Anglers of the Ausable Inc v. Dept of Environmental Quality

CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 2010
Docket138866
StatusPublished

This text of Anglers of the Ausable Inc v. Dept of Environmental Quality (Anglers of the Ausable Inc v. Dept of Environmental Quality) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anglers of the Ausable Inc v. Dept of Environmental Quality, (Mich. 2010).

Opinion

Order Michigan Supreme Court Lansing, Michigan

June 18, 2010 Marilyn Kelly, Chief Justice

138863-66(87)(91)(94) Michael F. Cavanagh Elizabeth A. Weaver ANGLERS OF THE AuSABLE, INC., Maura D. Corrigan Robert P. Young, Jr. MAYER FAMILY INVESTMENTS, LLC, Stephen J. Markman and NANCY A. FORCIER TRUST, Diane M. Hathaway, Plaintiffs-Appellants, Justices

v SC: 138863-138866 COA: 279301, 279306, 280265, 280266 Otsego CC: 06-011697-CE DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY, DIRECTOR OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY, and MERIT ENERGY COMPANY, Defendants-Appellees. _________________________________________/

On order of the Court, the motion to file a reply brief and the motion to file a supplemental affidavit are GRANTED. The motion to dismiss for mootness is DENIED.

CAVANAGH, J. (concurring).

I concur in the order denying the motion for dismissal. This Court originally granted leave to appeal to consider several issues, including whether the state could convey an easement to defendant, Merit Energy Company, that granted the right to discharge water on state-owned land; the proper test for determining the extent to which defendant may discharge water; and whether plaintiffs may pursue a cause of action against the Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) that challenges the propriety of the DEQ approving and issuing a permit to defendants. Anglers of the AuSable, Inc v Dep’t of Environmental Quality, 485 Mich 1063 (2010). Defendant now argues that the case is moot because, since the Court granted leave to appeal, defendant has quit- claimed its interest in the easement and claimed that it has abandoned any plans to discharge water into Kolke Creek. I am not convinced. It is well established that “this Court does not reach moot questions or declare principles or rules of law that have no practical legal effect in the case before us unless the issue is one of public significance that is likely to recur, yet evade judicial review.” Federated Publications, Inc v Lansing, 467 Mich 98, 112 (2002). An issue is not 2

necessarily moot, however, “[w]here a party voluntarily ceases an activity challenged as illegal . . . .” Dep’t of Social Services v Emmanuel Baptist Preschool, 434 Mich 380, 425 (1990), Cavanagh, J., concurring, quoting United States v W T Grant Co, 345 US 629, 633 (1953). In such cases, the issue may still be moot only if the party attempting to moot the issue can show that “there is no reasonable expectation that the wrong will be repeated,” and “the burden is a heavy one.” Id., 345 US at 633. The United States Supreme Court has been particularly wary of finding an issue moot when there remains “a public interest in having the legality of the practices settled,” Grant, 345 US at 632- 633, and when the party seeking to moot the issue is the party who prevailed in the lower court. City of Erie v Pap’s AM, 529 US 277, 287-288 (2000).1 In City of Erie, the Court cautioned that appellate courts have an “interest in preventing litigants from attempting to manipulate the Court’s jurisdiction to insulate a favorable decision from review . . . .” Id. at 288.

Under these principles, I do not believe that all of the issues presented in this case are no longer justiciable. Defendant’s conduct amounts to nothing more than a “voluntary cessation of allegedly illegal conduct” that does not render the case moot unless the defendant shows that the alleged wrong will not arise again. I cannot see that defendant has met this heavy burden. The legality of the practices addressed by the Court of Appeals remain important public questions.2 Moreover, because defendant

1 The dissenting statements rely on cases that are inapposite to the factual situation in this case. Justice MARKMAN relies on recitations of the general principles of the mootness doctrine from People v Richmond, 486 Mich 29 (2010), and Federated Publications. He fails to recognize, however, that these applications of these general principles, no matter how recently decided, do not control the outcome of this case because Grant and its progeny identify an exception to those general principles that is specific to cases, like this one, that involve the voluntary cessation of allegedly illegal conduct that has the potential to be resumed. Similarly, the case on which Justice YOUNG heavily relies, Street R Co of E Saginaw v Wildman, 58 Mich 286 (1885), is inapplicable because it was predicated on distinct legal principles and also did not involve the voluntary cessation of allegedly illegal conduct. In Wildman, the plaintiff sought an injunction to prevent the defendant from moving a building, but the defendant moved the building while the plaintiff’s appeal to this Court was pending. 58 Mich at 286-287. This Court therefore dismissed plaintiff’s equitable action for injunctive relief because, given that the allegedly illegal activity had been completed, it would have been useless for the Court to grant the requested injunctive relief. Id. at 287-288. Therefore, Wildman is inapplicable to this case because the Court’s holding was not predicated on whether there was an ongoing legal dispute affecting the parties’ rights but instead on the impossibility of granting injunctive relief to prevent an already completed action. In fact, the Court noted that the plaintiff could still pursue an action in law for damages. 58 Mich at 287-288. 2 For example, defendant prevailed on whether the plaintiffs may challenge the DEQ’s decision to issue or deny a permit and whether the state could convey an easement granting riparian rights to state-owned land. Further, the Court of Appeals decision left intact the trial court’s injunction, which would permit defendant, upon obtaining riparian rights, to pursue a discharge that 3

prevailed before the Court of Appeals on several of these important public issues, and did not move to moot the issues until after this Court had granted leave to appeal, this Court’s interest in preventing defendant from insulating a favorable decision from review is strongly implicated. Indeed, the facts of this case are strikingly similar to those in City of Erie, where the Court rejected the plaintiff’s attempt to moot the city’s appeal of the plaintiff’s successful challenge to a city ordinance, when the plaintiff had prevailed in the lower court and cried mootness only after the Court had granted leave to appeal. City of Erie, 529 US at 287-288. As in this case, the party seeking to moot the case in City of Erie had submitted an affidavit claiming that it would no longer pursue the challenged conduct and presented its voluntary surrender of the property interest necessary to pursue that conduct as evidence of its intent.3 Yet the City of Erie Court reasoned that because the lower court’s decision would otherwise remain intact, continuing to affect both parties, and the party could potentially resume the conduct, the issues were not moot.4 Further, and perhaps most importantly, the Court found the notion that a party

constitutes a “reasonable use.” The propriety and proper interpretation of that test was another issue on which this Court granted leave to appeal. These issues are of significant public importance, for, as stated in our Constitution, “[t]he conservation and development of the natural resources of the state are hereby declared to be of paramount public concern in the interest of the health, safety and general welfare of the people.” 1963 Const, art 4, § 52. 3 In City of Erie, the plaintiff-respondent was the owner of a nude dancing establishment affected by the challenged city ordinance, and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court had held that the ordinance was unconstitutional. After the United States Supreme Court granted certiorari, the plaintiff-respondent filed an affidavit stating that he had closed his business, sold his property, and never intended to operate a nude dancing establishment again.

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