Section 7005 of the Consolidated Onmibus Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1985 (COBRA) directs the Secretary of Transportation
(Secretary) to establish a schedule of pipeline safety user fees
based on usage of hazardous pipelines and to collect such fees
annually from persons operating pipeline facilities subject to the
Hazardous Liquid Pipeline Safety Act of 1979 (HLPSA) and the
Natural Gas Pipeline Safety Act of 1968 (NGPSA). Section 7005 --
designed to make the administration of the HLPSA and the NGPSA
self-financing -- provides that the assessed fees be used to
finance activities authorized by the HLPSA and the NGPSA, and that
such fees may not exceed 105 percent of the aggregate of
congressional appropriations for the fiscal year for activities to
be funded by the fees. Pursuant to this mandate, the Secretary
published fee schedules and assessed fees for fiscal year 1986.
Appellee Mid-America Pipeline Co. -- which owns and operates
pipelines that transport hazardous liquids and is, therefore,
subject to the HLPSA -- paid its fees under protest and filed suit
against the Secretary in the District Court for declaratory and
injunctive relief. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the court
adopted the conclusions of a Magistrate recommending that § 7005 be
struck down as an unconstitutional delegation to the Department of
Transportation of Congress' taxing power on the grounds that the
assessments were taxes, rather than fees, and that, in enacting §
7005, Congress did not give the kind of guidance to the Secretary
necessary to avoid the conclusion that Congress had
unconstitutionally delegated such power to the Executive
Branch.
Held: Section 7005 of COBRA is not an unconstitutional
delegation of the taxing power by Congress to the Executive Branch.
Pp.
490 U. S.
218-224.
(a) The multiple restrictions Congress placed on the Secretary's
discretion to assess user fees meet the normal requirements of the
nondelegation doctrine, which requires that Congress provide an
administrative agency with standards guiding its actions such that
a court can ascertain whether the will of Congress has been obeyed.
In enacting § 7005, Congress delimited the scope of the Secretary's
discretion with greater specificity than in other delegations this
Court has upheld. The Secretary may not collect fees from firms not
subject to either of the two
Page 490 U. S. 213
Pipeline Safety Acts or use the funds for purposes other than
administering such Acts; he may not set fees on a case-by-case
basis, apply a fee-setting criteria other than one of those
delineated by Congress, or establish a fee schedule that does not
bear a reasonable relationship to these criteria, and he has no
discretion to expand the budget for administering the Pipeline
Safety Acts because of the 105 percent ceiling. Pp.
490 U. S.
218-220.
(b) Even if the user fees are a form of taxation, neither the
Constitution nor congressional practices require the application of
a different and stricter nondelegation doctrine in cases where
Congress delegates discretionary authority to the Executive under
its taxing power. There is nothing in the placement of the Taxing
Clause -- first in place among the powers of Congress enumerated in
Art. I, § 8, of the Constitution -- that would distinguish the
power to tax from other enumerated powers in terms of the scope and
degree of authority that Congress may delegate to the Executive
Branch to execute the laws. Moreover, the Origination Clause --
which requires that all revenue bills originate in the House of
Representatives -- implies nothing about the scope of Congress'
power to delegate discretionary authority under its taxing power
once a bill has been properly enacted. Even when enacting tax
legislation with remarkable specificity, as it has done in the
Internal Revenue Code, Congress has delegated the authority to
prescribe, and to determine the retroactivity of, rules and
regulations for enforcement of the Code. Congress relies on
administrators and the courts to implement the legislative will,
since it cannot be expected to anticipate every conceivable problem
that can arise or carry out day-to-day oversight. Pp.
490 U. S.
220-223.
(c) This Court's decisions in
National Cable Television
Assn., Inc. v. United States, 415 U.
S. 336, and
FPC v. New England Power Co.,
415 U. S. 345, are
not to the contrary, since they stand only for the proposition that
Congress must indicate clearly its intention to delegate to the
Executive the discretionary authority to recover administrative
costs not inuring directly to the benefit of regulated parties by
imposing additional financial burdens, whether characterized as
"fees" or "taxes," on those parties. Section 7005 explicitly
reflects Congress' intent that the total costs of administering the
HLPSA and the NGPSA be recovered through assessment of charges on
those regulated by the Acts. Pp.
490 U. S.
223-223.
Reversed.
O'CONNOR, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
Page 490 U. S. 214
JUSTICE O'CONNOR delivered the opinion of the Court.
We decide today whether § 7005 of the Consolidated Onmibus
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985, which directs the Secretary of
Transportation to establish a system of user fees to cover the
costs of administering certain federal pipeline safety programs, is
an unconstitutional delegation of the taxing power by Congress to
the Executive Branch. We hold that it is not.
I
In 1986, Congress enacted the Consolidated Onmibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1985 (COBRA), Pub.L. 99-272, 100 Stat. 82.
Section 7005 of COBRA,
codified at 49 U.S.C. App. § 1682a
(1982 ed., Supp. IV), and entitled "Pipeline safety user fees,"
directs the Secretary of Transportation (Secretary) to
"establish a schedule of fees based on the usage, in reasonable
relationship to volume-miles, miles, revenues, or an appropriate
combination thereof, of natural gas and hazardous liquid
pipelines."
§ 7005(a)(1). These fees are to be collected annually, §
7005(b), from
"persons operating -- (A) all pipeline facilities subject to the
Hazardous Liquid Pipeline Safety Act of 1979 (49 U.S.C.App. 2001
et seq.); and (B) all pipeline transmission facilities and
all liquified
Page 490 U. S. 215
natural gas facilities subject to the jurisdiction of the
Natural Gas Pipeline Safety Act of 1968 (49 U.S.C.App. 1671
et
seq.)."
§ 7005(a)(3). The Hazardous Liquid Pipeline Safety Act (HLPSA)
regulates interstate and intrastate pipelines carrying petroleum,
petroleum products, or anhydrous ammonia.
See 49 CFR
pt.195 (1987). The Natural Gas Pipeline Safety Act of 1968 (NGPSA),
in turn, regulates certain liquified natural gas (LNG) facilities,
see 49 CFR pt.193 (1987), as well as interstate and
intrastate pipelines carrying natural gas, flammable gas, or gas
that is toxic or corrosive,
see 49 CFR pts.191, 192
(1987).
The fees collected under § 7005 of COBRA are to be used
"to the extent provided for in advance in appropriation Acts,
only -- "
"(1) in the case of natural gas pipeline safety fees, for
activities authorized under the Natural Gas Pipeline Safety Act of
1968 . . . ; and"
"(2) in the case of hazardous liquid pipeline safety fees, for
activities authorized under the Hazardous Liquid Pipeline Safety
Act of 1979. . . ."
§ 7005(c). These "activities" include Department of
Transportation expenses incurred in administering the Pipeline
Safety Acts, such as salaries, travel, printing, communication, and
supplies, as well as "regulatory, enforcement, training and
research costs, and State grants-in-aid." 51 Fed.Reg. 25783 (1986).
The fees assessed and collected are to be
"sufficient to meet the costs of [these] activities . . . but at
no time shall the aggregate of fees received for any fiscal year .
. . exceed 105 percent of the aggregate of appropriations made for
such fiscal year for activities to be funded by such fees."
§ 7005(d). Section 7005 of COBRA is one of a number of recent
congressional enactments designed to make various federal
regulatory programs partially or entirely self-financing.
E.g., § 3401 of the Onmibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
1986, 100 Stat. 1890,
codified at 42 U.S.C. § 7178 (1982
ed., Supp. IV) (entire regulatory budget of the Federal Energy
Page 490 U. S. 216
Regulatory Commission); COBRA § 7601,
codified at 42
U.S.C. § 2213 (1982 ed., Supp. IV) (33 percent of regulatory budget
of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission; 45 percent in fiscal years
1988 and 1989).
Pursuant to the mandate of § 7005, the Secretary published fee
schedules for fiscal year (FY) 1986 on July 16, 1986. 51 Fed.Reg.
25782 (1986). Prior to publication, the Secretary consulted the
pipeline industry's major trade associations for assistance in
determining the appropriate basis for assessing fees within the
range of options permitted by § 7005(a)(1). The consensus of these
trade associations -- the American Petroleum Institute, the
American Gas Association, the Interstate Natural Gas Association of
America, and the Association of Oil Pipe Lines -- was that pipeline
mileage (referred to simply as "miles" in § 7005) would provide
"the most reasonable basis for determining fees. . . ." 51 Fed.Reg.
25782 (1986). The Secretary agreed with this consensus for purposes
of the FY 1986 fee schedules. In comments submitted to the
Secretary for consideration of possible changes to be made in the
fee schedules for FY 1987, about one-third of those commenting
objected to pipeline mileage as the basis for assessing fees,
arguing that volume-miles would provide a more accurate indicator
of the term "usage" in § 7005, and that mileage alone did not
fairly reflect the Department of Transportation's enforcement
expenditures. The Secretary decided to continue assessing § 7005
fees based on mileage because of the ease of administering such a
system and because "long pipelines of small diameter require just
as much, if not more, enforcement effort than shorter pipelines of
large diameter."
Id. at 46978.
The Secretary also determined that the total pipeline safety
program costs, excluding State grants-in-aid, should be allocated
at 80 percent for persons regulated by the NGPSA and 20 percent for
persons regulated by the HLPSA. The costs of grants were to be
allocated at 95 percent for
Page 490 U. S. 217
persons regulated by the NGPSA and 5 percent for persons
regulated by the HLPSA. Five percent of the total gas program costs
were to be borne by LNG facility operators, allocated as a function
of storage capacity and number of LNG plants.
Id. at
25783, 46976. Finally, the Secretary estimated that the
administrative costs of assessing fees on the 23 percent of the
Nation's gas operators with less than 10 miles of gas pipeline and
the 17 percent of the Nation's hazardous liquid operators with less
than 30 miles of hazardous liquid pipeline would exceed the value
of the fees assessed. Accordingly, the Secretary exempted these
small mileage operators from assessment of § 7005 fees.
Ibid.
On the basis of this fee schedule framework, the Secretary set
fees of $23.99 per mile for gas pipelines and $6.41 per mile for
hazardous liquid pipelines in FY 1986. Operators of LNG facilities
were assessed lump sums ranging from $1,250 to $7,500 per plant.
Id. at 25783. The total costs for both pipeline safety
programs were $7.773 million, $8.523 million, and $8.550 million
for fiscal years 1986, 1987, and 1988 respectively. Brief for
Appellant 4, n. 2. Expenses for FY 1989 are estimated at $9.3
million.
See Department of Transportation and Related
Agencies Appropriations Act, 1989, Pub.L. 100-457, 102 Stat.
2143-2144.
B
Appellee Mid-America Pipeline Company, based in Tulsa, Oklahoma,
owns and operates pipelines that transport hazardous liquids, and
is, therefore, subject to the regulatory strictures of the HLPSA.
On July 28, 1986, pursuant to its recently published fee schedule,
the Secretary assessed Mid-America $53,023.52 as its share of the
cost of federal administration of the HLPSA. Mid-America paid that
sum under protest and filed suit against the Secretary in the
United States District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma
seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. On cross-motions for
summary judgment, the United States Magistrate assigned to the case
recommended that § 7005 of COBRA be
Page 490 U. S. 218
struck down as an unconstitutional delegation to the Department
of Transportation of Congress' taxing power. Relying primarily on
our decisions in
National Cable Television Assn., Inc. v.
United States, 415 U. S. 336
(1974), and
FPC v. New England Power Co., 415 U.
S. 345 (1974), the Magistrate concluded that the
assessments made under § 7005 are taxes rather, than fees. The
Magistrate then determined, in light of
J. W. Hampton & Co.
v. United States, 276 U. S. 394
(1928), and
American Power & Light Co. v. SEC,
329 U. S. 90
(1946), that, in enacting § 7005, Congress did not give the kind of
guidance to the Secretary necessary to avoid the conclusion that
Congress had unconstitutionally delegated its taxing power to the
Executive Branch.
The District Court adopted these conclusions and entered
judgment for Mid-America on February 9, 1988. Invoking this Court's
appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1252, the Secretary
appealed the decision of the District Court directly to this Court,
and we noted probable jurisdiction.
Sub nom. Burnley v.
Mid-America Pipeline Co., 488 U.S. 814 (1988). Because the
District Court entered its judgment before September 25, 1988, the
repeal of 28 U.S.C. § 1252 by Public Law 100-352, § 1, 102 Stat.
662, does not affect our jurisdiction in this case. Appeals from
District Court judgments finding Acts of Congress unconstitutional
and entered after the repealer's effective date, however, must now
be taken to the appropriate Federal Court of Appeals, pursuant to
28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II
Earlier this Term, in
Mistretta v. United States,
488 U. S. 361
(1989), we revisited the nondelegation doctrine and reaffirmed our
longstanding principle that, so long as Congress provides an
administrative agency with standards guiding its actions such that
a court could "
ascertain whether the will of Congress has been
obeyed,'" no delegation of legislative authority trenching on the
principle of separation of powers has occurred. Id. at
488 U. S. 379,
quoting Yakus v. United
States, 321
Page 490 U. S. 219
U.S. 414,
321 U. S. 426
(1944).
See American Power & Light Co. v. SEC, supra,
at
329 U. S. 105
(It is "constitutionally sufficient if Congress clearly delineates
the general policy, the public agency which is to apply it, and the
boundaries of this delegated authority. Private rights are
protected by access to the courts to test the application of the
policy in the light of these legislative declarations").
Appellee Mid-America does not seriously contend that the
guidelines provided by Congress to the Secretary in § 7005 do not
meet the normal requirements of the nondelegation doctrine as we
have applied it. Nor could Mid-America support any such contention.
In enacting § 7005, Congress delimited the scope of the Secretary's
discretion with much greater specificity than in delegations that
we have upheld in the past.
Cf. Lichter v. United States,
334 U. S. 742,
334 U. S.
778-786 (1948) (upholding delegation of authority to War
Department to recover "excessive profits" earned on military
contracts);
Yakus, supra, at
321 U. S. 420,
321 U. S.
426-427 (upholding delegation of authority to the Price
Administrator to fix prices of commodities that "will be generally
fair and equitable and will effectuate the purposes" of the
congressional enactment);
FPC v. Hope Natural Gas Co.,
320 U. S. 591,
320 U. S.
600-601 (1944) (upholding delegation to Federal Power
Commission to determine just and reasonable rates);
National
Broadcasting Co. v. United States, 319 U.
S. 190,
319 U. S. 194,
319 U. S.
225-226 (1943) (upholding delegation to the Federal
Communications Commission to regulate broadcast licensing as
"public interest, convenience, or necessity" require).
Under § 7005, the Secretary may not collect fees from firms not
subject to either of the two Pipeline Safety Acts, § 7005(a)(3); he
may not use the funds for purposes other than administering the two
Acts, § 7005(c); he may not set fees on a case-by-case basis, §
7005(a); in setting fees, he may not apply any criteria other than
volume-miles, miles, or revenues, § 7005(a); he may not establish a
fee schedule that does not bear a "reasonable relationship" to
these criteria,
Page 490 U. S. 220
§ 7005(a). Furthermore, the Secretary has no discretion
whatsoever to expand the budget for administering the Pipeline
Safety Acts, because the ceiling on aggregate fees that may be
collected in any fiscal year is set at 105 percent of the aggregate
appropriations made by Congress for that fiscal year. § 7005(d). We
have no doubt that these multiple restrictions Congress has placed
on the Secretary's discretion to assess pipeline safety user fees
satisfy the constitutional requirements of the nondelegation
doctrine as we have previously articulated them.
Mid-America contends -- and the District Court agreed -- that,
notwithstanding the constitutional soundness of § 7005 under
ordinary nondelegation analysis, the assessment of these pipeline
safety user fees must be scrutinized under a more exacting
nondelegation lens. When so scrutinized, Mid-America argues, § 7005
is revealed to be constitutionally inadequate. In Mid-America's
view, the assessments permitted by § 7005, although labeled "user
fees," are actually tax assessments levied by the Secretary on
firms regulated by the HLPSA or the NGPSA. Congress' taxing power,
Mid-America further contends, unlike any of Congress' other
enumerated powers, if delegable at all, must be delegated with much
stricter guidelines than is required for other congressional
delegations of authority. Mid-America purports to derive this
two-tier theory of nondelegation from the text and history of the
Constitution, from past congressional practice, and from the
decisions of this Court.
Article I, § 8, of the Constitution enumerates the powers of
Congress. First in place among these enumerated powers is the
"Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises. . .
." We discern nothing in this placement of the Taxing Clause that
would distinguish Congress' power to tax from its other enumerated
powers -- such as its commerce powers, its power to "raise and
support Armies," its power to borrow money, or its power to "make
Rules for the Government" -- in terms of the scope and degree of
discretionary authority
Page 490 U. S. 221
that Congress may delegate to the Executive in order that the
President may "take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed."
Art. II, § 3.
See J.W. Hampton, Jr., & Co.,
276 U. S. 394
(1928) (upholding broad delegation of authority to the President
under the Taxing Clause and the Commerce Clause to impose duties on
foreign imports). It is, of course, true that "[a]ll Bills for
raising Revenue [must] originate in the House of Representatives. .
. ." Art. I, § 7. But the Origination Clause, while embodying the
Framers' concern that persons elected directly by the people have
initial responsibility over taxation (until the ratification of the
Seventeenth Amendment in 1913, Senators were chosen by State
Legislatures,
see Art. I, § 3), implies nothing about the
scope of Congress' power to delegate discretionary authority under
its taxing power once a tax bill has been properly enacted.
Mid-America does not contend that § 7005 failed to originate in the
House. The House Committee on Energy and Commerce drafted the
provision, which was included in H.R. 3500, 99th Cong., 1st Sess.
See H. R. Rep. No. 99300, p. 492 (1985).
From its earliest days to the present, Congress, when enacting
tax legislation, has varied the degree of specificity and the
consequent degree of discretionary authority delegated to the
Executive in such enactments.
See, e.g., Act of Mar. 3,
1791, ch. 15, § 43, 1 Stat. 209 (in the case of fines assessed for
nonpayment of liquor taxes, "the secretary of the treasury of the
United States [has] . . . power to mitigate or remit such penalty
or forfeiture . . . upon such terms and conditions as shall appear
to him reasonable") (First Congress); Act of July 6, 1797, ch. 11,
§ 2, 1 Stat. 528 (in lieu of collecting stamp duty enacted by
Congress, the Secretary of the Treasury may "agree to an annual
composition for the amount of such stamp duty, with any of the said
banks, of one per centum on the amount of the annual dividend made
by such banks") (Fifth Congress).
See generally Field v.
Clark, 143 U. S. 649,
143 U. S.
683-689 (1892) (longstanding practice of Congress
Page 490 U. S. 222
delegating authority to the President under the Taxing Clause
"is entitled to great weight").
Even when Congress legislates with remarkable specificity, as it
has done in the Internal Revenue Code, it has delegated to the
Executive the authority to
"prescribe all needful rules and regulations for the enforcement
of [the Code], including all rules and regulations as may be
necessary by reason of any alteration of law in relation to
internal revenue"
and the authority to determine
"the extent, if any, to which any ruling or regulation, relating
to the internal revenue laws, shall be applied without retroactive
effect."
26 U.S.C. §§ 7805(a), (b). Such rules and regulations, which
undoubtedly affect individual taxpayer liability, are equally
without doubt the result of entirely appropriate delegations of
discretionary authority by Congress. As we observed in
Bob
Jones University v. United States, 461 U.
S. 574 (1983):
"In an area as complex as the tax system, the agency Congress
vests with administrative responsibility must be able to exercise
its authority to meet changing conditions and new problems. . .
."
"Congress, the source of IRS authority, can modify IRS rulings
it considers improper, and courts exercise review over IRS actions.
In the first instance, however, the responsibility for construing
the [Internal Revenue] Code falls to the IRS. Since Congress cannot
be expected to anticipate every conceivable problem that can arise
or to carry out day-to-day oversight, it relies on the
administrators and on the courts to implement the legislative
will."
Id. at
461 U. S.
596-597.
See also National Muffler Dealers Assn.,
Inc. v. United States, 440 U. S. 472,
440 U. S. 488
(1979) ("The choice among reasonable interpretations [of the
Internal Revenue Code] is for the Commissioner, not the
courts").
We find no support, then, for Mid-America's contention that the
text of the Constitution or the practices of Congress require the
application of a different and stricter nondelegation
Page 490 U. S. 223
doctrine in cases where Congress delegates discretionary
authority to the Executive under its taxing power. In light of this
conclusion, we need not concern ourselves with the threshold
question that so exercised the District Court whether the pipeline
safety users "fees" created by § 7005 are more properly thought of
as a form of taxation because some of the administrative costs paid
by the regulated parties actually inure to the benefit of the
public, rather than directly to the benefit of those parties. Even
if the user fees are a form of taxation, we hold that the
delegation of discretionary authority under Congress' taxing power
is subject to no constitutional scrutiny greater than that we have
applied to other nondelegation challenges. Congress may wisely
choose to be more circumspect in delegating authority under the
Taxing Clause than under other of its enumerated powers, but this
is not a heightened degree of prudence required by the
Constitution.
Our decisions in
National Cable Television Assn., Inc. v.
United States, 415 U. S. 336
(1974), and
FPC v. New England Power Co., 415 U.
S. 345 (1974), are not to the contrary. In these cases,
we considered the provision of the Independent Offices
Appropriation Act (IOAA), 1952, 65 Stat. 290,
recodified
at 31 U.S.C. § 9701, that allows agencies to collect fees
based on
"(A) the costs to the Government; (B) the value of the service
or thing to the recipient; (C) public policy or interest served;
and (D) other relevant facts."
31 U.S.C. § 9701(b)(2). The Federal Communications Commission
and the Federal Power Commission, respectively, sought to recoup
all of their costs in regulating community antenna television
systems and in administering the Federal Power Act and the Natural
Gas Act by assessing fees on the regulated parties. Recognizing
that some of the administrative costs at issue "inured to the
benefit of the public," 415 U.S. at
415 U. S. 343,
rather than directly to the regulated parties, we expressed doubt
whether Congress had clearly intended in the IOAA to delegate
authority to Executive agencies to recover the costs of
Page 490 U. S. 224
benefits conferred on the public by assessing fees on regulated
parties. We observed that, because such fees do not "besto[w] a
benefit on the [regulated party], not shared by other members of
society," they might better be thought of as taxes, rather than
fees. Given at least the possibility of a constitutional difficulty
arising from that delegation under the Taxing Clause, we chose to
interpret the IOAA "narrowly to avoid constitutional problems."
Id. at
415 U. S. 342.
Accordingly, we struck down the agencies' efforts to recover from
regulated parties costs for benefits inuring to the public
generally.
In
FEA v. Algonquin SNG, Inc., 426 U.
S. 548 (1976), we considered a nondelegation challenge
to the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, 76 Stat. 872, which permitted
the President to raise license "fees" on imports when necessary to
protect the national security. In rejecting the challenge, we made
clear that
National Cable Television and
New England
Power stand only for the proposition that Congress must
indicate clearly its intention to delegate to the Executive the
discretionary authority to recover administrative costs not inuring
directly to the benefit of regulated parties by imposing additional
financial burdens, whether characterized as "fees" or "taxes," on
those parties. 426 U.S. at
426 U. S. 560, n. 10. Of course, any such delegation
must also meet the normal requirements of the nondelegation
doctrine. As we have indicated, § 7005 explicitly reflects
Congress' intention that the total costs of administering the HLPSA
and the NGPSA be recovered through the assessment of charges on
those regulated by the Acts, and provides intelligible guidelines
for these assessments. Finding no unconstitutional delegation of
authority, we reverse the decision of the District Court.
It is so ordered.