SIERRA CLUB, Plaintiff-Appellee, and Green Valley Special Utility District, et al., Intervenor-Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. Bruce BABBITT, Etc., et al., Defendants-Intervenors-Defendants-Appellants, and United Services Automobile Association, et al., Intervenors-Defendants-Appellants.
No. 93-8123.
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
July 2, 1993.
Rehearing Denied Aug. 11, 1993.
REAVLEY and GARWOOD, Circuit Judges, and LAKE, District Judge.
Dirk D. Snel, John A. Bryson, U.S. Dept, of Justice, Washington DC, Laurence A. Gustafson, Haynes & Boone, Dallas, TX, James C. Kilboume, Charles R. Shockey, U.S. Dept, of Justice, Washington DC, Ronald F. Ederer, U.S. Atty., San Antonio, TX, for Bruce Babbitt.
Douglas G. Caroom, Sydney W. Falk, Jr., Bickerstaff, Heath & Smiley, LLP, Austin, TX, Javier Aguilar, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Houston, TX, for McFadin, et al.
David C. Duggins, Clark, Thomas, Winters & Newton, Martha S. Dickie, Minton, Burton, Foster & Collins, P.C., Austin, TX, for Texas Water Com’n.
Jim Matthews, Lloyd, Gosselink, Fowler, Blevins & Mathews, P.C., Austin, TX, John W. Davidson, Russell S. Johnson, Davidson & Troilo, San Antonio, TX, Hunter L. Prillaman, Kenneth A. Rubin, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, Washington DC, for City of San Antonio.
J.B. Ruhl, Fulbright & Jaworski, Austin, TX, Mary O. Kelly, San Antonio, TX, for Greater San Antonio Builders Ass’n.
Peter A. Winn, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Dallas, TX, Mehron Azarmehr, Asst. Atty. Gen., Austin, TX, for Texas Parks and Wildlife Dept.
Stuart N. Henry, Henry, Lowerre & Taylor, Austin, TX, for Sierra Club.
Louis T. Rosenberg, San Antonio, TX, for Green Valley Special Utility, et al.
Harry M. Reasoner, Vinson & Elkins, Houston, TX, Roger P. Nevola, Vinson &
Edmund McCarthy, John R. Breihan, McGinnis, Lochridge & Kilgore, Austin, TX, Mark B. Taylor, San Marcos, TX, for City of San Marcos.
Elbert Hooper, Hutcheson & Grundy, Austin, TX, for City of Braunfels, et al.
North Ottis West, West & West, San Antonio, TX, for Bexar Metro.
Before REAVLEY and GARWOOD, Circuit Judges, and LAKE1, District Judge.
REAVLEY, Circuit Judge:
Because the district court’s judgment imposes no injury upon the parties moving this appeal, no case or controversy remains. Lacking jurisdiction, we dismiss.
The Sierra Club sued the United States Fish and Wildlife Service and Interior Secretary Lujan (collectively FWS) for violating the Endangered Species Act (ESA),
I. BACKGROUND
The Edwards Aquifer (Edwards) stores water in a natural underground reservoir that stretches through six counties in Central Texas. Rainfall seeps through porous earth to “recharge” Edwards all along its path, and the water in the aquifer flows eastward. Many governments, corporations, and individuals, including appellants, pump water from Edwards. Depending on the amount that recharge exceeds pumping, water leaves Edwards naturally at two large springs, San Marcos Springs and Comal Springs, situated approximately fifteen miles apart at the aquifer’s eastern edge.
San Marcos Springs and dependent streams are home to four species listed by the federal government as “endangered” (the Fountain Darter, the Texas Blind Salamander, the San Marcos Gambusia (which may now be extinct), and Texas Wild Rice) and one listed as “threatened” (the San Marcos Salamander). See
In May 1991, Sierra Club sued FWS, alleging that endangered species died when flow from the San Marcos and Comal Springs dropped below a certain number of cubic feet per second. Sierra Club asserted that FWS was responsible for the loss of these creatures under the ESA because FWS failed to develop and disseminate information about the minimum springflows necessary to protect the endangered species, and because FWS failed to exercise its authority under the ESA to impose pumping restrictions to maintain the necessary springflows. Several governmental entities who are interested in maximizing springflow from San Marcos and
Judge Bunton conducted a bench trial and issued comprehensive findings and conclusions in February 1993. He concluded that FWS has a nondiscretionary duty under ESA § 4(f),
When Interior Secretary Babbitt replaced Interior Secretary Lujan, FWS changed its position in this case. FWS agreed to dismiss its appeal if the plaintiffs agreed to certain semantic changes in the district court’s findings and judgment;5 none of the changes affect the relief ordered against FWS. The plaintiffs joined FWS’s Motion to Clarify the Judgment and Findings, the district court amended its findings and judgment to conform with the parties’ motion, and FWS dismissed its appeal. However, several defendant-intervenors wish to continue their appeals.6 The appellees argue that the appellants have no standing absent FWS, and that we have no jurisdiction to decide these appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
The Constitution’s Article III limits the federal judiciary’s decisional authority to “cases” and “controversies.” A case or controversy does not exist unless the person who asks the court for a decision has “standing” to do so, the elements of which are injury, causation, and redressability. See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 112 S.Ct. 2130, 2136, 119 L.Ed.2d 351 (1992). A party’s “status as an intervenor ... does not confer standing sufficient to keep the case alive in the absence of [the party on whose side the intervenor intervened].” Diamond v. Charles, 476 U.S. 54, 68, 106 S.Ct. 1697, 1706, 90 L.Ed.2d 48 (1986). Rather, intervenors who wish to prosecute an appeal on their own must separately fulfill the injury, causation, and redressability requirements of Article III. Id.
Moreover, because FWS has agreed to the amended judgment and it grants relief only against FWS and merely requires it to develop and disseminate factual information having no legal consequence and which FWS would be free to develop and disseminate absent the judgment, and because intervenor-defendants, including the TWC, are not bound by such information or its dissemination (and are as free to subsequently contest it as if it were not made pursuant to the judgment), none of the findings or declarations in the amended judgment (or in the amended findings of fact and conclusions of law) are necessary to the relief ordered against FWS. Thus none of such findings or declarations have preclusive effect on appellants in future litigation, and appellants otherwise lack standing to challenge any of them here.
Our decision concerning preclusive effect controls subsequent cases. In New York Telephone Co. v. Maltbie, 291 U.S. 646, 54 S.Ct. 443, 78 L.Ed. 1041 (1934), a district court enjoined the enforcement of rate orders at the telephone company’s behest, and also fixed the value of the telephone company’s property and the allowed rate of return on that property. The telephone company appealed because it disagreed with the determinations of property value and rate of return. The Supreme Court simply stated that the court’s findings concerning property value and rate of return “are not to be regarded as res judicata ... in any judicial proceeding,” and dismissed the appeal. Id. at 646, 54 S.Ct. at 443. We follow the same course here to assure the appellants that they will suffer no adverse consequences in future litigation from the judgment and findings in this case. See also 15A WRIGHT, MILLER, & COOPER, § 3902, at 83 (“[I]t is better to deny appeal and forbid preclusion than to permit appeal in order to support preclusion.”).
The appellants allege numerous injuries from the district court’s judgment, but we decide that the judgment and findings are of no consequence to them. On its face, the judgment orders nothing of the appellants. Nor will the judgment affect the appellants in any future litigation, because the only issue necessarily decided by the district court is that FWS has a nondiscretionary duty to promulgate springflow information. The appellants cannot legitimately blame the judgment for causing any future litigation; the information ordered by the district court is in no wise a prerequisite to ESA-enforcement litigation. Finally, the judgment inflicts no procedural injury on the appellants—no law accords the appellants a right to participate in FWS’s decisionmaking process because the springflow information mandated by the judgment does not, of itself, bind the appellants, and because the judgment recognizes that FWS may change its springflow determinations at any time in the exercise of its best professional judgment.
DISMISSED.
