This appeal involves the district court’s references of motions for summary judgment and other liability and remedy issues concerning Appellants’ mandatory duty under section 303(d) of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d), to a special master pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 53(b). Because we conclude that the references were improper, we VACATE the orders of reference, the orders adopting the master’s recommendations, and the final judgment, and REMAND this action for further proceedings by the district court de novo.
I.
Appellees are two environmental organizations who brought this action to challenge the State of Louisiana’s and Appellants’ failure to comply with section 303(d) of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d). Appellees’ complaint sought relief for the State’s failure to identify, establish, and submit to Appellants total maximum daily loads (“TMDLs”) of pollutants for Louisiana’s polluted waters, and for Appellants’ failure to exercise its mandatory duty under section 303(d) to identify and establish such TMDLs in light of the State’s protracted inaction. Notwithstanding the Act’s strict deadlines for such identification and establishment, which were due in 1979, the State failed to identify, establish, or submit a single TMDL until 1992 although it received federal funding specifically earmarked for TMDL implementation. When the State did manage to finally submit a TMDL, Appellants rarely complied with the Act by either approving or disapproving the submission beyond the thirty-day deadline imposed by the Act. Appellees sought judicial enforcement of the Act’s requirements by seeking an order and judgment against Appellants to exercise its mandatory duty under the Act to identify and establish TMDLs whenever the State failed to do so, and to establish a reasonable schedule by which TMDLs would be implemented.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment relating to liability and remedy issues. At a pretrial conference Appellants suggested, and the court agreed, that an appointment of a special master pursuant to Rule 53(b) would be appropriate. The district court cited its congested docket and unfamiliarity with the issues presented as necessitating the reference. Appellees objected to the reference primarily based on the added delay and expense, but the court overruled the objection and directed the parties to submit names of candidates for the reference. Shortly thereafter, Appellants retracted their suggestion for a Rule 53(b) reference to a special master, objected to such reference, and moved for a reference to a magistrate under Rule 72. That objection was also overruled, and the district court eventually referenced the motions to a special master for report and recommendation, stating that under Rule 53(b), an exceptional condition required the reference because “[t]he case has been pending for two years, the filings are voluminous and contain highly technical documents and declarations, and the issues concern compliance with state and federal regulations.” R.E. 5 at 30.
The special master initially conducted two hearings and issued a report to the district court recommending that Appellants’ motion be denied and Appellees’ motion be granted in part and denied in part.
Appellants timely appealed the judgment and challenge, inter alia, the district court’s reference of the motions and liability issues to the special master. Because the question of whether the references were proper is dispositive of this appeal, we limit our discussion to the references and reserve discussion of the State’s and Appellants’ failure to comply with the Act for anothe'r day.
II.
We review references to a special master pursuant to Rule 53 for abuse of discretion.
See La Buy v. Howes Leather Co.,
A reference to a master shall be the exception and not the rule. In actions ... to be tried without a jury, save in matters of account and of difficult computation of damages, a reference shall be made only upon a showing that some exceptional condition requires it.
“The use of masters is ‘to aid judges in the performance of specific judicial duties, as they may arise in the progress of a cause, and not to displace the court.’ ”
La Buy,
Under this authority, the district court abused its discretion by referring the motions to the special master. In the initial order of reference, the district court stated that an “exceptional condition” existed because “[t]he case has been pending for two years, the filings are voluminous and contain highly technical documents and declarations, and the issues concern compliance with state and federal regulations.” R.E. 5 at 30. At the pretrial conference the court also stated that the court’s congested docket and inexperience with the subject matter of the action required referring the motions to a special master. Moreover, the second order of reference did not state any reason or condition at all warranting the reference. The orders adopting the master’s reports
There is no exceptional condition justifying the references. The fact that a case has been pending for two years is not so exceptional as to require the reference of dispositive matters such as summary judgment motions to a special master. The same applies to voluminous filings containing highly technical documents and declarations, which is pretty much the norm for modern federal litigation.
Cf. La Buy,
We disagree with Appellees’ argument that Appellants are not entitled to a reversal absent a showing that the references prejudiced Appellants. Appellees cite
Kent v. Walter E. Heller & Co.,
We believe that
Kent’s
discussion of prejudice is dicta, and that reversal is required in this action.
Cf. Stauble,
We also disagree with Appellees’ argument that reversal is improper because Appellants should have sought an interlocutory appeal or a writ of mandamus in this court after the order of reference was entered. It is true that an aggrieved party may seek review of an order of reference by an interlocutory appeal,
see
28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), or a writ of mandamus,
see La Buy,
Finally, we cannot accept Appellees’ contention that cases evaluating massive, long-term government programs are particularly suited for the appointment of a special master. None of the decisions Ap-pellees cite concerned the propriety of the reference to the special master, as in this action, and most of those decisions concerned the evaluation and implementation of particular remedies, not the determination of basic liability issues.
See Washington v. Tensas Parish Sch. Bd.,
While we recognize that our decision will add to the delay and expense already suffered by Appellees and the citizens of Lou
Vacated and remanded.
