APPELLANTS' MOTION FOR INJUNCTION PENDING APPEAL
Appellants, through their undersigned attorneys, respectfully move this Court for an Order,
pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 8(a), enjoining Defendants/Appellees from publishing the dioxin listing in the
"known" category of the 9th Report on Carcinogens ("9th RoC") during the pendency of Appellants'
forthcoming appeal. Counsel for Appellants attempted to contact counsel for Appellees by telephone
yesterday to advise her of Appellants' intent to file the instant motion, a copy of which is being served by
hand on counsel for Appellees this morning.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This case involves a challenge to Appellants' proposed upgraded listing of the chemical 2,3,7,8
tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin ("dioxin") in the 9th Report on Carcinogens ("RoC"). Plaintiffs/Appellants are
businesses whose products have been alleged contribute to human dioxin exposure, and Appellants are
very concerned that the proposed upgraded cancer classification for dioxin in the RoC will adversely and
irreparably harm their businesses.
The RoC, a report which HHS is directed by statute to publish, lists suspected carcinogens in one
of two possible classifications, either (i) "known" or (ii) "reasonably anticipated" to be carcinogenic to
humans. Dioxin has been listed in the "reasonably anticipated" category for the past several editions of
the RoC (since 1982) and, pursuant to agreement of the parties before the Court below, remains in that
category today, pending the outcome of this litigation.
The full 9th RoC was published on May 15, 2000. The report lists 218 chemicals, including dioxin,
as either "known" or "reasonably anticipated" human carcinogens. A footnote in the "reasonably
anticipated" dioxin listing indicates that a proposal to upgrade the listing to the "known" category awaits the
outcome of litigation.
Following oral argument on June 14, 2000, Defendants voluntarily agreed to forebear from
publishing the revised listing of dioxin. Def. Notice (July 10, 2000) (attached as Exhibit 1).(1) Defendants
indicated in their notice that they would provide the Court and Appellants a minimum of ten days' notice
before publishing a revised listing. Counsel for Appellees did not return a phone call by counsel for
Appellants yesterday (November 16) seeking to confirm the agency's intent to abide by this 10-day notice
commitment.
On September 30, 2000, the Court below granted Defendants' cross-motion for summary
judgment and denied Plaintiffs' cross-motion for summary judgment. The Court also granted in part and
denied in part Defendants' motion to dismiss, ruling that Plaintiffs Brevet Industries and Brevet, Inc. had
satisfied the requirements for standing. A copy of the District Court's September 30, 2000, Opinion and
Order is attached as Exhibit 2. Plaintiffs filed their notice of appeal of this decision on October 13, 2000.
The case turns on revised RoC listing criteria published September 26, 1996 (61 Fed. Reg.
50499-50500) (attached as Exhibit 3). The three principal reasons the District Court gave for ruling in
favor of Defendants/Appellees on the meaning of the revised RoC listing criteria were that (i) the
Defendant agency was entitled to deference in interpreting its own criteria, (ii) Defendants' interpretation in
this case was "eminently reasonable", and (iii) "the presentation of the proposed listing in the Federal
Register makes it clear that the proposed change is intended to apply to the criteria for both the 'known'
and the 'reasonably anticipated' categories." Exh. 2 at 10-11. The Court did not address Plaintiffs'
arguments that Defendants' new interpretation of the listing criteria represented an arbitrary and
capricious change in agency position without notice and a reasoned explanation.
On October 6, 2000, the day after being notified of the District Court's September 30 Order,
Plaintiffs filed a motion with the District Court, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 62(c), for an order enjoining the
agency's anticipated publication of the upgraded dioxin listing, pending appeal to this Court. Copies of the
briefing on Plaintiffs' motion for injunction pending appeal are attached hereto as Exhibits 4, 5 and 6.
On November 14, 2000, the District Court denied Plaintiffs' motion for an injunction pending
appeal, and that Order was filed with the District Court Clerk on November 15, 2000. A copy of that Order
is attached as Exhibit 7. Counsel for Appellants learned of the District Court's decision yesterday morning
and notified the Circuit Court Clerk's Office that the instant motion would be filed forthwith.
ARGUMENT
I. The Applicable Standard Favors Maintenance of the Status Quo
Pursuant to Circuit Rule 8(a), a party seeking an injunction pending appeal is required to state
how it meets the four-part test of: (i) likelihood that it will prevail on the merits; (ii) prospect of irreparable
injury to the moving party if relief is withheld; (iii) possibility of harm to other parties if relief is withheld; and
(iv) the public interest. The standard is thus similar to the traditional standard for issuance of injunctive
relief prior to adjudication of the merits by the trial court. See Michigan Coalition of Radioactive Material
Users, Inc. v. Griepentrog, 945 F.2d 150, 153 (6th Cir. 1991); Washington Metropolitan Area Transit
Comm'n v. Holiday Tours, Inc., 559 F.2d 841, 483 (D.C. Cir. 1977); Elsworth Assoc., Inc. v. United States,
917 F. Supp. 841, 847 (D.D.C. 1996).
Although the first requirement for the issuance of a preliminary injunction has often been stated as
mandating a finding of "probability" of success on the merits, a court, when confronted with a case in
which the other three factors strongly favor interim relief, may exercise its discretion to grant a stay if the
movant has made a "substantial case on the merits." Holiday Tours, supra, 559 F.2d at 843 (emphasis
added). The court is not required to find that ultimate success by the movant is a mathematical
probability, and indeed the Court may grant a stay even though its own approach may be contrary to
movant's view of the merits. Id.
Where the interests of justice require maintaining the status quo pending appeal, a court is on firm
ground in granting a motion for injunction pending appeal. See Holiday Tours, supra, 559 F.2d at 844.
See also Dalmo Sales Co. v. Tysons Corner Regional Shopping Center, 308 F. Supp. 988, 995 (D.D.C.
1970) (granting an injunction under Fed. R. Civ. P. 62(c)(2) for ninety days from the date of the order or until disposition of the case upon
summary hearing, whichever occurred first). In Dalmo Sales, even though the court had denied plaintiffs'
request for a preliminary injunction, the court noted that a temporary restraining order had been in effect
since the previous year, and the parties would not be unduly inconvenienced by a further extension of the
status quo. Id. See also Coastal Corp. v. Texas Eastern Corp., 869 F.2d 817, 820 (5th Cir. 1989) (district
court's power to alter an injunction pending appeal under Rule 62(c) is limited to "maintaining the status
quo").
Here, the "status quo" is that dioxin has again been listed in the "reasonably anticipated" category,
this time with a footnote indicating that a proposal to upgrade the listing is in litigation. This has been the
status quo for over six months, since 9th RoC was published on May 15, 2000. Indeed, the "reasonably
anticipated" classification has been the status quo since dioxin was first listed in the RoC back in 1982. In
order to preserve the status quo pending final adjudication of the case, the Court should grant this motion
and issue an order enjoining Appellees from altering the current listing while the appeal is pending.
II. Appellants Satisfy the Requirements for an Injunction Under Rule 8(a).
Appellants in this case meet the four requirements for an injunction pending appeal under Fed. R.
App. P. 8(a) and Circuit Rule 8(a).
A. Appellants Are Likely to Succeed on the Merits.
Appellants have demonstrated a strong likelihood of success on the merits, and they are likely to
prevail on the appeal. As discussed below, the three key pillars upon which the District Court based its
merits determination must be seriously questioned. Moreover, the District Court entirely failed to address
a central argument of Plaintiffs' case, i.e., that the new interpretation of the listing criteria espoused by the
Defendants/
Appellees represents an enormous change in long-standing agency position, a change adopted without
notice or reasoned justification. At a very minimum, Appellants' showing on the merits must be considered
"substantial", which is all the applicable standard requires.
First, as Plaintiffs explained in briefing below and at oral argument (Tr. at 60-61) (Exhibit 8
hereto),(3) the case precedent requiring courts to give deference to an agency's interpretation of its own
rules -- including U.S. Supreme Court and D.C. Circuit precedent -- recognizes two critical exceptions to
that doctrine, at least one of which is present here. An agency's reading of its own rule should not be
accorded deference where an alternative reading is compelled by (i) "the regulation's plain language", or
(ii) "other indications of the Secretary's intent at the time of the regulation's promulgation." Gardebring v.
Jenkins, 485 U.S. 415, 430 (1988); see also S.G. Loewendick & Sons, Inc. v. Reich, 70 F.3d 1291, 1294
(D.C. Cir. 1995) (quoting Gardebring).
Putting aside for the moment the question of whether the "plain language" of the listing criteria
compels a reading contrary to the agency's current interpretation -- Appellants believe that it does -- in the
case below, Plaintiffs presented two extraordinarily powerful pieces of contemporaneous evidence
regarding the agency's contrary intent at the time the revised criteria were published. The lower Court
addressed neither of these documents, nor this pivotal argument, in its opinion granting Defendants'
motion for summary judgment.
To appreciate the seriousness of this omission, and the significance of these two pieces of
documentary evidence, it is important to understand that Defendants/Appellees have maintained that the
RoC listing criteria were revised in 1996 to allow, for the first time, consideration of evidence other than
human epidemiological data in support of "known" category listings. Prior to 1996, listings in the "known"
category required that a causal relationship be indicated by "sufficient" evidence in the form of human
epidemiological data, and only human epidemiological data. Appellees contend that the 1996 revisions
permitted the agency also to list substances in the "known" category by reference to "mechanism of
action" data (as is being attempted in this case). Because the criteria had not permitted consideration of
such data to support previous "known" category listings, the 1996 revisions significantly changed the
criteria for the "known" category. Appellants, by contrast, maintain that the 1996 revisions effected no
such change to the criteria for the "known" category.
The first piece of contemporaneous evidence contrary to the agency's current reading was a
Department of Health and Human Services press release, issued the very day the revised criteria were
published, which stated, "The original criteria for listing a substance as a known human carcinogen remain
unchanged." Exhibit 9 at 2. The second piece of contemporaneous evidence was an August 1996 article
in Environmental Health Perspectives, the official journal of the Appellee agency that oversees the
National Toxicology Program,(4) confirming that same agency intention. Exhibit 10. The article stated, "The
revised criteria for listing a substance as 'known to be a human carcinogen' are substantively unchanged
from the former criteria. . . ."
If the agency intended the 1996 revised criteria to allow consideration of mechanistic data for
"known" category listings -- truly a sea change in RoC methodology -- then why were these two
documents ever issued? Neither of these crucial pieces of record evidence has ever been satisfactorily
explained. The Court below questioned government counsel about the press release at oral argument
(Exh. 8 at 41-43), but counsel's only explanation was that the release was "somewhat misleading". (Exh.
8 at 43). Given this strong contemporaneous evidence of contrary agency intent, the District Court should
have accorded no deference to the new interpretation that Appellees asserted during litigation. As noted,
neither of these critical pieces of evidence, which Appellants will address in further detail during the
appeal, was even mentioned in the District Court's opinion. The District Court thus ignored the rule in
Gardebring by summarily holding that the agency is to be accorded deference in its interpretation of the
listing criteria.
The reason Gardebring bears so heavily on Appellants' request for an injunction pending appeal
is that there was absolutely no contemporaneous evidence of a contrary agency intent in either Thomas
Jefferson Univ. v. Shalala, 512 U.S. 504 (1994), Wyoming Outdoor Council v. United States Forest
Service, 165 F.3d 43 (D.C. Cir. 1999), or Rollins v. United States EPA, 937 F.2d 649 (D.C. Cir. 1991), the
principal cases upon which the District Court relied in granting "substantial deference" to Defendants'
interpretation of the listing criteria. (See Exh. 2 at 10-11). Had evidence even approximating the probative
value of the HHS press release (Exh. 9) or the Environmental Health Perspectives article (Exh. 10) been
adduced in those cases, the rule in Gardebring would have come into play, and a different outcome might
well have been reached. The Thomas Jefferson, Wyoming Outdoor Council, and Rollins cases, however,
have nothing to do with contemporaneous evidence of a contrary agency intent and thus offer no basis for
the District Court's finding that substantial deference is warranted here, where such contemporaneous
evidence is clearly present.
Second, the District Court's conclusion regarding the reasonableness of the agency's
interpretation (Exh. 2 at 11) must also be questioned. The Court accepted without comment
Defendants/Appellees' extraordinary assertion that the final "descriptive" paragraph of the revised criteria
was intended to modify both the "known" and "reasonably anticipated" listing categories. This paragraph,
which permits listings to be based on consideration of "all relevant evidence", applies only to the
"reasonably anticipated" category, however, and cannot reasonably be interpreted to apply to both
categories.(5) For nearly three years after the revised criteria were adopted, the agency never interpreted
the criteria in the way Defendants advanced in the case below, and it was only with the specter of this
litigation looming that Defendants' lawyers constructed the painful contrivance that the lower Court
embraced as "eminently reasonable".
Appellees' interpretation allowing consideration of "all relevant information" for both the "known"
and "reasonably anticipated" listings would completely vitiate any distinction between the two categories.
As Appellants' counsel attempted to explain at oral argument (Exh. 8 at 11-14), the undisputed data set on
dioxin carcinogenicity is a perfect fit with the language of the "reasonably anticipated" category. Those
criteria state that a substance shall be classified as a "reasonably anticipated" human carcinogen if:
There is less than sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity in humans . . .
however . . . there is convincing relevant information that the agent acts
through mechanisms indicating it would be likely to cause cancer in
humans.
61 Fed. Reg. at 50500-50501 (Exh. 3). Appellee's own statements regarding the scientific record confirm
that the evidence of dioxin carcinogenicity consists of:
• less than "sufficient" human epidemiological data;
• strong animal data; and
• a basic similarity in mechanism of action
See, e.g., Exhibit 11 hereto at RC-1 (excerpt from NTP's Draft Background Document for TCDD,
summarizing basis for proposed listing).
Under Appellees' theory, the "all relevant information" language from the final descriptive
paragraph would permit upgrades to the "known" category, based on mechanistic data, where the human
data were less than sufficient. But if the final paragraph applies to both the "known" and the "reasonably
anticipated" categories, then any substance with the above profile could be placed into either category.
Such an irrational blurring of the two categories would be both contrary to past agency practice and a
direct contravention congressional intent.(6) How can an "interpretation" allowing simultaneous placement
of the same chemical into two separate categories -- categories which both Congress and the Appellee
agency intended to remain distinct -- be considered reasonable?
Third, the District Court's conclusion that "the presentation of the proposed change in the Federal
Register" supports Appellees' position (Exh. 2 at 11) cannot bear scrutiny. Appellees themselves had long
urged the Court to disregard the formatting in the Federal Register and to rely instead on shifting margins
in unpublished internal agency documents purporting to show that the final "descriptive" paragraph applies
to both the "known" and the "reasonably anticipated" categories. Appellants, by contrast, have sought
from day one -- even prior to the lawsuit -- to point out how the Federal Register formatting supports the
conclusion that the final descriptive paragraph cannot apply to the "known" category. See, e.g., Exhibit 12
at 3 (January 19, 1999 letter from undersigned counsel for Appellants to HHS counsel noting how Federal
Register section headings contradict HHS position).
Finally, as noted above, the District Court did not explain how its decision could be reconciled with
the long line of cases holding that an agency violates the bar on arbitrary and capricious agency action by
changing its policy or position on the meaning of a rule or statute without providing notice of that change
and a reasoned explanation. See Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S.
29, 41-42 (1983); DSE, Inc. v. United States, 169 F.3d 21, 31 (D.C. Cir. 1999) (finding Small Business
Administration had acted contrary to its long-standing policy, but that error was non-prejudicial); Troy
Corp. v. Browner, 120 F.3d 277, 286-87 (D.C.Cir. 1997); Pontchartrain Broadcasting Co. v. FTC, 15 F.3d
183, 185 (D.C. Cir. 1994); Graphic Communications Int'l Union, Local 554 v. Salem-Gravure Div. of World
Color Press, Inc., 843 F.2d 1490, 1493-94 (D.C. Cir. 1988) (agency action imposing new discovery
requirement that was a departure from established precedent was arbitrary and capricious because the
agency did not supply reasoned explanation), cert. denied, 489 U.S. 1011 (1989). Outside of the context
of this litigation, Appellees have never provided public notice and a reasoned explanation for their decision
to allow consideration of mechanistic data to support "known" category listings. Thus, even if the Circuit
Court were to adopt the Appellees' and the District Court's interpretation of the 1996 revised listing criteria,
including the final paragraph, the Court should still hold that Appellees' change in position was arbitrary
and capricious.
Given these substantial errors in the District Court's analysis of the record, the Circuit Court is
very likely to reverse the decision below on the merits.
B. Appellants Face Irreparable Harm.
Plaintiff Brevet, as the District Court correctly concluded, has demonstrated a threat of injury
sufficient to support standing.(7) Exh. 2 at 6. Appellants submit that this harm, if it does come to pass
because of Appellees' publication of the upgraded dioxin listing, is clearly irreparable. As stated at oral
argument:
THE COURT: But I may be wrong in my analysis or decision. If I'm wrong, the damage,
if there is any, will have been done if the report is released, assuming
there's damage, assuming there's standing.
MR. SMITH: Right.
Exh. 8 at 45. The damage the District Court recognized will indeed "have been done if the [final dioxin
listing] is released".
The District Court's conclusion regarding the threat of harm posed by the upgraded dioxin listing
was well grounded in the record. Appellant Brevet is a small California firm that manufactures polyvinyl
chloride ("PVC") connectors for use in surgery and other medical procedures. Plaintiffs submitted
evidence that several activist groups have attempted to link PVC manufacturing and disposal to
environmental dioxin levels and that these groups would trumpet the proposed dioxin listing in furtherance
of their efforts to eliminate all PVC use. According to the President of Brevet, his company has already
lost some customers due to public and shareholder concern regarding dioxin and has a reasonable basis
to believe that additional losses would follow from publication of the proposed listing. See Brewer Affid.
(attached as Exhibit 13) at ¶¶ 6-9.(8)
The injuries Appellants will suffer, to the extent they are calculable, are not compensable. No
action for money damages will lie against the government here. Noncompensable damage is, by
definition, irreparable.
Moreover, once the upgraded dioxin listing is released in final form, there would be no way to
undo the harm if Appellants ultimately prevailed before this Court. Even a full retraction of the upgrade by
Appellees would be unlikely to make Appellants whole for the lost sales or other damage to business
relationships they would suffer.
C. There is No Threat of Harm to Appellees.
This element of the injunction test is easily satisfied here. As noted above, the 9th RoC has been
published in final form for over six months. Of the 218 chemical listings in the report, 217 are fully
complete. Appellees have thus finished all work on the 9th RoC, save for the final resolution of this
litigation. Appellees will expend no additional funds on the 9th RoC or incur any other harm while this case
is on appeal. Indeed, the only harm Appellees face is the possible cost of later attempting to undo an
upgraded dioxin listing if it is published at this time.
D. The Public Interest Favors Granting an Injunction Pending Appeal.
The public will be well served by forgoing premature publication of the final dioxin listing pending
appeal. Until this case is finally resolved, Appellants submit that any RoC dioxin listing denominated as
"final" constitutes severe overreaching by the agency. While this case is pending, the dioxin listing will
not, in the truest sense, be "final". Ensuring that the information provided in the RoCs is accurate and in
conformance with the agency's listing criteria and the scientific evidence also weighs heavily in favor of
granting an injunction.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Appellants' motion for an injunction pending appeal should be granted.
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Respectfully submitted,
___________________________________
Charles J. Fromm
DC Bar No. 420021
Multinational Legal Services, PLLC
11 Dupont Circle, Suite 700
Washington, DC 20036
Ph: (202) 797-7124
Fax: (202) 939-6969
Attorneys for Appellants |
Dated: November 17, 2000
END NOTES:
1. Pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 8(a)(2)(B)(iii), Appellants are attaching the most recent and
crucial filings from the District Court docket in support of the instant motion. In so doing,
however, Appellants do not imply that, for purposes of the appeal, all "relevant parts of the
record" are attached.
2. The four-part standard for issuance of an injunction under Fed. R. App. P. 8(a) is the
same as that under Fed. R. Civ. P. 62(c).
3. Excerpts from the June 14, 2000 oral argument transcript are attached hereto as Exhibit
8. The full transcript was filed with the District Court on June 16, 2000 (Dist. Clerk's Dkt. Item
No. 55).
4. Environmental Health Perspectives is the official "Journal of the National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences". The journal is edited by personnel in NIEHS/NTP with
responsibility for administering the Report on Carcinogens Program, including Defendant
George W. Lucier, who was Co-Editor-in-Chief at the time the article was published.
5. The paragraph at issue appears in the first column on p. 50500 of the Federal Register
notice (see Exh. 3), and begins, "Conclusions regarding carcinogenicity in humans or
experimental animals. . . ."
6. See Statement of Chairman Rogers, Cong. Rec. (Oct. 10, 1978) at H34938 ("[T]he report
should be properly organized so that no possible confusion could exist between clearly
demonstrated carcinogens and those for which convincing data are not yet available. . . .").
7. Appellants intend to challenge the District Court's conclusion that only Brevet has
standing. For purposes of the present motion, however, the Court need not consider which
Plaintiffs have standing if it finds that Brevet meets the criteria necessary for a stay pending
appeal.
8. Plaintiffs submitted additional documentation regarding the threatened harm to other
Plaintiffs and intend to discuss this material further in their appeal brief.
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