Robocall Regulation and Judicial Review




Legal Sidebari

Robocall Regulation and Judicial Review
July 22, 2019
Robocalls—calls placed using an automatic telephone dialing system or an artificial or prerecorded
voice—continue to be one of the most common consumer complaints received by the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC). Generally, it is illegal under the Telephone Consumer Protection
Act
(TCPA) to place robocalls to consumers without their consent. However, enforcement efforts have
been complicated by technology that allows callers to falsify, or “spoof,” their caller ID information and
adopt an area code or telephone number similar to that of the recipient. One method of combating
robocalls with spoofed numbers involves deploying technology to verify the authenticity of caller ID
information and to block calls made from numbers with unverified caller ID information.
On June 7, 2019, the FCC published a declaratory ruling on the use of call-blocking technologies,
including those that rely on caller ID authentication. The ruling set forth the FCC’s position that
telecommunications providers may provide call-blocking to consumers as a default option without
violating the providers’ statutory duty under section 201(b) of the Communications Act to complete calls
on a “just and reasonable” basis. The ruling is subject to judicial review in the U.S. Courts of Appeals up
to sixty days after its publication; however, the Supreme Court’s recent decision in PDR Network, LLC v.
Carlton Harris Chiropractic, Inc
. l
eaves open the possibility that the ruling may be challenged in district
courts after that time frame and may put the FCC on a shakier footing with respect to regulating robocalls
in the future.
Section 201(b) of the Communications Act
Title II of the Communications Act of 1934 regulates telecommunications service providers who offer
their services to the public (referred to in the Act as “common carriers”). Section 201(b) of the
Communications Act requires that all common carriers ensure that “[a]ll charges, practices,
classifications, and regulations for and in connection with [their services] shall be just and
reasonable . . . .” Section 207 permits an individual to sue a common carrier who violates any of the Act’s
provisions, including Section 201(b).

The June 7 Ruling
Because call-blocking technologies deployed by common carriers deny service to the party initiating the
blocked call, the FCC has clarified on several occasions how Section 201(b)’s “just and reasonable”
requirements apply to call-blocking services. Several FCC orders referred to in the FCC’s June 7 Ruling
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have set forth the FCC’s policy that “opt-in” call-blocking services do not violate Section 201(b). The
June 7 Ruling built on these previous orders by clarifying the FCC’s position that common carriers may
also offer “opt-out” call-blocking services without violating Section 201(b). The FCC reasoned that many
consumers are frustrated by robocalls, but very few consumers go through the process of opting in to call-
blocking services. The FCC noted that consumers’ rights to block calls by choice is not legally
controversial, and nothing in the Communications Act or FCC rules and regulations suggests that
consumers may only opt in to exercise such a choice. The FCC saw opt-out call-blocking programs as a
means to increase participation in call-blocking programs while still respecting consumer choice.
The PDR Network Decision
On June 20, 2019, the Supreme Court of the United States issued an opinion in PDR Network, LLC v.
Carlton & Harris Chiropractic, Inc.
At issue before the Court was whether a federal district court was
required to accept as law an FCC order that defined a term from the TCPA.
A series of statutes known collectively as the Hobbs Act vests in the U.S. Courts of Appeals “exclusive
jurisdiction
to enjoin, set aside, suspend (in whole or in part), or to determine the validity of . . . final
orders of the Federal Communications Commission,” provided such challenges are made within sixty
days
of the FCC issuing the final order. The Court was asked to decide whether the Hobbs Act’s grant of
“exclusive jurisdiction” to federal appellate courts obligates district courts to follow legal interpretations
contained in FCC orders. This question turned on whether the Hobbs Act is a “jurisdiction-stripping”
statute, which takes away the district courts’ jurisdiction to adjudicate challenges to FCC orders, or
merely provides a means for pre-enforcement review of such orders. Reading the Hobbs Act as
jurisdiction-stripping would prevent parties from challenging the FCC’s legal interpretations outside the
60-day period afforded by the Hobbs Act, at which point district courts would have to follow the FCC’s
interpretations.
A brief of one of the parties before the Supreme Court sets out Supreme Court precedent, as well as
multiple decisions from the Courts of Appeals, reading the Hobbs Act as a jurisdiction-stripping statute.
Among the counterarguments raised in the opposing brief is that stripping district courts of jurisdiction
could prevent an entity from having an opportunity to challenge the order, as the Administrative
Procedure Act
(APA) arguably requires, when the entity does not understand how the order affects them
until after the review period has concluded.
Rather than answer the question, the Court remanded the case, holding that the lower courts had not
properly considered: (1) whether the FCC order at issue was a “legislative rule” with the force of law or
an “interpretive rule” that merely states the agency’s construction of the law, and (2) whether the
“exclusive jurisdiction” provision afforded a “prior” and “adequate” opportunity for judicial review of the
order.
Although a majority of the Court declined to reach the merits of the case, at least four Justices appear
willing to hold that district courts are not bound by an FCC order’s legal interpretations. In a concurring
opinion
joined by Justices Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch, Justice Kavanaugh concluded that district courts
should not give the FCC’s legal interpretations the force of law and should instead apply usual principles
of statutory construction. Justice Kavanaugh reasoned that an individual may typically challenge agency
actions under the APA specifically as those actions affect the individual (sometimes known as an “as-
applied” challenge). Because the APA expressly allows for as-applied review, Justice Kavanaugh
determined that as-applied review should only be considered barred if Congress has explicitly done so, as
it has in the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, the Clean Air
Act, and
the Clean Water Act.
Why This Matters for Robocalls


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After the PDR Network decision, district courts may be willing to consider legal challenges to the FCC’s
June 7th Ruling. Prior to the PDR Network decision, few district or appellate courts had questioned the
notion that district courts are bound by the FCC’s orders under the Hobbs Act. While the central question
of PDR Network remains unresolved, the decision has exposed an avenue for challenging FCC orders in
federal courts long after the sixty days allowed by the Hobbs Act have passed. Justice Kavanaugh’s
concurrence does not bind lower courts, but they are free to treat the concurrence as persuasive authority;
thus, lower courts may reverse course on how they treat FCC orders.
The shift contemplated by Justice Kavanaugh’s concurrence would not, however, strip all authority from
the FCC to make legal determinations. More likely is that any such determinations would receive
deference according to the framework set forth in Chevron USA, Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense
Council, Inc
.
Under the Chevron doctrine, a court examining an FCC order interpreting statutory language
would ask (1) whether congressional intent is clear from the language at issue, and (2) if congressional
intent is not clear, whether the agency’s interpretation of the language is reasonable. For straightforward
or uncontroversial definitions set forth by the FCC, applying this framework may result in the FCC’s
definition being upheld. But where the FCC redefines a term in a way dramatically different from the
plain language of the statute, courts may be more willing to strike the new definition down, as the Court
of Appeals for the DC Circuit
did recently when asked to review an FCC order defining an “automatic
telephone dialing system.”
In the case of the June 7 Ruling, a caller blocked by a common carrier could bring suit against that carrier
under Section 207(b) of the Communications Act, challenging the FCC’s conclusion that opt-in blocking
services are “just and reasonable.” While a phrase like “just and reasonable” is ambiguous enough that
courts typically defer to agency constructions of the term, more concrete terms may be subject to greater
scrutiny. The TCPA contains a number of terms that the FCC has clarified through administrative action,
including “prior express consent,” “elderly homes,” and even what constitutes a “telephone call.”
Because the TCPA permits individuals to bring suit against callers who violate it, such callers could now
defend themselves by challenging the validity of FCC orders defining terms in the TCPA.
The questions raised in PDR Network may reach the Supreme Court again, at which point the Court
would have another opportunity to decide whether the FCC’s legal interpretations bind district courts.
Four Justices have indicated that FCC orders are not binding. Regardless of the answer, Congress has the
authority to amend the Communications Act or TCPA with “clear statements” of congressional intent.

Author Information

Eric N. Holmes

Legislative Attorney






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