Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge RANDOLPH.
Asian elephants perform at the Ringling Bros, and Barnum & Bailey Circus. The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, the Animal Welfare Institute, the Fund for Animals, and Thomas Rider sued Ringling Bros, and its owner, Feld Entertainment, Inc., claiming that Asian elephants are an endangered species and that the circus mistreated its elephants in violation of the Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. § 1531 et seq. The only question is whether, as the district court ruled in dismissing their complaint, plaintiffs lack standing under Article III of the Constitution.
The strongest case for standing is presented by Thomas Rider. The relevant allegations in the complaint relating to him are as follows. Ringling Bros, holds circus performances in the United States and other countries. It sometimes stages events in which its Asian elephants parade along public streets. Rider worked for Ringling Bros, from June 1997 to November 1999, tending the elephant barns and working as a “handler.” As a result of his work with the elephants he formed a “strong, personal attachment to these animals.” Employees of Ringling Bros, beat the elephants with sharp bull hooks, kept the elephants in chains for long periods of time, and forcibly removed baby elephants from their mothers at an earlier age than they could normally be weaned in the wild. These actions have negative impacts on the elephants’ behavior “wherever they perform or are exhibited.” Rider has seen the elephants show stressful “stereotypic” behavior as a result. Department of Agriculture inspectors saw lesions and rope burns on the elephants. Rider left his job at Ringling Bros, because of the mistreatment of the elephants. He would like to work with the elephants again and would attempt to do so if the elephants were relocated. Rider would also like to visit the elephants, but is unwilling to do so because he would suffer “aesthetic and emotional injury” from seeing the animals unless they are placed in a different setting or are no longer mistreated.
The complaint was brought under the citizen-suit provision of the Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. § 1540(g), which allows any person to commence a civil suit to enjoin violations of the Act or its regulations. Id. § 1540(g)(1)(A). Plaintiffs provided written notice to the Secretary of the Interior and to Ringling Bros, sixty days before filing suit. Id. § 1540(g)(2)(A). They sought a declaratory judgment that Ringling Bros, violated the Act and the *336 regulations thereunder, an injunction against future violations, forfeiture of the elephants, and other relief.
The citizen-suit provision in the Endangered Species Act, by specifying that “any person” may be a plaintiff, eliminates any prudential standing requirement.
See Bennett v. Spear,
Rider failed to make such a showing, the district court ruled, because his exposure to the mistreatment of the elephants in the past did not cause him any present injury or threaten to cause any injury in the near future. Rider claimed that he wanted to work with the elephants again. But whether he could find such employment if Ringling Bros, were ordered to forfeit the elephants was, in the court’s view, speculative. Rider’s remaining arguments for standing - his general emotional upset, and his “continuing injury” from having quit his job - were insufficient for reasons unnecessary to recount. (The district court also held that the remaining individual and organizational plaintiffs lacked standing.)
We believe Rider has alleged enough to show injury in fact - that is, “an invasion of a judicially cognizable interest which is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.”
Bennett,
In
Glickman,
one of the plaintiffs had an “aesthetic” interest in observing animals under humane conditions.
Glickman,
While the complaint here says the elephants are still being mistreated, continuing harm to the animals is not our main focus. It is Rider who must be suffering injury now or in the immediate future. What we have written about Rider’s experience at Ringling Bros, cannot suffice. In actions for injunctive relief, harm in the past - as the district court correctly held - is not enough to establish a present controversy, or in terms of standing, an injury in fact. The question thus is whether the complaint contains enough to show some present or imminent injury to Rider. We believe it does.
In
Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc.,
To generalize from
Glickman
and
Laidlaw,
an injury in fact can be found when a defendant adversely affects a plaintiffs enjoyment of flora or fauna, which the plaintiff wishes to enjoy again upon the cessation of the defendant’s actions. Rider says he became attached to the elephants when he worked with them and would like to “visit” them again “so that he can continue his personal relationship with them, and enjoy observing them.” Exactly what sort of “visit” he has in mind is not spelled out. We can be sure that the prospect of his working in the elephant barns again is nil. But we believe a fair construction of his allegation encompasses Rider’s attending the circus as any member of the public would, by purchasing a ticket and viewing the show from the audience. From this vantage point he might observe either direct physical manifestations of the alleged mistreatment of the elephants, such as lesions, or detect negative effects on the animals’ behavior, which he claims he would recognize based on his experience working at Ringling Bros. This takes his claim out of the category of a generalized interest in ensuring the enforcement of the law, which would be insufficient to establish Article III standing.
See Common Cause v. Fed. Election Comm’n,
We recognize that Rider’s allegations differ from those in Glickman in one respect. Like the Glickman plaintiff who had regularly gone to a zoo, Rider claims to have witnessed inhumane treatment of animals while he was working for the circus. But unlike the Glickman plaintiff, if Rider returned to the circus as a member of the audience there is nothing to indicate that he would be in a position to witness the mistreatment again. Even so, we cannot see why this should matter as far as his standing is concerned. The plaintiffs in Laidlaw may not have seen the pollutants being discharged into the river; it was sufficient that they detected the effects of the pollution on the ecology. Here, the complaint alleges mistreatment and Rider says he is able to detect the effects, even if he does not directly observe the mistreatment. Given the posture of the case, we must assume the truth of the claims.
We think
Humane Society v. Babbitt,
For these reasons, Rider has made a sufficient allegation of injury in fact to satisfy the first element of the standing analysis.
The second element in Article III standing is a causal connection between the injury and the defendant’s conduct - “the injury must be fairly traceable to the challenged action of the defendant.”
Bennett,
The third element for standing is redressability. A plaintiff must show that it is “likely, as opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision.”
Bennett,
Based upon his desire to visit the elephants (which we must assume might include attending a performance of the circus), his experience with the elephants, his alleged ability to recognize the effects of mistreatment, and what an injunction would accomplish, Rider’s allegations are sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss for lack of standing. We therefore do not decide whether the other plaintiffs have standing because each of them is seeking relief identical to what Rider seeks.
See, e.g., Watt v. Energy Action Educ. Found.,
*339 The judgment of the district court dismissing the complaint for lack of standing is therefore reversed.
So ordered.
