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7.4: Judicial Review of Agency Actions

  • Page ID
    42028
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    The APA provides for judicial review of almost all agency decisions. However, before going to court, a business or individual must try to get the agency to reconsider its action. To this end, two requirements must be satisfied:

    1. Administrative remedies must be exhausted; and
    2. The party must have standing.

    Exhaustion of administrative remedies is the doctrine that, if an administrative remedy is provided by statute, a party must seek relief first from the agency before judicial relief is available. The purpose of this doctrine is to ensure that courts will not be burdened by cases in which judicial relief is unnecessary. Often courts cite the agency’s subject matter expertise as a reason to allow it to reconsider its action and fix errors, especially common ones that may impact more than just the party involved in the hearing.

    Graphic showing required steps in exhaustion of administrative remedies
    Figure 7.4 Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies Flowchart

    Standing is the requirement that only individuals and entities with a personal stake in the outcome of a controversy may seek judicial review. Standing is discussed more in Chapter 3. With respect to agency actions, this is often a litigated issue when advocacy groups want to challenge an agency’s decision but were not a party to the agency’s actions.

    Because agencies have significant discretion in regulating their areas of expertise, judicial review of agency actions is limited. A court will review an agency’s actions in five situations:

    Basis for Judicial Review Description
    Agency exceeded its authority Agency acted beyond the authority given to it in the enabling act
    Agency incorrectly interpreted the law Agency misunderstands or misapplies the law; courts are the legal experts
    Agency made a procedural error Agency failed to follow the APA or its own procedural rules
    Agency violated the Constitution Agency violated the Constitutional rights of businesses or individuals
    Agency made arbitrary or capricious decision Agency’s decision is neither based on the facts nor grounded in the law

    This page titled 7.4: Judicial Review of Agency Actions is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Melissa Randall and Community College of Denver Students via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.