COMMENTARY / SPECIAL REPORT
Fox Television
In FCC v. Fox Television Stations Inc., 129 S. Ct.
1800 (2009), the Supreme Court resolved two important issues relating to the application of the
arbitrary and capricious standard. First, Fox Television explicitly answered the question whether the
standard imposes a more demanding level of judicial review in a case in which the agency changes its
position than in a case in which the agency adopts
a position on a particular issue for the first time.
The
Court’s answer on this question was that the level
of judicial scrutiny under the arbitrary and capricious standard is no different in these two cases.
By its explicit resolution of the first issue, the
Court also implicitly resolved a second issue,
TAX NOTES, July 16, 2012
namely whether the arbitrary and capricious standard applies only to agency changes in position and
not at all to agency positions adopted for the first
time. By clarifying that the level of judicial review
under the arbitrary and capricious standard is the
same for both types of situations, the Court also left
no doubt that the application of the standard is not
limited to agency changes in position, but is also
equally applicable to agency positions adopted for
the first time.
Conclusion
The APA’s arbitrary and capricious standard
provides a powerful tool that can be used in challenging IRS regulations, particularly after Judulang’s
confirmation that this standard and Chevron step
two are equivalent. IRS regulations are especially
vulnerable to challenge under the arbitrary and
capricious standard, because the IRS seems to be
unaware that this standard requires that agencies
must explain the reasons for their rules when they
issue regulations.
However, taxpayers have seldom
invoked this standard in challenging IRS regulations. Presumably this will begin to change, with
the attention that Mayo has brought to the applicability in the tax world of general administrative
law principles. The Federal Circuit’s recent Dominion Resources decision shows that this change is
beginning to take place.
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and thus provides a much more widely available
basis for challenging IRS regulations than the IRS’s
noncompliance with the notice and comment requirement in issuing temporary regulations. Moreover, although the APA notice and comment
requirement may have some applicability to IRS
documents other than temporary regulations, such
as the notice that was challenged in Cohen, the
arbitrary and capricious standard will ordinarily
also be available as a basis for challenge in these
cases, as Cohen illustrates.
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