Filed: Mar. 08, 2019
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: Case: 18-10620 Document: 00514863670 Page: 1 Date Filed: 03/07/2019 IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit No. 18-10620 FILED March 7, 2019 Lyle W. Cayce TEXAS TECH PHYSICIANS ASSOCIATES, Clerk Plaintiff - Appellant v. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES; ALEX M. AZAR, II, SECRETARY, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, Defendants - Appellees Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern
Summary: Case: 18-10620 Document: 00514863670 Page: 1 Date Filed: 03/07/2019 IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit No. 18-10620 FILED March 7, 2019 Lyle W. Cayce TEXAS TECH PHYSICIANS ASSOCIATES, Clerk Plaintiff - Appellant v. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES; ALEX M. AZAR, II, SECRETARY, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, Defendants - Appellees Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern D..
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Case: 18-10620 Document: 00514863670 Page: 1 Date Filed: 03/07/2019
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
No. 18-10620
FILED
March 7, 2019
Lyle W. Cayce
TEXAS TECH PHYSICIANS ASSOCIATES, Clerk
Plaintiff - Appellant
v.
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES;
ALEX M. AZAR, II, SECRETARY, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES,
Defendants - Appellees
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Texas
Before KING, HIGGINSON, and COSTA, Circuit Judges.
GREGG COSTA, Circuit Judge:
Medicare incentivizes services, not results. Its fee-for-service model
risks not only that beneficiaries may receive treatment they do not need, but
also that they may miss out on less expensive treatment that might help. See
MEDICARE PAYMENT ADVISORY COMM’N, REPORT TO THE CONGRESS:
REFORMING THE DELIVERY SYSTEM 7 (June 2008). To test whether other
approaches could be more efficient, Congress authorizes “experiments and
demonstration projects” deviating from the ordinary Medicare reimbursement
rules. 42 U.S.C. § 1395b-1. This case arises from one such demonstration
project, with a twist: Texas Tech Physicians Associates could keep the
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additional fees it received for implementing the project only if its care
management model achieved cost savings. The government says Texas Tech
failed, and so demands return of roughly $8 million in fees. Texas Tech resists
that demand.
I.
One of the alternative payment models the Department of Health and
Human Services may explore is whether “payments for services other than
those for which payment may” ordinarily be made might reduce costs and
improve “utilization of services.” 42 U.S.C. § 1395b-1(a)(1)(B). Using that
authorization, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS, the
agency within HHS that administers Medicare) solicited proposals for a “Care
Management for High-Cost Beneficiaries Demonstration.” CMS was looking
for projects to test whether “intensive management” of patients and
coordination between providers might improve care and reduce costs for
Medicare beneficiaries with substantial medical needs. On top of the normal
fees for services, participating programs could earn monthly fees contingent on
achieving cost savings of 5%. These extra fees would count as costs.
Texas Tech Physicians Associates—together with Texas Tech University
Health Sciences Center and Trailblazer Health Enterprises—submitted a
proposal. The project would employ a “system of telephone contacts, letters,
site visits and physician contacts” to help manage and coordinate care for high-
risk beneficiaries treated at Texas Tech’s facilities. Interventions would range
from home safety assessments to support groups, depending on patients’ risk
levels. The application indicated it expected to achieve Medicare cost savings
of up to 25%.
CMS took Texas Tech up on its proposal, and the parties signed a
“demonstration agreement” in January 2006. Texas Tech agreed to implement
the project “as proposed in the demonstration application.” In exchange, it
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would receive a monthly management fee of $117 per participating beneficiary.
And as required by the solicitation, it agreed to be responsible for failure to
meet the 5% net cost savings figure, up to the amount it would receive in
management fees.
The difficulty—then and now—was selecting an adequate control group.
The control group was important because cost savings would be determined by
comparing the costs of patients in the control group with those of Texas Tech’s
participating patients, referred to as the intervention group. The
demonstration agreement did not itself identify a control group. Instead, CMS
would “contract with an independent evaluator” to “assist CMS in designing
features for a suitable comparison group.” After the contractor proposed a
methodology for matching a control group to the intervention group, Texas
Tech would have “the opportunity to review and agree” before beginning the
project.
Agreeing on a control group proved something of a sticking point.
Following an initial proposal from a contractor hired by CMS, RTI
International, Texas Tech raised various concerns about the populations from
which the control group would be drawn. RTI responded with changes to its
initial approach.
Following months of back-and-forth, RTI sent an April 2006 memo
summarizing a “physician group practice-based” approach. RTI used a “loyalty
algorithm” to identify patients whose loyalty to a practice was similar to that
of Texas Tech’s patients. Those beneficiaries would be eligible for inclusion in
the control group if they were within the 48-county area served by Texas Tech
and had high Medicare costs or serious diseases. RTI would then randomly
assign eligible beneficiaries to the control group such that, according to
historical cost data, it was made up of low-cost, medium-cost, and high-cost
patients in percentages nearly identical to Texas Tech’s patient population.
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Texas Tech reviewed and accepted the April 2006 methodology and began
enrolling participants that month.
The trouble began less than a year later. In February 2007, Actuarial
Research Corporation (another CMS contractor) released a report on the first
six months of Texas Tech’s project. After adjusting for baseline cost
differences, the intervention group’s monthly per-member costs were 7%
higher than the control group’s. Texas Tech chalked the cost differences up to
inconsistencies between the groups. It pointed, for instance, to two features of
the intervention group that it believed explained its higher costs: more deaths
and more patients residing in nursing homes. In light of those differences,
Texas Tech asked that the control group be adjusted. But CMS declined; it
said doing so was “not feasible” and its investigation of disparities between the
groups did not reveal “any reasonable adjustments that could produce a match
. . . that mitigated disparities.”
Texas Tech then terminated the program effective July 31, 2007. The
demonstration agreement permitted early termination, in which event it
required a prompt “final reconciliation.”
Actuarial Research Corporation issued a reconciliation report a year
later. It concluded that (1) Texas Tech had received $7.99 million in
administrative fees; (2) Texas Tech’s savings guarantee required just over $10
million in net savings—$2.05 million in cost reductions 1 plus the $7.99 million
in fees; and (3) the intervention group’s Medicare costs were $6.79 million
higher than the control group’s. This meant a “savings shortfall” of $16.79
million, exceeding the contingent monthly fees Texas Tech had received and
requiring their return in full.
Because Texas Tech terminated the project early, after just 16 months, it guaranteed
1
only 2% cost savings, not the 5% it guaranteed after the full three years.
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Unhappy with that result, Texas Tech hired its own consultant to
investigate disparities between the intervention and control groups. Its report
raised concerns about whether the control group’s historical cost trends
matched the intervention group’s, and whether differences in death rates made
the groups a poor match. CMS asked RTI to look into those concerns, but RTI
concluded that the differences between the groups “cannot account for the
estimated Texas Tech intervention effect of higher, not lower, cost growth.”
CMS sent a letter to Texas Tech in March 2009 requesting return of the
$7.99 million. Texas Tech demurred. Four years passed before CMS sent
Texas Tech another letter in September 2013, renewing its demand that Texas
Tech return the money. That letter said it would represent CMS’s “final
decision” unless Texas Tech appealed to HHS’s Departmental Appeals Board.
Texas Tech did appeal to the Board, only to promptly ask for dismissal
of its appeal. It argued that the demonstration agreement was a procurement
contract and thus governed by the Contract Disputes Act, 41 U.S.C. §§ 7101–
09, which would mean the Board was not the proper forum for resolving this
dispute. It also argued that the Act’s six-year statute of limitations barred
CMS’s delayed attempt to collect the debt. The Board denied Texas Tech’s
motion to dismiss, holding that the demonstration agreement was a grant
agreement rather than a procurement contract.
In the merits appeal that followed, Texas Tech raised a variety of
contract theories to avoid CMS’s demand for repayment, including three
alleged breaches of the agreement as well as common law defenses like mistake
and impossibility. In a thorough opinion, the Board rejected those arguments
in part because it determined that “[c]ommon law contract theories are
inapplicable” to grant agreements. In light of this view, whether CMS
breached the agreement mattered only insofar as the demonstration
agreement conditioned Texas Tech’s repayment obligation on CMS’s
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performance. And in addition to finding that none of Texas Tech’s allegations
would have affected its duty to meet the cost savings target, the Board
determined that CMS complied with the agreement.
Texas Tech sought further review by suing HHS under the
Administrative Procedure Act, asking the district court to set aside the Board’s
decision and enjoin CMS from enforcing its demand. 2 On competing summary
judgment motions, the district court ruled that Texas Tech had not met its
burden under the APA and granted HHS’s motion. Texas Tech appeals.
II.
Texas Tech first argues that the HHS Departmental Appeals Board
should not have heard this case. That is because, in its view, the
demonstration agreement was a procurement contract governed by the
Contract Disputes Act. See 41 U.S.C. § 7102(a)(2). If that statute applies, it
affects where and when this dispute should have been resolved. Disputes over
government procurement contracts start with presenting a claim to the
appropriate contracting officer.
Id. § 7103(a). Any such claim—whether by the
government or a private party—must be presented within six years.
Id.
§ 7103(a)(4)(A). If a party to the contract disagrees with the contracting
officer’s decision, it may appeal to the Civilian Board of Contract Appeals or
the Court of Federal Claims,
id. §§ 7104, 7105(b), but not to “any [other] forum,
tribunal, or Federal Government agency,”
id. § 7103(g). So if the
demonstration agreement was a procurement contract, then the government
2 Other circuits have held that contract claims seeking equitable or declaratory relief
are “impliedly forbid[den]” under the APA. 5 U.S.C. § 702; see, e.g., Transohio Sav. Bank v.
Dir., Office of Thrift Supervision,
967 F.2d 598, 609 (D.C. Cir. 1992). But when we asked for
supplemental briefing, both parties agreed that the APA permits review of disputes about
grant agreements. So we will consider this grant dispute under the APA, as we have before.
See Delta Found., Inc. v. United States,
303 F.3d 551, 563 (5th Cir. 2002); Inst. for Tech. Dev.
v. Brown,
63 F.3d 445, 449–50 (5th Cir. 1995).
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may have been late in seeking return of the fees, and the Board lacked
jurisdiction.
But none of the Contract Disputes Act’s requirements matters if the
Board correctly determined that the demonstration agreement was not a
procurement contract but instead a grant agreement. See
id. § 7102(a)(2)
(specifying the types of government contracts to which the CDA applies,
including those for the “procurement of services”); Coastal Corp. v. United
States,
713 F.2d 728, 730 (Fed. Cir. 1983) (“[The CDA] does not cover all
government contracts.”). The Federal Circuit, well versed in government
contract disputes, looks to the Federal Grant and Cooperative Agreement Act
when characterizing government agreements. See, e.g., Hymas v. United
States,
810 F.3d 1312, 1325–26 (Fed. Cir. 2016). So do the parties.
That statute says executive agencies must use procurement contracts
when:
the principle purpose of the instrument is to acquire (by purchase,
lease, or barter) property or services for the direct benefit or use of
the United States government.
31 U.S.C. § 6303(1). An example is a Navy contract for purchase of a ship. The
government gets to use what it purchased.
In contrast, agencies must use a grant agreement when:
the principle purpose of the relationship is to transfer a thing of
value to the State or local government or other recipient to carry
out a public purpose of support or stimulation . . . instead of
acquiring (by purchase, lease, or barter) property or services for
the direct benefit or use of the United States Government.
Id. § 6304(1). An example is an agreement with a school district to provide free
school lunches. The federal government pays for the lunches, but students
receive the benefit.
We agree with the Board that the demonstration agreement was not a
procurement contract. The “direct” benefits of the agreement ran to the
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Medicare beneficiaries participating in Texas Tech’s program, not to CMS. See
United States v. Univ. Hosp. of State Univ. of N.Y. at Stony Brook,
575 F. Supp.
607, 612–13 (E.D.N.Y. 1983) (distinguishing procurement contracts from
agreements to reimburse hospitals because “a hospital receiving
reimbursements under Medicaid or Medicare provides services directly to the
public”). CMS hoped to gain insight into how best to operate Medicare for high-
cost beneficiaries, but advancing an “agency’s overall mission” (something that
one would hope all grant agreements do) is not a direct benefit.
Hymas, 810
F.3d at 1328. And CMS would not achieve any cost savings directly. The
savings would have resulted—had the project gone as hoped—from Texas
Tech’s making participating beneficiaries healthier, thereby decreasing their
need for Medicare services. 3
The Board had jurisdiction.
III.
Under the APA, the Board’s action may be set aside if “arbitrary,
capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5
U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). An agency’s decision is presumptively valid; the plaintiff
bears the burden of showing otherwise. Texas Clinical Labs, Inc. v. Sebelius,
612 F.3d 771, 775 (5th Cir. 2010). We defer to the agency’s findings of fact if
they are supported by substantial evidence. Buffalo Marine Servs. Inc. v.
United States,
663 F.3d 750, 753–54 (5th Cir. 2011). On questions of law, our
3There may be instances when an agency “acquires” services for its own direct benefit,
even though the services are conferred on third parties, such as when it outsources services
it would otherwise perform. See, e.g., CMS Contract Mgmt. Servs. v. Mass. Housing Fin.
Agency,
745 F.3d 1379, 1385–85 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (holding that HUD’s agreements with
housing authorities, under which authorities would administer Section 8 payments, were
procurement contracts). But this is not an outsourcing case. There is a difference between
an agency that hires a company to perform administrative tasks the government would
otherwise have to perform, see
id., and CMS’s paying doctors and hospitals to benefit
Medicare patients.
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degree of deference varies according to the source of law. Although we give
Chevron deference to an agency’s interpretation of an ambiguous statute it
administers, Memorial Hermann Hosp. v. Sebelius,
728 F.3d 400, 405 (5th Cir.
2013), when an agency makes other conclusions of law—including interpreting
“contractual agreements”—our review is “effectively de novo,” Inst. for Tech
Dev. v. Brown,
63 F.3d 445, 450 (5th Cir. 1995).
A.
Underlying all of its merits arguments is Texas Tech’s objection to the
Board’s characterization of the demonstration agreement as something other
than a contract. Although the Board acknowledged that “the terms of a grant
agreement are binding on both the grantee and the grantor,”
Brown, 63 F.3d
at 449, it concluded that “contract law doctrines do not dictate its analysis or
resolution of disputes involving federal grants.” Several cases support that
proposition. See, e.g., Bennett v. Ky. Dep’t of Educ.,
470 U.S. 656, 669 (1985)
(“Although we agree with the State that Title I grant agreements had a
contractual aspect, the program cannot be viewed in the same manner as a
bilateral contract governing a discrete transaction.” (citation omitted)); United
States v. Melendez,
944 F.2d 216, 219 (5th Cir. 1991) (holding that “contract
principles do not apply” in dispute over federal scholarship agreement).
Texas Tech attempts to distinguish those decisions as limited to federal
grants in which the parties’ obligations are dictated by statute or regulation,
as opposed to the terms of a separately negotiated grant agreement. But we
ultimately need not resolve whether the Board erred in suggesting that the
common law of contracts never informs grant disputes. Even if it did, the
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Board made valid findings justifying the rejection of Texas Tech’s various
contract theories. 4
B.
Texas Tech’s most forceful complaint is that patients in the control group
were too dissimilar from patients in the intervention group—that is, that CMS
breached the demonstration agreement by failing to provide an appropriately
matched control group.
This is what the agreement said about selection of the control group:
For a matched control cohort, the evaluator will specify the
approach to be used in identifying such cohort. For each site that
is not randomized, attention will be given to ensuring that the
matched control cohort represents an appropriate comparison
group that is specific to the intervention mode. [Texas Tech] will
have the opportunity to review and agree to the approach that is
proposed by the evaluator and CMS. CMS and [Texas Tech] will
mutually agree upon the criteria and methodology used to select
the relevant comparison group pursuant to a memorandum from
the evaluation contractor documenting these methods and written
documentation from [Texas Tech] stating its agreement with such
memorandum.
The agreement thus required that “attention” be given to “ensuring” the
control group was sufficiently matched to the intervention group. It further
explains how that would be done: CMS’s obligation was to select a third-party
evaluator, which would propose an “approach” for choosing a control group.
Texas Tech had to review and agree to that approach before starting the
project.
4Typically, when an agency reaches a decision based on erroneous reasoning, the
Chenery doctrine prohibits a reviewing court from upholding that decision for an alternative
reason. Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Assoc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co.,
463 U.S. 29, 50 (1983);
SEC v. Chenery Corp.,
332 U.S. 194, 196 (1947). But when an agency gives multiple reasons,
we may uphold its decision based on any one of those reasons. Salt River Project Agr. Imp.
& Power Dist. v. United States,
762 F.2d 1053, 1060 n.8 (D.C. Cir. 1985).
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So agreement by the parties on “criteria and methodology” was the
mechanism for ensuring adequacy of the control group, not after-the-fact
assessment of whether the control group had an unspecified degree of
similarity with the intervention group. Texas Tech invoked its right to
influence the selection criteria, engaging in months of back-and-forth to flesh
out the details. The agreement did not require more than that for selection of
the control group.
C.
Texas Tech next argues that CMS breached the agreement by refusing
to allow it to access relevant Medicare claims data. In apparent response to
Texas Tech’s request to obtain this information from Trailblazer—a partner in
the project—CMS told Texas Tech (1) that it could not obtain Trailblazer data
in order to create its own “pseudo” control group; and (2) that it could not obtain
Trailblazer data on patients in the intervention group without submitting a
data use agreement and getting it approved by CMS. CMS did eventually
approve a data use agreement between Texas Tech and Trailblazer, but not
until May 2007, two months before Texas Tech terminated the project. Texas
Tech’s idea is that had it been armed with Trailblazer data sooner, it could
have better monitored its own performance as well as the accuracy of the
control group.
Attempting to locate its right to Trailblazer data in the demonstration
agreement, Texas Tech points to its project proposal. In it, Texas Tech
suggested that claims data would be available to it from the “Fiscal
Intermediary Standard System,” one of several sources of data it might use to
target its care management interventions. Because the agreement required
Texas Tech to “implement the care management program as proposed,” Texas
Tech claims a right to access and use data from fiscal intermediaries, including
Trailblazer.
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We agree with the Board that CMS’s declining or delaying Texas Tech’s
access to Trailblazer data did not violate the demonstration agreement. Even
if the proposal indicated that Texas Tech intended to use Trailblazer’s claims
data, the agreement incorporated the proposal to specify the details of the
project Texas Tech agreed to implement. The proposal thus became a Texas
Tech obligation, not a CMS obligation, so CMS could not have violated it. To
be clear, the agreement (as opposed to the proposal) did impose data-related
obligations on CMS. CMS had to give Texas Tech demographic information
and claims data on the intervention group going back 12 months, but Texas
Tech does not claim CMS failed to do so. Nothing in the agreement obligated
CMS to give Texas Tech access to additional data from fiscal intermediaries.
To the contrary, the only relevant provision in the agreement said that if Texas
Tech “wishes to receive additional data . . . from an FI,” it must notify CMS,
which would decide only “if such information can be provided.”
Texas Tech’s argument faces another problem. Even if we were to read
the agreement to require CMS to allow Texas Tech access to Trailblazer data,
that requirement would extend only to data on the intervention group—the
proposal said nothing about using fiscal intermediary data for purposes other
than honing Texas Tech’s care management interventions. And the Board
found that under HHS privacy regulations, CMS could not have allowed Texas
Tech to access Trailblazer’s claims data on the intervention group without a
data use agreement. See 45 C.F.R. § 164.514(e)(3)(i), (4)(i) (permitting a
“covered entity” to disclose medical data “only if the covered entity obtains
satisfactory assurance, in the form of a data use agreement” that the recipient
will use the data “for limited purposes”). Texas Tech does not dispute that. It
has not met its burden of showing that the Board’s ruling on this issue should
be set aside.
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D.
Texas Tech also contends that CMS breached the demonstration
agreement by engaging RTI to evaluate whether differences between the
intervention and control groups may have accounted for the apparent lack of
cost savings. Because RTI designed the parameters for the control group,
Texas Tech contends it had a conflict of interest in checking its work.
But the only time RTI analyzed the alleged disparities in the groups was
after Texas Tech had terminated the project, Actuarial Research Corporation
had conducted the final reconciliation, and Texas Tech had alleged that the
study was flawed. The demonstration agreement imposes no post-
reconciliation obligations on CMS, so CMS cannot have breached the
agreement by asking RTI to look into Texas Tech’s concerns. 5
E.
In addition to its breach arguments, Texas Tech asserted a variety of
common law contract doctrines before the Board. The Board did not expressly
address two of them—mistake and impracticability 6—because of its view that
those common law principles do not apply to grant agreements.
But the Board did make findings that doom those two defenses. It found,
based on the months of negotiation over criteria for the control group, that
Texas Tech “proceeded despite its concerns” and “could not reasonably have
failed to understand . . . that it had assumed the financial risks associated with
5 Before the Board, Texas Tech framed its conflict-of-interest theory as a breach of the
implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, not a breach of the demonstration
agreement’s explicit terms. But even if the implied covenant can apply to grant agreements,
it cannot “expand another party’s contractual duties beyond those in the express contract.”
Agility Pub. Warehousing Co. KSCP v. Mattis,
852 F.3d 1370, 1384 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (cleaned
up). The same goes for Texas Tech’s argument to the Board that CMS breached the implied
covenant by failing to create a more accurate control group.
6 The Board did alternatively reject the merits of two others: failure to disclose and
estoppel. Texas Tech does not challenge those conclusions.
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shortcomings in study design and implementation.” That undermines Texas
Tech’s mistake theory; Texas Tech assumed the risk by agreeing to perform
the demonstration, knowing that the control group might have problems.
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 154(b). It also undermines Texas
Tech’s impracticability theory because it shows that the accuracy of the control
group was not a “basic assumption” of the parties’ agreement.
Id. § 261.
Although the Board did not make these findings in the context of
discussing mistake and impracticability, they would defeat those defenses had
the Board directly addressed them. As a result, and because substantial
evidence supports these findings, any error was harmless. See Shinseki v.
Sanders,
556 U.S. 396, 411 (2009) (clarifying that administrative harmless
error analysis turns on, among other things, the “likelihood that the result
would have been different” but for the error). The administrative harmless
error rule can sit uneasily alongside the Chenery doctrine, which typically
confines judicial review to the agency’s reasoning. See Nicholas Bagley,
Remedial Restraint in Administrative Law, 117 COLUM. L. REV. 253, 302–07
(2017). But that tension arises when a reviewing court makes findings the
agency should have made in the first instance. See
id. at 305 (observing
“controversial[]” cases upholding agency decisions when “the evidence in the
record so strongly supports the result that the court is confident the agency
would reach the same decision on remand”). Chenery cautions against
intruding onto an agency’s turf, not against giving an agency’s own findings
their obvious effect. See Henry J. Friendly, Chenery Revisited: Reflections on
Reversal and Remand of Administrative Orders, 1969 DUKE L.J. 199, 211
(explaining that remand to an agency is “necessary only when the reviewing
court concludes that there is a significant chance that but for the error the
agency might have reached a different result” because “in the absence of such
a possibility, affirmance entails neither an improper judicial invasion of the
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administrative province nor a dispensation of the agency from its normal
responsibility”).
* * *
The district court’s judgment is AFFIRMED.
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