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Atchafalaya Basinkeeper v. Sandra Thompson, 11-30471 (2012)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit Number: 11-30471 Visitors: 18
Filed: May 24, 2012
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit FILED April 25, 2012 No. 11-30471 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk ATCHAFALAYA BASINKEEPER; LOUISIANA ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION NETWORK, Plaintiffs - Appellants, v. STEPHEN CHUSTZ, in his official capacity as Acting Director of the Atchafalaya Basin Program, Defendant - Appellee. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana Before DeMOSS, CLEMENT, and ELROD, Circuit Judges
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        IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                 FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
                                                Fifth Circuit

                                                                 FILED
                                                                 April 25, 2012

                                 No. 11-30471                   Lyle W. Cayce
                                                                     Clerk

ATCHAFALAYA BASINKEEPER; LOUISIANA ENVIRONMENTAL
ACTION NETWORK,

                                           Plaintiffs - Appellants,
v.

STEPHEN CHUSTZ, in his official capacity as Acting Director of the
Atchafalaya Basin Program,

                                           Defendant - Appellee.



                Appeal from the United States District Court
                   for the Western District of Louisiana


Before DeMOSS, CLEMENT, and ELROD, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
      The Atchafalaya Basinkeeper and the Louisiana Environmental Action
Network (collectively “Appellants”) are private entities with an interest in
protecting Bayou Postillion in Iberia Parish, Louisiana.        They sued the
Atchafalaya Basin Program (“Program”), alleging that the Program violated the
conditions of a permit issued to it by the Army Corps of Engineers (“Corps”)
under the Clean Water Act (“Act”), 33 U.S.C. § 1344.         The district court
dismissed Appellants’ case after determining that the Act does not allow citizen
suits to enforce the conditions of a § 1344 permit. We AFFIRM.
                                  No. 11-30471

                                        I.
      The Corps issued the Program a permit under § 1344 of the Act, allowing
it to dredge Bayou Postillion in Iberia Parish, Louisiana. Dredging activities
such as those allowed under the Program’s permit result in “spoil banks,” which
are large piles of dredged material that must be deposited along the sides of the
Bayou. According to the complaint, the Program violated the conditions of its
permit by failing to maintain appropriate gaps in its spoil banks to allow the
natural water flow and flooding necessary to sustain certain wetland plant life.
      Appellants sued the Program and its Acting Director under the Act’s
citizen suit provision, § 1365, to enforce the conditions of the Program’s § 1344
permit. The district court concluded that § 1365 does not allow such a citizen
suit. This appeal followed.
                                        II.
      We review a district court’s grant of a Rule 12(b)6) motion to dismiss de
novo. Bass v. Stryker Corp., 
669 F.3d 501
, 506 (5th Cir. 2012) (citing Wampler
v. Sw. Bell Tel. Co., 
597 F.3d 741
, 744 (5th Cir. 2010)). We accept as true the
facts pleaded in the complaint. 
Id. (citing Jebaco,
Inc. v. Harrah’s Operating Co.,
587 F.3d 312
, 318 (5th Cir. 2009)). For a complaint to state a claim, the non-
moving party must plead enough facts to state a claim to relief that is plausible
on its face. 
Id. (citing Wampler,
597 F.3d at 744).
      The Clean Water Act is a comprehensive statutory regime designed “to
restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the
Nation’s waters.” 33 U.S.C. § 1251(a). To that end, it prohibits “the discharge
of any pollutant,” including dredged spoil, unless in compliance with certain
enumerated exceptions. §§ 1311(a), 1362(6). Two of those exceptions, § 1342
and § 1344(a), create permitting schemes through which the discharge of
pollutants may be authorized. Section 1344 grants the Corps the authority to
issue permits “for the discharge of dredged or fill material,” and § 1342
authorizes the Environmental Protection Agency to issue a permit for the

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                                     No. 11-30471

discharge of all other pollutants.
      The Corps has played an important role in the management of the
navigable waters of the United States for over 100 years. Long before the Clean
Water Act, the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899 prohibited construction in
navigable waters without permission from the Corps. 33 U.S.C § 401. The
§ 1344 permit framework largely preserves the Corps’ historical responsibilities
for the navigable waters of the United States. Accordingly, the Corps can
enforce § 1344 itself as well as the conditions of the permits it issues under
§ 1344(s).
      The Act also allows citizen enforcement of certain specific and limited
types of violations. Section 1365(a)(1), the Act’s citizen-suit provision, provides,
in relevant part, that “any citizen may commence a civil action on his own behalf
. . . (1) against any person . . . who is alleged to be in violation of . . . an effluent
standard or limitation under this chapter.” Section 1365(f), in turn, provides a
seven-part definition of “effluent standard or limitation under this chapter.”
Two of § 1365(f)’s grounds for citizen suit are relevant here. First, § 1365(f)(1)
allows citizen suits for “an unlawful act under subsection (a) of section 1311 of
this title.” Section 1311(a), titled “[i]llegality of pollutant discharges except in
compliance with law,” provides that “[e]xcept as in compliance with this section
and sections 1312, 1316, 1317, 1328, 1342, and 1344 of this title, the discharge
of any pollutant by any person shall be unlawful.” Second, § 1365(f)(6) allows
citizen suits for violations of “a permit or condition thereof issued under section
1342 of this title.”
                                          III.
      Appellants claim a private right to sue the Program for violating a
condition of a permit issued and administered by the Corps. The district court
rejected Appellants’ argument for two reasons.              First, it explained that
Appellants’ interpretation of one subsection of the Act renders another
subsection of the Act redundant. Second, the district court explained that the

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                                  No. 11-30471

subsection of the Act under which Appellants claim a private right of action does
not actually address § 1344 permit condition violations. We need not reach the
district court’s second reason because we agree that Appellants’ interpretation
of the Act renders one of its subsections redundant.
      It is an established rule of statutory interpretation that no provision
should be construed to be entirely redundant. See Kungys v. United States, 
485 U.S. 759
, 778 (1988) (invoking the “cardinal rule of statutory interpretation that
no provision should be construed to be entirely redundant”). Appellants claim
a right to sue under § 1365(f)(1), arguing that violations of § 1342 and § 1344
permit conditions are “unlawful acts” under § 1311(a). As the district court
explained, however, if § 1365(f)(1) provided citizen suits for § 1342 permit
condition violations, then § 1365(f)(6), which provides citizen suits in the case of
a violation of “a permit or condition thereof issued under section 1342 of this
title,” would have been unnecessary.
      Appellants attempt to explain away this redundancy objection, but the
interpretation they must support to avoid it simply cannot be called a plain
reading of the Act. They point out that § 1311(a) renders only “discharges” in
violation of § 1342 and § 1344 unlawful acts and, therefore, proper grounds for
citizen suit. Noting that § 1365(f)(6) never mentions “discharges,” Appellants
insist that Congress’s one-word omission indicates its intent to limit § 1365(f)(6)
to non-discharge related § 1342 permit condition violations.         According to
Appellants, § 1365(f)(6) thus covers something § 1365(f)(1) does not, and reading
§ 1365(f)(1) to provide citizen suits for permit condition violations would not
render § 1365(f)(6) redundant.
      We reject that interpretation. Only someone who consulted § 1311(a)
could notice the absence of the word “discharge” in § 1365(f)(6). But it is unclear
why anyone interpreting § 1365(f)(6) would ever look to § 1311(a) in the first
place. After all, § 1311(a) is not part of the Act’s citizen suit provision, and
§ 1365(f)(6) does not reference it. Yet Appellants contend that the presence of

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                                   No. 11-30471

the word “discharge” in § 1311(a) is evidence of a drastic limitation on the scope
of § 1365(f)(6), which omits the term and is otherwise unrelated. It is highly
unlikely that Congress would so obliquely signal an extreme departure from
§ 1365(f)(6)’s plain language.
      That conclusion is strongly reinforced by Congress’s provision of citizen
suits for § 1342 permit condition violations in the unmistakably clear language
of § 1365(f)(6). It would be especially odd for Congress to provide citizen suits
for § 1342 permit condition violations so plainly in the text of § 1365(f)(6) and
simultaneously to bury the right to sue for § 1344 permit condition violations
within a tri-level maze of statutory cross-references. If Congress had intended
to allow citizen suits for § 1344 permit condition violations, it did not need to
resort to the complicated method Appellants urge. Instead, it could have simply
added another subsection to § 1365(f), providing the same right to sue for § 1344
permit condition violations that it provided for § 1342 permit condition violations
in § 1365(f)(6). See Khalid v. Holder, 
655 F.3d 363
, 374 (5th Cir. 2011) (“In sum,
the better view [of the statute] is the simpler one.”).
      This reasoning is also consistent with the Supreme Court’s warning to
lower courts not to infer private rights of action from such oblique statutory
interpretations. Where a statute has “elaborate enforcement provisions,” as does
the Act at issue here, the Supreme Court has warned that:
      [I]t cannot be assumed that Congress intended to authorize by
      implication additional judicial remedies for private citizens. . . . [I]t
      is an elemental canon of statutory construction that where a statute
      expressly provides a particular remedy or remedies, a court must be
      chary of reading others into it. In the absence of strong indicia of a
      contrary congressional intent, we are compelled to conclude that
      Congress provided precisely the remedies it considered appropriate.

Middlesex Cnty. Sewerage Auth. v. Nat’l Sea Clammers Ass’n, 
453 U.S. 1
, 14-15
(1981) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Congress has relied on
the Corps to enforce the permits it issues for more than 100 years, and there are
no strong indicia of congressional intent to provide citizen suits for § 1344 permit

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                                  No. 11-30471

condition violations. Cf. Louisiana Envtl. Action Network v. City of Baton Rouge,
No. 11-30549, 
2012 WL 1301164
, at *2 (5th Cir. Apr. 17, 2012) (“[T]he citizens’
role in enforcing the Act is ‘interstitial’ and should not be ‘intrusive.’”) (citing
Gwaltney of Smithfield, Ltd. v. Chesapeake Bay Found., Inc., 
484 U.S. 49
, 61
(1987)).
                                        IV.
      For these reasons, we hold that the Act does not provide citizens the right
to sue to enforce the conditions of § 1344 permits. AFFIRMED.




                                         6

Source:  CourtListener

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