LOGGERHEAD TURTLE (Caretta caretta); GREEN TURTLE (Chelonia mydas), et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, versus THE COUNTY COUNCIL OF VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA, a political subdivision of the State of Florida, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 97-2083
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
August 3, 1998
D.C. Docket No. 95-587-CIV-ORL-22
(August 3, 1998)
Before HATCHETT, Chief Judge, RONEY and CLARK, Senior Circuit Judges.
HATCHETT, Chief Judge:
I. BACKGROUND
In 1978, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) listed the loggerhead sea turtle as a threatened species and the green sea turtle as an endangered species. See
On June 8, 1995, the Turtles instituted this lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida under the citizen-suit provision of the ESA,
Volusia County‘s initial response to the complaint was twofold. First, on July 12, 1995, it answered the complaint. Second, on July 16, 1995, it applied to the Service for an “interim” incidental take permit. See
In September 1995, the district court entered a pretrial order that: (1) set a deadline of November 1, 1995, for the parties to file motions to amend and add parties; (2) closed discovery on February 1, 1996; and (3) scheduled trial for April 1996. On October 27, 1995, the Turtles filed a motion for leave to amend their original complaint to add the leatherback sea turtle (Dermochelys coriacea) as a party, attaching the proposed amended complaint and two exhibits to the motion. During the pendency of the Turtles’ motion for leave to amend, Volusia County successfully moved to continue the trial until October 1996, citing the imminence of the Service‘s permit decision.
In the same order, the district court denied the Turtles’ motion for leave to amend, reasoning that: (1) the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the leatherback sea turtle since it was unable to locate a copy of the Turtles’ notice of intent to sue letter that their motion referenced; (2) the Turtles unduly delayed in filing the motion; and (3) Volusia County would be prejudiced if the court extended the preliminary injunction to include the leatherback sea turtle whose nesting season starts earlier every spring.
After Volusia County obtained another trial continuance, the Service issued the county an incidental take permit on November 21, 1996. The next day, Volusia County moved the district court to dissolve the preliminary injunction and dismiss the Turtles’ case, contending that the permit mooted further proceedings. Although conceding that the permit authorized incidental takes through beach driving, the Turtles contended that it did not authorize incidental takes through artificial beachfront lighting. The district court agreed with Volusia County and closed the case. This appeal follows.
II. ISSUES
We address three issues: (1) whether the district court erred in concluding that Volusia County‘s incidental take permit excepted it from liability for taking protected sea turtles through
III. CONTENTIONS
As to the first issue, the Turtles contend that Volusia County‘s incidental take permit authorizes only incidental takes of sea turtles from beach driving, not from artificial beachfront lighting. The Turtles argue that to fall within the incidental take permit exception to the “take” prohibition, the Service‘s permission must be express and activity-specific. The Turtles also assert that the district court could not infer such permission from the Service‘s conditioning the permit on lighting-related mitigatory measures.
Volusia County responds that under the permit, it must survey every light source, study their impacts and implement methods to correct light sources that misorient sea turtles. Volusia County argues that given those extensive mitigatory requirements, the Service clearly contemplated that it be excepted from liability for any incidental takes that artificial beachfront lighting causes during the life of the permit.
With regard to the second issue, the Turtles contend that the court can fairly trace sea turtles’ lighting-related “harm” in the non-party municipalities of Daytona Beach, Daytona Beach Shores, Ormond Beach and New Smyrna Beach to Volusia County‘s regulatory acts. The Turtles claim that Volusia County exercises sufficient regulatory authority in imposing county-wide minimum artificial beachfront lighting restrictions and exempting Daytona Beach and Daytona Beach Shores from any such restrictions. Furthermore, the Turtles assert that the district court possesses the power to redress any and all lighting-related takes. To hold otherwise, the Turtles posit, would violate the accepted notion that both a person whose actions adversely affect a protected species and a governmental body that authorizes that person‘s actions can violate the ESA‘s “take” prohibition.
Regarding the third issue, the Turtles assert that the district court should have “freely given” them leave to amend their complaint to add the leatherback sea turtle as a party. They contend that, contrary to the district court‘s findings: (1) they sufficiently notified both the Service and Volusia County of their intent to sue for takes of the leatherback sea turtle through artificial beachfront lighting; (2) they discovered new information after they filed the original complaint; and (3) Volusia County would not have been unduly prejudiced because the Turtles did not ask to amend the preliminary injunction and the parties included the leatherback sea turtle in discovery.
Volusia County responds that the Turtles’ notice of intent to sue inadequately referred to the leatherback sea turtles as “nesting” on Volusia County beaches, as opposed to being “taken.” Volusia County contends that the Turtles possessed evidence of takes at least three months prior to filing their motion for leave to amend. Finally, Volusia County points to the “additional expense and possible delay” that the Turtles’ amendment would cause.
IV. DISCUSSION
“Harass” and “harm,” within the meaning of “take,” are defined through regulation. The Secretary of the Interior, through the Service, has construed “harass” as “an intentional or negligent act or omission which creates the likelihood of injury to wildlife by annoying it to such an extent as to significantly disrupt normal behavioral patterns which include, but are not limited to, breeding, feeding or sheltering.”
The crux of the Turtles’ artificial beachfront lighting allegations centered on “harm,” “an act which actually kills or injures wildlife” that may include “significant habitat modification or degradation where it actually kills or injures wildlife by significantly impairing essential behavioral patterns, including breeding, feeding or sheltering.”
A.
The incidental take permit exception to the “take” prohibition and its regulatory constructions, including the “harm” regulation, can be found in
Upon receiving a complete application package, the Service must publish notice in the Federal Register and provide the public an opportunity to comment on whether the Service should issue the permit.
(i) the taking will be incidental;
(ii) the applicant will, to the maximum extent practicable, minimize and mitigate the impacts of such taking;
(iii) the applicant will ensure that adequate funding for the plan will be provided;
(iv) the taking will not appreciably reduce the likelihood of the survival and recovery of the species in the wild; . . .
(v) the measures, if any, required under [16 U.S.C. § 1539(a)(2)(A)(iv)] will be met; [and]
[the Service] has received such other assurances as [it] may require that the [habitat conservation plan] will be implemented[.]
An incidental take permit “may authorize a single transaction, a series of transactions, or a number of activities over a specific period of time.”
[t]he authorizations on the face of a permit which set forth specific times, dates, places, methods of taking, numbers and kinds of wildlife or plants, location of activity, authorize certain circumscribed transactions, or otherwise permit a specifically limited matter, are to be strictly construed and shall not be interpreted to permit similar or related matters outside the scope of strict construction.
We turn first to the Turtles’ contention that Volusia County‘s incidental take permit does not expressly authorize takings through artificial beachfront lighting. Such express authority, if
F. The following types of incidental take are authorized herein, subject to the continued validity of this Permit:
1. Harassment, injury, and/or death to sea turtle eggs and/or hatchlings resulting from public and emergency and/or safety vehicles driving over unmarked/unprotected sea turtle nests located in designated traffic lane/driving area(s) or ramp [illegible] area(s) on County Beaches.
2. Harassment, injury, and/or death to sea turtle eggs and/or hatchlings resulting from emergency and/or safety vehicles driving over unmarked/unprotected sea turtles nests located within the Defined Area.
3. Harassment, injury, and/or death to sea turtle eggs and/or hatchlings resulting from emergency and/or safety vehicles driving over marked sea turtle nests located within the Defined Areas.
4. Harassment, injury, and/or death to hatchling sea turtles emerging from unmarked/unprotected nests and subsequently caught in vehicle ruts in areas where no rut removal has taken place.
5. Harassment, injury, and/or death to adult, hatchling, stranded, or post-hatchling washback [sic] sea turtles resulting from collisions with emergency and/or safety vehicles operating within the Defined
Area; such vehicles may also disorient/harass adults and/or hatchling sea turtles with headlights while in motion or at rest for less than one minute, or harass adult sea turtles during nesting activity. 6. Harassment, injury, and/or death to adult female sea turtles attempting to nest in the Transitional and/or Urban Areas of the County Beaches between 8 a.m. and 7 p.m., resulting from collisions with vehicles operated by the general public.
7. Harassment, injury, and/or death to hatchling sea turtles emerging from the nest and/or crawling from the Transitional and/or Urban Areas of the County Beaches to the ocean between 8 a.m. and 7 p.m., resulting from collisions with vehicles operated by the general public pursuant to terms and conditions of this permit.
8. Harassment, injury, and/or death to post-hatchling sea turtles that have emerged from a nest and entered the ocean by having been washed back onto Transitional and/or Urban Areas of the County Beaches resulting from collisions with vehicles operated by the general public pursuant to terms and conditions of this permit.
9. Harassment, injury, and/or death to nesting female turtles attempting to nest in the Defined Areas, resulting from physiological stress of potentially increasing the number of false crawls during the nesting season, or from sand compaction due to vehicles operating within the Defined Area pursuant to the terms and conditions of this permit.
10. Harassment, injury, and/or death of sea turtle and/or hatchlings in unmarked/unprotected nests due to physical crushing by activities associated with (1) marking the established Conservation Zone in the Transitional and Urban Areas of the County Beaches; (2) placement of trash receptacles on County Beaches; (3) placement of portable toilets as outlined in the [habitat conservation plan]; and (4) beach maintenance activities, including ramp maintenance.
11. Harassment, injury, and/or death of sea turtle eggs and/or nests laid outside the normal sea turtle nesting season, May 1 through October 31, when a nest monitoring/marking program is not in place.
(Emphasis added.) Indisputably, these eleven types of incidental take relate only to vehicular access on Volusia County‘s beaches. None of the eleven authorized activities listed in Condition F concerns artificial beachfront lighting. The only form of lighting mentioned in Condition F is vehicular headlights.
Although the majority of its conditions concern beach driving, the incidental take permit does address artificial beachfront lighting. Condition G of the permit, entitled “Mitigation/Minimization Measures,” lists fifteen categories of “measures [to] be employed by the Permittee to ensure that take is minimized and mitigated.” These categories fall under the following general headings: (1) “Protected Species Beach Management Areas“; (2) “Tire Tracks/Rut Removal Program“; (3) “Driving Zone Delineation“; (4) “Operation of Non-Public Vehicles within Conservation Zones and Protected Species Beach Management Areas“; (5) “Placement and Maintenance of Portable Facilities“; (6) “Maintenance and Placement of the Conservation Zone Markers“; (7) “Nighttime Operation of Law Enforcement/Safety Vehicles“; (8) “Special Beach Events“; (9) “Lifeguard Station Management“; (10) “Commercial Fishermen“; (11) “Beach/Access Ramp Maintenance and Cleaning“; (12) “Standards for Beach Evacuation“; (13) “Artificial Beachfront Lighting“; (14) “Off-Beach Parking Plan“; and (15) “Species Management Program.” (Emphasis added.) Most of these categories contain lengthy subcategories as well.
13. Artificial Beachfront Lighting.
i. Beachfront Lighting Management Plan. By November [illegible date] 1997, the Permittee shall have developed a Beach Lighting Management Plan. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service must approve the Beach Lighting Management Plan prior to its implementation. The scope of work of the Beach Lighting Management Plan shall include, but is not limited to, the following items.
a. Identify and map jurisdictional boundaries along the Volusia County coast.
b. Categorize coastal areas of the County with respect to existing lighting environments. Categories will consider type and extent of upland development, amount and intensity of beachfront lighting, sea turtle nesting densities, and relative effort and expense required to meet appropriate lighting standards.
c. Determine the adequacy of existing ordinances and codes within each jurisdiction as well as the adequacy of related enforcement programs in protecting nesting and hatchling sea turtles from beachfront lighting.
d. Develop an approach for addressing lighting issues for each coastal lighting category. Where modifications are impractical or cost prohibitive, develop mitigation guidelines that will yield greater cost/benefit ratios.
e. Develop a protocol for detailed lighting evaluations along those sections of coastline where lighting modifications are feasible and cost effective.
f. If it is determined that lighting ordinances will be cost effective and can be practically implemented in the currently exempt areas of Daytona Beach and Daytona Beach Shores, then coordinate the development of new ordinances in those municipalities. g. Develop a program for assisting coastal property owners in bringing lights into compliance with local ordinances or Florida Department of Environmental Protection guidelines.
h. Develop a generic public awareness program for promoting turtle-friendly lighting and voluntary compliance with light management guidelines.
i. Develop a long-term program for annual maintenance lighting evaluations.
The time frame for developing scope of work for the Beach Lighting Management Plan is one year from adoption of the [habitat conservation plan]. The Beach Lighting Management Plan will be implemented during the second and third years following adoption. Lighting inventories will be conducted during the first year of implementation. The annual lighting maintenance program will be initiated during the third year after [habitat conservation plan] adoption, and a mitigation plan for uncorrectable lighting problems will be implemented during the fourth and fifth years following adoption.
ii. Lighting Surveys. By April 1, 1997, Permittee shall develop, with further consultation and assistance from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Florida Department of Environmental Protection, a methodology for implementing and citing light sources that disorient sea turtles. Permittee will conduct lighting surveys and compile lists of infractions for Code Enforcement action or referral to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service. Lighting surveys will be conducted monthly, at a minimum, from April 1 through October 31 of each year. iii. County-owned and Operated Lights. The Permitee will survey all beachfront lights owned or operated by Volusia County to identify those that are not in compliance with State guidelines. The Permittee will ensure that the individual responsible for surveying the lights coordinates with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for concurrence with the results. Any lights deemed to be a problem for sea turtles as a result of the survey will be brought into compliance by the County. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will be notified to conduct a survey to ensure compliance; Volusia County personnel or their contractor will be present for the survey. All of the above measures will take place prior to May 1, 1997.
iv. Light Management Training. By July 1, 1997, the Permittee will establish a training manual and hold at least two Permittee-sponsored workshops on lighting and beach crime to provide information on the effects of lighting in compliance with Volusia County Code protecting sea turtles and crime occurrences.
Condition G does not contain any language expressly authorizing takes of sea turtles through artificial beachfront lighting like that contained within Condition F.
In light of the foregoing, it is readily apparent that the incidental take permit exhaustively lists all authorized activities within Condition F and all mitigation measures within Condition G. Activities relative to driving on the beach are mentioned in both conditions. Activities relative to artificial beachfront lighting, however, are mentioned only in Condition G. Given the permit‘s structure, the express authority to take sea turtles through artificial beachfront lighting -- if the Service had so intended -- would be memorialized in Condition F. This absence is
Volusia County argues that even if it lacks the Service‘s express permission, it has the Service‘s implied permission to take sea turtles incidentally through artificial beachfront lighting because the Service expressly conditioned the permit on Volusia County‘s implementation of detailed lighting-related mitigatory measures. This argument presents an issue of first impression in this and other circuits, whether the incidental take permit exception (
The ESA‘s text and the Service‘s regulations provide every indication that incidental take permission must be express and activity-specific. To be excepted from liability, the ESA mandates that the “take” be “incidental to . . . the carrying out of an . . . activity.”
The statutory dividing line between activities sought to be permitted and mitigatory measures is further reinforced in the Service‘s regulations. The Service requires applicants to describe completely “the activity sought to be authorized.”
Even the Service‘s informal publication advises applicants to describe specifically “all actions . . . that . . . are likely to result in incidental take” so that the permit holder “can determine the applicability of the incidental take authorization to the activities they undertake.”
The content of Volusia County‘s application and correspondence with the Service reflects the statutory and regulatory dividing line between authorized activities and mitigatory measures. In its initial application to the Service, Volusia County “complete[ly] describ[ed] . . . the activity sought to be authorized” as “vehicular access to Volusia County beaches[.]” (Citing
it is important to state for the record that the County of Volusia is not seeking incidental take authority for marine sea turtles resulting from lights owned or operated by the County. The purpose of any such discussion in the habitat conservation plan . . . is to provide mitigation for impacts to marine sea turtles resulting from permitted activities. The [incidental take permit] application
you submitted requests incidental take authority for sea turtle species from beach-driving and associated activities only.
(Emphasis added.) Finally, in a responsive letter to the Service, an assistant county attorney reiterated that “Volusia County is seeking an Incidental Take Permit for vehicles [sic] access to the beaches. However, Volusia County has addressed lighting throughout its permit application as a mitigating factor.” (Emphasis added.)
Contrary to Volusia County‘s position, no published case law even purports to suggest that purely mitigatory measures fall within the scope of the incidental take permit exception,
Volusia County argues that the Service “clearly anticipated” takes resulting from artificial beachfront lighting in the incidental take permit, just as the issuing agency in Ramsey “clearly anticipated” takes resulting from salmon fishing regulations in the incidental take statement. 96 F.3d at 442. We are not convinced. As a threshold matter, the Ramsey court gave no indication that Oregon‘s and Washington‘s salmon fishing regulations served as purely mitigatory measures, as does Volusia County‘s artificial beachfront lighting activities.
In any event, the law governing incidental take statements issued under
[1] the agency action will not [likely jeopardize the continued existence of any protected species or result in the destruction or adverse modification of its critical habitat (“likely jeopardize protected species“)], or [the agency] offers reasonable and prudent alternatives which the Secretary believes would not [jeopardize protected species]; [and]
[2] the taking of an endangered species or a threatened species incidental to the agency action will not [likely jeopardize protected species][.]
[1] the taking will be incidental;
[2] the applicant will . . . minimize and mitigate the impacts of such taking;
[3] the applicant will ensure that adequate funding for the [habitat conservation] plan will be provided;
[4] the taking will not appreciably reduce the likelihood of the survival and recovery of the species in the wild; and
[5] the [other measures that the issuing agency may require] will be met[.]
A second important difference between an incidental take statement (
Additionally, the “jeopardy” clause applies to protected fish, wildlife and plants, whereas the “take” prohibition applies only to protected fish and wildlife. See
We also summarily reject Volusia County‘s argument that its mitigatory measures render moot any remedy that the Turtles could possibly seek, short of a total blackout on the beach. The effectiveness of these mitigatory measures -- that the Turtles dispute with record evidence -- is an issue that can be resolved only at trial.
Finally, Volusia County erroneously contends that the Turtles’ appeal is an attempt to circumvent the
B.
“To satisfy the ‘case’ or ‘controversy’ requirement of Article III, which is the ‘irreducible constitutional minimum’ of standing, a plaintiff must, generally speaking, demonstrate that he has suffered ‘injury in fact,’ that the injury is ‘fairly traceable’ to the actions of the defendant, and that the injury will likely be redressed by a favorable decision.” Bennett v. Spear, 117 S. Ct. 1154, 1161 (1997) (citations omitted). The district court found that the Turtles failed to satisfy both the “fairly traceable” and “redressability” prongs of the standing doctrine to complain of the “harm” that artificial beachfront lighting causes them within the municipalities of Daytona Beach, Daytona Beach Shores, Ormond Beach and New Smyrna Beach. Those municipalities -- not parties to this case -- each possess at least some degree of regulatory authority and enforcement control over public and private artificial beachfront lighting within their borders.
1.
“The fairly traceable element explores the causal connection between the challenged conduct and the alleged harm.” Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Morley, 867 F.2d 1381, 1388 (11th Cir.), cert. denied, 493 U.S. 819 (1989). Essentially, “this requirement focuses on whether the line of causation between the illegal conduct and injury is too attenuated.” Morley, 867 F.2d at 1388 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The causal link may become “too attenuated” if the injury is “the result of the independent action of some third party not before the court.” Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560 (1992) (internal quotation marks and
We are not asked to trace to Volusia County the Turtles’ alleged “harm” in unincorporated beach communities like Wilbur-by-the-Sea, Ormond-by-the-Sea and Bethune Beach, as well as the incorporated Town of Ponce Inlet. Indisputably, Volusia County possesses exclusive local regulatory and enforcement control over artificial beachfront lighting in those locations. Instead, we are asked to review whether a “causal connection” exists between Volusia County‘s regulatory action and the Turtles’ alleged “harm” within the municipalities of Daytona Beach, Daytona Beach Shores, Ormond Beach and New Smyrna Beach. Morley, 867 F.2d at 1388. To answer this question, we examine Volusia County‘s charter and its artificial beachfront lighting ordinances.
Volusia County‘s charter requires it to protect the environment through county-wide ordinance:
The council . . . shall establish minimum standards . . . for the protection of the environment . . . . by ordinance. Such standards . . . shall apply within all the incorporated and unincorporated areas of Volusia County. In the event of a conflict between any standard . . . established by a County ordinance, the County ordinance shall prevail within the municipality to the extent of any conflict; provided, however, the governing body of each municipality may establish more restrictive standards . . . within the municipality for the protection of the environment.
Volusia County, Fla., Home Rule Charter, Art. II, § 202.4 (1989); see generally City of Ormond Beach v. County of Volusia, 535 So. 2d 302, 303 & n.3 (Fla. 5th D.C.A. 1988) (discussing “charter counties such as Volusia” and noting that “[t]he charter provides that the county‘s ordinances prevail if it sets minimal standards protecting the environment by prohibiting or
To this aim, in December 1989, Volusia County enacted Ordinance 89-60, entitled “Minimum Environmental Standards for Sea Turtle Protection.” Volusia County, Fla., Ordinance No. 89-60, § 2 (1989). Seeking generally to “minimiz[e] the artificial light on the beaches[,]” the ordinance classifies its restrictions into three categories: (1) lights associated with new development; (2) lights associated with existing development; and (3) lights that are publicly owned. Volusia County, Fla., Ordinance No. 89-60, § 2 (amending Ordinance No. 88-15, Art. VI, §§ 601, 603, 604, 606 (1988)). The substance of these restrictions does not concern us today.19 What is important, however, is where the restrictions apply. The ordinance‘s restrictions on new development apply county-wide, unless a municipality timely submits a proposed ordinance of its own that the county council determines to be in compliance with Ordinance 89-60‘s minimum standards. Volusia County, Fla., Ordinance No. 89-60, § 2 (amending Ordinance No. 88-15, Art. VI, §§ 603, 609). All the municipalities at issue (Daytona Beach, Daytona Beach Shores, Ormond Beach and New Smyrna Beach) have elected to either enact and enforce a complying ordinance of their own as to new development or submit to Volusia County‘s enforcement of Ordinance 89-60 within their borders.
As to other incorporated areas of Volusia County, the Minimum Environmental Standards for Sea Turtle Protection pertaining to existing development and public lighting apply unless a municipality submits a proposed ordinance of its own that the county council determines to be in compliance with Ordinance 89-60‘s minimum standards. See Volusia County, Fla., Ordinance No. 89-60, § 2 (amending Ordinance No. 88-15, Art. VI, §§ 604, 606, 609). Ormond Beach and New Smyrna Beach are two municipalities that enforce their own county-approved version of Ordinance 89-60, as amended.
Volusia County later enacted its own artificial beachfront lighting ordinance that exceeded the minimum standards established in Ordinance 89-60, as amended. See Volusia County, Fla., Ordinance No. 90-22, § 3 (1990) (amending Ordinance No. 88-3, Art. XII, §§ 1201-1206). Ordinance 90-22 applies to unincorporated beach communities of Volusia County like Wilbur-by-the-Sea, Ormond-by-the-Sea and Bethune Beach, as well as the incorporated Town of Ponce Inlet. Exempted from Ordinance 90-22 are Daytona Beach, Daytona Beach Shores and “any incorporated areas of Volusia County which have adopted the . . . Minimum
The Turtles’ theory of causation is twofold. First, they contend that Volusia County‘s exempting Daytona Beach and Daytona Beach Shores from all lighting restrictions, including the Minimum Environmental Standards for Sea Turtle Protection in Ordinance 89-60, as amended, serves as a cause-in-fact of their “harm” in those two municipalities. Similarly, they contend that Ordinance 89-60, as amended, and Ordinance 90-22 are causally connected to their “harm” in Ormond Beach and New Smyrna Beach since they allow those municipalities to retain only the allegedly deficient Minimum Environmental Standards for Sea Turtle Protection. The second -- and presently unchallenged -- prong of the Turtles’ theory of causation builds on their first, positing that even if Ordinance 90-22 applied county-wide, its restrictions are too lax to prevent takes. Mentioning only Daytona Beach and Daytona Beach Shores, Volusia County responds that it cannot be liable for takes in those locations because it “had no authority to regulate lighting within those municipalities” and “in no way authorized any activity by either of those municipalities that could have resulted in harm to the turtles.”20
shall . . . submit to the county council[] [their] ordinance[s] containing the standards in [the Minimum Environmental Standards for Sea Turtle Protection]; provided, however, . . . [Ormond Beach and New Smyrna Beach] may elect to authorize the county to administer [the Minimum Environmental Standards for Sea Turtle Protection] within [their borders]. . . . If such ordinance[s] . . . [are] not in compliance with [the Minimum Environmental Standards for Sea Turtle Protection], then, . . . the county council may enforce [the Minimum Environmental Standards for Sea Turtle Protection] in [Ormond Beach and New Smyrna Beach].
Volusia County, Fla., Ordinance No. 95-18, § 3 (emphasis added). Therefore, the Turtles lack standing to seek to hold Volusia County responsible for inadequate enforcement efforts on the part of Ormond Beach and New Smyrna Beach.
This absence of enforcement control on Volusia County‘s part, however, does not defeat the Turtles’ standing to sue for inadequate regulation, the Turtles’ core theory of causation in those two municipalities. At trial, the district court can simply assume full and complete enforcement efforts on the part of Ormond Beach and New Smyrna Beach. This assumption will focus the trier of fact solely on the regulatory acts of Volusia County in determining whether the
The trier of fact need not make any similar assumption with regard to Daytona Beach and Daytona Beach Shores. In exempting altogether those two municipalities from even the Minimum Environmental Standards for Sea Turtle Protection as contained within Ordinance 89-60, as amended, Volusia County obviously contemplated that they will not employ any enforcement measures. Furthermore, according to the complaint and the incidental take permit, nothing exists in those two municipalities to enforce. At trial, the trier of fact‘s inquiry can simply be whether the lack of artificial beachfront lighting restrictions in Daytona Beach and Daytona Beach Shores causes “harm” to sea turtles in those locations. As a defense, Volusia County may seek to prove the converse (e.g., protected sea turtles do not nest or shelter in those locations and/or unrestricted lighting does not “harm” them).
Because the district court dismissed the Turtles’ claims of takes in Daytona Beach, Daytona Beach Shores, Ormond Beach and New Smyrna Beach for lack of standing, we need not decide whether the Turtles have made a sufficient showing of causation for purposes of liability. Nonetheless, precedent from the Supreme Court and other circuits that address causation for purposes of liability support our holding. In Babbitt v. Sweet Home Chapter of Communities for a Great Oregon, the Supreme Court stated that the ESA‘s “harm” regulation
At least two circuits, the First and the Eighth, have held that the regulatory acts of governmental entities can cause takes of protected wildlife. See Strahan v. Coxe, 127 F.3d 155, 158, 163 (1st Cir. 1997) (state agency caused takings of the endangered right whale because it “licensed commercial fishing operations to use gillnets and lobster pots in specifically the
This case, like Defenders of Wildlife, involves a regulatory entity that exerts control over the use of something that allegedly takes protected wildlife. In both cases, the regulatory entity purports to make lawful an activity that allegedly violates the ESA. In Defenders of Wildlife, the EPA registered strychnine, allowing farmers to use it. In this case, Volusia County ordained beachfront lighting, allowing landowners to use lights all day and all night (that is, in Daytona Beach and Daytona Beach Shores) or use lights only during daylight hours and turn them off at
Volusia County‘s attempt to distinguish materially Defenders of Wildlife is unpersuasive. Volusia County contends that, unlike the EPA, it is not directly responsible for protecting endangered species. Volusia County, however, is subject to the ESA‘s “take” prohibition in the exact same manner as the EPA. See
Volusia County also purports to differentiate the specificity of the EPA‘s regulatory action in relation to its own. In Defenders of Wildlife, the court affirmed a trial finding of liability. In this case, we reverse a pretrial finding of no standing. Thus, Volusia County‘s argument concerns not the “irreducible constitutional minimum of standing” but raises “questions of
Even more persuasive than the Eighth Circuit‘s opinion in Defenders of Wildlife is the First Circuit‘s opinion in Strahan v. Coxe, 127 F.3d 155 (1st Cir. 1997). In Strahan, Massachusetts law prohibited fishing companies from using gillnet and lobster pot fishing equipment without a license. A state agency “vested with broad authority to regulate fishing” issued the licenses and, through regulation, restricted the use of the fishing equipment only in certain areas. 127 F.3d at 159. According to reports from the National Marine Fisheries Service, “entanglement with fishing gear is one of the leading causes of the depletion of the [endangered] Northern Right whale population[.]” 127 F.3d at 159.
A conservationist sued the state agency under the ESA, alleging that its continued licensing of fishing equipment caused “harm” to the right whale. See 127 F.3d at 158. The district court granted preliminary injunctive relief. First, as a threshold matter, the district court concluded that the conservationist had standing to sue the state agency even though “[i]ndisputably, the actions of third parties not before the court -- commercial fishing . . . operations -- are the immediate cause of the harm to endangered whales[.]” Strahan v. Coxe, 939 F. Supp. 963, 978 (D. Mass. 1996), aff‘d in part, vacated in part on other grounds, 127 F.3d 155 (1st Cir. 1997). The district court found a sufficient causal connection between the alleged “harm” to whales and the agency‘s licensing of fishing equipment, pointing to the fact that “[f]ishing vessels cannot, legally, place gillnets and lobster gear in Massachusetts waters without permission from [the agency].” 939 F. Supp. at 978. Reaching the merits of the ESA taking
On appeal, the First Circuit affirmed the judgment of the district court with respect to its ESA holdings. See 127 F.3d at 158.25 First, the court held that “a governmental third party pursuant to whose authority an actor directly exacts a taking of an endangered species may be deemed to have violated the provisions of the ESA.” 127 F.3d at 163. Second, the court affirmed the district court‘s finding of causation, stating that “while indirect, [the harm] is not so removed [from the agency‘s regulatory action] that it extends outside the realm of causation as it is understood in the common law.” 127 F.3d at 164. Finally, the court rejected the agency‘s analogy that its fishing equipment licensure “does not cause the taking any more than [the state‘s] licensure of automobiles and drivers solicits or causes federal crimes, even though automobiles it licenses are surely used to violate federal drug laws, rob federally insured banks, or cross state lines for the purpose of violating state and federal laws.” 127 F.3d at 164. The court reasoned that, unlike the licensing of automobiles, the licensing of fishing equipment “does not involve the intervening independent actor [as] a necessary component” because “it is not possible for a licensed commercial fishing operation to use its gillnets or lobster pots in a manner permitted by the [state agency] without risk of violating the ESA by exacting a taking.” 127 F.3d at 164.
2.
The “redressability” prong of the standing doctrine asks whether it is “likely, as opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision.” Lujan, 504 U.S. at 561 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The Turtles’ complaint prays for the district court to: (1) declare that Volusia County‘s “refusal to eliminate those artificial beachfront light sources that . . . misorient sea turtles from May 1st through October 31st annually constitutes an unlawful ‘taking’ of the loggerhead and green [sea] turtle“; and (2) enjoin permanently Volusia County “from permitting those artificial light sources that misorient sea turtles[.]” Given the Turtles’ record evidence, we easily conclude that if the district court were to grant the requested relief, fewer protected sea turtles would be “harmed” through misorientation. Cf. Strahan, 939 F. Supp. at 979 (“If the [state agency] were to limit further[] or ban . . . the use of gillnets and lobster gear in Massachusetts waters, it is likely that fewer endangered whales would be harmed through entanglements.“).
Although “redressability -- like the other prongs of the standing inquiry -- does not depend on the defendant‘s status as a governmental entity[,]” unique constitutional implications exist whenever a federal district court is asked to order a state entity to take regulatory action. Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env‘t, 118 S. Ct. 1003, 1017 n.5 (1998). Volusia County argues that granting the requested relief, that is, enjoining it from permitting “harmful” lighting, would be tantamount to ordering it to legislate in violation of the separation of powers.26 As the
Assuming, without deciding, that ordering Volusia County to implement and enforce county-wide a “turtle-friendlier” ordinance would violate the separation of powers, we find that alternative effective relief exists. The injunctive relief awarded in Defenders of Wildlife and Strahan is instructive. In Defenders of Wildlife, the district court “basically enjoined the EPA from continuing its registration of strychnine until the EPA could do so without illegally taking protected species of wildlife.” 882 F.2d at 1298; see also National Wildlife Fed‘n v. Hodel, No. S-85-0837 EJG, 23 Env‘t Rep. Cas. (BNA) 1089 (E.D. Cal. Aug. 26, 1985) (ordering the Secretary of the Interior and the Director of the Service to ban lead-shot bird hunting in portions of California, Illinois, Missouri, Oklahoma and Oregon based on a finding that their continued authorization caused takes of threatened bald eagles that ate lead-infested prey). In Strahan, the district court ordered the state agency to: (1) apply for an incidental take permit; (2) submit to the court a proposal “to restrict, modify or eliminate the use of fixed-fishing gear” in the endangered right whale‘s habitat; and (3) convene a committee that includes the plaintiff and other interested parties “to engage in substantive discussions . . . regarding modifications of fixed-fishing gear and other measures to minimize actual harm to the Northern Right whales[.]” 127 F.3d at 158; 939 F. Supp. at 992.
C.
[i]n the absence of any apparent or declared reason--such as undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the movant, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, undue prejudice to the opposing party by virtue of allowance of the amendment, futility of amendment, etc.--the leave sought should, as the rules require, be “freely given.”
Foman v. Davis, 371 U.S. 178, 182 (1962).
We conclude that the district court‘s “apparent or declared reason” for denying leave to the Turtles failed to serve the interest of justice. First, the district court erroneously concluded
Volusia County argues that, even if the district court had found the letter in the record, it insufficiently provided “notice of the violation” to the Secretary of the Interior and Volusia County.
The second basis of the district court‘s order, the Turtles’ undue delay, is equally flawed. One of the two exhibits attached to the Turtles’ motion for leave to amend is dated “June 1995.” The Turtles filed their original complaint and motion for preliminary injunction on June 8, 1995. We have no reason to doubt the Turtles’ lawyer‘s representation that they did not obtain this publication until after the filing of their original complaint. Thus, this is not a case where the facts supporting the proposed amendment “were known at the time of the original [pleading].” National Serv. Indus. v. Vafla Corp., 694 F.2d 246, 249 (11th Cir. 1982); cf. Palila, 852 F.2d at 1107 (noting the six-year gap between the original complaint and the amended complaint to add allegations of a new source of “harm” that “had not been the target of the original complaint because research . . . had not been completed“). Nonetheless, Volusia County insists that the Turtles must have known of the existence of leatherback sea turtles in March 1995, the date of their intent to sue letter. The district court, however, relied on no such factor. Additionally, the Turtles’ failure to plead in their original complaint the existence of the leatherback sea turtle on Volusia County‘s beaches reconciles with their obligations under the federal rules and general notions of fair dealing. Allegations in a complaint must have “evidentiary support” to the best of the party‘s “knowledge, information, and belief, formed after an inquiry reasonable under the circumstances.”
We recognize that in late July 1995 the Turtles submitted, in support of their motion for preliminary injunction, the very same exhibit that it relied upon as factual support for their proposed amended complaint. It is undisputed, however, that the Turtles, in contrast to the plaintiff in Sosa, filed their motion for leave to amend within the time period prescribed in the district court‘s scheduling order. See 133 F.3d at 1419. At most, their failure to request leave to file an amended complaint in late July instead of October supports a finding of “delay,” not “undue delay” or “dilatory” action. Foman, 371 U.S. at 182 (emphasis added). Nothing in the record suggests that this gap was anything other than “[t]he mere passage of time.” Floyd v. Eastern Airlines, Inc., 872 F.2d 1462, 1490 (11th Cir. 1989), rev‘d on other grounds, 499 U.S. 530 (1991).
The district court‘s final basis for denying leave, prejudice to Volusia County, constituted anything but “a substantial reason . . to deny leave to amend[.]” Florida Power & Light Co. v. Allis Chalmers Corp., 85 F.3d 1514, 1520 (11th Cir. 1996) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The district court reasoned that “[t]he impact of adding the leatherback [sea] turtle as a party, with its earlier breeding season, would be to foreclose the County‘s opportunity
The only purported prejudice we are left with is Volusia County‘s fear of incurring “additional expense and possible delay.” Any amendment to an original pleading necessarily involves some additional expense to the opposing party. In this case, it is of nominal proportions. In accordance with the district court‘s scheduling order, discovery proceeded on the assumption that the leatherback sea turtle would be added as a party. Cf. Hargett v. Valley Fed. Sav. Bank, 60 F.3d 754, 761 (11th Cir. 1995) (affirming the denial of plaintiff‘s motion for leave to amend “which was filed more than eight months after the pretrial order was entered and almost ten months after [a discovery] deposition“). As to possible delay, Volusia County could not plausibly convince us that it genuinely wanted to go to trial as quickly as possible. On the contrary, it employed extraordinary efforts to obtain continuance orders. Volusia County
We are mindful that “[t]he decision whether to grant leave to amend is within the sound discretion of the trial court.” Jameson v. Arrow Co., 75 F.3d 1528, 1534 (11th. Cir. 1996) (affirming the denial of leave to amend to a plaintiff who requested it “ten months after she retained counsel, discovery was closed, the complaint had been amended twice, and [the defendant] had filed two motions for summary judgment“). Reversal is inherently rare. Based on the circumstances of this case, however, we hold that the district court‘s denial of leave to amend the original complaint fell outside the permissible range of discretion. Accordingly, the interest of “justice so requires” that the leatherback sea turtle be included in further proceedings on remand.
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Turtles have convinced us to reverse the judgment of the district court. In summary, we first hold that Volusia County‘s incidental take permit does not authorize it to take protected sea turtles through purely mitigatory measures associated with artificial beachfront lighting.
Finally, we hold that the district court abused its discretion in denying the Turtles’ motion for leave to amend its original complaint and add the endangered leatherback sea turtle as a party. In light of the foregoing holdings, we remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion, including a trial on artificial beachfront lighting (absent the timely intervening issuance of an incidental take permit).
REVERSED and REMANDED.
I respectfully dissent, largely on the reasoning of the district court Order deciding that the issuance by the Department of the Interior‘s U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service of an Incidental Take Permit renders this case moot. I understand the technical points and reasoning that argue for a contrary conclusion, but sometimes it is important to step back and view the fabric as a whole, especially when considering important conservation issues Congress committed to the expertise of an administrative agency.
The issues concerning the endangered turtles, of course, are not moot. The very fact they are covered by the Act reflects that serious measures must be taken in order to preserve the species. It is important that there be efficient and effective measures to protect all endangered turtles, but Congress has wisely assigned to the Department of the Interior extensive responsibilities under the Endangered Species Act. See Babbitt v. Sweet Home Chapter, Communities for Great Oregon, 515 U.S. 687, 708 (1995) (“When it enacted the ESA, Congress delegated broad administrative and interpretive power to the Secretary.“). Along with these responsibilities comes the power to permit incidental “takes” as long as those takes do not threaten the continued existence of the species. See
As I understand it, there are two kinds of takings involved here. Baby turtles born at night crawl to the light, nature having made that light the reflection of the moon on the water. Artificial shoreline lighting and vehicular lighting disorients these turtles and instead of crawling to the water, they crawl away from the water. One kind of taking as a result is undisputed: the killing of the turtles by motor vehicles driving on the beach during this period. The plaintiffs concede that the Permit covers the incidental taking that occurs by motor vehicles as a result of the disorientation from artificial shoreline lights, as well as lights on the vehicles themselves.
Whether there is any taking due to shoreline artificial lights other than by vehicles is in dispute. The U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service has implemented an Artificial Beachfront Lighting Management Plan, however, which is designed to modify to the extent practical the lighting that disorients turtles during the critical nesting periods. This plan requires a detailed survey of artificial beachfront lights and contemplates more restrictive lighting regulations in the near future, all under the direct supervision of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
The Endangered Species Act authorizes the Department of the Interior to permit incidental “takes.” The language focuses on the incidental takes themselves, rather than the activity that actually causes the takes.
The Pemit includes not only the two plaintiff turtle species, but the leatherback turtle, which plaintiffs sought to include as a party plaintiff, and two other species of turtles as well. It requires Volusia County to work with experts from the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, the local lighting company, and even the municipalities of Daytona Beach and Daytona Beach Shores.
The conservation plan approved by the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service requires Volusia County within one year to conduct an extensive survey of all artificial lights along its beachfronts and document any problems that might be caused by those lights. It requires Volusia County over the following two years to correct any of those problems. Only then, if it proves impractical or cost prohibitive to correct any remaining problems, might the issuance of an Incidental Take Permit be necessary.
Common sense would dictate that the Agency would not implement such a plan if it did not permit such incidental taking as might occur during the management plan, if any, in addition to the taking through vehicular activity. If the agency does not properly protect the interests here involved under the statute, the parties have a remedy through the Administrative Procedures Act. In my judgment, it is a serious mistake, a waste of government resources, and an unjust expense to the parties to try to run parallel litigation of these issues in the district court while the problem is under the management of the federal agency.
This case involves a question of fact–whether artificial beachfront lighting “takes” sea turtles–that is not only within the special competence of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, but is actually being reviewed by that agency. The Incidental Take Permit requires Volusia County to provide the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service with information regarding lights which potentially disorient turtles and, if necessary, develop an appropriate mitigation plan. If the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service determines that artificial beachfront lighting does indeed “take” turtles but does not threaten the continued existence of the species, then it is empowered by statute to craft a flexible solution to the problem of incidental takes. In this case, the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service has already issued an Incidental Take Permit that comprehensively regulates artificial beachfront lighting. Invoking the primary jurisdiction doctrine would avoid a judicial solution that might conflict with the regulatory scheme already approved by the appropriate administrative agency. See Friends of Santa Fe County v. LAC Minerals, Inc., 892 F. Supp. 1333, 1350 (D.N.M. 1995).+ Considering the statutory responsibilities given to the Secretary of
In any event, there seems to be no question that the district court case is moot if the Incidental Take Permit includes, in addition to takings by motor vehicles, such other takings, if any, caused by artificial lights. If that issue is indeed in doubt, this Court could simply require a stay of the district court proceedings while the defendant repairs to the Agency to get a clarification on that point.
Notes
Bennett v. Spear, 117 S. Ct. 1154, 1159 (1997) (citations omitted and emphasis added).If a [federal] agency determines that action it proposes to take may adversely affect a listed species, it must engage in formal consultation with the Fish and Wildlife Service, as delegate of the Secretary [of the Interior], after which the Service must provide the agency with a written statement (the Biological Opinion) explaining how the proposed action will affect the species or its habitat . . . . [I]f the Biological Opinion concludes that the agency action will not result in jeopardy or adverse habitat modification, or if it offers reasonable and prudent alternatives to avoid that consequence, the Service must provide the agency with a written statement (known as the ”Incidental Take Statement“) specifying the “impact of such incidental taking on the species,” any “reasonable and prudent measures that the [Service] considers necessary or appropriate to minimize such impact,” and setting forth “the terms and conditions . . . that must be complied with by the Federal agency . . . to implement [those measures].”
