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Ninth Circuit Puts An End to the Kids Climate Case
A unanimous panel orders dismissal of Juliana v. United States, bringing this zombie litigation to a close.
Today a unanimous panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit granted the U.S. Department of Justice's petition for a writ of mandamus seeking dismissal of Juliana v. United States, the so-called "Kids Climate Case."
The brief order was short and direct. It noted that the Ninth Circuit had previously concluded that the plaintiffs lacked standing and ordered the case dismissed. Contrary to the plaintiffs' claims, no intervening decisions changed that fact, and that there was no basis for the district court to allow the plaintiffs to amend the complaint.
This decision should not have been a surprise. It should also be a relief to those who hope to see further climate litigation, as the Ninth Circuit panel saw no need to consider issues beyond the plaintiffs' Article III standing, and dismissal of the case obviates any need for the DOJ to seek Supreme Court review. Judge Aiken was wrong to revive this case, and now the Ninth Circuit has killed it for good.
Meanwhile, there are other (more well-grounded) climate cases proceeding in state courts under state law. More on those cases in future posts.
I've reproduced the Ninth Circuit's order after the jump.
Here is the text of the brief order:
In the underlying case, twenty-one plaintiffs (the Juliana plaintiffs) claim that—by failing to adequately respond to the threat of climate change—the government has violated a putative "right to a stable climate system that can sustain human life." Juliana v. United States, No. 6:15-CV-01517-AA, 2023 WL 9023339, at *1 (D. Or. Dec. 29, 2023). In a prior appeal, we held that the Juliana plaintiffs lack Article III standing to bring such a claim. Juliana v. United States, 947 F.3d 1159, 1175 (9th Cir. 2020). We remanded with instructions to dismiss on that basis. Id. The district court nevertheless allowed amendment, and the government again moved to dismiss. The district court denied that motion, and the government petitioned for mandamus seeking to enforce our earlier mandate. We have jurisdiction to consider the petition. See 28 U.S.C. § 1651. We grant it.
1. "[M]andamus is an extraordinary remedy . . . reserved for extraordinary situations." Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. v. Mayacamas Corp., 485 U.S. 271, 289 (1988). "[M]andamus is the appropriate remedy" when "sought on the ground that the district court failed to follow the appellate court's mandate." Vizcaino v. U.S. Dist. Ct. for W. Dist. of Wash., 173 F.3d 713, 719 (9th Cir. 1999); see also United States v. U.S. Dist. Ct. for S. Dist. of N.Y., 334 U.S. 258, 263 (1948). We review a district court's compliance with the mandate de novo. Pit River Tribe v. U.S. Forest Serv., 615 F.3d 1069, 1080 (9th Cir. 2010).
2. The petition accuses the district court of failing to execute our mandate on remand. District courts must "act on the mandate of an appellate court, without variance or examination, only execution." United States v. Garcia-Beltran, 443 F.3d 1126, 1130 (9th Cir. 2006). "[T]he only step" that a district court can take is "to obey the mandate." Rogers v. Consol. Rock Prods. Co., 114 F.2d 108, 111 (9th Cir. 1940). A district court must "implement both the letter and the spirit of the mandate, taking into account the [prior] opinion and the circumstances it embraces." Pit River Tribe, 615 F.3d at 1079 (emphasis added) (cleaned up).
3. In the prior appeal, we held that declaratory relief was "not substantially likely to mitigate the plaintiffs' asserted concrete injuries." Juliana, 947 F.3d at 1170. To the contrary, it would do nothing "absent further court action," which we held was unavailable. Id. We then clearly explained that Article III courts could not "step into the[] shoes" of the political branches to provide the relief the Juliana plaintiffs sought. Id. at 1175. Because neither the request for declaratory relief nor the request for injunctive relief was justiciable, we "remand[ed] th[e] case to the district court with instructions to dismiss for lack of Article III standing." Id. Our mandate was to dismiss.
4. The district court gave two reasons for allowing amendment. First, it concluded that amendment was not expressly precluded. Second, it held that intervening authority compelled a different result. We reject each.
The first reason fails because we "remand[ed] . . . with instructions to dismiss for lack of Article III standing." Id. Neither the mandate's letter nor its spirit left room for amendment. See Pit River Tribe, 615 F.3d at 1079. The second reason the district court identified was that, in its view, there was an intervening change in the law. District courts are not bound by a mandate when a subsequently decided case changes the law. In re Molasky, 843 F.3d 1179, 1184 n.5 (9th Cir. 2016). The case the court identified was Uzuegbunam v. Preczewski, which "ask[ed] whether an award of nominal damages by itself can redress a past injury." 141 S. Ct. 792, 796 (2021). Thus, Uzuegbunam was a damages case which says nothing about the redressability of declaratory judgments. Damages are a form of retrospective relief. Buckhannon Bd. & Care Home v. W. Va. Dep't of Health & Human Res., 532 U.S. 598, 608–09 (2001). Declaratory relief is prospective. The Juliana plaintiffs do not seek damages but seek only prospective relief.
Nothing in Uzuegbunam changed the law with respect to prospective relief. We held that the Juliana plaintiffs lack standing to bring their claims and told the district court to dismiss. Uzuegbunam did not change that. The district court is instructed to dismiss the case forthwith for lack of Article III standing, without leave to amend.
PETITION GRANTED.
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.
- "Federal Court Again Refuses to Dismiss Juliana Climate Case," Jan. 2, 2024.
- "Justice Department to Seek Mandamus to End Juliana Litigation (Again)," Jan. 29, 2024.
- "DOJ Files Petition for Writ of Mandamus to End Juliana Climate Litigation," Feb. 6, 2024.
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So they have to die of climate change before they can have standing?
I can live with that.
They will too, surprise surprise. Fewer people did from heat than cold, a lot fewer, and so will those kids.
At least a few hundred people died in a heat wave in the Sahel in April.
pre - traumatic stress syndrome
No, the Ninth Circuit's earlier ruling said their claimed injury did not give them standing -- they could die and their estates would still not be able to sue over a "right to a stable climate system that can sustain human life".
“right to a stable climate system that can sustain human life”
Even ignoring the absurdity of having a "right" to a planetary condition (that is to a large degree outside human control), a climate system "that can sustain human life" is pretty meaningless without further qualification. On its own the term is so vague it would include the peak of the current ice age 23K-25K years ago when global temperatures were about 10°F colder than today, and glaciers covered much of North America, Europe and Asia. In the other direction, parts of the globe may become inhabitable beyond certain warming levels (just as some are now and have been for millenia), but some that are currently too cold to sustain humans would then become habitable.
What parts of the globe not habitable during the Holocene Optimum (9,500 to 5,500 years BP) when temperatures were warmer than now?
Greenland didn’t have an ice sheet 800,000 years ago, so that’s almost a continent size land mass no longer habitable because current temperatures are too cold.
What parts of the globe were uninhabitable during the Eocene thermal maximum when temps were up to 8c warmer than now and primates evolved?
Certainly you are right that some parts that are currently too cold may become habitable, but there is no evidence in the geological record of large parts of the globe becoming uninhabitable, as long as there’s enough rain.
Certainly you are right that some parts that are currently too cold may become habitable, but there is no evidence in the geological record of large parts of the globe becoming uninhabitable, as long as there’s enough rain.
I never said anything about "large parts of the globe becoming uninhabitable". In fact almost nothing in your post makes sense as a response to what I did say.
3/4 of the planet is covered with water -- and we can make it potable. We have the technology -- ISRAEL is actually using it...
And if we put just half the money into researching it that we put into Pixie Dust and Unicorn Flatulence, we probably could bring the price where we could make even Africa green (assuming they stopped shooting each other long enough)...
Same argument but about fusion energy.
Or maybe flying cars.
R&D is not a 'just throw more money at it and it'll go faster and better' kinda enterprise.
'and we can make it potable.'
Ed will spend trillions and trillions on desalination plants rather than take action to protect existing freshwater supplies.
Eh. I'd argue that the right to life includes the right to a climate system that can sustain life. And at the dismissal stage you generally take their factual statement as true.
But judges cannot usurp the other branches here. It would be like saying "my ships are being robbed by pirates, and I have the right to my property; therefore Congress needs to increase naval spending, and the President must direct warships to these shipping lanes." You've got a concrete injury, your rights are being violated, and it could be addressed by specific government actions. And yet the judicial branch should do nothing.
Eh. I’d argue that the right to life includes the right to a climate system that can sustain life.
You seem to have missed the entire point of my post.
'Even ignoring the absurdity of having a “right” to a planetary condition'
Finding the idea that the condition of the planet we all live in might be crucial to survival 'absurd' really does say it all.
Let's see how these younger, better people use their increasing electoral power . . . particularly with respect to how they treat cranky old-timers and their bigoted, superstitious, obsolete ways.
It is an inherently political issue. Just how much damage to the environment is acceptable as trade off for industrial progress, which is an insane benefit, is a perfect item for democracy.
This attempted an end run around that.
I was not a fan of this litigation, from a slightly informed perspective.
I expect younger and better Americans to arrange progress electorally, in a manner that continues to improve our nation and world.
Good thing there aren't problems with our current styles of democracy, eh? Like massively wealthy vested interests profting from the destruction having more sway with politicians than people dying from the air pollution. They never use the courts to shut down the wishes of people who don't like dying of pollution.
Given how vastly wealthy and well off we are compared to societies that kick the ass of free people running businesses, I’ll take it. Your fantasy is just what the corruptions ordered — massive authority to get in the way.
The power hungry inform you they are naive do gooders serving The People, when evil big business marches in and tempts them.
Reality, the entire surface of the Earth, and all human history, is the opposite. You go into government to get in the way, to get paid to get back out of the way.
Fundamental Theorem of Government Corruption is not an unfortunate side effect of the wielding of power. It is the purpose of it since day one.
Cranky old-timers like… the Biden Justice Department’s Environment and Nautral Resources Division?
Cranky, bigoted old-timers like . . . the Volokh Conspiracy, the Federalist Society, the Heritage Foundation, and Trump supporters.
You know . . . the culture war's roadkill.
Not many people will actually die from fairy tales, and that includes frauds like apocalyptic anthropogenic climate change.
Fairy tales — silly superstition, childish nonsense, supernatural bullshit, old-times religion — have killed millions of people. If you do not understand this point, leave the reasoned debate to competent adults.
Same as how so few died from covid, as opposed to how so many died from the vaccine.
It isn't a fraud. Nobody will die from it. A slow moving problem over 100 to 300 years is the opposite of an emergency. It will be ameliorated as necessary.
It is, however, a gleeful reason for corruption to get in the way, regardless of veracity. Corruption does not care.
"The district court is instructed to dismiss the case forthwith for lack of Article III standing, without leave to amend."
A dismissal for lack of standing does not have preclusive effect. In principle the plaintiffs could file a new lawsuit and seek to have it assigned to the same judge as a related case.
I mean, theoretically anything is possible. But if they were to file with the same claims, and it isn't immediately dismissed, then there would be a lot of trouble goin' on. I think that the District Judge did something that was incorrect, but I will assume, until there is further evidence, that this is the end of it.
Not exactly. Issue preclusion bars the issues that were actually litigated. The issue that was litigated here was whether the plaintiffs’ injury was judicially redressable. The 9th Circuit held that it was not. (“We then clearly explained that Article III courts could not “step into the[] shoes” of the political branches to provide the relief the Juliana plaintiffs sought.”). These plaintiffs cannot show up in a court again and assert the same non-redressable cause of action.
In other contexts, a prior finding of standing is not preclusive if the plaintiff later obtains standing (e.g., a speculative injury occurs) or a plaintiff with standing brings the claim.
Yes, so if some new fact arguably gave them standing, they could refile. Otherwise, issue preclusion means they have no standing.
Or they could wait until they have the electoral muscle to impose progress without regard to the objections of a dwindling, enfeebled generation of selfish, cranky old clingers.
Their list of likely targets is a good one.
How do you get around the lack of a judicially enforceable remedy:
“We then clearly explained that Article III courts could not “step into the[] shoes” of the political branches to provide the relief the Juliana plaintiffs sought.”)
Maybe next time they will tie their environmental claims to claims of bigotry-ridden superstition and attract some conservative judges to their cause?
I think it's more likely that facts will come to light that further expose "global warming/climate change" as one of, if not the greatest scientific fraud in human history.
Are you waiting for a rapture, too?
How quickly we forget the evils of the covid vaccine.
It's about time that the 9th Circuit acted
"The first reason fails because we 'remand[ed] . . . with instructions to dismiss for lack of Article III standing.'"
That is pretty much it.
I know that I complain, and rightly so, about the insanity coming out of the 5th. But this was the right decision by the 9th Cir., and the District Court should never have allowed the amendment.
(FWIW, this was Senior US District Judge Ann Aiken. I don't like bad decisions that make a mockery of regular process, regardless of the intentions or the partisan valence.)
Aiken is a terrible judge. None of this is surprising with her.
Moved to correct spot
“right to a stable climate system that can sustain human life”
So as long as we are cooler than the Sahara, and warmer than Antarctica, it's all good?
Holy shit, some idiot on CNN is disasterbating that all 9 million of Los Angeles county are gonna bum rush the 9000 police at the university because they're pissed off.
I actually wouldn't be surprised -- they know that the cops can't do anything to them, and that they won't be prosecuted for anything, and (sadly) in academia today, hating Jews is a career advancement tool.
I am not making this up -- hate Jews, get promoted -- that's how higher ed has been for the past 30 years...
> and now the Ninth Circuit has killed it for good.
How do you figure? What is going to make this dismissal stick more than the last one?
Serious question: Why do appeals courts remand with instructions, instead of just doing it themselves?
Why "We remand with instructions to dismiss", and not" We dismiss, with instructions to not do this again."?
Do they just like seeing how long they can keep the volley going?