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No. 10715962
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Eliza Wille v. Howard Lutnik
No. 10715962 · Decided October 31, 2025
No. 10715962·Fourth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Decided
October 31, 2025
Citation
No. 10715962
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
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PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 24-1734
ELIZA WILLE; LISA DENNING,
Plaintiffs – Appellants,
and
SHELLEY CAREY,
Plaintiff,
v.
HOWARD LUTNICK, in his official capacity as Secretary of Commerce; NATIONAL
MARINE FISHERIES SERVICE; NEIL JACOBS, in his official capacity as
Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; EUGENIO
PIÑEIRO SOLER, in his official capacity as Assistant Administrator for Fisheries,
Defendants – Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Greenbelt.
Brendan A. Hurson, United States District Judge. (8:22-cv-00689-BAH)
Argued: May 8, 2025 Decided: October 31, 2025
Before HARRIS, RICHARDSON, and HEYTENS, Circuit Judges
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Richardson wrote the opinion, in which Judges
Harris and Heytens joined.
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ARGUED: Michael Poon, PACIFIC LEGAL FOUNDATION, Sacramento, California,
for Appellants. Robert Parke Stockman, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Damien M. Schiff, PACIFIC
LEGAL FOUNDATION, Sacramento, California, for Appellants. Todd Kim, Assistant
Attorney General, John E. Bies, Environment and Natural Resources Division, UNITED
STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Appellees.
2
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RICHARDSON, Circuit Judge:
“Spinner dolphins are small, acrobatic dolphins that are known for their distinctive
twisting leaps above the water.” Wille v. Raimondo, 2024 WL 2832599, at *1 (D. Md.
June 3, 2024). For their safety, the National Marine Fisheries Service regulated human
contact with the dolphins. Plaintiffs, however, all “in some way relied on access to” the
dolphins for “their livelihood[s].” Id. 1 Deprived of access to their flippered friends, they
argue that constitutional infirmities invalidate the regulation. Plaintiffs specifically claim
that the regulation is invalid under the Appointments Clause because it was signed and
promulgated by someone who is not a principal officer. See U.S. Const. art. II, § 2, cl. 2.
But after Plaintiffs filed suit, Dr. Richard Spinrad—the principal officer responsible for
overseeing the Fisheries Service—ratified the regulation. Applying agency law, it is thus
as if the regulation was promulgated by Spinrad in the first instance. Therefore, because
that ratification alleviated any constitutional defects that may have existed with the
regulation, we affirm this suit’s dismissal.
I. BACKGROUND
The challenged regulation is known as the Approach Rule. We start with its history
and ratification.
In September 2021, the Fisheries Service—and its parent agency, the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), a subagency within the Department of
1
For example, Plaintiff Wille “is a psychotherapist who incorporated dolphin
encounters into her practice as a form of experiential therapy,” Carey is a boat captain who
operated “dolphin swims,” and Denning worked as a dolphin guide and ocean
photographer. Opening Br. at 3.
3
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Commerce—issued the Approach Rule. See 50 C.F.R. § 216.20 (the “Swim With and
Approach Regulation for Hawaiian Spinner Dolphins Under the Marine Mammal
Protection Act”). The underlying authority to promulgate the Rule stems from the Marine
Mammal Protection Act, 16 U.S.C. § 1361 et seq. That Act authorizes the Secretaries of
Commerce and the Interior to promulgate regulations to protect against the “taking” of
marine mammals. 2 16 U.S.C. §§ 1371(a), 1372, 1373, 1382. The Approach Rule protects
spinner dolphins by barring people from approaching or remaining within 50 yards of a
spinner dolphin. 3
In the course of its promulgation, the Approach Rule went through the notice-and-
comment process. During that process, the “notice of final rulemaking” for the Approach
Rule was signed by Samuel Rauch, who was the Fisheries Service’s Deputy Assistant
Administrator for Regulatory Programs. 86 Fed. Reg. 53841. Rauch’s asserted power to
publish the Rule stemmed from a series of delegations. The Secretary of Commerce—at
the time, Gina Raimondo—is the Cabinet Secretary to whom Congress delegated the power
to enact regulations. In turn, the Secretary delegated her “authority to perform” the
“functions prescribed by the Marine Mammal Protection Act” to the Under Secretary of
2
“The term ‘take’ means to harass, hunt, capture, or kill, or attempt to harass, hunt,
capture, or kill any marine mammal.” 16 U.S.C. § 1362(13).
3
The Rule technically “prohibits people from approaching or remaining within 50
yards (45.7 m) of a spinner dolphin; swimming or attempting to swim within 50 yards (45.7
m) of a spinner dolphin; causing a vessel, person, or object to approach or remain within
50 yards (45.7 m) of a spinner dolphin; and intercepting, or placing a vessel, person, or
other object in the path of a spinner dolphin so that the dolphin approaches within 50 yards
(45.7 m) of the vessel, person, or object.” 86 Fed. Reg. 53837.
4
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Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere, who is also the NOAA Administrator. J.A. 188–
91. When Rauch signed the Rule for publication, the NOAA Administrator was Dr.
Richard Spinrad. The delegation to Spinrad allowed him to redelegate his “authority to
any employee of NOAA”—so Spinrad then delegated signing authority to Fisheries
Assistant Administrator Janet Coit. J.A. 196; J.A. 201 (granting “authority to perform
functions relating to . . . [s]ignature of material for publication in the Federal Register and
the Code of Federal Regulations”). In turn, Coit delegated signing authority to Rauch, the
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs. J.A. 204. The power to sign for
publication is the only power delegated to Rauch. See id. (listing as the only delegation
“[s]ignature of material for publication in the Federal Register and the Code of Federal
Regulations”).
Plaintiffs sued in July 2022, seeking to have the Rule declared unconstitutional and
to enjoin the government from enforcing it. 4 They argue that the delegations did not permit
the Rule’s promulgation because only constitutional officers who pass through the
Appointments Clause’s strictures may promulgate such regulations. Neither Coit
(Assistant Administrator) nor Rauch (Deputy Assistant Administrator) qualifies, they
argue. The government disagrees. But rather than fight over this constitutional issue, the
government chose a different strategy. Spinrad ratified the Approach Rule. To do so, he
signed a declaration that he “independently evaluated the Approach Rule and the basis for
4
Plaintiffs seek only forward-looking relief as they have not been subjected to
enforcement action under the Rule.
5
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adopting it” and exercised his “independent judgment that the Approach Rule was and
remains necessary.” J.A. 237–39.
The government argues that Spinrad’s ratification cured any Appointments Clause
defects that may have existed when Rauch signed the Rule for publication. And Plaintiffs,
in turn, argue that the ratification is either invalid or, if valid, failed to cure the defect. The
district court found that the ratification was valid and cured any defects, so it granted
summary judgment for the government.
Plaintiffs timely appealed.
II. DISCUSSION
In this appeal, constitutional and agency law converge. We begin by discussing the
Appointments Clause and relevant principles of agency law. We then turn to the issue on
appeal—whether ratification can cure an Appointments Clause defect in a regulation’s
promulgation. 5 Applying ordinary agency-law principles, we conclude that here Spinrad’s
ratification cured any constitutional defects that might have existed when the Rule was
published. Finally, Spinrad’s ratification was not impermissibly retroactive. We therefore
affirm.
Our review of this Appointments Clause challenge is de novo. See K&R
5
Contractors, LLC v. Keene, 86 F.4th 135, 143 (4th Cir. 2023). And we review de novo the
district court’s interpretation of the Marine Mammal Protection Act and agency-law
principles. See South Carolina v. U.S. Army Corps. of Engineers, 66 F.4th 189, 193 (4th
Cir. 2023).
6
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A. Appointments Clause
Article II of the Constitution vests “The executive Power” in the “President.” U.S.
Const. art. II, § 1, cl. 1. Thus “[t]he President is responsible for the actions of the Executive
Branch and cannot delegate that ultimate responsibility” to anyone. United States v.
Arthrex, Inc., 594 U.S. 1, 11 (2021) (emphasis added and quotation omitted). But “[t]he
Framers recognized” that “no single person could fulfill that responsibility alone and
expected that the President would rely on subordinate officers for assistance.” Id.
(quotation omitted). Recognizing this challenge, the Appointments Clause specifies
certain subordinates must be appointed. U.S. Const. art. II, § 2, cl. 2.
The Appointments Clause provides that the President “shall nominate, and by and
with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint . . . Officers of the United States
. . . but the Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they
think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in the Heads of Departments.”
Id. This Clause creates two distinctions. The first is between those who are “Officers of
the United States” and those who are not. The second, and within the category of officers,
is between those who are “inferior” officers and those who are a different kind of officer.
We often call that latter kind a “principal” officer. See, e.g., Morrison v. Olson, 487 U.S.
654, 672 (1988).
The first distinction matters because only validly appointed officers may “exercise[]
significant authority pursuant to the laws of the United States.” Kennedy v. Braidwood
Mgmt. Inc., 145 S. Ct. 2427, 2442 (2025) (quotation omitted). But non-officers—mere
“employee[s]”—cannot exercise such authority. Id.
7
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The second distinction—between principal and inferior officers—matters because
only principal officers must receive Senate confirmation. “Generally speaking, whether
one is an inferior officer depends on whether he has a superior other than the President,
and how much power the officer exercises free from control by a superior.” Id. (cleaned
up). Those supervised only by the President must be approved by both political branches,
but those directed and supervised by a principal officer can “be unilaterally appointed by
the President or a Head of Department.” Id.
Picking among these categories could have been the dispositive issue here. The
parties disagree on what type of officer, if any, needed to promulgate the Approach Rule.
But to avoid that fight, Spinrad—who all agree is a Senate-confirmed principal officer with
the authority to promulgate the Rule—“ratified” the Rule.
B. Agency-Law Ratification
Ratification is a doctrine derived from agency law that has long colored both
constitutional and administrative-law questions. We start with the principal-agent
relationship generally before turning to its application in the constitutional and
administrative contexts in the next section.
A principal is the party who delegates authority and tasks to an agent, who acts on
the principal’s behalf. Agency is “the fiduciary relation which results from the
manifestation of consent by one person to another that the other shall act on his behalf and
subject to his control.” Restatement (Second) of Agency § 1(1) (1958) (“Restatement”).
“The one for whom action is to be taken is the principal.” Id. § 1(3). “The one who is to
act is the agent.” Id. § 1(3).
8
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An agency relationship means that the “agent” “holds a power to alter the legal
relations between the principal and third persons”: “He has the power to affect the legal
relations of the principal to the same extent as if the principal had so acted.” Id. § 12 &
cmt. a. (emphasis added). But an agent’s power does not extend to any action. Typically,
agents can affect the legal relations between the principal and third parties only where they
have authority to act. An agent may act with actual authority—here, the agent can “affect
the legal relations of the principal by acts done in accordance with the principal’s
manifestations of consent to him.” Id. § 7 (emphasis added). Alternatively, an agent may
possess apparent authority: The agent can affect the principal’s legal relations with third
parties based on the third party’s reasonable belief—stemming from the principal’s
manifestations to the third party—that the agent has the authority to act for the principal.
Id. § 8.
But sometimes an agent’s actions can become binding on the principal and third
parties even where the agent possesses no authority at all (whether actual or apparent) to
act as he did. This can happen through ratification. Ratification is the principal’s
affirmation of a prior unauthorized act done by a purported agent. Restatement § 82
(“Ratification is the affirmance by a person of a prior act which did not bind him but which
was done or professedly done on his account.”). Upon successful ratification, “the act” “is
given effect as if originally authorized by” the principal. Id. Ratification is thus powerful
medicine. It allows a principal to unilaterally transform an act which did not bind into one
that does. See, e.g., Clark’s Ex’rs v. Van Riemsdyk, 13 U.S. 153, 161 (1815) (“[T]he acts
9
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of an agent, done without authority, may be so ratified and confirmed by his principals as
to bind them in like manner as if an original authority had existed.”).
Common-law ratification requires several conditions to be valid. The first is that
the principal must affirm the agent’s act. “Affirmance” occurs when the principal makes
“a manifestation” that “an unauthorized act” should be “treat[ed]” “as authorized.”
Restatement § 83. 6 The next two are temporal: For ratification to be effective, the principal
must possess the authority to authorize the act both when the agent initially took the action
and when the principal ratifies it. See id. § 84(1) (An act “can be ratified” only “if, at the
time of affirmance, [the principal] could authorize such an act.”); § 84(2) (If the principal
could “not have authorized” the “act” when it was “done,” “he cannot” ordinarily “ratify”
that act.). And a principal can delegate—and therefore ratify—only acts by an agent that
do not require personal performance by the principal. § 17. 7
There are a few more conditions. When the agent takes the action, he must be
“purport[ing] to . . . act[] for the ratifier.” Id. § 85. And when affirmed, the principal must
know the “material facts involved in the original transaction.” Id. § 91. Moreover, an
affirmance “must occur before the” third party “has manifested his withdrawal from” the
6
If a principal engages “in conduct” “justifiable only if there were such an election,”
that also may constitute affirmance. Restatement § 83.
7
If the act must be done by the principal himself (i.e., it requires personal
performance), then the principal lacks the authority to authorize the agent to perform the
act. And that means the act cannot be ratified. Restatement § 17 (“[I]f personal
performance is required, the doing of the act by another on his behalf does not constitute
performance by him.”). For example, if state law requires that a testator personally execute
a will, then the act of making a testamentary disposition cannot be delegated or ratified.
10
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transaction “to the purported principal or to the agent.” Id. § 88. Furthermore, a third party
can void a ratification if the affirmance “occurs at a time when the situation has so
materially changed that it would be inequitable to subject” the third party “to liability.” Id.
§ 89. Finally, after a person’s “[r]ights have [c]rystallized,” ratification cannot be used to
deprive the person of their right. Id. § 90. 8
With these principles in tow, we turn to the purported ratification in this case.
C. Spinrad’s Ratification Cured Any Appointments Clause Violation
We begin with an obvious, yet important, observation: the government functions
through chains of principals and agents. So it is unremarkable that Spinrad used agents to
act on his behalf. But his use of agents leaves us with two questions. First, whether
ordinary agency principles like ratification govern officers and their use of agents; second,
and if so, whether Spinrad’s ratification was valid under these principles.
Principals may use agents only for tasks that they may authorize an agent to perform,
so we begin there. The “President” “is authorized to . . . empower the head of any
department or agency in the executive branch . . . to perform without approval . . . any
function which is vested in the President.” 3 U.S.C. § 301 (entitled “[g]eneral authorization
to delegate functions”). So the President can authorize certain principal-officer agents—
the heads of departments and executive agencies—to perform most tasks that he himself
could perform. Here, the President has authorized the Secretary of Commerce to perform
There are other rules, most of which are fairly intuitive, such as that the principal
8
must have the requisite mental capacity to make an affirmance. See, e.g., Restatement
§ 86.
11
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any act “which is related to or incidental to, in support of, or necessary for, the operation
of the programs” for which the Department of Commerce is responsible. Exec. Order No.
11564, 35 Fed. Reg. 15801 (Oct. 6, 1970). And the Secretary has “delegated” to the NOAA
Administrator (who is appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the
Senate) “authority to perform [certain] functions vested in the Secretary,” including
“functions prescribed by the [Marine Mammal Protection Act].” Sec’y of Com., Dep’t.
Org. Ord. 10-15 § 3.01(t) (December 12, 2011) (hereinafter “Organization Order”); 5
U.S.C. app. at 129 (Reorg. Plan No. 4 of 1970 § 2(b)). Among the functions prescribed by
the Act is rulemaking concerning the taking of marine animals. See 16 U.S.C. §§ 1373(a),
1382(a).
NOAA’s Administrator, in turn, is authorized by the Secretary to “delegate his/her
authority . . . to any employee of NOAA.” Organization Order § 3.05. The Administrator
thus delegated authority to sign materials for publication and to perform the functions
related to the Marine Mammal Protection Act to the Assistant Administrator for Fisheries,
who is appointed by the Secretary and supervises the National Marine Fisheries Service.
J.A. 201–02. Next, the Assistant Administrator for Fisheries delegated authority to “[sign]
material for publication in the Federal Register and Code of Federal Regulations” to the
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs. J.A. 204.
“[I]t is generally accepted . . . that a governmental administrator vested with such
authority may delegate unless expressly forbidden.” House v. S. Stevedoring Co., 703 F.2d
87, 88 (4th Cir. 1983); see also United States v. Mango, 199 F.3d 85, 89–92 (2d Cir. 1999)
(upholding Secretary of the Army’s delegation of authority to sign and issue discharge
12
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permits to both district engineers and their designees who were lower-level employees).
Thus, the internal departmental orders that permitted the delegations of authority from
Secretary Raimondo to Administrator Spinrad to Assistant Administrator Coit to Deputy
Assistant Administrator Rauch were presumably authorized by law.
Those delegations carry with them the ordinary agency principles that govern the
use of delegated authority, including ratification. “Congress is understood to legislate
against a background of common-law . . . principles.” Astoria Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n v.
Solimino, 501 U.S. 104, 108 (1991). So we “may take it as given that Congress has” passed
these statutes “with an expectation that” ordinary agency principles will apply absent
“statutory” evidence “to the contrary.” Id. (quoting Isbrandtsen Co. v. Johnson, 343 U.S.
779, 783 (1952)). Any claim, then, that common-law agency principles like ratification
don’t apply requires some reason to think as much. On the contrary, Supreme Court
precedent and Congress’s clarification when ratification does not apply confirm that
ratification operates within the Executive Branch.
To start, Congress has in other contexts specifically clarified when ratification is not
available, see 5 U.S.C. § 3348, which supports the idea that ratification normally can
validate otherwise illicit actions in the agency context. And the Supreme Court has
consistently found that ratification can authorize otherwise illicit Executive actions. For
example, in FEC v. NRA Political Victory Fund, the Supreme Court confronted an
attempted ratification by the Solicitor General. 513 U.S. 88, 98 (1994). The FEC, which
“lacks statutory authority” to “litigate” before the Supreme Court “file[d] a petition for
certiorari.” Id. To make such a filing, the FEC needed, but did not obtain, “the Solicitor
13
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General’s authorization.” Id. (citing 28 C.F.R. § 0.20(a)). The Solicitor General later
provided “after-the-fact authorization,” but did so “more than 120 days after the deadline
for filing a petition had passed.” Id. (citing 28 U.S.C. § 2101(c)). In analyzing the effect
of the attempted ratification, the Supreme Court was quite clear: “The question is at least
presumptively governed by principles of agency law.” Id. at 98 (emphasis added) (citing
Restatement § 90). In that case, because the Solicitor General (the principal) “could not
himself have filed a petition for certiorari on” the date the action was affirmed, the
ratification was invalid. Id. at 98–99 (citing Restatement § 90 & cmt. a; also citing private-
law agency cases). But while the ratification in that case was invalid, it was only so for
reasons of agency law—not constitutional or statutory law.
Take another recent example. In Braidwood Management, the Court faced a
situation in which inferior officers had been appointed by an agent of a department head
for over 10 years. 145 S. Ct. at 2461. After the appointment of those officers was
challenged in litigation, the relevant department head “ratified” the “previous appointments
. . . and also re-appointed them.” Id. The Supreme Court thus opined that the “fact that
the Secretary did not begin personally appointing” the inferior officers “[wa]s irrelevant to
whether” they were “properly appointed.” Id. Given the Supreme Court’s willingness to
apply ordinary agency-law principles in the administrative-law context, we see no reason
not to do the same.
Under those principles, Spinrad properly ratified the Approach Rule. First, once a
dispute broke out as to the Rule’s validity, Spinrad “affirmed” Rauch’s publication of the
Rule. J.A. 237. As NOAA Administrator, Spinrad “possess[ed] the requisite statutory
14
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authority” under the Marine Mammal Protection Act to “promulgate the Approach Rule.”
J.A. 238. Plaintiffs conceded this point. Opening Br. at 45. What’s more, there was a
notice-and-comment period as required by 5 U.S.C. § 553(c). See Protective Regulations
of Hawaiian Spinner Dolphins Under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, 81 Fed. Reg.
80629 (Reopening of Public Comment Period Nov 16, 2016) (final rule at 50 C.F.R.
§ 216.20). And the Rule was published within a “reasonable” time, as required by 5 U.S.C.
§ 555(b). Indeed, nobody has alleged that either the first promulgation, or the ratification
which happened shortly thereafter, was unreasonably delayed. See also Jooce v. FDA, 981
F.3d 26, 29 (D.C. Cir. 2020) (finding a ratification effective in similar circumstances).
We thus have no doubt that Spinrad could have promulgated the Rule, in the first
instance, when he affirmed Rauch’s signature. And when he did so, he was clear that he
“independently evaluated the Approach Rule and the basis for adopting it” and that he had
“knowledge of the contents, purpose, and requirements of the Approach Rule.” J.A. 238.
Thus, Spinrad made a “manifestation” that Rauch’s allegedly “unauthorized act” should be
“treat[ed]” “as authorized,” see Restatement § 83, and knew the “material facts involved
in” Rauch’s initial publication, see id. § 91.
Next, based on his power to delegate his “authority to any employee of NOAA,”
Organization Order § 3.05, Spinrad delegated the power to sign materials for publication
to the Assistant Administrator for Fisheries: Janet Coit. J.A. 201–02. Coit, in turn,
redelegated this power—i.e., the power to sign materials for publication—to the Deputy
Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs: Samuel Rauch. J.A. 204. Rauch then
15
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signed the Rule for publication based on this delegated authority. 9 Thus, when Rauch
signed the Rule for publication, he “purported to be acting for the ratifier,” i.e., Spinrad (in
his capacity as head of NOAA). Id. § 85.
Because Spinrad had the authority to promulgate the Rule when it was initially
published, his subsequent ratification of Rauch’s signature made it such that he did
promulgate it at that time, thereby curing any Appointments Clause defects that may have
existed when the Rule was initially signed by Rauch. True, Spinrad could ratify only those
acts of Rauch that he could have originally delegated. See Restatement § 84. And Spinrad
could delegate (and therefore ratify) only those acts of Rauch that were ministerial and did
not require independent discretion. See id. §§ 18 & cmt. b, 78. Signing the Rule for
publication constitutes just this sort of delegable, non-discretionary ministerial act, and was
therefore ratifiable. 10
And none of the limits on ratification described in the Restatement, all of which aim
at avoiding inequity, apply here. Recall that once a third party’s “[r]ights have
[c]rystallized,” ratification cannot be used to deprive that person of their rights.
9
As the district court found, the delegation only permitted Coit or Rauch to “sign
regulations.” Wille, 2024 WL 2832599, at *2; J.A 201 (granting the Assistant
Administrator for Fisheries “authority to perform functions relating to . . . Signature of
material for publication in the Federal Register and the Code of Federal Regulations”); J.A.
204 (“Delegations of Authority to the Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory
Programs”: “Signature of material for publication in the Federal Register and the Code of
Federal Regulations.”).
10
We assume, without deciding, that non-officers cannot be delegated the power to
authorize rules for promulgation. And we address here only the conclusion that when
Rauch signed the rule, Spinrad could validly delegate signing authority.
16
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Restatement § 90. Plaintiffs claim that their right to relief vested when they filed this suit,
and so a post hoc ratification cannot alter that right. But the “mere commencement of [a]
suit [does] not change the nature of” a litigant’s “right[s].” United States v. Heinszen, 206
U.S. 370, 387 (1907). In Heinszen, the Supreme Court specifically found that the filing of
a lawsuit does not take away a principal’s ability to ratify his agent’s action. See id.; see
also Chuoco Tiaco v. Forbes, 228 U.S. 549, 555–56 (1913) (same); Jooce, 981 F.3d at 29
(same). The public also has several interests in the timing and content of federal
regulations, none of which were infringed on in this ratification. For example, the public
still received its right to notice and comment, as discussed above. See 5 U.S.C. § 553.
Further, rules must be a “logical outgrowth” of the comments the agency receives, and
Plaintiffs have not challenged that the Approach Rule was not. See Long Island Care at
Home, Ltd. v. Coke, 551 U.S. 158, 174 (2007). The only harm Plaintiffs allege is that they
are subject to a rule authorized by someone without the requisite authority—ratification,
however, makes clear that the Rule was promulgated at the behest of someone with such
authority. So ratification fixes Plaintiffs’ problem. There’s no inequity in that.
We also see no reason to think that signing rules for publication in the Federal
Register is the type of action that requires personal performance and therefore cannot be
delegated to an agent. See Restatement § 17. And no constitutional provision or statute
limits the ability of an officer to delegate this responsibility to non-officers. Instead,
Congress has gone out of its way in other contexts to specify when personal performance
by the relevant officer is required. See 5 U.S.C. § 3348(a)(2) (referring to regulations that
require certain actions “to be performed by the applicable officer (and only that officer)”
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(emphasis added)). Congress has not passed any statute prohibiting the delegation of the
power to sign regulations for publication to non-officer agents. See 16 U.S.C. § 1371.
This result does not ignore the Appointments Clause. The Appointments Clause
ensures that those who exercise judicial and executive power are appointed and confirmed
by the people’s elected representatives. And that is what happened here. President Biden,
and the Senate who confirmed Spinrad, were duly elected representatives. They appointed
Spinrad to faithfully discharge his duties. Spinrad, like any other constitutional officer,
authorized agents to act on his behalf. And using ordinary agency principles, Spinrad
independently ratified the Rule and is therefore deemed to have validly promulgated it from
the moment that it was signed. Thus, a constitutionally appointed officer promulgated the
Rule, which is what the Appointments Clause contemplates.
We do not stand alone in reaching this conclusion. The D.C. Circuit has “repeatedly
recognized that ratification can remedy a defect arising from the decision of” a non-
constitutionally appointed officer. Jooce, 981 F.3d at 28. In Jooce, the FDA had
“published a proposed rule to deem e-cigarettes, among other items, ‘tobacco products’
under” 21 U.S.C. § 387a(b). Id. at 27–28 (citing 79 Fed. Reg. 23,142, 23,143 (Apr. 25,
2014)). “After considering comments, FDA Associate Commissioner for Policy Leslie
Kux promulgated a rule” “that deemed e-cigarettes to be ‘tobacco products.’” Id. at 28
(citing 21 C.F.R. §§ 1100, 1140, 1143). But “Kux was not appointed as either an inferior
or principal officer.” Id. After the rule’s validity was “questioned in litigation” on the
grounds that it violated the Appointments Clause, “FDA Commissioners Robert Califf and
Scott Gottlieb”—who unquestionably had the authority to promulgate the rule—
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“ratifi[ed]” it. Id. at 28–29. The Court held that because the rule was “effectively ratified”
according to agency-law principles, the “Appointments Clause objections” to “Kux’s
issuance” failed. Id. at 29. 11
Officers delegate tasks—that is no surprise. All the evidence we have suggests that
when officers use agents, ordinary agency principles apply. And applying those principles,
it is as if Spinrad always promulgated the Approach Rule.
D. Ratification Is Not Impermissibly Retroactive
“Retroactivity is not favored in the law. Thus, congressional enactments and
administrative rules will not be construed to have retroactive effect unless their language
requires this result.” Bowen v. Georgetown Univ. Hosp., 488 U.S. 204, 208 (1988). And
“[b]y the same principle, a statutory grant of legislative rulemaking authority will not, as a
general matter, be understood to encompass the power to promulgate retroactive rules
unless that power is conveyed by Congress in express terms.” Id. Plaintiffs claim that
because ratification is retroactive, and because Congress never explicitly authorized
NOAA to promulgate retroactive regulations, Spinrad could not ratify the Approach Rule’s
publication.
11
Today’s decision does not conflict with the Supreme Court’s decision in Lucia v.
SEC, 585 U.S. 237 (2018). Lucia might be read to suggest that ratification cannot cure an
Appointments Clause defect. See id. at 252 & n.6. But Lucia confronted the purported
“ratification” of an appointment of constitutional officers. Id. But in its agency-law sense,
ratification can retroactively cure acts but not agents. So a purported “ratification” that
covers only one’s status as an officer cannot retroactively bequeath officer status to a non-
officer and thereby cure each and every unauthorized act performed by that non-officer.
But ratification of a particular unauthorized act can cure that act—as is the case here.
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Both premises are true, but Plaintiffs’ conclusion does not follow. Ratification does,
in some sense, have a retroactive effect—it reaches back and makes it so that a formerly
unauthorized act was authorized from the get-go. And it is true that nothing in the Marine
Mammal Protection Act—which formed the basis for the Approach Rule—explicitly
authorizes retroactive regulations. But Plaintiffs’ conclusion does not follow from their
premises, for ratification is not “retroactive” in the sense contemplated and circumscribed
by precedent.
Consider the Supreme Court’s decision in Bowen. There, the Supreme Court
evaluated legislation that provided “health care providers” “reimburse[ments] by the
Government for expenses incurred in providing medical services to Medicare
beneficiaries.” Bowen, 488 U.S. at 205–07. Congress also had “authorized the Secretary
of Health and Human Services to promulgate regulations setting limits on the levels of
Medicare costs that w[ould] be reimbursed.” Id. at 206. In 1981, the “Secretary issued a
cost-limit schedule” which “provided that wages paid by Federal Government hospitals”
to staff “would be excluded from” reimbursement. Id. That rule was invalidated because
the Secretary failed to provide “notice and opportunity for public comment.” Id. (citing 5
U.S.C. § 551 et seq.). Rather than appeal that decision, the Secretary waited a few years
and in 1984 “published a notice seeking public comment on a proposal to reissue the 1981
wage-index rule, retroactive to” 1981. Id. at 207. The Secretary then “proceeded to recoup
sums previously paid” as reimbursements. Id. Thus, even though the Secretary’s original
rule had been deemed invalid, “the net result was as if the original rule had never been set
aside.” Id. In other words, the regulation reached back in time and imposed liability where
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it did not exist before. This is the kind of action that needed, but was missing, explicit
authorization to promulgate retroactive rules.
This sort of retroactivity is materially distinct from the retroactivity effectuated by
ratification. Disfavored retroactivity turns conduct that was considered lawful at the time
into unlawful conduct; for example, it reaches back in time to regulate conduct that was
not formerly regulated. Not so here. Recall that the principal must have the authority to
authorize the action both when the action is initially performed by the agent, and when the
act is affirmed (and thereby ratified) by the principal. See Restatement § 84(1)–(2).
Because Spinrad independently validated the Rule’s publication, the Rule existed from the
moment that Rauch signed and published it.
The Supreme Court’s Heinszen decision illustrates the distinction between these two
senses of retroactivity and clarifies that ratification is not improperly retrospective. There,
Congress retroactively ratified the President’s imposition of a tariff. Id. at 385. But parties
who were subject to the tariff before Congress’s ratification argued that the tariff was the
sort of tax that only Congress could levy. Id. The Court disagreed. Because “the United
States could have originally authorized” the tariff, it “must be treated as if it were solely an
original exercise by Congress.” Id. at 385–86. And because “there was a tariff in
existence” “when the goods were brought into the” United States, “the elementary principle
of ratification” meant that the tariff was not “retrospective legislation.” Id. (emphasis
added). Ratification does not impose liability where there once was none—it confirms and
validates liability that already existed.
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Ratification also triggers none of the justifications that warrant limiting retroactive
legislation, so we see no reason to extend Bowen and its ilk. The “presumption against
retroactivity” is not “a constitutional imperative.” Antonin Scalia & Brian A. Garner,
Reading Law 261 (2012). Rather, it reflects “a general, almost invariable rule” that “a
legislature makes law for the future, not the past.” Id. But the Approach Rule did not reach
back in time and criminalize past conduct—when it was signed, it prohibited future
conduct. The no-retroactive-legislation rule “has consistently been explained by reference
to the unfairness of imposing new burdens on persons after the fact.” Landgraf v. USI Film
Prods., 511 U.S. 244, 270 (1994). But ratification does not upset “familiar considerations
of fair notice, reasonable reliance, and settled expectations”; it imposes an obligation to
follow a regulation that the government already claimed was validly promulgated. Id.; see
also Gonzalez v. Cuccinelli, 985 F.3d 357, 372–73 (4th Cir. 2021). That obligation exists
whenever legislation is passed, no matter whether a person has a claim that the legislation
is invalid. See, e.g., Walker v. City of Birmingham, 388 U.S. 307, 320 (1967). The
Approach Rule was thus like any other statute or regulation whose validity is confirmed
after its publication. In these circumstances, the presumption against retroactivity carries
no weight.
* * *
The Appointments Clause ensures that the political branches are ultimately
accountable for the actions of those whom they authorize to exercise significant power. In
this case, Spinrad’s authorized agents carried out the authority vested in NOAA by
Congress. Spinrad, through ratification, confirmed that his agents were indeed carrying
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out his will. Because ratification cured any potential infirmity in the Approach Rule, the
district court is
AFFIRMED.
23
Plain English Summary
USCA4 Appeal: 24-1734 Doc: 34 Filed: 10/31/2025 Pg: 1 of 23 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
Key Points
01USCA4 Appeal: 24-1734 Doc: 34 Filed: 10/31/2025 Pg: 1 of 23 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
0224-1734 ELIZA WILLE; LISA DENNING, Plaintiffs – Appellants, and SHELLEY CAREY, Plaintiff, v.
03HOWARD LUTNICK, in his official capacity as Secretary of Commerce; NATIONAL MARINE FISHERIES SERVICE; NEIL JACOBS, in his official capacity as Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; EUGENIO PIÑEIRO SOLER, in h
04(8:22-cv-00689-BAH) Argued: May 8, 2025 Decided: October 31, 2025 Before HARRIS, RICHARDSON, and HEYTENS, Circuit Judges Affirmed by published opinion.
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USCA4 Appeal: 24-1734 Doc: 34 Filed: 10/31/2025 Pg: 1 of 23 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
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