Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 60— - NATURAL GAS POLICY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - ADMINISTRATION, ENFORCEMENT, AND REVIEW › § 3416
You can ask a court to review most orders the Commission issues or any final agency decision made after a hearing. If you are a party and unhappy with a Commission order, you must ask the Commission for a rehearing within 30 days and say why. The Commission can grant, deny, or change the order. If it does not act within 30 days, your rehearing request is treated as denied. You cannot go to court until you have asked for a rehearing and the Commission has finally decided on it. The Commission may also change or cancel an order before the case record is sent to an appeals court, if it gives reasonable notice. A party who still wants review can file a petition in the U.S. Court of Appeals within 60 days after the Commission’s final action on the rehearing. You may file in the circuit where the party is located or has its main office, or in the D.C. Circuit. The court gets the Commission’s record and can affirm, change, or set aside the order. The court generally will not consider issues not raised in the rehearing unless there was a good reason. The Commission’s findings of fact stand if supported by substantial evidence. The court may allow new evidence if it is important and there was a good reason it wasn’t shown earlier; that evidence can be sent back to the Commission to reconsider. Asking for rehearing or filing in court does not pause the Commission’s order unless the Commission or the court specifically orders a stay. Cases under sections 3361–3363 (except enforcement under 3364(a)) must start in the Federal Circuit, and appeals under 3364(a)(2) from district courts must be filed in the Federal Circuit within 30 days after the district court’s judgment.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 3416
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73