Thе Village of Bartlett, in Cook County, Illinois, and a group of Bartlett residents that calls itself “Citizens Against the Bale-fill,” appeal from the denial of their motion to intervene in a suit brought by a joint venture of 23 Cook County municipalities known as the Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County.
The Village of Bartlett and Citizens Against the Balefill want to intervene on the side of the Corps to protect their interest in keeping the landfill from being built. They believe that the landfill would lower property values in Bartlett, that its operation would produce noise, dust, and odors in the adjacent residential areas, and that it would deprive the village’s residents of the environmental amenities that the site affords in its present undeveloped state. Although the site is fenced and not accessible for recreational use, its trees and waterways, which the landfill would harm, attract a variety of birds, and both the birds and the trees are visible to people in Bartlett and enhance their sense of well being. The would-be intervenors worry that the Department of Justice, which is the Corps of Engineers’ lawyer, having broader interests than merely enforcing the Clean Water Act in one small tract of land, may settle the suit on terms that do not fully protect the would-be inter-venors’ interest, or that it may decide not to appeal a judgment in favor of SWANCC should one be rendered. They do not argue that the Department is at present failing to defend the Corps with utmost vigor. Their fear is that its zeal may slacken before the
Rule 24(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure confers a right of intervention upon one who “claims an interest relating to” the subject matter of the suit in which he wants to intervene, provided that the disposition of the suit might “impair or impede” his ability to protect that interest and the interest is not “adequately represented” by a party to the suit. The district judge thought the Village and the citizens’ group lack the requisite “interest” because they have no property rights in the site of the proposed landfill, which is not within the village boundaries. In any event the Justice Department was, he found, adequately representing their interest.
The question what “interest” is required to support a right of intervention is a difficult one, and let us see whether we can clarify it. It will help to consider what rights these would-be intervenors would have if the Corps of Engineers had granted the permit for the landfill rather than denied it. Nоtwithstanding their lack of a property right in the site, they would have a sufficient interest to give them standing to challenge the grant of the permit in a federal court; equivalently, they would be “adversely affected or aggrieved” (synonyms) by the grant within the meaning of the Administrative Procedure Act. 5 U.S.C. § 702. To have standing, or to be “aggrieved,” requires (1) having suffered (or having the prospect of suffering) the kind of harm (that is, concrete аnd personal) that would support a suit at common law, whether or not the particular harm is one that the common law created a remedy for, provided (2) that the harm is to an interest that is protected by the statute claimed to provide the ground of relief. E.g., Air Courier Conference v. American Postal Workers Union,
A reduction in property values caused by activities on a neighboring piece of land, and an assault on the senses by noise, dust, and оdors, are just the kinds of harm that common law suits to abate a nuisance are designed to redress. It would make no difference if the decline in property values were wholly due to an irrational fear of garbage dumps. That might or might not knock out a nuisance suit. Compare DeSario v. Industrial Excess Landfill, Inc.,
Less clear is whether deprivation of the pleasure of watching birds and trees on another person’s proрerty is the kind of harm for which the watchers can seek a remedy in federal court. Because the common law sometimes (not regularly) protects vistas, Justice v. CSX Transportation, Inc.,
But is “interest” in Rule 24(a)(2) identical to the interest that is required to confer standing? It could be less, since by assumption there are parties with standing already in the casе. Or it could be more, or different. Our cases say that the prospective in-tervenor’s interest must be direct, significant, and legally protectable. E.g., Security Ins. Co. v. Schipporeit, Inc.,
It is uncertain whether, had the permit been granted, our would-be intervenors could have brought thеir own suit. The Clean Water Act does not create a general right of action against the Corps for the grant or denial of a permit. Preserve Endangered Areas of Cobb’s History, Inc. v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
There might be other legal grounds on which to attack such a grant. See, e.g., Fund for Animals, Inc. v. Rice,
The present case, still assuming coun-terfaetually that the Corps had granted rather than denied the permit to build the bale-fill, would be the same as our hypothetical suit involving the hydroelectric project. The would-be intervenors’ property rights would be impaired, and their legally protected interest (protected by the law of nuisance) against being subjected to noise, dust, and odors by a neighboring land use would also be impaired, by the grant of the permit. On either basis they would be entitled to intervene, provided they could prove inadequate representation by the Department of Justice, of which more shortly.
We must ask what difference it makes that the Corps denied rather than granted the permit. The answer is none. The test is whether the outcome of the suit might impair or impede the would-be intervenor’s interest. The outcome of the suit may be an order that the Corps grant the permit. Consider again our hypothetical case of the permit to build a dam. Suppose the permit had been denied, and the denial challenged in court by the power company. The property owner would be entitled to intervene to defend the denial (assuming, again, inadequacy of representation), sinсe if the denial were reversed and the permit granted his property would be damaged.
Where does this analysis leave the requirement that the interest of the person seeking intervention as a matter of right must be “direct, significant, and legally pro-tectable”? This formula is best understood as meaning that, because intervention can impose substantial costs on the parties and the judiciary, not only by making the litigation more cumbersome but also (and more important) by blocking settlement, Bethune Plaza, Inc. v. Lumpkin,
The stumbling block for the would-be in-tervenors in this ease is the requirement of proving inadequacy of representation by existing parties. The requirement is taken seriously and for good reasons already touched upon. Increasing the number of parties to a suit can make the suit unwieldy. Of particular concern, it can impede settlement. With immaterial exceptions, such as the case of a class member who has forgone his right tо opt out of the class action, a party cannot be forced to settle a case. An intervenor acquires the rights of a party. He can continue the litigation even if the party on whose side he intervened is eager to settle. United States v. City of Chicago,
Whеre the interests of the original party and of the intervenor are identical— where in other words there is no conflict of interest—adequacy of representation is presumed. United States v. South Bend Community School Corp.,
No suggestion as of now, at any rate. We are sympathetic to the aspiring intervenors’ concern that at some future point in this litigation the government’s representation of their interest may turn inadequate yet it would be too late to do anything about it. The easiest case to envisage is the following: The district court grants summary judgment for SWANCC, and the Department оf Justice has to decide whether to appeal. All appeals by federal government agencies must be approved by the Solicitor General, who might decide for reasons unrelated to the likely outcome of an appeal not to authorize appeal. The case might be unimportant and the Solicitor General reluctant to pester the court of appеals with an unimportant ease, which might dilute the impact of other government appeals. In such a case, the representation of the would-be intervenors’ interest by the Department of Justice could well be thought inadequate, cf. Meek v. Metropolitan Dade County,
The proper way to handle such an eventuality is for the would-be intervenor, when as here no present inadequacy of representation can be shown, to file at the outset of the ease a standby or conditional application for leave to intervene and ask the district court to defer consideration of the question of adequacy of representation until the applicant is prepared to dеmonstrate inadequacy. This procedure, to which we find no objection in the federal rules or elsewhere, would not expose the applicant for intervention to charges of foot-dragging that doom as belated the usual post-judgment application to intervene. See, e.g., United States v. City of Chicago, supra,
We are mindful of the argument that private parties should not be allowed to hijack, via intervention, a government suit. If the Justice Department, with its broader perspective than that of any individual federal agency, such as the Corps of Engineers, decides to “sell out” the Corps in a particular case for sоme larger governmental interest, why should a private party who may not have a right to sue on his own be able to keep the suit alive? Congress can if it wants preclude intervention in such eases. But if it does not do so and the requirements for intervention are met, we cannot find in Rule 24(a) an exception for the case in which the inadequate representative of the private interest is the Department of Justice rather than a private litigant.
We are not done. The appellants also sought permissive intervention. The district judge denied intervention on this basis because of the appellants’ lack (as the judge thought) of an “interest” sufficient to justify intervention. But “interest” does not appear in Rule 24(b). All that is required for permissive intervention, so far as bears on this ease, is that the applicant havе a claim or defense in common with a claim or defense in the suit. Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(b)(2). If this condition is satisfied, as it appears to be, the judge must then decide as a matter of discretion whether intervention should be allowed. Misconceiving the applicable standard, the judge failed to exercise his discretion, and the judgment, insofar as it denies permissive intervention, must therefore be vacated and the case remanded for that exercise.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED In PART, AND Remanded.
