WILSON, District Judge.
On May 25, 2010, I accepted this case on a transfer from the Western District of Arkansas, after the judges in that district recused. Early in the case I noted that it appeared to be as hairy as the Fouke Monster.
In preparing for the preliminary injunction hearing, I reviewed, among other things, the administrative record consisting of thousands of pages, along with exhibits.
The parties filed numerous pleadings and briefs consisting of several hundred
I pause to note that the papers and oral presentations by the lawyers for the parties were superb.
On October 27, 2010, I entered a twenty-page order granting, in part, Plaintiffs' Motions for a Preliminary Injunction.
As expected, SWEPCO, against whom the preliminary injunction was granted, sought relief in the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. SWEPCO requested a stay of the preliminary injunction pending a decision by the appellate court, arguing: (1) the Court should vacate the preliminary injunction order for lack of jurisdiction; (2) SWEPCO is likely to prevail on the merits of the appeal; (3) SWEPCO would be irreparably harmed absent a stay; (4) a stay would not substantially injure the other parties; and (5) a stay is in the public interest.
On November 24, 2010, the Eighth Circuit granted SWEPCO's request for relief by an order, which I quote in full:
(Signed by the Clerk at the direction of the Court.)
I realize full well that my order was not a slam dunk, but I was surprised to see the preliminary injunction eliminated by a one-sentence order.
Over forty years ago, the late George Rose Smith, then an associate justice of the Arkansas Supreme Court (and a renowned word merchant), wrote a paper entitled A Primer of Opinion Writing, For Four New Judges.
And of course, the litigating parties and trial judge are interested in the court's thinking (SWEPCO has just filed a motion asking for clarification of when the Eighth Circuit will address the issue of standing).
The projects that were stopped by the now-dissolved preliminary injunction will apparently be completed well before the Eighth Circuit considers the case on the merits. In other words, the harm I foresee will have been done, irrevocably.
Without any indication of the Eighth Circuit's specific thinking, I believe my time would be better spent working on other cases that need attention. To the Circuit Court, with respect to this case, I say, "Let's say goodbye like we said hello—in a friendly kind of way."