RULING AND ORDER
In its Amеnded Complaint [doc. # 30-1], Goodspeed Airport, LLC (“Goodspeed”), a privately-owned and operated airport that has inland wetlands on the airport property, seeks to remove or cut treеs from its property that are within seventy-five feet of the wetlands. Goodspeed wishes to cut down the trees because it believes they are obstructions to navigable airspace as defined by federаl regulations promulgated under the Federal Aviation Act.
See
14 C.F.R. § 77.1
et seq.
Goodspeed contends that because of the wetlands’ location on its property, its action usually would require a permit from the East Haddam Inlаnd Wetlands and Watercourses Com
Currently pending before the Court is Defendant Commissioner’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs Amеnded Complaint [doc. # 61]. In her motion, the Commissioner argues that Goodspeed’s claims against her are barred by the Eleventh Amendment of the United States Constitution. The Commissioner also contends that Goodspeеd has not alleged a “case or controversy” under Article III of the United States Constitution because the airport lacks standing and moreover, its claims are not yet ripe for judicial review. For the reаsons that follow, the Court GRANTS the Commissioner’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint [doc. # 61] on the basis of the Eleventh Amendment. As a consequence, the Court does not reach the Commissioner’s other arguments.
The Eleventh Amendment states that “[t]he judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by citizens of another statе, or by citizens or subjects of any foreign state,” U.S. Const, amend. XI, and it is well-settled that “the Constitution does not provide for federal jurisdiction over suits against nonconsenting States.”
Nevada Dep’t of Human Res. v. Hibbs,
Here, the Court finds that Good-speed cannot satisfy the requirements of Ex parte Young because it has failеd to allege that the Commissioner is involved in an ongoing violation of federal law or has threatened an enforcement action that violates federal law. Unlike the IWWC, which has represented to the Cоurt that it would take action against Goodspeed if it proceeded to cut or remove trees in or near the inland wetlands without a permit and in disregard of the IWWA, the Commissioner has threatened no such action under the IWWA or CEPA. Rather, the Commissioner has consistently maintained that it will evaluate Goodspeed’s actions after it trims or cuts down trees and determine then — based on the extent of the trimming and the location of the trees— whether an enforcement action is even appropriate. Indeed, the Commissioner points out that Goodspeed has previously trimmed trees on its property and the Commissioner took no enforcement action. As the Commissioner makes clear in her Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs Complaint [doc. # 61-1], “Plaintiff has not alleged that the Commissioner has sent to the Plaintiff any memoranda or letters regarding a potential CEPA against it. Nor has the Plaintiff pointed to any other action by the Commissioner that might be construed to indicate an imminent threat by the Commissioner to bring a CEPA action against the Plaintiff.” See id. at 9. The Court agrees.
The Second Circuit has allowed plaintiffs to invoke the
Ex parte Young
exception to the Eleventh Amendment bar on federal court jurisdiction where state officials are actively violating federal law or imminently threatening acts that the plaintiff challenges as unconstitutiоnal.
See, e.g., Air Transport Assoc. of Am., Inc. v. Cuomo,
In
Morales v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
a case that also addressed a preemption challenge to state enforcement under federal aviation law, the Supreme Court concluded that the plaintiff could rely on
In suits such as this one, which the plaintiff intends as a “first strike” to prevent a State from initiating a suit of its own, the prospect of state suit must be imminent, for it is the prospect of that suit which supplies the necessary irreparable injury. Ex parte Young thus speaks of enjoining state officers “who threaten and are about to commence proceedings,” and we have recognized in a related context that a cоnjectural injury cannot warrant equitable relief. Any other rule (assuming it would meet Article III case-or-controversy requirements) would require federal courts to determine the constitutionality of state laws in hypothetical situations where it is not even clear the State itself would consider its law applicable.
Id.
at 382,
However, unlike the imminent enforcement actions at issue in
Morales,
Good-speed’s pre-enforcement challenge includes no allegation that the Commissioner is threatening or about to сommence a CEPA action. And the Commissioner has explicitly stated that it has no such plans at this time. As
Morales
makes clear, the remote possibility that the Commissioner might decide to act under the IWWA or CEPA without more does not give rise to either an ongoing violation of federal law or an imminent threat of proceedings for purposes of securing equitable relief.
See Morales,
At oral argument, the Court made it clear that it would prefer the State to waive its Eleventh Amendment immunity so that the Commissioner could defend state law against Goodspeed’s preemption challenge. The Attorney General’s office considered the Court’s request but decided to press the Elеventh Amendment defense
IT IS SO ORDERED.
