MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before the court are Florida’s [second] Motion to Amend (Doc. 269) and Alabama’s [second] Motion to Amend (Doc. 270). For the reasons set forth below, and for the reasons stated at the June 30, 2005 hearing on the motions, the court grants the motions.
Further, the court orders Alabama and Florida to revise their amended complaints to clarify exactly which agency actions they are challenging under each claim, and to make other changes only as necessary to clearly articulate the basis of this court’s jurisdiction.
I. Facts and Procedural History
On June 28, 1990, Alabama filed a complaint against the United States Army Corps of Engineers and several of the Corps’ officers in their official capacities challenging a number of the Corps’ activities, plans, and actions primarily regarding the management of three reservoirs in Georgia: Carters Lake, Lake Allatoona, and Lake Lanier. Carters Lake and Lake Allatoona are part of the Alabama-Coosa-Tallapoosa (ACT) river basin. Lake Lanier is part of the Apalaehicola-Chattahoo-chee-Flint (ACF) river basin. Alabama and its citizens are downstream from these reservoirs and rely on water from both the ACT and ACF river basins.
Beginning soon after Alabama filed suit, a number of entities moved to intervene in the case, including Florida, 1 Georgia, and the Atlanta Regional Commission (ARC). See Doc. 21, Florida’s [Original] Motion to Intervene; Doc. 31, Georgia’s [Original] Motion to Intervene; Doc. 34, Water Supply Intervenors’ Motion to Intervene. Florida sought to intervene as a plaintiff, and Georgia and ARC sought to intervene as defendants.
To foster settlement negotiations, on September 14, 1990 Alabama and the Federal Defendants
2
filed a Joint Motion to Stay Proceedings, agreeing that, “until such time as the stay is terminated [under the terms of the joint motion], Defendants
Following a 1992 stay Order, which preserved rather than superseded the conditions of the 1990 stay Order, 4 the court denied several pending motions, including Florida’s, Georgia’s, and ARC’S motions to intervene, without prejudice to refile in the event the stay was lifted. See February 5, 1992 Order, Doc. 54.
In January, 2003, without the Corps first complying with the termination provisions of the 1990 Joint Motion to Stay, the Corps and Georgia entered into a settlement agreement (“the D.C. agreement”) with other parties in related litigation in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (the “D.C. Case”). Aabama responded on January 27, 2003 by filing a motion in this case for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction against the Corps, arguing that the Corps had violated the terms of the 1990 stay Order. Limited litigation activity commenced, interspersed with more stay orders, as requested by the parties, to permit them opportunities to settle the dispute over the D.C. agreement among themselves.
On September 8, 2003, Florida renewed its motion to intervene, which was not accompanied by a new proposed complaint. 5 See Doc. 158, Florida’s First Amended Motion to Intervene. In an Order setting the case for a hearing on Aa-bama’s request for a TRO and preliminary injunction, the court granted Florida’s motion to intervene and permitted Florida to file its complaint in intervention by September 12, 2003. Doc. 161, September 10, 2003 Order Granting Florida’s Motion to Intervene. On September 12, 2003, Florida filed its first complaint, which it styled as its “First Amended Complaint” because that complaint was different from its original 1990 proposed complaint in intervention. See Doc. 165, Florida’s First Amended Complaint. No Defendants answered Florida’s First Amended Complaint, presumably because, as discussed below, on November 24, 2003, the court again stayed the case.
On September 11, 2003, Georgia renewed its motion to intervene as a defendant, and the court granted the motion. See Doc. 162, Georgia’s Renewed Motion to Intervene; Doc. 183, September 23, 2003 Order Granting Georgia’s Motion to Intervene.
On September 23, 2003, Aabama moved to amend its complaint because, “[djuring the thirteen years which have passed since Aabama filed its original complaint and the six years which have passed since the execution of the ACF and ACT compacts, new factual developments have taken place
On October 15, 2003, after a hearing on September 24, 2003, the court found that the Corps had violated the September 19, 1990 stay Order, and entered a preliminary injunction prohibiting the Corps from “filing the settlement agreement in [the D.C. Case], implementing the settlement agreement,... or, [without this court’s approval,] entering into any other new storage or withdrawal contracts affecting the [ACF] river basin.” See Doc. 192, October 15, 2003 Preliminary Injunction Order. The court specified that the injunction would last only until this case is resolved on the merits, and may be lifted earlier “for just cause.” Id. p. 11.
On November 6, 2003 ARC attempted to make a “special appearance” to contest this court’s jurisdiction to enter the October 15, 2003 preliminary injunction. See Doc. 196. In December, Georgia, the Corps, and ARC (who was not a yet a party) each filed Notices of Appeal from the October 15, Preliminary Injunction Order. See Docs. 204-206.
Meanwhile, no party filed an opposition to Alabama’s motion to amend. On November 24, 2003, “recognizing] that the complexion of this litigation has changed considerably over the last thirteen years[,]... in an effort to ensure this dispute resolves on timely matters,” the court granted Alabama’s first Motion to Amend. See November 2k, 2003 Order, Doc. 203. In the same Order, the court stayed the case “until Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson makes an order in Southeastern Federal Power Customers, Inc., v. United States Army Corps of Engineers, C.A. No. 00-2975 (T.P.J.) (D.D.C.), deciding the validity of the proposed settlement in that case.” Id. The court required Alabama to file its amended complaint within 10 days after the lifting of the stay. Id.
On February 10, 2004, Judge Jackson entered an Order declaring that the D.C. agreement was “valid and approved, and may be executed and filed and thereafter performed in accordance with its terms; provided, however, that the preliminary injunction entered by N.D. Ala. on October 15, 2003, is first vacated.”
Southern Federal Power Customers, Inc. v. Caldera,
No Defendants answered Alabama’s or Florida’s Second Amended Complaint, presumably because, on April 1, 2004, the court stayed the action again in light of the appeal taken by the Defendants of the October 15, 2003 Preliminary Injunction Order.
See April 1, 200k Order Staying Case,
Doc. 231. However, on April 8, 2004, the Eleventh Circuit stayed that ap
On September 29, 2004, after the motions to lift the preliminary injunction in light of the D.C. Order 7 were under submission, the court held a hearing on whether to lift the injunction. At the hearing on the preliminary injunction, Alabama and Florida informed the court that they wished to amend their complaints again.
On September 30, 2004, because Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12 has generally abolished special appearances, and because ARC’s participation in this case far exceeded the bounds of a special appearance and was, therefore, a general appearance, the court construed ARC’s motion to appear specially as a motion to intervene and granted the motion. See September SO, ZOOlp Order, Doc. 257.
On November 8, 2004, the court entered an Order lifting the stay of the case as to all matters not on appeal, and the case has not been stayed again. See Doc. 262, November 8, 200J/, Order. In the same Order, in accordance with Alabama’s and Florida’s September 29, 2004 notification that they wished to amend again, the court permitted Alabama and Florida to file motions to amend their complaints by January 7, 2005. In accordance with that Order, Alabama and Florida timely filed the motions to amend their complaints now before the court, which the Defendants vigorously oppose.
Later, on February 18, 2005, the court entered an Order denying the motions to lift the injunction in light of the D.C. Order.
See
Docs. 274 & 275,
Order & Memorandum Opinion; Alabama v. United States Army Corps of Eng’rs,
II. Issues Presented Regarding the Current Motions to Amend
The Federal Defendants argue that the motions to amend are futile because the court lacks jurisdiction over the claims in the amended complaints because those claims do not challenge final agency actions. In addition, the Federal Defendants argue that the motions to amend are futile because venue is improper as to the amended claims.
Georgia and ARC (referred to as the “Georgia Defendants” only for purposes of this Memorandum Opinion
8
) argue, first, that the court has no jurisdiction to grant the motions to amend because the motions seek to introduce complaints that would create jurisdiction where the court had no jurisdiction before.
9
According to the
Second, the Georgia Defendants argue that the motions before the court are improperly cast as motions to amend under Rule 15(a) because they incorporate recent events. Rather, the Georgia Defendants contend, the motions to amend should be designated as motions to supplement under Rule 15(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Further, the Georgia Defendants maintain that the “motions to supplement” must be denied for several reasons: (1) because they improperly seek to add separate, distinct, and new causes of action in a case that has been dormant and has become moot; (2) because supplementation is futile based on improper venue as to the new claims; (3) because supplementation is futile because the controversy should fall under the Supreme Court’s original, exclusive jurisdiction; and (4) because allowing the motions would prejudice Georgia and the ARC.
Finally, without leave of court, months after briefing on the motions to amend was under submission, and mere days before the hearing on those motions, the Georgia Defendants filed an additional brief suggesting that Alabama’s claims are not “valid and bona fide,” and accusing Alabama of illegitimately seeking to keep this lawsuit viable. See Georgia Defendants’ Supplemental Brief, Doc. 325. The court will not consider this supplemental filing because Georgia and ARC unfairly waited until a few days before the hearing to spring their arguments on opposing parties and the court, and because they did not seek leave of court to file a supplemental brief on the propriety of granting the motions to amend. Moreover, the Georgia Defendants level their supplemental arguments at the merits of Alabama’s proposed amended claims. Those arguments, thus, are not germane to the propriety of permitting amendment.
III. Standard of Review
After service of a responsive pleading, “a party may amend the party’s pleading
only
by leave of court ... and leave shall be freely given when justice so requires.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a) (emphasis added). “ ‘[I]n the absence of any apparent or declared reason- — such as undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the movant, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, undue prejudice to the opposing party by virtue of allowance of the amendment, futility of amendment, etc. — the leave sought should, as the rules require, be “freely given.” ’ ”
Loggerhead Turtle v. County Council of Volusia, Fla.,
The Defendants contend that the motions to amend are really motions to supplement. Under Rule 15(d),
[u]pon motion of a party the court may, upon reasonable notice and upon such terms as are just, permit the party to serve a supplemental pleading setting forth transactions or occurrences or events which have happened since the date of the pleading sought to be supplemented. Permission may be granted even though the original pleading is defective in its statement of a claim for relief or defense. If the court deems it advisable that the adverse party plead to the supplemental pleading, it shall so order, specifying the time therefor.
As the Eleventh Circuit recognizes, “[a] supplemental pleading is an appropriate vehicle by which to ‘set forth new facts in order to update the earlier pleading, or change the amount or nature of the relief requested in the original pleading.’ ”
Lussier v. Dugger,
IV. Discussion
A. Whether the Court has Subject Matter Jurisdiction Over the Amended Claims
The Defendants argue that allowing Alabama and Florida to file their amended complaints would be futile because the court has no jurisdiction over the amended claims on several theories, including asserting that the court lacks jurisdiction over the original complaint. Whenever questions surface about the court’s subject matter jurisdiction-even fifteen years after the complaint was filed-the court must make a serious and studied examination of the issue.
See Reahard v. Lee County,
1. The Supreme Court’s Original Jurisdiction
The Georgia Defendants argue that, because this case involves interstate water allocation, this suit presents a “controversy between two or more states,” and, therefore, falls within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Supreme Court. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1251(a), “[t]he Supreme Court shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction of all controversies between two or more States.” (Emphasis added). In addition “[t]he Supreme Court shall have original but not exclusive jurisdiction of ... [a]ll controversies between the United States and a State.” 28 U.S.C. § 1251(b).
At this point, the case does not fall under the Supreme Court’s original and exclusive jurisdiction. Even though the Supreme Court occasionally exercises original jurisdiction in interstate water disputes,
10
28 U.S.C. § 1251 circumscribes the Supreme Court’s original jurisdiction based on the
identity of the parties
to a dispute,
not
based on the
siibject
of the dispute between the parties. Therefore, the Georgia Defendants’ argument that “interstate water disputes” automatically fall within the Supreme Court’s original exclusive jurisdiction because the general subject implicates states’ competing interests in water is misplaced.
See United States v. Nevada,
Just because states pursue opposing interests in a case does not necessarily mean a “controversy” exists between or among them, or that the Supreme Court will exercise original jurisdiction:
The exclusive jurisdiction of the Supreme court [under 28 U.S.C. § 1251(a) ] is limited to cases in which the states are and remain opponents in the controversy, regardless of their formal alignment. [See ] United States v. Nevada,412 U.S. 534 , 538-40,93 S.Ct. 2763 ,37 L.Ed.2d 132 (1973); California v. Nevada,447 U.S. 125 , 133,100 S.Ct. 2064 ,65 L.Ed.2d 1 . On the other hand, provided at least one state is on each side of the controversy, the presence of nonstate parties, even indispensable parties, does not affect the exclusive original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court. [E.g.], Arizona v. California,373 U.S. 546 , 564,83 S.Ct. 1468 ,10 L.Ed.2d 542 (1963); California v. Arizona,440 U.S. 59 , 61,99 S.Ct. 919 ,59 L.Ed.2d 144 (1979)[; see also ] Maryland v. Louisiana,451 U.S. 725 , 735-44,101 S.Ct. 2114 ,68 L.Ed.2d 576 (1981); Louisiana v. Mississippi,516 U.S. 122 ,116 S.Ct. 560 ,133 L.Ed.2d 459 (1995) (settling a boundary dispute between Louisiana and Mississippi and denying Louisiana’s title claim against a private defendant). Thus, when the United States and a state are opposing parties-a case of concurrent jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1251(b)(2)-the Supreme Court nevertheless retains exclusive jurisdiction if the suit also involves a controversy between two states. [See] California v. Arizona, [440 U.S. at 67 ,99 S.Ct. 919 ].
Robert L. Stern et al., Supreme Court Practice 554-555 (8th ed.2002) (emphasis in original).
The Supreme Court’s characteristically conservative nature regarding its jurisdiction extends even to its statutorily exclusive jurisdiction over controversies between two or more states. The Supreme Court has commented on its philosophy of invoking its § 1251 original jurisdiction sparingly:
We construe 28 U.S.C. s 1251(a)(1), as we do Art. Ill, s 2, cl. 2, to honor our original jurisdiction but to make it obligatory only in appropriate cases.... We incline to a sparing use of our original jurisdiction so that our increasing duties with the appellate docket will not suffer.
Illinois v. City of Milwaukee, Wis.,
Because the Supreme Court’s original jurisdiction over controversies between
This case presents precisely the kind of dispute the Eighth Circuit found to fall outside the Supreme Court’s exclusive jurisdiction in
South Dakota v. Ubbelohde,
The most instructive Eleventh Circuit case on this point is none other than
Georgia v. United States Army Corps of Engineers,
[Pjermitting Florida to intervene [would] not .deprive the district court of jurisdiction over the case. Indeed, to constitute “a justiciable controversy between the States ... it must appear that the complaining State has suffered a wrong through the action of the other State, furnishing ground for judicial redress, or is asserting a right against the other State which is susceptible of judicial enforcement according to the accepted principles of the common law or equity systems of jurisprudence.” Massachusetts v. Missouri,308 U.S. 1 , 15,60 S.Ct. 39 ,84 L.Ed. 3 (1939). Further, to invoke the Supreme Court’s original and exclusive jurisdiction, “a plaintiff State must first demonstrate that the injury for which it seeks redress was directly caused by the actions of another State.” Pennsylvania v. New Jersey,426 U.S. 660 , 663,96 S.Ct. 2333 ,49 L.Ed.2d 124 (1976)....
In this case, there is no such dispute between Florida and Georgia. The states do not seek relief from each other but, rather, want the Corps to act on the water supply request in opposite ways— Georgia seeks to have the Corps grant its request, while Florida wants to have it denied. Thus, although Florida technically will be a defendant and Georgia a plaintiff, Georgia does not seek redress for any harm caused by Florida, and Florida will not be subjected directly to any ruling of the district court. Accordingly, permitting Florida to intervene in this case will not deprive the district court of jurisdiction.
Georgia v. United States Army Corps of Eng’rs,
Similarly, in the case before the court, Alabama and Florida do not seek relief
Instead, this case presents a controversy under 28 U.S.C. § 1251(b)(2) between the United States and states, over which the Supreme Court has original but not exclusive jurisdiction, which it shares with the district courts. As such, this case is similar to
United States v. Nevada,
The Georgia Defendants argue that the court’s 2003 Preliminary Injunction converts this case into a controversy between two or more states. As the Georgia Defendants acknowledge, however, the court’s Order does not enjoin Georgia, only the Corps. See Order Granting Preliminary Injunction, Doc. 192; Georgia Defendants’ Brief, Doc. 281 at 39 n.2. The Georgia Defendants argue that, “as a practical matter[, the injunction] keeps Georgia from implementing the D.C. Settlement Agreement, and this indirect injunction against Georgia violates 28 U.S.C. § 1251(a) just the same.” Id. The Georgia Defendants offer no legal support for their theory that an “indirect injunction” can somehow create a controversy between two or more states or establish original and exclusive Supreme Court jurisdiction, and the court has found none. Moreover, given the Supreme Court’s innately conservative nature regarding its jurisdiction, this court will not dismiss the case on creative and unsupported theories suggesting the Supreme Court’s jurisdiction is more expansive than the Supreme Court itself has yet found it to be.
If this case someday evolves into a controversy between two states, then the court
will
have to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.
See Mississippi v. Louisiana,
The Defendants raise two jurisdictional arguments under the Administrative Procedures Act. First, the Georgia Defendants argue that the claims in the original complaint were never justiciable under the APA because they were not based on final agency actions. Therefore, according to the Georgia Defendants, the court never had subject matter jurisdiction over the case, and cannot enter an order granting the motions to amend even if the amended complaints would fall within the court’s jurisdiction. See Georgia Defendants’ Brief, Doc. 281, at 23-24. In response, Alabama and Florida argue that whether the court had subject matter jurisdiction over the claims in the original complaint does not matter now that Alabama has already amended the complaint once, and now that Florida has intervened and previously amended its complaint, as well. See Alabama’s and Florida’s Reply Brief Doc. 312, at 21-23.
Second, without explaining why the specific allegations in the Third Amended Complaints are “broad programmatic attacks” rather than challenges to “discrete final agency actions,” the Federal Defendants argue that the court has no jurisdiction over the amended claims because, under the Administrative Procedures Act, the court can only review final, discrete agency actions. See Federal Defendants’ Brief, Doc. 277, at 13-17.
In response, Alabama and Florida list “unlawful agency actions and failures to act by the Corps” drawn from their proposed complaints.
See Alabama’s and Florida’s Reply Brief,
Doc. 312, at 23-25. The parties asserting jurisdiction,
i.e.,
Alabama and Florida, bear the burden of establishing that the court has jurisdiction.
See Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
a.) Legal Standard for Court Review of Administrative Action Under the APA
Ordinarily, the federal government and its agencies are immune from suit.
See Estrada v. Ahrens,
Under the APA, this court may grant two basic types of relief. First, the court may “compel agency action unlawfully withheld or unreasonably delayed,” 5 U.S.C. § 706(1), but only if the agency action to be compelled is an action legally required.
S. Utah Wilderness Alliance,
542 U.S. at-,
Second, as more fully set out in 5 U.S.C. § 706(2), the court may grant relief by holding unlawful and setting aside agency actions, findings, and conclusions the court finds illegal, unconstitutional, unsupported by law or fact, or abusive of agency discretion. 5 U.S.C. § 706. In addition, to pre
Finally, when, as in this case, the plaintiffs seek review only under the general review provisions of the APA-as opposed to seeking review under specific authorization in the substantive statute-the plaintiffs must challenge a
final
agency action.
Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n,
Whether the complaints in this case challenge a final agency action presents an important question because the APA’s finality requirement is a jurisdictional prerequisite to judicial review.
See Nat’l Parks Conservation Ass’n v. Norton,
b.) APA Jurisdiction Over the Original Complaint.
The Georgia Defendants argue that the court never had jurisdiction over Alabama’s original complaint because the complaint did not challenge discrete, final agency actions. This argument presents two questions for the court to consider: first, whether the court’s jurisdiction over the claims in the original complaint matters fifteen years later when Alabama previously amended its complaint, and Florida has intervened and has also previously amended its complaint; and, if so, second, whether the claims in the original complaint were ripe for review in 1990 when Alabama filed the complaint. Contrary to Alabama’s and Florida’s arguments in response to the Georgia Defendants,
see Alabama’s and Florida’s Brief,
Doc. 312, p.22-23, subject matter jurisdiction is never waived, and “[a] federal court must always dismiss a case upon determining that it lacks subject matter jurisdiction, regardless of the stage of the proceedings.”
Goodman ex rel. Goodman v. Sipos,
Importance of Jurisdiction Over the Original Complaint
Alabama and Florida argue that the Georgia Defendants’ attacks on the court’s jurisdiction over Alabama’s original complaint are irrelevant because Alabama’s Second Amended Complaint superseded the original complaint. See Alabama’s and Florida’s Brief, Doc. 312, p.21. The court has found no statute or Eleventh Circuit case directly on point.
Of course, the court recognizes that “[d]efective
allegations
of jurisdiction may be amended, upon terms, in the trial or
As Alabama and Florida point out, Rule 15(d) permits courts to grant motions to supplement pleadings even if the original pleading is defective in stating a claim or defense. Furthermore, to eliminate the rigidity and formalism of needlessly subjecting a plaintiff to the difficulties of commencing a new action even if events occurring after the filing of the original complaint establish a right to relief, the advisory committee notes to Rule 15(d) specifically direct courts to freely allow supplemental pleadings in the interest of justice when the original complaint states no claim for which relief can be granted. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 15 advisory committee’s note. However, the court is not convinced by the Plaintiffs’ arguments that the Advisory Committee and the drafters of the Rule intended to instruct courts to allow supplements when no jurisdiction exists over the claims in the original complaint.
In practice, failure to state a claim and lack of jurisdiction often appear related. Thus, for example, defendants sometimes move for dismissal for failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted because the court lacks subject matter juris
The two defenses are not merely distinct in theory, however. The Federal Rules clearly distinguish them from one another. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12 (setting out failure to state a claim for which relief can be granted as a separate defense from lack of subject matter jurisdiction). Because the Rules themselves do not conflate failure to state a claim and lack of subject matter jurisdiction, but instead unambiguously recognize them as distinct defenses, the Rule and the advisory committee notes would have referred to both defenses explicitly if they were meant to instruct courts to allow supplementation when a complaint fails to effectively state a claim and when no jurisdiction exists over the claims in the original complaint. Rather than containing such a reference, however, the advisory committee notes unequivocally state that the amendment to Rule 15(d) expressly permitting a supplemental pleading where an original pleading fails to state a viable claim for relief “does not attempt to deal with such questions as the relation of the statute of limitations to supplemental pleadings, the operation of the doctrine of laches, or the availability of other defenses.” See Fed.R.Civ.P. 15 advisory committee’s note (emphasis added). Therefore, and in light of the authority set out supra regarding the court’s inability to allow a party to create jurisdiction by amendment or supplement, the court finds that Rule 15(d) does not allow it to permit supplements when it has no jurisdiction over the original claims.
For the reasons stated above, if indeed the court never had jurisdiction over any of the allegations in the original complaint, the court had no jurisdiction to enter any of the subsequent orders it has entered over the last fifteen years or to grant motions to amend and to intervene, and it has no jurisdiction today. On the other hand, if the court had subject matter jurisdiction over at least one of the claims in the original complaint, the court had jurisdiction to enter various orders and allow subsequent amendments, and it has jurisdiction to consider the motions to amend now before it. Accordingly, the court concludes that jurisdiction over the claims in the original complaint is a prerequisite to its jurisdiction to consider the motions to amend.
Finality of Agency Actions Challenged in the Original Complaint
Because the court is of the opinion that whether the court had jurisdiction over the original complaint
does
matter,
As a preliminary note, from a jurisdictional standpoint, Alabama’s original complaint was very poorly drafted. Thus, the court sympathizes with the Federal Defendants’ and Georgia’s difficulty in figuring out what agency actions Alabama challenged in each count of the complaint. However, having reviewed the complaint carefully, the court disagrees with the Defendants’ conclusions as to what agency actions Alabama challenged in the original complaint. 19
Among other things, Alabama based its original complaint on the following alleged Corps activities: 20
a.) entering into water withdrawal contracts with ARC, Gwinnett County, Georgia, and the cities of Gainesville, Buford, 21 and Cumming, Georgia, to allow the withdrawal of water from Lake Lanier at an average of 327 thousand gallons per day and at a peak rate of 377 million gallons per day (MGD), see Alabama’s Original Complaint, Doc. 1, at ¶ 11;
b.) entering into two contracts for water supply storage at Lake Allatoona, see id.;
c.) submitting a final Reallocation Report and Environmental Assessment reviewing the impacts of reallocating water in Carters Lake to its Division Engineer for intermediate-level approval and submission to the Corps’ Chief of Engineers for final approval without considering, at any point, objections Alabama made to the draft Report and draft Assessment when they were submitted to the public for comment and review, see id. at ¶ 15;
d.) planning to issue a draft Reallocation Report and draft Environmental Assessment for Lake Allatoona for public comment and review without the benefit of a basin-wide study assessing the potential impacts on the entire Alabama-Coosa-Tallapoosa (ACT) river basin, and planning to subsequently submit the final Draft Reallocation Report and Environmental Assessment reviewing the impacts of reallocating water in Carters Lake to its Division Engineer for intermediate-level approval and submission to the Corps’ Chief of Engineers for final approval without considering, at any point, Alabama’s objections to the Report and Assessment that Alabama planned to make at the public comment stage, see id. at ¶ 16; 22
e.) releasing for public comment and review a draft Post Authorization Change (PAC) Notification Report and draft Environmental Assessment proposing an 85 MGD increase in withdrawals from Lake Lanier, 23 see id. at ¶ 17;
f.) issuing interim water supply contracts to Cumming and Gainesville authorizing the withdrawal of water from Lake Lanier 24 before finalizing the PAC Report and Environmental Assessment and obtaining Congressional approval of the proposed 85 MGD increase in withdrawals from Lake Lanier, see id.;
g.) proposing a two-phased Comprehensive Studies Plan to Congress; in phase one, the Corps would reallocate water from Carters Lake, Lake Lanier, and Lake Allatoona (“the Lakes”) to satisfy water supply needs within Georgia, and, in phase two, the Corps would prepare a comprehensive management plan for the entire basin; thus, according to Alabama, certain unnamed common law rights would vest in Georgia citizens in phase one, preventing Alabama from later remedying any damage caused it by phase one, see id. at ¶ 18-19;
h.) in considering how to allocate water withdrawals from the Lakes, failing to consider the impact of already-authorized future reservoirs to be constructed on rivers and tributaries in Georgia in the ACF and ACT river basins, see id. at ¶ 20;
i.) in considering increases in water withdrawals from Lake Lanier, failing to consider the potential impact that would result if Georgia authorities granted Atlanta’s petition for an increase in the amount of pollution Atlanta could release into the ACF basin, see id., at ¶ 21;
j.) in preparing the proposed Reallocation Reports for Carters Lake and Lake Allatoona, and in preparing the PAC Notification Report for Lake La-nier, failing to prepare an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) when required, and failing to develop an adequate evidentiary record to support the Corps’ position that no EIS was required, see id. at ¶ 33; and
k.) in preparing Environmental Assessments, failing to properly consider potential impacts on the ACF and ACT basins, and failing to develop an adequate evidentiary record, see id. ¶ 34.
Based on the above-listed activities and actions by the Corps, Alabama alleged five causes of action in its original complaint. At most, only a few of the above-listed agency actions that Alabama challenged in its original complaint appear on initial observation to be final, discrete, challengea-ble agency actions. As subsequently discussed, however, entering into contracts (see a. and b. above) satisfies the requirements of a final agency action. Of Alabama’s five original causes of action, only one, the Third Cause of Action, clearly challenges those contracts, see Alabama’s Original Complaint, p. 22-23, ¶ 41, & p. 28 ¶ 2, as well as other contracts and proposed contracts mentioned in the complaint.
In their submissions and during the hearing, Georgia and the Corps represented that
none
of the contracts specifically referenced in the complaint had ever been finalized and that all those contracts had been withdrawn.
See, e.g., Hearing Transcript
at 30-31. However, because of the confusion created by the parties and by the poor draftsmanship of the complaint, the status of
all
the contracts referenced in the amended complaint remained obscured until the court specifically inquired into matter at the June 30, 2005 hearing and permitted additional submissions on this issue. At the court’s direction, the parties have finally, for the most part, cleared up that confusion. The contracts
The interim contracts with Cumming and Gainesville for water supply from Lake Lanier listed in (f.) above either had expired at the time Alabama filed suit on June 28, 1990, or were merely proposed contracts that the parties to those contracts never finalized. The Corps withdrew the proposed interim contracts, but continued to operate on the expired contracts it had intended to replace with the proposed interim contracts for Lake Lanier, and made changes to those expired but operative arrangements over time. See All Defendants’ Joint Supplemental Brief, Doc. 327, at 8; Alabama’s Supplemental Brief, Doc. 328 at 3-4. Alabama argues that the expired contracts under which the Corps continued to operate constituted licenses challengeable under the APA. See Alabama’s Supplemental Filing, Doc. 328, p. 4 n.2. The court, however, does not need to reach that argument because the parties do not dispute that at least two sets of contracts listed in (a.) and (b.) above were in effect in 1990 and remain in effect today: permanent water supply contracts from Lake Lanier for Buford and Gaines-ville, and the two storage contracts for Lake Allatoona. 25 See All Defendants’ Joint Supplemental Brief, Doc. 327, at 4-9.
In their supplemental filing, the Corps and the Georgia Defendants now argue that, three days after Alabama filed suit,
[o]n... July 2, 1990, the Corps issued a draft Water Supply Reallocation Report and Environmental Assessment proposing to permanently reallocate additional storage in Lake Allatoona.... These new storage contracts that the Corps proposed to execute for Lake Allatoona, and not the existing Allatoona contracts, were the subject of the causes of action that Alabama asserted in the 1990 complaint.
All Defendants’ Joint Supplemental Brief
26
Doc. 327, p. 6. The court is con
In the last paragraph under the Third Cause of Action, Alabama alleged that, “under the circumstances set forth in Paragraphs 1 through W [of the complaint], the Defendants have violated NEPA by issuing contracts for the withdrawal of water from Carters Lake, Lake Allatoona, and Lake Lanier without making any attempt to comply with NEPA by conducting the necessary environmental review.” Alabama’s Original Complaint, Doc. 1, ¶ 41 (emphasis added). Thus, consistent with Alabama’s representation at the June 30 hearing, see Hearing Transcript at 48^19, Alabama’s original Third Cause of Action challenged both proposed contracts and contracts already issued for all three lakes. The only contracts for water withdrawal from Lake Allatoona 27 that were already issued and that were referenced in the complaint were the two contracts found in paragraph eleven and referenced in (b.) above. These contracts were in effect in 1990 and are still in effect today, as acknowledged by the Corps at the hearing and in its supplemental brief. Therefore, the Third Cause of Action challenged the Corps’ entry into those contracts for water supply storage at Lake Allatoona without first complying with NEPA.
Further, contrary to Georgia’s arguments, Alabama did request relief based on the Corps’ alleged failure to comply with NEPA before entering into the contracts challenged in Count Three of the complaint. Alabama requested in its “Prayer for Relief’ that the court issue a “judicial declaration that the Defendants have violated NEPA by failing to comply with NEPA before entering into water supply contracts for the withdrawal of water from Carters Lake, Lake Allatoona, and Lake Lanier.” See Alabama’s Original Complaint, Doc. 1, p. 28, ¶ 2.
Because the court need only have jurisdiction over one claim in the original complaint to have jurisdiction to grant the motions to amend, the court will limit the discussion to whether Count Three creates jurisdiction by challenging a final agency
The Supreme Court decided
Bennett
in 1997, long after Alabama filed suit in 1990. In examining subject matter jurisdiction, the court evaluates jurisdiction as of the time Alabama filed the complaint.
See Baggett v. First Nat’l Bank of Gainesville,
The Supreme Court drew part one of the
Bennett
test from a 1948 case,
Chicago & Southern Air Lines, Inc. v. Waterman Steamship Corp.,
Thus, to be a final agency action in 1990 and today, the action must have satisfied the first part of the
Bennett
test for finality by marking the “consummation” of the agency’s decision-making process.
Bennett,
Both before and after Bennett,
28
in addition to examining whether a challenged agency action satisfies the two elements of the
Bennett
test, courts have “interpreted the ‘finality’ element in a pragmatic way” by considering a number of factors.
See FTC v. Standard Oil Co. of Cal.,
whether the action is a definitive statement of the agency’s position; whether the action had the status of law and immediate compliance with its terms was expected; whether the action has a direct impact on the day-to-day business of the plaintiff; and whether the preen-forcement challenge was calculated to speed enforcement and prevent piecemeal litigation.
See Am. Paper Inst., Inc. v. EPA,
The Corps’ entry into the two contracts for water supply storage in Lake Allatoona was a
discrete
action. Entering into a contract is not a broad program or general mode of operation, such as that challenged in
Lujan,
but a specific, individually distinct action.
See Lujan v. Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n,
Moreover, the Corps’ entry into the contracts was a
final
agency action. Entering into the contracts was not merely an interlocutory step in the administrative process,
In addition to marking the consummation of a final agency action, entering into the water supply and water withdrawal contracts was an act that, by its very nature, determined rights and obligations and had legal consequences, which is precisely what contracts do. The rights, obligations, and legal consequences established by the contracts allegedly damaged Alabama’s day-to-day business because the contracts permitted water withdrawals and allocated water withdrawal upstream from Alabama allegedly without proper consideration for downstream environmental impacts.
Because entering into the contracts was a discrete action that marked the consummation of the agency’s decision-making process, and because the water supply and water withdrawal contracts determined rights and obligations and had legal consequences, the Corps’ entry into those contracts constituted a final agency decision.
See Bennett v. Spear,
Mootness. Even if the claims in the original complaint were justiciable under the APA, the Georgia Defendants argue that they became moot when the Corps agreed in 1992 to withdraw the Water Supply Reallocation Reports, Environmental Assessments, and draft PAC Notification Report. See Georgia Defendants’ Brief, Doc. 281, pp. 3-4, 19, 24-26. The Georgia Defendants also argue that the claims in the original complaint became moot when the Corps finished its ACT/ ACF Comprehensive Study in 1998. Finally, the Georgia Defendants argue that the original complaint became moot because the court can no longer grant the relief requested in the original complaint. Therefore, according to the Georgia Defendants, the court no longer had jurisdiction in 2003 when it granted Florida’s motion to intervene or Alabama’s first motion to amend.
None of the Georgia Defendants’ mootness arguments addresses the Corps’ entry into water storage and water supply contracts. Because the court has jurisdic
c.) Futility of Amendments and APA Jurisdiction Over the Proposed Amended Complaints.
The Federal Defendants argue that the proposed amendments would be futile because, under the APA, the court has no jurisdiction over the amended claims. The Corps argues that the amended claims are “broad programmatic attacks” impermissible under the Administrative Procedures Act.
See Federal Defendants’ Brief
Doc. 277, at 13-17. As noted above, a person bringing an action under the APA must challenge discrete, final agency actions, and may not bring claims that are merely broad, generic attacks on entire administrative programs.
See Lujan v. Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n,
Particularly under
Lujan v. Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n,
Though the court had some difficulty figuring out exactly which agency actions Alabama is challenging in a few of Alabama’s amended claims, Alabama has clearly challenged some final, discrete agency actions. For example, in its proposed amended complaint, Alabama challenges, inter alia, the Corps’ entry into water supply contracts and water storage contracts without first complying with NEPA, see Doc. 270, Ex. A, Alabama’s Proposed Amended Complaint, at p. 57, ¶ 118. As discussed above, the Corps’ entry into at least some of those contracts constituted discrete, final agency actions that are not moot. Therefore, the court has jurisdiction over at least one claim in Alabama’s amended complaint, and allowing Alabama to amend would not be futile.
Florida’s proposed amended complaint presents more of a challenge to evaluate for jurisdiction because the court cannot tell exactly which agency actions are challenged under
any
claim. Nevertheless, the court is not convinced at this point, based on the Defendants’ conclusory argu
Because Alabama and Florida bear the burden of proof as to subject matter jurisdiction, the court directs Alabama and Florida to make clear in their amended complaints exactly which agency actions they are challenging under each claim, and to make other revisions only as necessary to clarify this court’s jurisdiction. As the court assured Georgia and warned the Plaintiffs at the June 30, 2005 hearing, see Hearing Transcript, pp. 44, 74, this case must proceed to a resolution, and the court will not continue to allow further amendments.
B. Whether Venue is Proper as to the Amended Claims
The Federal Defendants argue that amendment would be futile because venue is improper as to the amended claims. Alabama and Florida argue that the Federal Defendants waived the defense of improper venue as to the amended claims because the Federal Defendants did not raise a venue defense when Alabama filed its original complaint in 1990. Further, Alabama and Florida argue that venue is proper as to the amended claims.
1. Waiver
The court first considers the Plaintiffs’ argument that the Federal Defendants waived the defense of improper venue. Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(h),
A defense of... improper venue... is waived (A) if omitted from a motion in the circumstances described in subdivision (g), 30 or (B) if it is neither made by motion under this rule nor included in a responsive pleading or an amendment thereof permitted by Rule 15(a) to be made as a matter of course.
The Federal Defendants argue that they did not waive venue because, first, venue must be proper as to each claim, including claims in an amended complaint, and, second, because the venue statute changed in late 1990 so that the venue objections now available to the Federal Defendants differ from the venue objections available to them when Alabama filed the suit. See Federal Defendants’ Brief, Doc. 277, at 12.
On December 1, 1990, Congress enacted the Judicial Improvements Act of 1990. Among other things, this act amended 28 U.S.C. § 1391(e), the portion of the venue statute applicable to this action. The 1990 amendment eliminated the provision in § 1391(e) that the United States could be sued in any district “in which the claim arose.” The Federal Defendants argue that, because the venue statute changed after 1990, the venue objections available to them now are different than the venue objections available to them when Alabama filed suit.
See Federal Defendants’ Brief,
Doc. 277, at 12. However, the amendment did not give rise to new venue objections in this case because the amendment did not change the language in the venue statute permitting suit against the United States wherever “the plaintiff resides if no real property is involved in the action,” which is the provision under which Alabama seeks to establish venue.
See Penrod Drilling Co. v. Johnson,
No party has cited Eleventh Circuit precedent on whether amending or adding claims creates an opportunity for new venue objections. However, the court recognizes that venue must be proper as to every cause of action asserted. 31 For the reasons stated in this opinion, the court finds that venue is good as to the new claims in the amended complaints. Thus, the Federal Defendants have no valid venue objections to make as to the amended claims even if they technically have not waived them, and the court need not address whether the Federal Defendants waived all venue defenses as to the amended claims by failing to object to venue after Alabama filed its original complaint.
2. Proper Venue as to the Amended Claims
The Federal Defendants argue that the motions to amend are futile because venue is improper as to the amended claims. In response, Alabama and Florida argue that venue is proper as to the amended claims under 28 U.S.C. § 1391(e). Under that section,
[a] civil action in which a defendant is an officer or employee of the United States or any agency thereof acting in his official capacity or under color of legal authority, or an agency of the United States, or the United States, may, except as otherwise provided by law, be brought in any judicial district in which (1) a defendant in the action resides, (2) a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to the claim occurred, or a substantial part of property that is the subject of the action is situated, or (8) the plaintiff resides if no real property is involved in the action.
28 U.S.C. § 1391(e) (emphasis added).
The term “the plaintiff’ as used in 28 U.S.C. § 1391(e) is universally accepted to mean “any plaintiff.”
See Sidney Coal Co. v. Massanari,
Alabama and Florida bear the burden of establishing the propriety of venue, as does any plaintiff when a defendant challenges venue.
See Rogers v. Civil Air Patrol,
The Federal Defendants argue that venue is improper because no Defendant in the action resides in Alabama and a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to the claim did not occur here. The court does not need to address those arguments because the Plaintiffs have not sought to establish venue under § 1391(e)(1) or (2). Rather, Alabama and Florida maintain that venue is proper under § 1391(e)(3), which provides that, in an action against the Federal Government, venue lies where the plaintiff resides. Section 1391(e) reads in the disjunctive by using the word “or,” and not in the conjunctive with the word “and.” Thus, venue may lie under any of the scenarios outlined in the statute. Consequently, venue properly rests in the Northern District of Alabama if Alabama resides here.
The Federal Defendants further argue that, for venue purposes under § 1391(e)(3), Alabama does not reside in the Northern District of Alabama, but only in the Middle District of Alabama, which contains the state capital. The Federal Defendants base their argument on cases that are inapposite:
Tri-State Corp. v. State,
Furthermore, the Federal Defendants have not demonstrated why the rationale in the other case they cite,
Flowers,
should carry over to a case in which the plaintiff is not a corporation, but a state. In
Flowers,
the Eleventh Circuit held that, under § 1391(e)(3), venue as to a corporate
plaintiff
was properly restricted to its place of incorporation, despite language in § 1391(c) permitting suits against corporate
defendants
“in any judicial district in which [the corporation] is subject to personal jurisdiction at the time the action is commenced.” The Eleventh Circuit decided that, as to corporations, venue should be construed more strictly under § 1391(e) than under § 1391(c) because, under the well-settled law existing in 1962 when Congress enacted § 1391(e), for purposes of the general venue statutes, a corporation resided only in its state of incorporation.
Flowers,
The Federal Defendants argue that “[p]recisely the same logic [as in Flowers ] applies to the official residence of the State of Alabama. Because there is no evidence that Congress intended to alter traditional understanding regarding the residence of government officials, the traditional residence requirements continue to apply.” Federal Defendants’ Brief, Doc. 277, p.ll (emphasis added.) The Federal Defendants fail to grasp that the State of Alabama, not some government official, is the Plaintiff in this case. Other than the inap-posite Tri-State case, the Federal Defendants have provided no evidence that “traditional understanding” limited § 1391(e)(3) venue for state plaintiffs to the district containing the state capital.
The Federal Defendants’ argument presents an issue of first impression. Neither the Plaintiffs, who bear the burden of establishing the propriety of their chosen
Common sense suggests the Plaintiffs are correct. Given the complete absence of authority presented directly on this point, this court is not willing to create the new rule proposed by the Federal Defendants that would, for no just or logical reason, limit a state containing more than one federal judicial district to suing the Federal Government only in the district containing the state capital, regardless of any other consideration relevant to the case or the parties’ convenience. Indeed, the absence of authority may be precisely because common sense dictates that a state resides throughout its sovereign borders and the idea has not previously been challenged. Therefore, the court holds that a state may bring suit under 28 U.S.C. § 1391(e)(3) in any district within the state, and that venue is, therefore, proper as to Alabama’s claims in this case.
C. The Propriety of Adding Allegedly Separate, Distinct, and New Causes of Action Under Rule 15
The Georgia Defendants argue that Alabama’s and Florida’s motions to amend are actually motions to supplement, and that the motions to supplement must be denied because they seek to add new claims. See Georgia Defendants’ Brief, Doc. 281, at 31-33. The motions technically are in large part motions to supplement, because motions to supplement by definition “set forth occurrences and or events that have happened since the date of the pleading sought to be supplemented.” See Fed. R.Civ.P. 15(d). However, the slight differences between motions to supplement and motions to amend do not affect the standard of review in this case. See 6A Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1504 (2d ed.1990) (explaining the standards of review for motions to supplement and motions to amend).
The current trend has been to permit parties to “assert separate or additional claims or defenses arising after commencement [of the action], although courts typically require some relationship between the original and the later accruing material.”
See
6A Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 1504, 1506 (2d ed.1990);
see also
3 James Wm. Moore et al.,
Moore’s Federal Practice
¶ 15.30 (3rd ed.2005). Thus, to be permitted under the modern framework, the allegations in the supplemental pleading need not arise out of the same transaction or occurrence as the allegations in the original complaint. Moore,
supra,
at ¶ 15.30. The policy of judicial efficiency that “a party should be given every opportunity to join all of his grievances against another party regardless of when they arose” underlies the current, more permissive trend.
See
Wright & Miller,
supra,
at § 1506;
see also Franks v. Ross,
Supreme Court and Eleventh Circuit law illustrate courts’ willingness to allow plaintiffs to supplement complaints with new claims that arise after the filing of the action when those claims are related to the claims in the original complaint.
See, e.g., Griffin v. Sch. Bd. of Prince Edward County,
In this particular case, the considerations of efficient administration of justice underlying courts’ permissiveness toward supplementation could not weigh more heavily in favor of permitting supplementation with related claims. As Judge
The Georgia Defendants further argue that the motions to amend are inappropriate because they seek to revive a moot action and they could be the cause of a separate action or proceeding. See Georgia Defendants’ Brief, Doc. 281, at 32. For the reasons stated previously in this opinion, the case has not become moot. Further, although for much of the time this case has been stayed, the underlying claims were never dormant. Rather, during the stay, the parties were attempting to negotiate a resolution to this case, violating the court’s stay order, and otherwise implicitly proving by their actions the continued vitality of the underlying claims.
For all the reasons stated above, the court will not deny the motions to amend or supplement based on the Defendants’ argument that Rule 15 precludes addition of new claims.
D. Allowing the Motions Would Not Unduly Prejudice Georgia and the ARC
1. Abatement of the Georgia Case
The Georgia Defendants argue that granting the motions to amend will unduly prejudice them in pursuing their rights in Georgia v. United States Army Corps of Eng’rs, No. 2:01-CV-26-RWS (N.D. Ga.), because Judge Story has entered an order abating and administratively closing that case pending final judgment in this one, and because allowing the amendments will prolong this case. See Order Abating Georgia Case, Georgia Case Doc. 132; see also Order on Reconsideration of Order Abating Georgia Case, Georgia Case Doc. 156. The Georgia Defendants cite no legal authority to support this argument.
The Georgia Defendants argue that, while granting the motions to amend would “delay resolution” of the litigation in the Northern District of Georgia, denying the motions “would not prejudice Alabama or Florida” because they could “file the new claims in a separate lawsuit that would not tie up the Georgia case indefinitely.” See Georgia Defendants’ Brief, Doc. 281, at 40-43. As three United States District Courts and two United States Courts of Appeals have now experienced first-hand, the multiplicity of lawsuits regarding the Corps’ allocation of the waters at issue in this case has done little more than “tie up” the litigation and prolong any settlement or decision on the merits in any of these cases. The Georgia Defendants’ proposition that yet another related lawsuit would promote more efficient resolution of any case on the merits is, at best, utterly and preposterously mer-itless.
The rationale underlying Judge Story’s abatement Order was avoidance of the inefficiency, inconvenience, and comity complications accompanying the litigation of “competing claims to water in the ACF basin” in multiple fora.
See Order Abating Georgia Case, Georgia Case
Doc. 132, at 16-18;
see also Order on Reconsideration of Order Abating Georgia Case, Georgia Case
Doc. 156, at 8 (finding that “per
As this court has previously noted, “The dispute among the parties as to the allocation of water from Lake Lanier is now centered in this court.”
See
Doc. 274
Memorandum Opinion,
at 9;
Alabama v. United States Army Corps of Eng’rs,
2. Appearance of Unfairness
The Georgia Defendants argue that granting the motions to amend will unfairly prejudice them because of an appearance of unfairness. According to the Georgia Defendants, “many entities within the State of Georgia with a direct interest in the D.C. Settlement Agreement and with legally protectable interests have been reluctant to appear voluntarily to defend their interests before this [ejourt,” for fear of having the tri-state water dispute adjudicated in Alabama, where they have “no connection” with the Northern District of Alabama. See Georgia Defendants’ Brief, Doc. 281, at 42-43. The Georgia Defendants maintain that “[t]his [c]ourt’s order joining ARC as a party on the basis of a defensive special appearance 34 has significantly heightened the sense of caution in this regard.” Id. Thus, the Georgia Defendants argue, “it now appears that this ‘most controversial’ issue, which is of vital importance to all of the residents of the ACF and ACT basins, will be decided by a court sitting in Alabama, with only limited representation for the Georgians affected.” Id.
As discussed above, this case currently lies outside the Supreme Court’s exclusive original jurisdiction over controversies between two or more states. Therefore, this case must be heard before a district court
The Georgia Defendants also argue that allowing the motions to amend will create the appearance of unfairness because the court is, at best, straining the bounds of its jurisdiction in this case, and, by granting the motions to amend, the court “will signal a willingness to adjudicate any and all disputes related to water allocation in the tri-state area.” See Georgia Defendants’ Brief, Doc. 281, at 45-46. However, the case does not, as the Georgia Defendants argue, “strain[] the boundaries of this court’s subject matter jurisdiction,” see Georgia Defendants’ Brief Doc. 281, at 46, but lies squarely within it. Furthermore, this court is and has been zealous in examining challenges to its jurisdiction, and in independently considering whether jurisdiction exists. It will not exercise jurisdiction over any dispute, even a dispute related to water allocation, if it has no jurisdiction to hear it. Neither will it retreat from deciding any case over which it has jurisdiction when it has a duty to decide the case. The Georgia Defendants’ arguments on this point are simply misplaced.
V. Conclusion
The court has jurisdiction to consider the motions to amend. Given the posture of this case, the lengthy stay, and changes in circumstances during the last fifteen years, justice requires allowing the parties to amend. As discussed above, the court finds no reason, such as undue prejudice or futility of the amendments, to deny the motions to amend. Because leave to amend should be freely given under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15, the court grants the motions.
However, the court orders Alabama and Florida to revise their amended complaints to make clear exactly which agency actions they are challenging under each claim, and to make other changes as necessary only to clearly articulate the basis of this court’s jurisdiction.
ORDER
Before the court are Florida’s [second] Motion to Amend (Doe. 269) and Alabama’s [second] Motion to Amend (Doc. 270). For the reasons stated in the memorandum opinion entered contemporaneously with this Order, and for the reasons stated at the June 30, 2005 hearing on the motions, the court GRANTS the motions.
Further, as explained at the hearing and in the memorandum opinion accompanying this Order, the court ORDERS Alabama and Florida to revise their amended complaints before filing to clarify exactly which agency actions they are challenging under each claim, and to make other changes only as necessary to clearly articulate the basis of this court’s jurisdiction. The revised amended complaints shall be filed on or before August 24, 2005.
Notes
. Florida and its citizens are downstream from the ACF reservoirs and rely on water from the ACF river basin.
. In this opinion and throughout the case, the court and the parties have referred to the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the Defendant Corps officers collectively as the "Federal Defendants” or, simply, "the Corps.” At the time of the filing of the 1990 Joint Motion to Stay, Alabama and the Federal Defendants were the only parties to the case. The Joint Motion to Stay also granted certain rights to, and recognized certain obligations of, Georgia and Florida, who had been involved with the parties in settlement discussions. See Doc. 41, p.2-3. Georgia apparently did not agree with the Joint Motion to Stay. See Doc. 44, September 19, 1990 Order, p. 1.
. Now-Senior United States District Judge James H. Hancock was at that time presiding over the case. A succession of judges have been involved with this case until November 14, 2001, when the case was reassigned to this judge. See Doc. 120, Notice of Reassignment.
. See Doc. 192, October 15, 2003 Preliminary Injunction Order, pp. 2-4.
. Florida requested leave to file its amended complaint by September 12, 2003, stating that, in light of events in related cases, it needed more time to draft a complaint. See Doc. 158, Florida's First Amended Motion to Intervene.
. In their February 24, 2004 motion, Alabama and Florida requested the court to extend the due date for their amended complaints to March 10, 2005, although Florida had not filed a motion to amend its complaint or obtained permission to do so, and although the Order (Doc. 203) containing the deadline that was the subject of the motion only expressly applied to the filing of Alabama’s amended complaint pursuant to the grant of Alabama's motion to amend.
. Georgia and the Federal Defendants also argued that the court should lift the preliminary injunction for a number of reasons other than the entry of the D.C. Order, but the court declined to consider those arguments.
See
Docs. 274 & 275,
Order & Memorandum Opinion; Alabama v. United States Army Corps of Eng’rs,
. Georgia and ARC jointly filed one brief in opposition to both motions to amend. See Doc. 281. They made clear in their brief that, though they share similar interests in opposing the motions to amend, their positions may differ on the merits of the claims raised in the proposed amended complaints. See Georgia Defendants’ Brief, Doc. 281, p. 1.
.Upon reading the Defendants' submissions, the court was relieved by the prospect that it might not have jurisdiction over this case. However, for the reasons stated in this opinion, the court finds that it does have jurisdiction. Therefore, the court will willingly accept its duty to hear the case fairly and fully under the law until the case settles, some action occurs that relieves the court of jurisdiction, or until the court enters a final judgment.
.
See, e.g., Texas v. New Mexico,
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. " '[R]ule’ means the whole or a part of an agency statement of general or particular applicability and future effect designed to implement, interpret, or prescribe law or policy or describing the organization, procedure, or practice requirements of an agency and includes the approval or prescription for the future of rates, wages, corporate or financial structures or reorganizations thereof, prices, facilities, appliances, services or allowances therefor or of valuations, costs, or accounting, or practices bearing on any of the foregoing.” 5 U.S.C. § 551(4).
. " '[OJrder’ means the whole or a part of a final disposition, whether affirmative, negative, injunctive, or declaratory in form, of an agency in a matter other than rule making but including licensing." 5 U.S.C. § 551(6). " '[R]ule making' means agency process for formulating, amending, or repealing a rule.” 5 U.S.C. § 551(5). For the definition of ''licensing,” see infra note 11.
. “[L]icense’ includes the whole or a part of an agency permit, certificate, approval, regis
. " '[S]anction' includes the whole or a part of an agency — (A) prohibition, requirement, limitation, or other condition affecting the freedom of a person; (B) withholding of relief; (C) imposition of penalty or fine; (D) destruction, taking, seizure, or withholding of property; (E) assessment of damages, reimbursement, restitution, compensation, costs, charges, or fees; (F) requirement, revocation, or suspension of a license; or (G) taking other compulsory or restrictive action.” 5 U.S.C. § 551(10).
. " '[R]elief includes the whole or a part of an agency — (A) grant of money, assistance, license, authority, exemption, exception, privilege, or remedy; (B) recognition of a claim, right, immunity, privilege, exemption, or exception; or (C) taking of other action on the application or petition of, and beneficial to, a person.” 5 U.S.C. § 551(11).
. "The terms following those five categories of agency action are not defined in the APA: 'or the equivalent or denial thereof, or failure to act.’ § 551(13). But an ‘equivalent ... thereof' must also be discrete (or it would not be equivalent), and a 'denial thereof' must be the denial of a discrete listed action (and perhaps denial of a discrete equivalent).”
Norton v. S. Utah Wilderness Alliance, 542
U.S. 55, -,
."The final term in the definition, 'failure to act,' is in [the Supreme Court's] view properly understood as a failure to take an agency action — that is, a failure to take one of the agency actions (including their equivalents) earlier defined in § 551(13). Moreover, even without this equation of 'act' with ‘agency action’ the interpretive canon of
ejusdem gen-eris
would attribute to the last item ('failure to act') the same characteristic of discreteness shared by all the preceding items. A 'failure to act’ is not the same thing as a 'denial.' The latter is the agency’s act of saying no to a request; the former is simply the omission of an action without formally rejecting a request-for example, the failure to promulgate a rule or take some decision by a statutory deadline. The important point is that a ‘failure to act’ is properly understood to be limited, as are the other items in § 551(13), to a discrete action.”
S. Utah Wilderness Alliance,
542 U.S. at-,
. In their briefs and in a handout and which Georgia presented to the court at the June 30, 2005 hearing, the Defendants set out their understanding of what agency actions Alabama’s original complaint challenged.
. The court does not view the list given here as necessarily exhaustive.
. Alabama referred to "Bufford,” Georgia in its complaint, but at the hearing, on the court’s inquiry, Alabama confirmed that it intended to refer instead to Buford, Georgia, a town northeast of Atlanta near Lake Lanier.
. For obvious reasons, the alleged future activities listed under (d.) are probably the ultimate examples of agency "actions” that are not final,
. The Corps could not implement the 85 MGD increase until it submitted a final proposal to Congress and procured Congressional approval.
. Alabama admits that the Corps, Cumming, and Gainesville never signed the interim water supply contracts referenced in ¶ 17 of the original complaint. See Alabama's Supplemental Brief, Doc. 328 at 3-4.
. Paragraph Eleven of the original complaint described existing contracts, including the contracts for water supply storage from Lake Allatoona, not proposed contracts. See Alabama’s Original Complaint, Doc. 1, ¶ 11 ("The Corps entered into one or more contracts. .. to permit the withdrawal of water from Lake Lanier.... [A]t the present time, the Corps has not entered into any contracts for water withdrawal of water from Carters Lake.... [TJhere are two contracts for water supply storage at Lake Allatoona.'') (emphasis added).
. Because of the monumental importance of the Corps’ admission at the hearing that two of the Lake Allatoona contracts challenged in the complaint were final agency actions in effect in 1990 and remain in effect today, upon the Corps' request, the court permitted the Corps additional time to consult with Alabama and its own records to verify that its representations regarding the contracts were, in fact, correct, and to submit an additional filing only to verify the Corps’ representations as to those contracts. See Hearing Transcript, pp. 71-72.
In their post-hearing
joint
supplemental submission to the court, while admitting the continued existence of those contracts, the Federal Defendants, Georgia, and the ARC argue that the original complaint failed to state a cause of action based on those Lake Allatoona contracts because the statute of limitations had expired, and because NEPA did not apply to the decision to enter into them. Because the additional arguments presented exceed the scope of the court's consent to an additional submission, the court will not consider them. The court further notes that it did not need, desire, permit, or request any
Moreover, the additional arguments assert defenses to the contract-based claims or tardy-arguments for dismissal of claims in the original complaint for failure to state a claim-not arguments regarding the court’s subject matter jurisdiction over the complaint. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 12 (differentiating between motions to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction and motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted). As counsel for Alabama correctly noted at the hearing, “this horse has been beaten to death.” See Hearing Transcript, p. 73. Thus, while the court willingly considers jurisdictional questions whenever they arise, it will not consider arguments that are not jurisdictional submitted after the hearing and long after the time for briefing has passed.
. As Alabama demonstrated by the evidence presented in its supplemental filing, the two Lake Allatoona "water supply storage contracts” were for water supply withdrawals. See Doc. 328, Exs. A & B.
. For Eleventh Circuit cases decided after
Bennett
that relied on the factors listed
infra,
see, e.g.,
TVA v. Whitman,
. Indeed, the Defendants may properly challenge many of the alleged claims in both the amended complaints. By allowing these amendments, the court does not predetermine the success of any of the asserted claims or defenses to them.
. That is, the party's first Rule 12 motion.
.
See
17 James Wm. Moore et al.,
Moore's Federal Practice
¶ 110.05 (3rd ed.2005);
see also id.
at ¶ 110.06 (["I]f the plaintiff files an amended complaint adding additional... claims, venue rules must be satisfied for that complaint. An amended complaint is treated as a new action... and[,] therefore!)] a determination must be made as to whether the chosen district is one in which the action 'may be brought.’ ”).
But see id.
at ¶ 110.05 (noting that the rule requiring venue to be proper as to each cause of action is not veiy restrictive because, "[s]ince
Hurn
v.
Oursler
[,
. Alabama has also argued that venue is proper because a large portion of the citizens on whose behalf Alabama is suing in its
par-ens patriae
capacity reside in the Northern District of Alabama.
See Alabama’s and Florida’s Brief,
Doc. 312, at 26-29. Throughout this lawsuit, beginning with its original complaint,
see
Doc. 1 at 1, Alabama has alleged that it is suing on its own behalf and on behalf of all its citizens in its
parens patriae
capacity. Florida also claims to be suing as
parens patriae. See
Doc 269, Ex. A,
Florida’s Amended Complaint,
at ¶ 5. For reasons stated on the record at the hearing, the court has asked Alabama and Florida to clearly demonstrate that they have standing to bring their claims against the Corps in their
parens patri-ae
capacity.
See Massachusetts v. Mellon,
. The Georgia Defendants cite
Berssenbrugge v. Luce Mfg. Co.,
. ARC did not intend to intervene, but intervened nonetheless by its own voluntary attempt to make a "special appearance” to contest this court's jurisdiction and the entry of the October 15, 2003 preliminary injunction.
See
Doc. 196. As discussed
supra,
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12 has generally done away with special appearances.
See Harrison
v.
Prather,
