Solid Waste Agency v. United States Army Corps of Engineers

101 F.3d 503
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 26, 1996
DocketNo. 95-3324
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 101 F.3d 503 (Solid Waste Agency v. United States Army Corps of Engineers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Solid Waste Agency v. United States Army Corps of Engineers, 101 F.3d 503 (7th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

POSNER, Chief Judge.

The 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. 163 F.R.D. 268 (N.D.Ill.1995). SWANCC wants to build a landfill on a wooded and watery 533-acre site adjacent to Bartlett. The landfill would occupy 182 of these acres, centered on an abandoned gravel pit in which the nonhazardous wastes of SWANCC’s members would be buried after first being placed in bales (hence “balefill”). After the Corps of Engineers determined that the site contains navigable waters subject to the Corps’ jurisdiction under section 404 of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1344, SWANCC applied for a section 404 permit to build the landfill; and when the Corps denied it on the ground that the landfill would violate the Act, SWANCC filed this suit to undo the denial on the ground that the Corps lacks jurisdiction over the site or alternatively that the denial was arbitrary and capricious. 28 U.S.C. § 1331; Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 702. Motions for summary judgment on the jurisdictional issue have been filed and are awaiting decision in the district court.

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 [505]*505litigation runs its course and that it will be too late for them to intervene then.

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. Notwithstanding 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 and 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, 498 U.S. 517, 523, 111 S.Ct. 913, 917-18, 112 L.Ed.2d 1125 (1991); Lujan v. National Wildlife Federation, 497 U.S. 871, 883, 110 S.Ct. 3177, 3186, 111 L.Ed.2d 695 (1990).

A reduction in property values caused by activities on a neighboring piece of land, and an assault on the senses by noise, dust, and odors, 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., 68 Ohio App.3d 117, 587 N.E.2d 454, 461 (1991), with Berry v. Armstrong Rubber Co., 989 F.2d 822, 829 (5th Cir.1993). That would be the issue on the merits. All that would be important to standing would be whether it was the kind of harm that the common law protects people against (it would be — property values are in the core of the interests that the common law protects) and that the Clean Air Act provides a remedy for. We cannot find any case on the latter question, and only a hint (supporting our conjecture) in the secondary literature. 2 William H. Rodgers, Jr., Environmental Law: Air and Water § 4.13, p. 207 (1986). The Act is directed immediately against water pollution but ultimately against the harms that water pollution produces. They are harms to the range of environmental interests endangered by such pollution. Save Our Community v. EPA, 971 F.2d 1155, 1161 (5th Cir.1992) (per curiam); Save Our Wetlands, Inc. v. Sands, 711 F.2d 634, 640 (5th Cir.1983). Those interests overlap to a great extent the interests that nuisance law protects. Indeed, the major difference is that environmental statutes regulate more subtle and attenuated harms than the common law of nuisance does; a land use that creates a common law nuisance is thus likely to be an a fortiori violation of statutory environmental law.

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101 F.3d 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/solid-waste-agency-v-united-states-army-corps-of-engineers-ca7-1996.