Case Information
*1 Before JONES, BARKSDALE and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:
Eleven Louisiana coastal parishes (the “Parishes”) filed suits against BP and other defendants (“Appellees”) [1] involved in the DEEPWATER HORIZON oil spill to recover penalties under The Louisiana Wildlife Protection Statute (“Wildlife Statute”) for the pollution-related loss of aquatic life and wildlife. La. R.S. 56:40.1. [2] Suits filed originally in state court were removed to federal court, which denied the Parishes’ motions to remand and then dismissed all of the Parishes’ claims as preempted by federal law. Both decisions are challenged in the Parishes’ appeal. We concur with the district court that the state law claims were removable pursuant to the jurisdictional provision of the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (“OCSLA”). We also affirm their dismissal as preempted by federal law.
BACKGROUND
The Macondo well, which was being drilled by the mobile offshore drilling
rig DEEPWATER HORIZON, experienced a catastrophic blowout and explosion
in April 2010 and caused hydrocarbon, mineral, and other contaminant pollution
all along the shores and estuaries of the Gulf Coast states, inflicting billions of
dollars in property and environmental damage and spawning a litigation frenzy.
Among the thousands of cases transferred for consolidated management by the
Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation to the Eastern District of Louisiana
were the Parishes’ lawsuits, some of which had been removed from state court.
The district court handled cases filed by government entities, like the Parishes,
in various groups according to their common issues. Considering first the
remand motions filed by three of these Parishes, the court upheld its removal
jurisdiction notwithstanding that the cases alleged only penalties accruing under
state law for pollution damage that occurred in state waters or along the
coastline. The court predicated
federal court
jurisdiction on
43 U.S.C. § 1349(b)(1)(A).
See In re: Oil Spill by the Oil Rig “Deepwater Horizon”
in the Gulf of Mex., on April 20, 2010 (In re: Oil Spill)
,
Plaquemines), and the court’s pertinent order was issued on October 6, 2010. The docket sheets are somewhat ambiguous about which Parishes are included in the ruling and order, but all have appealed the refusal to remand.
708-09 (E.D. La. 2010). Next, considering various defendants’ Motions to
Dismiss the “B1” pleading bundle cases, filed for private or “non-governmental
economic loss and property damages,” the district court held that admiralty
jurisdiction was present because the alleged tort occurred upon navigable waters
and disrupted maritime commerce, and the operations of the DEEPWATER
HORIZON, the vessel, bore a substantial relationship to maritime activity.
In re: Oil Spill
,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
“The district court’s denial of the motion to remand, the propriety of
removal under the various governing statutes, and the existence of subject-
matter jurisdiction here are all interrelated questions of law subject to
de novo
review.”
Oviedo v. Hallbauer
, 655 F.3d 419, 422 (5th Cir. 2011) (emphasis
added). Further, “[w]e review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
on preemption grounds
de novo
.”
O’Hara v. Gen. Motors Corp.
,
DISCUSSION
I. Removal Jurisdiction
The Appellees principally rely on OCSLA’s broad jurisdictional grant in petitioning for federal court removal jurisdiction. Defendants may generally remove a case from state court if the federal court would have had original jurisdiction over it. 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a). The defendants bear the burden of establishing the basis for removal, and operative facts and pleadings are evaluated at the time of removal. City of Chicago v. Int’l Coll. of Surgeons, 522 U.S. 156, 163, 118 S. Ct. 523, 529 (1997). The pertinent provision, OCSLA § 23(b)(1), states:
. . . the district courts of the United States shall have jurisdiction of cases and controversies arising out of, or in connection with . . . any operation conducted on the outer Continental Shelf which involves exploration, development, or production of the minerals, of the subsoil and seabed of the outer Continental Shelf, or which involves rights to such minerals . . ..
The Fifth Circuit has interpreted this language as straightforward and
broad.
See Tenn. Gas Pipeline v. Hous. Cas. Ins. Co.
, 87 F.3d 150, 154
(5th Cir. 1996);
EP Operating Ltd. P’ship v. Placid Oil Co.
,
The Parishes do not concede, however, that, under the second half of the inquiry, their statutory wildlife claims arose out of or in connection with the oil production operation. Following the migration of contaminants from the well, the injury to wildlife and aquatic life was wholly situated in state territorial waters and on land. The statutory wildlife claims, they assert, have no effect on the “efficient exploitation of resources from the OCS,” nor do they “threaten the total recovery of federally-owned resources.” Id . at 570. “Mere connection” to activities on the OCS, in other words, is insufficient to meet the jurisdictional test.
This argument, however, cannot be squared with applicable Fifth Circuit
law or the facts before us. Even though one can hypothesize a “mere connection”
between the cause of action and the OCS operation too remote to establish
federal jurisdiction, this court deems § 1349 to require only a “but-for”
connection.
See, e.g.
,
Hufnagel v. Omega Serv. Indus., Inc.
,
Undeterred by this reasoning, the Parishes raise additional but flawed
arguments. First, their attempt to intertwine the Section 1349 jurisdictional
inquiry with OCSLA’s choice of law provision, 43 U.S.C. § 1333, fails because the
provisions and the issues they raise are distinct.
See, e.g., Dahlen v. Gulf Crews
,
Inc.
,
II. Choice of Law
The more difficult question in this appeal is whether the Wildlife Statute’s
penalties can be applied against the Appellees. The Parishes’ arguments are
easily summarized. Both briefs submitted by the Parishes (authored on behalf
of Orleans Parish, et al. and New Iberia Parish, et al.) acknowledge that the
mobile offshore drilling unit DEEPWATER HORIZON is a vessel.
Demette v.
Falcon Drilling Co.
,
While they purport to abjure the application of federal law, however, the Parishes also rely on savings clauses in federal statutes that regulate water pollution (Clean Water Act (“CWA”)), 33 U.S.C. § 1321(o), [9] and oil pollution (Oil Pollution Act (“OPA”)), 33 U.S.C. § 2718(c), and preserve some state remedies. Of course, if the in-state location of wildlife injury alone suffices to support Louisiana’s exercise of its police power, why resort to federal savings clauses?
The Parishes’ inconsistent positions reveal a basic flaw. The question here is not whether federal law plays a role in remediating the effects of the Macondo well blowout, but how extensive the role is. The Parishes cannot prove Appellees’ responsibility, or respective shares of responsibility, for wildlife injuries without alluding to the blowout’s physical source, emissions from a well drilled in the OCS, or its human source, errors or omissions related to the DEEPWATER HORIZON’S production activity on the high seas above the OCS. The Parishes’ pleadings expressly allege, inter alia , that Appellees caused the Macondo well oil spill and violated federal regulations in so doing.
Analysis of federal law thus inevitably precedes the Parishes’ simplistic
lex loci delicti
theory. Federal law covers the disaster in two ways. First,
pursuant to OCSLA, “[a]ll law applicable to the outer Continental Shelf is
federal law,” and all cases “involving events occurring on the Shelf [are]
governed by federal law . . ..”
Gulf Offshore Co. v. Mobil Oil Corp.
,
Alternatively, maritime law applies here because the DEEPWATER
HORIZON is a vessel. A strong argument exists for the proposition that the
disaster occurred while the vessel was engaged in the maritime activity of
conducting offshore drilling operations, and the disaster had a significant effect
on maritime commerce.
Cf. Jerome B. Grubart, Inc. v. Great Lakes Dredge &
Dock Co.
,
OSCLA Section 1333(a)(1) and admiralty law constitute alternative, not
overlapping, regimes of federal law.
See Rodrigue v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.
,
A. General Principles
The Federal Water Pollution Control Act ( aka Clean Water Act, “CWA”), 33 U.S.C. § 1251-1376, and its implementing regulations comprehensively govern oil exploration and development on the OCS, including BP’s conduct of the Macondo well operations pursuant to National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (“NPDES”) Permit No. GMG290000. Gulf Restoration Network v. Salazar , 683 F.3d 158, 164-66 (5th Cir. 2012). Under the regulations, states like Louisiana that might be affected by offshore pollutant discharges may offer comments before permits are issued, but they have no other express regulatory role. Id . at 165. Nevertheless, the Parishes assert the right to pursue state law penalties against the Appellees for pollution that migrated from nearly fifty miles offshore. We will examine their arguments in detail but first explain further the pertinent background law.
Put in starkest terms, had the blowout occurred in Texas state waters and
caused pollution in Louisiana, the Parishes’ Louisiana law claims would be
squarely foreclosed. Federal preemption of interstate water pollution claims has
been a feature of United States law for over a hundred years.
See, e.g., Missouri
v. Illinois
,
After examining the CWA as a whole, its purposes and its history, we are convinced that if affected States were allowed to impose separate discharge standards on a single point source, the inevitable result would be a serious interference with the achievement of the “full purposes and objectives of Congress.”
Among its reasons, the Court noted that factors such as the impact of
discharges on a waterway, the types of effluents, and the schedule for
compliance may vary widely among sources. Point source states may require
stricter controls than the federal government. Complex policy, scientific, and
technological decisions are required. Lawsuits based on affected states’ common
law of nuisance would upset this “balance of public and private interests.”
It would be extraordinary for Congress, after devising an elaborate permit system that sets clear standards, to tolerate common-law suits that have the potential to undermine this regulatory structure.
Notably, also confronted and rejected the contention that two
provisions of the CWA, which preserved a State’s right to regulate its waters and
an injured party’s right to seek relief under “any statute or common law,”
authorized the nuisance suit under the affected state’s law rather than that of
the point source state. According to the Court, neither savings clause, carefully
read, would stand for so broad a proposition. 479 U.S. at 492-93,
superseded by any later Supreme Court decision nor, as we shall see, by statute.
Indeed, its principles were affirmed by the Court in
Arkansas v. Oklahoma
,
Because the CWA was inadequate to provide complete remedies for the Valdez, Alaska oil spill catastrophe, Congress passed the Oil Pollution Act (“OPA”) in 1990. 33 U.S.C. §§ 2701-62. Congress intended that the OPA would “build[] upon section 311 of the Clean Water Act [§ 1321] to create a single Federal law providing cleanup authority, penalties, and liability for oil pollution.” S. Rep. No. 101-94, at 9 (1989), reprinted in 1990 U.S.C.C.A.N. 722, 730. The OPA prescribes a supplemental, comprehensive federal plan for handling oil spill responses, allocating responsibility among participants and prescribing reimbursement for cleanup costs and injuries to third parties. The remedial efforts for the Macondo well blowout occurred under the auspices of both the CWA, 33 U.S.C. § 1321(b)(1) (the CWA applies to oil discharges in connection with activities above the OCS), and the OPA, 33 U.S.C. § 2701(32)(C) (extending the OPA to offshore facilities above the OCS).
Both the CWA and the OPA contain provisions that save state law causes of action, including penalty claims, under certain circumstances. The CWA clause involved in this case is 33 U.S.C. § 1321(o), which states in pertinent part:
(o) Obligation for damages unaffected, local authority not preempted; existing Federal authority not modified or affected (1) Nothing in this section shall affect or modify in any way the obligations of any owner or operator . . . or offshore facility to any person or agency under any provision of law for damages to any publicly owned or privately owned property resulting from a discharge of any oil or hazardous substance . . ..
(2) Nothing in this section shall be construed as preempting any State or political subdivision thereof from imposing any requirement or liability with respect to the discharge of oil or hazardous substance into any waters within such State, or with respect to any removal activities related to such discharge.
(3) Nothing in this section shall be construed . . . to affect any State or local law not in conflict with this section.
(Emphasis added).
The OPA’s provision is differently worded:
Section 2718(a). Relationship to Other Law (a) Preservation of State authorities; Solid Waste Disposal Act
Nothing in this Act . . . shall–
(1) affect, or be construed or interpreted as preempting, the authority of any State or political subdivision thereof from imposing any additional liability or requirements with respect to—
(A) the discharge of oil or other pollution by oil within such State; or (B) any removal activities in connection with such a discharge; or (2) affect, or be construed or interpreted to affect or modify in any way the obligations or liabilities of any person under . . . State law, including common law.
. . . .
(c) Additional requirements and liabilities; penalties Nothing in this Act . . . shall in any way affect, or be construed to affect, the authority of the United States or . . . any State or political subdivision thereof– (1) to impose additional liability or additional requirements; or (2) to impose, or to determine the amount of, any fine or penalty (whether criminal or civil in nature) for any violation of law; relating to the discharge . . . of oil.
33 U.S.C. § 2718(a), (c) (emphasis added).
B. Application of General Principles
The Parishes make two basic arguments. First, they assert that their historic police powers to deter oil pollution in their waters and protect their aquatic life and wildlife are preserved notwithstanding the application of federal law. Second, they assert that both above-cited federal savings clauses expressly protect their ability to levy Wildlife Statute fines. Each argument must be carefully considered.
1. Does control?
The Parishes’ first proposition depends on whether the states maintained
historic police powers to apply their local law to interstate water pollution even
if the pollution originated outside the state. The Supreme Court’s discussion of
the issue in
Milwaukee I
contradicts the Parishes’ position.
Even assuming the Parishes have some residual police power to apply local
law to this OCSLA-originated discharge, however, they must overcome federal
preemption under the CWA. As the Supreme Court predicted in
Milwaukee I
,
406 U.S. at 107, 92 S. Ct. at 1395, Congress could and did supplant federal
common law with an overarching regulatory framework to protect the nation’s
waters. To effectuate the full purposes of the regulations,
Ouellette
held that the
states’ ability to apply local law to out-of-state point sources of alleged water
pollution was in conflict with the CWA.
The Parishes contend that Ouellette is distinguishable. First, it applies only to the CWA’s permitting provision (33 U.S.C. § 1342), not to the oil discharge prohibition (33 U.S.C. § 1321(o)). Relatedly, the savings provisions that Ouellette found inapposite are different from the provisions the Parishes rely on. Second, since Ouellette considered only interstate water pollution, the decision has no bearing on discharges from the OCS. We find these distinctions unpersuasive.
The Supreme Court’s subsequent interpretation of
Oullette
substantially
undermines any cramped reading of the case. The Court reiterated
Ouellette
’s
holding that “the Clean Water Act taken ‘as a whole, its purposes and its history’
pre-empted an action based on the law of the affected State and that the
only
state law applicable to an interstate discharge is ‘the law of the State in which
the point source is located.’”
Arkansas
,
Hoping to confine Ouellette to NPDES permitting cases and the specific savings provisions the Court considered, the Parishes contend that the Court’s goal in Ouellette was to prevent disruption of the point-source effluent permitting system by redundant or conflicting state legal regimes. 33 U.S.C. § 1342. On the other hand, they contend, because the CWA essentially prohibits “discharges” of “oil or hazardous substances” into the nation’s navigable waters and the waters of the OCS, 33 U.S.C. 1321(b), allowing all affected states to impose their laws on the illegal activity creates not conflict, but reinforcement of federal law.
The Court’s opinion, however, resists such limitation. In the paragraph
that introduces the Court’s reasoning,
Ouellette
speaks plainly: “We hold that
when a court considers a State-law claim concerning interstate water pollution
that is subject to the CWA, the court must apply the law of the state in which
the point source is located.”
A weaker argument against
Ouellette
urges that it quelled disputes over
the application of competing state laws to interstate water pollution but has no
impact on the overlay of state laws on a federally controlled point source. On the
contrary, the federal responsibility for the OCS is clear. The Macondo well site
was developed under a plethora of federal regulations, including an NPDES
permit.
See generally Gulf Restoration Network
,
In sum, forms a controlling backdrop for resolving claims caused by the blowout. Federal law, the law of the point source, exclusively applies to the claims generated by the oil spill in any affected state or locality.
2. Effect of Savings Clauses
With
Ouellette
as the controlling law, there are no state remedies to “save.”
The OPA applies as the law of the OCSLA point source and, along with the CWA
penalties, furnishes a comprehensive remedial regime for affected states’
governmental and private claims. Just because the Parishes are located in the
most closely adjacent state, they fare no better than the “down-current” states
of Texas, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. The CWA and the OPA “savings”
clauses preserve but do not create state law claims.
Knickerbocker Ice Co. v.
Stewart
,
Nevertheless, for additional reasons, each savings clause is powerless to
“save” the Parishes’ claims under the Wildlife Statute. In general, the savings
clauses must be read with particularity and, as demonstrates, a
savings clause does not disrupt the ordinary operation of conflict preemption.
See Ouellette
,
a. CWA § 1321(o)
Most closely on point in the CWA is Section 1321(o)(2), which provides
that, “[n]othing in this Section shall [preempt any state or local] requirement or
liability with respect to the discharge of oil . . . into any waters within such
state . . . .” The provision only saves state laws imposing liability or additional
requirements with respect to the “discharge” of oil “into any waters within such
State.” The provision does not save a state’s laws where the discharge did not
occur “within” the state. The Parishes contend that the term “discharge” should
be read to include “any means by which oil enters state waters.” According to
the statute, however, “discharge” “includes, but is not limited to, any spilling,
leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying or dumping . . ..” 33 U.S.C.
§ 1321(a)(2). These gerunds connote active conduct or movement from a point
source to a place within the state rather than the mere passive migration or
floating of oil into state waters. Contrary to the Parishes’ view, the word
“emitting” does not change this analysis. “Emit” means to send out or release.
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary
742 (3d ed. 1986). The principle
of
noscitur a sociis
, that words grouped in a list should be given related meaning,
reinforces our interpretation because, taken in context with the other gerunds,
“emitting” must take on an active cast.
See Third Nat’l Bank in Nashville v.
Impac Ltd., Inc.
,
The other subsections of Section 1321(o) afford no benefit to the Parishes. Section 1321(o)(1) expressly saves damage claims, not penalties under the Wildlife Statute. Section 1321(o)(3), a catch-all provision, saves state laws not in conflict with the section itself. To construe the catch-all harmoniously with Section 1321(o)(2), which is limited to discharges within state waters, and avoid rendering the companion provision superfluous, the catch-all must be similarly limited.
b. Section 2718(c)
The Parishes place the most emphasis on this savings clause from the OPA. The section states that “[n]othing in this Act [OPA] . . . shall in any way affect . . . the authority of the United States or any State [or locality] . . . to impose . . . any fine or penalty . . .” relating to an oil discharge. 33 U.S.C. § 2718(c). First, they assert, the OPA was enacted to supplement the older CWA apparatus for redressing the consequences of oil pollution. Second, the Parishes urge that the OPA, being specific with regard to oil pollution, controls over the more general requirements of the CWA, which applies to both illegal oil and hazardous substance discharges into navigable waters. Third, the exact language of Section 2718(c) differs critically from the CWA’s Section 1321(o) because it lacks the narrowing reference to state waters. Finally, a construction of Section 2718(c) that limits its effect to discharges within state waters would allegedly render the OPA savings clause superfluous. Section 2718(c), from their standpoint, preserves “all state penalty provisions ‘relating to’ oil spills in any way, not just those originating in state waters.” On balance, however, we conclude that the Parishes place more weight on this savings provision than it can bear.
To begin, the canon of construction that mandates application of a specific over a general statutory provision is not easily adapted to this statutory scheme. As all parties acknowledge, the CWA, the fountainhead of clean water regulation, contains the provisions that prohibit oil discharges and set penalties for illegal discharges. 33 U.S.C. § 1321(b)(3),(6) (“Administrative penalties”), (7) (“Civil penalty actions”), (f) (“Liability for actual costs of removal”). These provisions led the district court to declare the CWA’s savings provision more specific than those in the OPA. The Parishes, in contrast, characterize Section 2718(c) as plainly more specific both because it resides in the OPA and it preserves state penalty actions. We do not, however, perceive the applicability of these provisions to be an either/or proposition. Instead, each requires interpretation within a statutory framework in which the OPA was designed to complement, not compete with the CWA. That the OPA was enacted more recently than the CWA means little where there is no fundamental conflict with provisions of the CWA. The statutes, in other words, must be construed, as the district court noted, in pari materia .
Moving to the specific language of Section 2718(c), the provision more
precisely states, “Nothing in this Act, the Act of March 3, 1851 (46 U.S.C. § 183
et seq
.), or § 9509 of Title 26, [shall affect] the authority of the United States or
any State or political subdivision thereof . . ..” Statutory construction begins
with the language of the statute,
Hardt v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co.
,
Other principles of statutory construction are relevant because of the
prefatory language here. If Section 2718(c) were interpreted, as the Parishes
contend, to “supersede” the CWA and by allowing all affected states to
layer their unique penalty and regulatory laws on top of those governing this
OCSLA blowout, the result would be an implied repeal of CWA preemption.
Implied repeals, however, are disfavored.
Crawford Fitting Co. v. J.T. Gibbons,
Inc.
,
It is also possible to understand why Section 2718(c) omits a reference to waters within the affected state. Simply, the provision saves remedies available to the United States as well as the states, rendering a geographic limitation to state waters meaningless. Viewed in light of Congress’ presumed awareness of when the OPA was passed, and Congress’ failure to change the scope of CWA preemption despite its intent generally to broaden remedies against oil pollution, this omission cannot be controlling on the scope of this savings provision.
Nor does this construction deprive the savings provision of utility, as the Parishes assert. For any oil pollution whose point source is on the land or navigable waters within a state, Section 2718(c) authorizes the point source state and its political subdivisions to impose any additional liability, requirements, fines, and penalties. Preemption is limited to situations in which the affected state is not the point source jurisdiction; affected states may still pursue relief based on the OPA and the CWA or the law of the point-source. [14]
Finally, we note that this interpretation does not diminish the incentives for compliance with the CWA or the OPA or the point source states’ additional laws concerning oil pollution. The federal laws’ extravagant penalties, fines, criminal liability, and damage exposure that may be imposed on entities associated with oil pollution, even in the absence of the layering of multiple affected states’ laws, evidence a clear congressional policy of deterrence and retribution. [15]
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the district court had removal jurisdiction over the Parishes’ Wildlife Statute claims. Further, it correctly concluded that the claims are preempted by the CWA as interpreted in , and that Congress did not reject that interpretation explicitly or by negative implication in the CWA or when it passed the OPA. The judgment of the court dismissing the Parishes’ claims is AFFIRMED .
Notes
[1] The Parishes filed suit against BP Exploration & Production, Inc.; BP Products North America, Inc.; BP America Production Company; and BP p.l.c. (collectively “BP”); Transocean Ltd.; Transocean Offshore; Transocean Deepwater; and Transocean Holdings (collectively “Transocean”); Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. and its related entities (collectively “Halliburton”); M-I, LLC; Cameron International Corp.; Weatherford U.S., L.P.; Anadarko Petroleum Corporation Co. and Anadarko E & P Company LP (collectively “Anadarko”); MOEX Offshore 2007 LLC and MOEX USA Corp. (collectively “MOEX”); Mitsui Oil Exploration Co., Ltd. (“MOECO”). On June 18, 2012, the district court entered a Consent Decree in MDL No. 2179 between the United States and MOEX defendants. Among other things, the Consent Decree provided for the payment of civil penalties to the State of Louisiana, conditioned on the State timely providing a Release to MOEX. The State timely provided the Release. Accordingly, the district court dismissed the Parishes’ claims against MOEX.
[2] La. R.S. 56:40.1 et seq. authorizes civil penalties against any “person who . . . through the violation of any other state or federal law or regulation, kills or injures any fish, wild birds,
[4] Appellees’ reliance on 28 U.S.C. § 1331 “arising under” jurisdiction is unpersuasive
because no claim based on federal law appeared on the face of the Parishes’ well-pled
complaints.
McKnight v. Dresser, Inc.
,
[5] Golden has been criticized and is in any event factually distinguishable from this case, as the injury there originated in the land-based operation of the helicopter. See , e.g., David W. Robertson & Michael F. Sturley , Recent Developments in Admiralty & Maritime Law at the National Level & in the Fifth & Eleventh Circuits, 33 Tul. Mar. L.J. 381, 464 (2009).
[6] Section 1441(b) was amended effective only for actions commenced after January 6, 2012. The Parishes’ claims commenced prior to that date. The language of Section 1441(b) applicable to the Parishes’ claims provides: Any civil action of which the district courts have original jurisdiction founded on a claim or right arising under the Constitution, treaties or laws of the United States shall be removeable without regard to the citizenship or residence of the parties. Any other such action shall be removeable only if none of the parties in interest properly joined and served as defendants is a citizen of the State in which such action is brought. 28 U.S.C. § 1441(b).
[7] Of course, the Parishes cannot prevent the application of OCSLA as a litigation choice any more than they could agree to a contract choice of law provision mandating admiralty law in these circumstances. Alleman v. Omni Energy Servs. Corp. , 580 F.3d 280, 283 n.2 (5th Cir. 2009) (“parties cannot choose to be governed by maritime law when OCSLA applies”).
[8] The crux of the Parishes’ argument is this analogy: “If someone commits murder on the navigable waters within the State of Louisiana, admiralty law might apply to any civil claim arising from that death, but Louisiana would undoubtedly be able to prosecute the murder under Louisiana law.” It is a bad analogy because it assumes the murder was committed in Louisiana waters, unlike the pollution that simply migrated into state waters. It is also an inapt basis for considering federal preemption, a subject that demands close textual analysis of case law and statutes.
[9] The district court referred to this provision by Section number of the Clean Water Act (§ 311), rather than by the U.S.C. number (§ 1321).
[10] This Court’s “
PLT
test,” which we have used to determine when state law may apply
to an OCSLA activity, is a misfit for the present case.
See Union Tex. Petroleum Corp. v. PLT
Eng’g, Inc.
,
[11] The Local Government Entity Master Complaint alleges breach of tort duties under the laws of Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas.
[12] We reject the assertion in Alabama’s amicus brief that “effects jurisdiction” or the “objective territorial principle,” theories associated only with international law, apply to the federal preemption issues here.
[13]
Askew v. Am. Waterways Operators, Inc.
,
[14] The argument is also briefly made that the Parishes’ Wildlife Statute claims are preserved by Section 2718(a)(1)(A), which allows any state or political subdivision thereof to impose additional liability or requirements with respect to “the discharge of oil or other pollution by oil within such State . . ..” The Parishes would limit “within such State” to modifying “pollution by oil.” This does not wash grammatically; the geographic limitation applies to both means of pollution.
[15] From this discussion, it is clear that we reject a Tenth Amendment argument on behalf of the Parishes and need not reach Appellees’ contention that the OPA’s proscription of certain duplicative damages preempts the Wildlife Statute claims.
