Master The Supreme Court held that agency decisions not to take enforcement action are presumptively unreviewable under the APA as committed to agency discretion by law. with this comprehensive case brief.
Heckler v. Chaney is the canonical modern statement of administrative enforcement discretion. It establishes a strong presumption that an agency’s decision not to initiate enforcement—like a prosecutor’s decision not to indict—is generally beyond judicial review under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) because it is “committed to agency discretion by law.” The case thus marks a critical boundary on the courts’ power to second-guess how agencies prioritize violations, allocate scarce resources, and assess litigation risks.
At the same time, the Court articulated important limits and exceptions. The presumption can be rebutted if Congress provides meaningful standards for when enforcement must occur, if the agency’s refusal rests on a mistaken view of its legal authority, or if the agency has effectively abdicated its statutory responsibilities through an across-the-board nonenforcement policy. Chaney therefore both insulates day-to-day enforcement choices and furnishes a framework for testing when nonenforcement crosses legal lines—an architecture that reverberates through environmental, immigration, health, and consumer protection law.
Heckler v. Chaney, 470 U.S. 821 (1985) (U.S. Supreme Court)
A group of death row inmates petitioned the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to take enforcement action to prevent states from using certain FDA-approved drugs in lethal injections. The drugs had been approved for therapeutic purposes, but not for execution; the inmates argued that their use in executions rendered them “unapproved” or “misbranded” under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDCA), and they asked the FDA to seize the drugs, take enforcement action against manufacturers and state officials, and otherwise prohibit the practice. The FDA declined, explaining that its enforcement decisions are individualized and discretionary; that the FDCA’s enforcement provisions do not mandate action in every instance of potential statutory violation; that the agency historically does not regulate the practice of medicine; and that the use at issue was undertaken by state officials for executions, not by manufacturers promoting a new intended use. The inmates sued under the APA to compel enforcement, arguing the FDA’s refusal was arbitrary, capricious, and contrary to law. The district court sided with the FDA, but the D.C. Circuit reversed, holding that the refusal to enforce was reviewable and remanding for further consideration. The Supreme Court granted certiorari.
Are an agency’s decisions not to take enforcement action—here, the FDA’s refusal to initiate proceedings to prevent use of drugs in lethal injections—subject to judicial review under the APA, or are they unreviewable because they are committed to agency discretion by law?
Under APA § 701(a)(2), agency action is unreviewable when the statute is drawn so that a court would have no meaningful standard against which to judge the agency’s exercise of discretion—i.e., when action is committed to agency discretion by law. As a general matter, an agency’s refusal to initiate enforcement proceedings is presumptively unreviewable because it is akin to a prosecutor’s decision not to indict and involves a complex balancing of factors peculiarly within the agency’s expertise (including resource allocation, enforcement priorities, likelihood of success, and fit with broader policies). This presumption can be rebutted where (1) Congress has provided substantive guidelines or meaningful standards limiting discretion, (2) the agency’s refusal rests on a belief that it lacks legal authority (a reviewable legal interpretation), or (3) the agency has consciously and expressly adopted a general policy that amounts to an abdication of its statutory responsibilities.
The FDA’s decision not to undertake enforcement action to prevent the use of drugs in lethal injections is presumptively unreviewable under APA § 701(a)(2) and, on the record presented, falls within the agency’s enforcement discretion. The Court reversed the D.C. Circuit.
The Court, per Justice Rehnquist, emphasized that agency nonenforcement decisions are generally unsuitable for judicial review. Such decisions mirror prosecutorial discretion: they require agencies to weigh resource constraints, assess the strength of cases, consider whether enforcement would serve statutory objectives, and set priorities among numerous potential violations. Courts lack manageable standards to second-guess these policy-laden judgments. The FDCA’s enforcement provisions, including 21 U.S.C. § 336 (the “minor violations” clause), reflect congressional intent to afford the FDA broad discretion regarding whether and when to pursue enforcement. Critically, while the FDCA defines what constitutes a violation, it does not supply a judicially administrable standard dictating when the FDA must act upon a suspected violation. The mere existence of a statutory violation does not eliminate enforcement discretion. The Court rejected the D.C. Circuit’s approach that treated the FDA’s refusal as reviewable simply because the FDCA sets substantive requirements. Those requirements speak to the merits of whether conduct violates the statute, not to the separate question of whether the agency must bring an enforcement action. The Court also explained that nonenforcement typically does not impose coercive effects on regulated parties, further counseling against review. At the same time, the Court articulated limits: if Congress has provided meaningful standards for enforcement (e.g., “shall” language tied to ascertainable criteria), courts may review refusals to act. Likewise, if the agency’s refusal rests on an erroneous view that it lacks jurisdiction, that legal determination is reviewable. Finally, if the agency adopts an expressed policy of blanket nonenforcement that amounts to abdication of statutory duties, courts may intervene. None of those conditions were present here, and the FDA’s explanation fell within the core of prosecutorial-like discretion.
Chaney is the leading case on enforcement discretion and APA reviewability. It creates a strong presumption that refusals to enforce are unreviewable, shaping litigation strategy for challengers and agency counsel alike. Law students should internalize both the presumption and its exceptions: meaningful statutory standards, jurisdictional errors, and abdication of duty. The framework is frequently invoked in fields like environmental law (e.g., Massachusetts v. EPA distinguishing when Congress cabins discretion), immigration enforcement, and consumer protection. Practically, Chaney channels challenges away from nonenforcement choices and toward rulemaking, adjudication, or legally reviewable interpretations, unless the challenger can show that Congress has constrained agency discretion or that the agency has effectively renounced its statutory mission.
It means the governing statute provides no meaningful legal standards for a court to apply in reviewing the agency’s decision. In such circumstances—typified by nonenforcement choices—the APA’s default of judicial review yields to a presumption of unreviewability because courts cannot sensibly judge how the agency should balance priorities, allocate resources, or evaluate case strength.
Three primary routes exist: (1) Congress supplies substantive, judicially manageable standards dictating when the agency must enforce (e.g., “shall” language guided by criteria); (2) the agency’s refusal rests on a pure legal interpretation that it lacks statutory authority—courts can review that legal question; and (3) the agency has adopted a general, explicit nonenforcement policy that is so sweeping it amounts to abdication of its statutory responsibilities.
No. Chaney is focused on decisions not to take enforcement action. Other forms of inaction—such as denial of a rulemaking petition—can be reviewable under different APA provisions, though review is often deferential. For example, courts may review an agency’s denial of a petition for rulemaking or failure to act where a statute imposes a discrete, mandatory duty (APA § 706(1)), subject to limits articulated in cases like Norton v. Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance.
Massachusetts v. EPA did not reject Chaney; it distinguished it. The Clean Air Act provided a meaningful standard—requiring the EPA to regulate pollutants that “may reasonably be anticipated to endanger public health or welfare.” Because Congress cabined discretion with specific criteria, EPA’s refusal to regulate greenhouse gases was reviewable. Chaney presumption yields when Congress speaks clearly to when action is required.
Challengers often (1) target reviewable legal interpretations underpinning nonenforcement (e.g., the agency claims it lacks authority), (2) point to statutory language that creates enforceable standards triggering mandatory duties, (3) challenge broad, categorical nonenforcement policies as abdication, or (4) pursue rulemaking challenges, adjudicatory outcomes, or state-law avenues rather than trying to compel case-by-case federal enforcement.
No. Agencies remain politically accountable and subject to oversight, appropriations, and after-the-fact judicial review if and when they do enforce. Moreover, the Chaney presumption can be overcome when Congress supplies standards, when an agency misreads its authority, or when an agency adopts an abdication policy. Congress can also recalibrate discretion by amending statutes to mandate enforcement in specified circumstances.
Heckler v. Chaney draws a firm line around the judicial role in reviewing agency nonenforcement, recognizing that such choices are inherently policy-laden and resource-dependent. By analogizing agency nonenforcement to prosecutorial discretion, the Court set a baseline that protects internal priority setting and preserves agency flexibility in administering broad statutory schemes.
For law students and practitioners, Chaney is both a shield and a roadmap. It shields day-to-day enforcement choices from judicial second-guessing, but it also provides the analytic tools to test nonenforcement when Congress has limited discretion, when agencies misinterpret their powers, or when nonenforcement becomes abdication. Mastery of Chaney’s presumption and its exceptions is essential to effective administrative law advocacy.