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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
RUCKELSHAUS v. MONSANTO CO., 467 U.S. 986 (1984)
467 U.S. 986
RUCKELSHAUS, ADMINISTRATOR, UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY
v. MONSANTO CO.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT
OF MISSOURI
No. 83-196.
Argued February 27, 1984
Decided June 26, 1984
The Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA)
authorizes the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to use data
submitted by an applicant for registration of a covered product
(hereinafter pesticide) in evaluating the application of a subsequent
applicant, and to disclose publicly some of the submitted data. Under
the data-consideration provisions of 3, as amended in 1978, applicants
now are granted a 10-year period of exclusive use for data on new
active ingredients contained in pesticides registered after September
30, 1978, while all other data submitted after December 31, 1969, may
be cited and considered in support of another application for 15 years
after the original submission if the applicant offers to compensate
the original submitter. If the parties cannot agree on the amount of
compensation, either may initiate a binding arbitration proceeding,
and if an original submitter refuses to participate in negotiations or
arbitration, he forfeits his claim for compensation. Data that do not
qualify for either the 10-year period of exclusive use or the 15-year
period of compensation may be considered by EPA without limitation.
Section 10, as amended in 1978, authorizes, in general, public
disclosure of all health, safety, and environmental data even though
it may result in disclosure of trade secrets. Appellee, a company
headquartered in Missouri, is an inventor, producer, and seller of
pesticides, and invests substantial sums in developing active
ingredients for pesticides and in producing end-use products that
combine such ingredients with inert ingredients. Appellee brought suit
in Federal District Court for injunctive and declaratory relief,
alleging, inter alia, that the data-consideration and data-disclosure
provisions of FIFRA effected a "taking" of property without just
compensation, in violation of the Fifth Amendment, and that the
data-consideration provisions violated the Amendment because they
effected a taking of property for a private, rather than a public,
purpose. The District Court held that the challenged provisions of
FIFRA are unconstitutional, and permanently enjoined EPA from
implementing or enforcing those provisions.
[467 U.S. 986, 987]
Held:
1. To the extent that appellee has an interest in its health,
safety, and environmental data cognizable as a trade-secret property
right under Missouri law, that property right is protected by the
Taking Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Despite their intangible
nature, trade secrets have many of the characteristics of more
traditional forms of property. Moreover, this Court has found other
kinds of intangible interests to be property for purposes of the
Clause. Pp. 1000-1004.
2. EPA's consideration or disclosure of data submitted by
appellee prior to October 22, 1972, or after September 30, 1978,
does not effect a taking, but EPA's consideration or disclosure of
certain health, safety, and environmental data constituting a trade
secret under state law and submitted by appellee between those two
dates may constitute a taking under certain conditions. Pp.
1004-1014.
(a) A factor for consideration in determining whether a
governmental action short of acquisition or destruction of property
has gone beyond proper "regulation" and effects a "taking" is
whether the action interferes with reasonable investment-backed
expectations. With respect to any health, safety, and environmental
data that appellee submitted to EPA after the effective date of the
1978 FIFRA amendments (October 1, 1978), appellee could not have had
a reasonable, investment-backed expectation that EPA would keep the
data confidential beyond the limits prescribed in the amended
statute itself. As long as appellee is aware of the conditions under
which the data are submitted, and the conditions are rationally
related to a legitimate Government interest, a voluntary submission
of data in exchange for the economic advantages of a registration
can hardly be called a taking. Pp. 1005-1008.
(b) Prior to its amendment in 1972 (effective October 22, 1972),
FIFRA was silent with respect to EPA's authorized use and disclosure
of data submitted to it in connection with an application for
registration. Although the Trade Secrets Act provides a criminal
penalty for a Government employee who discloses, in a manner not
authorized by law, any trade-secret information revealed to him
during the course of his official duties, it is not a guarantee of
confidentiality to submitters of data, and, absent an express
promise, appellee had no reasonable, investment-backed expectation
that its information submitted to EPA before October 22, 1972, would
remain inviolate in the EPA's hands. The possibility was substantial
that the Federal Government at some future time would find
disclosure to be in the public interest. A fortiori, the Trade
Secrets Act, which penalizes only unauthorized disclosure, cannot be
construed as any sort of assurance against internal agency
[467 U.S. 986, 988]
use of submitted data during consideration of the
application of a subsequent applicant for registration. Pp.
1008-1010.
(c) However, under the statutory scheme in effect between October
22, 1972, and September 30, 1978, a submitter was given an
opportunity to protect its trade secrets from disclosure by
designating them as trade secrets at the time of submission. The
explicit governmental guarantee to registration applicants of
confidentiality and exclusive use with respect to trade secrets
during this period formed the basis of a reasonable
investment-backed expectation. If EPA, consistent with current
provisions of FIFRA, were now to disclose such trade-secret data or
consider those data in evaluating the application of a subsequent
applicant in a manner not authorized by the version of FIFRA in
effect between 1972 and 1978, its actions would frustrate appellee's
reasonable investment-backed expectation. If, however, arbitration
pursuant to FIFRA were to yield just compensation for the loss in
the market value of appellee's trade-secret data suffered because of
EPA's consideration of the data in connection with another
application (no arbitration having yet occurred), then appellee
would have no claim against the Government for a taking. Pp.
1010-1014.
3. Any taking of private property that may occur in connection
with EPA's use of data submitted to it by appellee between October
22, 1972, and September 30, 1978, is a taking for a "public use,"
rather than for a "private use," even though subsequent applicants
may be the most direct beneficiaries. So long as a taking has a
conceivable public character, the means by which it will be attained
is for Congress to determine. Congress believed that the
data-consideration provisions would eliminate costly duplication of
research and streamline the registration process, making new end-use
products available to consumers more quickly. Such a procompetitive
purpose is within Congress' police power. With regard to FIFRA's
data-disclosure provisions, the optimum amount of disclosure to
assure the public that a product is safe and effective is to be
determined by Congress, not the courts. Pp. 1014-1016.
4. A Tucker Act remedy is available to provide appellee with just
compensation for any taking of property that may occur as a result
of FIFRA's data-consideration and data-disclosure provisions, and
thus the District Court erred in enjoining EPA from acting under
those provisions. Neither FIFRA nor its legislative history
discusses the interaction between FIFRA and the Tucker Act, and
inferring a withdrawal of Tucker Act jurisdiction would amount to a
disfavored partial repeal by implication of the Tucker Act. FIFRA's
provision that an original submitter of data forfeits his right to
compensation from a later submitter for the use of the original
submitter's data if he fails to participate in, or comply with the
terms of, a negotiated or arbitrated
[467 U.S. 986, 989] compensation
settlement merely requires a claimant to first seek satisfaction
through FIFRA's procedure before asserting a Tucker Act claim. Pp.
1016-1019.
5. Because the Tucker Act is available as a remedy for any
uncompensated taking appellee may suffer as a result of the
operation of the challenged provisions of FIFRA, appellee's
challenges to the constitutionality of the arbitration and
compensation scheme of FIFRA are not ripe for resolution. Pp.
1019-1020.
564 F. Supp. 552, vacated and remanded.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BURGER,
C. J., and BRENNAN, MARSHALL, POWELL, REHNQUIST, and STEVENS, JJ.,
joined, and in which O'CONNOR, J., joined, except for Part IV-B and a
statement on p. 1013. O'CONNOR, J., filed an opinion concurring in
part and dissenting in part, post, p. 1021. WHITE, J., took no part in
the consideration or decision of the case.
Deputy Solicitor General Wallace argued the cause for appellant.
With him on the briefs were Solicitor General Lee, Acting Assistant
Attorney General Liotta, Deputy Assistant Attorney General Walker,
Jerrold J. Ganzfried, Raymond N. Zagone, Anne S. Almy, and John A.
Bryson.
A. Raymond Randolph, Jr., argued the cause for appellee. With him
on the briefs were David G. Norrell, Thomas O. Kuhns, W. Wayne
Withers, Frederick A. Provorny, Gary S. Dyer, C. David Barrier, and
Kenneth R. Heineman.
*
[
Footnote * ] Briefs of amici curiae urging reversal were filed for
the American Association for the Advancement of Science et al. by
Thomas O. McGarity; for the American Federation of Labor and Congress
of Industrial Organizations et al. by Marsha S. Berzon, Michael Rubin,
Laurence Gold, Albert H. Meyerhoff, and J. Albert Woll; for the
Pesticide Producers Association et al. by David B. Weinberg and
William R. Weissman; and for PPG Industries, Inc., by Thomas H.
Truitt, David R. Berz, and Jeffrey F. Liss.
Briefs of amici curiae urging affirmance were filed for Abbott
Laboratories et al. by Kenneth W. Weinstein and Lawrence S. Ebner; for
the American Chemical Society et al. by William J. Butler, Jr., and
Arthur D. McKey; for the American Patent Law Association, Inc., by
Donald S. Chisum; for Avco Corp. by Alvin D. Shapiro; for Sathon,
Inc., by Ralph E. Brown and Mark E. Singer; for SDS Biotech Corp. et
al. by Harold Himmelman and Cynthia A. Lewis; and for Stauffer
Chemical Co. by Lawrence S. Ebner, John T. Ronan III, and John W.
Behan. [467 U.S. 986,
990]
JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case, we are asked to review a United States District
Court's determination that several provisions of the Federal
Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA), 61 Stat. 163, as
amended, 7 U.S.C. 136 et seq., are unconstitutional. The provisions at
issue authorize the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to use data
submitted by an applicant for registration of a pesticide
1 in evaluating the application of a subsequent applicant, and to
disclose publicly some of the submitted data.
I
Over the past century, the use of pesticides to control weeds and
minimize crop damage caused by insects, disease, and animals has
become increasingly more important for American agriculture. See S.
Rep. No. 95-334, p. 32 (1977); S. Rep. No. 92-838, pp. 3-4, 6-7
(1972); H. R. Rep. No. 92-511, pp. 3-7 (1971). While pesticide use has
led to improvements in productivity, it has also led to increased risk
of harm to humans and the environment. See S. Rep. No. 92-838, at 3-4,
6-7; H. R. Rep. No. 92-511, at 3-7. Although the Federal Government
has regulated pesticide use for nearly 75 years,
2 FIFRA was first adopted in 1947. 61 Stat. 163.
[467 U.S. 986, 991]
As first enacted, FIFRA was primarily a licensing and labeling
statute. It required that all pesticides be registered with the
Secretary of Agriculture prior to their sale in interstate or foreign
commerce. 3(a) and 4(a) of the 1947 Act, 61 Stat. 166-167. The 1947
legislation also contained general standards setting forth the types
of information necessary for proper labeling of a registered
pesticide, including directions for use; warnings to prevent harm to
people, animals, and plants; and claims made about the efficacy of the
product. 2(u)(2) and 3(a)(3).
Upon request of the Secretary, an applicant was required to submit
test data supporting the claims on the label, including the formula
for the pesticide. 4(a) and (b). The 1947 version of FIFRA
specifically prohibited disclosure of "any information relative to
formulas of products," 3(c)(4) and 8(c), but was silent with respect
to the disclosure of any of the health and safety data submitted with
an application.
3
In 1970, the Department of Agriculture's FIFRA responsibilities
were transferred to the then newly created Environmental Protection
Agency, whose Administrator is the appellant in this case. See
Reorganization Plan No. 3 of 1970, 35 Fed. Reg. 15623 (1970), 5 U.S.C.
App., p. 1132.
Because of mounting public concern about the safety of pesticides
and their effect on the environment and because of a growing
perception that the existing legislation was not equal to the task of
safeguarding the public interest, see S. Rep. No. 92-838, at 3-9; S.
Rep. No. 92-970, p. 9 (1972); H. R. Rep. No. 92-511, at 5-13, Congress
undertook a comprehensive revision of FIFRA through the adoption of
the Federal Environmental Pesticide Control Act of 1972, 86 Stat. 973.
The amendments transformed FIFRA from a labeling law into a
comprehensive regulatory statute. H. R. Rep. No. 92-511, at 1. As
amended, FIFRA regulated the
[467 U.S. 986, 992] use, as well as the
sale and labeling, of pesticides; regulated pesticides produced and
sold in both intrastate and interstate commerce; provided for review,
cancellation, and suspension of registration; and gave EPA greater
enforcement authority. Congress also added a new criterion for
registration: that EPA determine that the pesticide will not cause
"unreasonable adverse effects on the environment." 3(c)(5)(C) and (D),
86 Stat. 980-981.
For purposes of this litigation, the most significant of the 1972
amendments pertained to the pesticide-registration procedure and the
public disclosure of information learned through that procedure.
Congress added to FIFRA a new section governing public disclosure of
data submitted in support of an application for registration. Under
that section, the submitter of data could designate any portions of
the submitted material it believed to be "trade secrets or commercial
or financial information." 10(a), 86 Stat. 989. Another section
prohibited EPA from publicly disclosing information which, in its
judgment, contained or related to "trade secrets or commercial or
financial information." 10(b). In the event that EPA disagreed with a
submitter's designation of certain information as "trade secrets or
commercial or financial information" and proposed to disclose that
information, the original submitter could institute a declaratory
judgment action in federal district court. 10(c).
The 1972 amendments also included a provision that allowed EPA to
consider data submitted by one applicant for registration in support
of another application pertaining to a similar chemical, provided the
subsequent applicant offered to compensate the applicant who
originally submitted the data. 3(c)(1)(D). In effect, the provision
instituted a mandatory data-licensing scheme. The amount of
compensation was to be negotiated by the parties, or, in the event
negotiations failed, was to be determined by EPA, subject to judicial
review upon the instigation of the original data submitter. The scope
of the 1972 data-consideration provision, however,
[467 U.S. 986, 993]
was limited, for any data designated as "trade secrets or
commercial or financial information" exempt from disclosure under 10
could not be considered at all by EPA to support another registration
application unless the original submitter consented. Ibid.
The 1972 amendments did not specify standards for the designation
of submitted data as "trade secrets or commercial or financial
information." In addition, Congress failed to designate an effective
date for the data-consideration and disclosure schemes. In 1975,
Congress amended 3(c)(1)(D) to provide that the data-consideration and
data-disclosure provisions applied only to data submitted on or after
January 1, 1970, 89 Stat. 755, but left the definitional question
unanswered.
Much litigation centered around the definition of "trade secrets or
commercial or financial information" for the purposes of the
data-consideration and data-disclosure provisions of FIFRA. EPA
maintained that the exemption from consideration or disclosure applied
only to a narrow range of information, principally statements of
formulae and manufacturing processes. In a series of lawsuits,
however, data-submitting firms challenged EPA's interpretation and
obtained several decisions to the effect that the term "trade secrets"
applied to any data, including health, safety, and environmental data,
that met the definition of trade secrets set forth in Restatement of
Torts 757 (1939). See, e. g., Mobay Chemical Corp. v. Costle, 447 F.
Supp. 811 (WD Mo. 1978); Chevron Chemical Co. v. Costle, 443 F. Supp.
1024 (ND Cal. 1978). These decisions prevented EPA from disclosing
much of the data on which it based its decision to register pesticides
and from considering the data submitted by one applicant in reviewing
the application of a later applicant. See S. Rep. No. 95-334, at 7; H.
R. Rep. No. 95-663, p. 18 (1977).
Because of these and other problems with the regulatory scheme
embodied in FIFRA as amended in 1972, see S. Rep.
[467 U.S. 986, 994]
No. 95-334, at 2-5; H. R. Rep. No. 95-663, at 15-21; see
generally EPA Office of Pesticide Programs, FIFRA: Impact on the
Industry (1977), reprinted in S. Rep. No. 95-334, at 34-68, Congress
enacted other amendments to FIFRA in 1978. These were effected by the
Federal Pesticide Act of 1978, 92 Stat. 819. The new amendments
included a series of revisions in the data-consideration and
data-disclosure provisions of FIFRA's 3 and 10, 7 U.S.C. 136a and
136h.
Under FIFRA, as amended in 1978, applicants are granted a 10-year
period of exclusive use for data on new active ingredients contained
in pesticides registered after September 30, 1978. 3(c)(1)(D)(i). All
other data submitted after December 31, 1969, may be cited and
considered in support of another application for 15 years after the
original submission if the applicant offers to compensate the original
submitter. 3(c)(1)(D)(ii).
4 If the parties cannot agree on the amount of
[467 U.S. 986, 995]
compensation, either may initiate a binding arbitration
proceeding. The results of the arbitration proceeding are not subject
to judicial review, absent fraud or misrepresentation. The same
statute provides that an original submitter who refuses to participate
in negotiations or in the arbitration proceeding forfeits his claim
for compensation. Data that do not qualify for either the 10-year
period of exclusive use or the 15-year period of compensation may be
considered by EPA without limitation. 3(c)(1)(D)(iii).
Also in 1978, Congress added a new subsection, 10(d), 7 U.S.C.
136h(d), that provides for disclosure of all health,
[467 U.S. 986, 996]
safety, and environmental data to qualified requesters,
notwithstanding the prohibition against disclosure of trade secrets
contained in 10(b). The provision, however, does not authorize
disclosure of information that would reveal "manufacturing or quality
control processes" or certain details about deliberately added inert
ingredients unless "the Administrator has first determined that the
disclosure is necessary to protect against an unreasonable risk of
injury to health or the environment." 10(d)(1)(A) to (C).
5 EPA may not disclose data to representatives of foreign or
multinational pesticide companies unless the original submitter of
[467 U.S. 986, 997]
the data consents to the disclosure. 10(g). Another
subsection establishes a criminal penalty for wrongful disclosure by a
Government employee or contractor of confidential or trade secret
data. 10(f).
II
Appellee Monsanto Company (Monsanto) is an inventor, developer, and
producer of various kinds of chemical products, including pesticides.
Monsanto, headquartered in St. Louis County, Mo., sells in both
domestic and foreign markets. It is one of a relatively small group of
companies that invent and develop new active ingredients for
pesticides and conduct most of the research and testing with respect
to those ingredients.
6
These active ingredients are sometimes referred to as
"manufacturing-use products" because they are not generally sold
directly to users of pesticides. Rather, they must first be combined
with "inert ingredients" - chemicals that dissolve, dilute, or
stabilize the active components. The results of this process are
sometimes called "end-use products," and the firms that produce
end-use products are called "formulators." See the opinion of the
District Court in this case, Monsanto Co. v. Acting Administrator,
United States Environmental Protection Agency, 564 F. Supp. 552, 554
(ED Mo. 1983). A firm that produces an active ingredient may
[467 U.S. 986, 998]
use it for incorporation into its own end-use products, may
sell it to formulators, or may do both. Monsanto produces both active
ingredients and end-use products. Ibid.
The District Court found that development of a potential commercial
pesticide candidate typically requires the expenditure of $5 million
to $15 million annually for several years. The development process may
take between 14 and 22 years, and it is usually that long before a
company can expect any return on its investment. Id., at 555. For
every manufacturing-use pesticide the average company finally markets,
it will have screened and tested 20,000 others. Monsanto has a
significantly better-than-average success rate; it successfully
markets 1 out of every 10,000 chemicals tested. Ibid.
Monsanto, like any other applicant for registration of a pesticide,
must present research and test data supporting its application. The
District Court found that Monsanto had incurred costs in excess of
$23.6 million in developing the health, safety, and environmental data
submitted by it under FIFRA. Id., at 560. The information submitted
with an application usually has value to Monsanto beyond its
instrumentality in gaining that particular application. Monsanto uses
this information to develop additional end-use products and to expand
the uses of its registered products. The information would also be
valuable to Monsanto's competitors. For that reason, Monsanto has
instituted stringent security measures to ensure the secrecy of the
data. Ibid.
It is this health, safety, and environmental data that Monsanto
sought to protect by bringing this suit. The District Court found that
much of these data "contai[n] or relat[e] to trade secrets as defined
by the Restatement of Torts and Confidential, commercial information."
Id., at 562.
Monsanto brought suit in District Court, seeking injunctive and
declaratory relief from the operation of the data-consideration
provisions of FIFRA's 3(c)(1)(D), and the data-disclosure provisions
of FIFRA's 10 and the related 3(c)(2)(A). Monsanto alleged that all of
the challenged provisions
[467 U.S. 986, 999] effected a "taking" of
property without just compensation, in violation of the Fifth
Amendment. In addition, Monsanto alleged that the data-consideration
provisions violated the Amendment because they effected a taking of
property for a private, rather than a public, purpose. Finally,
Monsanto alleged that the arbitration scheme provided by 3(c)(1)(D)(ii)
violates the original submitter's due process rights and constitutes
an unconstitutional delegation of judicial power.
After a bench trial, the District Court concluded that Monsanto
possessed property rights in its submitted data, specifically
including the right to exclude others from the enjoyment of such data
by preventing their unauthorized use and by prohibiting their
disclosure. 564 F. Supp., at 566. The court found that the challenged
data-consideration provisions "give Monsanto's competitors a free ride
at Monsanto's expense." Ibid. The District Court reasoned that
3(c)(1)(D) appropriated Monsanto's fundamental right to exclude, and
that the effect of that appropriation is substantial. The court
further found that Monsanto's property was being appropriated for a
private purpose and that this interference was much more significant
than the public good that the appropriation might serve. 564 F. Supp.,
at 566-567.
The District Court also found that operation of the disclosure
provisions of FIFRA constituted a taking of Monsanto's property. The
cost incurred by Monsanto when its property is "permanently committed
to the public domain and thus effectively destroyed" was viewed by the
District Court as significantly outweighing any benefit to the general
public from having the ability to scrutinize the data, for the court
seemed to believe that the general public could derive all the
assurance it needed about the safety and effectiveness of a pesticide
from EPA's decision to register the product and to approve the label.
Id., at 567, and n. 4.
After finding that the data-consideration provisions operated to
effect a taking of property, the District Court found
[467 U.S. 986, 1000]
that the compulsory binding-arbitration scheme set forth
in 3(c)(1)(D)(ii) did not adequately provide compensation for the
property taken. The court found the arbitration provision to be
arbitrary and vague, reasoning that the statute does not give
arbitrators guidance as to the factors that enter into the concept of
just compensation, and that judicial review is foreclosed except in
cases of fraud. 564 F. Supp., at 567. The District Court also found
that the arbitration scheme was infirm because it did not meet the
requirements of Art. III of the Constitution. Ibid. Finally, the court
found that a remedy under the Tucker Act was not available for the
deprivations of property effected by 3 and 10. 564 F. Supp., at
567-568.
The District Court therefore declared 3(c)(1)(D), 3(c)(2)(A),
10(b), and 10(d) of FIFRA, as amended by the Federal Pesticide Act of
1978, to be unconstitutional, and permanently enjoined EPA from
implementing or enforcing those sections. See Amended Judgment, App.
to Juris. Statement 41a.
7
We noted probable jurisdiction.
464 U.S. 890 (1983).
III
In deciding this case, we are faced with four questions: (1) Does
Monsanto have a property interest protected by the Fifth Amendment's
Taking Clause in the health, safety, and environmental data it has
submitted to EPA? (2) If so, does EPA's use of the data to evaluate
the applications of others or EPA's disclosure of the data to
qualified members of the public effect a taking of that property
interest? (3) If there
[467 U.S. 986, 1001] is a taking, is it a taking for a
public use? (4) If there is a taking for a public use, does the
statute adequately provide for just compensation?
For purposes of this case, EPA has stipulated that "Monsanto has
certain property rights in its information, research and test data
that it has submitted under FIFRA to EPA and its predecessor agencies
which may be protected by the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of
the United States." App. 36. Since the exact import of that
stipulation is not clear, we address the question whether the data at
issue here can be considered property for the purposes of the Taking
Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
This Court never has squarely addressed the applicability of the
protections of the Taking Clause of the Fifth Amendment to commercial
data of the kind involved in this case. In answering the question now,
we are mindful of the basic axiom that "`[p]roperty interests . . .
are not created by the Constitution. Rather, they are created and
their dimensions are defined by existing rules or understandings that
stem from an independent source such as state law.'" Webb's Fabulous
Pharmacies, Inc. v. Beckwith,
449 U.S. 155, 161 (1980), quoting Board of Regents v. Roth,
408 U.S. 564, 577 (1972). Monsanto asserts that the health,
safety, and environmental data it has submitted to EPA are property
under Missouri law, which recognizes trade secrets, as defined in 757,
Comment b, of the Restatement of Torts, as property. See Reddi-Wip,
Inc. v. Lemay Valve Co., 354 S. W. 2d 913, 917 (Mo. App. 1962);
Harrington v. National Outdoor Advertising Co., 355 Mo. 524, 532, 196
S. W. 2d 786, 791 (1946); Luckett v. Orange Julep Co., 271 Mo. 289,
302-304, 196 S. W. 740, 743 (1917). The Restatement defines a trade
secret as "any formula, pattern, device or compilation of information
which is used in one's business, and which gives him an opportunity to
obtain an advantage over competitors who do not know or use it." 757,
Comment b. And the parties have stipulated that much of the
information, research, and test data that Monsanto has submitted under
[467 U.S. 986, 1002]
FIFRA to EPA "contains or relates to trade secrets as
defined by the Restatement of Torts." App. 36.
Because of the intangible nature of a trade secret, the extent of
the property right therein is defined by the extent to which the owner
of the secret protects his interest from disclosure to others. See
Harrington, supra; Reddi-Wip, supra; Restatement of Torts, supra; see
also Kewanee Oil Co. v. Bicron Corp.,
416 U.S. 470, 474 -476 (1974). Information that is public
knowledge or that is generally known in an industry cannot be a trade
secret. Restatement of Torts, supra. If an individual discloses his
trade secret to others who are under no obligation to protect the
confidentiality of the information, or otherwise publicly discloses
the secret, his property right is extinguished. See Harrington, supra;
1 R. Milgrim, Trade Secrets 1.012. (1983).
Trade secrets have many of the characteristics of more tangible
forms of property. A trade secret is assignable. See, e. g., Dr. Miles
Medical Co. v. John D. Park & Sons Co.,
220 U.S. 373, 401 -402 (1911); Painton & Co. v. Bourns, Inc., 442
F.2d 216, 225 (CA2 1971). A trade secret can form the res of a trust,
Restatement (Second) of Trusts 82, Comment e (1959); 1 A. Scott, Law
of Trusts 82.5, p. 703 (3d ed. 1967), and it passes to a trustee in
bankruptcy. See In re Uniservices, Inc., 517 F.2d 492, 496-497 (CA7
1975).
Even the manner in which Congress referred to trade secrets in the
legislative history of FIFRA supports the general perception of their
property-like nature. In discussing the 1978 amendments to FIFRA,
Congress recognized that data developers like Monsanto have a
"proprietary interest" in their data. S. Rep. No. 95-334, at 31.
Further, Congress reasoned that submitters of data are "entitled" to
"compensation" because they "have legal ownership of the data." H. R.
Conf. Rep. No. 95-1560, p. 29 (1978).
8 This general [467
U.S. 986, 1003] perception of trade secrets as property
is consonant with a notion of "property" that extends beyond land and
tangible goods and includes the products of an individual's "labour
and invention." 2 W. Blackstone, Commentaries *405; see generally J.
Locke, The Second Treatise of Civil Government, ch. 5 (J. Gough ed.
1947).
Although this Court never has squarely addressed the question
whether a person can have a property interest in a trade secret, which
is admittedly intangible, the Court has found other kinds of
intangible interests to be property for purposes of the Fifth
Amendment's Taking Clause. See, e. g., Armstrong v. United States,
364 U.S. 40, 44 , 46 (1960) (materialman's lien provided for under
Maine law protected by Taking Clause); Louisville Joint Stock Land
Bank v. Radford,
295 U.S. 555, 596 -602 (1935) (real estate lien protected); Lynch
v. United States,
292 U.S. 571, 579 (1934) (valid contracts are property within
meaning of the Taking Clause). That intangible property rights
protected by state law are deserving of the protection of the Taking
Clause has long been implicit in the thinking of this Court:
"It is conceivable that [the term `property' in the Taking
Clause] was used in its vulgar and untechnical sense of the physical
thing with respect to which the citizen exercises rights recognized
by law. On the other hand, it may have been employed in a more
accurate sense to denote the group of rights inhering in the
citizen's relation to the physical thing, as the right to possess,
use and dispose of it. In point of fact, the construction given the
phrase has been the latter." United States v. General Motors Corp.,
323 U.S. 373, 377 -378 (1945).
We therefore hold that to the extent that Monsanto has an interest
in its health, safety, and environmental data cognizable as a
trade-secret property right under Missouri law,
[467 U.S. 986, 1004]
that property right is protected by the Taking Clause of
the Fifth Amendment.
9
IV
Having determined that Monsanto has a property interest in the data
it has submitted to EPA, we confront the difficult question whether a
"taking" will occur when EPA discloses those data or considers the
data in evaluating another application for registration. The question
of what constitutes a "taking" is one with which this Court has
wrestled on many occasions. It has never been the rule that only
governmental acquisition or destruction of the property of an
individual constitutes a taking, for
"courts have held that the deprivation of the former owner rather
than the accretion of a right or interest
[467 U.S. 986, 1005]
to the sovereign constitutes the taking. Governmental
action short of acquisition of title or occupancy has been held, if
its effects are so complete as to deprive the owner of all or most
of his interest in the subject matter, to amount to a taking."
United States v. General Motors Corp.,
323 U.S., at 378 .
See also PruneYard Shopping Center v. Robins,
447 U.S. 74 (1980); Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon,
260 U.S. 393, 415 (1922).
As has been admitted on numerous occasions, "this Court has
generally `been unable to develop any "set formula" for determining
when "justice and fairness" require that economic injuries caused by
public action'" must be deemed a compensable taking. Kaiser Aetna v.
United States,
444 U.S. 164, 175 (1979), quoting Penn Central Transportation Co.
v. New York City,
438 U.S. 104, 124 (1978); accord, Hodel v. Virginia Surface Mining
& Reclamation Assn., Inc.,
452 U.S. 264, 295 (1981). The inquiry into whether a taking has
occurred is essentially an "ad hoc, factual" inquiry. Kaiser Aetna,
444 U.S., at 175 . The Court, however, has identified several
factors that should be taken into account when determining whether a
governmental action has gone beyond "regulation" and effects a
"taking." Among those factors are: "the character of the governmental
action, its economic impact, and its interference with reasonable
investment-backed expectations." PruneYard Shopping Center v. Robins,
447 U.S., at 83 ; see Kaiser Aetna,
444 U.S., at 175 ; Penn Central,
438 U.S., at 124 . It is to the last of these three factors that
we now direct our attention, for we find that the force of this factor
is so overwhelming, at least with respect to certain of the data
submitted by Monsanto to EPA, that it disposes of the taking question
regarding those data.
A
A "reasonable investment-backed expectation" must be more than a
"unilateral expectation or an abstract need."
[467 U.S. 986, 1006]
Webb's Fabulous Pharmacies,
449 U.S., at 161 . We find that with respect to any health,
safety, and environmental data that Monsanto submitted to EPA after
the effective date of the 1978 FIFRA amendments - that is, on or after
October 1, 1978
10 - Monsanto could not have had a reasonable, investment-backed
expectation that EPA would keep the data confidential beyond the
limits prescribed in the amended statute itself. Monsanto was on
notice of the manner in which EPA was authorized to use and disclose
any data turned over to it by an applicant for registration.
Thus, with respect to any data submitted to EPA on or after October
1, 1978, Monsanto knew that, for a period of 10 years from the date of
submission, EPA would not consider those data in evaluating the
application of another without Monsanto's permission. 3(c)(1)(D)(i).
It was also aware, however, that once the 10-year period had expired,
EPA could use the data without Monsanto's permission. 3(c)(1)(D)(ii)
and (iii). Monsanto was further aware that it was entitled to an offer
of compensation from the subsequent applicant only until the end of
the 15th year from the date of submission. 3(c)(1)(D)(iii). In
addition, Monsanto was aware that information relating to formulae of
products could be revealed by EPA to "any Federal agency consulted and
[could] be revealed at a public hearing or in findings of fact" issued
by EPA "when necessary to carry out" EPA's duties under FIFRA. 10(b).
The statute also gave Monsanto notice that much of the health, safety,
and efficacy data provided by it could be disclosed to the general
public at any time. 10(d). If, despite the data-consideration and
data-disclosure provisions in the statute, Monsanto chose to submit
the requisite data in order to receive a registration, it can hardly
argue that its reasonable investment-backed
[467 U.S. 986, 1007]
expectations are disturbed when EPA acts to use or
disclose the data in a manner that was authorized by law at the time
of the submission.
Monsanto argues that the statute's requirement that a submitter
give up its property interest in the data constitutes placing an
unconstitutional condition on the right to a valuable Government
benefit. See Brief for Appellee 29. But Monsanto has not challenged
the ability of the Federal Government to regulate the marketing and
use of pesticides. Nor could Monsanto successfully make such a
challenge, for such restrictions are the burdens we all must bear in
exchange for "`the advantage of living and doing business in a
civilized community.'" Andrus v. Allard,
444 U.S. 51, 67 (1979), quoting Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon,
260 U.S., at 422 (Brandeis, J., dissenting); see Day-Brite
Lighting, Inc. v. Missouri,
342 U.S. 421, 424 (1952). This is particularly true in an area,
such as pesticide sale and use, that has long been the source of
public concern and the subject of government regulation. That Monsanto
is willing to bear this burden in exchange for the ability to market
pesticides in this country is evidenced by the fact that it has
continued to expand its research and development and to submit data to
EPA despite the enactment of the 1978 amendments to FIFRA.
11 564 F. Supp., at 561.
Thus, as long as Monsanto is aware of the conditions under which
the data are submitted, and the conditions are rationally related to a
legitimate Government interest, a voluntary submission of data by an
applicant in exchange for the economic advantages of a registration
can hardly be called a taking. See Corn Products Refining Co. v. Eddy,
249 U.S. 427 , [467
U.S. 986, 1008] 431-432 (1919) ("The right of a
manufacturer to maintain secrecy as to his compounds and processes
must be held subject to the right of the State, in the exercise of its
police power and in promotion of fair dealing, to require that the
nature of the product be fairly set forth"); see also Westinghouse
Electric Corp. v. United States Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n, 555 F.2d
82, 95 (CA3 1977).
B
Prior to the 1972 amendments, FIFRA was silent with respect to
EPA's authorized use and disclosure of data submitted to it in
connection with an application for registration. Another statute, the
Trade Secrets Act, 18 U.S.C. 1905, however, arguably is relevant. That
Act is a general criminal statute that provides a penalty for any
employee of the United States Government who discloses, in a manner
not authorized by law, any trade-secret information that is revealed
to him during the course of his official duties. This Court has
determined that 1905 is more than an "antileak" statute aimed at
deterring Government employees from profiting by information they
receive in their official capacities. See Chrysler Corp. v. Brown,
441 U.S. 281, 298 -301 (1979). Rather, 1905 also applies to formal
agency action, i. e., action approved by the agency or department
head. Ibid.
It is true that, prior to the 1972 amendments, neither FIFRA nor
any other provision of law gave EPA authority to disclose data
obtained from Monsanto. But the Trade Secrets Act is not a guarantee
of confidentiality to submitters of data, and, absent an express
promise, Monsanto had no reasonable, investment-backed expectation
that its information would remain inviolate in the hands of EPA. In an
industry that long has been the focus of great public concern and
significant government regulation, the possibility was substantial
that the Federal Government, which had thus far taken no position on
disclosure of health, safety, and environmental data concerning
pesticides, upon focusing on the issue, would
[467 U.S. 986, 1009]
find disclosure to be in the public interest. Thus, with
respect to data submitted to EPA in connection with an application for
registration prior to October 22, 1972,
12 the Trade Secrets Act provided no basis for a reasonable
investment-backed expectation that data submitted to EPA would remain
confidential.
A fortiori, the Trade Secrets Act cannot be construed as any sort
of assurance against internal agency use of submitted data during
consideration of the application of a subsequent applicant for
registration.
13 Indeed, there is some evidence that the practice of using data
submitted by one company during consideration of the application of a
subsequent applicant was widespread and well known.
14 Thus, [467 U.S.
986, 1010] with respect to any data that Monsanto
submitted to EPA prior to the effective date of the 1972 amendments to
FIFRA, we hold that Monsanto could not have had a "reasonable
investment-backed expectation" that EPA would maintain those data in
strictest confidence and would use them exclusively for the purpose of
considering the Monsanto application in connection with which the data
were submitted.
C
The situation may be different, however, with respect to data
submitted by Monsanto to EPA during the period from October 22, 1972,
through September 30, 1978. Under the statutory scheme then in effect,
a submitter was given an opportunity to protect its trade secrets from
disclosure by designating them as trade secrets at the time of
submission. When Monsanto provided data to EPA during this period, it
was with the understanding, embodied in FIFRA, that EPA was free to
use any of the submitted data that were not trade secrets in
considering the application of another, provided
[467 U.S. 986, 1011]
that EPA required the subsequent applicant to pay
"reasonable compensation" to the original submitter. 3(c)(1)(D), 86
Stat. 979. But the statute also gave Monsanto explicit assurance that
EPA was prohibited from disclosing publicly, or considering in
connection with the application of another, any data submitted by an
applicant if both the applicant and EPA determined the data to
constitute trade secrets. 10, 86 Stat. 989. Thus, with respect to
trade secrets submitted under the statutory regime in force between
the time of the adoption of the 1972 amendments and the adoption of
the 1978 amendments, the Federal Government had explicitly guaranteed
to Monsanto and other registration applicants an extensive measure of
confidentiality and exclusive use. This explicit governmental
guarantee formed the basis of a reasonable investment-backed
expectation. If EPA, consistent with the authority granted it by the
1978 FIFRA amendments, were now to disclose trade-secret data or
consider those data in evaluating the application of a subsequent
applicant in a manner not authorized by the version of FIFRA in effect
between 1972 and 1978, EPA's actions would frustrate Monsanto's
reasonable investment-backed expectation with respect to its control
over the use and dissemination of the data it had submitted.
The right to exclude others is generally "one of the most essential
sticks in the bundle of rights that are commonly characterized as
property." Kaiser Aetna,
444 U.S., at 176 . With respect to a trade secret, the right to
exclude others is central to the very definition of the property
interest. Once the data that constitute a trade secret are disclosed
to others, or others are allowed to use those data, the holder of the
trade secret has lost his property interest in the data.
15 [467 U.S. 986,
1012] That the data retain usefulness for Monsanto even
after they are disclosed - for example, as bases from which to develop
new products or refine old products, as marketing and advertising
tools, or as information necessary to obtain registration in foreign
countries - is irrelevant to the determination of the economic impact
of the EPA action on Monsanto's property right. The economic value of
that property right lies in the competitive advantage over others that
Monsanto enjoys by virtue of its exclusive access to the data, and
disclosure or use by others of the data would destroy that competitive
edge.
EPA encourages us to view the situation not as a taking of
Monsanto's property interest in the trade secrets, but as a
"pre-emption" of whatever property rights Monsanto may have had in
those trade secrets. Brief for Appellant 27-28. The agency argues that
the proper functioning of the comprehensive FIFRA registration scheme
depends upon its uniform application to all data. Thus, it is said,
the Supremacy Clause dictates that the scheme not vary depending on
the property law of the State in which the submitter is located. Id.,
at 28. This argument proves too much. If Congress can "pre-empt" state
property law in the manner advocated by EPA, then the Taking Clause
has lost all vitality. This Court has stated that a sovereign, "by
ipse dixit, may not transform private property into public property
without compensation . . . . This is the very kind of thing that the
Taking Clause of the Fifth Amendment was meant to prevent." Webb's
Fabulous Pharmacies, Inc. v. Beckwith,
449 U.S., at 164 .
[467 U.S. 986, 1013]
If a negotiation or arbitration pursuant to 3(c)(1)(D)(ii) were to
yield just compensation to Monsanto for the loss in the market value
of its trade-secret data suffered because of EPA's consideration of
the data in connection with another application, then Monsanto would
have no claim against the Government for a taking. Since no
arbitration has yet occurred with respect to any use of Monsanto's
data, any finding that there has been an actual taking would be
premature. See infra, at 1019-1020.
16
In summary, we hold that EPA's consideration or disclosure of data
submitted by Monsanto to the agency prior to October 22, 1972, or
after September 30, 1978, does not effect a taking. We further hold
that EPA consideration or disclosure of health, safety, and
environmental data will constitute a taking if Monsanto submitted the
data to EPA between October 22, 1972, and September 30, 1978;
17 the data constituted trade secrets under Missouri law; Monsanto
had designated the data as trade secrets at the time of its
submission; the use or disclosure conflicts with the explicit
assurance of confidentiality or exclusive use contained in the statute
during that period; and the operation of the arbitration provision
[467 U.S. 986, 1014]
does not adequately compensate for the loss in market
value of the data that Monsanto suffers because of EPA's use or
disclosure of the trade secrets.
V
We must next consider whether any taking of private property that
may occur by operation of the data-disclosure and data-consideration
provisions of FIFRA is a taking for a "public use." We have recently
stated that the scope of the "public use" requirement of the Taking
Clause is "coterminous with the scope of a sovereign's police powers."
Hawaii Housing Authority v. Midkiff, ante, at 240; see Berman v.
Parker,
348 U.S. 26, 33 (1954). The role of the courts in second-guessing
the legislature's judgment of what constitutes a public use is
extremely narrow. Midkiff, supra; Berman, supra, at 32.
The District Court found that EPA's action pursuant to the
data-consideration provisions of FIFRA would effect a taking for a
private use, rather than a public use, because such action benefits
subsequent applicants by forcing original submitters to share their
data with later applicants. 564 F. Supp., at 566. It is true that the
most direct beneficiaries of EPA actions under the data-consideration
provisions of FIFRA will be the later applicants who will support
their applications by citation to data submitted by Monsanto or some
other original submitter. Because of the data-consideration
provisions, later applicants will not have to replicate the sometimes
intensive and complex research necessary to produce the requisite
data. This Court, however, has rejected the notion that a use is a
public use only if the property taken is put to use for the general
public. Midkiff, ante, at 243-244; Rindge Co. v. Los Angeles,
262 U.S. 700, 707 (1923); Block v. Hirsh,
256 U.S. 135, 155 (1921).
So long as the taking has a conceivable public character, "the
means by which it will be attained is . . . for Congress to
determine." Berman,
348 U.S., at 33 . Here, the public purpose behind the
data-consideration provisions is clear from
[467 U.S. 986, 1015]
the legislative history. Congress believed that the
provisions would eliminate costly duplication of research and
streamline the registration process, making new end-use products
available to consumers more quickly. Allowing applicants for
registration, upon payment of compensation, to use data already
accumulated by others, rather than forcing them to go through the
time-consuming process of repeating the research, would eliminate a
significant barrier to entry into the pesticide market, thereby
allowing greater competition among producers of end-use products. S.
Rep. No. 95-334, at 30-31, 40-41; 124 Cong. Rec. 29756-29757 (1978)
(remarks of Sen. Leahy). Such a procompetitive purpose is well within
the police power of Congress. See Midkiff, ante, at 241-242.
18
Because the data-disclosure provisions of FIFRA provide for
disclosure to the general public, the District Court did not find that
those provisions constituted a taking for a private use. Instead, the
court found that the data-disclosure provisions served no use. It
reasoned that because EPA, before registration, must determine that a
product is safe and effective, and because the label on a pesticide,
by statute, must set forth the nature, contents, and purpose of the
pesticide, the label provided the public with all the assurance it
needed that the product is safe and effective. 564 F. Supp., at 567,
and n. 4. It is enough for us to state that the optimum amount of
disclosure to the public is for Congress, not the courts, to decide,
and that the statute embodies Congress'
[467 U.S. 986, 1016]
judgment on that question. See 123 Cong. Rec., at 25706
(remarks of Sen. Leahy). We further observe, however, that public
disclosure can provide an effective check on the decisionmaking
processes of EPA and allows members of the public to determine the
likelihood of individualized risks peculiar to their use of the
product. See H. R. Rep. No. 95-343, p. 8 (1977) (remarks of Douglas M.
Costle); S. Rep. No. 95-334, at 13.
We therefore hold that any taking of private property that may
occur in connection with EPA's use or disclosure of data submitted to
it by Monsanto between October 22, 1972, and September 30, 1978, is a
taking for a public use.
VI
Equitable relief is not available to enjoin an alleged taking of
private property for a public use, duly authorized by law,
19 when a suit for compensation can be brought against the
sovereign subsequent to the taking. Larson v. Domestic & Foreign
Commerce Corp.,
337 U.S. 682, 697 , n. 18 (1949). The Fifth Amendment does not
require that compensation precede the taking. Hurley v. Kincaid,
285 U.S. 95, 104 (1932). Generally, an individual claiming that
the United States has taken his property can seek just compensation
under the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. 1491.
20 United States v. Causby,
328 U.S. 256, 267 (1946) ("If there is a taking, the claim is
`founded upon the Constitution' and within the jurisdiction
[467 U.S. 986, 1017]
of the Court of Claims to hear and determine"); Yearsley
v. Ross Construction Co.,
309 U.S. 18, 21 (1940).
In this case, however, the District Court enjoined EPA action under
the data-consideration and data-disclosure provisions of FIFRA,
finding that a Tucker Act remedy is not available for any taking of
property that may occur as a result of the operation of those
provisions. We do not agree with the District Court's assessment that
no Tucker Act remedy will lie for whatever taking may occur due to EPA
activity pursuant to FIFRA.
In determining whether a Tucker Act remedy is available for claims
arising out of a taking pursuant to a federal statute, the proper
inquiry is not whether the statute "expresses an affirmative showing
of congressional intent to permit recourse to a Tucker Act remedy,"
but "whether Congress has in the [statute] withdrawn the Tucker Act
grant of jurisdiction to the Court of Claims to hear a suit involving
the [statute] `founded . . . upon the Constitution.'" Regional Rail
Reorganization Act Cases,
419 U.S. 102, 126 (1974) (emphasis in original).
Nowhere in FIFRA or in its legislative history is there discussion
of the interaction between FIFRA and the Tucker Act. Since the Tucker
Act grants what is now the Claims Court "jurisdiction to render
judgment upon any claim against the United States founded . . . upon
the Constitution," we would have to infer a withdrawal of jurisdiction
with respect to takings under FIFRA from the structure of the statute
or from its legislative history. A withdrawal of jurisdiction would
amount to a partial repeal of the Tucker Act. This Court has
recognized, however, that "repeals by implication are disfavored."
Regional Rail Reorganization Act Cases,
419 U.S., at 133 . See, e. g., Amell v. United States,
384 U.S. 158, 165 -166 (1966); Mercantile National Bank v.
Langdeau,
371 U.S. 555, 565 (1963); United States v. Borden Co.,
308 U.S. 188, 198 -199 (1939).
[467 U.S. 986, 1018]
Monsanto argues that FIFRA's provision that an original submitter
of data who fails to participate in a procedure for reaching an
agreement or in an arbitration proceeding, or fails to comply with the
terms of an agreement or arbitration decision, "shall forfeit the
right to compensation for the use of the data in support of the
application," 3(c)(1)(D)(ii), indicates Congress' intent that there be
no Tucker Act remedy. But where two statutes are "`capable of
co-existence, it is the duty of the courts, absent a clearly expressed
congressional intention to the contrary, to regard each as
effective.'" Regional Rail Reorganization Act Cases,
419 U.S., at 133 -134, quoting Morton v. Mancari,
417 U.S. 535, 551 (1974). Here, contrary to Monsanto's claim, it
is entirely possible for the Tucker Act and FIFRA to co-exist. The
better interpretation, therefore, of the FIFRA language on forfeiture,
which gives force to both the Tucker Act and the FIFRA provision, is
to read FIFRA as implementing an exhaustion requirement as a
precondition to a Tucker Act claim. That is, FIFRA does not withdraw
the possibility of a Tucker Act remedy, but merely requires that a
claimant first seek satisfaction through the statutory procedure. Cf.
Regional Rail Reorganization Act Cases,
419 U.S., at 154 -156 (viewing Tucker Act remedy as covering any
shortfall between statutory remedy and just compensation).
21
With respect to data disclosure to the general public, FIFRA
provides for no compensation whatsoever. Thus, Monsanto's argument
that Congress intended the compensation scheme provided in FIFRA to be
exclusive has no relevance to the data-disclosure provisions of 10.
Congress in FIFRA did not address the liability of the Government
to pay just compensation should a taking occur. Congress' failure
specifically to mention or provide for recourse
[467 U.S. 986, 1019]
against the Government may reflect a congressional belief
that use of data by EPA in the ways authorized by FIFRA effects no
Fifth Amendment taking or it may reflect Congress' assumption that the
general grant of jurisdiction under the Tucker Act would provide the
necessary remedy for any taking that may occur. In any event, the
failure cannot be construed to reflect an unambiguous intention to
withdraw the Tucker Act remedy. "[W]hether or not the United States so
intended," any taking claim under FIFRA is one "founded . . . upon the
Constitution," and is thus remediable under the Tucker Act. Regional
Rail Reorganization Act Cases,
419 U.S., at 126 . Therefore, where the operation of the
data-consideration and data-disclosure provisions of FIFRA effect a
taking of property belonging to Monsanto, an adequate remedy for the
taking exists under the Tucker Act. The District Court erred in
enjoining the taking.
VII
Because we hold that the Tucker Act is available as a remedy for
any uncompensated taking Monsanto may suffer as a result of the
operation of the challenged provisions of FIFRA, we conclude that
Monsanto's challenges to the constitutionality of the arbitration and
compensation scheme are not ripe for our resolution. Because of the
availability of the Tucker Act, Monsanto's ability to obtain just
compensation does not depend solely on the validity of the statutory
compensation scheme. The operation of the arbitration procedure
affects only Monsanto's ability to vindicate its statutory right to
obtain compensation from a subsequent applicant whose registration
application relies on data originally submitted by Monsanto, not its
ability to vindicate its constitutional right to just compensation.
Monsanto did not allege or establish that it had been injured by
actual arbitration under the statute. While the District Court
acknowledged that Monsanto had received several offers of compensation
from applicants for registration, 564 F. Supp., at 561, it did not
find that EPA had considered
[467 U.S. 986, 1020] Monsanto's data in
considering another application. Further, Monsanto and any subsequent
applicant may negotiate and reach agreement concerning an outstanding
offer. If they do not reach agreement, then the controversy must go to
arbitration. Only after EPA has considered data submitted by Monsanto
in evaluating another application and an arbitrator has made an award
will Monsanto's claims with respect to the constitutionality of the
arbitration scheme become ripe. See Duke Power Co. v. Carolina
Environmental Study Group, Inc.,
438 U.S. 59, 81 (1978); Regional Rail Reorganization Act Cases,
419 U.S., at 138 .
VIII
We find no constitutional infirmity in the challenged provisions of
FIFRA. Operation of the provisions may effect a taking with respect to
certain health, safety, and environmental data constituting trade
secrets under state law and designated by Monsanto as trade secrets
upon submission to EPA between October 22, 1972, and September 30,
1978.
22 But whatever taking may occur is one for a public use, and a
Tucker Act remedy is available to provide Monsanto with just
compensation. Once a taking has occurred, the proper forum for
Monsanto's claim is the Claims Court. Monsanto's challenges to the
constitutionality of the arbitration procedure are not yet ripe for
review. The judgment of the District Court is therefore vacated, and
the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
JUSTICE WHITE took no part in the consideration or decision of this
case.
Footnotes
[
Footnote 1 ] For purposes of our discussion of FIFRA, the term
"pesticides" includes herbicides, insecticides, fungicides,
rodenticides, and plant regulators. See 2(t) and (u) of FIFRA, as
amended, 7 U.S.C. 136(t) and (u).
[
Footnote 2 ] The first federal legislation in this area was the
Insecticide Act of 1910, 36 Stat. 331, which made it unlawful to
manufacture and sell insecticides that were adulterated or misbranded.
In 1947, the 1910 legislation was repealed and replaced with FIFRA. 61
Stat. 172.
Some States had undertaken to regulate pesticide use before there
was federal legislation, and many more continued to do so after
federal legislation was enacted. In 1946, the Council of State
Governments recommended for adoption a model state statute, the
Uniform State Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act. See S. Rep.
No. 92-838, p. 7 (1972); H. R. Rep. No. 313, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., 3
(1947).
[
Footnote 3 ] Appellant here concedes, however, that as a matter of
practice, the Department of Agriculture did not publicly disclose the
health and safety information. Brief for Appellant 5, n. 5.
[
Footnote 4 ] Section 3(c)(1)(D), 92 Stat. 820-822, 7 U.S.C.
136a(c)(1)(D), reads in relevant part:
"(i) With respect to pesticides containing active ingredients
that are initially registered under this Act after [September 30,
1978], data submitted to support the application for the original
registration of the pesticide, or an application for an amendment
adding any new use to the registration and that pertain solely to
such new use, shall not, without the written permission of the
original data submitter, be considered by the Administrator to
support an application by another person during a period of ten
years following the date the Administrator first registers the
pesticide . . .;
"(ii) except as otherwise provided in subparagraph (D)(i) of this
paragraph, with respect to data submitted after December 31, 1969,
by an applicant or registrant to support an application for
registration, experimental use permit, or amendment adding a new use
to an existing registration, to support or maintain in effect an
existing registration, or for reregistration, the Administrator may,
without the permission of the original data submitter, consider any
such item of data in support of an application by any other person .
. . within the fifteen-year period following the date the data were
originally submitted only if the applicant has made an offer to
compensate the original data submitter and submitted such offer to
the Administrator accompanied by evidence of delivery to the
original data submitter of the offer. The terms and amount of
compensation may be fixed by agreement between the original data
submitter and the applicant,
[467 U.S. 986, 995] or, failing such
agreement, binding arbitration under this subparagraph. If, at the
end of ninety days after the date of delivery to the original data
submitter of the offer to compensate, the original data submitter
and the applicant have neither agreed on the amount and terms of
compensation nor on a procedure for reaching an agreement on the
amount and terms of compensation, either person may initiate binding
arbitration proceedings by requesting the Federal Mediation and
Conciliation Service to appoint an arbitrator from the roster of
arbitrators maintained by such Service. . . . [T]he findings and
determination of the arbitrator shall be final and conclusive, and
no official or court of the United States shall have power or
jurisdiction to review any such findings and determination, except
for fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct by one of the
parties to the arbitration or the arbitrator where there is a
verified complaint with supporting affidavits attesting to specific
instances of such fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct. . .
. If the Administrator determines that an original data submitter
has failed to participate in a procedure for reaching an agreement
or in an arbitration proceeding as required by this subparagraph, or
failed to comply with the terms of an agreement or arbitration
decision concerning compensation under this subparagraph, the
original data submitter shall forfeit the right to compensation for
the use of the data in support of the application. . . .
Registration action by the Administrator shall not be delayed
pending the fixing of compensation;
"(iii) after expiration of any period of exclusive use and any
period for which compensation is required for the use of an item of
data under subparagraphs (D)(i) and (D)(ii) of this paragraph, the
Administrator may consider such item of data in support of an
application by any other applicant without the permission of the
original data submitter and without an offer having been received to
compensate the original data submitter for the use of such item of
data."
[
Footnote 5 ] Section 10(d), 92 Stat. 830, reads in relevant part:
"(1) All information concerning the objectives, methodology,
results, or significance of any test or experiment performed on or
with a registered or previously registered pesticide or its separate
ingredients, impurities, or degradation products and any information
concerning the effects of such pesticide on any organism or the
behavior of such pesticide in the environment, including, but not
limited to, data on safety to fish and wildlife, humans, and other
mammals, plants, animals, and soil, and studies on persistence,
translocation and fate in the environment, and metabolism, shall be
available for disclosure to the public: Provided, That the use of
such data for any registration purpose shall be governed by section
3 of this Act: Provided further, That this paragraph does not
authorize the disclosure of any information that -
"(A) discloses manufacturing or quality control processes,
"(B) discloses the details of any methods for testing, detecting,
or measuring the quantity of any deliberately added inert
ingredients of a pesticide, or
"(C) discloses the identity or percentage quantity of any
deliberately added inert ingredient of a pesticide,
unless the Administrator has first determined that disclosure is
necessary to protect against an unreasonable risk of injury to health
or the environment.
"(2) Information concerning production, distribution, sale, or
inventories of a pesticide that is otherwise entitled to
confidential treatment under subsection (b) of this section may be
publicly disclosed in connection with a public proceeding to
determine whether a pesticide, or any ingredient of a pesticide,
causes unreasonable adverse effects on health or the environment, if
the Administrator determines that such disclosure is necessary in
the public interest."
[
Footnote 6 ] A study by the Office of Pesticide Programs of the
EPA showed that in 1977 approximately 400 firms were registered to
produce manufacturing-use products. S. Rep. No. 95-334, p. 34 (1977).
It was estimated that the 10 largest firms account for 75% of this
country's pesticide production. Id., at 60. A correspondingly small
number of new pesticides are marketed each year. In 1974, only 10 new
pesticides were introduced. See Goring, The Costs of Commercializing
Pesticides, International Conference of Entomology, Aug. 20, 1976,
reprinted in Hearings on Extension of the Federal Insecticide,
Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act before the Subcommittee on Agricultural
Research and General Legislation of the Senate Committee on
Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, 95th Cong., 1st Sess., 250, 254
(1977).
[
Footnote 7 ] The District Court's judgment in this case is in
conflict with the holdings of other federal courts. See, e. g.,
Petrolite Corp. v. United States Environmental Protection Agency, 519
F. Supp. 966 (DC 1981); Mobay Chemical Corp. v. Costle, 517 F. Supp.
252, and 517 F. Supp. 254 (WD Pa. 1981), aff'd sub nom. Mobay Chemical
Co. v. Gorsuch, 682 F.2d 419 (CA3), cert. denied,
459 U.S. 988 (1982); Chevron Chemical Co. v. Costle, 499 F. Supp.
732 (Del. 1980), aff'd, 641 F.2d 104 (CA3), cert. denied,
452 U.S. 961 (1981).
[
Footnote 8 ] Of course, it was not necessary that Congress
recognize the data at issue here as property in order for the data to
be protected by the Taking
[467 U.S. 986, 1003] Clause. We mention
the legislative history merely as one more illustration of the general
perception of the property-like nature of trade secrets.
[
Footnote 9 ] Contrary to EPA's contention, Brief for Appellant 29,
Justice Holmes' dictum in E. I. du Pont de Nemours Powder Co. v.
Masland,
244 U.S. 100 (1917), does not undermine our holding that a trade
secret is property protected by the Fifth Amendment Taking Clause.
Masland arose from a dispute about the disclosure of trade secrets
during preparation for a trial. In his opinion for the Court, the
Justice stated:
"The case has been considered as presenting a conflict between a
right of property and a right to make a full defence, and it is said
that if the disclosure is forbidden to one who denies that there is
a trade secret, the merits of his defence are adjudged against him
before he has a chance to be heard or to prove his case. We approach
the question somewhat differently. The word property as applied to
trade-marks and trade secrets is an unanalyzed expression of certain
secondary consequences of the primary fact that the law makes some
rudimentary requirements of good faith. Whether the plaintiffs have
any valuable secret or not the defendant knows the facts, whatever
they are, through a special confidence that he accepted. The
property may be denied but the confidence cannot be. Therefore the
starting point for the present matter is not property or due process
of law, but that the defendant stood in confidential relations with
the plaintiffs." Id., at 102.
Justice Holmes did not deny the existence of a property interest;
he simply deemed determination of the existence of that interest
irrelevant to resolution of the case. In a case decided prior to
Masland, the Court had spoken of trade secrets in property terms.
Board of Trade v. Christie Grain & Stock Co.,
198 U.S. 236, 250 -253 (1905) (Holmes, J., for the Court). See
generally 1 R. Milgrim, Trade Secrets 1.011. (1983).
[
Footnote 10 ] The Federal Pesticide Act of 1978 was approved on
September 30, 1978. 92 Stat. 842. The new data-consideration and
data-disclosure provisions applied with full force to all data
submitted after that date.
[
Footnote 11 ] Because the market for Monsanto's pesticide products
is an international one, Monsanto could decide to forgo registration
in the United States and sell a pesticide only in foreign markets.
Presumably, it will do so in those situations where it deems the data
to be protected from disclosure more valuable than the right to sell
in the United States.
[
Footnote 12 ] The 1972 amendments to FIFRA became effective at the
close of the business day on October 21, 1972. 86 Stat. 998.
[
Footnote 13 ] The Trade Secrets Act prohibits a Government
employee from "publish[ing], divulg[ing], disclos[ing] or mak[ing]
known" confidential information received in his official capacity. 18
U.S.C. 1905. In considering the data of one applicant in connection
with the application of another, EPA does not violate any of these
prohibitions.
[
Footnote 14 ] The District Court found: "During the period that
USDA administered FIFRA, it was also its policy that the data
developed and submitted by companies such as [Monsanto] could not be
used to support the registration of another's product without the
permission of the data submitter." Monsanto Co. v. Acting
Administrator, United States Environmental Protection Agency, 564 F.
Supp. 552, 564 (ED Mo. 1983) (emphasis in original). The District
Court apparently based this finding on the testimony of two former
Directors of the Pesticide Regulation Division, who testified that
they knew of no instance in which data submitted by one applicant were
subsequently considered in evaluating another application. Ibid.
This finding is in marked conflict with the statement of the
National Agricultural Chemicals Association, presented before a Senate
Subcommittee in 1972, which advocated that the 1972 amendments to
FIFRA should contain an exclusive-use provision:
"Under the present law registration information submitted to the
Administrator has not routinely been made available for public
inspection. Such information has, however, as a matter of practice
but without statutory authority, been considered by the
Administrator to support the registration of the same or a similar
product by another registrant." Federal
[467 U.S. 986, 1010]
Environmental Pesticide Control Act: Hearings before
the Subcommittee on Agricultural Research and General Legislation of
the Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry, 92d Cong., 2d Sess.,
pt. 2, p. 245 (1972).
In addition, EPA points to the Department of Agriculture's
Interpretation with Respect to Warning, Caution and Antidote
Statements Required to Appear on Labels of Economic Poisons, 27 Fed.
Reg. 2267 (1962), which presents a list of pesticides that would
require no additional toxicological data for registration. The clear
implication from the Interpretation is that the Department determined
that the data already submitted with respect to those chemicals would
be sufficient for purposes of evaluating any future applications for
registration of those chemicals.
Although the evidence against the District Court's finding seems
overwhelming, we need not determine that the finding was clearly
erroneous in order to find that a submitter had no reasonable
expectation that the Department or EPA would not use the data it had
submitted when evaluating the application of another. The District
Court did not find that the policy of the Department was publicly
known at the time or that there was any explicit guarantee of
exclusive use.
[
Footnote 15 ] We emphasize that the value of a trade secret lies
in the competitive advantage it gives its owner over competitors.
Thus, it is the fact that operation of the data-consideration or
data-disclosure provisions will allow a competitor to register more
easily its product or to use the disclosed data
[467 U.S. 986, 1012]
to improve its own technology that may constitute a
taking. If, however, a public disclosure of data reveals, for example,
the harmful side effects of the submitter's product and causes the
submitter to suffer a decline in the potential profits from sales of
the product, that decline in profits stems from a decrease in the
value of the pesticide to consumers, rather than from the destruction
of an edge the submitter had over its competitors, and cannot
constitute the taking of a trade secret.
[
Footnote 16 ] Because the record contains no findings with respect
to the value of the trade-secret data at issue and because no
arbitration proceeding has yet been held to determine the amount of
recovery to be paid by a subsequent applicant to Monsanto, we cannot
preclude the possibility that the arbitration award will be sufficient
to provide Monsanto with just compensation, thus nullifying any claim
against the Government for a taking when EPA uses Monsanto's data in
considering another application. The statutory arbitration scheme, of
course, provides for compensation only in cases where the data are
considered in connection with a subsequent application, not in cases
of disclosure of the data.
[
Footnote 17 ] While the 1975 amendments to FIFRA purported to
carry backward the protections against data consideration and data
disclosure to submissions of data made on or after January 1, 1970, 89
Stat. 751, the relevant consideration for our purposes is the nature
of the expectations of the submitter at the time the data were
submitted. We therefore do not extend our ruling as to a possible
taking to data submitted prior to October 22, 1972.
[
Footnote 18 ] Monsanto argues that EPA and, by implication,
Congress misapprehended the true "barriers to entry" in the pesticide
industry and that the challenged provisions of the law create, rather
than reduce, barriers to entry. Brief for Appellee 35, n. 48. Such
economic arguments are better directed to Congress. The proper inquiry
before this Court is not whether the provisions in fact will
accomplish their stated objectives. Our review is limited to
determining that the purpose is legitimate and that Congress
rationally could have believed that the provisions would promote that
objective. Midkiff, ante, at 242-243; Western & Southern Life Ins. Co.
v. State Bd. of Equalization,
451 U.S. 648, 671 -672 (1981).
[
Footnote 19 ] Any taking of private property that would occur as a
result of EPA disclosure or consideration of data submitted by
Monsanto between October 22, 1972, and September 30, 1978, is, of
course, duly authorized by FIFRA as amended in 1978.
[
Footnote 20 ] The Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. 1491, reads, in relevant
part:
"The United States Claims Court shall have jurisdiction to render
judgment upon any claim against the United States founded either
upon the Constitution, or any Act of Congress or any regulation of
an executive department, or upon any express or implied contract
with the United States, or for liquidated or unliquidated damages in
cases not sounding in tort."
[
Footnote 21 ] Exhaustion of the statutory remedy is necessary to
determine the extent of the taking that has occurred. To the extent
that the operation of the statute provides compensation, no taking has
occurred and the original submitter of data has no claim against the
Government.
[
Footnote 22 ] We emphasize that nothing in our opinion prohibits
EPA's consideration or disclosure, in a manner authorized by FIFRA, of
data submitted to it by Monsanto. Our decision merely holds that, with
respect to a certain limited class of data submitted by Monsanto to
EPA, EPA actions under the data-disclosure and data-consideration
provisions of the statute may give Monsanto a claim for just
compensation. [467 U.S.
986, 1021]
JUSTICE O'CONNOR, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I join all of the Court's opinion except for part IV-B and the
Court's conclusion, ante, at 1013, that "EPA's consideration or
disclosure of data submitted by Monsanto to the agency prior to
October 22, 1972 . . . does not effect a taking." In my view public
disclosure of pre-1972 data would effect a taking. As to consideration
of this information within EPA in connection with other license
applications not submitted by Monsanto, I believe we should remand to
the District Court for further factual findings concerning Monsanto's
expectations regarding interagency uses of trade secret information
prior to 1972.
It is important to distinguish at the outset public disclosure of
trade secrets from use of those secrets entirely within EPA. Internal
use may undermine Monsanto's competitive position within the United
States, but it leaves Monsanto's position in foreign markets
undisturbed. As the Court notes, ante, at 1007, n. 11, the likely
impact on foreign market position is one that Monsanto would weigh
when deciding whether to submit trade secrets to EPA. Thus a
submission of trade secrets to EPA that implicitly consented to
further use of the information within the agency is not necessarily
the same as one that implicitly consented to public disclosure.
It seems quite clear - indeed the Court scarcely disputes - that
public disclosure of trade secrets submitted to the Federal Government
before 1972 was neither permitted by law, nor customary agency
practice before 1972, nor expected by applicants for pesticide
registrations. The Court correctly notes that the Trade Secrets Act,
18 U.S.C. 1905, flatly proscribed such disclosures. The District Court
expressly found that until 1970 it was Government "policy that the
data developed and submitted by companies such as [Monsanto] be
maintained confidentially by the [administrative agency] and was not
to be disclosed without the permission of the data submitter."
Monsanto Co. v. Acting Administrator, EPA, 564 F. Supp. 552, 564
(1983). Finally, the Court, ante, at
[467 U.S. 986, 1022] 1009, n. 14, quotes
from a 1972 statement by the National Agricultural Chemicals
Association that "registration information submitted to the
Administrator has not routinely been made available for public
inspection." It is hard to imagine how a pre-1972 applicant for a
pesticide license would not, under these circumstances, have formed a
very firm expectation that its trade secrets submitted in connection
with a pesticide registration would not be disclosed to the public.
The Court's analysis of this question appears in a single sentence:
an "industry that long has been the focus of great public concern and
significant government regulation" can have no reasonable expectation
that the Government will not later find public disclosure of trade
secrets to be in the public interest. Ante, at 1008. I am frankly
puzzled to read this statement in the broader context of the Court's
otherwise convincing opinion. If the degree of Government regulation
determines the reasonableness of an expectation of confidentiality,
Monsanto had as little reason to expect confidentiality after 1972 as
before, since the 1972 amendments were not deregulatory in intent or
effect. And the Court entirely fails to explain why the nondisclosure
provision of the 1972 Act, 10, 86 Stat. 989, created any greater
expectation of confidentiality than the Trade Secrets Act. Section 10
prohibited EPA from disclosing "trade secrets or commercial or
financial information." No penalty for disclosure was prescribed,
unless disclosure was with the intent to defraud. The Trade Secrets
Act, 18 U.S.C. 1905, prohibited and still prohibits Government
disclosure of trade secrets and other commercial or financial
information revealed during the course of official duties, on pain of
substantial criminal sanctions. The Court acknowledges that this
prohibition has always extended to formal and official agency action.
Chrysler Corp. v. Brown,
441 U.S. 281, 298 -301 (1979). It seems to me that the criminal
sanctions in the Trade Secrets Act therefore created at least as
strong an expectation of privacy before 1972 as the precatory language
of 10 created after 1972.
[467 U.S. 986, 1023]
The Court's tacit analysis seems to be this: an expectation of
confidentiality can be grounded only on a statutory nondisclosure
provision situated in close physical proximity, in the pages of the
United States Code, to the provisions pursuant to which information is
submitted to the Government. For my part, I see no reason why Congress
should not be able to give effective protection to all trade secrets
submitted to the Federal Government by means of a single, overarching,
trade secrets provision. We routinely assume that wrongdoers are put
on notice of the entire contents of the Code, though in all likelihood
most of them have never owned a copy or opened a single page of it. It
seems strange to assume, on the other hand, that a company like
Monsanto, well served by lawyers who undoubtedly do read the Code,
could build an expectation of privacy in pesticide trade secrets only
if the assurance of confidentiality appeared in Title 7 itself.
The question of interagency use of trade secrets before 1972 is
more difficult because the Trade Secrets Act most likely does not
extend to such uses. The District Court found that prior to October
1972 only two competitors' registrations were granted on the basis of
data submitted by Monsanto, and that Monsanto had no knowledge of
either of these registrations prior to their being granted. 564 F.
Supp., at 564. The District Court also found that before 1970 it was
agency policy "that the data developed and submitted by companies such
as [Monsanto] could not be used to support the registration of
another's product without the permission of the data submitter." Ibid.
This Court, however, concludes on the basis of two cited fragments of
evidence that "the evidence against the District Court's finding seems
overwhelming." Ante, at 1010, n. 14. The Court nevertheless wisely
declines to label the District Court's findings of fact on this matter
clearly erroneous. Instead, the Court notes that the "District Court
did not find that the policy of the Department [of Agriculture] was
publicly known at the time [before 1970] or that there was any
explicit guarantee of exclusive use." Ibid. This begs exactly the
right question, but the
[467 U.S. 986, 1024] Court firmly declines
to answer it. The Court simply states that "there is some evidence
that the practice of using data submitted by one company during
consideration of the application of a subsequent applicant was
widespread and well known." Ante, at 1009 (footnote omitted). And
then, without more ado, the Court declares that with respect to
pre-1972 data Monsanto "could not have had a `reasonable
investment-backed expectation' that EPA would . . . use [the data]
exclusively for the purpose of considering the Monsanto application in
connection with which the data were submitted." Ante, at 1010.
If one thing is quite clear it is that the extent of Monsanto's
pre-1972 expectations, whether reasonable and investment-backed or
otherwise, is a heavily factual question. It is fairly clear that the
District Court found that those expectations existed as a matter of
fact and were reasonable as a matter of law. But if the factual
findings of the District Court on this precise question were not as
explicit as they might have been, the appropriate disposition is to
remand to the District Court for further factfinding. That is the
course I would follow with respect to interagency use of trade secrets
submitted by Monsanto before 1972.
[467 U.S. 986, 1025]
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