Justia Texas Supreme Court Opinion Summaries

Articles Posted in Drugs & Biotech
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A group of businesses and consumers involved in the sale and manufacture of consumable hemp products containing manufactured delta-8 THC challenged actions taken by the Texas Department of State Health Services and its commissioner. Following federal and state legislative changes in 2018 and 2019 that removed “hemp” and certain tetrahydrocannabinols (THC) in hemp from the definition of controlled substances, the Texas commissioner objected to a federal rule that would have further decontrolled hemp-derived extracts, including delta-8 THC. The commissioner then amended the state schedules to clarify that manufactured delta-8 THC remained a Schedule I controlled substance, leading to substantial business disruption for the vendors who had entered the delta-8 market.The vendors sued in district court, arguing that the commissioner exceeded her authority both procedurally and substantively under Texas law by modifying the schedules in a way that contradicted the Texas Farm Bill, and that the Department’s website statement about delta-8 THC was an invalid rule under the Texas Administrative Procedure Act (APA). The trial court denied the Department’s plea to the jurisdiction (challenging standing and sovereign immunity) and issued a temporary injunction against enforcement of the amended schedules and the website statement. The Court of Appeals for the Third District of Texas affirmed, concluding that the vendors had standing, the claims were justiciable, and a temporary injunction was appropriate.The Supreme Court of Texas held that the vendors had standing and their claims were ripe for review. However, it concluded that the commissioner acted within her broad statutory discretion and followed proper procedures under Health & Safety Code § 481.034(g) in objecting to the federal rule and amending the schedules. The court also held that the website statement was not an APA “rule.” Accordingly, it reversed the injunction and rendered judgment for the Department, with the only affirmed portion being the finding of standing. View "TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF STATE HEALTH SERVICES v. SKY MARKETING CORP." on Justia Law