United States Court of Appeals
FOR TH E D ISTR ICT OF C OL UM BIA CIR CU IT
Argued October 8, 2004 Decided January 28, 2005
No. 04-5026
Frank Taucher, et al.,
Appellees
v.
Sharon Brown-Hruska, Acting CFTC Chairman, et al.,
Appellants
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Columbia
(No. 97cv01711)
William S. Liebman, Assistant General Counsel, Commod-
ity Futures Trading Commission, argued the cause for appel-
lants. With him on the briefs was Kirk T. Manhardt, Deputy
General Counsel.
Scott G. Bullock argued the cause for appellees. With him
on the brief was William H. Mellor.
Before: EDWARDS, HENDERSON , and ROBERTS, Circuit
Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROBERTS.
Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge EDWARDS.
2
ROBERTS, Circuit Judge: After a federal district court
declared a portion of the Commodity Exchange Act unconstitu-
tional, the prevailing parties sought attorneys’ fees under the
Equal Access to Justice Act. A magistrate judge concluded that
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s defense of the
Act was not substantially justified, and accordingly awarded
fees to the challengers. On appeal we reject the Commission’s
argument that it should not be held liable for fees because it was
obligated to defend the statute, but we also conclude that the
Commission’s defense was a reasonable one on the merits.
Accordingly, we reverse and vacate the award of attorneys’ fees.
I.
A. Congress enacted the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA),
Pub. L. No. 74-675, 49 Stat. 1491 (1936), in an effort to combat
fraudulent practices affecting the commodity futures market.
Section 4m of the CEA as amended, see Commodity Futures
Trading Act of 1974, Pub. L. No. 93-463, 88 Stat. 1389, 1398,
makes it unlawful for any commodity trading advisor (CTA) “to
make use of the mails or any means or instrumentality of
interstate commerce in connection with his business as [a]
commodity trading advisor” unless the CTA is registered under
the Act. 7 U.S.C. § 6m(1). Registration is burdensome; those
applying to register must submit a substantial amount of
background information, renew their registrations annually,
maintain books and records for inspection, and undertake
mandatory ethics training. See id. § 6n; 17 C.F.R. §§ 3.10, 3.34
(1997). The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC),
which implements the Act, can deny, revoke, or suspend
registration for a wide variety of reasons. See 7 U.S.C.
§ 12a(2)(A)–(H). It also has discretionary authority to deny
registration for “good cause,” § 12(a)(3)(M), which can be based
on a pattern of conduct by the applicant indicating “moral
turpitude, or lack of honesty,” even if such conduct has never
3
been the subject of a formal action or proceeding. 7 C.F.R. pt.
3, app. A (interpreting § 12(a)(3)(M)).
The statutory definition of a CTA subject to these provi-
sions sweeps broadly. It includes those who “for compensation
or profit . . . advise[] others, either directly or through publica-
tions, writings, or electronic media, as to the value of or the
advisability of trading in” commodity futures or “issue[] or
promulgate[] analyses or reports concerning” trading in com-
modity futures. 7 U.S.C. § 1a(6)(A). There is an exemption for
“any news reporter, news columnist, or news editor of the print
or electronic media,” id. § 1a(6)(B)(ii), but only if their activities
relating to commodity futures are “solely incidental to the
conduct of their business or profession,” id. § 1a(6)(C). The
consequences of acting as an unregistered CTA are not trifling:
willfully violating Section 4m is a felony punishable by a
maximum fine of $500,000 for individuals and as much as five
years’ imprisonment, id. § 13(a)(5), and unregistered CTAs risk
civil penalties of $100,000 or triple their monetary gains,
whichever is greater. Id. § 9.
B. On July 30, 1997, certain publishers providing informa-
tion, analyses, and advice on commodity futures trading filed
suit against the chairman and commissioners of the CFTC in
their official capacities. Joined by customers who purchased
their publications, these plaintiffs sought a declaration that the
registration provision was unconstitutional under the First
Amendment. The publishers did not dispute that they qualified
as CTAs under the statutory scheme. After all, they offered
advice on trading in commodity futures through newsletters,
books and trading course manuals, Internet-based information
services, and software programs. Although the publishers could
be considered part of the print or electronic media for purposes
of the exemption in 7 U.S.C. § 1a(6)(B), commodity trading
advice was central rather than “incidental” to their businesses,
and accordingly they could not qualify for the exemption. See
4
id. § 1a(6)(c). Each publisher employed a trading system based
on technical analysis of commodity price levels and historic
trends. The publisher’s system played a central role across the
spectrum of publications, forming the basis for tips in newslet-
ters and serving as the backbone of software programs generat-
ing trading recommendations based on current market data. See,
e.g., Taucher v. Born, 53 F. Supp. 2d 464, 466–67 (D.D.C.
1999) (“Taucher I”) (describing a publisher’s use of his trading
system in his newsletter, book, trading course, and software
program).
The publishers’ argument was not that they were not
covered by the statute, but instead that their various publications
were protected under the First Amendment and that the registra-
tion requirement constituted a prior restraint on speech prohib-
ited by that Amendment. After rejecting the CFTC’s motion to
dismiss and the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, the
district court held a three-day bench trial. In a memorandum
opinion and order issued the following month, the court entered
judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, declaring the registration
requirement unconstitutional as applied to the publishers. Id. at
482–83.
The district court first addressed whether Section 4m was
a regulation of speech triggering First Amendment scrutiny or
was merely a regulation of a profession — that of commodity
trading advisor — subject to rational basis review. As the court
explained, “[t]his is a question with which courts have struggled
in the past in an effort to articulate a principled way of distin-
guishing between the two kinds of regulations.” Id. at 476–77.
The court looked to Justice Jackson’s concurring opinion in
Thomas v. Collins, 323 U.S. 516 (1945), which noted that while
regulation of speech and regulation of a profession “may shade
into” one another, “a rough distinction always exists, . . . which
is more shortly illustrated than explained.” Id. at 544 (Jackson,
J., concurring). The district court quoted Justice Jackson’s view
5
that “modern regulators sought, at times successfully, to regulate
speech by ‘associating the speaking with some other factor
which the state may regulate so as to bring the whole within
official control.’ ” Taucher I, 53 F. Supp. 2d at 479 (quoting
323 U.S. at 547). “[I]t is the court’s duty to ‘inquire whether
[the] speech or publication is properly condemned by associa-
tion.’ ” Id. (same).
The district court also sought guidance from Lowe v. SEC,
472 U.S. 181 (1985), in which the Supreme Court addressed a
First Amendment challenge to a registration requirement for
securities investment advisors under the Investment Advisors
Act (IAA). The Lowe majority did not reach the constitutional
question, finding that the plaintiffs fell within a statutory
exemption for the press. See id. at 211. Relying on the legisla-
tive history underlying the exemption, the Supreme Court
construed it as reaching those whose investment advice was not
personalized for clients. See id. at 203–11. Although the
majority in Lowe did not reach the constitutional question, the
district court looked to Justice White’s separate opinion concur-
ring in the result. Justice White did not think the exemption
could be construed to cover the plaintiffs, but would have found
the registration requirement an unconstitutional prior restraint of
speech as applied to them. He found Justice Jackson’s concur-
rence in Thomas “instructive” in “help[ing] to locate the point
where regulation of a profession leaves off and prohibitions on
speech begin.” Id. at 231–32 (White, J., concurring in the
result). Justice White reasoned that where there was no
“personal nexus between professional and client” and a speaker
does not exercise judgment on behalf of that client, “government
regulation ceases to function as legitimate regulation of profes-
sional practice . . . [and] becomes regulation of speaking or
publishing as such” subject to heightened scrutiny under the
First Amendment. Id. at 232.
6
Finding that the publishers here never exercised judgment
or traded commodity futures on behalf of clients and had no
personal contact with them, the district court concluded that the
registration requirement was a regulation of speech when
applied to the plaintiffs. Taucher I, 53 F. Supp. 2d at 478–79.
Rejecting the claim that the dispute involved commercial speech
entitled to lesser First Amendment protection, the court then
concluded that the registration scheme was an unconstitutional
prior restraint. Id. at 480–82. The CFTC appealed the district
court’s decision, but later agreed to dismiss its appeal because
of a new regulation it had promulgated exempting persons like
the plaintiff-publishers from registration requirements. See 17
C.F.R. § 4.14(a)(9) (2000).
C. With its merits victory secured, the plaintiffs’ pro bono
counsel, a public interest law firm, sought to recover attorneys’
fees pursuant to the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA), 28
U.S.C. § 2412. That Act authorizes an award of fees to a party
prevailing against the government unless the government’s legal
position is “substantially justified or . . . special circumstances
make an award unjust.” 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A). The district
court referred the matter to a magistrate judge, who correctly
read “substantially justified” to mean “justified to a degree that
could satisfy a reasonable person” or otherwise having “a
reasonable basis both in law and fact.” Taucher v. Rainer, 237
F. Supp. 2d 7, 11 (D.D.C. 2002) (“Taucher II”) (quoting Pierce
v. Underwood, 487 U.S. 552, 565 (1988)). The magistrate judge
spent the bulk of his opinion explaining that Section 4m was
“[u]nquestionably” a prior restraint on speech, and that defen-
dants “utterly failed to overcome” the weighty presumption
against its validity by casting the registration scheme as a
content-neutral regulation advancing important governmental
interests unrelated to the suppression of speech. Id. at 11–12.
In a more summary fashion, the magistrate judge rejected
the substantiality of the CFTC’s argument that Section 4m was
7
a regulation of a profession that did not implicate the First
Amendment in the first place. The magistrate judge regarded
the difference between “a professional’s advice to a client and
a writer’s advice to whoever will read her and use it” as “so self-
evident and obvious that the defendants’ ignoring it cannot be
justified.” Id. at 15. Finally, the magistrate judge rejected the
argument that the CFTC was excused from paying fees because
it had the duty to defend — and the inability to question — the
constitutionality of Section 4m. Id. Having concluded that the
CFTC was liable for fees under EAJA, the magistrate judge
awarded plaintiffs’ counsel $182,425.55 in fees in a subsequent
decision. Taucher v. Rainer, 292 F. Supp. 2d 111, 125 (D.D.C.
2003).
The CFTC appeals the magistrate judge’s holding that its
position was not substantially justified under EAJA and chal-
lenges the amount of fees awarded.
II.
We review a district court’s conclusion on substantial
justification only for abuse of discretion, even when the district
court’s judgment turns on an evaluation of questions of law.
Underwood, 487 U.S. at 560. We have explained, however, that
“our deference does not exempt the district court’s substantial
justification determination from appellate scrutiny.” F.J.
Vollmer Co. v. Magaw, 102 F.3d 591, 596 (D.C. Cir. 1996)
(finding abuse of discretion); see Halverson v. Slater, 206 F.3d
1205 (D.C. Cir. 2000) (same). “We will reverse the district
court if its decision rests on clearly erroneous factual findings or
if it leaves us with a definite and firm conviction that the court
below committed a clear error of judgment in the conclusion it
reached upon a weighing of the relevant factors.” F.J. Vollmer,
102 F.3d at 596 (internal quotation marks omitted).
EAJA provides, in relevant part, that “a court shall award to
a prevailing party other than the United States fees and other
8
expenses . . . incurred by that party in any civil action . . . unless
the court finds that the position of the United States was
substantially justified or that special circumstances make an
award unjust.” 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A). Although the CFTC
questions whether the subscriber-plaintiffs were prevailing
parties — the district court found it unnecessary to consider their
claims as distinct from the publishers’ claims — it is undisputed
that the publishers prevailed in the merits litigation. Once an
applicant’s status as a prevailing party is established, the
government has the burden of showing that its legal position was
substantially justified or that special circumstances make an
award unjust. Air Transp. Ass’n of Canada v. FAA, 156 F.3d
1329, 1332 (D.C. Cir. 1998).
The government’s position is substantially justified if it is
“justified to a degree that could satisfy a reasonable person” or,
in other words, has “a reasonable basis both in law and fact.”
Underwood, 487 U.S. at 565 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Although the strength of the government’s position in the
litigation obviously plays an important role in a substantial
justification evaluation, the reasonableness inquiry “may not be
collapsed into [an] antecedent evaluation of the merits, for
EAJA sets out a distinct legal standard.” Cooper v. United
States R.R. Ret. Bd., 24 F.3d 1414, 1416 (D.C. Cir. 1994)
(internal quotation marks omitted). The statutory structure
assumes that the government can lose on the merits and never-
theless be found to have taken a substantially justified position.
Underwood, 487 U.S. at 569. See De Allende v. Baker, 891 F.2d
7, 12 (1st Cir. 1989) (“The mere fact that the government lost in
the underlying litigation does not create a presumption that its
position was not substantially justified.”). “To be ‘substantially
justified’ means, of course, more than merely undeserving of
sanctions for frivolousness,” Underwood, 487 U.S. at 566, but
at the same time the standard does not “require the Government
to establish that its decision to litigate was based on a substantial
probability of prevailing.” Spencer v. NLRB, 712 F.2d 539, 557
9
(D.C. Cir. 1983) (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 96-1418, at 10–11
(1980)).
Here as in other areas courts need to guard against being
“subtly influenced by the familiar shortcomings of hindsight
judgment.” Beck v. Ohio, 379 U.S. 89, 96 (1964). Cf.
Christiansburg Garment Co. v. EEOC, 434 U.S. 412, 421–22
(1978) (courts must “resist the understandable temptation to
engage in post hoc reasoning by concluding that, because a
plaintiff did not ultimately prevail, his action must have been
unreasonable or without foundation”). Not all opinions can
aspire to what was said of those of Justice Brandeis — that in
them “the right doctrine emerges in heavenly glory and the
wrong view is consigned to the lower circle of hell,” HENRY J.
FRIENDLY , Mr. Justice Brandeis — The Quest for Reason, in
BENCHMARKS 291, 294 (1967) — but there is always the hope
that, after decision, the “wrong view” looks considerably less
plausible than it did before. But just as discovery of contraband
does not establish probable cause, nor an accident negligence,
nor poor returns an imprudent trustee, so too a loss on the merits
does not mean that legal arguments advanced in the context of
our adversary system were unreasonable.
Our EAJA jurisprudence reflects this principle. It “requires
that the district court do more than explain, repeat, characterize,
and describe the merits . . . decision.” Halverson, 206 F.3d at
1209. Courts evaluating substantial justification must instead
analyze why the government’s position failed in court: if, for
example, the government lost because it vainly pressed a
position “flatly at odds with the controlling case law,” Am.
Wrecking Corp. v. Sec. of Labor, 364 F.3d 321, 326–27 (D.C.
Cir. 2004) (internal quotation marks omitted), that is one thing;
quite another if the government lost because an unsettled
question was resolved unfavorably. See United States v.
Hallmark Constr. Co., 200 F.3d 1076, 1080 (7th Cir. 2000) (“the
district court must reexamine the legal and factual circumstances
10
of the case from a different perspective than that used at any
other stage of the proceeding”).
III.
The CFTC’s first argument was presented to the district
court not under the guise of “substantial justification” at all, but
instead as a “special circumstance” making the award of fees
“unjust” in this case. See 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A). The
CFTC argued that it had a duty to defend the constitutionality of
Section 4m, and that it would be unjust to award fees against it
simply for faithfully undertaking this duty. See Taucher II, 237
F. Supp. 2d at 15. On appeal, the CFTC merged this contention
with its substantial justification claim. See Reply Br. at 16
(“The Commission understands that it still must pass the
substantial justification test.”).
The CFTC argues that the merits suit is best seen not as a
challenge to a discretionary agency action directed against any
particular plaintiff, but rather an attack on the validity of a
congressionally enacted statute as applied to the plaintiffs. The
CFTC argues — and the district court agreed — that unlike the
situation in Lowe, the statutory scheme at issue here does not
lend itself to an interpretation exempting the plaintiffs from
registration. See Taucher I, 53 F. Supp. 2d at 475–76 (conclud-
ing Section 4m applied to publisher-plaintiffs). In other words,
the judgment that these publishers should register was made by
Congress, not the CFTC. The CFTC notes that acts of Congress
are presumed to be constitutional, see, e.g., United States v.
Morrison, 529 U.S. 598, 607 (2000), and that administrative
agencies generally do not have jurisdiction to question the
constitutionality of their governing statutes. See, e.g., Thunder
Basin Coal Co. v. Reich, 510 U.S. 200, 215 (1994); Oestereich
v. Selective Serv. Sys. Local Bd. No. 11, 393 U.S. 233, 242
(1968) (Harlan, J., concurring in result).
11
From these premises, however, the CFTC draws a suspect
conclusion: that its inability to question the presumptive
constitutionality of Section 4m renders its position substantially
justified under EAJA. It seeks support for this conclusion in the
following observation, made by this court two decades ago:
[T]he prospect of judicial review of legislation for constitu-
tionality does not relieve Congress of the obligation to self-
police its measures for compatibility with the Constitution.
Therefore, situations in which the government’s defense of
the constitutionality of a federal statute fails the “substan-
tially justified” test should be exceptional.
Grace v. Burger, 763 F.2d 457, 458 n.5 (D.C. Cir. 1985)
(emphasis added). The CFTC argues that because it has a duty
to execute faithfully the laws passed by Congress, it should not
be penalized for undertaking that constitutional obligation. See
Kiareldeen v. Ashcroft, 273 F.3d 542, 549 (3d Cir. 2001) (“We
conclude that [the Executive Branch] is duty-bound to defend
what Congress has enacted, and was therefore substantially
justified in defending the constitutionality of this statute.”).
Circuit precedent provides no support for the Commission’s
duty-to-defend argument. Rather than promulgating the rule the
CFTC proposes, the underscored language from our footnote in
Grace simply emphasizes that this court presumes that Congress
typically attends to its obligation to legislate within the bounds
of the Constitution. Indeed, the text to which footnote 5 was
appended explained that “we do not rule . . . that the government
is forever and always ‘substantially justified’ in defending in
court the constitutionality of an act of Congress, whatever the
statute may say, and on any ground a legal mind might con-
ceive.” 763 F.2d at 458. See also League of Women Voters v.
FCC, 798 F.2d 1255, 1259 (9th Cir. 1986) (“neither the lan-
guage of the EAJA nor its legislative history support . . .
exceptions for constitutional attacks on statutes”). The CFTC’s
duty to defend the constitutionality of Section 4m explains, at
12
most, why the CFTC took the position it did. The question
under EAJA remains whether that position was substantially
justified.
IV.
The CFTC’s main contention is that the district court
abused its discretion in finding the argument that Section 4m
was a valid regulation of a profession rather than a restraint on
speech to be not substantially justified. Focusing on whether the
registration scheme was an unconstitutional prior restraint, the
magistrate judge devoted less attention to the separate and
antecedent question of whether Section 4m was a regulation of
speech that implicated the First Amendment at all. See Taucher
II, 237 F. Supp. 2d at 12–15. On that question, the magistrate
judge wrote that refusing to appreciate the difference between
brokers giving advice to clients and the publication of a newslet-
ter was “to ignore the cases upon which [the district court] relied
that discuss the distinction between a professional’s advice to a
client and a writer’s advice to whoever . . . will read her and use
it.” Id. at 14–15. According to the magistrate judge, this
difference was “self-evident and obvious.” Id. at 15.
In considering substantial justification under EAJA,
however, it is not enough to repeat the analysis of the merits
decision, and add adjectives. See Halverson, 206 F.3d at 1209;
F.J. Vollmer, 102 F.3d at 596. “[T]he district court must
analyze the merits . . . reasoning to determine whether the
[government’s] position, though rejected, was substantially
justified.” Halverson, 206 F.3d at 1209. Here such an analysis
of the merits reasoning might begin with the fact that “the cases
upon which [the district court] relied” consist of two concurring
opinions. Well reasoned, to be sure, and perhaps ultimately
persuasive, but — to paraphrase the Supreme Court’s dismissal
of non-majority views in another case — the comments in the
concurring opinions are just that: comments in concurring
13
opinions. See United States R.R. Ret. Bd. v. Fritz, 449 U.S. 166,
177 n.10 (1980).
What is more, while the magistrate judge found the distinc-
tion drawn in the two concurrences “self-evident and obvious,”
Taucher II, 237 F. Supp. 2d at 15, the concurring opinions
themselves belie that assertion. Justice Jackson acknowledged
that the distinction between permissible regulation and unconsti-
tutional suppression of speech was a “rough” one, with the two
areas “shad[ing]” into one another, and that the distinction was
“more shortly illustrated than explained.” Thomas, 323 U.S. at
544 (concurring opinion). Justice Jackson’s analysis highlighted
the fact-specific nature of the inquiry, noting that a court can
draw the pertinent line only after deciding whether the speech
has been “properly condemned by association” with a non-
speech factor open to state regulation. Id. at 547. “Whether in
a particular case the association or characterization is a proven
and valid one,” Justice Jackson acknowledged, “often is difficult
to resolve.” Id. Justice White recognized that Justice Jackson
“wrestled” with the issue, and that the question was a line-
drawing one of “locat[ing] the point where regulation of a
profession leaves off and prohibitions on speech begin.” Lowe,
472 U.S. at 231–32 (concurring opinion). Hardly the language
of a “self-evident and obvious” distinction.
Nor is there any indication that the district court judge
regarded the matter as so open-and-shut as did the magistrate
judge. The former’s opinion lacks the adjectives that populate
the latter’s; the district judge appreciated that the distinction the
magistrate judge found “so self-evident and obvious” was one
“with which courts have struggled in the past.” Taucher I, 53 F.
Supp. 2d at 476. The district court also appreciated that the
Lowe concurrence was “perhaps not conclusive” and only
“instructive” on how to draw the line between regulation of a
profession and regulation of speech. Order Den. Pls.’ Mot. for
Summ. J. (Jan. 14, 1999) at 2 [JA 56]. The district court did not
14
regard the Lowe concurrence as stating a well-established rule;
the Justices who joined it were instead “searching for a way to
distinguish between the regulation of a profession and the
regulation of speech.” Id.
The plaintiffs argue, however, that because the Lowe
majority “clearly implied” that the IAA registration scheme
would have been unconstitutional had it been “applied to . . .
impersonal investment advisers,” Lowe dictates that the CEA
registration scheme violates the First Amendment. Br. at 17
(citing 472 U.S. at 210). The district court’s merits opinion
drew a similar inference, reasoning that the Lowe majority — in
construing the IAA as it did to avoid a conflict with the First
Amendment — “alluded to the correctness” of a conclusion that
Section 4m was unconstitutional. Taucher I, 53 F. Supp. 2d at
481–82. Such “allusions” are properly the stuff from which to
draw guidance in resolving open legal questions, but the very
fact that such inferences must be drawn confirms the absence of
controlling legal authority. After all, the whole point of the
constitutional avoidance in which the Lowe majority expressly
engaged, see 472 U.S. at 190 & n.24, is to avoid deciding the
constitutional question. It is a bit much to argue that the Lowe
majority provided constitutional guidance so clear that fees
should be awarded against those who failed to heed it, even
under a different statute regulating a different business than the
one at issue in Lowe, when the basis for the opinion was the
need to avoid a constitutional decision altogether. The Lowe
majority opinion, while helpful and apposite, did not govern the
disposition of the case. See CFTC v. Vartuli, 228 F.3d 94,
104–05 (2d Cir. 2000) (“Lowe provides us with neither a binding
interpretation of the CEA . . . nor a constitutional analysis of
[the IAA]”).
Moreover, the magistrate judge was wrong to suggest that
the defendants “ignore[d]” the cases on which the district court
had relied. The defendants confronted the guidance the district
15
court sought from Lowe head on, and attempted to distinguish it.
Relying heavily on the IAA’s legislative history, the Lowe
majority explained that the IAA was meant to cover “the
business of rendering personalized investment advice,” not
“nonpersonalized publishing activities.” 472 U.S. at 204. The
defendants explained that the difference between a traditional
personalized trader and a publisher specializing in trading advice
is markedly less sharp in the commodity futures business than
in the securities market addressed by Lowe. In the commodity
futures market, the relationship between trader and client is quite
impersonal. CTAs are rarely in contact with their clients. They
generally do not obtain detailed financial information from
clients, evaluate the suitability of clients to engage in trading, or
communicate trading advice. Transactions are rarely pre-
approved by individual clients and rarely tailored to their needs.
See Taucher I, 53 F. Supp. 2d at 465–66 (factual findings on the
CTA-client relationship).
Securities and commodity futures trading are similar
enough to invite comparison, but the differences between the
two markets render any analogy less than airtight. This consid-
eration is particularly weighty when reviewing the reasonable-
ness of the government’s position in litigation over the bound-
aries between permissible economic regulation and unconstitu-
tional infringement on speech rights — disputes in which factual
distinctions concerning the nature of particular markets can
carry the day. Compare, e.g., Glickman v. Wileman Bros. &
Elliott, Inc., 521 U.S. 457 (1997) (upholding the constitutional-
ity of a mandatory advertising fee — for peaches — against
First Amendment challenge because pertinent market was
comprehensively regulated) with United States v. United Foods,
Inc., 533 U.S. 405 (2001) (striking down a similar mandatory
advertising fee on First Amendment grounds because market —
for mushrooms — was not as pervasively regulated as the one
in Glickman).
16
In the absence of controlling Supreme Court case law, the
available circuit precedent becomes more significant in consid-
ering substantial justification under EAJA. During pre-litigation
enforcement of Section 4m and when the plaintiffs filed suit, the
only appellate decision addressing the constitutionality of
requiring a publisher of a commodity futures newsletter to
register as a CTA had upheld Section 4m against a First Amend-
ment challenge. See Savage v. CFTC, 548 F.2d 192, 197–98
(7th Cir. 1977). The argument considered and rejected in
Savage was that
a statutory requirement that a license be obtained in order
to publish information and opinions regarding the commod-
ities markets is an unwarranted impairment of First Amend-
ment rights of freedom of speech and press; that the First
Amendment covers newsletters even though they are
published in anticipation of economic gain; and that prior
restraints are presumed illegal especially where, as here, the
Commission seeks to prohibit publication of a newsletter
without any evidence whatsoever that it was used in a
deceptive or fraudulent manner.
Id. at 196.
The plaintiffs argue that Savage is distinguishable because
there the plaintiff also had personal contacts with his clients. Br.
at 26 n.3. In rejecting the constitutional challenge, however, the
Savage opinion — written well before Justice White’s concur-
rence in Lowe — placed no weight whatever on that fact. See
Savage, 548 F.2d at 197. The fact that the Seventh Circuit itself
narrowed a broad reading of Savage after the merits decision
below, see Commodity Trend Serv., Inc. v. CFTC, 233 F.3d 981,
990 (7th Cir. 2000), or suggested such a narrowing during the
merits briefing below, see Commodity Trend Serv., Inc. v.
CFTC, 149 F.3d 679, 686 (7th Cir. 1998), does not alter the
reasonableness of the CFTC’s position in this case.
17
* * *
In sum, when this suit was filed, there was no controlling
Supreme Court authority or D.C. Circuit precedent on the
constitutionality of Section 4m as applied to publishers of
commodity futures trading advice. The only circuit authority —
although arguably distinguishable — had upheld the provision
in the face of a First Amendment challenge. The theory on
which the publishers relied in arguing that Section 4m was
unconstitutional as applied to them had been articulated not in
a Supreme Court majority opinion but in two separate concur-
rences. These concurrences themselves had recognized that the
line between regulation of a profession and regulation of speech
was not easy to discern. And even if the two concurrences did
state the applicable test, the nature of the commodity futures
market presented a substantial factual basis for supposing that
applying the test might lead to a different result than the one
argued for by the plaintiffs.
Contrast this with cases in which we have found the govern-
ment’s position not to be substantially justified. Given the
precedent at the time of litigation, the CFTC’s position was
neither “patently flawed” nor “flatly at odds with the controlling
case law.” Am. Wrecking Corp., 364 F.3d at 326–27 (internal
quotation marks omitted). It was not “obviously insufficient
under well-established precedent,” or pressed “[i]n the face of
an unbroken line of authority.” Precision Concrete v. NLRB,
362 F.3d 847, 851–52 (D.C. Cir. 2004). The CFTC did not act
in defiance of a “string of losses.” Contractor’s Sand & Gravel,
Inc. v. FMSHRC, 199 F.3d 1335, 1341 (D.C. Cir. 2000) (internal
quotation marks omitted). See also Halverson, 206 F.3d at 1211
(government’s position “entirely without merit”); F.J. Vollmer,
102 F.3d at 596 (government’s position “required treating
identical weapons in completely different ways”). Morever,
given the differences between the securities and commodity
futures trading markets, it cannot be said that the CFTC’s
18
argument lacked a reasonable factual basis in the record,
Cooper, 24 F.3d at 1416–17, even if the Lowe concurrence
governed. We are confident that the CFTC’s position — though
rejected — was nonetheless “justified to a degree that could
satisfy a reasonable person,” Underwood, 487 U.S. at 565, and
that it was an abuse of discretion to conclude otherwise.
The decision of the district court is reversed and the award
of attorneys’ fees is vacated.
EDWARDS, Circuit Judge, dissenting: The Equal Access to
Justice Act (“EAJA”) provides that:
a court shall award to a prevailing party . . . fees and other
expenses . . . incurred by that party in any civil action . . .
brought by or against the United States . . . unless the court
finds that the position of the United States was substantially
justified or that special circumstances make an award
unjust.
28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A) (2000). The Supreme Court’s
decision in Pierce v. Underwood, 487 U.S. 552 (1988), clearly
and firmly controls the level of involvement by the courts of
appeals in the application of this statutory provision.
In Underwood, the Court instructed that, in considering
whether the Government’s litigating position was “substantially
justified” within the meaning of EAJA, a court of appeals does
not engage in de novo review. Id. at 557-63. Rather, a district
court’s judgment that fees are due to a prevailing party under
EAJA is entitled to significant deference under an abuse-of-
discretion standard. Id. Indeed, the Court made it clear that,
even when “the attorney’s fee determination . . . involve[s] a
judgment ultimately based upon evaluation of the purely legal
issue governing the litigation,” the district court’s judgment is
still subject only to the most limited review. Id. at 560.
In reaching this conclusion, the Court in Underwood was
counseled by considerations of “sound judicial administration.”
Id. at 563. Specifically, the Court sought to avoid the “unusual
expense” associated with requiring an appellate court to
“undertake the unaccustomed task of reviewing the entire
record, not just to determine whether there existed the usual
minimum support for the merits determination made by the
factfinder below, but to determine whether urging of the
opposite merits determination was substantially justified.” Id.
at 560. The Court indicated that this would be a poor use of
2
court of appeals resources, because it “will either fail to produce
the normal law-clarifying benefits that come from an appellate
decision on a question of law, or else will strangely distort the
appellate process.” Id. at 561. In short, Underwood was quite
plain in saying that the courts of appeals have no business
second-guessing district court determinations whether the
Government’s litigating position was “substantially justified”
within the meaning of EAJA.
Thus, under Underwood, a district court’s judgment may be
reversed only when the record “commands the conclusion that
the Government’s position was substantially justified.” Id. at
570-71 (emphasis added). Why such a tight rein on the standard
of review? It is really quite simple. The abuse-of-discretion
standard of review is required because judgments on what is
substantially justified are inherently discretionary and therefore
not reasonably susceptible to more probing review. Id. at 561-
62. In other words, as the Court said in Underwood, the
“substantially justified” formulation admits of no “useful
generalization.” Id. at 562. Therefore, “‘[o]ne of the “good”
reasons for conferring discretion on the trial judge is the sheer
impracticability of formulating a rule of decision for the matter
in issue.’” Id. at 561 (quoting Maurice Rosenberg, Judicial
Discretion of the Trial Court, Viewed from Above, 22 SYRACUSE
L. REV. 635, 662 (1971)).
There is no doubt that we are bound to follow the principles
enunciated in Underwood. And adherence to Underwood means
that our review of the District Court’s decision is narrow,
limited, and deferential. Under this standard of review, there is
no conceivable way that the record in this case can be seen to
“command” the conclusion that the Government’s position was
substantially justified.
****
3
The merits litigation in this case did not pose a difficult
legal issue. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(“Commission”) had been enforcing a provision under the
Commodity Exchange Act (“CEA”), 7 U.S.C. § 6m(1), that
required all Commodity Trading Advisors (“CTAs”) to register.
The disputed legislation provided that “[i]t shall be unlawful for
any commodity trading advisor . . . unless registered under this
chapter, to make use of the mails or any means or
instrumentality of interstate commerce in connection with his
business as such commodity trading advisor.” 7 U.S.C. § 6m(1).
Two groups of plaintiffs challenged the Commission’s
enforcement of this provision. One group, the “publishers,” was
composed of persons who published nonpersonalized books,
newsletters, Internet sites, instruction manuals, and computer
software that provided information, analysis, and advice on
commodity futures trading. The publishers did not service
individual clients or execute trades on behalf of any clients. The
second group, the “subscribers,” was composed of members of
the public who read and used the publishers’ publications. The
gravamen of the complaint was that, while the publishers’
actions made them CTAs under the CEA, the application of the
CEA’s registration requirement to them, as opposed to the more
typical account-managing CTAs, constituted an unconstitutional
prior restraint infringing their freedom of speech under the First
Amendment.
The District Court held that the publications at issue were
“fully protected speech,” as opposed to “commercial speech.”
Taucher v. Born, 53 F. Supp. 2d 464, 480-81 (D.D.C. 1999).
The District Court concluded that, as a prior restraint on fully
protected speech, the registration requirement could not survive
the searching scrutiny applied to such restraints. Id. at 481-82.
On August 19, 1999, the Commission appealed the District
Court’s decision to this court, where the case was briefed and
scheduled for oral argument. However, prior to argument, the
4
Commission adopted regulations exempting persons like the
publishers in this case from the registration requirement, thereby
mooting the case. See 17 C.F.R. § 4.14(a)(9) (2004) (adopted
Mar. 10, 2000). The parties then agreed to voluntarily dismiss
the appeal. See Taucher v. Rainer, No. 99-5293, 2000 WL
516081 (D.C. Cir. Mar. 28, 2000) (per curiam), reprinted in
Joint Appendix at 149.
It is hardly surprising that the Government elected not to
appeal the District Court’s judgment on the merits, for that
judgment was eminently correct and unassailable. Nor is it
surprising that, in holding the Government liable under EAJA,
the Magistrate Judge who heard and decided the case found that
the Commission’s position in the merits litigation was baseless
and thus not substantially justified. See Taucher v. Rainer, 237
F. Supp. 2d 7 (D.D.C. 2002).
The Magistrate Judge first noted that the Commission
seemed not to recognize that the registration requirement, as a
prior restraint, was subject to more than “intermediate scrutiny”:
For the defendants to say, in the teeth of this jurisprudence,
that prior restraints upon publication are subject to, at most,
intermediate scrutiny was to ignore the central principle of
the jurisprudence pertaining to prior restraints – that such
restraints, sui generis, come burdened with a heavy
presumption against their constitutionality and therefore
have historically been judged by a much more stringent
standard than statutes that have an incidental effect on
speech. To so misunderstand the controlling law and to
equate a prior restraint that conditioned speech upon
governmental approval with a statute that had only an
incidental effect on speech was to confuse most
unreasonably two entirely different principles of First
Amendment adjudication.
5
Id. at 13. The Magistrate Judge then held that the Commission
was not substantially justified in its position that the disputed
registration restriction constituted a permissible professional
regulation, as opposed to an impermissible regulation of speech:
Under [the Commission’s] theory, it was as appropriate to
regulate the publishers, who provided information to
commodity investors, as it was to regulate CTA’s, who
actually managed clients’ accounts. To the defendants, the
medium was irrelevant; whether it was a published article,
a website, or computer software, the message
communicated – buy or don’t buy this commodity – was the
same. Any such communication was as subject to
government regulation as any other. Thus, there was no
significant difference between the CTA telling a client, who
had retained her, to buy cocoa and a published article
making the same recommendation.
But, as Holmes pointed out, “every idea is an
incitement.” Gitlow v. New York, 268 U.S. 652, 673 (1925)
(Holmes, J., dissenting). If encouraging a person to engage
in a particular economic activity is subject to government
regulation, irrespective of the medium, or because some of
the people who do it have clients who rely upon them for
advice, then, reductio ad absurdum, the government could
regulate what appears in the Wall Street Journal, Barrons
and Money Magazine. These publications all have specific
columns providing investment advice and, unless they are
wasting their time, hope that their readers will use it. To
refuse to see the difference between the broker who gives
her advice to her client and the publisher of a newsletter is
to ignore the cases upon which Judge Urbina relied that
discuss the distinction between a professional’s advice to a
client and a writer’s advice to whoever who will read her
and use it. Taucher, 53 F. Supp. 2d at 476-79. That
6
distinction is so self-evident and obvious that the
defendants’ ignoring it cannot be justified.
Id. at 14-15 (citations omitted).
In essence, the Magistrate Judge found that, because the
Government’s positions in the merits litigation bordered on the
absurd, the positions could not possibly be “substantially
justified.” The Judge was quite correct on both counts.
Before this court, the Government offered nothing of
substance to suggest that the Magistrate Judge’s decision
reflected an abuse of discretion. Rather, the Government’s brief
to this court offered a new ploy, suggesting that the Commission
was “duty-bound” to defend the constitutional challenge to the
CEA and that this constituted substantial justification for its
position. Commission’s Br. at 27-36. This argument is
specious. In Grace v. Burger, 763 F.2d 457 (D.C. Cir. 1985),
this court did state in a footnote that “situations in which the
government’s defense of the constitutionality of a federal statute
fails the ‘substantially justified’ test should be exceptional.” Id.
at 458 n.5. However, the context reveals that the court intended
this statement not as a normative principle, but merely as a
prediction, noting that Congress is under an “obligation to
self-police its measures for compatibility with the Constitution.”
Id. Thus, the court simply stated its expectation that it would be
rare that Congress would enact a statute so clearly
unconstitutional that an agency would not be substantially
justified in defending it. Indeed, in the main text of the opinion,
the court explicitly stated:
[W]e do not rule, nor did the district court, that the
government is forever and always “substantially justified”
in defending in court the constitutionality of an act of
Congress, whatever the statute may say, and on any ground
7
a legal mind might conceive. As we have explained, the
government bears the burden on the substantial justification
plea, and to carry that burden, the government must
demonstrate that its litigation position had a solid basis in
fact and law.
Id. at 458 (footnote and citation omitted).
The Government also contends that its defense of the
unconstitutional registration requirement was substantially
justified because its position found support in the Seventh
Circuit’s 1977 decision in Savage v. CFTC, 548 F.2d 192 (7th
Cir. 1977). This, too, is a specious argument. If considered in
isolation, Savage does indeed provide some support for the
Commission’s position. However, Savage was completely
undermined by the Supreme Court’s later decision in Lowe v.
SEC, 472 U.S. 181 (1985). In Lowe, the Court held that the
petitioners could not be permanently enjoined from publishing
nonpersonalized investment advice and commentary in
securities newsletters for the reason that they were not registered
as investment advisers under § 203(c) of the Investment
Advisers Act. The majority opinion by Justice Stevens held
that, because petitioners’ publications fell within the statutory
exclusion for bona fide publications, none of the petitioners was
an “investment adviser” as defined in the Act.
Justice White wrote a long concurring opinion in Lowe, in
which Chief Justice Burger and then-Justice Rehnquist joined,
concluding that the prior restraint of the publishers was
forbidden under the First Amendment. Id. at 211-36 (White, J.,
concurring in result). Justice White focused on the point where
regulation of a profession leaves off and prohibitions on speech
begin:
8
One who takes the affairs of a client personally in hand and
purports to exercise judgment on behalf of the client in the
light of the client’s individual needs and circumstances is
properly viewed as engaging in the practice of a profession.
Just as offer and acceptance are communications incidental
to the regulable transaction called a contract, the
professional’s speech is incidental to the conduct of the
profession. If the government enacts generally applicable
licensing provisions limiting the class of persons who may
practice the profession, it cannot be said to have enacted a
limitation on freedom of speech or the press subject to First
Amendment scrutiny. Where the personal nexus between
professional and client does not exist, and a speaker does
not purport to be exercising judgment on behalf of any
particular individual with whose circumstances he is
directly acquainted, government regulation ceases to
function as legitimate regulation of professional practice
with only incidental impact on speech; it becomes
regulation of speaking or publishing as such, subject to the
First Amendment’s command . . . .
Id. at 232 (footnote omitted) (White, J., concurring in result).
Justice White’s concurring opinion in Lowe did not rest on
novel statements of law; it was grounded in decades of Supreme
Court precedent. See, e.g., id. at 229-30 (White, J., concurring
in result) (discussing the relevant precedent and citing a number
of cases in which the Supreme Court struck down prior restraints
on ostensibly professional speech). And the concurring opinion
in Lowe is consistent with the majority opinion. Indeed,
although the majority opinion decided the case on statutory
grounds, it strongly suggested that application of the disputed
statute to publishers of nonpersonalized investment advice
would be unconstitutional. See id. at 226 (White, J., concurring
in result) (“One does not have to read the Court’s opinion very
9
closely to realize that its interpretation of the Act is in fact based
on a thinly disguised conviction that the Act is unconstitutional
as applied to prohibit publication of newsletters by unregistered
advisers.”).
****
The abuse-of-discretion standard obviously does not mean
that a district court’s exercise of discretion is unreviewable. See
United States v. Criden, 648 F.2d 814, 817-19 (3d Cir. 1981).
“‘[U]nreviewable discretion offends a deep sense of fitness in
our view of the administration of justice.’” Id. at 818 (quoting
Rosenberg, supra, at 641-42). What it does mean, however, is
that review is substantially limited, especially when, as with
cases under EAJA, litigating circumstances vary so much that it
is difficult to frame generally applicable principles constricting
the trial court’s exercise of discretion. At bottom, the abuse-of-
discretion standard focuses on the reasonableness of the trial
court’s judgment, and the measure of reasonableness depends
upon the facts of each particular case before the court. Id. at
817-18.
As noted above, under EAJA, a district court’s judgment
that fees are due to a prevailing party is entitled to significant
deference because the “substantially justified” formulation
admits of no “useful generalization.” Underwood, 487 U.S. at
562. With this in mind, the Court in Underwood found that,
when the “objective indicia” in a case (such as “the objective
fact that the merits were decided at the pleadings stage”) fail to
provide a “conclusive answer,” id. at 568, and the district court’s
exercise of discretion rests on a view of the facts and the law
that is not unreasonable, id. at 568-571, the appellate court
cannot find that the district court abused its discretion. It does
not matter whether the appellate court agrees or disagrees with
10
the trial court. All that matters is that the trial court’s judgment
rests on a reasonable view of the record before it.
In this case, the Magistrate Judge found that the
Government’s positions in the merits litigation were far from
substantially justified, because they were largely baseless. If the
decision were mine to make, I would hold that the
Government’s positions bordered on frivolous. But my job here
is not to make that decision. Rather, as the Court in Underwood
instructed, my colleagues and I are limited to determining only
whether the District Court’s judgment amounts to an abuse of
discretion. I think it is absolutely clear on the record at hand
that the District Court’s judgment in this case cannot be found
wanting under any accepted construction of the abuse-of-
discretion standard of review. Appellees were properly awarded
fees under EAJA, and the judgment in their favor should be
affirmed.