Overview of Administrative Law History of Administrative Law The Administration of Government Moving beyond feudalism, all governments are divided into functional units.
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Transcript Overview of Administrative Law History of Administrative Law The Administration of Government Moving beyond feudalism, all governments are divided into functional units.
Overview of Administrative Law
History of Administrative Law
The Administration of Government
Moving beyond feudalism, all governments are
divided into functional units that behave as
agencies
Administrative law deals with agencies in the
executive branch of the federal government
State administrative law is more complex
because states have multiple executives and
less separation of powers.
The Colonial Period
Colonial governments had agencies that were
either controlled by the king or by local
governments
Major cities were more powerful entities than
most states
To this day, old cities have varying degrees of
special legal status
Much of the regulatory state was urban
Articles of Confederation
After independence, but before the Constitution,
the states were independent sovereigns
The Articles did not provide for a central
government with binding powers
All agency action was state and local
This did not work very well and almost cost us the
revolutionary war
The Constitutional Allocation of Powers
The Constitution provided for a national
executive, legislature, and courts with binding
powers over the states
The states were left all powers not allocated to the
federal government
Police powers (most traditional state and local
regulation)
The federal delegation was flexible, not
enumerated
Administrative Law in the Constitution
The Constitution did not contemplate a large
federal government
The Constitution established the framework for
separation of powers and basic functions of the
government, but is largely silent on the law of
agencies
This was not important at the time because day
to day government was run by states and cities
Original intent analysis does not work in adlaw
Administrative Law in the States
From the Constitutional period until the Great
Depression, most government was state and local
While some see this period as one of limited
regulation, that is only true at the federal level
The states and cities had extensive regulatory laws
and agencies
Most administrative law (most government) is still
carried out at the state level
Many regulatory system are shared federalism
Environmental law
Medicaid
The Federal Administrative Law System
While there was federal regulation before the 1930s,
the modern regulatory state began with the Great
Depression
The role of the federal government was greatly
expanded to fight World War II
The military did not disband after WW II because we
went into the Cold War
The federal government also did not disband,
beginning the modern regulatory state
Most major Supreme Court cases on adlaw date from
the 1970s
Organization of Agencies
Separation of Powers
Enforcement agencies must be in the executive
branch
Agencies that do not do enforcement may be in
any branch
Most executive branch agencies are under the
control of the President through the appointments
process, as laid out in the Constitution
The Creation of Agencies
Since the Constitution was silent on agencies, all federal
agencies are rooted in statutes
Congress delegates power to the agency and provides
the money to run the agency.
Congress cut off money to move Guantanamo
prisoners to US prisons
Congress can abolish agencies, change their powers,
and fund or defund them, subject only to presidential
veto power.
Congress ultimately holds the power
Congress has political trouble using the power
Independent Agencies
Congress created independent agencies to reduce the
power of the president.
These are headed by boards whose members are
appointed by the president
They serve fixed, staggered terms
They can only be removed for good cause
They are still in the executive branch
This limits the ability of a new president to affect the
course of the agency, and prevents political pressure on
sitting agency commissioners.
This is not in the constitution but has been accepted
by the courts.
Agency Practice
The Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
The Administrative Procedure Act provides the
general framework for the interaction of between
the agency, regulated parties, and the general
public.
The APA is secondary to the statutes that
establish an agency.
The APA only controls when the enabling act is
silent.
Adjudications
Congress can give agencies the power to make
factual determinations and issue orders
This determination of facts and enforcement in
individual cases involving specific named parties
is called an adjudication
These can look like trials, complete with
independent judges and rules of evidence
They can also be as informal as inspecting a
restaurant or impounding a bad dog
Rule Making
Congress can give agencies the power to make rules that
have the same legal effect as statutes
The public is given a chance to see and comment on
these rules before they become final
Rulemaking is very important because most statutes
passed by Congress do not contain sufficient detail to be
enforced without additional agency regulation.
The terms rule and regulation are interchangeable.
The Role of the Courts
Is the enabling law constitutional?
Are the regulations consistent with the enabling law and
properly promulgated?
Did the agency act in an arbitrary and capricious manner
in an adjudication?
Did the agency violate an individuals constitutional rights
or commit a tort?
Biggest difference from private and criminal law:
The courts generally defer to the agency.
Administrative Law Practice
Counsel clients how to operate within regulations
Represent clients before agencies
Litigate against agencies
Represent clients in the development of agency
policy and regulations
Areas of Agency Practice
Tax
Environmental law
Securities law
Land use law
Etc.
Suing Agencies
Learn about exhaustion of remedies
Learn about how the standards for judicial review of
agency decisionmaking differ from private and
criminal litigation
Learn the procedure and limits on the government for
damages caused by agencies
Sovereign immunity
Tort claims acts
Statutory immunity such as the Flood Control Act
of 1928.