dissenting:
The majority here achieves a remarkable result: the petitioner is denied relief in the District Court because the Court of Appeals has exclusive jurisdiction; the petitioner is denied relief in this Court of Appeals because petitioner’s challenge is “untimely”; even though it was precisely the weird procedure in the FDA which left the petitioner with neither clear reason nor opportunity to challenge the regulations, “the attack on the procedure . . . fails because no prejudice has been shown”; and, by lifting of the protective stay on 14 March 1977 with the reasons for decision following eleven months later, the petitioner has been denied any realistic chance of relief by seeking en banc consideration or certiorari. How did Justice assume this shape?
It is significant that there is not' a Statement of Facts as such in the majority opinion; rather, highlights of the procedural history are interspersed through a discussion of legal precedents. The procedural facts here are detailed and all important to a correct appreciation and resolution of a jurisdictional conundrum which is being posed with increasing frequency to this court. In this particular matter the procedural history is embarrassing to the FDA and to the disposition the majority make of this case. If the reader receives the impression that the Commissioner was operating without legal counsel, or with lawyers who preferred to ignore the agency’s basic statute and the Administrative Procedure Act, while devising ad hoc procedure en route to final regulations, that impression is an accurate reflection of the record.
For any effective analysis of both the specific errors here and the recurring legal problem, no giant slalom through the facts, touching a pole here and there, will suffice. We must first look very carefully at the procedural steps taken by the Commissioner and the appropriateness of the responsive action (or non-action) taken by the petitioner, before proceeding to an analysis of Where, When and from What judicial review should take place. The Where, When, and What of judicial review under these circumstances has, in my opinion, an importance far beyond its impact on this case; the ad hoc procedure blithely employed by the FDA here serves only as a glaring illustration of why careful, thorough consideration by this court is necessary.
In these two cases the Independent Cosmetic Manufacturers and Distributors, Inc. (ICMAD), a trade association comprised of small-to-medium sized manufacturers and distributors of cosmetic, skin care, and fragrance products, seeks to challenge a cosmetic ingredient labeling regulation1 promulgated by the Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration pursuant to § 1454 of the Fair Packaging and Labeling Act (FPLA).2 Recognizing confusion in the law regarding the proper forum for judicial review,3 ICMAD filed suit in the District *350Court for declaratory and injunctive relief on 27 August 1975; on the same day, IC-MAD filed a petition for review of the regulation in this court. The result of the majority’s decision on both of petitioner’s pleas is to deny ICMAD any opportunity to obtain judicial review of the Commissioner’s cosmetic labeling regulation anywhere.
I dissent from the majority’s position on the grounds that the District Court has subject matter jurisdiction over ICMAD’s action and that, in the context of this case, the District Court was the proper forum for ICMAD’s challenge. Most emphatically, I also dissent from the majority’s conclusion that ICMAD’s petition in this court was not timely filed. These cases present a significant and recurring issue related to the choice of the proper federal forum in which to mount a challenge to federal administrative agency action; the result here is that federal agency action is totally insulated from judicial review.
I. THE AGENCY PROCEEDINGS
The thesis of this dissent is that the nature of the administrative record is central to a determination as to the proper forum in this and similar cases; the procedural history of the labeling regulation emphasizes this critical point as to the nature of the record which has been developed.
In addition, the precise chronology of events is crucial to making an informed decision on the question of the timeliness of ICMAD’s petition in this court. In this part, I shall first outline the statutory authority under which the Commissioner proceeded in promulgating the regulation, and then proceed to examine in detail the various stages in the evolution of the cosmetic labeling regulation.
A. Statutory Authority.
Section 1454(c) of the FPLA grants the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare the discretionary authority to promulgate labeling and packaging regulations whenever he determines such regulations “are necessary to prevent the deception of consumers or to facilitate value comparisons.” 4 This authority may be exercised to require, among other things, “that the label on each package of a consumer commodity . bear (A) the common or usual name of such consumer commodity, if any, and (B) in case such consumer commodity consists of two or more ingredients, the common or usual name of each such ingredient listed in order of decreasing predominance,” so long as trade secrets are not required to be divulged.5 The labeling regulation at issue in these cases seeks to prescribe the precise method to govern such a listing of cosmetic ingredients in order of decreasing predominance.
In promulgating labeling regulations, the Secretary is required by § 1455 of the FPLA to observe the procedural requirements of section 701(e) of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act.6 Also, the judicial review of these regulations is governed by the provisions of section 701(f) of the Food and Drug Act.7 Therefore, in analyzing the issues presented in this case, the provisions of the Food and Drug Act, not the FPLA, will be the primary focus of concern.
*351B. Procedural Background.
The central point to be kept in mind is that the cosmetic ingredient labeling regulation was promulgated in an amazingly piecemeal fashion during the period beginning 7 February 1973 and ending 30 May 1975. During this period the Commissioner published notices and other material concerning the regulation on five separate occasions in the Federal Register,8 and took other action not so noticed. The undeniable result was, contrary to the majority opinion, that the petitioner had not clear designation as to from What it should appeal, When, and eventually, Where! For purposes of organizing this discussion of the procedural background, these five communications from the Commissioner will be examined seriatim.
1. 7 February 1973. On this date the Commissioner first issued the proposal for the labeling of cosmetics. There were actually two proposals put forth in this notice— one proposal consisted of a petition presented by a private party, while the other was the Commissioner’s proposal. The Commissioner’s proposal is the one which was subsequently discussed, amended, and adopted, and any further mention of the labeling regulation will refer to this proposal. The Commissioner’s proposal sought to add § 1.205 to Chapter I of 21 C.F.R. and, at this time, consisted of four subsections.
In the notice of 7 February 1973 the Commissioner stated that written comments on the proposal to require ingredient labeling would be received until 9 April 1973.
2. 17 October 1973. In this notice the Commissioner announced that 291 comments had been received in response to the proposals published on 7 February 1973. Several comments received during this period questioned (1) the Commissioner’s legal authority to promulgate the regulation and also questioned (2) whether the Commissioner had met the statutory standard of determining that the regulation was necessary to prevent consumer deception or to facilitate value comparison. These objections are of great importance in this case because they later formed the basis for ICMAD’s judicial challenge to the regulation.
The Commissioner undertook to answer these two objections in the notice of 17 October 1973. With respect to the statutory authority issue, the Commissioner stated:
The Commissioner concludes that Section 5 of the Fair Packaging and Labeling Act contains ample authority for the promulgation of this regulation. For the purposes of ingredient labeling, the Commissioner concludes that all cosmetics are appropriately considered a single “commodity”. However, even if the term “cosmetic” is considered to encompass several separable cosmetic “commodities”, nevertheless the Commissioner concludes that ingredient labeling is needed for all such commodities and that a comprehensive order governing all such commodities in this respect is most efficient. As the United States Supreme Court has recently observed in upholding other regulations of the Food and Drug Administration, “[t]he comprehensive rather than the individual treatment may indeed be necessary for quick effective relief.” Weinberger v. Hynson, Westcott & Dun*352ning, 412 U.S. 609, 93 S.Ct. 2469, 2481 [37 L.Ed.2d 207] (June 18, 1973).9
With respect to the statutorily mandated finding of necessity, the following justification was put forth:
The Commissioner also concludes that cosmetic ingredient labeling is necessary to prevent the deception of consumers and to facilitate value comparisons. Ingredient labeling can be meaningful in preventing consumer deception by precluding product claims that are unreasonable in relation to the ingredients present and by providing consumers with additional information that can contribute to a knowledgeable judgment regarding the reasonableness of the price of the product. Furthermore, while ingredient identity may not be the sole determinant of a product’s value to a consumer, it is one important criterion of a product’s value in comparison with others. The presence of a substance to which a consumer is allergic or sensitive, for example, may render the product worthless to that consumer.10
In the entire record of the proceedings before the FDA, the issues of statutory authority and adherence to the statutory standard were faced only in this 17 October 1978 notice and only in the above quoted passages.
In the 17 October notice the Commissioner set a deadline of 16 November 1973 for the filing of objections and requests for hearings on the provisions of the ingredient labeling regulation. Also, the Commission for the first time set effective dates for the regulation to be put into operation; the regulation was to apply to all cosmetic labeling ordered after 31 March 1974 and to all cosmetic products labeled after 31 March 1975.
Finally, in the 17 October 1973 notice, the Commissioner invited petitions for the amendment of the regulation to deal with exemptions for incidental ingredients present in cosmetic products in insignificant amounts. This action was taken in response to comments received on this issue.
In summary, the notice of 17 October 1973 sought to accomplish three goals. First, the Commissioner undertook to express his opinion on the substantive issues raised in the written comments that had been received. Second, the Commissioner added a fifth subsection to his original proposal which invited petitions from interested parties to establish specific uniform names for cosmetic ingredients. In announcing this fifth subsection, the Commissioner stated that each such petition would be subject to notice and comment procedures prescribed in the FDA regulations. Third, the Commissioner for the first time invited formal objections and requests for hearing to the regulation as it then stood.
This point bears repeating: it was at this stage (17 October 1973) that interested parties were first given the opportunity to exercise the procedural rights to object specified in section 701(e) of the Food and Drug Act. The point to be made is that the form and content of the regulation were still very much open to discussion and debate as of 17 October 1978; the Commissioner on this date envisioned that the process of informal rulemaking would proceed at least until all objections had been dealt •with.11 The majority opinion is thus totally in error on the critical point in its own rationale when it states: “[T]he original regulation . . . was published in final form in the Federal Register on October 17, 1973 (38 Fed.Reg. 28912) ... and ICMAD’s petition for review in 1975 clearly falls outside the 90-day boundary.”12 The Commissioner himself prescribed a thirty day limit on the filing of objections and requests for hearings in his continuation of informal rulemaking. (38 Fed.Reg. 28912) There was no administration action at this *353date from which anyone could have sought judicial review within 90 days, and no one did.
3. 25 July 1974. The Commissioner reported on this date that thirteen objections and four requests for hearing had been received as the result of his notice of 17 October 1973. In response to these filings, the Commissioner prepared what he termed a “Tentative Revised Final Order.” The Commissioner stated his belief that this tentative revised order adequately dealt with the objections and eliminated the need for a public hearing.
The Tentative Revised Final Order was not published in the Federal Register and, therefore, one who depended on public notices as required by the Food and Drug Act would be unable to gauge the magnitude of the changes which the Commissioner made in response to the objections. Rather, the order was sent to all parties who had filed objections and was placed on display with the Hearing Clerk of the FDA for a period of thirty days. The Commissioner also announced that he would meet privately with any parties during the period from 25 July 1974 to 23 August 1974 to discuss the proposed ingredient labeling regulation.
The informal rule making, albeit with some unusual variations, was thus continuing; there was still no final administrative action from which an appeal could be taken, and none was.
4. 3 March 1975. This is the key date with respect to understanding the procedural history of the cosmetic ingredient labeling regulation. On this date the Commissioner divided his communications on the subject of cosmetic ingredient labeling into two notices.
Although the Commissioner termed the communications as two separate notices, they dealt with the same subject matter, were filed with the Registrar of federal documents at exactly the same time, and were separated in the Federal Register by only a short black horizontal line. As will be seen, there is no doubt the Commissioner wanted the notices thought of as being separate; the question of whether this technique exalts form over substance in an unacceptable manner will be discussed at a later point.
In the first notice the Commissioner explained his reason for not holding public hearings in response to the filed objections:
The Commissioner believes that the factual circumstances involved are well known to the Food and Drug Administration and that a hearing could not provide additional information.13
The Commissioner asserted that the private discussions he had been holding pursuant to his 25 July 1974 notice were justified by this assumed inability of a public hearing to provide additional information.
The primary purpose of this first notice of 3 March 1975 was to promulgate significant additions to the ingredient labeling regulation which had been the focus of attention since 7 February 1973. In this notice the Commissioner proposed the addition of twelve subsections to the five subsections which had already been proposed. According to the Commissioner, these proposed additions contained “refinements of and alternatives to the original regulations for ingredient labeling . . . [T]he new provisions offer alternative methods for ingredient declaration.”14
The Commissioner began the first 3 March 1975 notice by referring to the 17 October 1973 notice as “the first final order” for cosmetic labeling.15 This terminology at first appears puzzling to one who reads this 3 March notice; the significance of this statement becomes apparent only when the overall purpose of the Commissioner’s 3 March notices is considered. The Commissioner’s intention is to have the 12 new subsections considered as a separate unit, apart from the original five subsections discussed in all previous public notices. Even though the Commissioner has stated *354that the proposed additions represent “refinements of and alternatives to the original regulations," as of 3 March 1975 he began to consider the two sets of subsections (a-e, f-q) as separate entities. The majority opinion accepts without question this post hoc description, ignoring the call in the 17 October 1973 order for further informal rulemaking, ignoring the Commissioner’s own actions over the intervening 17 months, and never deigning to explain from What the petitioner could have sought relief after the 17 October 1973 order which plainly contemplated further administrative proceedings on the proposed regulations. The validity of the Commissioner’s characterization is central to the question of the timeliness of ICMAD’s petition in this court.
As a conclusion to the first notice of 3 March 1975, the Commissioner set a deadline of 2 April 1975 for the filing of objections to the twelve proposed subsections. The Commissioner also set new effective dates of 3 March 1976 for ordering labels and 3 September 1976 for labeling of products. The new effective dates were to apply to the entire regulation (the original five plus the twelve new subsections); no attempt was made to separate the regulations for this purpose.
In the second notice-published on 3 March 1975, the Commissioner dealt with the objections filed in response to the first five subsections discussed in the 17 October 1973 notice.16 The Commissioner found substance in only two of the objections and ordered that these provisions be stayed pending a public hearing. With respect to the effect of the stayed provisions on the original 17 October 1973 provisions, the Commissioner stated that “the unstayed portions of the October 1973 order are distinct and unaffected. The Commissioner concludes that these separable parts of the October 1973 order should be placed into effect without further delay.”17
Thus, as a result of the two notices published on 3 March 1975, the Commissioner had divided the cosmetic ingredient labeling regulation into three separate entities: 1) the unstayed portions of the 17 October 1973 notice (three subsections); 2) the stayed portions of the 17 October 1973 notice (two subsections); and 3) the twelve new subsections promulgated first in the notice of 3 March 1975. The logic and appropriateness of this division will be examined in a later section.
5. 30 May 1975. In this notice the Commission dealt with the objections (which included the first written objections interposed by ICMAD) filed pursuant to the notices issued 3 March 1975. As to those objections which concerned the first five subsections originally published bn 17 October 1973, the Commissioner stated that
nothing in the regulations published March 3, 1975, requires the declaration of ingredients on cosmetic products. That requirement was issued under § 701.3(a) in the order published in the Federal Register of October 17, 1973, at which time a period of 30 days was provided for the filing of objections and requests for hearing. Consequently, the objections to provisions of § 701.3(a) received in response to the announcement of March 3, 1975, are untimely, and the requests for hearing on those provisions are denied.18
With respect to ICMAD’s objection that there was no substantial evidence to support the conclusion that the regulation was “necessary” in the statutory sense, the Commissioner stated,
The Commissioner notes that the question whether a particular regulation prevents consumer deception or facilitates value comparisons is a question of fact, not a question of law . . . Had objections and a request for hearing been made [pursuant to the 17 October 1973 notice], the Commissioner would have placed any appropriate additional evidence in the record at such a hearing, demonstrating *355that ingredient declaration prevents consumer deception and facilitates value comparisons.19
After dealing with the objections to the first five subsections by declaring them untimely, the Commissioner in his 30 May 1975 notice turned to the objections to the additional twelve subsections which had been promulgated on 3 March 1975. The Commissioner dealt with these objections by terming them “petitions for amendment” of the labeling regulation; that is, he denied that they were objections at all. As the Commissioner stated, “each is in fact a request that additional exemptions be granted or alternative methods of labeling be permitted.”20 After labeling these objections as “petitions”, the Commissioner proceeded to declare that the petitions were defective qua petitions in that they did not meet the statutory standards for petitions.
Thus, the objections to the twelve additional subsections were first characterized as being in a different form than the parties intended, and then were denied as not fitting into that newly designated category. This action with respect to objections to the twelve additional subsections was taken-eighty-eight days after the subsections were promulgated on 3 March 1975.
The Commissioner did find that one objection interposed by ICMAD had merit and ordered that the provision in question be stayed pending the outcome of a public hearing. In addition, the partial stay issued 3 March 1975 was revoked. The Commissioner at this time set a new and final effective date for the labeling regulation; all labeling for cosmetic products ordered after 31 May 1976 and all cosmetic product packages labeled after 30 November 1976 were to comply with all of the requirements of the regulation except the one provision stayed in the 30 May 1975 notice. Again, the effective dates applied to all seventeen subsections and did not distinguish between what the Commissioner termed the two separate regulations. The notice of 30 May 1975 was the final pronouncement by FDA on this matter. There has been no citation by the parties as to the outcome of any proceedings concerning the one provision which was stayed on 30 May 1975.
II. ICMAD’S OBJECTIONS
ICMAD first interposed written objections on 1 April 1975; these objections were filed within the prescribed 30 days in response to the Commissioner’s notice of 3 March 1975. ICMAD objected “totally to the concept of ingredient labeling on cosmetics” in its letter to the Commissioner on 1 April 197521 This objection was based on the adverse consequences of the regulation which would fall particularly hard on the type of manufacturers and distributors represented by ICMAD. ICMAD chose to mount its frontal challenge to the regulation at this point because, in its view, the twelve new subsections proposed on 3 March 1975 “in fact give no relief from the adverse effects of” the first five subsections promulgated on 17 October 1973.22
ICMAD also contended in its 1 April 1975 submission that the Commissioner had not made the statutorily required finding of necessity in promulgating the regulation; as ICMAD stated, the conclusion “that cosmetic ingredient labeling is necessary to prevent deception and facilitate value comparison ... is not supported by facts, but by surmises.”23 ICMAD thus challenged the legal basis on which the regulation was promulgated.
After outlining the adverse consequences of the, regulation for its membership and challenging the legal basis for the regulation, ICMAD put forth particularized objections to the twelve additional subsections proposed on 3 March 1975. In each case ICMAD identified what it considered the *356particular defect in the proposed provisions and offered a precise formulation of the issue on which a public hearing was requested. It is the thoroughness and completeness of ICMAD’s objections which apparently inspired the Commissioner to label the objections as “petitions for amendment” and label them as defective as “petitions”; presumably if ICMAD’s objections had been more cursory and far less specific they would have passed muster as objections. As stated previously, all but one of the objections were denied by the Commissioner; ICMAD’s next formulation of its objections to the labeling regulation is to be found in its complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief filed on 27 August 1975.
As framed in the complaint and the petition for review,.ICMAD objects to the labeling regulation on three basic grounds. First, ICMAD contends that the Commissioner acted in excess of his statutory authority by 1) treating all cosmetic products as a single commodity; 2) by failing to make a determination on a commodity-by-commodity basis that this ingredient labeling regulation is necessary to achieve the statutory objective; and 3) by requiring manufacturers to divulge all ingredients, and therefore to divulge trade secrets.
As the second ground for challenge, IC-MAD argues that, even if the FPLA empowers the Commissioner to promulgate a labeling regulation governing all cosmetic products as one commodity, the Commissioner has failed to meet the statutory burdens of finding that this regulation is necessary to prevent the deception of consumers or to facilitate value comparisons.
As the third ground for challenging the regulation, ICMAD points to numerous alleged procedural irregularities which it believes render the regulation unlawful.
III. JUDICIAL REVIEW OF LABELING REGULATIONS
Judicial review of the cosmetic ingredient labeling regulation at issue in these cases is governed by section 701(f) of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. In relevant part this section provides:24
“(f)(1) In a case of actual controversy as to the validity of any order under subsection (e) of this section, any person who will be adversely affected by such order if placed in effect may at any time prior to the ninetieth day after such order is issued file a petition with the United States court of appeals for the circuit wherein such person resides or has his principal place of business, for a judicial review of such order. . . . The Secretary thereupon shall file in the court the record of the proceedings on which the Secretary based his order, as provided in section 2112 of Titlé 28.
“(2) If the petitioner applies to the court for leave to adduce additional evidence, and shows to the satisfaction of the court that such additional evidence is material and that there were reasonable grounds for the failure to adduce such evidence in the proceeding before the Secretary, the court may order such additional evidence (and evidence in rebuttal thereof) to be taken before the Secretary, and to be adduced upon the hearing, in such manner and upon such terms and conditions as to the court may seem proper. The Secretary may modify his findings as to the facts, or make new findings, by reason of the additional evidence so taken, and he shall file such modified or new findings, and his recommendation, if any, for the modification or setting aside of his original order, with the return of such additional evidence.
“(3) . . .
******
“(6) The remedies provided for in this subsection shall be in addition to and not in substitution for any other remedies provided by law.”
The FDA contends that section 701(f)(1) makes review in the court of appeals the exclusive avenue for relief for ICMAD in this case. ICMAD, on the other hand, points to the “saving clause” in clause 6 to *357justify district court jurisdiction in the matter. ICMAD’s principal argument is that it is unsure of which court to go to in order to secure judicial review; ICMAD did, therefore, file for judicial review in the district court and in the court of appeals on the same day.
The question which will occupy the greater part of the remainder of this dissent involves the interrelationship between the saving clause and the statutorily prescribed review procedure. In particular, the issue boils down to the following question: under what circumstances is it mandatory that review of a regulation promulgated pursuant to section 701(e) be sought in the court of appeals?
IV. ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK
Congress undoubtedly has the power to designate the forum in which challenges to federal administrative action are to be brought.25 In this regard the Supreme Court has admonished that special review procedures, such as that found in section 701(f) of the Food and Drug Act, are to be “construed both with precision and with fidelity to the terms by which Congress has expressed its wishes.”26 There are two sources which will be examined in an attempt to discern the Congressional intent as regards the proper forum in these cases brought by ICMAD. First, the words of the statute itself will be' examined; this exercise will be followed by a close examination of the legislative history. After discussing the legislative intent, relevant judicial precedents, including in particular the Supreme Court’s decision in Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner,27 will be examined. In examining these various sources, the purpose is to formulate a set of precise, relevant questions to apply to the facts of this case in order to determine the proper forum.
A: Statutory Language.
A literal reading of the first three clauses of section 701(f) would appear to indicate that the challenges to be heard by the court of appeals are those that are based on the factual findings made by the Commissioner when promulgating regulations. This conclusion derives from two statutory references. First, upon receipt of a copy of the petition for review, the Secretary is required to file with the court “the record of the proceedings on which the Secretary based his order . . . .”28 Furthermore, the statute envisions a record which can be reviewed under the “substantial evidence” test.29 Thus, the primary concern of the special review procedure appears to be with the factual findings made when regulations are issued.
The idea that the statutorily provided review procedure is primarily concerned with the review of factual matters finds further support in clause (2) of section 701(f). This section provides that a petitioner may request that the court of appeals order the taking of additional evidence before the agency. Significantly, such additional evidence must also include rebuttal evidence. After taking the additional evidence, the statute authorizes the Secretary at his discretion to “modify his findings as to the facts, or make new findings by reason of the additional evidence . .”30 In so stating, the implication is clear that the Secretary has already made factual findings based on the record sent to the court of appeals. Clause (2) merely provides for the addition of evidence to that original record. Clause (2) also requires the Secretary to file his new or modified findings with the court; such a requirement *358serves to ensure that the court of appeals has the fullest possible record on which to review the factual findings of the Secretary.
In summary, a reading of the statutory language yields the conclusion that review in the court of appeals is premised on the existence of two conditions: 1) a record which is 2) capable of being reviewed for substantial evidence. If there is no record, or if it is such that cannot be meaningfully reviewed for substantial evidence, the implication is that the saving clause in § 701(f)(6) provides the remedy. This implication flows from the positioning of the saving clause at the end of the subsection which specifies the statutory review procedure; if the special procedure is not applicable, then the saving clause must come into operation. The fuller meaning and intent behind the special review procedure and the saving clause will now be explored by examining the legislative history.
B. Legislative History.
As stated previously, the legislative history is of great importance in these cases.31 While recognizing the importance of this source of information, it is appropriate to qualify this characterization with two observations.
First, the Food and Drug Act was enacted in 1938, over a decade before the Administrative Procedure Act went into effect. The Food and Drug Act, in its judicial review provisions, uses such terms as “order,” “substantial evidence,” and “record.” These terms were later incorporated into the APA and given somewhat more precise definitions than existed in the pre-APA period.32 In addition, these terms have undergone some significant redefinition in recent years as the courts have begun to focus more heavily on the review of federal agency action. Therefore, it would serve no useful purpose to search the legislative history of the Food and Drug Act to determine the precise intent with respect to some of these key terms which have gone through at least two stages of redefinition. Rather, in a case such as this, the legislative history should be consulted in order to identify the basic underlying congressional concerns. Once these underlying concerns have been identified, a court can then seek to reconcile these concerns with the current, accepted tenets of federal administrative law. Such an approach in no way denigrates the importance or significance of congressional intent but merely recognizes that the intent expressed in 1938 cannot control current court actions with total specificity.
Second, the fact that the FPLA incorporates by reference the judicial review provisions of the Food and Drug Act is of some significance in this case. At the time it was enacted, the Food and Drug Act represented a marked increase in federal interest and activity in protecting consumers in an area in which they are particularly vulnerable— food and drugs. The legislative history is filled with frightening stories concerning the effects of unsafe, untested, and adulterated food and drug products which made their way on to the market because of the lack of effective regulation. The point to be made is that the subject matter of that legislation was a very important factor in the fashioning of the judicial review provisions. The FPLA deals with a different subject matter of somewhat diminished potential impact on the public; it is not that the FPLA is any less important a piece of legislation, but the concerns underlying the two laws are different. This point should be kept in mind as the analysis proceeds.
There is a preliminary matter which deserves mention before proceeding to the primary areas of inquiry. Section 701(f) refers to the review of “orders” in the court of appeals. Such terminology in other statutory schemes has, in the past, caused courts of appeals to refuse to review “regulations” on the grounds that they are not “orders” as specified in the statutory re*359view provisions. Many,33 but not all,34 appellate courts have found ways to circumvent this narrow view of “order” so as to review regulations which are the product of informal, notice-and-comment rulemaking. At first glance, this issue would appear to be present in the cases brought by ICMAD; on closer examination, however, the legislative history resolves the issue in favor of the review of “regulations” as well as “orders.” Throughout the legislative history reference is made to orders and regulations; 35 the statutory language itself, however, makes reference only to orders. Thus it appears clear that Congress intended to encompass regulations within the special review provision.
There are two primary questions concerning the statutorily prescribed review provision which must be posed and answered. First, why have a special review procedure at all? Second, why designate the court of appeals as the forum in which to bring the challenges encompassed by the special review procedures. These questions will now be examined in turn.
1. Why have a special review procedure ? In considering the question of judicial review in the various deliberations concerning the Food and Drug Act, the suggestion was seriously put forth on numerous occasions that the regulations of the FDA be made unreviewable in the courts.36 These suggestions of non-reviewability did not prevail; indeed, the Conference Report on the legislation indicates that the “type of judicial review provided . . . is as broad as the Constitution permits in the case of review by a constitutional court.”37 Once this commitment to the concept of pre-enforcement judicial review of FDA regulations had been made, it remained to work out the details of the review procedures.
During the legislative consideration of the Food and Drug Act, it became clear that the legislators believed that the basic validity of regulations could be tested in the courts through the injunctive and declaratory judgment remedies without any express provision for such review in the statute.38 The legislators did not, however, believe that factual determinations were reviewable in equity in the absence of a special statutory review procedure.39 Congress believed that it was important to be able to test these many underlying technical factual determinations during the pre-enforcement period; thus, the basic decision was made to include a specific pre-enforcement review procedure to ensure that the commitment to the concept of full judicial review would be carried out. The concern for the factual predicate of FDA regulations lay at the core of the decision to adopt a special review procedure.
2. Why designate the court of appeals? The reasoning behind this designation of *360the appellate court is important for purposes of this analysis. Throughout the lengthy40 legislative consideration of the Food and Drug Act, the district court had been specified as the proper forum in which to challenge FDA action;41 the language used in these preliminary drafts was nearly identical to the language eventually adopted, with the exception of the reference to the court of appeals in the final version. It was not until the conference between the House and the Senate, which was convened to resolve the differences between the respective versions of the legislation, that the court of appeals was substituted for the district court as the statutory review forum.
The court of appeals was substituted for the district court because judicial challenges “would be confined to 10 circuits instead of to 85 districts.”42 The very considerable controversy surrounding judicial review had centered on the fact that any district judge could delay the implementation of important regulations designed to protect the health and safety of the public. As one participant in the congressional debates stated,
With 85 different district courts, just think of the chance a chain store has. It could undoubtedly prolong litigation and hold it up in one State after another.43
With the court of appeals as the statutory forum, the number of potential forums for challenges would be reduced and the possibility of endless, harassing litigation would also be reduced.
Thus the choice of forums in the Food and Drug Act emanated from considerations apart from those dealing with a division of functions between the district and appellate courts. That is, Congress did not reason that, since appellate courts regularly perform a reviewing function they should be assigned the reviewing function in the case of FDA regulations. Rather, the reasoning rested on the desire to channel any challenges to FDA orders into the level of the federal judicial system which has fewer forums.
What is the import of this congressional intent for the cases brought by ICMAD? The primary message is that any decision to designate the district court as a proper forum in these cases must take into account the congressional concern about the delay in implementing regulations, keeping in mind that the subject matter of the regulations in these cases is different from the subject matter which was the focus of congressional discussions surrounding the enactment of section 701(f).44 If proper and careful notice is taken of this concern about the proliferation of challenges and possible delay, the congressional purpose in designating the court of appeals as opposed to the district courts will be vindicated.
There is another relevant message to be taken from the legislative history. As noted, the Congress did not consider the comparative qualifications of the district and appellate courts when designating the latter as the statutory forum. Congress has not, therefore, pre-empted a consideration of these factors. It is appropriate for a court to consider these factors when making a determination relating to forum; and this determination can be made in this context without deviating from congressional mandate since these factors did not significantly influence the legislative decision.
3. The saving clause. There remains the question of the purpose and significance *361of the saving clause found in section 701(f)(6). There is no question that this clause applies to regulations promulgated under section 701(e), as was the regulation at issue in these cases brought by ICMAD. Discerning the congressional intent concerning the clause is somewhat more difficult.
The House version of the Food and Drug Act was the source of the saving clause. The Senate conferees specifically adopted this House version; the House Report indicates that:
There is also saved as a method to review a regulation . . . whatever rights exist to initiate a historical proceeding in equity to enjoin the enforcement of the regulation, and whatever rights exist to initiate a declaratory judgment proceeding.45 •
The clear implication of this evidence, and the evidence surrounding the decision to adopt a special review procedure46 is that a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief on the grounds that the Commissioner’s action are ultra vires is not subject to the special review procedure of section 701(f). Such an action would, however, be appropriate in a district court. It therefore can be concluded that review in the court of appeals was not meant to be exclusive; the question of when such review would be appropriate under this statutory scheme will now be faced.
4. The “record” and “substantial evidence.” As noted previously, these terms have undergone significant redefinition since the Food and Drug Act was enacted in 1938.47 Nevertheless, the legislative history does yield significant information concerning these terms which must be taken into account in making the decision regarding the proper forum.
Section 701(e) defines the procedures to be followed in promulgating regulations such as the one at issue in these cases. This section prescribes a multi-phase rulemaking procedure which combines most of the attributes of both informal and formal rule-making. In effect, the first phase of these proceedings is similar to a section 553 notice-and-eomment proceeding as prescribed in the APA: the publication of a notice of proposed rulemaking, the solicitation of comment, and the publication of an order setting forth the rule.48 It is at the end of this proposal-comment-order stage that the section 701(e) procedure becomes quite complicated; at this point, any person who will be adversely affected by the proposed rule has the right to object and to request a formal hearing.49
The legislative history clearly indicates that a full-fledged, trial-type hearing was intended,50 and the FDA regulations carry out this intention.51 The formal hearing is conducted by an APA hearing examiner;52 the hearing “is directed to receiving factual evidence and expert opinion testimony related to the issues in the proceeding.”53 Witnesses are sworn and are available for cross-examination by any participant.54 Objections to the admission or rejection of evidence, or to limitations of the scope of examination are entertained.55 A stenographic record of the hearing is made, and the record may be corrected at the conclu*362sion of the hearing.56 The transcript, exhibits and any written argument that may have been filed at or in connection with the hearing constitute “the exclusive record for decision.”57
The final order which evolves from these two stages in the section 701(e) rulemaking process must “be based only on substantial evidence of record” at the hearing.58 If the two stages have been employed, the final order contains detailed findings of fact and conclusions by the Commissioner. This entire record is the record which is filed with the court of appeals pursuant to the special statutory review procedure found in section 701(f)(1).
The FDA conducts the overwhelming vast majority of its rulemaking proceedings under section 701(e) without going beyond the proposal-comment-order stage.59 How is this done? It has been accomplished by introducing an element of discretion into the Commissioner’s determination as to when a hearing is warranted by an objection; a hearing will be granted only when the Commissioner concludes that there is a “reasonable ground” therefor.60 The Commissioner has developed an extremely strict notion of the type of objections which are sufficient to trigger a formal hearing. Moreover, the Commissioner has also developed a “summary judgment” type procedure, as used in these cases, to deny the reasonableness of objections.61 The Commissioner will evidently go to great lengths to avoid the burdens imposed by a formal hearing.
The parameters of the Commissioner’s authority to deny objections in a summary manner has not been settled; this is not the place in which to address the merits of that controversy.62 But the summary procedure does have significant implications for the issue of the proper forum in which to challenge FDA regulations. The point to be drawn from the discussion is that the statute envisions a rather complete record being developed when there is substantial controversy surrounding one or more provisions of a proposed regulation. That is, the Congressional intent was that objections would lead to a structured dialogue between the affected party and the agency and such dialogue would take place within the framework of a formal hearing. No such formal hearing took place in response to objections by ICMAD or any other affected party. According to the statute, judicial review of a regulation is to take place on the basis of the record as developed in the two stages of the proceeding outlined above.
It is clear from the legislative schemata and debate that the type of record developed in the ICMAD case here was envisioned as an appropriate record only when the factual bases on which the Commissioner proceeded went unchallenged. Such is not the case with ICMAD.63 The failure to hold a hearing thus embodies a different message in the context of FDA regulations; such a failure does not mean that there are not numerous controversies as to the facts, *363but that the controversies have not met the extremely high standard set by the Commissioner in his efforts to avoid a formal hearing. When compared with the legislative intent as to what the record before the court of appeals should be, the record as compiled before the Commissioner is artificially limited because of his concern over the burdensomeness of the formal hearing process, to put the extraordinary procedure employed by the Commissioner in the most charitable light.
It is possible to discern from the legislative history some concept of what was meant by “substantial evidence.” The legislators conceived of this term as having a qualitative as well as a quantitative dimension. That is, it was intended that the evidence relied upon by the Commissioner in promulgating regulations would be tested by opposing evidence.64 The technique of the public hearing was to suffice to inject this element of adversariness into the procedures prescribed in section 701(e). This concern for the introduction of adverse evidence is a definite theme in the legislative history. There was no such testing of the evidence in this ease.
C. Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner.
The Supreme Court has rendered an interpretation of some aspects of section 701(f) in Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner65 and two companion cases,66 and both parties to the cases here have placed great emphasis on the rationale of these Supreme Court cases. In Abbott a group of drug manufacturers brought suit in the district court seeking declaratory and injunctive relief with respect to a labeling regulation promulgated by the Commissioner. The district court granted the relief but the Third Circuit reversed on the grounds that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction. The Supreme Court granted certiorari and reversed, thus upholding the exercise of district court jurisdiction.
The regulations in Abbott and the companion cases were promulgated under section 701(a) of the Food and Drug Act; the regulation in these cases brought by IC-MAD was promulgated pursuant to section 701(e). The difference in the source of the statutory authority is quite significant as regards the relevance of the Abbott case to the cases brought by ICMAD. There is no special statutory review procedure (i. e., court of appeals review) applicable to regulations promulgated pursuant to § 701(a). Thus, in Abbott and the companion cases the question of the proper forum was not raised by the parties or addressed by the Supreme Court; indeed, the Court specifically avoided this issue.67 Rather, the issue presented was whether the special statutory review procedure applicable to § 701(e) regulations meant that § 701(a) regulations were immune from pre-enforcement judicial review. The Abbott case thus resolved around the issue of allowable remedies, not. the issue of the proper forum.
In holding that pre-enforcement judicial review of § 701(a) regulations was proper, the Court discussed the saving clause found in § 701(f)(6). The Court first drew the important conclusion that the saving clause applied to § 701(a), not just to section 701(e) as the government had contended68 and as Justice Fortas argued in dissent.69 The Court went on to conclude from the legislative history that the remedies of injunction and declaratory judgment were encompassed within the intended meaning of the saving clause.70 Since the saving clause applied to § 701(a) regulations, it was appropriate for the plaintiff in Abbott to seek *364these remedies. For purposes of these cases brought by ICMAD, this conclusion is quite •important in that it confirms the notion that Congress intended through § 701(f)(6) to save the very remedies which ICMAD sought in the District Court. The Court in Abbott did not specify the forum in which challenges to FDA regulations could be made, but it did make a significant statement concerning the nature of the remedies preserved to the parties.
In discussing the saving clause, the Court in Abbott stated that “when the special provisions [§ 701(f)] apply, presumably they must be used . . . .”71 In so stating, the Court expressed the generally accepted conclusion that judicial review is generally to occur in the forum and in the form specified in the statute. But this statement, as true as it is, does very little to aid in the disposition of the cases brought by ICMAD, since the statement merely expresses a conclusion. The statement does not attempt to delineate the conditions under which the special provisions do apply and must therefore be employed. There are, however, two relevant pieces of evidence in the Abbott case as to when the remedies preserved in the saving clause (i. e., injunction and declaratory judgment) might be employed.
First, the Government in Abbott argued that the saving clause is applicable to regulations promulgated pursuant to section 701(e) when such regulations are issued “without affording the required public notice and opportunity to file objections and to request a public hearing.”72 Under these circumstances, the Government contended that “an equity proceeding or a declaratory judgment action . . . might be entertained on the ground that the statutory procedures had not been followed.”73 Such an argument is certainly possible in these cases brought by ICMAD.74
Second, in dissent Justice Fortas argued (unlike the majority) that the saving clause applied only to section 701(e) regulations. In a footnote, he further argued that the saving clause
was intended to save the remedies, of injunction and declaratory judgment where the agency promulgated a subsection (e) regulation without the hearings and findings needed to permit review in the Court of Appeals.75
Although the legislative history nowhere contains such an explicit statement of the purpose of the saving clause, Justice Fortas’ interpretation is certainly consistent with the legislative intent. That is, Congress in the Food and Drug Act made the basic policy judgment that regulations such as the one at issue in the ICMAD cases should be subject to pre-enforcement review. Congress went further and specified that pre-enforcement review, under certain circumstances76 was to be in the court of appeals. If those circumstances were not present, the saving clause reserved review in the District Court. This is also my view; in the preceding sections I have developed the major points mentioned above more fully. The statutory language, the legislative history, and the leading case on the issue support my view of the purpose and operation of the saving clause.
From the above, it is apparent that the majority’s reliance on Nader v. Volpe77 is misplaced. In the middle of a rulemaking proceeding before the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, plaintiff brought suit in Nader seeking to compel the inclusion of certain documents in the hearing record. The District Court denied relief and on appeal this court found the District Court to be without jurisdiction. It did so *365based in part on the doctrine of exhaustion, specifically citing the need (1) to avoid premature interruption of agency proceedings (2) to permit the agency to exercise its expertise and discretion on a technical factual matter, and (3) to conserve agency and judicial energies.78 Moreover, the court observed that once the agency action had become final, it could be adequately reviewed under the special court of appeals review procedures specified in the Act.79
In other words, Nader involved an attempt to seek review of non-final agency action in District Court under circumstances in which the special court of appeals procedures were applicable. In contrast, in the case at bar, review is being attempted of final agency action which is not amenable to the special court of appeals review procedures set forth in the statute.
The majority cites Nader for the proposition that “when Congress has specified a procedure for judicial review of administrative action, that procedure is the exclusive means of review unless, because of some extraordinary circumstances, the procedure fails to provide an adequate remedy.”80 However, this begs the question. The issue here is precisely whether Congress intended the special review procedures to apply to the kind of agency action here challenged. As I have demonstrated from the statutory language, the legislative history, and case law, Congress did not intend to apply these review procedures to such action.81
D. Relevant Precedents in this Circuit.
The recurring problem of the choice as to a proper forum in situations analogous to these cases has been fully discussed in other opinions of this court.82 No ironclad rule concerning this issue has, or could be, developed. The statement which is now generally accepted in this circuit and which comes the closest to establishing a general guideline in this matter comes from the court’s opinion in Deutsche Lufthansa Aktiengesellschaft v. CAB:
It is the availability of a record for review and not the holding of a quasi judicial hearing which is now the jurisdictional touchstone.83
This view has been widely accepted by other courts as well.84
The statement that a record for review is necessary for appellate court jurisdiction is not very helpful in the circumstances of ICMAD’s case, for it, like the Supreme Court’s statement in Abbott, is also merely a conclusory statement which does not attempt to define when a record is appropriate for judicial review. There is a record in this case, but is it sufficient? The statement that the existence of a record is the jurisdictional touchstone thus should be the beginning of the analysis in many cases, not the end. This failure to address the question of the sufficiency of the record pervades the case law; courts have not articulated guidelines to make the decision as to *366the sufficiency of the record. The first source of guidance on the type of record needed for review should, of course, be the statute and its legislative history; this examination has already taken place above.85 Beyond that, the case law provides little help as to how to conduct this necessary inquiry. It is to this area left largely untouched in the case law that I now turn.
V. THE RECORD IN THE ICMAD CASE
The record on which the review of the cosmetic ingredient labeling regulation would be based in this court consists of eight volumes of evidence. The overwhelming majority of the evidence consists of the written comments submitted by private citizens and commercial enterprises with an interest in the economic impact of the regulation. There has been no hearing held during the period in which the regulation was promulgated. There are no formal findings or conclusions presented by the Commissioner. The evidence is presented straightforwardly, with no reference to what the Commissioner found to be convincing or unconvincing. Indeed, there is no overt indication that the Commissioner actually took any of the proffered information into account when promulgating the regulation.
In sum, the record is similar to that filed in a typical case covered by section 553 of the APA. It appears clear that the record, as described above, is not the type of record which Congress intended for the court of appeals to review. The abbreviated form of the record is due to the Commissioner’s actions in denying all requests for hearings on various provisions, even though there were unresolved questions of fact and statutory interpretation surrounding the filed objections. I shall assume, arguendo, that the Commissioner’s denials of formal hearings can be considered legal. Given this assumption, the relevant question becomes: is the record that has been presented a sufficient basis on which to conduct appellate review of the regulation pursuant to section 701(f)(1) of the Food and Drug Act?. This question will be answered by examining the grounds on which ICMAD has challenged the labeling regulation.
ICMAD has contended that the Commissioner’s finding that the regulation is necessary is not supported by substantial evidence. Can we review this determination for such evidence on the basis of the informal comments and the Commissioner’s conclusory statement which are the only evidence before us? I suggest that the answer to this is clearly no. As stated in this court’s opinion in Mobil Oil v. FPC, “Informal comments simply cannot create a record that satisfies the substantial evidence test.”86 This view seems particularly appropriate in light of the legislative history on the meaning of substantial evidence in this context.87
The Commissioner has admitted that the finding as to necessity is a factual matter.88 Even more significantly, the Commissioner has admitted that he has evidence to support a factual finding of necessity but he refuses to put it in the record because of his view that the objection was not timely filed. There was a similar objection filed earlier in the proceedings which prompted the Commissioner’s defense of his finding of necessity on 17 October 1973, and the Commissioner failed to insert evidence at that time. The point is that this court is denied this vitally important information which is admittedly in the possession of the promulgating authority. The court of appeals is asked to make substantial evidence determination on the basis of untested, unorganized, random, informal comments at the same time that the Commissioner claims to have the type of evidence that the statute envisions to support his finding.
A court simply must look into the factual predicates of the Commissioner’s determi*367nation that he has met the requirements of the statutory standard.89 This cannot be done on the basis of this record before the court of appeals. This court could not apply the substantial evidence test to this aspect of ICMAD’s challenge. The district court, on the other hand, could elicit further facts concerning this issue and therefore inject that element of adversariness envisioned in the statute and the legislative history. Since recourse to the district court is clearly an option provided in the statute, this is an appropriate situation in which to employ that mechanism. The district court can develop the type of record on this point that the Food and Drug Act intended to be presented to the court of appeals.
ICMAD also challenges the labeling regulation on the grounds that the Commissioner exceeded his statutory authority in several respects.90 It has been stated that “legal” issues, or issues of statutory construction, need not first be addressed by the district court in these situations where the question of the proper forum is ambiguous.91 But these assertions rest on an important premise that is not present in these cases; the premise is, as the court in Deutsche Lufthansa Aktiengesellschaft stated, that “evidence has been assembled before the agency and is not challenged, and where the issues presented are legal and not factual.”92 In this case evidence was assembled before the agency (in an informal manner); but it is indeed challenged. No challenge by any party was given the treatment of an adversary hearing, because of the Commissioner’s attempt to avoid the burden of a trial-type hearing as specified in the statute. There was no explanation for why the challenges (objections) were denied in many instances; in others, the explanation was quite terse and conclusory.
If the evidence before an agency is unchallenged, a court makes the determination as to statutory authority with some confidence that the decision conforms with the realities of the larger setting in which the federal regulatory action is to take place. No such confidence could attach to a decision by this court in this case on the record before it. There is ample evidence to believe that the fact-gathering function has been artificially stifled in this case; we are left with an incomplete picture of the business practices, operating techniques, and possible ramifications for the industry which is subject to the regulation. Without some knowledge of these facts, we could not really understand what Congress was attempting to accomplish through the FPLA; without this knowledge, we could not determine if the Commissioner was operating within the scope of his authority under the statute. Some factual basis is needed even to make these decisions regarding statutory authority;93 we have not been presented with them, and we could not develop them ourselves.
Since the option of district court review is available in this case, this would appear to be a particularly appropriate time to opt for such review. Not only could the court find additional facts, but it could perform the additional valuable function of organizing and ordering the factual presentation so as to facilitate review in this court. There*368fore, I conclude that the record before us is insufficient as a basis to review even the “legal” questions regarding statutory authority.
Given the Congressional concern about the delay in implementing regulations promulgated pursuant to section 701(e), this concern must be fully dealt with. As stated previously, the concern for delay can be assigned a lesser role in the context of the FPLA than it was in the context of the Food and Drug Act.94 In addition, the delay resulting from district court review in these cases is not of the same variety as feared in the legislative history of the Food and Drug Act. There the fear was that there would be repeated challenges, each of a different nature, in numerous district courts around the nation. The fear was that the regulation might never go into effect because of the repeated instances of court challenges.
District Court review in this case will cause delay, but it would not be delay of a substantial or damaging nature. The FDA has itself delayed for long periods in finally putting the regulation into effect. During the various stages of promulgation, many objections were worked out to the apparent agreement of the private parties and the agency. ICMAD’s remaining objections are limited in number and narrowly focused; there is no reason to think that litigation would proliferate in the district courts. In addition, ICMAD, as one entity, represents all those parties who continue to have objections and who wish to secure judicial review of the regulation. Thus, the fear that there are numerous parties to challenge the regulation in different forums is not present in these cases.
In addition to the fact that delay in this instance would not be substantially detrimental, the compensating advantages of district court review must be considered. District Court review will add order to the process of judicial review by providing that structured dialogue between the agency and the affected parties that is envisioned in the Food and Drug Act. Review in this court will therefore take place with a more realistic view of the various aspects of the regulation at issue and the resulting revision is likely to be a more meaningful one which accomplishes the purposes of pre-enforcement review as enunciated in the legislative history of the Food and Drug Act. Thus, any disadvantages resulting from delay will be overcome by this more orderly, reflective, and thorough method of review.
In conclusion, my view is that review in the district court is proper in the ICMAD case. The conclusion rests on the following line of reasoning:
1) Review of section 701(e) regulations is not exclusively vested in the court of appeals;
2) Review in the court of appeals was intended in those instances where there is a record which can be reviewed for substantial evidence;
3) The saving clause preserves the remedies of injunction and declaratory judgment to the parties in those instances where the special review provisions do not apply;
4) The special review provisions do not apply in this case because of the nature of the record and the issues presented; and,
5) Therefore, a suit for injunctive and declaratory relief is both proper and appropriate in this case as an effectuation of both legislative intent and sound judicial policy in supervising an orderly, efficient, and effective system of judicial review of federal administrative action.
VI. TIMELINESS ARGUMENT
The benefits and virtues of withholding judicial review of administrative action until such action is “final” have been well documented.95 Much of the writing on this *369subject deals with the advantages of such a policy for the effective operation of the agencies and the courts. The policy, however, is also dictated by another significant concern. Prior to “final agency action,” a party cannot be certain that it will be adversely affected or aggrieved by the agency action so as to justify and support a judicial challenge to the agency action. This important concept of “final agency action” has been distorted by the FDA and the majority of this court in this case to the detriment of ICMAD in its efforts to secure judicial review.
The FDA’s argument with respect to timeliness hinges on the propriety of the Commission’s notices of 3 March 1975 in which he separated the originally proposed five subsections from the twelve subsections first promulgated in that same notice of 3 March 1975. In my view the regulation cannot be separated in such a way. All seventeen subsections, taken as a whole, are what controls the conduct of the parties subject to the regulation. The subsections are, in other words, the regulation. Indeed, the twelve subsections promulgated on 3 March 1975 provide, in the Commissioner’s words, alternate means of complying with the substantive provisions of the first five subsections. In his notices of 3 March 1975 the Commissioner recognizes that a party will not know how to conduct itself so as not to violate the law until the entire regulation is placed into effect.
At other times however, the Commissioner insists on labeling the two sets of subsections as being independent; this insistence apparently stems from his desire to make as much of the regulation final as possible to ameliorate some of the effects of the prolonged delays that had already taken place and to insulate the basic concept from judicial review. The Commissioner accomplished this goal but did so by doing violence to the concept of finality. It is well settled that a court will not accept the post-hoc rationalizations of counsel to explain the reasons for agency action;96 the same reasoning should apply to the Commissioner’s attempt retroactively to divide that which is not logically divisible in the first place.
At oral argument before this court the Government’s counsel indicated that the first five subsections became final 30 days following their promulgation on 17 October 1973. Since dialogue with the court demonstrated that this position was not legally secure, since the FDA did not publish notice of its finality in the Federal Register, counsel also argued that 3 March 1975 was the “outside date” for the finality of these five subsections. The fatal weakness of this is that the objections filed pursuant to the 3 March 1975 notice were not answered until 30 May 1975, some eighty-eight days after the regulation became “final” in the FDA’s view. Following this view, ICMAD would have had but two days to assess the Commissioner’s responses and file a petition in the court of appeals. (This assumes, of course, that ICMAD received its copy of the Commissioner’s response on the day it was dated, 30 May 1975). Thus, merely by delaying its response to objections, FDA has created a situation in which it can in effect insulate its actions from review by delaying its summary denial of objections. The record of these proceedings is replete with such examples of the “no-win” posture in which ICMAD has been placed by the combination of events that have taken place. I point to this one as merely being illustrative of the difficulties faced by ICMAD in dealing with the FDA’s concept of administrative procedure.
It is my view that the regulation became final for purposes of calculating the 90 day period in which to file a petition in the court of appeals on 30 May 1975. Before this date, ICMAD could not be certain that it would be “adversely affected” in such a way as to justify and support a judicial challenge. I shall not provide a lengthy exposition of this conclusion but, rather, challenge the majority to explain how it *370could become final on an earlier date, either 17 October 1973 or 3 March 1975, and how the subsections could be logically divided.
Faced with the choice of either date as final, if the petitioner’s plea can be denied as untimely, the majority has opted for 17 October 1973 rather than 3 March 1975. In so doing it has given support to the most desperate efforts of the Commissioner to avoid judicial review at all costs. The majority says: “Nor can ICMAD’s challenge be deemed timely filed as an attack on the amendments promulgated in 1975. The amendments merely provided narrow exemptions to labeling and alternate means of compliance . . . [they] did not change the substance or thrust of the original regulation.” 97 The answer to this is threefold: First, this is a deplorable acquiescence in the Commissioner’s deceitful effort to deny that what ICMAD filed were “objections” as called'for by the statute, and to preclude judicial review by terming them “petitions for amendment.” discussed p. 347 of 187 U.S.App.D.C., p. 558 of 574 F.2d supra. Second, twelve subsection “amendments” added 17 months later are pretty strong evidence that the 17 October 1973 five subsections were not a final regulation after all, and that all subsections together constitute the regulation. Third, surely ICMAD has some opportunity at some time to object to these amendments of 3 March 1975; when should ICMAD have done so? My colleagues’ answer is 90 days after 17 October 1973, before they were promulgated.
On this point the majority adds: “The amendments had nothing to do with the claims ICMAD now makes before this court.”98 These 12 new subsections of the regulation had everything to do with ICMAD’s claims here. Not until these 12 additional subsections were promulgated was the FDA rulemaking complete. The 12 new subsections are as much part of the regulation as the original five; not until the full regulation had been announced did ICMAD know whether it had cause to object, to ask for modifications, or to file for judicial review. It filed objections within 30 days, and sought judicial review within 87 days after the FDA response. The 3 March 1975 amendments, adding 12 subsections to the original 5, were the key action of the Commissioner in the whole long drawn process, and the first action which carried any indication whatsoever of intended finality.
My colleagues have thus avoided justifying the manifest unfairness of requiring the petitioner to seek judicial review in less than 48 hours after receiving the FDA response, which was the FDA counsel’s final position at argument. My colleagues have embraced, though, the difficulties inherent in explaining the Commissioner’s proviso in the 17 October 1973 order calling for objections and comment within 30 days, his continuous informal exchange of views with many interested parties over a period of 17 months, the un published Tentative Revised Final Order of 24 July 1974, the additional twelve subsections in the 3 March 1975 order, and the division in that same order of the cosmetic labeling regulation into three categories by the long delayed promulgation of a stay of two of the original subsections.
My colleagues may characterize this 17 October 1973 order as imbued with administrative finality; I say such characterization is administrative absurdity. If the majority is to charge petitioner ICMAD with the running of the 90 day period after the “final” order of 17 October 1973, then the majority opinion should answer (in addition to the difficult explanations listed above) some very practical subsidiary questions which naturally arise:
1) Would this court have accepted review at a time when the administrative proceeding was still going?
2) How can such review be reconciled with concepts of ripeness as developed by the Supreme Court and this court?
3) What record would have been transmitted to this appellate court? Would *371it have included proceedings subsequent to 17 October 1973?
4) What impact would the orders of 24 July 1974 and 3 March 1975 have had on the ongoing judicial review of the order of 17 October 1973?
5) Why were the effective dates for the regulation changed so often, and why did the “two” regulations have to go into effect at the same time?
I suggest that these questions cannot be satisfactorily answered. If the majority suggests that a petition for appellate review would have been appropriate during the 90 day period subsequent to 17 October 1973,1 in turn respectfully suggest that any other panel of this court would have denied the petition for lack of ripeness. To reiterate, ICMAD has been placed in a truly “no-win” dilemma.
The majority have approved a model which, if followed by other administrators, can be used to insulate their own actions from judicial review. I would, as an alternative to having the district court review this matter initially, allow the petition here as being timely filed.
I must dissent.
. 21 C.F.R. § 701.3.
. 15 U.S.C. § 1454.
. “The only lawyer-like remedy today, as Judge McGowan points out, is double filing.” Investment Co. Institute v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Sys., 179 U.S.App.D.C. 311, 324, 551 F.2d 1270 at 1283 (1977) (Leventhal, J., concurring); Cf.: Ingraham, J. in Lo-Vaca Gathering Co. v. Railroad Comm’n of Texas, 565 F.2d 145 at 148 (Em.App.1977), “ . . . there is only an original complaint before this court, and ... no record exists from which an appellate argument can be made. Lo-Vaca would fill this void by transforming TECA into a trial level court to receive evidence and develop facts. . . . We realize that Congress has extended our jurisdiction by cutting out the district court to provide direct review of agency action. We do not believe, however, that it was the intent of Congress to convert TECA into a trial level court . . .”; and Wright, J. (dissenting in part) in Natural *350Resources Defense Council v. Environmental Protection Agency, 168 U.S.App.D.C. 111, 121, 512 F.2d 1351, 1361 (1975) “ . . . the courts play jurisdictional badminton with these provisions” between the district court and court of appeals. See: Lubrizol Corp. v. Environmental Protection Agency, 183 U.S.App. D.C. 288, note 19 at 294, 562 F.2d 807, note 19 at 813 (1977); Utah Power & Light Co. v. Environmental Protection Agency, 180 U.S.App.D.C. 70, note 20 at 74, 553 F.2d 215, note 20 at 219 (1977); Natural Resources Defense Council v. Train, 171 U.S.App.D.C. 151, 155, 519 F.2d 287, 291 (1975).
. 15 U.S.C. § 1454(c).
. Id.
. 15 U.S.C. § 1455(c). Section 701(e) of the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act is codified at 21 U.S.C. § 371(e). Throughout this opinion reference will be made to the sections of the Act as enacted, with footnote references to the U.S. Code citations where appropriate.
.Id.
. The five Federal Register Notices are as follows:
(1) 7 February 1973 — Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 38 Fed.Reg. 3523-25.
(2) 17 October 1973 — Cosmetic Ingredient Labeling, 38 Fed.Reg. 28912-14.
(3) 25 July 1974 — Notice of Availability of Tentative Revised Final Order, 39 Fed.Reg. 27181.
(4) 3 March 1975 — There were two Notices published Thursday:
(A) Cosmetic Labeling: Designation of Ingredients on Package Labels, 40 Fed.Reg. 8918-24;
(B) Cosmetic Labeling: Designation of Ingredients; ConGrmation of Effective Date and Stay of Certain Provisions, 48 Fed.Reg. 8924-26.
(5)30 May 1975 — Final Order, Cosmetic Labeling, 40 Fed.Reg. 23458-60.
. 38 Fed.Reg. 28912.
. Id.
. The statutorily prescribed manner is set forth in section 701(e) of the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, 21 U.S.C. § 371(e), and is discussed in the text at notes 48 to 49, infra.
.Maj. Op. 187 U.S.App.D.C. 346, 574 F.2d 557 (emphasis added).
. 40 Fed.Reg. 8918 (emphasis added).
. 40 Fed.Reg. 8919 (emphasis added).
.40 Fed.Reg. 8918.
. 40 Fed.Reg. 8924-26.
. 40 Fed.Reg. 8925-26.
.40 Fed.Reg. 23459.
. 40 Fed.Reg. 23459.
. 40 Fed.Reg. 23459-60.
. Letter of 1 April 1975 from ICMAD to Commissioner of FDA, J.A. at 17.
. Id.
. Id.
. 21 U.S.C. § 371(f) (emphasis added).
. See, e. g., Yakus v. United States, 321 U.S. 414, 64 S.Ct. 660, 88 L.Ed. 834 (1944).
. Cheng Fan Kwok v. Immigration and Naturalization Serv., 392 U.S. 206, 212, 88 S.Ct. 1970, 1974, 20 L.Ed.2d 1037 (1968).
. 387 U.S. 136, 87 S.Ct. 1507, 18 L.Ed.2d 681 (1967).
. 21 U.S.C. § 371(f)(1) (emphasis added).
. Id. § 371(f)(3).
. Id. § 371(f)(2) (emphasis added).
. See text and note at note 26, supra.
. 5 U.S.C. § 551 et seq.
. See, e. g., Investment Co. Inst. v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Sys., 179 U.S.App.D.C. 311, 551 F.2d 1270 (1977); Deutsche Lufthansa Aktiengesellschaft v. CAB, 156 U.S.App.D.C. 191, 479 F.2d 912 (1973). See also Verkuil, Judicial Review of Informal Rulemaking, 60 Va.L.Rev. 185, 196-205 (1974).
. See, e. g., PBW Stock Exch. v. SEC, 485 F.2d 718 (3d.Cir. 1973), cert. denied, 416 U.S. 969, 94 S.Ct. 1992, 40 L.Ed.2d 558 (1974).
. See C. Dunn, Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act: A Statement of Its Legislative Record (1938) at 824 (House Report No. 2139, 75th Cong., 3d Sess. (1938)); at 995 (Conference Report, House Rep.No.2716, 75th Cong., 3d Sess. (1938)) (hereinafter referred to as Dunn). The Dunn work is a compilation of the Reports and Debates on the Act. Page citations will be to the Dunn work with a notation in parenthesis as to Report or Debate which is the source of the citation.
. See, e. g., Dunn, supra note 35, at 834-39 (H.R.Rep.No.2139, Part 2, Minority Views, 75th Cong., 3d Sess. (1938)); 873-85 (Debate in the House, June 1, 1938).
. See Dunn, supra note 35, at 995 (Conference Report, House Rep.No.2716, 75th Cong., 3d Sess. (1938)).
. See, e. g., Dunn, supra note 35, at 938 (Debate in the House, June 1, 1938) (remarks of Congressman Mapes). See also, 83 Cong.Rec. 7892 (1938).
. See 83 Cong.Rec. 7772-7773, 7781-7784, 7893-7899 (1938); see also Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 136, 143, 87 S.Ct. 1507, 18 L.Ed.2d 1037 (1967).
. The original bill leading to the enactment of the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act of 1938 was introduced in June, 1933. See S. 1944, 73d Cong., 1st Sess. (1933). Legislative activity in this area of food and drug regulation was extensive during the period from 1933-38; see generally, Dunn, supra note 35.
. See Dunn, supra note 35, at 810-811, 825 (H.R.Rep.No.2139, 75th Cong., 3d Sess. (1938)).
. See Dunn, supra note 35, at 938 (Debate in the House, June 1, 1938) (remarks of Congressman Mapes).
. See Dunn, supra note 35, at 940 (Debate- in the House, June 1, 1938) (remarks of Congressman Sauthoff).
. See discussion at 360 to 361 of 187 U.S.App.D.C., at 571 to 572 of 574 F.2d, supra.
. See Dunn, supra note 35, at 825 (emphasis added) (H.R.Rep.No.2139, 75th Cong., 3d Sess. (1938)).
. See text at notes 36 to 39, supra.
. See text at notes 32 to 33, supra.
. 5 U.S.C. § 553.
. 21 U.S.C. § 371(e)(2).
. See Dunn, supra note 35, at 824 (H.R.Rep. No.2139, 75th Cong., 3d Sess. (1938)). (“While common law or jury trial rules of evidence need not be enforced at such a hearing, nevertheless it is essential that all the evidence on which the administrative officer acts be disclosed at the hearing and that the right to contravert viva voce be accorded.”) (emphasis added).
. 21 C.F.R. § 2.48 et seq.
. Id. § 2.71.
. Id. § 2.79.
. Id. § 2.81.
. Id. § 2.83.
. Id §§ 2.90(a), 2.93.
. Id § 2.94.
. 21 U.S.C. § 371(e)(3).
. See Hamilton, Procedures for the Adoption of Rules of General Applicability: The Need for Procedural Innovation in Administrative Rule-making, 60 Cal.L.Rev. 1276, 1283-84, 1287 (1972).
. 21 C.F.R. §§ 2.48, 2.67(b)(5).
. See 21 C.F.R. § 2.67(c); see also, Hamilton, supra note 59, at 1287 n. 69; Verkuil, supra note 33, at 192.
. The Supreme Court has approved FDA’s use of a summary judgment procedure for the denial of requests for a hearing pursuant to the withdrawal of a new drug application under section 505 of the Act, 21 U.S.C. § 355. See Weinberger v. Hynson, Westcott & Dunning, 412 U.S. 609, 620-622, 93 S.Ct. 2469, 37 L.Ed.2d 207 (1973). The withdrawal of a new drug application does, of course, present a situation somewhat different from the ICMAD cases involving the promulgation of cosmetic labeling regulations through rulemaking.
.ICMAD has indeed challenged the factual bases on which the Commissioner proceeded. See text at page 356 of 187 U.S.App.D.C., at page 567 of 574 F.2d and notes 21 to 23, supra.
. See note 50 supra.
. 387 U.S. 136, 87 S.Ct. 1507, 18 L.Ed.2d 1037 (1967).
. Toilet Goods Ass’n, Inc. v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 158, 87 S.Ct. 1520, 18 L.Ed.2d 697 (1967); Gardner v. Toilet Goods Ass’n, Inc., 387 U.S. 167, 87 S.Ct. 1526, 18 L.Ed.2d 704 (1967).
. Toilet Goods Ass’n, Inc. v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 158, 165 n. 3, 87 S.Ct. 1520, 18 L.Ed.2d 697 (1967).
. 387 U.S. at 144-46, 87 S.Ct. 1507.
. 387 U.S. at 180, 87 S.Ct. 1526.
. Id. at 144-146, 87 S.Ct. 1507.
. Id. at 146, 87 S.Ct. at 1514.
. Id. at 146 n. 14, 87 S.Ct. at 1514 n. 14.
. Id.
. ICMAD has indeed challenged the procedures employed by the FDA in this case and, from the discussion at notes 8 to 20, supra, there is a colorable argument to be made in this regard.
. 387 U.S. 180, n. 5, 87 S.Ct. 1533, n. 5.
. See discussion at notes 40 to 43, supra.
. 151 U.S.App.D.C. 90, 466 F.2d 261 (1972).
. 151 U.S.App.D.C. at 94-97, 466 F.2d at 265-268.
. 151 U.S.App.D.C. at 98-100, 466 F.2d at 269-271.
. Majority Opinion at page 343 of 187 U.S.App.D.C., at page 554 of 574 F.2d.
. In Nader, Judge Robinson noted:
“The legislative history of the [National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety] Act is almost completely silent as to the exclusivity or concurrency of the review procedure which it specifies.” 151 U.S.App.D.C. at 94-95, 466 F.2d at 265-66.
Such is certainly not the case with the Food and Drug Act. Although it doubtless would be better if, as Judge Leventhal has suggested, Congress were to enact a general solution to the choice of forum problem (see Investment Company Institute v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 551 F.2d 1270, 1283 (Leventhal, J., concurring)), we do not now have such a general solution, and legislative intent as expressed in individual laws must serve as the primary guidepost in this area.
. See Investment Co. Inst. v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Sys., 179 U.S.App.D.C. 311, 551 F.2d 1270 (1977); Deutsche Lufthansa Aktiengesellschaft v. CAB, 156 U.S.App.D.C. 191, 479 F.2d 912 (1973).
. Deutsche Lufthansa Aktiengesellschaft v. CAB, 156 U.S.App.D.C. 191, 195, 479 F.2d 912, 916 (1973) (emphasis added).
. See cases cited, id.
. See text at notes 31 to 64, supra.
. Mobil Oil v. FPC, 157 U.S.App.D.C. 235, 257, 483 F.2d 1238, 1260 (1973).
.See notes 50, 64, supra.
.See note 19, supra.
. See Citizens to Preserve Overton Park v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402, 91 S.Ct. 814, 28 L.Ed.2d 136 (1971); see also Currie & Goodman, Judicial Review of Federal Administrative Action: Quest for the Optimum Forum, 75 Colum.L. Rev. 1, 42 (1973).
. See text at notes 21-23, supra.
. See, e. g., Deutsche Lutthansa Aktiengesellschaft v. CAB, 156 U.S.App.D.C. 191, 195, 479 F.2d 912, 916 (1973).
. 156 U.S.App.D.C. at 195, 479 F.2d at 916 (emphasis added). See also Investment Co. Inst. v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Sys., 179 U.S.App.D.C. 311, 319, 551 F.2d 1270, 1278 (1977), where the court states that
“The issues of statutory construction which appellants raise, if ripe, clearly could be resolved on the basis of the administrative record.”
Such is not the situation here; see text at note 93, infra.
.See Currie & Goodman, supra note 89, at 42 (“Statutory authority, although a ‘legal’ question, is often dependent upon the existence of certain facts.”)
. See text at note 44 and p. 360-361 of 187 U.S.App.D.C., pp. 571-572 of 574 F.2d, supra.
. See Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 136, 148, 87 S.Ct. 1507 (1967); 3 Davis, Administrative Law Treatise, Ch. 21 (1958); *369Jaffe, Judicial Control of Administrative Action, Ch. 10 (1965).
. See, S.E.C. v. Chenery Corp., 318 U.S. 80, 94, 63 S.Ct. 454, 87 L.Ed. 626 (1943).
. Maj. Op. 347 of 187 U.S.App.D.C., 558 of 574 F.2d.
. Maj. Op. 348 of 187 U.S.App.D.C., 559 of 574 F.2d.