FRIENDS OF ANIMALS, Appellant v. Sally JEWELL, in her official capacity as Secretary of Interior, Department of the Interior, Appellee.
No. 15-5223
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued May 16, 2016. Decided July 15, 2016.
828 F.3d 989
Matthew Littleton, Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, argued the cause for appellee. With him on the brief were John C. Cruden, Assistant Attorney General, and Andrew C. Mergen, Washington, DC, and Thekla Hansen-Young, Attorneys.
Before: ROGERS, SRINIVASAN and MILLETT, Circuit Judges.
ROGERS, Circuit Judge:
This appeal presents a single question: Does Friends of Animals have informational standing under
I.
Congress enacted the Endangered Species Act (“the Act“),
Any “interested person” may petition the Secretary to add a species or remove it from the endangered or threatened species lists.
Whichever of the three 12-month findings the Secretary makes, she must publish certain information in the Federal Register. If she makes a “not warranted” finding, she must publish that finding.
The Act‘s citizen-suit provision permits “any person” to bring suit against the Secretary in federal district court alleging that the Secretary has failed to perform a non-discretionary act or duty required by section 4.
According to the complaint, Friends of Animals is a nonprofit organization that seeks to protect animals from cruelty and exploitation. On September 27, 2013, it submitted two listing petitions asking the Secretary to list the spider tortoise and the flat-tailed tortoise as either threatened or endangered. More than eight months later, on June 9, 2014, the FWS issued positive 90-day findings in response to both listing petitions. See 90-Day Finding on Petitions To List Two Tortoises as Endangered or Threatened and and [sic] a Sloth as Endangered, 79 Fed. Reg. 32,900, 32,902. Twelve months after it had filed its petitions, Friends of Animals found itself still waiting for the 12-month findings and served the Secretary with notice of its intent to sue. In December 2014, the FWS sent Friends of Animals a letter stating that it planned to issue 12-month findings for both listing petitions in fiscal year 2017 (October 1, 2016—September 30, 2017).
Subsequently, Friends of Animals filed suit in the district court, alleging that the Secretary had violated section 4 of the Act by not timely issuing 12-month findings in response to its listing petitions. It principally sought declaratory and injunctive relief, in particular a declaratory judgment that the Secretary had violated the Act by not issuing 12-month findings in response to the listing petitions and not listing the two tortoise species as endangered or threatened, and an order directing the Secretary to issue findings and rulemakings on each species within 60 days. The district court granted the Secretary‘s motion to dismiss the complaint for lack of
II.
Under any theory, “the irreducible constitutional minimum of standing contains three elements“: (1) the plaintiff must have suffered an “injury in fact” that is “concrete and particularized” and “actu
A plaintiff suffers sufficiently concrete and particularized informational injury where the plaintiff alleges that: (1) it has been deprived of information that, on its interpretation, a statute requires the government or a third party to disclose to it, and (2) it suffers, by being denied access to that information, the type of harm Congress sought to prevent by requiring disclosure. See Akins, 524 U.S. at 21-22, 118 S.Ct. 1777. The scope of the second part of the inquiry may depend on the nature of the statutory disclosure provision at issue. In some instances, a plaintiff suffers the type of harm Congress sought to remedy when it simply “s[eeks] and [is] denied specific agency records.” Pub. Citizen, 491 U.S. at 449-50, 109 S.Ct. 2558. In others, a plaintiff may need to allege that nondisclosure has caused it to suffer the kind of harm from which Congress, in mandating disclosure, sought to protect individuals or organizations like it. Compare Akins, 524 U.S. at 21-23, 118 S.Ct. 1777, and Shays v. FEC, 528 F.3d 914, 923 (D.C. Cir. 2008), with Nader v. FEC, 725 F.3d 226, 230 (D.C. Cir. 2013).
Here, Friends of Animals‘s contention that it has standing fails at the first part of the inquiry, the sine qua non of informational injury: It is seeking to enforce a statutory deadline provision that by its terms does not require the public disclosure of information. The disclosure requirement Friends of Animals points to as the source of its informational injury does not impose any obligations on the Secretary until a later time in the listing process. To the contrary, Friends of Animals insists, section 4 of the Act gives it a right to two categories of information now, and it suffers informational injury because the Secretary‘s delay in issuing a 12-month finding deprives it of this information. The first category is the information the Secretary must publish in the Federal Register after making a 12-month finding. See
Section 4(b)(3)(B) of the Act—the provision at issue here—contains two functional components, a deadline requirement and a disclosure requirement. The deadline requirement mandates that the Secretary make one of three types of findings within 12 months of receiving a listing petition: “(i) The petitioned action is not warranted
The structure of section 4(b)(3)(B) reflects the distinct purposes served by the deadline requirement and the disclosure requirement. Congress, in the Endangered Species Act Amendments of 1982,
Friends of Animals‘s complaint seeks to have the court order compliance with section 4(b)(3)(B)‘s deadline requirement, not its disclosure requirement. This is, as the Friends of Animals president characterizes it, a “deadline suit[ ].” Decl. of Priscilla Feral ¶ 12 (Apr. 29, 2015). The complaint‘s only cause of action alleges that “[t]he Secretary failed to make a finding indicating whether the petitioned action was warranted within twelve months after receiving the petition[s] to list” the spider tortoise and the flat-tailed tortoise. Compl. ¶¶ 36-38. Friends of Animals‘s complaint, in other words, demonstrates precisely why it lacks informational injury: before the Secretary makes a 12-month finding, section 4(b)(3)(B) does not mandate the disclosure of any information whatsoever.
Friends of Animals attempts to overcome this hurdle by conflating the purposes of section 4(b)(3)(B)‘s deadline and disclosure requirements. Together, in Friends of Animals‘s view, those two requirements confer on it “the right to timely information.” Pet‘r‘s Reply Br. 5 n.2 (emphasis omitted). Yet nothing in the Act or its legislative history indicates that the deadline requirement Friends of Animals seeks to enforce should be read to incorporate the informational purpose of section 4(b)(3)(B)‘s disclosure requirement. The deadline requirement was meant to spur a
Our other informational standing precedents in the Endangered Species Act context are to the same effect. In American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals v. Feld Entertainment, Inc., 659 F.3d 13, 22-24 (D.C. Cir. 2011), the court held that a violation of section 9 of the Act could not give rise to an informational injury because the relevant provisions of section 9 did not require the release of any information but merely prohibited defined categories of behavior harmful to certain species protected under the Act. Id. at 22-24; see also
The same distinction undercuts Friends of Animals‘s reliance on other informational standing cases. In those cases, the plaintiffs or petitioners had informational standing because they sought to enforce a statutory disclosure requirement. The plaintiffs in Akins, 524 U.S. at 21-22, 26, 118 S.Ct. 1777, and Public Citizen, 491 U.S. at 445-47, 449-50, 109 S.Ct. 2558, sued over whether certain organizations were subject to disclosure requirements in the Federal Election Campaign Act and the Federal Advisory Committee Act, respectively. In Ethyl Corp. v. EPA, 306 F.3d 1144 (D.C. Cir. 2002), the petitioner sought to enforce a provision of the Clean Air Act that, it maintained, required the EPA to take actions that it had been handling behind closed doors through public notice-and-comment rulemaking. Id. at 1146-48. Likewise unavailing is Friends of Animals‘s reliance on American Canoe Association, Inc. v. City of Louisa Water and Sewer Commission, 389 F.3d 536, 544-47 (6th Cir. 2004). Setting aside the Sixth Circuit‘s apparent conflation of informational and organizational standing, compare id. at 544-46, with id. at 546-47, the plaintiffs there sued to force a municipal utility to abide by a provision of the Clean Water Act that they contended imposed certain disclosure obligations. Id. at 539-40. Finally, in Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman, 455 U.S. 363, 373-75, 102 S.Ct. 1114, 71 L.Ed.2d 214 (1982), and Zivotofsky ex rel. Ari Z. v. Secretary of State, 444 F.3d 614, 615-19 (D.C. Cir. 2006), the plaintiffs sought to compel compliance with statutory provisions that guaranteed a right to receive information in a particular form. By contrast, Friends of Animals seeks to enforce a deadline requirement that does not obligate the Secretary to disclose information.
Accordingly, we affirm the dismissal of the complaint.
David PATCHAK, Appellant v. Sally JEWELL, in her official capacity as Secretary of the United States Department of the Interior, et al., Appellees
No. 15-5200
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued May 13, 2016. Decided July 15, 2016.
