Raptors Are the Solution v. Croplife America

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 2026
DocketA171537
StatusPublished

This text of Raptors Are the Solution v. Croplife America (Raptors Are the Solution v. Croplife America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raptors Are the Solution v. Croplife America, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 4/29/26 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

RAPTORS ARE THE SOLUTION, Plaintiff and Respondent, A171537 v. CROPLIFE AMERICA et al., (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. RG18908605) Intervenors and Appellants.

Raptors Are the Solution (Raptors), an environmental organization founded to protect wildlife from the toxic effects of pesticides, challenged decisions of the Department of Pesticide Regulation (Department or DPR) to renew and not to reevaluate certain rodenticides, claiming the Department had failed to comply with the California Environmental Quality Act (Pub. Resources Code, § 21000 et seq.) (CEQA) and its own regulations in making those decisions. Trade associations that represented developers, manufacturers, formulators and distributors of those products intervened to defend the Department’s decisions against Raptors’ challenge, claiming they and their members had direct pecuniary interests in the Department’s registrations of their products. After lengthy litigation that included proceedings in both the trial and appellate courts, Raptors prevailed in significant part, the Department placed five of the challenged rodenticides into reevaluation and the Governor signed legislation placing a moratorium on their use while the reevaluation proceedings were pending.

1 This appeal concerns Raptors’ motion for attorney fees under the private attorney general statute as the successful party in the action. The trial court awarded fees to Raptors and imposed joint and several responsibility for them on the Department, a group of pesticide companies designated as real parties in interest and the trade associations who intervened and participated in the defense from early on in the case. The trade associations alone appeal from the trial court’s fee award. They assert they cannot be liable for fees because they did not make the policy decisions that caused Raptors to file suit. Further, they now claim they lack the very same direct and pecuniary interests they previously informed the trial court they had when arguing they were entitled to intervene. The trial court took them at their word the first time, found they had a direct interest in the litigation and awarded the fees against them and the other parties that defended the case. The trade associations fail to show the trial court erred, and we therefore affirm. BACKGROUND 1 “On December 22, 2017, in response to the Department’s proposed decision to renew rodenticide registrations for 2018, Raptors requested that the Department initiate reevaluation of three first-generation anticoagulant rodenticides (FGARs) and four second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs). 2 Raptors argued that the continued use of these rodenticides posed a significant risk and/or is likely to have significant cumulative impacts on wildlife, and that the Department was

1Where indicated infra, we quote our slip opinion from the prior appeal, Raptors Are the Solution v. Cal. Department of Pesticide Regulation (Sept. 27, 2022, A161787) [nonpub. opn.]) (Raptors I), for portions of the background facts and procedural history. “2 The three FGARs [were] diphacinone, chlorophacinone and warfarin. The four SGARs [were] brodifacoum, bromadiolone, difethialone, and difenacoum. Anticoagulant rodenticides generally work by disrupting the blood-clotting mechanism in the target animal, which causes hemorrhaging and ultimately leads to death.”

2 therefore required to reevaluate these rodenticides pursuant to [Cal. Code Regs., tit. 3,] section 6220. Raptors attached several exhibits to its request and provided additional information and data over the course of the next several months in support of its request for reevaluation. “In March 2018, the Department responded to Raptors that it was ‘in the process of reviewing data submitted by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife and wildlife organizations’ to determine the potential adverse impacts of the continued use of FGARs and SGARs on non-target wildlife. The Department further wrote that it was ‘proceeding with the renewal of [the seven rodenticides] and will not be placing them into reevaluation at this time.’ On April 18, 2018, the Department published a ‘Final Decision Regarding Renewal or Registration of Pesticide Products for 2018’ that confirmed its decision to renew the subject rodenticides without reevaluation.[3] “On June 13, 2018, Raptors filed a verified petition for writ of mandate. The petition alleged two causes of action against the Department for violation of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and violation of the Department’s own regulations based on its decision to renew the subject rodenticides for 2018 without reevaluation. On October 19, 2018, Raptors filed an amended petition that added various agencies and companies as real parties in interest. These parties

3 The statute regulating pesticides defines “pesticide” broadly to include rodenticides. (See Food & Agr. Code, § 12753, subd. (b) [“Any substance, or mixture of substances which is intended to be used for defoliating plants, regulating plant growth, or for preventing, destroying, repelling, or mitigating any pest, as defined in Section 12754.5, which may infest or be detrimental to vegetation, man, animals, or households, or be present in any agricultural or nonagricultural environment whatsoever”]; id. § 12754.5, subd. (a) [defining “pest” to include “[a]ny . . . rodent”].)

3 had all received a renewal from the Department for one or more of the seven challenged rodenticides for 2018. “On November 16, 2018, the Department wrote to Raptors’ counsel that it had completed its investigation of the subject rodenticides in response to Raptors’ request and that it would begin reevaluation of SGARs, but not FGARs. The Department reasoned that its ‘investigation of the reported impacts found that the rate of FGAR exposure among non-target wildlife is generally decreasing and is lower than for SGARS.’ The letter was accompanied by a 35-page report that summarized the Department’s investigation of FGARs and SGARs based on the data submitted and its reasons for placing SGARs into reevaluation but not FGARs. At the same time, the Department published its proposed decision to reevaluate the four SGARs.” In response to that decision and to an order sustaining the Department’s demurrer with leave to amend, Raptors filed a second amended petition in May 2019 limiting its challenge to the Department’s April 2018 decision to renew the registration of one of the three FGAR rodenticides known as diphacinone without reevaluation and its November 2018 decision not to reevaluate diphacinone. In the meanwhile, in March 2019 appellants CropLife America/Responsible Industry for a Sound Environment (CropLife) and Western Plant Health Association (collectively, proposed Intervenors or Intervenors), which are trade associations, 4 moved to intervene in the action. Proposed Intervenors declared that

4 CropLife America is “a nonprofit trade association representing more than 50 developers, manufacturers, formulators and distributors of crop protection products.” Responsible Industry for a Sound Environment or RISE is “a standing committee of CLA [CropLife America] that serves as the national not-for-profit trade association representing more than 220 producers and suppliers of specialty pesticide and fertilizer products sold to both the professional and consumer markets.” “WPHA [Western Plant Health Association] is a voluntary nonprofit

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Raptors Are the Solution v. Croplife America, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raptors-are-the-solution-v-croplife-america-calctapp-2026.