Lacewell v. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency ( 2021 )


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  • 19-4271
    Lacewell v. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Second Circuit
    _____________________________________
    August Term 2020
    (Argued: March 9, 2021              Decided: June 3, 2021)
    No. 19-4271
    _____________________________________
    LINDA A. LACEWELL, IN HER OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS SUPERINTENDENT OF THE NEW
    YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL SERVICES,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    — v. —
    OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY, MICHAEL J. HSU, IN HIS OFFICIAL
    CAPACITY AS ACTING U.S. COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY,
    Defendants-Appellants. ∗
    _____________________________________
    Before:                   LEVAL, LYNCH, and BIANCO, Circuit Judges.
    Plaintiff-Appellee the Superintendent of the New York State Department of
    Financial Services (“DFS”) brought this action against Defendants-Appellants the
    Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the U.S. Comptroller of the
    Currency (together, the “OCC”) to challenge the OCC’s decision to begin
    ∗
    Pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 43(c)(2), Acting U.S. Comptroller of
    the Currency Michael J. Hsu is automatically substituted for former U.S. Comptroller of
    the Currency Joseph M. Otting as Defendant-Appellant.
    accepting applications for special-purpose national bank (“SPNB”) charters from
    financial technology companies (“fintechs”) engaged in the “business of banking,”
    including those that do not accept deposits. DFS asserts that this decision, and the
    OCC regulation underlying it, exceed the OCC’s statutory authority under the
    National Bank Act (“NBA” or the “Act”), 
    12 U.S.C. § 21
     et seq., because, in DFS’s
    view, the “business of banking” as used in the NBA requires that national banks
    take deposits. The OCC moved to dismiss DFS’s complaint for lack of subject
    matter jurisdiction and for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be
    granted, arguing, inter alia, that: (1) DFS lacks Article III standing; (2) DFS’s claims
    are constitutionally and prudentially unripe; and (3) the term “business of
    banking” in the NBA is ambiguous and the OCC’s interpretation of that term to
    include institutions that do not accept deposits is reasonable, such that it is entitled
    to Chevron deference. The United States District Court for the Southern District of
    New York (Marrero, J.) denied the OCC’s motion and held, in relevant part, that
    DFS has Article III standing, that its claims against the OCC are ripe both under
    the U.S. Constitution and as a matter of prudence, and that the OCC exceeded its
    authority under the NBA because the Act unambiguously requires national banks
    to engage in deposit-taking. After the parties agreed that no further factual
    development was required in light of these holdings, the district court entered
    judgment in favor of DFS, setting aside the OCC’s decision to accept SPNB charter
    applications from non-depository fintechs nationwide. We conclude that DFS
    lacks Article III standing because it failed to allege that the OCC’s decision caused
    it to suffer an actual or imminent injury in fact, and we find that DFS’s claims are
    constitutionally unripe for substantially the same reason.
    Accordingly, we REVERSE the amended judgment and REMAND to the
    district court with instructions to enter a judgment of dismissal without prejudice.
    CHRISTOPHER CONNOLLY, Assistant
    United States Attorney, (Benjamin H.
    Torrance, Assistant United States
    Attorney, on the brief), for Audrey
    Strauss, United States Attorney for the
    Southern District of New York, New
    York, NY, for Defendants-Appellants.
    2
    BARBARA D. UNDERWOOD, Solicitor
    General (Steven C. Wu, Deputy
    Solicitor General, Matthew W. Grieco,
    Assistant Solicitor General, on the brief),
    for Letitia James, Attorney General of
    the State of New York, New York, NY,
    for Plaintiff-Appellee. †
    JOSEPH F. BIANCO, Circuit Judge:
    Plaintiff-Appellee the Superintendent of the New York State Department of
    Financial Services (“DFS”) brought this action against Defendants-Appellants the
    Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the U.S. Comptroller of the
    Currency (together, the “OCC”) to challenge the OCC’s decision to begin
    accepting applications for special-purpose national bank (“SPNB”) charters from
    financial technology companies (“fintechs”) engaged in the “business of banking,”
    including those that do not accept deposits. 1 DFS asserts that this decision, and
    the OCC regulation underlying it, exceed the OCC’s statutory authority under the
    †   See Appendix A for a list of filings by amici curiae.
    1 For ease of reference, this opinion makes use of the following defined terms: 
    12 C.F.R. § 5.20
    (e)(1)(i) (“Section 5.20(e)(1)(i)”); the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”); the
    Comptroller’s Licensing Manual Supplement: Considering Charter Applications from
    Financial Technology Companies (“Licensing Manual Supplement”); the Conference of
    State Bank Supervisors (“CSBS”); financial technology companies (“fintechs”); the
    National Bank Act (“NBA” or the “Act”); the New York State Department of Financial
    Services (“DFS”); the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the U.S. Comptroller
    of the Currency (together, the “OCC”); and special-purpose national bank (“SPNB”).
    3
    National Bank Act (“NBA” or the “Act”), 
    12 U.S.C. § 21
     et seq., because, in DFS’s
    view, the “business of banking” as used in the NBA requires that national banks
    take deposits. The OCC moved to dismiss DFS’s complaint for lack of subject
    matter jurisdiction and for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be
    granted, arguing, inter alia, that: (1) DFS lacks Article III standing; (2) DFS’s claims
    are constitutionally and prudentially unripe; and (3) the term “business of
    banking” in the NBA is ambiguous and the OCC’s interpretation of that term to
    include institutions that do not accept deposits is reasonable, such that it is entitled
    to Chevron 2 deference. The United States District Court for the Southern District
    of New York (Marrero, J.) denied the OCC’s motion and held, in relevant part, that
    DFS has Article III standing, that its claims against the OCC are ripe both under
    the U.S. Constitution and as a matter of prudence, and that the OCC exceeded its
    authority under the NBA because the Act unambiguously requires national banks
    to engage in deposit-taking. After the parties agreed that no further factual
    development was required in light of these holdings, the district court entered
    judgment in favor of DFS, setting aside the OCC’s decision to accept SPNB charter
    applications from non-depository fintechs nationwide.
    2   See generally Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 
    467 U.S. 837
     (1984).
    4
    We conclude that DFS lacks Article III standing because it failed to allege
    that the OCC’s decision caused it to suffer an actual or imminent injury in fact, and
    we find that DFS’s claims are constitutionally unripe for substantially the same
    reason. Accordingly, we REVERSE the amended judgment and REMAND to the
    district court with instructions to enter a judgment of dismissal without prejudice.
    BACKGROUND
    I.    The Dual Banking System
    Financial institutions in the United States operate within a “dual banking
    system.” Wachovia Bank, N.A. v. Burke, 
    414 F.3d 305
    , 314 (2d Cir. 2005) (“States
    have a legitimate role in regulating certain banking activity, and it is often said
    that we have a ‘dual banking system’ of federal and state regulation.”); accord
    Watters v. Wachovia Bank, N.A., 
    550 U.S. 1
    , 15 n.7 (2007). Within that system, both
    federal and state governments are empowered to charter banks and to regulate the
    banks holding their respective charters.      Thus, banks with national banking
    charters are primarily supervised by federal regulators, and banks with state
    charters are largely, though not exclusively, subject to state regulation.
    On the federal side, the OCC is the bureau of the U.S. Department of the
    Treasury “charged with assuring the safety and soundness of, and compliance
    5
    with laws and regulations, fair access to financial services, and fair treatment of
    customers by, the [federally-chartered] institutions and other persons subject to its
    jurisdiction.” 
    12 U.S.C. § 1
    (a). In New York, DFS is the state agency responsible
    for “the enforcement of [New York’s] insurance, banking and financial services
    laws.” 
    N.Y. Fin. Serv. Law § 102
    ; see also 
    id.
     § 102(c) (listing one of DFS’s “goals”
    as “provid[ing] for the effective and efficient enforcement of [New York’s] banking
    and insurance laws”). Among other duties, DFS is responsible for supervising
    more than 200 New York-licensed state and international banks (with assets of
    around $2.5 trillion), as well as approximately 600 non-bank financial services
    companies (with assets of around $1 trillion).
    II.   Statutory and Regulatory Context
    Under the NBA, the OCC has been granted the power to charter national
    banks. Specifically, the NBA’s “[c]ertificate of authority to commence banking”
    section provides that:
    If, upon a careful examination of the facts so reported,
    and of any other facts which may come to the knowledge
    of the Comptroller . . . it appears that [an entity applying
    for a federal banking charter] is lawfully entitled to
    commence the business of banking, the Comptroller shall
    give to such association a certificate . . . that such
    association has complied with all the provisions required
    to be complied with before commencing the business of
    6
    banking, and that such association is authorized to
    commence such business.
    
    12 U.S.C. § 27
    (a) (emphases added). Although the term the “business of banking”
    is not defined in the NBA, the Act does specify that once a bank receives a federal
    charter—and thereby becomes a national bank—
    it shall have power . . . Seventh[,] [t]o exercise . . . all such
    incidental powers as shall be necessary to carry on the
    business of banking; by discounting and negotiating
    promissory notes, drafts, bills of exchange, and other
    evidences of debt; by receiving deposits; by buying and
    selling exchange, coin, and bullion; by loaning money on
    personal security; and by obtaining, issuing, and
    circulating notes . . . .
    
    Id.
     § 24(Seventh) (emphasis added).
    In 2003, the OCC amended one of its regulations to give itself the ability to
    issue SPNB charters. 3 See Rules, Policies, and Procedures for Corporate Activities;
    Bank Activities and Operations; Real Estate Lending and Appraisals, 
    68 Fed. Reg. 70,122
    , 70,126 (Dec. 17, 2003). Specifically, the amended regulation provides:
    The OCC charters a national bank under the authority of
    the National Bank Act of 1864 . . . . The bank may be a
    special purpose bank that limits its activities to fiduciary
    activities or to any other activities within the business of
    3 An SPNB, in this context, is a “national bank that engages in a limited range of banking
    activities, including one of the core banking functions [i.e., paying checks or lending
    money], but does not take deposits and is not insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance
    Corporation (FDIC).” Joint App’x at 120.
    7
    banking. A special purpose bank that conducts activities
    other than fiduciary activities must conduct at least one
    of the following three core banking functions: Receiving
    deposits; paying checks; or lending money.
    
    12 C.F.R. § 5.20
    (e)(1)(i) (“Section 5.20(e)(1)(i)”) (emphasis added).           By that
    amendment, the OCC expressly pronounced that it had the authority to issue
    national bank charters to institutions that do not receive deposits for the first time
    since the NBA was enacted in 1864. 4
    DFS alleges that, in March 2016, the OCC first contemplated issuing SPNB
    charters to non-depository fintechs 5 and released a white paper wherein it
    “identifie[d] the impact of fast-paced developments in financial services
    technology as a much needed subject of regulatory inquiry.” Joint App’x at 19. It
    then started the lengthy process of determining whether to issue SPNB charters to
    non-depository fintechs.      More specifically, the OCC began by releasing an
    4 Both DFS and the OCC note that the OCC has yet to grant a federal charter to a non-
    depository financial institution of any kind pursuant to its authority under
    Section 5.20(e)(1)(i).
    5  The OCC describes fintechs as “thousands of technology-driven nonbank companies
    offering a new approach to products and services . . . . Fintech companies vary widely in
    their business models and product offerings. Some are marketplace lenders providing
    loans to consumers and small businesses, others offer payment-related services, others
    engage in digital currencies and distributed ledger technology, and still others provide
    financial planning and wealth management products and services.” OCC Br. at 7 n.1
    (quoting Joint App’x at 47–48).
    8
    additional white paper in December 2016 titled “Exploring Special Purpose
    National Bank Charters for Fintech Companies,” 
    id.
     at 19–20, 46, which noted that
    “[a] question raised by technological advances in financial services and evolving
    customer preferences is whether it would be appropriate for the OCC to consider
    granting a special purpose national bank charter to a fintech company,” 
    id. at 48
    .
    The OCC also stated that its ability to grant SPNB charters to fintechs would be
    based upon Section 5.20(e)(1)(i), which, as mentioned supra, does not require
    deposit-taking.   Further, it pointed out that “[s]tate law applies to a special
    purpose national bank in the same way and to the same extent as it applies to a
    full-service national bank,” noting that “[e]xamples of state laws that would
    generally apply to national banks include state laws on anti-discrimination, fair
    lending, [and] debt collection,” among others. Id. at 51.
    Thereafter, the OCC received and, in March 2017, responded to comments
    from DFS and other interested parties concerning its plan to grant SPNB charters
    to fintechs—including those that did not receive deposits—set forth in its
    December 2016 white paper. In response to criticism that this plan exceeded the
    OCC’s statutory authority under the NBA insofar as it enabled the OCC to grant
    SPNB charters to non-depository institutions, the OCC asserted that “[t]he [NBA]
    9
    does not require that a bank take deposits in order to be engaged in the ‘business
    of banking.’ Rather, under the Act, performing only one of [either accepting
    deposits, paying checks, or lending money] is sufficient to be performing [the] core
    banking functions” required by Section 5.20(e)(1)(i). Id. at 132–33. 6
    On July 31, 2018, the OCC announced its final decision to accept applications
    from—and grant SPNB charters to—fintechs, including those that do not receive
    deposits, pursuant to Section 5.20(e)(1)(i) (the “Fintech Charter Decision”). In the
    press release announcing its decision, the OCC stated that “it [would] begin
    accepting applications for national bank charters from nondepository financial
    technology (fintech) companies engaged in the business of banking.” Id. at 165.
    That same day, the OCC also published a “Policy Statement on Financial
    Technology Companies’ Eligibility to Apply for National Bank Charters,” id. at 23,
    167–70, and the “Comptroller’s Licensing Manual Supplement:              Considering
    Charter Applications from Financial Technology Companies” (“Licensing Manual
    Supplement”), id. at 23–24, 172–91. The policy statement made clear that the
    OCC’s intent was to begin accepting SPNB charter applications from non-
    6In March 2017, the OCC also released a draft supplement to the Comptroller’s Licensing
    Manual titled “Evaluating Charter Applications [f]rom Financial Technology
    Companies,” id. at 22–23, 135, regarding which DFS sent an opposition letter, again
    contending that the OCC’s plan exceeded its statutory authority under the NBA.
    10
    depository fintechs. See id. at 167 (“It is the policy of the Office of the Comptroller
    of the Currency (OCC) to consider applications for national bank charters from
    companies conducting the business of banking, provided they meet the
    requirements and standards for obtaining a charter.                 This policy includes
    considering applications for special purpose national bank charters from financial
    technology (fintech) companies that are engaged in the business of banking but do
    not take deposits.” (emphasis added)). DFS further alleges that, following the
    Fintech Charter Decision, the OCC “immediately invited . . . Fintech startup
    companies to come to [its] office in New York to discuss . . . the new [SPNB]
    charter.” Joint App’x at 24. In response to the Fintech Charter Decision, DFS
    brought this action in September 2018.
    III.   Procedural History
    A.     The Instant Action
    Following the July 2018 Fintech Charter Decision, DFS filed the complaint
    against the OCC at issue in this appeal in the Southern District of New York on
    September 14, 2018.7 As relevant here, DFS asserted that (1) the Fintech Charter
    7 Before filing the instant action (and over a year before the OCC’s Fintech Charter
    Decision became final), DFS filed a separate action against the OCC in the United States
    District Court for the Southern District of New York in May 2017, asserting, inter alia, that
    11
    Decision exceeded the OCC’s authority under the NBA because it permits the OCC
    to grant SPNB charters to institutions that do not accept deposits and
    (2) Section 5.20(e)(1)(i) is null and void for that same reason. 8 Although it was not
    clear from the face of the complaint, the district court interpreted these claims as
    the OCC lacked the authority under the NBA to issue SPNB charters to non-depository
    fintechs and that Section 5.20(e)(1)(i) “is null and void because it exceeds the OCC’s
    authority under the NBA.” Vullo v. Off. of the Comptroller of the Currency (Vullo I), No. 17-
    cv-3574 (NRB), 
    2017 WL 6512245
    , at *4 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 12, 2017). After the OCC moved to
    dismiss the complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, the district court found that,
    far from receiving and reviewing SPNB charter applications from non-depository
    fintechs (let alone granting such applications), the OCC “ha[d] not yet determined
    whether it [would] issue SPNB charters to fintech companies” at all. 
    Id. at *5
    .
    Accordingly, the district court dismissed DFS’s complaint without prejudice on the
    grounds that DFS had not suffered an injury in fact sufficient to confer Article III standing
    and that the claims against the OCC were not yet constitutionally or prudentially ripe.
    See 
    id.
     at *7–10. With respect to standing, the court determined that DFS’s asserted
    injuries, which included, among other things, that New York-chartered institutions
    seeking and receiving federal SPNB charters would thereby “escape New York’s
    regulatory requirements, stripping their customers of the protections of New York State
    law,” “[would] only become sufficiently imminent to confer standing once the OCC
    makes a final determination that it will issue SPNB charters to fintech companies.” 
    Id. at *7
    . In relation to constitutional ripeness, the court held that, because “constitutional
    ripeness is a subset of the injury-in-fact element of Article III standing, our constitutional
    ripeness analysis here is coterminous with our standing analysis.” 
    Id. at *8
    .
    8 With respect to DFS’s second claim, the district court clarified that, although the claim
    was phrased as a facial challenge of Section 5.20(e)(1)(i) in the complaint, it read that claim
    as challenging “only . . . so much of the [r]egulation as purports to authorize [the] OCC
    to issue SPNB charters to non-depository institutions.” Joint App’x at 230 n.5.
    12
    arising under Section 702 of the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”), 
    5 U.S.C. § 701
     et seq. 9
    The OCC subsequently moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of subject
    matter jurisdiction and for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be
    granted, pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6),
    respectively. It first contended that DFS lacks Article III standing to pursue its
    claims and that the dispute is not yet constitutionally or prudentially ripe for
    adjudication. As to the merits, the OCC argued that the statutory term the
    “business of banking” in the NBA is ambiguous and that, therefore, its
    interpretation of the term to encompass entities that do not accept deposits—
    including non-depository fintechs—pursuant to Section 5.20(e)(1)(i) warrants
    Chevron deference.
    The district court denied the OCC’s motion to dismiss as it related to the
    justiciability and Chevron issues now on appeal. With respect to standing, the court
    noted that “DFS alleges two distinct harms that follow from OCC’s actions,” the
    first being that “New York citizens will suffer by losing critical financial
    9 In its complaint, DFS also alleged that the Fintech Charter Decision violated the Tenth
    Amendment. However, the district court granted the OCC’s motion to dismiss as to that
    claim, and DFS does not challenge that decision on appeal.
    13
    protections that New York banking law and regulatory oversight currently
    provides[,]” and more specifically “that the removal of state regulations impacts
    [DFS’s] regulation of non-depository money transmitters, of payday lenders and
    their usurious trade, as well as of the state’s safety and soundness standards for
    non-depository institutions.” Joint App’x at 246–47 (internal quotation marks
    omitted). The second alleged harm identified by the district court was that DFS
    would “suffer direct economic harm because its operating expenses are funded by
    assessments levied by the agency upon New York State licensed institutions and
    the Fintech Charter Decision will deprive DFS of the revenues from future
    assessments.” 
    Id. at 247
     (internal quotation marks omitted). The district court
    concluded that DFS has standing to bring its APA claims against the OCC, noting
    that “[t]hese alleged threats to New York and DFS implicate the type of sovereign
    and direct interests common in cases where states have standing to contest agency
    action.” 
    Id.
     (footnote omitted). Moreover, the district court held that DFS’s claims
    are constitutionally ripe for review because DFS had sufficiently alleged that the
    OCC’s execution of the Fintech Charter Decision was imminent and that there was
    a substantial risk that the OCC could grant an SPNB charter to a non-depository
    fintech at any time, thereby injuring DFS.
    14
    With respect to DFS’s claims under the APA, the district court concluded
    that the term the “business of banking” in the NBA unambiguously requires
    federally chartered institutions to accept deposits. In reaching that conclusion, the
    district court found that the NBA’s text, statutory framework, and legislative
    history, as well as the history of federal banking law and the fact that the OCC
    only gave itself charting power over non-depository institutions in 2003, all
    counseled in favor of finding that the receipt of deposits is clearly indispensable
    to the “business of banking.” Accordingly, the district court determined that it did
    not need to reach the second step of the Chevron analysis and denied the OCC’s
    motion to dismiss as to DFS’s APA claims.
    Following the district court’s decision and order on the OCC’s motion to
    dismiss, the parties agreed that the court had “resolve[d] the substantive legal
    issues in this matter[,] . . . render[ing] the entry of final judgment appropriate.” 
    Id. at 301
    . Notwithstanding the OCC’s request for vacatur limited to non-depository
    fintechs “that have a nexus to New York State,” 
    id. at 293
    , the district court set
    aside Section 5.20(e)(1)(i) “with respect to all fintech applicants seeking a national
    bank charter that do not accept deposits,” regardless of their location in the United
    15
    States, 
    id. at 301
     (emphasis added). After the district court entered its amended
    judgment, the OCC timely appealed.
    B.     Similar Actions in the District of Columbia
    The Conference of State Bank Supervisors (“CSBS”)—which filed an amicus
    brief in connection with this appeal—separately has filed similar lawsuits against
    the OCC in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. In
    Conference of State Bank Supervisors v. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (CSBS
    I), CSBS—like DFS—brought a pre-Fintech Charter Decision suit against the OCC,
    alleging that it lacked the authority to grant SPNB charters to non-depository
    fintechs.   See 
    313 F. Supp. 3d 285
    , 291–93 (D.D.C. 2018).         The district court
    dismissed the complaint for lack of standing, holding, like the court in Vullo I, that
    CSBS had not alleged a sufficient injury in fact given that each of the harms alleged
    were “contingent on whether the OCC charters a Fintech,” 
    id.
     at 295–96, and that
    CSBS’s claims were constitutionally unripe for that same reason, 
    id. at 299
    ; see also
    
    id. at 296
     (“Several contingent and speculative events must occur before the OCC
    charters a Fintech: (1) the OCC must decide to finalize a procedure for handling
    those applications; (2) a Fintech company must choose to apply for a charter;
    (3) the particular Fintech must substantively satisfy regulatory requirements; and
    16
    (4) the OCC must decide to grant the charter to the particular Fintech. When the
    complaint was filed, not even the first step—finalized procedures—had
    occurred.”).
    Again like DFS, CSBS filed another suit against the OCC after it issued its
    July 2018 Fintech Charter Decision. See Conf. of State Bank Supervisors v. Off. of the
    Comptroller of the Currency (CSBS II), No. 18-cv-2449 (DLF), 
    2019 WL 4194541
    , at *1
    (D.D.C. Sept. 3, 2019). Unlike DFS, however, CSBS fared no better the second time
    around. Specifically, the district court found, for substantially the same reasons
    set forth in CSBS I, that CSBS lacked standing and that the dispute was not ripe for
    judicial review. See 
    id.
     at *1–3. 10
    DISCUSSION
    On appeal, the OCC contends that the district court erred in denying in part
    its motion to dismiss DFS’s complaint. Specifically, it argues that the district court
    erred in holding that: (1) DFS has Article III standing to pursue its APA claims and
    10 We note that, after briefing for this appeal was completed, CSBS again sued the OCC
    in the District of Columbia on December 22, 2020 in connection with the Fintech Charter
    Decision. CSBS has now added to its complaint the fact that Figure Technologies Inc.—a
    fintech that the OCC allegedly has determined does accept deposits but will not be
    required to obtain deposit insurance from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation—
    applied to the OCC for an SPNB charter. See Complaint at 2, 6, Conf. of State Bank
    Supervisors v. Off. of the Comptroller of the Currency (CSBS III), 20-cv-3797 (DLF) (D.D.C.
    Dec. 22, 2020), ECF No. 1. The OCC’s motion to dismiss the complaint is pending.
    17
    that those claims are constitutionally and prudentially ripe for adjudication; (2) the
    OCC’s decision to accept SPNB charter applications from non-depository fintechs
    is not entitled to Chevron deference because the “business of banking” under the
    NBA unambiguously requires the receipt of deposits; and (3) Section 5.20(e)(1)(i)
    should be vacated as applied to non-depository fintechs without any geographical
    limitation. As discussed below, we find that DFS lacks Article III standing and
    that its APA claims are constitutionally unripe because no non-depository fintech
    has filed a formal SPNB charter application, nor is it known whether such an
    application will be granted if filed. 11 Accordingly, we need not reach the OCC’s
    other claims of error.
    I.     Standard of Review
    In this case, the OCC brought a “facial”—as opposed to a “fact-based”—
    standing challenge under Rule 12(b)(1) because its motion was “based solely on
    the allegations of the complaint . . . and exhibits attached to it.” Carter v. HealthPort
    11At various points in its appellate briefs, the OCC suggests that DFS’s claims may not
    become justiciable even when a non-depository fintech formally applies for an SPNB
    charter, but rather that DFS may need to wait to bring its claims until after the OCC grants
    such an application. We do not decide the precise point at which DFS’s claims may
    become justiciable in the future. Instead, we limit our analysis to the facts currently
    before us and conclude that at this juncture, where there is no formal application from a
    non-depository fintech for an SPNB charter, DFS does not satisfy the requirements for
    Article III standing, nor are its claims constitutionally ripe.
    18
    Techs., LLC, 
    822 F.3d 47
    , 56 (2d Cir. 2016). “[W]e review the district court’s decision
    on such a facial challenge de novo.” Id.; accord Sonterra Cap. Master Fund Ltd. v. UBS
    AG, 
    954 F.3d 529
    , 533 (2d Cir. 2020). In doing so, we “accept[] as true all material
    factual allegations of the complaint, and draw[] all reasonable inferences in favor
    of the plaintiff.” Sonterra Cap. Master Fund Ltd., 954 F.3d at 533 (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Additionally, “the plaintiff has no evidentiary burden” when
    confronted with a facial standing challenge. Carter, 822 F.3d at 56.
    As with its standing determination, a district court’s conclusion as to
    ripeness “is also a legal determination subject to de novo review.” Connecticut v.
    Duncan, 
    612 F.3d 107
    , 112 (2d Cir. 2010); accord Murphy v. New Milford Zoning
    Comm’n, 
    402 F.3d 342
    , 347 (2d Cir. 2005).
    II.   Article III Standing
    At the threshold, the OCC argues that DFS cannot establish Article III
    standing because it has not alleged that it suffered, or will suffer imminently, an
    injury in fact as a result of the OCC’s Fintech Charter Decision.
    Under Article III of the U.S. Constitution, “[t]he judicial Power of the United
    States” extends only to certain “Cases” and “Controversies.” U.S. Const. art. III,
    §§ 1–2; see also Raines v. Byrd, 
    521 U.S. 811
    , 818 (1997) (“No principle is more
    19
    fundamental to the judiciary’s proper role in our system of government than the
    constitutional limitation of federal-court jurisdiction to actual cases or
    controversies.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). To satisfy the Constitution’s
    “case-or-controversy requirement,” a plaintiff in federal court “must establish that
    they have standing to sue.” Clapper v. Amnesty Int’l USA, 
    568 U.S. 398
    , 408 (2013)
    (quoting Raines, 
    521 U.S. at 818
    ). “The law of Article III standing, which is built on
    separation-of-powers principles, serves to prevent the judicial process from being
    used to usurp the powers of the political branches.” 
    Id.
    The requirements of Article III standing are well established: “[A] plaintiff
    must have (1) suffered an injury in fact, (2) that is fairly traceable to the challenged
    conduct of the defendant, and (3) that is likely to be redressed by a favorable
    judicial decision.” Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 
    136 S. Ct. 1540
    , 1547 (2016). DFS, “as the
    party invoking federal jurisdiction, bears the burden of establishing these
    elements.” 
    Id.
     (“Where, as here, a case is at the pleading stage, the plaintiff must
    ‘clearly . . . allege facts demonstrating’ each element.” (quoting Warth v. Seldin, 
    422 U.S. 490
    , 518 (1975)). Because DFS fails to establish “the ‘[f]irst and foremost’ of
    standing’s three elements”—injury in fact, 
    id.
     (alteration in original) (quoting Steel
    20
    Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t, 
    523 U.S. 83
    , 103 (1998))—we need not address
    traceability or redressability.
    “[T]he injury-in-fact requirement[] . . . helps to ensure that the plaintiff has
    a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy.” Susan B. Anthony List v.
    Driehaus, 
    573 U.S. 149
    , 158 (2014) (internal quotation marks omitted). For purposes
    of Article III standing, an “injury in fact” is “an invasion of a legally protected
    interest which is (a) concrete and particularized[] and (b) actual or imminent, not
    conjectural or hypothetical.” Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560 (1992)
    (footnote, citations, and internal quotation marks omitted); accord Clapper, 
    568 U.S. at 409
    ; Sonterra Cap. Master Fund Ltd., 954 F.3d at 534. “An allegation of future
    injury may suffice if the threatened injury is ‘certainly impending,’ or there is a
    ‘“substantial risk” that the harm will occur.’” Driehaus, 573 U.S. at 158 (quoting
    Clapper, 
    568 U.S. at
    414 & n.5); accord Chevron Corp. v. Donziger, 
    833 F.3d 74
    , 121 (2d
    Cir. 2016); see also Clapper, 
    568 U.S. at 410
     (finding an “objectively reasonable
    likelihood” of future harm to be an improper standard for showing a “threatened
    injury [is] certainly impending” (internal quotation marks omitted)). Importantly,
    however, “allegations of possible future injury are not sufficient.” Clapper, 
    568 U.S. at 409
     (alteration and internal quotation marks omitted) (“Although imminence is
    21
    concededly a somewhat elastic concept, it cannot be stretched beyond its purpose,
    which is to ensure that the alleged injury is not too speculative for Article III
    purposes . . . .” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    DFS alleges that it will suffer two classes of injuries as a result of the OCC’s
    actions.   First, it asserts that the Fintech Charter Decision will lead to the
    preemption of state law and thereby reduce DFS’s regulatory power, to the
    detriment of New York consumers. Second, it argues that it faces the prospect of
    losing revenue from assessments it currently levies against non-depository
    fintechs, which may opt to convert to a federal SPNB charter. 12 Each of these
    alleged injuries is discussed below in turn.
    A.     Preemption and Regulatory Disruption
    In asserting that it has standing, DFS does not argue that it has already
    suffered any sort of injury as a result of the OCC’s actions. Instead, it contends
    that there is a substantial risk that the Fintech Charter Decision will enable non-
    depository fintechs with SPNB charters that would otherwise be subject to its
    regulatory jurisdiction to escape enforcement by claiming federal preemption.
    DFS’s logic is as follows: Under the dual banking system, states have heretofore
    12 Under federal law, state-chartered institutions may convert into national banks,
    provided that they meet certain requirements. See 
    12 U.S.C. § 35
    .
    22
    regulated non-depository institutions. Thus, if any New York-chartered, non-
    depository fintech converts to—or any new non-depository fintech seeking to do
    business in New York applies for—an SPNB charter pursuant to the Fintech
    Charter Decision, it will, in DFS’s view, claim federal preemption in response to
    any DFS-initiated regulatory action.
    DFS further alleges that this alleged preemption, will, inter alia, “weaken[]
    regulatory controls on usury, payday loans, and other predatory lending
    practices” and thereby harm New York, as well as the consumers and businesses
    that reside there. Joint App’x at 11. In particular, DFS contends that non-
    depository fintechs with federal SPNB charters will “escape” New York’s
    “bonding requirements, liquidity and capitalization standards, and [certain]
    payment obligations” meant “to protect consumers against loss in the event that
    such an institution fails.” 
    Id. at 25
    . Relatedly, DFS asserts that “the Fintech Charter
    Decision effectively negates New York’s strict interest-rate caps and anti-usury
    laws” because, under federal law, national banks are subject to the interest-rate
    laws of the jurisdiction in which they are “located.” 
    Id. at 26
     (quoting 
    12 U.S.C. § 85
    ). Thus, according to DFS, “under the Fintech Charter [D]ecision, marketplace
    lenders that use the Internet can now gouge New York borrowers by receiving an
    23
    OCC special purpose charter and locating in any number of other states that
    authorize interest rates considered usurious in New York.” 
    Id.
    The district court determined that the alleged threat of federal preemption
    and subsequent regulatory harm was sufficient to confer Article III standing
    because New York’s “comprehensive regulatory system for non-depository
    fintech companies” is “allegedly threatened by” the OCC’s Fintech Charter
    Decision. 
    Id. at 247
     (“These alleged threats to New York and DFS implicate the
    type of sovereign and direct interests common in cases where states have standing
    to contest agency action.” (footnote omitted)). We disagree. 13
    13 Although not relied upon by DFS on appeal, the district court also determined that
    DFS’s APA claims “fall within the parens patriae framework of standing.” Joint App’x at
    248. Parens patriae standing allows a state (in its capacity as a sovereign) to bring suit on
    behalf of its citizens when it “allege[s] injury to a sufficiently substantial segment of its
    population,” “articulate[s] an interest apart from the interests of particular private
    parties,” and “express[es] a quasi-sovereign interest.” Alfred L. Snapp & Son, Inc. v. Puerto
    Rico ex rel. Barez, 
    458 U.S. 592
    , 607 (1982). The ability of a state to sue the federal
    government under this doctrine of standing is subject to continuing judicial debate. See
    Connecticut v. U.S. Dep’t of Com., 
    204 F.3d 413
    , 414 n.2 (2d Cir. 2000) (declining to address
    the issue); see also Ariz. State Legislature v. Ariz. Indep. Redistricting Comm’n, 
    576 U.S. 787
    ,
    802 n.10 (2015) (noting that the cases relating to “standing of states to sue the federal
    government[,]” including those addressing parens patriae standing, “are hard to
    reconcile” (internal quotation marks omitted)). However, we need not delve into this
    complex threshold question because, even assuming parens patriae standing could apply
    here, New York residents (like the state itself) lack a concrete or imminent harm
    stemming from the OCC’s Fintech Charter Decision and that same lack of harm at this
    juncture prevents DFS from relying on this doctrine to establish parens patriae standing
    under Snapp. See, e.g., Table Bluff Rsrv. (Wiyot Tribe) v. Philip Morris, Inc., 
    256 F.3d 879
    , 885
    24
    As an initial matter, insofar as DFS is relying on the “substantial risk” test
    for Article III standing articulated in Driehaus and Clapper, we find DFS’s asserted
    risk of regulatory injury to be too speculative to meet the requirements of Article
    III.   At this time, no non-depository fintech has applied for—let alone been
    granted—an SPNB charter, and, as DFS concedes, no state law or regulation has
    been preempted as a result of the Fintech Charter Decision.                  Thus, there is
    currently no non-depository fintech that can claim federal preemption engaging
    in any practice that may give rise to the regulatory harms that DFS alleges, such
    as charging interest rates that exceed New York’s statutory cap. Moreover, the
    Fintech Charter Decision merely indicates that the OCC intends to begin accepting
    SPNB charter applications from non-depository fintechs; it is not a guarantee that
    those applications will be granted. As was the case before the Fintech Charter
    Decision was made final, “[a]ny allegation of preemption at this point relies on
    speculation about the OCC’s future actions.” Vullo I, 
    2017 WL 6512245
    , at *8; see
    also CSBS I, 313 F. Supp. 3d at 298 (“[No] state law has been preempted by the
    (9th Cir. 2001) (holding that “[the sovereign] still must allege injury in fact to the citizens
    they purport to represent as parens patriae”); accord Utah Div. of Consumer Prot. v. Stevens,
    
    398 F. Supp. 3d 1139
    , 1145 (D. Utah 2019) (“[A]s a matter of logic, it is clear enough that
    the mere assertion of a state interest, untethered from injury to the State’s citizens, cannot
    support parens patriae standing—even if that interest might qualify as a quasi-sovereign
    interest if accompanied by such injury.”).
    25
    OCC’s preliminary activities respecting Fintech charters.”). In short, before any
    non-depository fintech that engages in the types of business practices about which
    DFS is concerned applies for or receives an SPNB charter, there will be no requisite
    “imminent” injury to DFS. 14 Lujan, 
    504 U.S. 560
    ; accord Clapper, 
    568 U.S. at 406
    ,
    409–14 (finding plaintiffs—a group that included “attorneys and human rights,
    labor, legal, and media organizations”—failed to establish Article III standing to
    challenge a statute permitting the foreign surveillance of individuals other than
    “United     States   persons”     where     plaintiffs    contended      that   their   own
    communications could be intercepted by the U.S. government under the statute
    based upon “a highly attenuated chain of possibilities”). For the same reasons,
    there is not, at this time, a sufficiently “substantial risk” that such injury will occur.
    Driehaus, 573 U.S. at 158 (quoting Clapper, 
    568 U.S. at
    414 n.5).
    14 In its brief on appeal, DFS argued that it “will be forced to incur regulatory costs before
    any issuance of a charter” because it will need “to complete enforcement actions before a
    fintech company can seek immunity from OCC, and to monitor fintechs nationwide for
    potential incursion into the New York marketplace.” DFS Br. at 28. As a threshold
    matter, DFS failed to raise this issue below. See Spinelli v. Nat’l Football League, 
    903 F.3d 185
    , 198 (2d Cir. 2018) (“The well-established general rule is that an appellate court will
    not consider an issue raised for the first time on appeal.” (alteration and internal
    quotation marks omitted)). But even if it were properly raised, we note that counsel for
    DFS conceded at oral argument that DFS still has yet to incur these costs, despite alleging
    that the OCC had already begun processing draft applications when the district court
    judgment was entered, thus demonstrating that these costs—like the other costs DFS
    alleges it will incur—are too speculative at this stage to support standing.
    26
    Moreover, even if the OCC grants an SPNB charter to some non-depository
    fintech, it is not entirely clear that the regulatory disruption that DFS fears will
    actually occur. Indeed, DFS’s purported standing on the basis of preemption and
    regulatory injury is undermined by its own complaint, which repeatedly couches
    this alleged injury in conditional or future-oriented terms. For example, DFS
    alleges that: “federal preemption claims will surely proliferate among fintech
    charter-holders in response to New York misconduct charges,” Joint App’x at 25
    (emphasis added); “New York-licensed money transmitters . . . could qualify for an
    [SPNB] charter and thereby escape New York’s regulatory requirements,” 
    id.
    (emphasis added); and the Fintech Charter Decision “could realistically lead in New
    York to the proliferation of prohibited payday lending by out-of-state OCC
    chartered entities,” 
    id. at 26
     (emphasis added). DFS also undercuts its own claimed
    standing, admitting that “the full scope of regulatory disruption is difficult to
    ascertain” because the class of fintechs to which the OCC will ultimately grant
    SPNB charters is uncertain. 
    Id. at 25
    .
    Although no non-depository fintech has filed a formal application for an
    SPNB charter, DFS urges us to assume that the OCC will grant one imminently.
    In its brief on appeal, for instance, DFS points to evidence that the OCC has
    27
    actively solicited SPNB charter applications from non-depository fintechs and that
    a former Comptroller of the Currency suggested that there were multiple entities
    “going through the [SPNB charter] application process” prior to the district court’s
    decision in this case denying in part the OCC’s motion to dismiss. DFS Br. at 19–
    20 (internal quotation marks omitted). In DFS’s view, these developments suggest
    that its alleged regulatory injuries are sufficiently imminent.             We disagree,
    however, because the mere act of welcoming SPNB charter applications from non-
    depository fintechs does little to show that the OCC is on the verge of granting
    those applications imminently or at all (or even that one will necessarily be filed).
    Consequently, DFS’s concern about preemption and its regulatory fallout is too
    speculative. 15
    15  Although the district court noted that “DFS benefits from the supposition that the
    government enforces and acts on its recent, non-moribund laws,” Joint App’x at 249
    (citing Hedges v. Obama, 
    724 F.3d 170
    , 197 (2d Cir. 2013)), that supposition does not alter
    the standing analysis here. In Hedges, this Court assessed, inter alia, whether certain non-
    citizens had Article III standing to challenge a provision of the National Defense
    Authorization Act purporting to authorize the U.S. President to detain any person
    associated with certain terrorist activities. 724 F.3d at 182, 193–94. In that context, we
    stated that plaintiffs seemed to face a more “forgiving” standing inquiry before the
    Supreme Court when bringing a pre-enforcement challenge of a statute proscribing
    certain conduct, in part, because of the Court’s apparent “willing[ness] to presume that
    the government will enforce the law as long as the relevant statute is recent and not
    moribund.” Id. at 197 (internal quotation marks omitted). This presumption is of no
    moment here, however, because the Fintech Charter Decision proscribes nothing and it
    does not even apply directly to DFS. See Lujan, 
    504 U.S. at 562
     (“[W]hen the plaintiff is
    28
    Furthermore, at oral argument, DFS asserted that, in light of certain
    statements by former Comptrollers of the Currency to the effect that applications
    for SPNB charters were in process, the OCC must have been in preliminary
    discussions with—and received draft SPNB charter applications from—non-
    depository fintechs, such that any ultimate grant of such a charter would occur
    very soon after a formal application is filed. To be sure, the OCC’s Licensing
    Manual Supplement includes a “prefiling phase,” during which a fintech that
    considers applying for an SPNB charter can engage with OCC staff regarding the
    application process, discuss any potential issues concerning the business plan at
    issue, and, if necessary, submit a draft application. Joint App’x at 176–77. But
    contrary to DFS’s view, the possibility that some unidentified non-depository
    fintechs were in initial discussions with the OCC about applying for an SPNB
    charter prior to the district court’s decision in this case, or that those fintechs had
    submitted draft applications for such a charter, does not render the granting of an
    SPNB charter to a non-depository fintech, much less DFS’s asserted preemption-
    related injuries, actual or imminent; rather, it only makes those events somewhat
    not [it]self the object of the government action or inaction [it] challenges, standing is not
    precluded, but it is ordinarily substantially more difficult to establish.” (internal
    quotation marks omitted)).
    29
    more “possible.” Clapper, 
    568 U.S. at 409
     (noting that “allegations of possible future
    injury are not sufficient” to establish Article III standing (alteration and internal
    quotation marks omitted)). 16 Indeed, the Licensing Manual Supplement itself
    provides that “[f]iling a draft application does not guarantee that the OCC will
    approve a formal application,” Joint App’x at 177 n.11, and DFS ignores the fact
    that applicants are, by regulation, required to publish notice of formal SPNB
    charter applications and that the OCC must then provide a thirty-day public
    comment period, see 
    id.
     at 178 & nn.12–13.
    The district court and DFS stress that DFS, as a state-agency plaintiff, is
    owed “special solicitude” when assessing Article III standing. Massachusetts v.
    EPA, 
    549 U.S. 497
    , 520 (2007). In finding that DFS lacks standing, however, we do
    not cast doubt on this principle because it does not absolve a state or state-agency
    16 We are also unmoved by developments that have occurred since the briefs in this
    appeal were filed. In its Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(j) letter dated September
    4, 2020, DFS informed the court that Politico had reported that the then-Acting
    Comptroller of the Currency had indicated in an interview that the OCC “[would] be
    ready as soon as [September 1, 2020] to start processing applications for charters from
    payments companies.” DFS Rule 28(j) Letter at 1 (Sept. 4, 2020), ECF. No. 103. DFS
    contends that the reported statement demonstrates that it is in no way “speculative” that
    the OCC “will exercise [its challenged] chartering authority.” Id. at 2. Even if we were
    to agree that this statement constituted evidence that the OCC is now more eager to
    accept SPNB charter applications, it does not establish that non-depository fintechs are
    any more likely to now submit such applications or have such applications granted
    imminently.
    30
    plaintiff from the constitutional requirement that it establish a sufficiently
    “concrete, particularized, and . . . imminent” injury in fact. Clapper, 
    568 U.S. at 409
    (internal quotation marks omitted); see Del. Dep’t of Nat. Res. & Env’t Control v. Fed.
    Energy Regul. Comm’n, 
    558 F.3d 575
    , 579 n.6 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (“This special
    solicitude does not eliminate the state petitioner’s obligation to establish a concrete
    injury, as [Massachusetts v. EPA] amply indicates.”). Additionally, we note that the
    considerations in Massachusetts v. EPA were quite different from those presented
    in this case. In particular, there, Massachusetts had experienced an actual injury
    in fact—namely, “rising seas ha[d] already begun to swallow Massachusetts’
    coastal land,” Massachusetts v. EPA, 
    549 U.S. at 522
    , whereas here, DFS has not
    suffered any actual injury, and the future injuries it fears will only occur if, at least,
    an application for an SPNB charter is filed by a non-depository fintech and the
    OCC decides to grant that application.
    Furthermore, we find the cases upon which DFS relies for the proposition
    that “[a]gency action that expands the preemptive scope of an existing federal
    statute causes a cognizable injury to [s]tates,” DFS Br. at 31, to be factually
    inapposite to the circumstances here because the preemptive effect of the new
    federal law, regulation, or policy at issue in those cases was direct and immediate.
    31
    For instance, Wyoming ex rel. Crank v. United States involved a federal law
    prohibiting individuals convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence crimes from
    owning firearms. 
    539 F.3d 1236
    , 1239 (10th Cir. 2008). In response to this law,
    Wyoming passed its own statute establishing a process for the expungement of
    certain domestic violence crimes for the purpose of restoring firearm ownership
    rights.   
    Id.
     at 1239–40.    The state brought suit in federal court after federal
    authorities informed state officials that the new state law did not align with federal
    law and that anyone possessing a gun pursuant to the expungement law could
    still face federal prosecution. See 
    id.
     at 1240–41. With respect to Article III
    standing, the Tenth Circuit concluded that Wyoming had sufficiently alleged
    injury in fact because federal authorities expressly found that Wyoming law was
    preempted, and thereby infringed upon the state’s sovereign interest in enforcing
    its own laws. 
    Id. at 1242
    .
    The situation before us is altogether different from Wyoming ex rel. Crank.
    As noted above, no New York law or regulation has been preempted because the
    OCC has not received an SPNB charter application from, or granted an SPNB
    charter to, any non-depository fintech and, in addition, it is unclear at this juncture
    32
    whether New York law will ever be preempted in the ways DFS fears. 17 Simply
    put, the Fintech Charter Decision has not implicated the sorts of direct preemption
    concerns that animated DFS’s cited cases, and it will not do so until the OCC
    receives an SPNB charter application from or grants such a charter to a non-
    depository fintech that would otherwise be subject to DFS’s jurisdiction.
    B.     Loss of Assessment Revenue
    We are also unpersuaded that DFS faces a substantial risk of suffering its
    second alleged future injury—that it will lose revenue acquired through annual
    assessments. In its complaint, DFS alleges that it is funded through assessments
    levied upon institutions it regulates pursuant to 
    N.Y. Fin. Serv. Law § 206
    (a). DFS
    further asserts that, in light of this assessment regime, the Fintech Charter Decision
    will cause it injury in “a directly quantifiable way” because “[e]very non-
    depository financial firm that receives an [SPNB] charter in place of a New York
    17 The remaining preemption-based standing cases that DFS cites are unavailing for this
    same reason. See Alaska v. U.S. Dep't of Transp., 
    868 F.2d 441
    , 442–43 (D.C. Cir. 1989)
    (concluding that states had suffered sufficient injury in fact to confer Article III standing
    because federal officials expressly took the position that federal regulations preempted
    state consumer protection laws concerning “airline price advertising,” which encroached
    upon the states’ sovereign interest in enforcing their own laws); Ohio ex rel. Celebrezze v.
    U.S. Dep’t of Transp., 
    766 F.2d 228
    , 229–30, 232–33 (6th Cir. 1985) (finding same where a
    federal “statement of policy” expressly provided that federal regulations preempted state
    laws requiring prenotification of the transportation of certain radioactive materials
    within state lines).
    33
    license to operate in the state deprives DFS of crucial resources that are necessary
    to fund the agency’s regulatory function.” Joint App’x at 27–28.
    As with its asserted preemption-related injuries, DFS has not alleged that it
    lost any assessments as a result of the Fintech Charter Decision, nor has it shown
    that such a financial loss is sufficiently imminent. At least until a non-depository
    fintech that DFS currently regulates—or would otherwise regulate—decides to
    apply for an SPNB charter, this alleged assessment loss will remain purely
    “conjectural or hypothetical,” rather than “imminent” as the Constitution requires.
    Lujan, 
    504 U.S. at 560
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    In addition, the cases DFS relies upon to support its loss-of-revenue
    argument are distinguishable either because the new law or agency decision at
    issue had already led to pecuniary injury at the time of the lawsuit, or because
    such injury was inevitable. 18 For example, in Wyoming v. Oklahoma, Wyoming
    brought suit against Oklahoma under the Commerce Clause of the U.S.
    Constitution, challenging an Oklahoma law requiring utility companies to
    purchase a certain amount of coal from in-state sources rather than sources in
    18For purposes of this discussion, we assume, without deciding, that the cited decisions
    of other courts of appeals, which are not binding on this Court in any event, were
    correctly decided.
    34
    Wyoming. See 
    502 U.S. 437
    , 440–41, 443 (1992). The Supreme Court concluded
    that Wyoming had been sufficiently injured for purposes of Article III standing
    because the Oklahoma law had already led to decreased coal sales, which, in turn,
    had decreased Wyoming’s tax revenues. 
    Id.
     at 447–48; see also Air Alliance Hous. v.
    EPA, 
    906 F.3d 1049
    , 1056–57, 1059–60 (D.C. Cir. 2018) (per curiam) (finding that
    states had standing to challenge regulations delaying a final Environment
    Protection Agency rule concerning chemical disasters in light of prior, as well as
    anticipated, expenditures the states had made to prevent such disasters while the
    final rule was delayed).
    Additionally, in Texas v. United States, multiple states brought a challenge
    under the APA against a decision by the Department of Homeland Security to
    defer enforcement of the immigration laws against the parents of U.S. citizens and
    Lawful Permanent Residents. 
    787 F.3d 733
    , 743–44 (5th Cir. 2015), affirmed by an
    equally divided court, 
    136 S. Ct. 2271
     (2016) (per curiam). The Fifth Circuit agreed
    with the district court that Texas had sufficiently demonstrated that it had Article
    III standing because the program, which would have gone into effect but for the
    preliminary injunction entered by the district court, see 
    id.
     at 745–46, would require
    the state to incur the cost of issuing driver’s licenses to program beneficiaries, 
    id.
    35
    at 748; see also 
    id. at 749
     (“Texas’s forced choice between incurring costs and
    changing its laws is an injury because those laws exist for the administration of a
    state program, not to challenge federal law, and Texas did not enact them merely
    to create standing.”); New York v. U.S. Dep’t of Homeland Sec., 
    969 F.3d 42
    , 50, 59–60
    (2d Cir. 2020) (finding that states had established standing to challenge an agency
    rule “setting out a new . . . interpretation of a . . . provision of [U.S.] immigration
    law that renders inadmissible to the United States any non-citizen who is likely to
    become a ‘public charge’” where the states alleged “they [were] injured because
    the [r]ule [would] cause many of their residents to forgo use of public benefits
    programs, thereby decreasing federal transfer payments to the states, reducing
    Medicaid revenue, increasing overall healthcare costs, and causing general
    economic harm” and the agency itself had anticipated a decrease in public benefits
    enrollment).
    Plainly, the instant case presents an entirely different situation. It is clear
    that, contrary to its cited cases, see Wyoming v. Oklahoma, 
    502 U.S. at
    447–48 (finding
    that the state-plaintiff had already suffered a financial loss); Air Alliance Hous., 906
    F.3d at 1059–60 (same), DFS has yet to lose out on any revenue acquired through
    its assessments as a result of the Fintech Charter Decision because the OCC has
    36
    not received, let alone approved, an application for an SPNB charter from a non-
    depository fintech within DFS’s jurisdiction. Moreover, unlike Texas v. United
    States, where the challenged immigration program would have certainly gone into
    effect absent the states-plaintiffs’ APA challenge and thereby forced Texas to incur
    the costs of issuing driver’s licenses, 787 F.3d at 745–46, the OCC may never grant
    an SPNB charter to a non-depository fintech currently subject to DFS assessments
    and, in fact, has yet to even receive a formal application.
    In short, DFS asks this Court to determine—in the absence of an actual or
    imminent harm, or a sufficiently “substantial risk” of harm—whether the NBA
    unambiguously requires that fintechs accept deposits in order to be eligible for an
    SPNB charter. The standing requirement under Article III of the U.S. Constitution
    forecloses consideration of such a request at this time. Accordingly, because DFS
    failed to adequately allege that it has Article III standing to bring its APA claims
    against the OCC, those claims must be dismissed without prejudice.
    III.   Constitutional & Prudential Ripeness
    The OCC also separately asserts that DFS’s APA claims are neither
    constitutionally nor prudentially ripe for judicial review because the OCC has
    merely announced that it would begin accepting applications for SPNB charters
    37
    from non-depository fintechs, and has not received, or granted, such an
    application.     We hold, in the alternative, that constitutional ripeness
    considerations require dismissal of this case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
    Because we hold that constitutional considerations mandate dismissal, we need
    not reach the OCC’s argument that DFS’s claims are prudentially unripe.
    In the administrative context, the ripeness doctrine “prevent[s] the courts,
    through avoidance of premature adjudication, from entangling themselves in
    abstract disagreements over administrative policies, and also . . . protect[s] the
    agencies from judicial interference until an administrative decision has been
    formalized and its effects felt in a concrete way by the challenging parties.” Nat’l
    Park Hosp. Ass’n v. Dep’t of Interior, 
    538 U.S. 803
    , 807–08 (2003) (quoting Abbott
    Laboratories v. Gardner, 
    387 U.S. 136
    , 148–49 (1967), abrogated on other grounds by
    Califano v. Sanders, 
    430 U.S. 99
     (1977)). “‘Ripeness’ is a term that has been used to
    describe two overlapping threshold criteria for the exercise of a federal court’s
    jurisdiction.” Simmonds v. INS, 
    326 F.3d 351
    , 356–57 (2d Cir. 2003). In particular,
    this doctrine is “drawn both from Article III limitations on judicial power and from
    prudential reasons for refusing to exercise jurisdiction.” Nat’l Park Hosp. Ass’n, 
    538 U.S. at 808
     (quoting Reno v. Cath. Soc. Servs., Inc., 
    509 U.S. 43
    , 57 n.18 (1993)). Thus,
    38
    we refer to the former aspect of the doctrine as “constitutional ripeness” and the
    latter aspect as “prudential ripeness.” See, e.g., In re Methyl Tertiary Butyl Ether
    (MTBE) Prods. Liab. Litig., 
    725 F.3d 65
    , 109–10 (2d Cir. 2013); Simmonds, 
    326 F.3d at 357
     (“These two forms of ripeness are not coextensive in purpose.”).
    “Constitutional ripeness is a doctrine that, like standing, is a limitation on
    the power of the judiciary” in that it “prevents courts from declaring the meaning
    of the law in a vacuum and from constructing generalized legal rules unless the
    resolution of an actual dispute requires it.” Simmonds, 
    326 F.3d at 357
    ; accord In re
    MTBE Prods. Liab. Litig., 725 F.3d at 110 (“The doctrine of constitutional ripeness
    prevents a federal court from entangling itself in abstract disagreements over
    matters that are premature for review because the injury is merely speculative and
    may never occur.” (internal quotation marks omitted)); MPM Silicones, LLC v.
    Union Carbide Corp., 
    966 F.3d 200
    , 232 (2d Cir. 2020). Crucially, the doctrine of
    constitutional ripeness “overlaps with the standing doctrine, ‘most notably in the
    shared requirement that the plaintiff’s injury be imminent rather than conjectural
    or hypothetical.’” In re MTBE Prods. Liab. Litig., 725 F.3d at 110 (quoting Ross v.
    Bank of Am., N.A., 
    524 F.3d 217
    , 226 (2d Cir. 2008)); accord Nat’l Org. for Marriage,
    Inc. v. Walsh, 
    714 F.3d 682
    , 688 (2d Cir. 2013) (“Often, the best way to think of
    39
    constitutional ripeness is as a specific application of the actual injury aspect of
    Article III standing.”); see also MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc., 
    549 U.S. 118
    , 128
    n.8 (2007) (explaining that “standing and ripeness boil down to the same question”
    in cases where “the party seeking declaratory relief is himself preventing the
    complained-of injury from occurring”); Brooklyn Legal Servs. Corp. v. Legal Servs.
    Corp., 
    462 F.3d 219
    , 225 (2d Cir. 2006) (“Because [defendant’s] ripeness arguments
    concern only [the] shared requirement” that “the [alleged] injury be imminent
    rather than conjectural or hypothetical, . . . it follows that our analysis of
    [defendant’s] standing challenge applies equally and interchangeably to its
    ripeness challenge.”), abrogated on other grounds by Bond v. United States, 
    564 U.S. 211
     (2011). 19
    Accordingly, for substantially the same reasons set forth above with respect
    to Article III standing, we hold that DFS’s APA claims are not constitutionally ripe.
    19To be sure, the doctrines of standing and ripeness serve separate and distinct purposes.
    See Bronx Household of Faith v. Bd. of Educ. of the City of N.Y., 
    492 F.3d 89
    , 111 (2d Cir. 2007)
    (Leval, J., concurring) (“Standing, in its fundamental aspect, focuses on the party seeking
    to get his complaint before a federal court and whether that party suffers a sufficiently
    direct and concrete injury to be heard in complaint. By contrast, the fundamental concern
    of ripeness is whether at the time of the litigation the issues in the case are fit for judicial
    decision.” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)). We simply reemphasize that,
    where, as here, the justiciability inquiry focuses on whether an alleged injury is
    “imminent rather than conjectural or hypothetical,” the two doctrines “overlap[].” In re
    MTBE Prods. Liab. Litig., 725 F.3d at 110.
    40
    In particular, we reiterate that, even if non-depository fintechs have engaged in
    preliminary discussions with the OCC regarding (or submitted draft applications
    for) SPNB charters, DFS is still asking us to “entangl[e] [ourselves] in abstract
    disagreements over matters that are premature for review because the injury is
    merely speculative and may never occur.” In re MTBE Prods. Liab. Litig., 725 F.3d
    at 110 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    IV.   Merits
    Having determined that DFS lacks Article III standing, and that its claims
    are not constitutionally ripe, we lack jurisdiction to decide the remaining issues on
    appeal. Specifically, we do not address the district court’s holding, on the merits,
    that the “business of banking” under the NBA unambiguously requires the receipt
    of deposits, nor whether that holding warrants setting aside Section 5.20(e)(1)(i)
    nationwide with respect to non-depository fintechs applying for SPNB charters.
    In reversing the amended judgment, we express no view on the district court’s
    determinations regarding these issues.
    41
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons set forth above, we REVERSE the amended judgment and
    REMAND to the district court with instructions to enter a judgment of dismissal
    without prejudice.
    42
    19-4271
    Lacewell v. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
    Appendix A
    Filings by Amici Curiae 1
    BRIEF OF PROFESSOR DAVID ZARING AS AMICUS CURIAE IN SUPPORT OF APPELLANTS
    (Jeffrey S. Bucholtz, J.C. Boggs, Amy R. Upshaw (King & Spalding LLP,
    Washington, DC), David Zaring (University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA)).
    BRIEF OF THIRTY-THREE BANKING LAW SCHOLARS AS AMICI CURIAE IN SUPPORT OF
    APPELLEE (Daniel R. Walfish (Walfish & Fissell PLLC, New York, NY)).
    BRIEF OF AMICUS CURIAE CONFERENCE OF STATE BANK SUPERVISORS IN SUPPORT OF
    APPELLEE AND AFFIRMANCE (Michael Townsley (Conference of State Bank
    Supervisors, Washington, DC), Jennifer Ancona Semko, Graham R. Cronogue
    (Baker McKenzie, Washington, DC)).
    BRIEF OF NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF CONSUMER CREDIT ADMINISTRATORS AND
    AMERICAN CONFERENCE OF UNIFORM CONSUMER CREDIT CODE STATES AS AMICI
    CURIAE IN SUPPORT OF APPELLEE (Zachary D.A. Hingst (Iowa Division of Banking,
    Des Moines, IA)).
    AMICUS CURIAE BRIEF OF THE CENTER FOR RESPONSIBLE LENDING, NATIONAL
    CONSUMER LAW CENTER AND NATIONAL COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT COALITION IN
    SUPPORT OF APPELLEE (Stuart Rossman (National Consumer Law Center, Boston,
    MA), Bradley H. Blower (National Community Reinvestment Coalition,
    Washington, DC), Lauren Saunders (National Consumer Law Center,
    Washington, DC), William R. Corbett, Yvette Garcia Missri (Center for
    Responsible Lending, Durham, NC)).
    BRIEF FOR INDEPENDENT COMMUNITY BANKERS OF AMERICA AS AMICUS CURIAE IN
    SUPPORT OF APPELLEE (Keith Bradley, Darin Smith (Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP,
    Denver, CO)).
    1   None of the Amici Curiae listed herein participated in oral argument.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19-4271

Filed Date: 6/3/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/3/2021

Authorities (30)

Wyoming Ex Rel. Crank v. United States , 539 F.3d 1236 ( 2008 )

Ross v. Bank of America, N.A. (USA) , 524 F.3d 217 ( 2008 )

state-of-connecticut-v-united-states-department-of-commerce-william-m , 204 F.3d 413 ( 2000 )

brooklyn-legal-services-corp-b-and-legal-services-for-new-york-city-on , 462 F.3d 219 ( 2006 )

Bronx Household of Faith v. BOARD OF EDUC., NY , 492 F.3d 89 ( 2007 )

Anthony Simmonds, A/K/A Anthony Simmons v. Immigration and ... , 326 F.3d 351 ( 2003 )

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State of Alaska v. U.S. Department of Transportation and ... , 868 F.2d 441 ( 1989 )

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robert-murphy-and-mary-murphy-v-new-milford-zoning-commission-george , 402 F.3d 342 ( 2005 )

Connecticut v. Duncan , 612 F.3d 107 ( 2010 )

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wachovia-bank-na-and-wachovia-mortgage-corporation-v-john-p-burke-in , 414 F.3d 305 ( 2005 )

Warth v. Seldin , 95 S. Ct. 2197 ( 1975 )

Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner , 87 S. Ct. 1507 ( 1967 )

Alfred L. Snapp & Son, Inc. v. Puerto Rico Ex Rel. Barez , 102 S. Ct. 3260 ( 1982 )

Califano v. Sanders , 97 S. Ct. 980 ( 1977 )

Wyoming v. Oklahoma , 112 S. Ct. 789 ( 1992 )

Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife , 112 S. Ct. 2130 ( 1992 )

Watters v. Wachovia Bank, N. A. , 127 S. Ct. 1559 ( 2007 )

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