Coalition for Responsible Regional Development v. Coleman

555 F.2d 398, 10 ERC 1792
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 11, 1977
DocketNo. 76-1400
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 555 F.2d 398 (Coalition for Responsible Regional Development v. Coleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coalition for Responsible Regional Development v. Coleman, 555 F.2d 398, 10 ERC 1792 (4th Cir. 1977).

Opinion

DONALD RUSSELL, Circuit Judge:

This suit to enjoin the construction of a bridge across the Ohio and Guyandotte Rivers between Huntington, West Virginia and Proctorville, Ohio, was earlier before this Court on appeal from an order denying a preliminary injunction.1 The factual background for the proceedings is adequately stated in the opinion reversing the District Court’s denial of such injunction and need not be restated here. The action is now before us on appeal from a decree of the District Court on the merits, denying an injunction and dismissing the action. We affirm.

The bridge involved in this proceeding is to be entirely state-financed. It, however, would cross a navigable stream. Permission to cross such a stream depends on the issuance of a federal permit under the provisions of the General Bridge Act.2 Before issuing such a permit, the Secretary must prepare an environmental impact statement (EIS) in compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act;3 and, since the construction would constitute a use of “park-lands” the Secretary has to make the determinations mandated by § 4(f), Department of Transportation Act,4 and to comply with the provisions of § 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act.5 The Secretary prepared an EIS, and made the necessary findings under § 4(f) and § 106. The plaintiffs, attacking the legal validity and sufficiency of the Secretary’s determinations, instituted this action to enjoin the construction of a bridge. After a trial, the District Court, in a carefully reasoned opinion, entered its order from which this appeal by the plaintiffs is taken.

It is necessary, as a predicate to a review of the District Court’s order, that we mark out the scope of judicial review in cases such as this one. The standard for judicial review of an administrative decision under either NEPA or § 4(f) of the Transportation Act is declared in Citizens to Preserve Overton Park v. Volpe (1971), 401 U.S. 402, 91 S.Ct. 814, 28 L.Ed.2d 136. As there declared, the court is to consider first, “whether the Secretary acted within the scope of his authority” and, second, whether the ultimate decision was “ ‘arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.’ ”6 In applying [400]*400the arbitrary standard, the court must “engage. in a substantial inquiry”7 in order to determine whether the agency, in its conclusions, made a good faith judgment, after considering all relevant factors, including possible alternative or mitigative measures.8 In passing on such “good faith” administrative judgment, the court specifically is “not empowered to substitute its judgment for that of the agency.”9 Environmental Def. F., Inc. v. Corps, of Eng. of U. S. Army (5th Cir. 1974), 492 F.2d 1123, 1139; Sierra Club v. Froehlke (7th Cir. 1973), 486 F.2d 946, 953. To quote an authoritative commentator, the court is “not [to] make the ultimate decision” but only to see “that the official or agency take a ‘hard look’ at all relevant factors.”10 This is so because the power of judicial review in this area, is a narrow one to be applied within reason,11 and in essence is confined to a determination of whether the administrative decision “represented a clear error of judgment.”12 In making such determination, the court is not to be led into construing the mandating statutes as a device to be used as “a crutch for chronic faultfinding” and, it is not to fault an agency for failure to consider “an alternative whose effect cannot be reasonably ascertained, and whose implementation is deemed remote and speculative.”13 Nor is the agency obligated “to consider in detail each and every conceivable variation of the alternatives stated;” it “ ‘need only set forth those alternatives “sufficiently] to permit a reasoned choice’.”14 In sum, so long as the court, in its review, observes the rule of reason and practicality and takes a “hard look” at the relevant factors, it performs its obligation under the statutes.15

The plaintiffs do not argue that the Secretary, in his determination under NEPA or § 4(f), acted beyond the scope of his authority. Their argument is primarily directed to the District Court’s determination that the Secretary adequately considered and evaluated the Lewis Hollow site as a “feasible and prudent” alternative. They contend that both the Secretary and the District Court dismissed the Lewis Hollow site for an erroneous reason and without a proper consideration of factors relevant to its feasibility. In the exposition of their argument that these determinations rested on an erroneous premise, the plaintiffs hark back to their contentions addressed in our earlier appeal and assert that the determination by the District Court was based, despite our direction in the earlier opinion, on the premise that the bond authorization statute, by its alleged geographic limitation, eliminated the Lewis Hollow site as a feasible and prudent alternative.

[401]*401We, however, find nothing in the opinion of the District Court to support this contention. Nowhere in its opinion does the District Court refer to the bond authorization statute in support of its decision. It spelt out clearly the reasons which prompted its conclusion against the Lewis Hollow site as a viable alternative. It found that the Lewis Hollow site “would create 4(f) problems in that such a location would involve the taking of either a public fairground, a public school playground or a golf course," would lie “outside of the general traffic corridor encompassed by this particular project” and would “not accomplish the objectives of the [proposed] project”. All the reasons so identified represented valid reasons for finding the Lewis Hollow site not to be a viable alternative. They were reasons for which there was clear support in the record. None of them finds its justification in the bond authorization statute. In resting its conclusions on such reasons the District Court conformed scrupulously to our ruling in the earlier decision and to the proper criteria governing judicial review.

It is equally clear that the Secretary did not predicate his determination against the Lewis Hollow site on the bond authorization statute. This the District Court expressly found, declaring that the Secretary’s decision was made “without regard to the bond resolution.” Again, this finding is amply supported in the record. In the EIS, it is stated:

The Second Coast Guard District Legal Officer has expressed the opinion that he finds no prohibition against other site locations and, further, that the applicant’s reliance on the case of State ex rel. Nelson vs. Ritchie [154 W.Va. 644, 177 S.E.2d 791 (W.Va.1970)] to both preclude Lewis Hollow as an alternate location and to build only within an area between 24th Street and 31st Street is unsupportable.

This language is not substantially different from our own language in our earlier opinion.16

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Bluebook (online)
555 F.2d 398, 10 ERC 1792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coalition-for-responsible-regional-development-v-coleman-ca4-1977.