Appeals pending for public nuisance climate change litigation

Appeals are pending in three cases with significant implications for tort-based climate litigation. Connecticut v. American Electric Power Company, Inc.; Comer v. Murphy Oil Co.; and California v. General Motors Corp. – all dismissed in district court on political question grounds – are pending in the Second, Fifth, and Ninth Circuits, respectively. As the legislative and executive branches mobilize to address climate change issues under the Obama administration, activity in the judicial branch may also impact the climate law landscape.

Connecticut v. American Electric Power Company, Inc. (05-05104) (“AEP”) was docketed with the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in September 2005. In AEP, the District Court rejected public nuisance claims brought by eight state Attorneys General against five power companies based on the companies’ greenhouse gas emissions. The court held that the case was non-justiciable because it required “identification and balancing of economic, environmental, foreign policy, and national security interests” of a “transcendently legislative nature.” The appellate briefing was complete in March 2006. Oral argument was held on June 7, 2006. Following argument, plaintiffs and defendants sent letters to the Second Circuit regarding the significance of the Supreme Court’s decision in Massachusetts v. EPA.


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In Comer v. Murphy Oil Co., fourteen individuals filed a class action lawsuit against insurance, oil, coal and chemical companies seeking relief for property damages resulting from Hurricane Katrina. Plaintiffs alleged that defendants’ emissions contributed to climate change and thus magnified adverse weather events, including Hurricane Katrina. The district court dismissed the Comer case on constitutional standing and political question grounds. Comer v. Murphy Oil USA (07-60756) was docketed in the Fifth Circuit in September 2007 and the appeal was argued on November 3, 2008.


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In California v. General Motors Corp., California sued six of the major automakers for allegedly “creating, and contributing to, an alleged public nuisance – global warming.” The district court granted defendants motion to dismiss in September 2007. The Court held, among other things, that resolution of the plaintiffs’ claim would require the Court to make an initial policy decision of a kind committed to the political branches of government and was, therefore, not justiciable. The appeal was docketed in the Ninth Circuit (07-16908) in October 2007. Briefing (including citation updates) was completed in August 2008 and oral argument will be scheduled on the next available calendar (i.e., after March 2009). Both sides also filed supplemental briefs following the Supreme Court’s decision in Mass v. EPA.


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Global Climate Law Blog - October 16, 2009 4:15 PM
Co-authored with Joanne Lichtman. In a carefully watched case in the Northern District of California, Judge Saundra Brown Armstrong has issued a ruling dismissing the Kivalina climate change lawsuit on grounds that: (1) it raises a non-justiciable poli...
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Dr. Wil Burns - April 28, 2009 3:02 PM

Given the preliminary endangerment finding by EPA and the drumbeat for federal climate change legislation, it's hard to see how the circuits don't punt these cases on political question grounds also, seems like the rationale to defer has grown. This may prove unfortunate, because I think the litigation serves the salutary role of goosing the other branches to act, but so it goes.

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