FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120 (2000)
FDA v. Brown & Williamson is a landmark administrative law decision defining the limits of agency power in the face of ambiguous statutes and significant policy questions.
Does the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act authorize the FDA to regulate tobacco products as "drugs" and "devices" based on nicotine's physiological effects, notwithstanding Congress's tobacco-specific legislation and the FDCA's overall scheme?
An agency may not assume regulatory authority of vast economic and political significance without clear congressional authorization. Statutory terms must be interpreted in light of the statute's text, structure, purpose, and the broader legislative scheme, including later-enacted, related statutes. Under the FDCA, the FDA's mandate requires it to ensure that drugs and devices are safe and effective; if a product cannot be made safe for its intended use, the FDA must remove it from the market. Where Congress has enacted a distinct regulatory framework for an industry (here, tobacco) that presupposes the product's continued availability and has declined to grant FDA regulatory authority, courts will not infer such authority from general definitional provisions.
No. The FDCA does not authorize the FDA to regulate tobacco products as customarily marketed. Reading the FDCA in light of its structure, purpose, and Congress's tobacco-specific legislation, Congress clearly precluded FDA jurisdiction over tobacco in the absence of explicit authorization.
Brown & Williamson is a foundational administrative law case for understanding the limits of Chevron deference and the emergence of the major questions principle. It teaches that agencies cannot bootstrap sweeping regulatory authority from generalized statutory terms where Congress has crafted a separate policy framework or where the agency's interpretation would produce consequences Congress has rejected. The decision also models holistic statutory interpretation, the use of subsequent related legislation to inform meaning, and the relevance of longstanding agency practice. For students, it foreshadows later cases such as Utility Air Regulatory Group v. EPA, King v. Burwell, and West Virginia v. EPA, which further entrench the requirement of clear congressional authorization for major policy shifts.