The Volokh Conspiracy
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Federal Court Again Refuses to Dismiss Juliana Climate Case
Judge Aiken's reckless defiance of legal rules is turning the "Kids Climate Case" into a zombie climate case.
On December 29, Judge Ann Aiken of the U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon took senior status, but she did not retire from the bench. On the very same day, Judge Aiken denied the federal government's motion to dismiss Juliana v. United States, the so-called "Kids Climate Case," and directed the parties to begin preparing for a trial. It is an astounding order that threatens to bring climate litigation back to the Supreme Court, and outcome few climate activists should want.
A bit of background. The Juliana litigation began in 2015, when a group of youth plaintiffs filed suit alleging, among other things, that the federal government's failure to control greenhouse gases violates their substantive due process rights to life, liberty, and property, including a right to a "stable climate system," violates their right to equal protection, and failed to uphold its "public trust" obligation to hold certain natural resources in trust for the people and for future generations.
As one would expect, the federal government sought to dismiss the case. Not only did the district court deny the motion to dismiss, it also denied the federal government's request to certify the decision for interlocutory review. Faced with the prospect of extensive discovery requests and a looking trial, the federal government sought a writ of mandamus and stay of the proceedings, first with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and eventually at One First Street.
While the Supreme Court did not grant the federal government's motions, it issued two orders -- one in July and one in November 2018 -- that made clear the justices believed Judge Aiken had misapplied the relevant rules (including that governing interlocutory review) and not-so-subtly directing the Ninth Circuit to get the district court in line. The Ninth Circuit issued a stay and Judge Aiken reconsidered her prior decision to deny interlocutory review, leading to the Ninth Circuit's decision in January 2020 to dismiss the case on standing grounds.
One might have thought the Ninth Circuit's decision would have put an end to the Juliana litigation. After all, the Ninth Circuit's mandate instructed the district court to dismiss the case, so that is all there was left to do after the plaintiffs had exhausted their opportunities for en banc review and certiorari. But Judge Aiken had other ideas, and instead ordered the parties to have a settlement conference and granted the plaintiffs an opportunity to amend their pleadings so as to keep the case alive.
As one would have predicted, the federal government again sought to have the case dismissed, arguing that the district court was required to do so given the Ninth Circuit's mandate, and that even were that mandate not binding the plaintiffs continue to lack standing and failed to state viable constitutional or other claims upon which relief could be granted. Once again, Judge Aiken refused to let the case die, denying the federal government's motion, save for dismissing the plaintiffs' equal protection and Ninth Amendment claims.
From Judge Aiken's opinion:
The parties do not disagree that the climate crisis threatens our ability to survive on planet Earth. This catastrophe is the great emergency of our time and compels urgent action. As this lawsuit demonstrates, young people—too young to vote and effect change through the political process—are exercising the institutional procedure available to plead with their government to change course. While facts remain to be proved, lawsuits like this highlight young people's despair with the drawn-out pace of the unhurried, inchmeal, bureaucratic response to our most dire emergency. Top elected officials have declared that the climate emergency spells out "code red for humanity." Burning fossil fuels changes the climate more than any other human activity. The government does not deny that it has promoted fossil fuel combustion through subsidies; tax exemptions; permits for fossil fuel development projects; leases on federal lands and offshore areas; permits for imports and exports; and permits for energy facilities. Despite many climate change suits around the country, in 2023, the United States witnessed record-breaking levels of oil and gas production. And recent calculations conservatively estimate that the United States provides the oil and gas industry $20,000,000,000.00 annually in an array of subsidies.
Defendants maintain that, because tackling the climate crisis is complex, and no single remedy may entirely redress plaintiffs' harms caused by climate change, the judiciary is constrained by the Constitution from offering any redress at all. . . . Defendants contend that the issue of climate change is political in its nature, and that redress of plaintiffs' alleged injuries must be sought from Congress. … That unnecessarily narrow view overlooks one clear and constitutional path to shielding future generations from impacts of the onslaught of environmental disaster: that it is the responsibility of the judiciary to declare the law that the government may not deprive the People of their Constitutional guarantee of the God-given right to life. U.S. CONST. art III; U.S. CONST. amend. V; Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 170 (1803).
Plaintiffs' allegations are that collective resolve at every level and in every branch of government is critical to reducing fossil fuel emissions and vital to combating climate change. That curbing climate change requires an all-hands-on-deck approach does not oust the Court from its province or discharge it of its duty under the Constitution to say what the law is. Marbury 5 U.S. at 170. Combatting climate change may require all to act in accord, but that does not mean that the courts must "throw up [our] hands" in defeat. . . .
The legislative and executive branches of government wield constitutional powers entrusted to those branches by the People through the democratic process. … So too, as part of a coequal branch of government, the Court cannot shrink from its role to decide on the rights of the individuals duly presenting their case and controversy. Marbury, 5 U.S. at 170. . . .
Some may balk at the Court's approach as errant or unmeasured, but more likely than not, future generations may look back to this hour and say that the judiciary failed to measure up at all. In any case over which trial courts have jurisdiction, where the plaintiffs have stated a legal claim, it is the proper and peculiar province of the courts to impartially find facts, faithfully interpret and apply the law, and render reasoned judgment. Such is the case here.
Among other things, Judge Aiken declares the existence of a substantive due process right to a "climate system that can sustain human life."
Exercising "reasoned judgment," the Court finds that the right to a climate system that can sustain human life is fundamental to a free and ordered society.
Defendants contend plaintiffs are asserting a right to be free from pollution or climate change, and that courts have consistently rejected attempts to define such rights as fundamental. Defendants mischaracterize the right plaintiffs assert. Plaintiffs do not object to the government's role in producing any pollution or in causing any climate change; they assert the government has caused pollution and climate change on a catastrophic level, and that if the government's actions continue unchecked, they will permanently and irreversibly damage plaintiffs' property, their economic livelihood, their recreational opportunities, their health, and ultimately their (and their children's) ability to live.
In this opinion, this Court simply holds that where a complaint alleges governmental action is affirmatively and substantially damaging the climate system in a way that will cause human deaths, shorten human lifespans, damage property, threaten human food sources, and dramatically alter the planets ecosystem, it states a claim for a due process violation. To hold otherwise would be to say that the Constitution affords no protection against a government's knowing decision to poison the air its citizens breathe or the water its citizens drink. . . .
We cannot vow to uphold the Constitution's protection of a God-given right to life, and at the same time, exercise "judicial restraint" by telling plaintiffs that "life" cannot possibly include the right to be free from knowing government destruction of their ability to breathe, to drink, or to live. "It cannot be presumed that any clause in the [C]onstitution is intended to be without effect." Marbury, 5 U.S. at 174. Plaintiffs have adequately alleged infringement of a fundamental right and defendants' motion to dismiss is denied on this issue.
The most startling part of Judge Aiken's decision is not the sweeping assertions of constitutional rights, but her refusal to certify the opinion for interlocutory review, without comment. This is striking because it was Judge Aiken's prior refusal to permit interlocutory review which ultimately prompted two separate Supreme Court orders indicating that she had misapplied the standard in 28 U.S.C. §1292 and the Ninth Circuit's ultimate stay.
The last time around, Judge Aiken deigned to explain her actions, offering both an explanation for her initial denial of interlocutory review and her subsequent reversal. This time, however, her opinion offers not a word in defense of her decision to deny the federal government's request, even though nothing has changed that would alter the application of §1292's standards to this case, and the Supreme Court's admonitions remain on point. There is simply no other way to describe this aspect of her opinion other than as outright judicial defiance (and illustrates how some "shadow docket" orders are more a measured response to misbehavior by lower court judges than a sign of High Court activism).
Judge Aiken's decision is not merely defiant, but reckless as well. The Department of Justice has little choice but to seek review of this decision, even if through a writ of mandamus, and if the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit does not intervene, the question could reach the Supreme Court, where the justices are already considering whether to grant review of other climate litigation.
Those filing various nuisance and tort suits against energy companies have been working hard to keep their cases out of federal court (and with much success). Whereas the energy companies characterize the suits as unbounded efforts to dictate energy policy in state courts, the plaintiffs in those cases stress that they are simply pursuing state law claims in state courts, and that such questions are not worth the Supreme Court's review. Suits like Juliana (and the recently filed Genesis B case), threaten to disrupt the plaintiffs "business as usual" narrative and offer the justices good cause to step in to make sure climate litigation does not get out of hand.
Many climate activists are cheering Judge Aiken's latest ruling. But should her shenanigans lead to premature High Court review of pending climate claims, they may come to rue the day Judge Aiken refused to let the Juliana litigation stay dead and buried.
* * *
For those interested, here are my prior posts on the Juliana litigation:
- "Is Kids Climate Case Coming to an End?" Nov. 26, 2018.
- "Ninth Circuit Dismisses Kids Climate Case for Lack of Standing (Updated)," Jan. 17, 2020.
- "Kids Climate Plaintiffs to Seek Rehearing En Banc," Jan. 20, 2020.
- "Ninth Circuit Denies Petition for En Banc Rehearing in Kids Climate Case," Feb. 10, 2021.
- "Will the Justice Department Settle a Case the Ninth Circuit Already Dismissed?" May 26, 2021.
- "States Seek to Intervene to Prevent Settlement in Kids Climate Case Ninth Circuit Already Ordered Dismissed," June 9, 2021.
- "Blue States File Brief Encouraging District Court to Consider Juliana Settlement," July 7, 2021.
- "Juliana Plaintiffs Opt Against Filing Cert Petition in Kids Climate Case," July 13, 2021.
- "District Court Judge Revives Kids Climate Case," June 1, 2023.
- "The Next Kids Climate Case: Genesis B. v. EPA," Dec. 15, 2023.
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We don’t impeach enough judges.
I for one appreciate Judge Aiken, I want her to be the judge for a future lawsuit:
"when a group of [Senior] plaintiffs filed suit alleging, among other things, that the federal government's failure to control [deficit spending] violates their substantive due process rights to life, liberty, and property, including a right to a "stable [financial] system," violates their right to equal protection, and failed to uphold its "public trust" obligation to hold [the faith and trust of the Treasury] in trust for the people and for future generations."
I'm sure her arguments about standing and the urgency of action will resonate just as vibrantly as in the current litigation.
“We don’t impeach enough judges.”
Best comment of the year.
Sounds like on remand they should order the case assigned to another judge.
An excellent remedy. I might also consider ordering her to recuse from any case where the government is a party. She seemingly can't adjudicate straight when one of the parties is the USA.
Does her husband take wads of cash from those with business before her court? Does she drive a luxury vehicle acquired with a "forgiven loan?" Did she accept (and try to conceal) luxury travel and pricey gifts from climate change activists? Has she lied on a series of financial disclosures? Has her husband been belatedly revealed to have been involved in un-American schemes to influence matters before her court?
Are you an asshole or do you just play one on the VC threads?
(By the way, her husband is dead)
I read somewhere that Clarence Thomas got stuck in Oklahoma recently because the engine in his RV ran out of caviar
LOL I posted that one the other day. Shouts and murmurs
Yep
I would tend to agree that assuming Judge Aiken is working tactically, in terms of what she can do for the plaintiffs within the context of her office as a judge, it would seem to be in the plaintiffs’ interests not to get the Supreme Court to make a general ruling on climate matters that could inhibit future plaintiffs’ ability to file in state court.
Although perhaps she thinks that a settlement conference with a government offer of some kind would be better than nothing, and a settlement would be unreviewable.
Whatever Judge Aikin may think of former President Trump, even he doesn’t survive his current legal troubles, his judicial appointees will be here to stay.
ReaderY 10 mins ago
"Whatever Judge Aikin may think of former President Trump, even he doesn’t survive his current legal troubles, his judicial appointees will be here to stay."
ReaderY - What do Trump's judges have to do with this case?. Aiken is a Clinton appointee. She is the problem judge, not the judges on CA9 or SC
They have something to do with whether the plaintiffs in this case will like the resulting Supreme Court ruling in this case if this case remains in play and reaches the Supreme Court again. That in turn has something to do with the strategic interests the plaintiffs in this case, and a judge who seems to be going to bat for them, might want to consider in deciding what to do.
That still makes no sense. No Supreme Court in my lifetime would have tolerated the gamesmanship of this judge.
It's also worth noting that this case started in 2015, two years before Trump took office, and the two prior SCOTUS decisions were issued in 2018 at which time Trump had only appointed one Justice (Gorsuch). Gorsuch replaced Scalia and it seems highly unlikely that those decisions would have been any different if Scalia had still been on the court.
Or are you trying to say that you think Aikin should be gaming the case but that she's incompetent at it?
Reminiscent of Robert Alton Harris's execution, where the 9th circuit was so obstreperous — repeatedly trying to stop the execution, only to have SCOTUS slap them down, only for them to come up with a new reason for delay — that the Supreme Court eventually issued a flat order: there will be no further stays of his execution. Period.
Not quite. I think the actual order was no further stays of his execution by any court other than the Supreme Court.
Same effect though. He was executed.
My guess has always been that the Robert Alton Harris shenanigans were specifically because he represented the reinstatement of executions in California after the voters removed the Rose Bird court, and some Ninth Circuit judges (particularly Reinhardt) always thought that the voters and California Republicans did Rose Bird dirty and wanted to stop the first execution. Whatever the reason, the guy was a cold blooded killer and while I opposed his execution (I flatly oppose the death penalty), his execution was lawful.
For a chuckle, check out Edwin Chemerinsky’s dissection of the machinations around Harris’s execution.
“The Lawless Execution of Robert Alton Harris” https://lawcat.berkeley.edu/record/1114430/files/fulltext.pdf
My favorite part? Page 243 where Chemerinsky (and Caminker, whoever) claims that Harris’s 10-year failure to challenge the constitutionality of the gas chamber “served, if unintentionally, to advance the federal judiciary’s institutional interest in self-restraint.”
Damn, left out my other favorite part.
“The [Supreme] Court could not fairly have interpreted Judge Pregerson’s issuance of a fourth stay as evidence of such insolence.” (p 248)
What makes that comment particularly absurd were the grounds for Pregerson’s stay: that Harris hadn’t bothered to bring these claims in state court, and therefore they weren’t exhausted, and therefore he should be entitled to a federal stay of state proceedings to allow him to proceed in state court.
I did like Chemerinsky’s argument that the Supreme Court’s order didn’t consider the possibility that aliens could arrive on UFOs and declare that they’d invade and conquer the earth unless the execution was delayed. Or the equivalent.
Indeed. Solid work all-round by the good professor.
We all love Senior Judges (don't we)?
That unnecessarily narrow view overlooks one clear and constitutional path to shielding future generations from impacts of the onslaught of environmental disaster: that it is the responsibility of the judiciary to declare the law that the government may not deprive the People of their Constitutional guarantee of the God-given right to life.
Sometimes reasoning is so absurdly broad that I like to imagine it applied to other situations. For instance: I'm sure I can find some kids who think China is the biggest threat of the 21st century. In their opinion, the government isn't devoting enough money to the US Navy as a countermeasure, thus depriving them of their Constitutional guarantee to the God given gift of life. Therefore the government is ordered to build ten more aircraft carriers.
This constitutional right stuff sure is fun.
Or what about a constitutional right to have the U.S. invade Gaza?
Unfortunately, federal judges can only concern themselves with rights arising under the constitution, laws, and treaties of the United States.
To paraphrase Sir Thomas More in Robert Bolt’s A Man For All Seasons, for rights arising under God’s law, God can grant the plaintiffs relief.
Why not just do the whole Animatrix blot out the sun thing, if this thing is so bad as Aiken and Kerry say?
Oh, worry not — the “experts” have been busy as bees trying to work out how best to reenact Snowpiercer.
Isn't it funny how all the filthy rich believe in climate change and are planning their little fantasy hideaways to ride out the apocalypse all the while insisting they need to keep raking it in from the things directly causing said apocalypse?
Ah, Nige. When those idiots actually manage to block a substantial portion of the sun and belatedly realize it's infinitely harder to get all those particles back out of the air than it was to dump them in, I have not a shred of doubt you'll be right there at the forefront with some sort of elementary school grade distraction.
Your brain appears to permanently stuck in a Simpsons episode.
Jack Marshall wrote about the case.
https://ethicsalarms.com/2020/01/18/the-terrifying-and-unethical-dissent-of-judge-staton-in-juliana-vs-the-united-states/
"However, that ill-omened word “reluctantly” is nothing compared to the incompetent emotional drivel registered by Judge Josephine Laura Staton. I think I’ll use her from now on to metaphorically shake in the face of those who cite Trump’s less qualified judicial appointments, of whom there have been, alas, too many. She dissented from the panel’s decision, which literally, though reluctantly, did nothing but follow black letter law. Go ahead, read it, and by all means, have your most fanatic climate change-addled friends read it too. Then explain to them why it shows either ignorance or disrespect for democracy, the law, AND science.
“Waiting is not an option,” the judge writes. “Those alive today are at perhaps the singular point in history where society (1) is scientifically aware of the impending climate crisis, and (2) can avoid the point of no return.”
This isn’t a statement of fact, nor is it informed opinion. This judge, like the vast majority of climate hysterics, only knows what she has been told by activists from groups whose politics she admires, and can’t possibly understand the technical data and projections underlying them. Society is not “aware” of the impending climate crisis with any specificity, and if the judge thinks she is, she’s an idiot. We know this, because one doomsday prediction after another has proven hyperbolic. What will this crisis be, judge? When will it occur? What measures are you so certain will address them? What will have to be sacrificed to do that? Are you certain they can be addressed? Are you certain subsequent factors and events won’t materially change “the impending crisis”?
The dissent goes off the rails into Fantasyland, and then flies out of Fantasyland into Maniac Mansion. “[P]laintiffs have a constitutional right to be free from irreversible and catastrophic climate change,” she writes. This, of course, is irresponsible bootstrapping from the rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness asserted in our nation’s mission statement, the Declaration. Her distorted view transforms a statement meant to affirm the individual’s right to be free of government domination to one justifying government dictatorship rationalized by citizens’ assertion that they have a right to have everyone else’s liberty and needs forcefully curtailed because they prefer policies embodying their priorities.
Judges like this, and I know we have many more than Judge Staton, are un-American and dangerous, lurking enemies of democracy and representative government waiting for their chance to order policies they support regardless of the will of the people or the judgment of their elected representatives. She continues, “Without explicitly laying this groundwork, the majority nonetheless suggests that this case is “special”—and beyond our redress—because plaintiffs’ requested relief requires (1) the messy business of evaluating competing policy considerations to steer the government away from fossil fuels and (2) the intimidating task of supervising implementation over many years, if not decades….I admit these are daunting tasks, but we are constitutionally empowered to undertake them. There is no justiciability exception for cases of great complexity and magnitude….”" - Jack Marshall
'This isn’t a statement of fact, nor is it informed opinion.'
It's both. But, politically, the right has painted itself into the corner of pretending there's no problem, so while the world burns, melts and floods around them, they have to oretend nothing is happening.
Your sounding hysteric like Judge Staten. What's wrong with you?
Am I? Presumably you didn't read the comment I was replying to, because hoo boy.
Isn't it tiresome to always be a contrarian?
Regardless of what you believe, climate change is an extremely complicated issue that takes substantial scientific expertise to actually understand, as opposed to merely parroting what other scientists say. It is far beyond the ken of a judge to make grand pronouncements about what is and is not a crisis, at what point there can be "no return," and whether humanity is at a "singular point in history" about such things. I'd say it would be equally inappropriate and absurd to say the same about other problems far more easily understood, like domestic violence or gun crime. Such loaded rhetoric about topics, especially those that have nothing to do with legal philosophy or the law generally, are the hallmarks of activist judges and have no place in an opinion.
You're just washing your hands and demanding others wash their hands too. It's a determined and deliberate abdication of responsibility.
'takes substantial scientific expertise to actually understand, as opposed to merely parroting what other scientists say.'
That just sums it up. 'It takes scientific expertise to understand, stop listening to the scientific experts.'
This judge has short hair like a lesbian. My guess is that the president who appointed her, the traitorous Bill Clinton who transferred missile technology to the Chinese for campaign contributions, tried to penetrate her in the Oval Office after he got tired of Lewinski, and she was so repulsed she became a lesbian.
And another troglodyte joins the ranks. Ed, you'll be happy to know that this blog has recently been attracting a lot of similar, low-wattage filth like yourself. You'll be happy here. Welcome aboard
It's not another one; it's just a constantly shifting username for the same one.
Well, that is kind of on a par with Stephen Colbert's referring to Trump as Putin's cock holster. Political discourse these days is pretty degraded, whether it be the left on major TV networks or the right in blog comments.
Comedians are paid to make silly, outrageous comments. You got anything else?
Remember when the Chief Justice said, "We do not have Obama judges or Trump judges, Bush judges or Clinton judges. What we have is an extraordinary group of dedicated judges doing their level best to do equal right to those appearing before them"? Looks like another "judge" has once again proven him wrong.
These female judges should be tried for sedition and sentenced not to jail, but having bleach poured on their shriveled genitals. And someone in the vein of Idi Amin, may Allah bless his soul, should administer it.
“Among other things, Judge Aiken declares the existence of a substantive due process right to a “climate system that can sustain human life.””
Maybe the USGS should submit a brief that lets Judge Aiken know that the oldest ice sheet in the world, Antarctica, is only 1,000,000 years old when the first humans were developing, and the oldest glacier in Alaska is only 30,000 years old when there were people were spreading around the globe. So even if it gets warm enough to melt every ice sheet humans will be flourishing as much as they ever have.
https://www.usgs.gov/faqs/how-old-glacier-ice
Going back to the way things were 30,000 years ago doesn’t sound so hot to me!
And you lot accuse eco-activists of wanting people to move back to caves.
I'll agree that the court is out of line trying to dictate things on emotional and political terms. The judge should be ruling on the law alone and not the subject matter which a judge is not an expert in. Same with the judge in Texas on another quixotic bender outlawing mifeprestone
This tells me all I need to know about Mr. Lubet From his Official Northwestern Biography “He was once interviewed by Stephen Colbert for a segment on The Daily Show with John Stewart (in the early days, before they had important guests).”
Wait! there's more
His satirical commentaries have been heard on National Pubic Radio’s Morning Edition.
Frank
In Wisconsin, if you win a reversal on appeal, you have an automatic right to substitute the lower court judge who got reversed. Prevents nonsense like this.
A sincere complaint with no backing is just that > And why do they mention the 21 kids , like that adds weight? Just the opposite,.
IF they knew shit they would know that the people they support are the chief climate offenders.
I have many examples but let's see what the post-Kerry agreements did.
COAL 11 April 2024 1:01
China responsible for 95% of new coal power construction in 2023, report says
China doubles down on coal with rapid roll-out of new railway track to the world’s largest deposit
257km line from Zhundong open pit to Urumqi will increase the mine’s transport capacity to more than 100 million tonnes a year
China's growing use of coal including the LONGEST coal transporting railway - which carries 200 MILLION tons of fossil fuel 1,141 MILES annually - draws pundit outrage as western nations spend BILLIONS to push citizens to reduce carbon footprint
A Scottish journalist highlighted the incongruity between the green initiatives coming from Western countries and those coming from China
China is responsible for 33 percent of the world's greenhouse gas, but continues to power itself by coal and establish itself as a global superpower
====> UTTER FAILURE, UTTER !!!!