Board of Commissioners v. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co.

88 F. Supp. 3d 615, 2015 WL 631348
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 13, 2015
DocketCivil Action No. 13-5410
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 88 F. Supp. 3d 615 (Board of Commissioners v. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Commissioners v. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co., 88 F. Supp. 3d 615, 2015 WL 631348 (E.D. La. 2015).

Opinion

ORDER

NANNETTE JOLIVETTE BROWN, District Judge.

Before the Court is Defendants’ “Joint Motion to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim Under Rule 12(b)(6).”1 Having considered the motion, the memoranda in support, the memoranda in opposition, the statements at oral argument, the Petition, and the applicable law, the Court will grant the motion with respect to each of Plaintiffs claims.

I. Background

A. Factual Background

Plaintiff in this matter is the Board of Commissioners of the Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority — East, individually and as the board governing the Orleans Levee District, the Lake Borgne Basin Levee District, and the East Jefferson Levee District.2 The Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority (the “Authority”) was created by statute in 2006 to further “regional coordination of flood protection.” 3 According to Plaintiff, the Authority’s “mission is to ensure the physical and operational integrity of the regional flood risk management system, and to work with local, regional, state and federal partners to plan, design and construct projects that will reduce the probability and risk of flooding of the residents within the Authority’s jurisdiction.”4

Defendants are eighty-eight oil and gas companies operating in what Plaintiff refers to as the “Buffer Zone.”5 The Buffer [619]*619Zone “extends from East of the Mississippi River through the Breton Sound Basin, the Biloxi Marsh, and the coastal wetlands of eastern New Orleans and up to Lake St. Catherine.”6

Plaintiff alleges that Defendants’ oil and gas operations have led to coastal erosión in the Buffer Zone, making south Louisiana more vulnerable to severe weather and flooding. According to Plaintiff, “[c]oastal lands have for centuries provided a crucial buffer zone between south Louisiana’s communities and the violent wave action and storm surge that tropical storms and hurricanes transmit from the Gulf of Mexico.” 7 However, “[h]undreds of thousands of acres of coastal lands that once protected south Louisiana are now gone as a result of oil and gas activities.”8 Specifically, Plaintiff asserts that Defendants have “dredged a network of canals to access oil and gas wells and to transport the many products and by-products of oil and gas production.”9 This canal network, in conjunction with “the altered hydrology associated with oil and gas activities,” has caused vegetation die-off, sedimentation inhibition, erosion, and submergence — all leading to coastal land loss.10 In addition to the initial dredging, Plaintiff maintains that Defendants “exacerbate direct land loss by failing to maintain the canal network and banks of the canals that Defendants have dredged, used, or otherwise overseen.”11 This failure has “caused both the erosion of the canal banks and expansion beyond their originally permitted widths and depths of the canals comprising that network.”12 Looking beyond the alleged effects of the canal network, Plaintiff identifies ten other oil and gas activities that, it claims, “drastically inhibit the natural hydrological patterns and processes of the coastal lands” — road dumps, ring levees, drilling activities, fluid withdrawal, seismic surveys, marsh buggies, spoil disposal/dispersal, watercraft navigation, impoundments, and propwash-ing/maintenance dredging.13

B. Procedural Background

On July 24, 2013, Plaintiff filed suit in Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, State of Louisiana.14 In its petition, Plaintiff asserts six causes of action: (1) negligence,15 (2) strict liability,16 (3) natural servitude of drain,17 (4) public nuisance,18 (5) private nuisance,19 and (6) breach of contract — third party beneficiary.20 Plaintiff requests both damages and injunctive relief

... in the form of abatement and restoration of the coastal land loss at issue, including, but not limited to, the backfill-ing and revegetating of each and every canal Defendants dredged, used, and/or for which they bear responsibility, as well as all manner of abatement and restoration activities determined to be [620]*620appropriate, including, but not limited to, wetlands creation, reef creation, land bridge construction, hydrologic restoration, shoreline protection, structural protection, bank stabilization, and ridge restoration.21

While Plaintiffs six causes of action are all ostensibly state-law claims, Plaintiff contends that “Defendants’ dredging and maintenance activities at issue in this action are governed by a longstanding and extensive regulatory framework under both federal and state law specifically aimed at protecting against the deleterious effects of dredging activities.”22 According to Plaintiff, “the relevant components of this regulatory framework ... buttress the Authority’s claims.”23 Specifically, Plaintiff points to the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899, which “grants to the [Army Corps of Engineers] exclusive authority to permit modification of navigable waters of the United States and prohibits the unauthorized alteration of or injury to levee systems and other flood control measures built by the United States.”24 Plaintiff also cites the Clean Water Act of 1972 and accompanying regulations, which require Defendants to “[m]aintain canals and other physical alterations as originally proposed; [r]estore dredged or otherwise modified areas to their natural state upon completion of their use or their abandonment; and [m]ake all reasonable efforts to minimize the environmental impact of the Defendants’ activities.”25 Further, Plaintiff references the Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972 and related Louisiana coastal zone regulations that “impose ... a litany of duties and obligations expressly designed to minimize the adverse ecological, hydrological, topographical, and other environmental effects” associated ,with oil and gas activities.26 Finally, Plaintiff cites “[r]egulations and rights-of-way granted across state-owned lands and water bottoms administered by the Louisiana Office of State Lands.”27 According to Plaintiff, “[t]his regulatory framework establishes a standard of care under Louisiana law that Defendants owed and knowingly undertook when they engaged in oil and gas activities.”28 Additionally, Plaintiff avers that these “permitting schemes created numerous individual obligations under Louisiana law between Defendants and governmental bodies of which Plaintiff is the third-party beneficiary.”29

On August 13, 2013, Defendant Chevron U.S.A. Inc. (“Chevron”) removed the case to federal court.30 On September 10, 2013, Plaintiff filed a “Motion to Remand.”31 All Defendants filed a “Joint Response in Opposition to the Motion to Remand,”32

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Bluebook (online)
88 F. Supp. 3d 615, 2015 WL 631348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-commissioners-v-tennessee-gas-pipeline-co-laed-2015.