Case: 20-11179 Document: 00516436126 Page: 1 Date Filed: 08/17/2022
United States Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit
United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
August 17, 2022
No. 20-11179 Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
Data Marketing Partnership, LP; LP Management
Services, LLC,
Plaintiffs—Appellees,
versus
United States Department of Labor; Martin Walsh,
Secretary, U.S. Department of Labor; United States of
America,
Defendants—Appellants.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Texas
USDC No. 4:19-cv-800
Before Smith, Elrod, and Oldham, Circuit Judges.
Andrew S. Oldham, Circuit Judge:
There are three questions presented. The first is whether the
Department of Labor’s self-labeled “advisory opinion” is reviewable “final
agency action” under the Administrative Procedure Act. It is. The second is
whether the Department’s action is arbitrary, capricious, or otherwise
contrary to law. Again, it is. The third is whether the district court issued the
appropriate relief. Here, we affirm the district court’s vacatur of the agency
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action. But we vacate and remand the district court’s injunction for further
consideration in light of this opinion.
I.
We first (A) detail the relevant statutory and regulatory background.
Then we (B) describe the factual and procedural background.
A.
First, some legal background. This appeal involves the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”). ERISA was “[e]nacted
to protect the interests of participants in employee benefit plans and their
beneficiaries.” Raymond B. Yates, M.D., P.C. Profit Sharing Plan v. Hendon,
541 U.S. 1, 6 (2004) (quotation omitted). It “pre-empts ‘any and all State
laws insofar as they may now or hereafter relate to any employee benefit plan’
covered by ERISA.” Rutledge v. Pharm. Care Mgmt. Ass’n, 141 S. Ct. 474, 479
(2020) (quoting 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a)). If ERISA doesn’t regulate the plan,
then state law does.
One relevant plan regulated by ERISA is an “employee welfare benefit
plan,” which can be used by employers to provide health insurance to
“participants.” 29 U.S.C. § 1002(1). ERISA defines a “participant” as “any
employee or former employee of an employer, . . . who is or may become
eligible to receive a benefit of any type from an employee benefit plan which
covers employees of such employer . . . , or whose beneficiaries may be
eligible to receive any such benefit.” Id. § 1002(7). It in turn defines an
“[e]mployee” as “any individual employed by an employer” and an
“employer” as “any person acting directly as an employer, or indirectly in
the interest of an employer, in relation to an employee benefit plan.” Id.
§ 1002(5), (6). As relevant here, a “working owner” or a “bona fide partner”
may be an “employee.” See Yates, 541 U.S. at 6 (working owner); 29 C.F.R.
§ 2590.732(d)(2) (bona fide partner).
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The Department of Labor set up a procedure to formally provide
guidance to entities. See Advisory Opinion Procedure, 41 Fed. Reg. 36,281
(Aug. 27, 1976). It provides two options: (1) “advisory opinions” and
(2) “information letters.” An “advisory opinion” is “a written statement
issued to an individual or organization, or to the authorized representative
. . . , that interprets and applies the Act to a specific factual situation.” Id. at
36,282. In certain circumstances, the requester “may rely on the opinion.”
Id. at 36,283. By contrast, an “information letter” is “a written statement . . .
that does no more than call attention to a well-established interpretation or
principles . . . without applying it to a specific factual situation.” Id. at 36,282.
B.
Next, the factual and procedural background. LP Management
Services, LLC (“Management Services”) serves as the general partner of
several limited partnerships, including Data Marketing Partnership (“Data
Marketing”).
In November 2018, Management Services requested an advisory
opinion from the Department to confirm that a proposed health insurance
plan for its limited partnerships would qualify as an employee welfare benefit
plan under ERISA. In the request, it described Data Marketing’s business
model. Its business is “the capture, segregation, aggregation, and sale to
third-party marketing firms of electronic data generated by [limited partners]
who share such data with” Data Marketing. The limited partners share that
data by “install[ing] specific software [that] tracks the capture of such data
by other companies . . . and provides access of such data to” Data Marketing.
Data Marketing then processes, aggregates, and sells that data to marketers.
The request also described the limited partners’ relationship with
Data Marketing. Individuals become limited partners by executing a joinder
agreement subject to the approval of Management Services. They then
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receive a “Limited Partnership Interest” that permits them to “participate
in global management issues through periodic votes of all Partners.” That
partnership interest also lets them receive income distributions from Data
Marketing that “will be reported as guaranteed payments and subject to
employment taxes.”
By October 2019, the Department still had not issued an advisory
opinion. So plaintiffs sued, sought a declaration that their plan was covered
by ERISA, and moved for an injunction ordering the Department not to
release a contrary advisory opinion.
A few months later, the Department issued a six-page advisory
opinion. Based on the facts in the request and the complaint, the Department
concluded that plaintiffs’ plan was not covered by ERISA. According to the
Department, the limited partners were neither working owners nor bona fide
partners because their work lacked hallmarks of a traditional employment
relationship and their financial stake and participation in the management of
the business was not serious enough. The Department also emphasized that
plaintiffs’ structure was a sham, intended only to sell insurance to consumers
under ERISA rather than state law.
Plaintiffs then amended their complaint to challenge the lawfulness of
the advisory opinion. Thereafter, plaintiffs and the Department cross-moved
for summary judgment. The district court granted plaintiffs’ motion, denied
the Department’s cross-motion, vacated the agency action, and permanently
enjoined the Department “from refusing to acknowledge the ERISA-status
of the Plan or refusing to recognize the Limited Partners as working owners
of” Data Marketing.
The district court reached two relevant conclusions. First, the district
court concluded that the advisory opinion was final agency action. That’s
because no further agency review was available and because the opinion
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denied plaintiffs the safe harbor of federal preemption, which exposed them
to state insurance regulation. Second, the district court concluded that the
advisory opinion was arbitrary, capricious, and contrary to law. The court
determined that the limited partners were “working owners” under a
definition that the Department had previously used in another advisory
opinion. In the alternative, the district court determined that the limited
partners were “bona fide partners” because they had a “more-than-
pretextual relationship” with Data Marketing and because the “bona fide
partner” standard was easier to meet than the “working owner” standard.
The Department timely appealed. We have appellate jurisdiction
under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review the grant of summary judgment de novo.
Playa Vista Conroe v. Ins. Co. of the W., 989 F.3d 411, 414 (5th Cir. 2021). And
we review the district court’s permanent injunction and vacatur of the agency
action for abuse of discretion. Whole Woman’s Health v. Paxton, 10 F.4th 430,
438 (5th Cir. 2021) (en banc); Standing Rock Sioux Tribe v. U.S. Army Corps
of Eng’rs, 985 F.3d 1032, 1051 (D.C. Cir. 2021).
We (II) determine whether the advisory opinion is final agency action.
We next (III) address whether the advisory opinion is (A) arbitrary and
capricious and (B) contrary to law because it unreasonably interpreted the
applicable statutory and regulatory provisions. Finally, we (IV) tackle the
proper remedy.
II.
Start with finality. The Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”)
provides judicial review of “final agency action for which there is no other
adequate remedy in a court.” 5 U.S.C. § 704. Our circuit considers finality
“a jurisdictional prerequisite of judicial review.” Louisiana v. U.S. Army
Corps of Eng’rs, 834 F.3d 574, 584 (5th Cir. 2016). There are two
requirements: (A) “the action must mark the consummation of the agency’s
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decisionmaking process—it must not be of a merely tentative or interlocutory
nature.” U.S. Army Corps of Eng’rs v. Hawkes Co., 578 U.S. 590, 597 (2016)
(quotation omitted). And (B) “the action must be one by which rights or
obligations have been determined, or from which legal consequences will
flow.” Ibid. (quotation omitted). This is generally a “pragmatic” inquiry. Id.
at 599 (quotation omitted); but see Biden v. Texas, 142 S. Ct. 2528, 2559 n.7
(2022) (Alito, J., dissenting) (explaining that the Court sometimes uses an
“expansive, formalist approach to the second Bennett factor . . . at odds with
the usual pragmatic approach” (quotation omitted)). We consider each
requirement in turn and find both satisfied.
A.
The advisory opinion consummated the Department’s
decisionmaking process. That’s because it is “not subject to further Agency
review.” Sackett v. EPA, 566 U.S. 120, 127 (2012). The Department
effectively concedes that the advisory opinion is not subject to additional
agency review.
Instead, the Department recycles an argument that the Supreme
Court has repeatedly rejected: The action isn’t final because the agency can
change its position or its reasons for the decision after more factfinding. This
argument is squarely foreclosed by numerous Supreme Court decisions. See,
e.g., ibid. (“The mere possibility that an agency might reconsider in light of
‘informal discussion’ and invited contentions of inaccuracy does not suffice
to make an otherwise final agency action nonfinal.”); Hawkes, 578 U.S. at 598
(“The Corps may revise an [action] within the five-year period based on new
information. That possibility, however, is a common characteristic of agency
action, and does not make an otherwise definitive decision nonfinal.”
(quotation omitted)). An action is either final or not, and the mere fact that
the agency could—or actually does—reverse course in the future does not
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change that fact. See Biden v. Texas, 142 S. Ct. at 2545 (“[B]oth the June 1
Memorandum and the October 29 Memoranda, when they were issued, marked
the consummation of the agency’s decisionmaking process and resulted in
rights and obligations being determined.” (emphasis added) (quotation
omitted)). Were it otherwise, no agency action would be final because an
agency could always revisit it. And that can’t be right. 1
Prong one is thus satisfied.
B.
The advisory opinion also determined rights, produced obligations, or
caused legal consequences. That’s for three reasons.
First, it’s well-established that “where agency action withdraws an
entity’s previously held discretion, that action alters the legal regime, binds
the entity, and thus qualifies as final agency action.” Texas v. EEOC, 933 F.3d
433, 442 (5th Cir. 2019) (quotation omitted). The advisory opinion did that
here. The applicable regulation provides requestors the right to “rely” in
certain circumstances on the opinion. 41 Fed. Reg. at 36,283. So the advisory
opinion bound the Department to some degree and withdrew its previously
held discretion. That’s textbook final agency action.
Contrary to the Department’s suggestion, it doesn’t matter that there
are preconditions to the requestor’s reliance. See 41 Fed. Reg. at 36,283
(allowing reliance where the request is accurate). Nor does it matter that a
future event must occur to satisfy those preconditions. See Biden v. Texas, 142
1
The Department also points to Taylor-Callahan-Coleman Counties District Adult
Probation Department v. Dole, 948 F.2d 953 (5th Cir. 1991), for the idea that actions that are
“subject to change” are not final. See id. at 957. This opinion was contradicted by the
Supreme Court’s subsequent decisions in Sackett and Hawkes, so we aren’t bound by it.
See, e.g., Gahagan v. USCIS, 911 F.3d 298, 302 (5th Cir. 2018).
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S. Ct. at 2545 n.7 (“The fact that the agency could not cease implementing
MPP, as directed by the October 29 Memoranda, until it obtained vacatur of
the District Court’s injunction, did not make the October 29 Memoranda any
less the agency’s final determination of its employees’ obligation to do so
once such judicial authorization had been obtained.”). All that matters is
that, when those preconditions are met, the Department loses discretion.
The Department insists that it hasn’t lost any discretion because
plaintiffs can’t prevent state regulation with the particular advisory opinion
they received. In other words, the Department focuses on how plaintiffs
would use the current advisory opinion rather than the advisory opinion
plaintiffs wanted. That focus is wrong. “The fact that the advisory opinion
procedure is complete and deprives the plaintiff of a legal right . . . [that] it
would enjoy if it had obtained a favorable resolution in the advisory opinion
process . . . denies a right with consequences sufficient to warrant review.”
Unity08 v. FEC, 596 F.3d 861, 865 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (quotation omitted); see
also Env’t Def. Fund, Inc. v. Ruckelshaus, 439 F.2d 584, 589 n.8 (D.C. Cir.
1971). The Department can’t escape finality just by ruling against the
requester.
Second, the applicable regulation contemplates that the “failure to
obtain an advisory opinion” can cause “unusual hardship.” 41 Fed. Reg. at
36,282. This further confirms that an advisory opinion is “binding as a
practical matter” and thus final. Texas v. EEOC, 933 F.3d at 442 (quotation
omitted). After all, how can an advisory opinion alleviate “unusual hardship”
without determining any rights, producing any obligations, or causing any
legal consequences?
Third, comparing the Department’s advisory opinions to its
information letters reinforces that its advisory opinions are final agency
action. Information letters are “informational only” and are “not binding on
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the Department with respect to any particular factual situation.” 41 Fed. Reg.
at 36,282. Advisory opinions, by contrast, are the “opinion of the
Department as to the application[s] of” ERISA and may be relied on in
certain circumstances. Id. at 36,283. The Department thus had the choice to
provide final agency action (advisory opinion) instead of non-final agency
action (information letter). See id. at 36,282 (“[T]he Department may, when
it is deemed appropriate and in the best interest of sound administration of
the Act, issue information letters calling attention to established principles
under the Act, even though the request that was submitted was for an
advisory opinion.”). It chose final agency action. And that choice has
consequences.
Prong two is thus satisfied. The agency’s action is final.
III.
Next, the action’s lawfulness. We (A) conclude that the advisory
opinion is arbitrary and capricious. We then (B) frame the relevant
interpretive questions for the district court’s consideration on remand.
A.
The APA directs courts to “hold unlawful and set aside agency
action[s]” that are “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise
not in accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2). “The APA’s arbitrary-and-
capricious standard requires that agency action be reasonable and reasonably
explained.” FCC v. Prometheus Radio Project, 141 S. Ct. 1150, 1158 (2021). We
must not “substitute” our “own policy judgment for that of the agency.”
Ibid. Still, we must ensure that “the agency has acted within a zone of
reasonableness and, in particular, has reasonably considered the relevant
issues and reasonably explained the decision.” Ibid.; see also Motor Vehicle
Mfrs. Ass’n of U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43
(1983). “Put simply, we must set aside any action premised on reasoning that
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fails to account for ‘relevant factors’ or evinces ‘a clear error of judgment.’”
Univ. of Tex. M.D. Anderson Cancer Ctr. v. HHS, 985 F.3d 472, 475 (5th Cir.
2021) (quoting Marsh v. Or. Nat. Res. Council, 490 U.S. 360, 378 (1989)).
In reviewing an agency’s action, we may consider only the reasoning
“articulated by the agency itself”; we cannot consider post hoc
rationalizations. State Farm, 463 U.S. at 50; see also DHS v. Regents of the
Univ. of Cal., 140 S. Ct. 1891, 1909 (2020) (“An agency must defend its
actions based on the reasons it gave when it acted.”). At the same time, the
fact that an agency provided a post hoc rationalization is relevant evidence that
the action is arbitrary and capricious. See, e.g., Wages & White Lion Invs., LLC
v. FDA, 16 F.4th 1130, 1140 (5th Cir. 2021) (“The very fact that the FDA
perceived the need to rehabilitate its Order with new and different arguments
before our court underscores that the Order itself omitted a reasoned
justification for the agency’s action.”); Texas v. Biden, 20 F.4th 928, 993 (5th
Cir. 2021). 2
Our review is “not toothless.” Sw. Elec. Power Co. v. EPA, 920 F.3d
999, 1013 (5th Cir. 2019). In fact, it’s well-established that “after Regents, it
2
The Supreme Court recently reversed our judgment in Texas v. Biden. See Biden
v. Texas, 142 S. Ct. at 2548 (reversing the court of appeals). It’s thus important to
determine the extent to which the panel’s opinion is still binding under this circuit’s rule
of orderliness. Our rule of orderliness requires us to follow the panel opinion except for the
portions of it on statutory interpretation and final agency action. See Cent. Pines Land Co.
v. United States, 274 F.3d 881, 893 n.57 (5th Cir. 2001) (concluding that circuit opinions in
which the judgment was reversed on some but not all grounds are still precedential with
respect to the portions not reversed); United States v. Kirk, 528 F.2d 1057, 1063–64 (5th
Cir. 1976); see also Texas v. United States, 40 F.4th 205, 222 n.9 (5th Cir. 2022) (per curiam)
(understanding Texas v. Biden, 20 F.4th 928 (5th Cir. 2021), to be binding on all grounds
not reversed). So the panel’s understanding of arbitrary-and-capricious review,
reviewability under Heckler v. Chaney, 470 U.S. 821 (1985), Article III standing, mootness,
&c. remains binding. Cf. Stokes v. Sw. Airlines, 887 F.3d 199, 205 (5th Cir. 2018) (“[T]he
determination whether a given precedent has been abrogated is itself a determination
subject to the rule of orderliness.”).
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has serious bite.” See, e.g., Wages, 16 F.4th at 1136; Texas v. United States, 40
F.4th 205, 226 (5th Cir. 2022) (per curiam).
The Department failed to “reasonably consider[] the relevant issues
and reasonably explain[]” the advisory opinion. Prometheus, 141 S. Ct. at
1158; see also Michigan v. EPA, 576 U.S. 743, 750, 752 (2015) (“[A]gency
action is lawful only if it rests on a consideration of the relevant factors” and
“important aspect[s] of the problem.” (quotation omitted)). The key factors
the Department ignored were its prior advisory opinions discussing the term
“working owner” and its regulation adopting a definition of the term in a
related context. See Dep’t of Labor, Advisory Op. No. 99-04A, 1999 WL
64920, at *2 n.3 (Feb. 4, 1999) [hereinafter 1999 opinion]; Dep’t of Labor,
Advisory Op. No. 2006-04A, 2006 WL 1401678, at *3 (Apr. 27, 2006)
[hereinafter 2006 opinion]; Definition of “Employer” Under Section 3(5) of
ERISA—Association Health Plans, 83 Fed. Reg. 28,912, 28,931 (June 21,
2018); 29 C.F.R. § 2510.3-5(e). These omissions doom the Department’s
action.
Start with the omitted advisory opinions. In 1999, the Department
issued an advisory opinion that characterized the term “working owner”:
By the term “working owner,” [the requester] apparently
mean[s] any individual who has an equity ownership right of
any nature in a business enterprise and who is actively engaged
in providing services to that business, as distinguished from a
“passive” owner, who may own shares in a corporation, for
example, but is not otherwise involved in the activities in which
the business engages for profit.
1999 opinion, supra, at *2 n.3. In 2006, the Department issued another
advisory opinion reiterating this prior characterization. See 2006 opinion,
supra, at *3. Yet the Department never even mentioned this prior
characterization in the advisory opinion at issue here.
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The Department’s failure is hardly “reasoned decisionmaking.”
Michigan, 576 U.S. at 750 (quotation omitted). The opinion at issue adopts a
definition of “working owner” materially different from the definitions in the
1999 and 2006 opinions. The opinion thus has “an unexplained
inconsistency”—the hallmark of “an arbitrary and capricious change from
agency practice.” Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro, 579 U.S. 211, 222
(2016) (quotation omitted). Plus, if courts must give the Department’s
advisory opinions Skidmore deference, then the Department itself must
meaningfully consider relevant advisory opinions as well to issue a
“reasonable and reasonably explained” action. Prometheus, 141 S. Ct. at 1158.
“That omission alone renders [the Department’s opinion] arbitrary and
capricious, but it was not the only defect.” Regents, 140 S. Ct. at 1896.
The Department justifies ignoring its prior characterization of the
term “working owner” because the characterization originated in an
advisory opinion predating the Supreme Court’s 2004 decision in Yates. But
Yates is no justification. For one thing, the Department referred to the 1999
opinion’s definition of “working owner” after Yates in the 2006 advisory
opinion. See 2006 opinion, supra, at *3. For another, the Supreme Court in
Yates relied on that very same 1999 opinion, though not specifically for
defining the term “working owner.” See 541 U.S. at 17–18, 20. Still, Yates
shows that the Department was on notice of the 1999 opinion’s significance
and potential continued significance. And in all events, Data Marketing cited
the 1999 opinion in its submission, putting the Department on notice of the
relevant authority.
The Department also failed to address a regulation that adopted a
definition of “working owner.” See 29 C.F.R. § 2510.3-5(e) (definition). The
Department in promulgating the regulation justified at length its definition of
“working owner.” See 83 Fed. Reg. at 28,929–33; see also id. at 28,964
(providing the definition). Yet the Department adopted a contrary definition
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in the opinion here and never acknowledged the regulation. It did so even
though Data Marketing cited the regulation in its request. One would think
that a reasonable agency’s “natural response” to seeing a regulation with a
definition of the exact same term at issue in the request would be to consider
the definition—perhaps explaining why the Department is adopting a
different one. Regents, 140 S. Ct. at 1916. 3
More fundamentally, the Department spills much ink in its response
brief either explaining away the prior advisory opinions and the regulation or
arguing that the definitions they adopted are consistent with the ones
adopted elsewhere. But all those arguments were not made in the final agency
action itself and thus aren’t “contemporaneous explanations.” Regents, 140
S. Ct. at 1909. They are instead “impermissible post hoc rationalizations.”
Ibid. And these post hoc rationalizations confirm that the action here is
arbitrary and capricious. See Wages, 16 F.4th at 1140; Texas v. Biden, 20 F.4th
at 993.
B.
Next we consider whether the district court interpreted the relevant
provisions correctly. The court interpreted two relevant terms: (1) “working
owner” and (2) “bona fide partners.” We remand as to both terms, so that
the district court may address certain interpretive questions in the first
instance.
3
It’s true that a district court in March 2019 held the regulation’s definition
unreasonable because it included working owners without employees. See New York v.
DOL, 363 F. Supp. 3d 109, 136–39 (D.D.C. 2019). But this makes the Department’s failure
to discuss the regulation all the more perplexing. The Department appealed the decision to
defend the definition. If the definition is worth defending in court, it’s worth meaningfully
addressing in an advisory opinion when the request cites the regulation.
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1.
First, “working owner.” In Yates, the Supreme Court concluded that
a “working owner” may qualify as an “employee” and a “participant” under
ERISA. 541 U.S. at 6. In reaching this conclusion, the Court did not “resort
to common law.” Id. at 12. Instead, the Court determined that “ERISA’s
text contains multiple indications that Congress intended working owners to
qualify as plan participants” and that “these indications combine to provide
specific guidance.” Ibid. (quotation omitted). The Court, however, did not
“clearly define who exactly makes up this class of ‘working owners.’” Id. at
25 n.* (Thomas, J., concurring in the judgment). All it said was that “a
working owner may have dual status, i.e., he can be an employee entitled to
participate in a plan and, at the same time, the employer (or owner or member
of the employer) who established the plan.” Id. at 16 (majority op.); see also
ibid. (stating that “a working owner can wear two hats, as an employer and
employee”). Lower courts were thus left to determine the scope of the term.
Yates nevertheless provided courts a framework for assessing
working-owner questions. Yates requires courts to determine whether
ERISA’s text provides “specific guidance” on the precise question before
the court, such that resort to the common law is unnecessary. To determine
whether ERISA provides “adequate[] informati[on],” courts must consider,
among other things, all four titles of ERISA and the Internal Revenue Code.
Ibid.; see also id. at 12–13 (“Congress enacted ERISA against a backdrop of
IRC provisions that permitted corporate shareholders, partners, and sole
proprietors to participate in tax-qualified pension plans. . . . Congress’
objective was to harmonize ERISA with longstanding tax provisions.”).
The district court did not perform this analysis. It appears to have
understood Yates to say that ERISA always provides specific guidance for all
working-owner questions. In our estimation, however, Yates only concluded
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there was sufficient guidance for the particular threshold question before the
Court—i.e., whether working owners may qualify as participants at all. That,
however, does not mean the same guidance is relevant, let alone specific
enough, to resolve all working-owner questions. Rather, the question on
remand is whether all of the Yates factors, including the various provisions of
ERISA and the IRC, combine to make these particular working owners
qualify as plan participants.
2.
Now, bona fide partners. The applicable regulation says:
Employment relationship. In the case of a group health plan, the
term employer also includes the partnership in relation to any
bona fide partner. In addition, the term employee also includes
any bona fide partner. Whether or not an individual is a bona
fide partner is determined based on all the relevant facts and
circumstances, including whether the individual performs
services on behalf of the partnership.
29 C.F.R. § 2590.732(d)(2). The regulation requires the determination to be
“based on all the relevant facts and circumstances” and then provides one
example consideration (“whether the individual performs services on behalf
of the partnership”). In essence, the regulation commands a totality-of-the-
circumstances analysis.
The district court did not appear to apply a totality-of-the-
circumstances inquiry. It instead understood the regulatory definition to
“simply require[] a more-than-pretextual relationship between the employer
and employee.” And it determined that the limited partners were bona fide
partners because the “standard is a lower threshold” than for working
owners. Insofar as these standards differ from a totality-of-the-circumstances
inquiry, the district court erred.
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As with the working-owner inquiry, we believe it best to remand for
the district court to apply the totality-of-the-circumstances inquiry in the first
instance. On remand, the district court should also consider whether the
Department’s interpretation of the regulation warrants Auer deference or
whether the Department forfeited the argument for such deference. See Ortiz
v. McDonough, 6 F.4th 1267, 1275–76 (Fed. Cir. 2021) (Auer deference
forfeitable); cf. HollyFrontier Cheyenne Refin., LLC v. Renewable Fuels Ass’n,
141 S. Ct. 2172, 2180 (2021) (“[T]he government is not invoking Chevron.
We therefore decline to consider whether any deference might be due its
regulation.” (quotation omitted)); Texas v. Biden, 20 F.4th at 961 (“The
Government thus forfeited the Chevron issue by failing to mention it in its
brief.”).
IV.
Next, the proper remedy. The APA gives courts the power to “hold
unlawful and set aside agency action[s].” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2). Under prevailing
precedent, § 706 “extends beyond the mere non-enforcement remedies
available to courts that review the constitutionality of legislation, as it
empowers courts to ‘set aside’—i.e., formally nullify and revoke—an
unlawful agency action.” Jonathan F. Mitchell, The Writ-of-Erasure Fallacy,
104 Va. L. Rev. 933, 950 (2018); see also id. at 1012–16; Texas v. Biden, 20
F.4th at 957 (“That statutory empowerment means that, unlike a court’s
decision to hold a statute unconstitutional, the district court’s vacatur
rendered the June 1 Termination Decision void.” (emphasis added));
Driftless Area Land Conservancy v. Valcq, 16 F.4th 508, 522 (7th Cir. 2021)
(“Vacatur [of an agency action] retroactively undoes or expunges a past
[agency] action. . . . Unlike an injunction, which merely blocks enforcement,
vacatur unwinds the challenged agency action.”); Monsanto Co. v. Geertson
Seed Farms, 561 U.S. 139, 165 (2010) (describing vacatur as “a less drastic
remedy” than an injunction); but see John Harrison, Section 706 of the
16
Case: 20-11179 Document: 00516436126 Page: 17 Date Filed: 08/17/2022
No. 20-11179
Administrative Procedure Act Does Not Call for Universal Injunctions or Other
Universal Remedies, 37 Yale J. on Reg. Bull. 37 (2020). The default rule
is that vacatur is the appropriate remedy. See, e.g., Texas v. Biden, 20 F.4th at
1000 (“[B]y default, remand with vacatur is the appropriate remedy.”);
United Steel v. Mine Safety & Health Admin., 925 F.3d 1279, 1287 (D.C. Cir.
2019) (“The ordinary practice is to vacate unlawful agency action.”). The
Department makes no developed argument that the district court abused its
discretion in following the default rule, so the Department forfeited the
argument. See, e.g., DeVoss v. Sw. Airlines Co., 903 F.3d 487, 489 n.1 (5th Cir.
2018) (concluding that an argument was “forfeited” because it wasn’t
“structured”); United States v. Maes, 961 F.3d 366, 377 (5th Cir. 2020);
United States v. Avants, 367 F.3d 433, 442 (5th Cir. 2004); Trevino v. Johnson,
168 F.3d 173, 181 n.3 (5th Cir. 1999). We therefore uphold the court’s
vacatur.
The district court also permanently “enjoined” the Department
“from refusing to acknowledge the ERISA-status of the Plan or refusing to
recognize the Limited Partners as working owners of” Data Marketing. This
injunction, however, turned on the interpretative questions that the district
court must further address on remand. So we vacate this injunction without
opining on whether such relief might be appropriate.
* * *
The Supreme Court has made clear that when it comes to arbitrary-
and-capricious review, “the Government should turn square corners in
dealing with the people.” Regents, 140 S. Ct. at 1909 (quotation omitted). The
Department failed to do that. For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s
judgment is AFFIRMED in part, VACATED in part, and
REMANDED.
17