GENERAL ELECTRIC CO. V. JACKSON
610 F.3d 110 (D.C. Cir. 2010)
NATURE OF THE CASE: General Electric (P) appealed the district court's grant of summary
judgment to EPA (D). P challenges the constitutionality of a statutory scheme that
authorizes the Environmental Protection Agency to issue orders, known as unilateral
administrative orders (UAOs), directing companies and others to clean up hazardous waste for
which they are responsible without a hearing before a neutral decision maker.
FACTS: P filed suit in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia
challenging CERCLA's UAO regime. P alleged that the statute violates the Fifth Amendment to
the United States Constitution because it 'deprive[s] persons of their fundamental right to
liberty and property without . . . constitutionally adequate procedural safeguards.' '[T]he
unilateral orders regime. . . imposes a classic and unconstitutional Hobson's choice':
because refusing to comply 'risk[s] severe punishment [i.e., fines and treble damages],' UAO
recipients' only real option is to 'comply . . . before having any opportunity to be heard
on the legality and rationality of the underlying order.' The district court dismissed P's
amended complaint for lack of jurisdiction. The appeals court reversed, ruling that section
113(h) presented no bar to P's lawsuit because the company 'does not challenge any
particular action or order by EPA.' On remand, the district court issued two decisions that
P now appeals. The district court granted EPA's motion for summary judgment on P's facial
due process challenge. The court rejected P's claim that CERCLA's fines and treble damages
are so severe that, as a practical matter, they foreclose judicial review. In the
alternative, the district court applied the 'Salerno doctrine,' which prohibits facial
invalidation of a statute unless the statute 'is unconstitutional in every application.'
According to the court, even if CERCLA's fines and damages make pre-compliance review
unavailable as a practical matter, the statute can still be applied constitutionally in
emergency situations. Finally, the district court concluded that it had jurisdiction to
address what it called P's 'pattern and practice' challenge to EPA's administration of
CERCLA's UAO provisions, i.e., P's argument that EPA's policies and procedures for issuing
UAOs exacerbate CERCLA's constitutional deficiencies, and it allowed discovery on that claim
to proceed. The district court granted EPA's motion for summary judgment on the pattern and
practice challenge as well. P appeals both decisions.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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