
imposing updated compliance deadlines.  
The decisions from 2017 and 2018 collectively reaffirmed or articulated many important propositions 
about rule-delays that may inform future agency action. Some courts, for example, held that suspending 
the effective date of a rule is “tantamount to amending or revoking a rule” and, therefore, generally must 
be preceded by notice and comment. Courts have also concluded that agencies have no “inherent 
authority” to delay or suspend rules implementing statutory directives, but instead derive such authority, 
to the extent they have it, from the governing statute.  
5. Congress’s Regulatory Reform Initiatives 
Not all notable administrative developments in 2018 concerned judicial or agency action. This past year 
saw a continuing interest by Members of Congress in legislation to reform the administrative state. In 
2018, Members of the 115th Congress introduced several bills aimed at reforming administrative law and 
procedure, continuing a trend from the 115th Congress when a number of high-profile bills were 
introduced to transform administrative law, including a proposal to eliminate Chevron and Auer 
deference. One prominent  bill passed by the House in 2018, the Guidance Out of Darkness (GOOD) Act 
(H.R. 4809), sought to “increase the transparency of agency guidance documents and . . . make [such] 
documents more readily available to the public.” The bill would have obligated agencies to post their 
guidance documents online. Also notable was S. 3387, which would have reversed the Trump 
Administration’s executive order that changed the selection procedures for ALJs.  
The extent to which the 116th Congress will share the previous Congress’s interest in reforming or 
reimagining the administrative state remains to be seen. But given the host of important issues raised by 
the developments discussed above, there is no shortage of possible topics for legislation or other 
congressional action. 
  
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Author Information 
 
Daniel J. Sheffner 
   
Legislative Attorney 
 
 
 
 
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