The Vaping Dragon Breathes Fire: Another Court Finds FDA’s Tobacco Civil Monetary Penalty Authority Unconstitutional
Monday was an eventful day for the parties and practitioners alike who are closely following the ongoing legal challenges to FDA’s attempt to impose civil penalties on businesses alleged to be selling unauthorized e-liquid tobacco products. The day included oral arguments at the Fifth Circuit and another federal court decision weighing in on the issue.
In August 2025, we blogged on a first-of-its-kind decision by the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas that held that FDA’s civil monetary penalty (CMP) provision for tobacco products was unconstitutional. See Wulferic, LLC v. FDA, 793 F. Supp. 3d 830 (N.D. Tex. 2025). In short, applying the Supreme Court’s reasoning in SEC v. Jarkesy, 603 U.S. 109 (2024) (see our analysis of the decision), the court ruled that the Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial applies to civil monetary penalties like those applied by the FD&C Act, and that the enforcement of these penalties by administrative law judges is unconstitutional.
We followed up with an update in December 2025, noting that FDA had appealed the Wulferic decision to the Fifth Circuit where it joined another case, Texas Tobacco Barn. We also noted that the issue was on review by the D.C. Circuit (link to D.C. Circuit oral argument recording here).
On Monday, the Fifth Circuit heard oral arguments in Texas Tobacco Barn (link to oral argument recording here) (the Wulferic appeal has been stayed pending a decision). It’s too early to make a call on how the Fifth Circuit will rule, but it’s fair to say that the judges put FDA through its paces. We will be watching closely for decisions from both the Fifth Circuit and the D.C. Circuit in the near future.
But the big hit to FDA’s CMP provision for tobacco was another decision on Monday, Vaping Dragon LLC v. FDA, No. 1:25-cv-081-H (N.D. Tex. Feb. 2, 2026), out of the Northern District of Texas that, similar to Wulferic, ruled that the CMP provision violates the Seventh Amendment’s right to trial by jury. As in other district court decisions on this subject, the court spent significant time analyzing whether the district court has jurisdiction to hear a constitutional challenge to FDA’s CMP proceedings. It ruled here that because the claim involved a “structural constitutional issue” (i.e., Vaping Dragon sought injunctive relief “preventing it from having to incur time and expense of an allegedly unconstitutional proceeding”) the analysis favored jurisdiction.
After sorting through these jurisdictional issues, the district court found that because the CMP provision imposes a remedy designed to push or deter the wrongdoer, it was similar to a common law remedy that could only be enforced by courts of law, thus implicating the Seventh Amendment. Just like in Wulferic, the court rejected FDA’s argument that the public rights exception applied because the CMP provision implicates public health. The court granted Vaping Dragon’s request for a ruling enjoining FDA from adjudicating civil monetary penalties against Vaping Dragon and further enjoining the agency to dismiss the pending administrative complaint against the company. The court rejected the company’s request for a universal injunction against FDA or to enter declaratory relief.
One other note: looming large in the Vaping Dragon decision, and in the Texas Tobacco Barn oral argument, was the Fifth’s Circuit’s decision in AT&T,
Inc. v. FCC, 149 F.4th 491, 503 (5th Cir. 2025), holding that the FCC’s civil money penalties were unconstitutional under Jarkesy. Just last month, the Supreme Court granted certiorari from that case (along with a contrary ruling out of the Second Circuit). Although the Court’s ruling might not address the issues most central to FDA’s CMP scheme, any future Supreme Court pronouncements on the meaning and breadth of Jarkesy will be closely watched.
Stay tuned for more developments.