99-22015. Rules of Practice Amendments  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 164 (Wednesday, August 25, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 46267-46270]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-22015]
    
    
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    FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
    
    16 CFR Parts 2, 3 and 4
    
    
    Rules of Practice Amendments
    
    AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
    
    ACTION: Final rules with request for comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: To streamline the process of providing effective relief where 
    parties consent to the entry of a cease and desist order, the FTC is 
    amending its Rules of Practice to shorten the period for public comment 
    on consent settlements from 60 days to 30 days. The amended rules also 
    provide for more effective interim relief in cases involving mergers or 
    acquisitions, by providing that hold-separate or asset-
    
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    maintenance orders will be made immediately effective when the 
    Commission accepts the consent agreement or settlement proposal for 
    public comment.
    
    DATES: These rule amendments are effective on August 25, 1999. 
    Agreements that have been executed by any or all respondents before the 
    effective date will not be affected by these amendments without the 
    consent of the parties.
        Comments must be received on or before September 24, 1999.
    
    ADDRESSES: Written comment on these rule revisions must be submitted in 
    20 copies to the Office of the Secretary, Room 159, Federal Trade 
    Commission, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20580. 
    Individuals filing comments need not submit multiple copies.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Christian S. White, Assistant General 
    Counsel for Legal Counsel, (202) 326-2476, Office of the General 
    Counsel, FTC, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20580.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission considers it important to 
    solicit public comment on consent agreements. Nonetheless, the current 
    comment period of 60 days unduly delays implementation of consent 
    orders and the benefits to the public of addressing the conduct alleged 
    to be unlawful in the Commission's complaint. Neither the 
    Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 551, nor the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. 
    41-58, requires agencies to offer a public comment period on 
    administrative settlements.1 Accordingly, the Commission has 
    decided to shorten the comment period to 30 days, as it was before 
    1974. The 30-day comment period will begin on the date the Commission 
    issues a press release announcing that the Commission has accepted the 
    agreement and placed it on the public record for comment. Press 
    releases are ordinarily posted on the Commission's Web site the day 
    they are released. The Commission believes that the shorter period 
    generally will be sufficient to allow thoughtful public comment. The 
    Commission may lengthen or shorten the 30-day comment period in the 
    public interest. The Commission also retains discretion to make an 
    order final after acceptance but before the comment period starts but 
    it contemplates doing so only in exceptional cases where, for example, 
    it believes that the allegedly unlawful conduct to be prohibited 
    threatens substantial and imminent public harm. If, in such cases, the 
    Commission, after the comment period, believes that modifications to 
    the order would be appropriate, it will (absent agreement by 
    respondents to the modifications) initiate a proceeding to reopen and 
    modify the order pursuant to Rule 3.72(b) or issue a new administrative 
    complaint to commence a new administrative proceeding in accordance 
    with Rule 3.11.
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        \1\ Although public comment periods on consent agreements are 
    not required, the Commission has followed this practice for many 
    years. The Commission's procedure for considering administrative 
    consent orders has existed in one form or another since at least 
    1939. The procedure did not include a public comment period until 
    1967, when the Commission promulgated Rule 2.34, providing for a 
    comment period of 30 days. 32 FR 8448-49 (June 13, 1967). In 1974, 
    the Commission extended the comment period from 30 to 60 days. The 
    Commission added a companion provision, Rule 3.25, in 1975 to 
    establish an identical comment procedure for consent agreements in 
    Part 3 matters. 40 FR 15235-36 (April 4, 1975).
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        With regard to competition cases involving planned mergers and 
    acquisitions, when staff negotiates a hold-separate or asset-
    maintenance agreement, the Commission will issue the agreement as an 
    immediately effective order when it accepts the consent agreement for 
    comment. Although it is the Commission's view that hold-separate 
    agreements, as currently structured, are immediately enforceable, 
    treating such agreements as final Commission orders will make clear 
    that violations are punishable by civil penalties.2
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        \2\ The amendment to Sec. 2.34 specifies that any hold-separate 
    or asset-maintenance orders will be accompanied by an administrative 
    complaint, but that the complaint will neither initiate an 
    adjudicatory proceeding nor trigger the application of the 
    prohibitions on ex parte communications in Sec. 4.7.
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        These changes require amending Rules 2.32, 2.34 and 3.25. Technical 
    conforming changes also are being made to Rule 4.9 respecting the 
    Commission's public record. The Commission believes these amendments 
    will improve the protection of consumers and competition by 
    accelerating the effectiveness of Commission consent orders and by 
    increasing incentives to preserve the status quo pending final 
    resolution of planned and allegedly anticompetitive mergers and 
    acquisitions.
        These rule revisions relate solely to agency practice and, 
    therefore, are not subject to the notice and comment requirements of 
    the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 553(a)(2), or to the 
    requirements of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601(2). The 
    revisions do not involve the collection of information subject to the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35. Although the revisions 
    are effective as stated in the previous section, the Commission 
    welcomes comment on them and will consider further revision as 
    appropriate.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    16 CFR Part 2
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Consent agreements, 
    Investigations.
    
    16 CFR Part 3
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Consent agreements.
    
    16 CFR Part 4
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Public record.
    
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Federal Trade 
    Commission amends title 16, chapter I, subchapter A, of the Code of 
    Federal Regulations as follows:
    
    PART 2--NONADJUDICATIVE PROCEDURES
    
        1. Revise the authority citation for part 2 to read:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 46.
    
    Subpart C--Consent Order Procedure
    
        2. Revise Sec. 2.32 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 2.32  Agreement.
    
        Every agreement in settlement of a Commission complaint shall 
    contain, in addition to an appropriate proposed order, either an 
    admission of the proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law 
    submitted simultaneously by the Commission's staff or an admission of 
    all jurisdictional facts and an express waiver of the requirement that 
    the Commission's decision contain a statement of findings of fact and 
    conclusions of law. Every agreement also shall waive further procedural 
    steps and all rights to seek judicial review or otherwise to challenge 
    or contest the validity of the order. In addition, where appropriate, 
    every agreement in settlement of a Commission complaint challenging the 
    lawfulness of a proposed merger or acquisition shall also contain a 
    hold-separate or asset-maintenance order. The agreement may state that 
    the signing thereof is for settlement purposes only and does not 
    constitute an admission by any party that the law has been violated as 
    alleged in the complaint. Every agreement shall provide that:
        (a) The complaint may be used in construing the terms of the order;
        (b) No agreement, understanding, representation, or interpretation 
    not
    
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    contained in the order or the aforementioned agreement may be used to 
    vary or to contradict the terms of the order;
        (c) The order will have the same force and effect and may be 
    altered, modified or set aside in the same manner provided by statute 
    for Commission orders issued on a litigated or stipulated record;
        (d) Except as provided by order of the Commission, any order issued 
    pursuant to the agreement will become final upon service;
        (e) The agreement will not become a part of the public record 
    unless and until it is accepted by the Commission; and
        (f) If the Commission accepts the agreement, further proceedings 
    will be governed by Sec. 2.34.
        3. Revise Sec. 2.34 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 2.34  Disposition.
    
        (a) Acceptance of proposed consent agreement. The Commission may 
    accept or refuse to accept a proposed consent agreement. Except as 
    otherwise provided in paragraph (c) of this section, acceptance does 
    not constitute final approval, but it serves as the basis for further 
    actions leading to final disposition of the matter.
        (b) Effectiveness of hold-separate or asset-maintenance order. 
    Following acceptance of a consent agreement, the Commission will, if it 
    deems a hold-separate or asset-maintenance order appropriate, issue a 
    complaint and such an order as agreed to by the parties. Such order 
    will be final upon service. The issuance of a complaint under this 
    paragraph will neither commence an adjudicatory proceeding subject to 
    part 3 of this chapter nor subject the consent agreement proceeding to 
    the prohibitions specified in Sec. 4.7 of this chapter.
        (c) Public comment. Promptly after its acceptance of the consent 
    agreement, the Commission will place the order contained in the consent 
    agreement, the complaint, and the consent agreement on the public 
    record for a period of 30 days, or such other period as the Commission 
    may specify, for the receipt of comments or views from any interested 
    person. At the same time, the Commission will place on the public 
    record an explanation of the provisions of the order and the relief to 
    be obtained thereby and any other information that it believes may help 
    interested persons understand the order. The Commission also will 
    publish the explanation in the Federal Register. The Commission retains 
    the discretion to issue a complaint and a Final Decision and Order, 
    incorporating the order contained in a consent agreement, in 
    appropriate cases before seeking public comment. Unless directed 
    otherwise by the Commission, such Decision and Order will be final upon 
    service.
        (d) Comment on initial compliance report. If respondents have filed 
    an initial report of compliance pursuant to Sec. 2.33, the Commission 
    will place that report on the public record, except for portions, if 
    any, granted confidential treatment pursuant to Sec. 4.9(c) of this 
    chapter, with the complaint, the order, and the consent agreement.
        (e) Action following comment period. (1) Following the comment 
    period, on the basis of comments received or otherwise, the Commission 
    may either withdraw its acceptance of the agreement and so notify 
    respondents, in which event it will take such other action as it may 
    consider appropriate, or issue and serve its complaint in such form as 
    the circumstances may require and its decision in disposition of the 
    proceeding.
        (2) The Commission, following the comment period, may determine, on 
    the basis of the comments or otherwise, that a Final Decision and Order 
    that was issued in advance of the comment period should be modified. 
    Absent agreement by respondents to the modifications, the Commission 
    may initiate a proceeding to reopen and modify the decision and order 
    in accordance with Sec. 3.72(b) of this chapter or commence a new 
    administrative proceeding by issuing a complaint in accordance with 
    Sec. 3.11 of this chapter.
    
    PART 3--RULES OF PRACTICE FOR ADJUDICATIVE PROCEEDINGS
    
        4. Revise the authority citation for part 3 to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 46, unless otherwise noted.
    
    Subpart C--Prehearing Procedures; Motions; Interlocutory Appeals; 
    Summary Decisions
    
        5. Amend Sec. 3.25 by revising paragraph (f) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 3.25  Consent agreement settlements.
    
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        (f) After some or all of allegations in a matter have been 
    withdrawn from adjudication, the Commission may accept the proposed 
    consent agreement, reject it and return the matter or affected portions 
    thereof to adjudication for further proceedings or take such other 
    action as it may deem appropriate. If the agreement is accepted, it 
    will be disposed of as provided in Sec. 2.34 of this chapter, except 
    that if, following the public comment period provided for in Sec. 2.34, 
    the Commission decides, based on comments received or otherwise, to 
    withdraw its acceptance of such an agreement, it will so notify the 
    parties and will return to adjudication any portions of the matter 
    previously withdrawn from adjudication for further proceedings or take 
    such other action it considers appropriate.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 4--MISCELLANEOUS RULES
    
        6. Revise the authority citation for part 4 to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 46, unless otherwise noted.
    
        7. Amend Sec. 4.9 by revising paragraph (b)(6) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 4.9  The public record.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (6) Consent Agreements (16 CFR 2.31 through 2.34, 3.25). (i) 
    Agreements containing orders, after acceptance by the Commission 
    pursuant to Secs. 2.34 and 3.25(f) of this chapter;
        (ii) Comments and other materials filed or placed on the public 
    record under Secs. 2.34 and 3.25(f) concerning proposed consent 
    agreements and related orders; and
        (iii) Decisions and orders issued and served under Secs. 2.34 and 
    3.25(f), including separate statements of Commissioners.
    * * * * *
        By direction of the Commission.
    Donald S. Clark,
    Secretary.
    
    Statement of Commissioner Orson Swindle Concerning Amendments to 
    Commission Rules 2.32, 2.34, 3.25, and 4.9
    
        I have voted for the amendments to the Commission's Rules of 
    Practice that would shorten the public comment period on consent 
    agreements and would make hold-separate and asset-maintenance 
    agreements immediately effective. In my judgment, shortening the 
    comment period to 30 days achieves a sensible balance between 
    forestalling violations of Commission orders and affording the 
    public sufficient time to comment on Commission settlements. I also 
    see obvious benefits from issuing hold-separate and asset-
    maintenance agreements as immediately enforceable orders.
        Nevertheless, I would have preferred to subject these rule 
    revisions to advance public comment, rather than--as the Commission 
    has done--issuing them as final rules with a request for comments 
    after the fact. Whatever my judgment (and that of my colleagues) 
    concerning whether the revisions are prudent and in the public 
    interest, I would have thought we would also try to appraise the 
    judgment of the public--those for whom we in government work, and to 
    whom we are ultimately accountable--before issuing a
    
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    final rule that halves the comment period on consent 
    agreements.1
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        \1\ The Administrative Procedure Act (``APA'') generally 
    requires that agencies engage in notice-and-comment procedures 
    before issuing a final rule, 5 U.S.C. 553(c), but rules of agency 
    procedure or practice are exempt from this requirement. 5 U.S.C. 
    553(b)(A). Nevertheless, ``[a]lthough the APA provides this 
    exemption for rules of agency procedure or practice, agency 
    rulemakers should consider providing notice and an opportunity for 
    comment where possible if the rules will affect the public.'' 
    Administrative Conference of the United States, A Guide to Federal 
    Agency Rulemaking 51 (2d ed. 1991) (emphasis added); see also 
    American Bar Ass'n, Government and Public Sector Lawyers Division 
    and Section of Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice, A Guide 
    to Federal Agency Rulemaking 54-55 (3d ed. 1998). Although I do not 
    believe that the Commission must put every change in its procedural 
    rules out for public comment, doing so is warranted here because the 
    proposed change may significantly affect the public.
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        One might respond to my concern with the argument that since the 
    public comment period itself is for the benefit of the Commission 
    and not of the public, any decision to shorten or eliminate the 
    period should be in the hands of the sole beneficiary of the public 
    comment mechanism--the Commission. To argue thus, however, would be 
    to disregard a core element of our system of government: the 
    public's stake in the decisions reached by government agencies, and 
    our responsibility to take the public's views into account. Although 
    I would not have voted to shorten the comment period to 30 days if I 
    believed that such an action would nullify the public's role, 
    getting public comment beforehand on this very issue would have been 
    valuable.
        Instead, the Commission has decided to allow 30 days for public 
    comment after these final rules have been published in the Federal 
    Register. I fear that this is not an adequate surrogate for the 
    advance comment that we should have solicited. Once something such 
    as an order or a rule revision is issued ``in final,'' it is often a 
    fait accompli that is unlikely to be undone even in the face of 
    inexorable logic.2 We should have invited public 
    participation before taking these steps.
    
        \2\ The courts have recognized that seeking comment after making 
    a rule change is not usually a substitute for obtaining comment 
    before such a change is made: ``[A]n agency is not likely to be 
    receptive to suggested changes once the agency ``put[s] its 
    credibility on the line in the form of ``final'' rules. People 
    naturally tend to be more close-minded and defensive once they have 
    made a ``final'' determination.'''' Air Transport Ass'n of America 
    v. Dept. of Transp., 900 F.2d 369, 379 (D.C. Cir. 1990) (quoting 
    National Tour Brokers Ass'n v. United States, 591 F.2d 896, 902 
    (D.C. Cir. 1978)), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 1023 (1991).
    
    [FR Doc. 99-22015 Filed 8-24-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6750-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
8/25/1999
Published:
08/25/1999
Department:
Federal Trade Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rules with request for comments.
Document Number:
99-22015
Dates:
These rule amendments are effective on August 25, 1999. Agreements that have been executed by any or all respondents before the effective date will not be affected by these amendments without the consent of the parties.
Pages:
46267-46270 (4 pages)
PDF File:
99-22015.pdf
CFR: (5)
16 CFR 2.32
16 CFR 2.34
16 CFR 3.11
16 CFR 3.25
16 CFR 4.9