MetLife, Inc. v. Financial Stability Oversight Council , 865 F.3d 661 ( 2017 )


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  • United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Argued January 18, 2017                Decided August 1, 2017
    No. 16-5188
    METLIFE, INC.,
    APPELLEE
    v.
    FINANCIAL STABILITY OVERSIGHT COUNCIL,
    APPELLEE
    BETTER MARKETS, INC.,
    APPELLANT
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Columbia
    (No. 1:15-cv-00045)
    Stephen W. Hall argued the cause for appellant Better
    Markets, Inc. With him on the briefs were Dennis M. Kelleher
    and Austin W. King.
    Anne L. Weismann was on the brief for amici curiae
    Campaign for Accountability, et al. in support of intervenor-
    appellant.
    Amir C. Tayrani argued the cause for appellee MetLife, Inc.
    With him on the brief was Eugene Scalia. Ashley S. Boizelle
    and Indraneel Sur entered appearances.
    2
    Nicolas Riley, Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, argued
    the cause for federal appellee. With him on the brief were
    Benjamin C. Mizer, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney
    General, and Mark B. Stern and Daniel Tenny, Attorneys.
    Before: GARLAND, Chief Judge, and KAVANAUGH and
    SRINIVASAN, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion for the Court filed by Chief Judge GARLAND.
    GARLAND, Chief Judge: The underlying question in this
    case is whether the Dodd-Frank Act abrogates the common-law
    right of public access to judicial records. The appellees
    maintain that it does. In their view, the Act categorically
    requires courts to seal parts of briefs and appendices containing
    information that a nonbank financial company has submitted to
    the Financial Stability Oversight Council for its use in deciding
    whether to designate the company for enhanced supervision by
    the Federal Reserve.
    We disagree. The right of public access is a fundamental
    element of the rule of law, important to maintaining the integrity
    and legitimacy of an independent Judicial Branch. Although the
    right is not absolute, there is a strong presumption in its favor,
    which courts must weigh against any competing interests. There
    is nothing in the language of Dodd-Frank to suggest that
    Congress intended to displace the long-standing balancing test
    that courts apply when ruling on motions to seal or unseal
    judicial records. Accordingly, because the district court did not
    apply that test to the motion to unseal the records at issue here,
    but instead ruled that they were categorically exempt from
    disclosure, we vacate its judgment and remand the case for
    further proceedings.
    3
    I
    Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
    Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L. No. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376
    (2010), to mitigate the risks that certain financial institutions
    could pose to the stability of the national financial system. S.
    Rep. No. 111-176, at 2 (2010). The Act tasks the Financial
    Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) with carrying out that
    objective. Among other powers, FSOC may designate a
    “nonbank financial company” for enhanced supervision by the
    Federal Reserve System’s Board of Governors if the Council
    determines that “material financial distress” at the company
    “could pose a threat to the financial stability of the United
    States.” 12 U.S.C. § 5323(a)(1). To assist it in making
    designation decisions, FSOC may require nonbank financial
    companies to submit financial data and information to the
    Council. 
    Id. § 5322(d)(3)(A).
    FSOC must “maintain the
    confidentiality of any data, information, and reports” that a
    company submits. 
    Id. § 5322(d)(5)(A).
    In July 2013, FSOC notified MetLife, Inc. that it was
    considering the company for designation. Over the course of the
    next year, MetLife voluntarily submitted over 21,000 pages of
    documents to FSOC to help it reach a determination. In
    December 2014, FSOC determined that “material financial
    distress” at MetLife “could pose a threat to the financial stability
    of the United States,” 
    id. § 5323(a)(1),
    and therefore designated
    MetLife for supervision.
    Pursuant to 12 U.S.C. § 5323(h), MetLife challenged
    FSOC’s designation determination in district court. That section
    authorizes a nonbank financial company to seek judicial review
    of a final determination by the Council. The court’s review is
    “limited to whether the final determination . . . was arbitrary and
    capricious.” 
    Id. 4 During
    the ensuing summary-judgment briefing, MetLife
    and FSOC worked together to prepare redacted and unredacted
    versions of their briefs and 16-volume joint appendix. Some
    redactions were of portions of FSOC’s final determination
    designating MetLife; others were of data and information that
    MetLife had voluntarily submitted to FSOC. Both parties
    sought leave to file their unredacted briefs and unredacted joint
    appendix under seal. The district court granted their requests.
    Thereafter, the parties filed the unredacted documents under seal
    and made the redacted versions publicly available. Before the
    district court issued its ruling on the merits, MetLife filed new
    versions of its briefs and the joint appendix with fewer
    redactions.
    MetLife redacted a total of approximately 22 lines from the
    final, public versions of its opening and reply briefs. See J.A.
    73-80; MetLife Br. 9, 23. FSOC redacted approximately the
    same number of lines from the public versions of its briefs. See
    J.A. 59-72. Those public briefs contained 90 citations to sealed
    portions of the joint appendix. Better Markets Br. 5. All
    together, over 1,900 pages of the joint appendix -- more than
    two-thirds of the total -- were redacted from the public version.
    
    Id. at 4.
    Better Markets, Inc. is a “nonpartisan, nonprofit, public-
    interest organization” focused on the United States financial
    system. Better Markets Br. at iii. Pursuant to Federal Rule of
    Civil Procedure 24(b), the organization moved to intervene in
    the district court litigation and to unseal the briefs and joint
    appendix. Before ruling on those motions, the court granted
    MetLife’s summary-judgment motion and rescinded FSOC’s
    designation of MetLife on the ground that it was arbitrary and
    capricious. See MetLife, Inc. v. Fin. Stability Oversight Council,
    5
    
    177 F. Supp. 3d 219
    , 242 (D.D.C. 2016).1 The court initially
    entered its opinion under seal and allowed the parties to suggest
    redactions. After neither party requested any, the court unsealed
    the opinion in its entirety.
    The district court next ruled on Better Markets’ motions.
    Although the court permitted Better Markets to intervene, it
    denied the motion to unseal. See MetLife, Inc. v. Fin. Stability
    Oversight Council, 
    2016 WL 3024015
    , No. 15-0045 (D.D.C.
    May 25, 2016). The court concluded that Dodd-Frank’s
    confidentiality provision, 12 U.S.C. § 5322(d)(5)(A), required
    that the relevant portions of the briefs and joint appendix remain
    sealed because they included data, information, and reports
    MetLife submitted to FSOC. MetLife, 
    2016 WL 3024015
    , at *6.
    Dodd-Frank, the court said, “supersedes the multi-factor inquiry
    prescribed by the D.C. Circuit” for ruling on motions to seal or
    unseal judicial records. 
    Id. at *5
    (referencing United States v.
    Hubbard, 
    650 F.2d 293
    (D.C. Cir. 1980)). The court further
    suggested that the briefs and appendix may not qualify as
    “judicial records” in any event. See 
    id. at *6-7.
    Better Markets now appeals the denial of its motion to
    unseal.2
    1
    FSOC appealed, and that matter is pending before another panel
    of this court. MetLife, Inc. v. Fin. Stability Oversight Council, No. 16-
    5086 (D.C. Cir. filed Apr. 20, 2016).
    2
    Better Markets also asks us to review the standard the district
    court applied in granting its motion to intervene. Because the district
    court granted that motion, we decline to take up Better Markets’
    challenge to the court’s reasoning. See Camreta v. Greene, 
    563 U.S. 692
    , 702 (2011) (noting that a court will usually decline “review of a
    prevailing party’s challenge even when he has the requisite stake” in
    the appeal).
    6
    II
    Almost 40 years ago, the Supreme Court said it was “clear
    that the courts of this country recognize a general right to
    inspect and copy public records and documents, including
    judicial records and documents.” Nixon v. Warner Commc’ns,
    Inc., 
    435 U.S. 589
    , 597 (1978) (internal citation omitted). Two
    years later, in United States v. Hubbard, our court likewise
    “recogniz[ed] this country’s common law tradition of public
    access to records of a judicial proceeding,” noting that “[a]ccess
    to records serves the important functions of ensuring the
    integrity of judicial proceedings in particular and of the law
    enforcement process more 
    generally.” 650 F.2d at 314-15
    .
    “This common law right,” we explained, “is fundamental to a
    democratic state”:
    As James Madison warned, “A popular Government
    without popular information, or the means of acquiring
    it, is but a Prologue to a Farce or a Tragedy: or
    perhaps both. . . . A people who mean to be their own
    Governors, must arm themselves with the power which
    knowledge gives.” Like the First Amendment, then,
    the right of inspection serves to produce “an informed
    and enlightened public opinion.” Like the public trial
    guarantee of the Sixth Amendment, the right serves to
    “safeguard against any attempt to employ our courts as
    instruments of persecution,” to promote the search for
    truth, and to assure “confidence in . . . judicial
    remedies.”
    7
    
    Id. at 315
    n.79 (quoting United States v. Mitchell, 
    551 F.2d 1252
    , 1258 (D.C. Cir. 1976), rev’d on other grounds sub nom.
    Nixon, 
    435 U.S. 589
    ).3
    In light of these considerations, there is a “strong
    presumption in favor of public access to judicial proceedings.”
    
    Hubbard, 650 F.2d at 317
    ; see Hardaway v. D.C. Housing Auth.,
    
    843 F.3d 973
    , 980 (D.C. Cir. 2016). That presumption may be
    outweighed in certain cases by competing interests. In
    Hubbard, we crafted a six-factor test to balance the interests
    presented by a given case. 
    See 650 F.2d at 317-22
    . Specifically,
    when a court is presented with a motion to seal or unseal, it
    should weigh: “(1) the need for public access to the documents
    at issue; (2) the extent of previous public access to the
    documents; (3) the fact that someone has objected to disclosure,
    and the identity of that person; (4) the strength of any property
    and privacy interests asserted; (5) the possibility of prejudice to
    those opposing disclosure; and (6) the purposes for which the
    documents were introduced during the judicial proceedings.”
    EEOC v. Nat’l Children’s Ctr., Inc., 
    98 F.3d 1406
    , 1409 (D.C.
    Cir. 1996) (citing 
    Hubbard, 650 F.2d at 317
    -22). A seal may be
    maintained only “if the district court, after considering the
    relevant facts and circumstances of the particular case, and after
    weighing the interests advanced by the parties in light of the
    public interest and the duty of the courts, concludes that justice
    so requires.” In re Nat’l Broad. Co., 
    653 F.2d 609
    , 613 (D.C.
    Cir. 1981) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    3
    See also 
    Nixon, 435 U.S. at 598
    (noting that the right of access
    promotes “the citizen’s desire to keep a watchful eye on the workings
    of public agencies”); Cowley v. Pulsifer, 
    137 Mass. 392
    , 394 (1884)
    (Holmes, J.) (“[I]t is of the highest moment that those who administer
    justice should always act under the sense of public responsibility, and
    that every citizen should be able to satisfy himself with his own eyes
    as to the mode in which a public duty is performed.”).
    8
    In subsequent cases involving motions to seal or unseal
    judicial records, the Hubbard test has consistently served as our
    lodestar because it ensures that we fully account for the various
    public and private interests at stake. See, e.g., 
    Hardaway, 843 F.3d at 980
    ; Primas v. District of Columbia, 
    719 F.3d 693
    , 698-
    99 (D.C. Cir. 2013); Nat’l Children’s 
    Ctr., 98 F.3d at 1409-11
    ;
    Johnson v. Greater Se. Cmty. Hosp. Corp., 
    951 F.2d 1268
    , 1277
    & n.14 (D.C. Cir. 1991).
    Relying on the common-law right of public access to
    judicial records, Better Markets contends that the district court
    improperly sealed parts of the summary-judgment briefs and
    joint appendix because it did so without applying the Hubbard
    test.4   MetLife and FSOC respond with two principal
    contentions: (1) those documents do not qualify as judicial
    records subject to the common-law right; and (2) even if they
    do, the Dodd-Frank Act supersedes that right. We address these
    contentions in the following two Parts of this opinion. Both are
    subject to de novo review. See Ctr. for Nat’l Sec. Studies v.
    DOJ, 
    331 F.3d 918
    , 920, 936-37 (D.C. Cir. 2003); United States
    v. El-Sayegh, 
    131 F.3d 158
    , 160 (D.C. Cir. 1997).
    4
    Amici curiae supporting Better Markets ask us to hold that the
    public has not only a common-law right, but also a First Amendment
    right of access to the records in this case. Better Markets adopts this
    argument in its reply brief. The question, however, is not properly
    before us. Better Markets disavowed any First Amendment claim
    before the district court, see Better Markets Mot. to Intervene at 21
    n.10, and the claim is therefore waived, see Potter v. District of
    Columbia, 
    558 F.3d 542
    , 547 (D.C. Cir. 2009). Nor may amici
    expand an appeal’s scope to sweep in issues that a party has waived.
    See Eldred v. Reno, 
    239 F.3d 372
    , 378 (D.C. Cir. 2001).
    9
    III
    We begin with common ground. “[N]ot all documents filed
    with courts are judicial records.” SEC v. Am. Int’l Grp., 
    712 F.3d 1
    , 3 (D.C. Cir. 2013). Rather, “whether something is a judicial
    record depends on ‘the role it plays in the adjudicatory
    process.’” 
    Id. (quoting El-Sayegh,
    131 F.3d at 163).
    On appeal, FSOC does not dispute that the documents at
    issue here, whether sealed (redacted) or not, qualify as judicial
    records.5 MetLife, however, does. In its view, the sealed parts
    of those documents did not play a sufficient role in the
    adjudicatory process to qualify as judicial records because the
    district court’s opinion granting summary judgment, which is
    publicly available in its entirety, did not quote or cite any of
    those sealed (redacted) parts.
    On this we disagree. At the outset, we note that MetLife’s
    claim is inconsistent with the seminal Hubbard case itself.
    Hubbard involved the sealing of documents that had been seized
    pursuant to a search warrant and that were the subject of a
    motion to 
    suppress. 650 F.2d at 300-02
    & n.22. We treated
    those documents as judicial records, subject to the balancing test
    described above, notwithstanding that their “contents were not
    specifically referred to or examined upon during the course of
    those proceedings and [their] only relevance to the proceedings
    derived from the defendants’ contention that many of them were
    not relevant to the proceedings, i.e., that the seizure exceeded
    the scope of the warrant.” 
    Id. at 316;
    see 
    id. at 300
    (noting that
    “only a small number of the documents were referred to
    individually by nature or content by either witnesses in the
    5
    FSOC took a different position in the district court. See FSOC
    Response to Motion to Intervene at 6-7.
    10
    suppression hearing or by the trial judge in his ultimate decision
    on the motion”).
    A brief (or part of a brief) can affect a court’s
    decisionmaking process even if the court’s opinion never quotes
    or cites it. To affect the court’s decision, after all, is the reason
    parties file briefs. “The premise of our adversarial system is that
    appellate courts do not sit as self-directed boards of legal inquiry
    and research, but essentially as arbiters of legal questions
    presented and argued by the parties before them.” Carducci v.
    Regan, 
    714 F.2d 171
    , 177 (D.C. Cir. 1983). There is no doubt,
    then, that parties’ briefs play a central role in the adjudicatory
    process.
    So, too, the joint appendix. Just as our adversarial system
    relies on the arguments presented in the parties’ briefs, our
    system of judicial review of agency action requires the court to
    consider the record upon which an agency made its decision.
    FSOC uses the information it collects from a nonbank financial
    company to determine whether the company should be
    designated for supervision because “material financial distress
    at the . . . company . . . could pose a threat to the financial
    stability of the United States.” 12 U.S.C. § 5323(a)(1). When,
    pursuant to 12 U.S.C. § 5323(h), a court reviews a designation
    determination to decide whether it was “arbitrary and
    capricious,” the court must examine the administrative record
    upon which the Council based its decision. See Camp v. Pitts,
    
    411 U.S. 138
    , 142 (1973) (“In applying [the arbitrary and
    capricious] standard, the focal point for judicial review should
    be the administrative record already in existence . . . .”).6
    6
    See SEC v. Chenery Corp., 
    318 U.S. 80
    , 87 (1943) (“The
    grounds upon which an administrative order must be judged are those
    upon which the record discloses that its action was based.”); John
    Doe, Inc. v. DEA, 
    484 F.3d 561
    , 570 (D.C. Cir. 2007) (“We review the
    11
    Indeed, “[n]ormally, an agency rule would be arbitrary and
    capricious if the agency has [inter alia] . . . offered an
    explanation for its decision that runs counter to the evidence
    before the agency.” Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n of U.S., Inc. v.
    State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    463 U.S. 29
    , 43 (1983).
    Under the district court’s local rules, the joint appendix is
    the place the court will look to find the administrative record.
    In “cases involving the judicial review of administrative agency
    actions,” those rules require counsel to “provide the Court with
    an appendix containing copies of those portions of the
    administrative record that are cited or otherwise relied upon in
    any memorandum in support of or in opposition to any
    dispositive motion.” U.S. Dist. Ct. for D.C. Local R. 7(n)(1).
    Thus, by definition, the joint appendix contains information with
    which the parties hope to influence the court, and upon which
    the court must base its decision. See Wash. Legal Found. v. U.S.
    Sentencing Comm’n, 
    89 F.3d 897
    , 906 (D.C. Cir. 1996) (“[T]he
    meaning and legal import of a judicial decision is a function of
    the record upon which it was rendered.”).
    MetLife notes that, in SEC v. American International
    Group, this court found that an independent consultant’s reports
    were “not judicial records subject to the right of access because
    the district court made no decisions about them or that otherwise
    relied on 
    them.” 712 F.3d at 3-4
    . It maintains that the same is
    true here. It is not. Although the reports at issue in American
    International Group were prepared pursuant to the court’s
    consent decree, they were never filed with it. 
    Id. at 4.
    Because
    those reports never became part of the district court’s docket and
    [agency’s] rationale for denying [the] permit under the APA’s familiar
    arbitrary and capricious standard. In conducting our judicial review,
    we focus on the administrative record that formed the basis for the
    agency’s decision . . . .” (internal citation omitted)).
    12
    were produced after the court’s decision, the decision was not
    “about them” and the court could not have “relied on them” in
    adjudicating the case. Id.; see 
    id. (noting that
    “the independent
    consultant had no relationship with the court”).
    Here, by contrast, the briefs and appendix were filed before
    the district court’s decision and were intended to influence it.
    We have no doubt that the court read the briefs, including the
    parts it did not cite or quote. And it was required by Supreme
    Court precedent to examine the appendix, including the sealed
    portions, because the appendix contained the administrative
    record upon which the court’s review had to be based. See
    supra note 6. The fact that the court did not cite or quote
    portions of those documents does not mean that it did not “rely”
    on them -- if only to determine that they did not dissuade it from
    its bottom-line conclusion. And the court certainly made
    “decisions about them”: it decided that MetLife’s briefs
    persuaded it while FSOC’s did not; and it decided that FSOC’s
    designation determination was arbitrary and capricious in light
    of the administrative record contained in the joint appendix.7
    In suggesting that the sealed materials are not judicial
    records, the district court emphasized that its opinion -- “‘the
    quintessential business of the public’s institution[],’ . . . -- is
    7
    In United States v. El-Sayegh, we held that a plea agreement
    submitted to the court only to allow it to rule on the government’s
    motion to seal that agreement was not a judicial 
    record. 131 F.3d at 163
    . Reasoning that the concept of judicial records “assumes a
    judicial decision,” the court concluded that the unconsummated plea
    agreement could not be a judicial record because “[t]he only judicial
    act related to [that] document [was] the district court’s determination
    to release it.” 
    Id. at 162.
    Here, of course, the pertinent judicial act
    related to the briefs and appendix was not the decision whether to
    release them, but rather the decision to vacate FSOC’s designation
    determination.
    13
    entirely unsealed.” MetLife, 
    2016 WL 3024015
    , at *6 (quoting
    Nat’l Children’s 
    Ctr., 98 F.3d at 1409
    ). The issuance of a
    completely public opinion contributes significantly to the
    transparency of the court’s decisionmaking process. But the fact
    that one judicial record is public does not determine whether
    other documents qualify as judicial records as well. Without
    access to the sealed materials, it is impossible to know which
    parts of those materials persuaded the court and which failed to
    do so (and why). For that reason, we have no doubt that an
    appellate court reviewing the district court’s decision to vacate
    FSOC’s determination would want to examine all of the
    materials -- sealed and unsealed -- to determine whether the
    court correctly concluded that the agency’s decision was
    arbitrary and capricious.8 And that is more than enough to make
    them judicial records.
    Finally, it is important to understand the implications of
    adopting MetLife’s contrary view. Carried to its logical
    conclusion, that view would permit the redaction of every page
    of a brief or joint appendix that a court opinion did not cite or
    quote -- without any analysis under Hubbard -- because such
    pages would not qualify as judicial records. Needless to say,
    this would greatly diminish the common-law right of access.
    The reader of the current opinion has likely noticed that no
    part of it is redacted, and that we have not cited or quoted every
    8
    We note that, at the oral argument of the appeal from the district
    court’s decision regarding FSOC’s designation of MetLife, there was
    in fact a discussion of a study contained in a sealed portion of the joint
    appendix. See Oral Arg. Tr. at 29, MetLife, Inc. v. Fin. Stability
    Oversight Council, No. 16-5086 (addendum to Better Markets Reply
    Br.).
    14
    page of the parties’ appellate briefs or joint appendix. We
    assure the reader, however, that we have read those documents
    (including the parts not cited), that we have “relied” on them in
    reaching our decision (sometimes being persuaded, sometimes
    not), and that our decision is “about them” taken as a whole.
    We have no doubt that those documents, too, are judicial
    records.
    IV
    MetLife and FSOC contend that, even if the sealed
    materials qualify as judicial records subject to the common-law
    right of access, the Dodd-Frank Act supersedes that right. The
    district court agreed, holding that Dodd-Frank renders Hubbard
    inapplicable. Although it is true that the Hubbard inquiry must
    yield to a statute “when Congress has spoken directly to the
    issue at hand,” Ctr. for Nat’l Sec. 
    Studies, 331 F.3d at 937
    , the
    Dodd-Frank Act is not such a statute.
    A
    The Dodd-Frank provision upon which the district court
    relied is 12 U.S.C. § 5322(d)(5). Subsection (A) states: “[t]he
    Council, the Office of Financial Research, and the other member
    agencies shall maintain the confidentiality of any data,
    information, and reports submitted under this subchapter.” 12
    U.S.C. § 5322(d)(5)(A). MetLife argues that this language
    “categorically protects” the sealed portions of the briefs and
    joint appendix from public disclosure without the need for a
    Hubbard analysis. MetLife Br. 16. But even assuming that all
    of the sealed materials constitute confidential “data, information,
    and reports” that were submitted to FSOC -- a fact that Better
    Markets disputes -- subsection (A) requires only that “[t]he
    Council, the Office of Financial Research, and the other member
    15
    agencies” keep those materials confidential.9 It imposes no such
    obligation on -- and does not even mention -- the courts.
    There is no reason to read the statute atextually to include
    such an obligation. See, e.g., Conn. Nat’l Bank v. Germain, 
    503 U.S. 249
    , 253-54 (1992) (“[C]ourts must presume that a
    legislature says in a statute what it means and means in a statute
    what it says there. When the words of a statute are
    unambiguous, then, this first canon is also the last: ‘judicial
    inquiry is complete.’” (internal citations omitted)). To the
    contrary, we can reasonably assume that Congress would not
    have overturned the longstanding presumption favoring judicial
    transparency by a provision that mentions executive agencies
    but not the judiciary. Cf. Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v. Static Control
    Components, Inc., 
    134 S. Ct. 1377
    , 1390 (2014) (“Congress, we
    assume, is familiar with the common-law rule and does not
    mean to displace it sub silentio.”).
    The remaining two subsections of § 5322(d)(5) reinforce
    our conclusion that subsection (A) was not meant to
    categorically bar disclosure by courts.
    First, subsection (B) provides that “[t]he submission of any
    nonpublicly available data or information under this subsection
    . . . shall not constitute a waiver of, or otherwise affect, any
    privilege arising under Federal or State law (including the rules
    of any Federal or State court) to which the data or information
    is otherwise subject.” 12 U.S.C. § 5322(d)(5)(B). This
    subsection plainly refers to privileges against disclosure that
    parties may have in litigation. But if subsection (A) meant that
    9
    No party disputes that § 5322(d)(5)(A) applies to information
    that a nonbank financial company voluntarily submits to FSOC, see
    12 U.S.C. § 5322(a)(2)(A), as well as to information that such a
    company is required to submit to FSOC, see 
    id. § 5322(d)(3)(A).
                                      16
    the submission of material to FSOC categorically protects it
    from disclosure by a court, there would be no need to mention
    other privileges against disclosure (or the waiver of such
    privileges). Hence, the appellees’ construction of subsection (A)
    would render subsection (B) superfluous, contravening the
    principle that “[a] statute should be construed so that effect is
    given to all its provisions.” Hibbs v. Winn, 
    542 U.S. 88
    , 101
    (2004) (internal quotation marks omitted).10
    Second, subsection (C) states that the Freedom of
    Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. § 552, “including the
    exceptions thereunder, shall apply to any data or information
    submitted under this subsection.” 12 U.S.C. § 5322(d)(5)(C).
    By virtue of this provision, all data and information that MetLife
    submitted to FSOC must be released by the Council if requested
    under FOIA, see 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(3)(A), unless one of that
    statute’s enumerated exemptions protects it, see 
    id. § 552(b);
    see
    also DOJ v. Tax Analysts, 
    492 U.S. 136
    , 150-51 (1989). To be
    sure, some of that data and information may well be covered by
    FOIA exemptions that preclude disclosure.11 But by subjecting
    10
    Moreover, as discussed in Part II, the only “privilege” against
    disclosure that MetLife has with respect to judicial records is defined
    by the Hubbard analysis, and subsection (B) provides that this
    “privilege” is not “affect[ed]” by Metlife’s submission of information
    to FSOC. We also note that subsection (B) only protects the
    submission of “nonpublicly available data or information.” In this
    way as well, the statute does not contemplate the categorical judicial
    protection for which MetLife argues.
    11
    See, e.g., 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4) (exempting “trade secrets and
    commercial or financial information obtained from a person and
    privileged or confidential”); 
    id. § 552(b)(8)
    (exempting information
    “contained in or related to examination, operating, or condition reports
    prepared by, on behalf of, or for the use of an agency responsible for
    the regulation or supervision of financial institutions”).
    17
    that material to FOIA at all, Congress made clear that it did not
    intend that the information be absolutely exempt from
    disclosure. And it seems unlikely that Congress would have
    wanted some submitted material to be available upon a FOIA
    request to the agency, but wholly unavailable upon a motion to
    unseal judicial records filed in a court.
    B
    The district court and appellees have raised a number of
    extra-textual arguments for concluding that the Dodd-Frank Act
    displaces the common-law right of access to judicial records.
    We address those arguments in this subpart. See NLRB v. SW
    General, Inc., 
    137 S. Ct. 929
    , 942 (2017) (“The text is clear, so
    we need not consider this extra-textual evidence. In any event,
    [that] evidence is not compelling.”).
    1. Noting that Dodd-Frank provides a right to judicial
    review of designation determinations, the district court regarded
    it as “unthinkable that Congress would condition the
    confidential treatment of a company’s information on that
    company’s refraining from seeking judicial review expressly
    afforded to it by the same statute.” MetLife, 
    2016 WL 3024015
    ,
    at *6. Similarly, FSOC argues that “[a] nonbank financial
    company does not forfeit the protections of [§ 5322(d)(5)(A)] by
    seeking judicial review of a designation.” FSOC Br. 11; see
    also MetLife Br. 19. We reject this argument for several
    reasons.
    First, it assumes what it must prove: applying Hubbard
    cannot be said to require a company to “forfeit” the protections
    of § 5322(d)(5)(A) unless those protections apply not only to
    FSOC but also to the courts. But as we have said above, the
    language of § 5322(d)(5) does not make those protections
    18
    applicable to the latter. Nor do the appellees cite any legislative
    history that suggests Congress wanted them to be.
    Second, a company does not in fact surrender (or “forfeit”)
    the confidentiality of its information by seeking judicial review.
    Instead, Hubbard directs courts to weigh the importance of
    confidentiality, requiring them to take into account “the fact that
    someone has objected to disclosure,” “the strength of any
    property and privacy interests asserted,” and “the possibility of
    prejudice to those opposing disclosure.” Nat’l Children’s 
    Ctr., 98 F.3d at 1409
    (citing 
    Hubbard, 650 F.2d at 317
    -22). For
    documents containing sensitive business information and trade
    secrets, those factors often weigh in favor of sealing and, as
    Hubbard itself noted, courts commonly permit redaction of that
    kind of information.12 Moreover, it is important to remember
    that, even while a company’s information is solely in FSOC’s
    hands, its confidentiality is not categorically protected because
    Dodd-Frank renders it subject to FOIA. See 12 U.S.C.
    § 5322(d)(5)(C).
    Finally, there is nothing “unthinkable” about declining to
    grant categorical protection from disclosure to material that
    12
    See 
    Hubbard, 650 F.2d at 315
    & n.81 (noting that “[t]he public
    has in the past been excluded, temporarily or permanently, from court
    proceedings or the records of court proceedings to protect private as
    well as public interests[,] [including] to protect trade secrets” (citing
    cases)); accord 
    Nixon, 435 U.S. at 598
    (“[T]he common-law right of
    inspection has bowed before the power of a court to insure that its
    records are not . . . [used] as sources of business information that
    might harm a litigant’s competitive standing.”); see also, e.g., Suture
    Express, Inc. v. Owens & Minor Distrib., Inc., 
    851 F.3d 1029
    , 1046-47
    (10th Cir. 2017); Rudd Equip. Co. v. John Deere Constr. & Forestry
    Co., 
    834 F.3d 589
    , 593 (6th Cir. 2016); Apple Inc. v. Samsung Elecs.
    Co., 
    727 F.3d 1214
    , 1226, 1228 (Fed. Cir. 2013); Pepsico, Inc. v.
    Redmond, 
    46 F.3d 29
    , 31 (7th Cir. 1995).
    19
    constitutes the record on review and that may be necessary to
    understand the basis of a court’s decision. To the contrary,
    noncategorical balancing tests analytically similar to Hubbard’s
    are the standard for ruling on motions to seal or unseal judicial
    records in every Circuit.13
    2. In a related vein, FSOC worries that applying Hubbard
    to the judicial records at issue here “would discourage nonbank
    financial companies and third parties from sharing confidential
    information with the Council, thereby undermining the
    Council’s ability to perform its core functions under
    Dodd-Frank.” FSOC Br. 12. As just discussed, continued
    confidential treatment of sensitive information is still possible
    under Hubbard. In addition, companies will still have reason to
    voluntarily provide information that they think will help them
    avoid designation (and likewise, will have the same incentive
    they had before to resist providing information they think will
    make designation more likely). Finally, in the end Dodd-Frank
    gives FSOC the trump card: the Act grants the Council the
    power to require companies to turn over the financial
    information the Council needs for its work, regardless of the
    companies’ predilections. See 12 U.S.C. § 5322(d)(3)(A).
    13
    See Siedle v. Putnam Investments, Inc., 
    147 F.3d 7
    , 10 (1st Cir.
    1998); Lugosch v. Pyramid Co. of Onondaga, 
    435 F.3d 110
    , 119 (2d
    Cir. 2006); In re Cendant Corp., 
    260 F.3d 183
    , 194 (3d Cir. 2001);
    Va. Dep’t of State Police v. Wash. Post, 
    386 F.3d 567
    , 575 (4th Cir.
    2004); SEC v. Van Waeyenberghe, 
    990 F.2d 845
    , 848 (5th Cir. 1993);
    In re Knoxville News-Sentinel Co., 
    723 F.2d 470
    , 474 (6th Cir. 1983);
    United States v. Corbitt, 
    879 F.2d 224
    , 228 (7th Cir. 1989); Webster
    Groves Sch. Dist. v. Pulitzer Publ’g Co., 
    898 F.2d 1371
    , 1376 (8th
    Cir. 1990); Foltz v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    331 F.3d 1122
    ,
    1135 (9th Cir. 2003); Mann v. Boatright, 
    477 F.3d 1140
    , 1149 (10th
    Cir. 2007); Chicago Tribune Co. v. Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc., 
    263 F.3d 1304
    , 1311 (11th Cir. 2001).
    20
    3.     FSOC also contends that Better Markets’
    § 5322(d)(5)(C) right to seek access to information through
    FOIA negates any right to seek access through a motion to
    unseal. But FOIA applies solely to information in the hands of
    executive agencies and expressly excludes federal courts from
    its domain. See 5 U.S.C. § 551(1)(B) (excluding “the courts of
    the United States” from the definition of “agency”); 
    id. § 552(a)
    (providing that “[e]ach agency shall make available to the public
    information as follows”) (emphasis added). It is therefore “clear
    that [FOIA] was not intended to restrict the federal courts.”
    Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. v. FTC, 
    710 F.2d 1165
    1177 (6th Cir. 1983). And again, there are no words in
    § 5322(d)(5)(C), or any legislative history, to the contrary.
    4. The appellees rely on several cases for their extra-textual
    reading of § 5322(d)(5), none of which supports their position.
    FSOC argues that Nixon v. Warner Communications, 
    435 U.S. 589
    , “stands for the principle that a statutory disclosure
    scheme preempts the common law right of access to public
    records,” and thus establishes that Dodd-Frank’s incorporation
    of FOIA’s disclosure scheme preempts that right here. FSOC
    Br. 12-13 (internal quotation marks omitted). FSOC overreads
    the case.
    The statute at issue in Nixon, the Presidential Recordings
    and Materials Preservation Act, Pub. L. No. 93-526, 88 Stat.
    1695 (1974), “created an administrative procedure for
    processing and releasing to the public . . . all of petitioner’s
    Presidential materials of historical interest, including recordings
    of the conversations at issue” -- the Nixon tapes. 
    Nixon, 435 U.S. at 603
    . “Considering all the circumstances of this
    concededly singular case,” the Court held “that the common-law
    right of access to judicial records [did] not authorize release of
    21
    the tapes in question from the custody of the District Court.” 
    Id. at 608.
    The administrative procedure for processing and releasing
    materials created by the Presidential Recordings Act did not
    exclude the courts from its coverage. 
    Id. at 603.
    By contrast,
    the administrative procedure that Dodd-Frank incorporates --
    FOIA -- does so expressly. See 5 U.S.C. § 551(1)(B). Further,
    the Supreme Court described the Presidential Recordings Act’s
    procedure as “unique.” 
    Nixon, 435 U.S. at 603
    . But there is
    nothing unique about FOIA, which applies to every record of
    almost every Executive Branch agency. If FOIA’s disclosure
    scheme preempted the common-law right of access to judicial
    records, there would be little left of that right in litigation
    involving the federal government; agencies could simply seal all
    materials that would qualify as “agency records” under FOIA.
    We do not think the Court contemplated such a result in ruling
    on the “singular” case of the Nixon tapes.14
    14
    Three other cases that FSOC cites for the “principle that a
    statutory disclosure scheme preempts the common law right of access
    to public records” are plainly inapposite. FSOC Br. 13 (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Center for National Security Studies v.
    DOJ involved a FOIA request to the Department of Justice for records
    in the Department’s possession; it did not involve a conflict between
    FOIA and the common-law right of access to judicial records. 
    See 331 F.3d at 936-37
    . United States v. El-Sayegh held that “[t]he appropriate
    device” for obtaining access to an unconsummated plea agreement
    was “a Freedom of Information Act request addressed to the relevant
    agency,” but it did so only after concluding that the plea agreement
    did not constitute a judicial record subject to a public right of 
    access. 131 F.3d at 163
    ; see supra note 7. Finally, In re Motions of Dow
    Jones & Co. held that, “even if there were once a common law right
    of access to [materials relating to grand jury proceedings], the
    common law has been supplanted by Rule 6(e)(5) and Rule 6(e)(6) of
    the Federal Rules of Criminal 
    Procedure.” 142 F.3d at 504
    . But those
    22
    The appellees also argue that In re Sealed Case, 
    237 F.3d 657
    (D.C. Cir. 2001), stands for the proposition that, when a
    statute requires an agency to preserve the confidentiality of
    administrative materials, the statute supersedes the Hubbard test
    and requires that agency materials be sealed during litigation.
    MetLife Br. 14-15; see also FSOC Br. 14-15. We do not read
    Sealed Case so broadly.
    In Sealed Case, the Federal Election Commission (FEC)
    petitioned a district court to enforce a third-party subpoena. In
    connection with its petition, the FEC publicly filed exhibits
    containing information about an ongoing investigation, despite
    the agency’s statutory mandate to keep the information
    
    confidential. 237 F.3d at 661
    , 665. The subject of the
    investigation filed a motion to seal the exhibits, which the
    district court denied. 
    Id. at 661.
    On appeal, we explained that, “[i]f this were a typical
    case . . . looking simply at whether court records should be
    sealed,” we would have held that the district court should have
    considered the Hubbard factors (which it had failed to do). 
    Id. at 666.
    We found, however, that this was not a case about
    “whether court records should be sealed.” 
    Id. “Rather, the
    question before us [was] more properly posed as whether the
    FEC has the authority to file information concerning an ongoing
    investigation on the public record when it seeks to enforce a
    subpoena.” 
    Id. Holding that
    the Federal Election Campaign Act
    and FEC regulations “plainly prohibit the FEC from” making
    such a disclosure, we “conclud[ed] that the FEC failed to act in
    accordance with law” when it filed “the subpoena enforcement
    action on the public docket.” 
    Id. at 667.
    rules, unlike § 5322(d)(5), expressly govern the federal courts. See
    FED. R. CRIM. P. 1(a)(1).
    23
    In short, Sealed Case does not stand for the broad
    proposition that whenever a statute commands an agency to
    keep materials confidential, the statute bars courts from applying
    the Hubbard analysis when considering whether to unseal those
    materials. It held only that the FEC violated the Campaign Act
    and FEC regulations by unilaterally filing the information on the
    public record, and that such agency action had to be overturned.
    Sealed Case did not reach the Hubbard issue, other than to say
    that the statutory and regulatory scheme in that case “create[d]
    an extraordinarily strong privacy interest in keeping the records
    sealed[,] . . . [s]o strong . . . that only rarely, if ever, might the
    remaining five Hubbard factors counterbalance the strength of
    the privacy interests asserted.” 
    Id. at 666
    (internal quotation
    marks and alterations omitted).15
    In the case now before us, FSOC -- unlike the FEC in
    Sealed Case -- did not violate its governing statute. Rather, it
    consistently joined MetLife’s efforts to seal the relevant records.
    Per Sealed Case, then, this case presents only the “typical”
    question of whether a court should unseal those records -- a
    question governed by Hubbard. See 
    id. MetLife further
    maintains that Congress drafted
    § 5322(d)(5)(A) against the backdrop of Sealed Case, and that
    it therefore must have intended that provision to limit courts as
    well as FSOC. Oral Arg. Recording at 36:32-38. There is no
    legislative history to support that claim and no evidence that
    Congress construed the case as MetLife does, rather than as we
    do. Nor is there any evidence that Congress was aware of the
    15
    The court noted that, under the provisions of the Campaign Act
    relating to pending investigations, “secrecy is vital to protect [an]
    innocent accused who is exonerated from disclosure of the fact that he
    has been under investigation.” In re Sealed 
    Case, 237 F.3d at 667
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    24
    case at all. If Congress were aware of any law on this subject,
    we expect it would have been the longstanding common-law
    right of public access to judicial records -- a right that “antedates
    the Constitution,” 
    El-Sayegh, 131 F.3d at 161
    , and is enshrined
    in a series of cases in the Supreme Court, this court, and each of
    the other circuits.16 Thus, if any canon of construction applies,
    it is that “[s]tatutes which invade the common law . . . are to be
    read with a presumption favoring the retention of
    long-established and familiar principles, except when a statutory
    purpose to the contrary is evident.” United States v. Texas, 
    507 U.S. 529
    , 534 (1993) (quoting Isbrandtsen Co. v. Johnson, 
    343 U.S. 779
    , 783 (1952)). No such purpose is evident in the Dodd-
    Frank Act.
    C
    In sum, we conclude that Dodd-Frank does not displace the
    common-law right of public access to judicial records, or the
    Hubbard test that courts in this Circuit apply when asked to seal
    or unseal such records.
    Our conclusion is further confirmed by considering the
    logical consequence that would result from instead adopting the
    appellees’ position. As both MetLife and FSOC forthrightly
    acknowledged at oral argument, accepting their view would also
    require a court to redact portions of its own opinion that discuss
    data or information submitted by a company to the Council --
    even key applications of law to fact. Oral Arg. Recording at
    41:51-42:05 (MetLife); 
    id. at 43:33-44:36
    (MetLife); 
    id. at 48:10-31
    (FSOC). That requirement would be categorical:
    16
    See Nixon, 
    435 U.S. 589
    ; Hubbard, 
    650 F.2d 293
    ; cases cited
    supra note 13; cf. Dixon v. United States, 
    548 U.S. 1
    , 13-14 (2006)
    (“[W]e can safely assume that . . . Congress was familiar with . . . the
    long-established common-law rule . . . .”).
    25
    redaction would be mandatory, without the balancing
    contemplated by Hubbard, and without regard for how central
    the redacted material is to explaining the opinion’s rationale. 
    Id. at 41:05-42:05
    (acknowledgment by MetLife that redaction
    would be required, even if the public could not understand an
    opinion without reference to the redacted information).17 Such
    a requirement would contradict a fundamental norm of our
    judicial system: that judges’ decisions and their rationales must
    be available to the public. See Matter of Krynicki, 
    983 F.2d 74
    ,
    75 (7th Cir. 1992) (“Judges deliberate in private but issue public
    decisions after public arguments based on public records.”). We
    would not expect Congress to upset such a norm without saying
    so.18
    V
    Because the common-law right of public access applies to
    the briefs and appendix filed in this case, and because Dodd-
    Frank does not supersede that right, the district court was
    required to apply the Hubbard test in resolving Better Markets’
    motion to unseal the redacted portions of those documents. The
    court did state that it had “reviewed the record and all of the
    17
    We recognize that the district court’s opinion in this case
    contains no redactions, and that MetLife and FSOC voluntarily strove
    to redact as little as they thought possible from their briefs and
    appendices. See MetLife, 
    2016 WL 3024015
    , at *6 (noting that “the
    parties have been entirely forthcoming, even volunteering to lift
    redactions previously made”). But the decision we reach today will
    apply not only to this case, but also to future cases in which the
    relevant players may be less diligent or conscientious than those
    involved here.
    18
    We take no position on the extent to which Congress could
    constitutionally mandate the sealing of judicial records or opinions.
    We conclude only that § 5322(d)(5) does not embody such a mandate.
    26
    briefs . . . and [found] that large parts of the administrative
    record and the briefs should be redacted from public view.”
    MetLife, 
    2016 WL 3024015
    , at *6. In context, however, it is
    clear that the court’s finding was based not on an application of
    Hubbard, but rather on its conclusion that Dodd-Frank
    “supersedes the multi-factor inquiry prescribed by [the court] in
    Hubbard.” 
    Id. at *5
    .19
    We therefore remand the case to the district court to apply
    the Hubbard analysis. Remanding is our normal course when a
    district court does not adequately articulate its reasons for
    sealing judicial records. See, e.g., 
    Primas, 719 F.3d at 699
    ;
    Nat’l Children’s 
    Ctr., 98 F.3d at 1410
    ; 
    Johnson, 951 F.2d at 1277-78
    . We see no reason to distinguish those cases from this
    one, where the court did not apply Hubbard at all. See United
    States v. Peyton, 
    745 F.3d 546
    , 557 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (noting that
    “[w]e are a court of review, not of first view”). In applying
    Hubbard on remand, the district court must supply its reasoning
    “with specific reference to the particular documents or group of
    documents to which each reason is 
    applicable.” 650 F.2d at 324
    .
    Dodd-Frank’s confidentiality provision should weigh heavily in
    that analysis. Although § 5322(d)(5)(A) does not categorically
    protect the sealed information, it does represent a congressional
    judgment about the importance of maintaining the
    confidentiality of nonpublic information submitted to FSOC.
    Cf. In re Sealed 
    Case, 237 F.3d at 666
    (noting that the
    confidentiality provision of the Federal Election Campaign Act
    would “create an extraordinarily strong privacy interest in
    keeping . . . records sealed” under Hubbard).
    19
    See MetLife, 
    2016 WL 3024015
    , at *4 (“Ordinarily courts
    apply a six-factor framework to decide whether the public right is
    overcome by private interest . . . . For the reasons stated below, the
    Court does not reach that framework in this case.”).
    27
    Pointing to Hardaway v. District of Columbia Housing
    Authority, MetLife argues that we should apply Hubbard on our
    own accord and conclude that all currently sealed records should
    remain so. In Hardaway, we held that “given the clarity of the
    issue,” we could deviate from our normal practice of remanding
    and conclude as a matter of law that “the single medical form
    currently in the record, and all future medical records describing
    [the plaintiff’s] disability, must be 
    sealed.” 843 F.3d at 980-81
    .
    But whereas Hardaway involved a single record document, there
    are almost two thousand sealed pages in the 16-volume joint
    appendix in this case. The parties have not even submitted that
    appendix for our review. And whereas Hardaway involved only
    one category of possible future records -- medical forms
    describing the plaintiff’s disability -- this case involves a diverse
    array of financial data, some of which may include sensitive
    business information, some of which may not. Applying
    Hubbard to the records in this case will require a more complex
    and intensive analysis than was required in Hardaway, and the
    district court is best suited to conduct that analysis given its
    considerable familiarity with those records.
    VI
    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the records at
    issue in this case are judicial records, and that the Dodd-Frank
    Act does not displace the common-law right of public access to
    those records. The traditional Hubbard balancing test therefore
    governs the question of whether to unseal them. Because the
    district court is best positioned to undertake that inquiry in the
    first instance, the case is remanded for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    Reversed and remanded.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 16-5188

Citation Numbers: 865 F.3d 661

Filed Date: 8/1/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (35)

Siedle v. Putnam Investments, Inc. , 147 F.3d 7 ( 1998 )

Michael D. Van Etten v. Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc , 263 F.3d 1304 ( 2001 )

Securities and Exchange Commission v. Gary Van Waeyenberghe ... , 990 F.2d 845 ( 1993 )

virginia-department-of-state-police-v-the-washington-post-the-virginian , 386 F.3d 567 ( 2004 )

in-re-cendant-corp-formerly-known-as-cuc-international-inc-cendant , 260 F.3d 183 ( 2001 )

Lugosch v. Pyramid Co. of Onondaga , 435 F.3d 110 ( 2006 )

Louis A. Carducci v. Donald T. Regan, Secretary, U.S. ... , 714 F.2d 171 ( 1983 )

In the Matter of Grand Jury Proceedings: Victor Krynicki, ... , 983 F.2d 74 ( 1992 )

United States v. Michael J. Corbitt, Pulitzer Community ... , 879 F.2d 224 ( 1989 )

Webster Groves School District v. Pulitzer Publishing ... , 898 F.2d 1371 ( 1990 )

Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation v. Federal Trade ... , 710 F.2d 1165 ( 1983 )

Pepsico, Inc. v. William E. Redmond, Jr., and the Quaker ... , 46 F.3d 29 ( 1995 )

debbie-foltz-consumer-action-united-policyholders-texas-watch , 331 F.3d 1122 ( 2003 )

In Re the Knoxville News-Sentinel Company, Inc., (83-5095). ... , 723 F.2d 470 ( 1983 )

John Doe, Inc. v. Drug Enforcement Administration , 484 F.3d 561 ( 2007 )

In Re Application of National Broadcasting Company, Inc., ... , 653 F.2d 609 ( 1981 )

Harold D. Johnson, M.D. v. Greater Southeast Community ... , 951 F.2d 1268 ( 1991 )

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. National ... , 98 F.3d 1406 ( 1996 )

Potter v. District of Columbia , 558 F.3d 542 ( 2009 )

Ctr Natl Sec Studies v. DOJ , 331 F.3d 918 ( 2003 )

View All Authorities »