The plaintiffs, a non-profit organization, a private firm and an individual, allege that the defendants, the Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA”) and the Deputy Administrator for Animal Care, Animal Plant Health Inspection Service, have violated the mandate of the Animal Welfare Act (“AWA”), 7 U.S.C. § 2131, et seq., by promulgating regulations that exclude birds, mice and rats from the definition of “animal” under the Act. Defendants move to dismiss on the grounds that all three plaintiffs lack standing to bring suit. In the alternative, defendants. move to dismiss based on the grounds that the Secretary’s exclusion of the three species is within his Congres-sionally delegated discretion and is therefore not subject to judicial review. Even if judicial review is appropriate, defendants argue that the Court should still dismiss the case out of deference to the USDA’s reasonable interpretation of the AWA. Finally, defendants assert that the Court, in its discretion, should stay this lawsuit as premature on the grounds that the agency has under its consideration a petition brought by plaintiffs herein to amend its regulations to include protection for birds, rats and mice.
Based on a review of the pleadings, the record and the governing case law, this Court concludes that: (1) defendants’ challenge to plaintiff Kristine Gausz’s constitutional standing must be rejected as inconsistent with this Circuit’s
en banc
decision in
Animal Legal Defense Fund, Inc. v. Glickman,
BACKGROUND
Congress enacted the AWA to ensure that “animals intended for use in research facilities ... are provided humane care and treatment.” 7 U.S.C. § 2131(1). The Act grants authority to the Secretary of Agriculture to promulgate regulations for the treatment of animals consistent with the stated purpose of the Act. 7 U.S.C. § 2143(a)(1). At issue in this case is the Secretary’s ' definition of “animal,” which the plaintiffs contend is unlawful in light of the statutory language of the AWA.
The AWA defines “animal” as:
any live or dead dog, cat, monkey (nonhuman primate mammal), guinea pig, hamster, rabbit, or such other warmblooded animal, as the Secretary may determine is being used, or is intended for use, for research, testing, experimentation, or exhibition purposes, or as a pet.
7 U.S.C. § 2132(g).
The USDA regulations further refine the definition of animal by including the six specifically identified species, but specifically excluding “[bjirds, rats of the genus Rattus and mice of the genus Mus bred for use in research ...” 9 C.F.R. § 1.1 (1990).
1
In 1990 two animal welfare organizations and two individuals brought suit challenging the Secretary’s exclusion of birds, mice and rats. The suit alleged, as does the present action, that the Secretary’s exclusion of birds, mice and rats was unlawful given the Congressional mandate to regulate “other such warm blooded mammal[s].” The suit was dismissed on appeal based on lack of standing.
See Animal Legal Defense Fund v. Espy,
Plaintiffs subsequently filed this lawsuit, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. In response, defendants have filed the instant motion to dismiss.
ANALYSIS
The Court grants a motion to dismiss only when the “plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
The Court has jurisdiction to review the challenged regulations under § 10(a) of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). This section provides judicial recourse to a plaintiff that is “adversely affected or aggrieved by agency action within the meaning of a relevant statute.” 5 U.S.C. § 702. The plaintiffs in this case claim that they are each adversely affected by the USDA’s failure to include birds, mice and rats in the regulation’s definition of “animal.”
As a threshold matter, however, the plaintiffs must show that they have standing to bring suit in order to survive defendants’ motion to dismiss.
I. STANDING
The question of standing involves both constitutional limitations on federal court jurisdiction as well as prudential limitations on its exercise.
Bennett v. Spear,
Further, in order to secure judicial review under the APA, the plaintiff must satisfy the additional requirement of prudential standing. A plaintiff has prudential standing if his interests “arguably fall within the zone of interests protected or regulated by the statutory provision ... invoked in the suit.”
Bennett,
Here, the defendants’ motion challenges the constitutional standing of plaintiff Gausz and the prudential standing of plaintiffs ARDF and In Vitro. However, given the Court’s determination that Gausz has constitutional standing, it need not address the prudential standing of the remaining plaintiffs. 2
A. Plaintiff Gausz’ Standing
Kristine Gausz is a psychology student at Beaver College. As part of her course requirements at the college, she participates in laboratory experiments involving rats. She alleges that as a result of the defendants’ failure to include birds, mice and rats in the AWA’s definition of “animal,” Beaver College is permitted to use rats for laboratory experiments without providing them with humane care. The lack of humane care in the lab has caused the plaintiff regularly to observe laboratory rats that receive “inadequate housing, water, food, and veterinary care.” Complaint, Para. 18. Gausz claims aesthetic and emotional injury resulting from her observation of these mistreated animals. She further alleges that she has spent her own time and money to “rectify the inhumane treatment” of the rats. Complaint, Para. 19.
1. Injury In Fact
Plaintiff Gausz states in her affidavit at ¶ 16 that she “want[s] to observe and study the laboratory rats, however, I am personally, aesthetically, emotionally, and profoundly disturbed when observing rats treated and cared for inhumanely. Repeatedly, I have observed rats that were suffering and subject to deplorable living conditions, which has been an assault on my senses.” Based on these, allegations, plaintiff claims that she has suffered a concrete and particularized injury to her aesthetic interest in studying rats in a humane environment. Based on the binding precedent established by this Circuit in ALDF III, this Court must agree that plaintiffs aesthetic interest is a cognizable interest sufficient to satisfy the requirement of constitutional standing.
As noted in
ALDF III,
“[t]he Supreme Court has repeatedly made clear that injury to an aesthetic interest in the observation of animals is sufficient to satisfy the demands of Article III standing.”
ALDF III,
In
ALDF III
plaintiff Marc Jurnove was a regular visitor to the Long Island Game Farm Park and Zoo (“Game Farm”). The plaintiff visited the-Game Farm out of his “love of exotic animals, as well as for recreational and educational purposes.”
Id.
Nonetheless, defendants attempt to avoid the Circuit Court’s holding in ALDF III by arguing that Ms. Gausz’s injury is distinguishable from that of Mr. Jurnove because Mr. Jurnove and the plaintiffs in the other cases cited in ALDF III “were interacting with animals in conservation or recreation activities,” whereas Ms. Gausz’s injuries arose in the course of her employment. Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss at 10-11. This distinction cannot withstand scrutiny.
As recognized by the D.C. Circuit, “the primary purpose of the [AWA] is to ensure the humane care and treatment of various animals used
in research
or for exhibition or kept as pets. 7 U.S.C. § 2131. To this end, the Act requires,
inter alia,
that the Secretary of Agriculture ‘promulgate standards to govern the humane handling, care, treatment and transportation of animals by dealers,
research facilities,
and exhibitors.’
Id.
§ 2143(a)(1).”
Animal Legal Defense Fund, Inc. v. Espy,
In reaching this result, this Court is persuaded by the cogent analysis of this very issue by the Honorable Stephen F. Williams in his concurrence in
ALDF I,
which was cited with approval in
ALDF III,
The gulf between seeing experimental animals decently treated and seeing them cruelly treated seems every bit as great as that between seeing animals savoring their natural habitat and not seeing them at all; if there is any difference between the two types of loss, the former would seem more acute.... I can see no reason why the viewer’s purpose in being near the animals should make a difference....
Given the express purpose of the AWA to ensure the humane treatment of animals, including those used in research, and the Court’s holding in ALDF III, this Court must, for the reasons explicated by Judge Williams in ALDF I, find that there is no meaningful distinction between the aesthetic interest recognized in ALDF III and that presented by Ms. Gausz in this case. Therefore, the Court finds that plaintiff Gausz has satisfied the injury in fact prong of constitutional standing.
2. Causation
The Supreme Court has held that causation exists when a challenged agency rule authorized the conduct that allegedly caused the plaintiffs injury, if that conduct would be illegal otherwise.
See Simon v. Eastern Kentucky Welfare Rights Organization,
Gausz’s complaint states that her injuries are the result of the allegedly illegal regulations promulgated by the USDA. She contends that if the regulation’s definition of “animal” included rats, the laboratory would have been required by law to provide them with adequate food, water and care, and further, the lab would have been required to consider non-animal alternatives to the tests it performed on rats. 5
The plaintiff in
ALDF III,
a frequent zoo visitor, challenged USDA regulations, which he alleged caused him . aesthetic harm. Jurnove challenged the USDA regulations on the grounds that they failed to. set forth sufficient minimum standards of care for zoo primates, as .required, by the AWA. Specifically, Jurnove asserted .that the housing of incompatible species next to each other and the housing of primates in isolation constituted inhumane treatment.
The government, however, contends that this case is distinguishable from ALDF III since Gausz had control over the care of the laboratory rats whose suffering she witnessed. Indeed, Gausz’s declaration mentions several occasions when she undertook to care for the rats in the laboratory. Her declaration also points out, however, that she only took these steps in response to mistreatment of laboratory rats that had already caused her aesthetic injury. Further, the plaintiffs declaration mentions several instances where she was powerless to control the care of the lab rats. For instance, the plaintiff alleges that she applied for a job in the laboratory that would have given her direct control over the rats’ care, but she was ultimately denied the position. Further, Gausz alleges that she attempted to persuade the lab personnel to consider an alternative, non-animal test to the behavioral experiments the lab performed on the rats, but they would not consider her suggestion. Thus, there is no factual support for the defendants’ distinction.
The government also contends that Gausz’s injuries are not fairly traceable to the Secretary’s exclusion of rats, since she treated her rats humanely without the benefit of regulations. The government argues that the regulations, as presently written, do not require that rats be treated inhumanely, and therefore, the regulations do not legally cause the rats’ mistreatment. This argument is unpersuasive.
The D.C. Circuit rejected a similar argument in ALDF III In ALDF III, the government challenged causation, asserting that the regulations at issue in no way affected the conditions that allegedly caused the plaintiffs aesthetic injuries. The government argued that the “governing law simply permits the conditions ... rather than requiring animal exhibitors to follow allegedly inhumane practices.” ALDF III, 154 F.3d at 441. The Court rejected any argument based on a distinction between permissive and mandatory government regulation, noting that it is not necessary for the law to compel a third party to act in the allegedly injurious way, but rather it is sufficient if “a challenged government action permitted the third party conduct ... when that conduct would have otherwise been illegal.” Id. at 442.
The defendants’ challenge to causation in this case mirrors the government’s challenge in ALDF III. Here, just as in ALDF III, the challenged agency action permits conditions that the plaintiff alleges caused her injury. As ALDF III makes clear, it is no defense that the challenged action is merely permissive of the injurious conditions.
In sum, the injuries alleged by the plaintiff are fairly traceable to the defendants’ allegedly illegal exclusion of rats from the AWA regulations, and as such, are sufficient- to satisfy the causation prong of constitutional standing analysis. Having satisfied the elements of constitutional standing, 6 the motion to dismiss as to Ms. Gausz on the grounds that she lacks constitutional standing must be rejected.
II. REVIEWABILITY
In addition to their challenge to plaintiffs’ standing, defendants argue that their motion to dismiss should be granted because the Secretary’s discretion to exclude certain animals from the Act is committed by law to his discretion and is not subject to judicial review.
Most importantly, the plain language of the statute does not support the defendants’ argument that Congress has committed absolute discretion to the USDA to determine the meaning of the term “animal.” The AWA defines animal as:
The term “animal” means any live or dead dog, cat, monkey (nonhuman primate mammal), guinea pig, hamster, rabbit, or such other warm-blooded animal, as the Secretary may determine is being used, or is intended for use, for research, testing, experimentation, or exhibition purposes, or as a pet; but such term excludes horses, not used for research purposes and other farm animals, such as, but not limited to livestock or poultry used or intended for use for food or fiber, or livestock or poultry used or intended for use for improving animal nutrition, breeding, management, or production efficiency, or for improving the quality of food or fiber. With respect to a dog, the term means all dogs including those used for hunting, security, or breeding purposes. 7 U.S.C. § 2132(g).
As was found by the Honorable Charles R. Richey, in
Animal Legal Defense Fund v. Yeutter,
Nor can the Court conclude that the legislative history relied upon by the defendants in their Motion to Dismiss at 13-16 supports their position. The very sentence from the Committee Report
7
upon which defendants rely was carefully considered by Judge Richey in
Madigan,
and as he found, “this single sentence does not provide much support in light of an overall reading of the legislative history, which supports the plaintiffs’ view of the statute.”
In sum, the Court is persuaded by Judge Richey’s reasoning in Yeutter and Madigan and rejects the defendants’ argument that the plaintiffs’ case should be dismissed on the grounds that the Secretary has unreviewable discretion to exclude birds, rats, and mice from the AWA’s protection.
III. STAY
Defendants urge the Court to exercise its discretionary power to stay this case pending the outcome of plaintiffs’ petition for rulemaking. While this action may become moot at some future point, there is no basis at this time for the Court to conclude that the matter should be stayed
IV. THE REASONABLENESS OF THE AGENCY’S INTERPRETATION
Defendants’ final argument is that if there is jurisdiction to review the agency’s regulatory exclusion of certain animals from the AWA, the Court should accord deference to the agency’s interpretation and uphold it as a reasonable interpretation of the Act. While defendants may be correct, this issue cannot be decided on a motion to dismiss, but must await a motion for summary judgment.
CONCLUSION
For the above reasons, the defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is DENIED on the grounds that plaintiff Gausz has standing and that the agency’s action is not insulated from judicial review.
Notes
. By regulation, the USDA has excluded birds, rats and mice from coverage under the Act dating back to 1971. See 36 Fed.Reg. 24,919 (1971).
.
See Mountain States Legal Foundation v. Glickman,
. As noted by the Supreme Court in
Defenders of Wildlife,
"the desire
to use
or observe an animal species, even for purely aesthetic purposes, is undeniably a cognizable interest for purposes of standing.”
.
See also ALDF II,
. For those “animals” covered by the regulations, the Secretary must “promulgate standards to govern the humane handling, care, [and] treatment ... of animals ... by ... research facilities.” 7 U.S.C. § 2143(a)(1). In addition, research facilities using protected "animals” must “corisider[ ] alternatives to any procedure likely to produce pain or distress in an experimental animal,” 7 U.S.C. § 2143(a)(3)(B), and it must establish a research facility committee to "represent society's concerns regarding the welfare of animal subjects used [at the facility].” 7 U.S.C. § 2143(b)(1).
. The Court need not address the redressability element of standing, since defendants do not raise this issue in their motion.
. H.R.Rep., No. 91-1651, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 6, reprinted in 1970 U.S.Code & Ad.News 5103, 5108 ("Committee Report”).
. Further references to legislative history provide little guidance given the fact that in 1970, a proposed amendment to include "any warm-blooded animal, as determined by the Secretary” was rejected, see Hearings on H.R. 13957 before the Subcomm. On Livestock and Grains of the House Comm, on Agriculture, 91st Cong., 2d Sess., at 84 (1970), but Congress also rejected the originally proposed legislation in 1970 which defined "animal” to cover all warm-blooded animals. Id. at 102.
