Master Supreme Court held that the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act impliedly precludes consumer suits challenging milk marketing orders; review is limited to handlers through the statute's specific scheme. with this comprehensive case brief.
Block v. Community Nutrition Institute is a cornerstone administrative law decision on when Congress has implicitly precluded judicial review under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). The case arises from challenges to milk marketing orders promulgated by the Secretary of Agriculture under the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act (AMAA). Although the APA presumes reviewability of agency action, the Supreme Court held that the AMAA's detailed and party-specific review scheme makes congressional intent to preclude other forms of review fairly discernible. As a result, consumers could not sue to invalidate orders; only regulated "handlers" could seek review through the AMAA's specialized process.
The decision is significant because it refines the presumption of reviewability and clarifies how courts infer preclusion from statutory structure, purpose, and legislative history. Block is frequently paired with later "channeling" and "exclusive review" cases to illustrate that when Congress crafts a comprehensive remedial path for particular parties, courts will not permit end-runs by other would-be plaintiffs invoking general federal-question jurisdiction or the APA. For law students, Block is a must-know authority on 5 U.S.C. § 701(a)(1) (statutory preclusion) and on reading statutory schemes holistically to discern congressional intent.
467 U.S. 340 (U.S. 1984)
The Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937 (AMAA), 7 U.S.C. § 601 et seq., authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to issue milk marketing orders regulating the minimum prices "handlers" (processors/distributors of milk) must pay to dairy producers. The statute sets up a complex mechanism of classified pricing and marketwide pooling intended to stabilize the milk industry and ensure that producers receive a uniform price "to the fullest extent practicable." It also establishes a specific administrative and judicial review process available to handlers: a handler aggrieved by an order must first file a petition with the Secretary, obtain a ruling after a hearing, and then may seek judicial review in federal district court pursuant to 7 U.S.C. § 608c(15)(A)–(B). Consumers and producers are not listed in this review provision. The Community Nutrition Institute (a consumer group) and individual consumers sued the Secretary of Agriculture (then John R. Block), challenging certain milk marketing orders as inconsistent with the AMAA, including the statute's uniform-pricing requirement. They sought declaratory and injunctive relief under general federal-question jurisdiction and the APA, arguing the orders unlawfully resulted in higher consumer prices. The Secretary moved to dismiss on the ground that the AMAA precludes consumer suits because Congress provided a specific review mechanism for handlers only. The court of appeals permitted the suit to proceed, but the Supreme Court granted certiorari to decide whether consumers could seek judicial review of AMAA milk orders.
Whether the AMAA's statutory scheme, which provides a specific administrative and judicial review mechanism for milk "handlers," impliedly precludes judicial review of milk marketing orders at the behest of consumers under the APA or general federal-question jurisdiction.
There is a strong presumption under the APA that agency action is subject to judicial review. However, that presumption is overcome where congressional intent to preclude review is fairly discernible in the statutory scheme. When a statute provides a detailed mechanism for judicial consideration of particular issues at the behest of particular persons, courts will infer that review at the behest of other persons is impliedly precluded. The "clear and convincing evidence" formulation is a guide to discerning congressional intent, not a rigid evidentiary burden; the focus is on statutory text, structure, purpose, and legislative history (APA § 701(a)(1)).
Consumers are impliedly precluded from obtaining judicial review of milk marketing orders under the AMAA. Congress intended to limit review to handlers through the statute's specific administrative and judicial process; thus, consumer suits challenging such orders are not permitted.
1) Statutory structure and specificity: The AMAA expressly furnishes a comprehensive review mechanism tailored to handlers: petition to the Secretary, administrative hearing, and limited district court review. The specificity of this pathway—who may seek review (handlers), when and how they must proceed (exhaustion and timing requirements), and the forum—signals Congress's intent to channel and confine challenges to those brought by the directly regulated class. Permitting consumer suits under general jurisdiction or the APA would undermine that channeling, allow circumvention of exhaustion and time limits, and expand review beyond what Congress contemplated. 2) Purpose and practical consequences: The AMAA's purpose is to stabilize agricultural markets and ensure uniform prices to producers. That complex economic program depends on predictable, ongoing price orders and pooled returns. Allowing consumers to mount collateral challenges would risk systemic disruption, inject uncertainty into pricing and pooling, and frustrate the Act's operation. The Court emphasized that Congress balanced interests within a tightly reticulated scheme; opening the courthouse to non-designated parties would upset that balance. 3) Legislative history and statutory context: While the AMAA references the public interest and contemplates producer referenda and public participation in rulemaking, Congress chose to limit judicial review to handlers—the parties directly regulated and best positioned to press statutory objections without derailing the regulatory regime. The omission of consumers from § 608c(15) is meaningful in light of the level of detail elsewhere in the Act. The Court treated earlier "clear and convincing evidence" formulations as descriptive rather than talismanic: what matters is whether preclusive intent is fairly discernible from the statute as a whole. 4) Relationship to APA review and standing doctrines: The Court resolved the case on statutory preclusion grounds and did not need to decide whether consumers otherwise fell within the statute's zone of interests for APA standing. Even assuming arguendo that consumers could satisfy standing, the AMAA's specific review pathway forecloses a more general APA route. Thus, § 701(a)(1) applies: statutes may preclude judicial review. Because the AMAA's design makes preclusion of consumer suits fairly discernible, the Court reversed the judgment allowing the lawsuit to proceed.
Block is a leading case on implied preclusion of judicial review under APA § 701(a)(1). It teaches students to read statutes holistically: if Congress crafts a comprehensive review scheme for certain parties (here, handlers), courts will infer that other parties (here, consumers) cannot bypass it. Block also refines the presumption of reviewability by clarifying that the "clear and convincing evidence" phrase is a way of describing the requisite confidence in congressional intent, not a separate evidentiary test. The case is foundational to later channeling and exclusive-review decisions, and it frequently appears on exams testing how to analyze statutory text, structure, purpose, and practical consequences when determining whether judicial review is available and to whom.
Only milk "handlers" (processors/distributors subject to the orders) are authorized to seek review. They must first file a petition with the Secretary under 7 U.S.C. § 608c(15)(A), obtain an administrative ruling after a hearing, and then may seek judicial review in federal district court under § 608c(15)(B). This pathway includes exhaustion and timing requirements and is the exclusive route for judicial review.
No. Consumers may participate in notice-and-comment rulemaking and may influence policy through political and administrative channels. Block holds only that Congress impliedly precluded consumer-initiated judicial review of marketing orders; it does not limit public participation in the regulatory process or other forms of oversight (e.g., congressional or executive oversight).
The Court looked for congressional intent to preclude review that is fairly discernible from the statute's text, structure, purpose, and history. It did not reject the 'clear and convincing evidence' language outright; instead, it explained that phrase is a useful description of the level of confidence required in discerning intent, not a rigid evidentiary rule. The key inquiry remains congressional intent.
Block provides the template: when a statute furnishes a detailed review scheme for particular parties and issues, courts infer that collateral APA suits by other parties are precluded. Later cases like Thunder Basin Coal Co. v. Reich and its progeny apply a similar analysis—asking whether congressional intent to channel review is fairly discernible and whether allowing outside suits would undermine the statutory scheme.
The Court resolved the case on statutory preclusion grounds and did not need to definitively decide zone-of-interests standing. Even if consumers could otherwise meet APA standing requirements, the AMAA's specific review provision for handlers impliedly forecloses consumer suits under § 701(a)(1).
The AMAA governs a complex, continuous pricing system with pooling and classified pricing. Consumer suits could bypass exhaustion and timing limits, produce piecemeal and unpredictable judicial interventions, and destabilize uniform producer payments—the very stability the statute seeks to achieve.
Block v. Community Nutrition Institute crystallizes an essential method of administrative law analysis: start with the presumption of reviewability, but then read the statute holistically to determine for whom, when, and how Congress intended judicial review. By crafting a precise pathway for handlers—and only handlers—to challenge milk orders, Congress implicitly foreclosed collateral suits by consumers. The Supreme Court respected that allocation of authority, emphasizing that detailed statutory procedures are not suggestions; they reflect deliberate congressional choices.
For law students and practitioners, Block is a caution against invoking the APA as a universal backdoor to court. When a regulatory statute contains a comprehensive remedial scheme tailored to certain parties, courts will infer that others cannot end-run those limits. The case remains a touchstone for questions of implied preclusion, statutory channeling, and the interplay between the APA's presumption of reviewability and Congress's power to define and confine judicial review.
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