PARISH OF CAMERON ET AL v. AUSTER OIL & GAS INC ET AL
CASE NO. 2:18-CV-00677
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA LAKE CHARLES DIVISION
December 22, 2022
JUDGE ROBERT R. SUMMERHAYS; MAGISTRATE JUDGE PEREZ-MONTES
CaseID #: 13530
REASONS FOR DECISION
The present matters before the Court are a Motion to Remand [ECF No. 67] filed by the Parish of Cameron and a Motion to Remand [ECF No. 71] filed by intervenor-plaintiffs, the State of Louisiana ex rel., the Louisiana Attorney General, and the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources (hereafter, state and parish parties referred to collectively as “Plaintiffs“). The original removal was based on the “federal-officer removal” provision in
I. BACKGROUND
Several Louisiana parishes filed forty-two lawsuits against various oilfield-related defendants3 (hereafter, all defendants in these matters will collectively be referred to as
SLCRMA provides a cause of action against companies that either violate a state-issued coastal use permit or fail to properly obtain a coastal use permit when required. The act also contains certain exemptions from the coastal use permitting requirements, namely, uses which do
The cases had been previously removed to this Court on the basis of admiralty jurisdiction, federal jurisdiction under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (“OCSLA“),
Defendants then, for a second time, removed this case along with eleven other cases. The current Notice of Removal, filed on May 23, 2018, asserts federal-officer jurisdiction under
Plaintiffs filed motions to remand, arguing that (1) Defendants’ claim of federal-officer jurisdiction is without merit; (2) Defendants’ federal question jurisdiction basis for removal has already been rejected; and (3) removal was untimely because the expert report cited as the basis for removal was received months, if not years, after the removing defendants knew or should have known the factual underpinnings of Plaintiffs’ claims. Defendants opposed the motions to remand.10 On September 26, 2019, the Court granted the two motions to remand, holding that removal was timely but that Defendants had not established grounds to remove under
On August 5, 2021, the Fifth Circuit issued an opinion affirming the Court‘s ruling on the motions to remand in part, reversing the Court‘s remand orders in part, and remanding both the present case and Parish of Plaquemines to the Western District of Louisiana and Eastern District of Louisiana, repectively.13 The Fifth Circuit ruled that Defendants timely removed the cases from state court.14 The Fifth Circuit panel also affirmed the rulings of the district courts in both cases that the Defendants had not established grounds for federal question jurisdiction under
On January 11, 2022, the district court in the Eastern District of Louisiana issued its second ruling on the motion to remand filed in Parish of Plaquemines v. Chevron.16 The district court in Parish of Plaquemines applied the Fifth Circuit‘s new test under Latiolais and granted the motions to remand filed in that case.17 The defendants in that case then, once again, filed a Notice of Appeal to the Fifth Circuit. On October 17, 2022, the Fifth Circuit issued an opinion affirming the Eastern District‘s remand order in the Plaquemines Parish case.18
II. LAW AND ANALYSIS
A. Federal-Officer Removal.
A defendant may remove any action against “[t]he United States or any agency thereof or any officer (or any person acting under that officer) of the United States or of any agency thereof, [sued in] an official or individual capacity for any act under color of such office.”19 “[F]ederal officer removal under
B. The “Acting Under” Prong.
To satisfy
The cases applying this “acting under” requirement provide useful guidance as to how to draw the line between “direct control” and mere regulation. Many cases where courts have found sufficient control and direction to satisfy the “acting under” requirement involve government contractors who manufacture products according to detailed specifications and oversight by an agency or officer of the federal government.31 For example, in Winters, the plaintiff sued for personal injuries received as a result of exposure to Agent Orange while working as a civilian nurse for the United States Agency for International Development in Vietnam.32 Diamond Shamrock was a government contractor that supplied the mix of herbicides known as Agent Orange to the United States Defense Department.33 The Fifth Circuit affirmed the district court‘s conclusion that Diamond Shamrock was “acting under” a federal officer or office in supplying this mix of herbicides. The court observed that the Defense Department mandated a specific mixture
Similarly, in Zeringue, the plaintiff sued multiple defendants for damages caused by asbestos exposure.37 The plaintiff alleged exposure while deployed with the U.S. Navy as well as exposure when he worked in the Avondale Shipyard near Navy vessels that contained asbestos.38 The court found that the defendants had “acted under” a federal officer or office with respect to these asbestos exposure claims because the Navy had mandated the use of asbestos insulation in its contract specifications and the defendants complied with those requirements.39 According to the court, “equipment could not have been installed aboard Navy vessels unless it was first determined by the Navy to be in conformity with all applicable Navy specifications.”40 The court further noted that had the defendant not complied with the specifications and provided these products to the government, “the Navy would have had to build those parts instead.”41 In all of these cases, the plaintiffs’ claims arose out of conduct mandated by the government.
As we have pointed out, however, differences in the degree of regulatory detail or supervision cannot by themselves transform Philip Morris’ regulatory compliance into the kind of assistance that might bring the FTC within the scope of the statutory phrase “acting under” a federal “officer.” And, though we find considerable regulatory detail and supervision, we can find nothing that warrants treating the FTC/Philip Morris relationship as distinct from the usual regulator/regulated relationship. This relationship, as we have explained, cannot be construed as bringing Philip Morris within the terms of the statute.47
The Court also distinguished the “government contractor” line of cases, such as the Agent Orange and asbestos cases, by reasoning that the defendants in those cases were assisting the federal
In MTBE Prod. Liab. Litig., the plaintiffs brought claims against private companies that “manufactured, refined, marketed, or distributed gasoline containing MTBE” on the grounds that this additive contaminated water supplies.49 The defendants attempted to remove the case under the federal-officer removal statute on the grounds that the federal Clean Air Act and regulations promulgated by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) required them to reformulate their gas with additives such as MTBE to “oxygenate” the gas and therefore reduce emissions in certain metropolitan areas.50 The district court concluded that the defendants had satisfied the “acting under” requirement for removal on the grounds that the defendants used MTBE because EPA regulations required them to oxygenate their product for certain metropolitan areas.51 Even though other additives had been approved to oxygenate gasoline, the district court noted that “both Congress and the EPA were aware that the defendants would have to use MTBE in order to comply with the Clean Air Act‘s requirements.”52 The district court further noted that MTBE was the only approved additive available in a quantity sufficient to comply with the EPA‘s regulations.53 The Second Circuit reversed. According to the court, there was no evidence of “an explicit directive in either the Clean Air Act or its implementing regulations” that required the use of MTBE.54 In other words, while the statute and implementing regulations required defendants to oxygenate their gas, the regulations did not mandate that this be done by the addition of a specific additive, namely
C. Defendants’ “Acting Under” Allegations.
In the present case, Defendants contend that Plaintiffs’ claims challenge the following aspects of their pre-SLCRMA activities, and that these activities were governed by federal regulations and directives during World War II:
- how Defendants spaced wells;
- Defendants’ use of dredged canals instead of roads;
- Defendants’ use of vertically drilled wells;
- Defendant‘s use of earthen pits and centralized tank batteries;
- Defendants’ practices involving water discharged from drilling sites and the failure to re-inject saltwater; and
- Defendants’ use of inadequate tubing.57
Defendants characterize the U.S. oil and gas industry as essentially an agent of the federal government during World War II, and that the industry‘s activities were tightly controlled to support the country‘s war efforts.58 They contend that federal regulations and directives issued during the war mandated the activities challenged by Plaintiffs. Specifically, in 1941, President Franklin Roosevelt created the Office of Petroleum Coordinator,59 which subsequently was
On remand from the Fifth Circuit, Defendants filed supplemental briefs and evidence raising an additional ground for federal-officer removal under
D. The Fifth Circuit Addresses the “Acting Under” Requirement in Plaquemines Parish.
Following the supplemental briefing in this case, the Fifth Circuit decided the Plaquemines Parish case.68 That case addresses the grounds for federal-officer removal under
With respect to the defendants’ subcontractor arguments, the Fifth Circuit held that there was no evidence in the record of any contract creating a subcontractor relationship with the defendant producers.74 According to the Fifth Circuit, mere “supplier relationships” are insufficient to create a subcontractor relationship.75 The circuit further reasoned that, even if a subcontract existed, the presence of a subcontractor relationship is not sufficient to support federal-officer removal jurisdiction unless the subcontractor can independently show how they, as opposed to the prime contractor, were “subject to the federal government‘s guidance and control.”76 The circuit reiterated that the evidence in the record did not establish the level of control or guidance to support federal-officer removal with respect to the defendant producers. Accordingly, the Fifth Circuit affirmed the Eastern District‘s order remanding that case to state court.
E. Have Defendants Established the “Acting Under” Requirement for Federal-Officer Removal under Section 1442(a)(1)?
The Fifth Circuit‘s analysis in Plaquemines Parish did not alter the analysis that this Court must apply in determining the “acting under” prong of
Second, as in Plaquemines Parish, the record does not reflect the government contractor relationship that existed in Winters and Zeringue. In those cases, the courts highlighted the fact
Without evidence of some such special relationship, Philip Morris’ analogy to Government contracting breaks down. We are left with the FTC‘s detailed rules about advertising, specifications for testing, requirements about reporting results, and the like. This sounds to us like regulation, not delegation. If there is a difference between this kind of regulation and, say, that of Food and Drug Administration regulation of prescription drug marketing and advertising (which also involve testing requirements), see Serono Labs., Inc. v. Shalala, 158 F.3d 1313, 1316 (C.A.D.C.1998), that difference is one of degree, not kind.84
Here, federal agencies likely entered into contracts for the sale of oil, gas, and other petroleum products during World War II to support the war effort. But as noted by Plaintiffs, the oil and gas industry includes “upstream” activities—exploration and production of oil and gas—and “downstream” activities—the actual refinement of crude oil into usable petroleum products.85 Although Defendants gloss over this distinction, any World War II contracts would have generally involved “downstream” refined petroleum products, while the federal regulation at issue here involved “upstream” exploration and production activities.86 Thus, unlike Winters and Zeringue, the Plaintiffs’ claims are not grounded in activities mandated by government contracts but are based on Defendants’ compliance with a federal war-time regulatory regime.
Finally, Defendants’ new government subcontractor arguments fail for the same reasons that they failed in the Plaquemines Parish case. Here, Defendants have pointed to no evidence of any contract creating a subcontractor relationship between Defendants and downstream refiners with respect to refined products sold pursuant to government contracts. As noted by the Firth Circuit in Plaquemines Parish, a mere supplier relationship does not rise to the level of a
In sum, the record as a whole does not satisfy the “acting under” requirement for federal-officer removal under
F. Consideration of Latiolais.
Prior to the Fifth Circuit‘s recent decision in Latiolais, a party removing a case under
Latiolais’ rejection of the strict “causal nexus” test does not change the result in the present case. As the Fifth Circuit subsequently held in Plaquemines Parish, the record does not reflect any connection or association between Defendants and any acts taken at the direction of a federal officer. Rather, the record reflects, at most, compliance with federal regulations. To the extent that Defendants rely on federal directives to refineries during World War II, as explained in Plaquemines Parish, Defendants have come forward with no facts showing anything other than a supplier relationship between Defendants (or their predecessors) and downstream refineries. The Fifth Circuit has already held that a showing of a mere supplier relationship does not establish the necessary connection or association to support removal under
*
In sum, Defendants have not satisfied the “acting under” requirement for federal-officer removal under
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons explained above, the Court GRANTS the two Motions to Remand filed in this matter [ECF Nos. 67 and 71]. In order to permit Defendants an opportunity to seek an extended stay of this ruling, the Court will temporarily stay the effect of the remand for a period of twenty (20) days. If no further stay is entered by this Court or a higher court within twenty (20) days, the Clerk is directed to transmit the case back to the state court.
THUS DONE in Chambers on this 22nd day of December, 2022.
ROBERT R. SUMMERHAYS
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
