Association of Data Processing Service Organizations, Inc. v. Camp, 397 U.S. 150 (1970) (Supreme Court of the United States)
Association of Data Processing v. Camp is a cornerstone of administrative law and federal jurisdiction that reshaped the doctrine of standing for challenges brought under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
Do private competitors have standing under Article III and the APA to challenge the Comptroller of the Currency's ruling that permits national banks to provide data processing services, based on alleged competitive economic injury and statutory limits on bank powers?
To establish standing to seek judicial review of federal agency action under APA § 702, a plaintiff must: (1) allege an injury in fact—an actual or threatened injury, economic or otherwise, that is concrete and particularized; and (2) show that the interest sought to be protected is arguably within the zone of interests to be protected or regulated by the statute allegedly violated by the agency. The APA's grant of review is broad, and the prior requirement of a "legal right" or "legal interest" as a prerequisite to standing is rejected. Absent clear statutory preclusion or agency action committed to agency discretion by law, agency actions are presumptively reviewable.
Yes. The plaintiffs alleged a sufficient injury in fact—economic harm from increased competition—and their interests were arguably within the zone of interests protected or regulated by the relevant banking statutes. They therefore had standing to challenge the Comptroller's ruling under the APA. The case was remanded for proceedings on the merits.
Data Processing inaugurates the modern two-part framework for APA standing and underscores that economic competition can constitute injury in fact. Its "zone-of-interests" test—refined in later cases such as Clarke v. Securities Industry Ass'n—remains central to determining who may challenge agency action. The decision also decouples standing from the merits: plaintiffs need not show a substantive legal entitlement to prevail on standing. For law students, the case is a bedrock reference in Administrative Law and Federal Courts for differentiating constitutional standing, prudential limitations, and statutory authorization to sue, and for understanding the role of competitor suits in policing agency overreach.