Federal Court Dismisses without Prejudice Asian Carp Suit against US Army Corps

Here is the order:

12-3-12 Order

An excerpt:

The defendants’ motion therefore presents the question of whether harms arising from actions or omissions that are required by a federal statute can constitute a public nuisance. Though mindful of, and alarmed by, the potentially devastating ecological, environmental, and economic consequences that may result from the establishment of an Asian carp population in the Great Lakes, the Court is nevertheless constrained to answer the question in the negative. In the absence of a constitutional violation (and none is here alleged), it is not the province of the courts to order parties to take action that would directly contravene statutory mandates and prohibitions, and the common law recognizes that actions required by law do not give rise to liability for nuisance. If the plaintiffs want to remove these congressional impediments to hydrologic separation and to replace them with effective barriers between the waterways, they must do so by means of the legislative process, not by alleging that the Corps’ acts and/or omissions, required by federal statutes, violate federal nuisance common law and therefore justify an override of those statutes by the courts. Plaintiffs’ complaint, therefore, is dismissed.

Seventh Circuit Affirms Denial of Injunction in Asian Carp Suit (Michigan v. Army Corps)

Here is the opinion.

An excerpt:

We conclude that the court’s decision to deny preliminary relief was not an abuse of discretion. Our analysis, however, differs in significant respects from that of the district court, which was persuaded that the plaintiffs had shown only a minimal chance of succeeding on their claims. We are less sanguine about the prospects of keeping the carp at bay. In our view, the plaintiffs presented enough evidence at this preliminary stage of the case to establish a good or perhaps even a substantial likelihood of harm – that is, a non-trivial chance that the carp will invade Lake Michigan in numbers great enough to constitute a public nuisance. If the invasion comes to pass, there is little doubt that the harm to the plaintiff states would be irreparable. That does not mean, however, that they are automatically entitled to injunctive relief. The defendants, in collaboration with a great number of agencies and experts from the state and federal governments, have mounted a full-scale effort to stop the carp from reaching the Great Lakes, and this group has promised that additional steps will be taken in the near future. This effort diminishes any role that equitable relief would otherwise play. Although this case does not involve the same kind of formal legal regime that caused the Supreme Court to find displacement of the courts’ commonlaw powers in American Electric Power, on the present state of the record we have something close to it. In light of the active regulatory efforts that are ongoing, we conclude that an interim injunction would only get in the way. We stress, however, that if the agencies slip into somnolence or if the record reveals new information at the permanent injunction stage, this conclusion can be revisited.

Seventh Circuit Oral Argument Audio in Asian Carp Appeal — Michigan v. U.S. Army Corps

Here.

Near the end of the argument, Judge Wood responded to an industry lawyer with this:

“On the one hand you have commerce; on the other hand you have the planet.”

Asian Carp Injunction Hearing Today

From the Toledo Blade, via How Appealing:

A federal court hearing begins in Chicago Tuesday that has huge ramifications for the Great Lakes region’s $7 billion fishery, and especially for Toledo and other parts of western Lake Erie trying to diversify their economies with more recreation tourism.

Mike Cox, Michigan’s attorney general, is asking for a preliminary injunction against the Army Corps of Engineers to block the movement of Asian carp into Lake Michigan until a suit seeking a permanent separation of the lakes from the Mississippi River is decided.

Mr. Cox, joined by Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray’s office and other officials, demands immediate construction of more barriers and more aggressive use of poisons, metal grates, nets, and similar devices to repel the threat.

“The future of our water-based economy and environment is hanging in the balance,” Mr. Cox said.

The hearings only will decide the temporary injunction.

Continue reading