Fed Appellate Judge Upholds Baltimore Climate Suit Against Energy Majors; Discovery Will Proceed
A federal appellate judge ruled that Baltimores climate liability suit will proceed in state court, rejecting a motion by more than two dozen fossil fuel defendants to halt the suit while they try to convince the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals that the case belongs in federal court. In an order issued Tuesday, Judge James A. Wynn, Jr., refused to halt the case pending appeal of an earlier federal court decision sending the case back to state court. Chief Judge Roger L. Gregory and Judge Albert Diaz concurred with Wynns decision.
That means discovery should be able to proceed in state court unless the U.S. Supreme Court steps into intervene, a highly unlikely outcome, said Ann Carlson, co-director of the UCLA School of Laws Emmett Institute on Climate Change and the Environment in a blog post. The process of discovery will be long and drawn out and oil companies will put up every obstacle imaginable in an attempt to avoid answering questions along the way, said Carlson, who has provided pro-bono consulting for Baltimore and other municipalities. But the cases have reached a new stage that no other climate change nuisance case has. Things are about to get interesting.
This is the second unsuccessful attempt by the fossil fuel defendants to stay or pause the case pending appeal of U.S. District Court Judge Ellen Hollanders ruling that Baltimores suit should be heard in state court.
Hollander denied the first attempt in July, rejecting the companies claim that they would be irreparably harmed if the case were to proceed. The companies then filed a second motion to stay the case, this time with the Fourth Circuit. Wynns order nixed that motion.
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In the suit, which was filed in state court last year, Baltimore alleges that ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell and 23 other fossil fuel producers and distributors knew for decades that fossil fuels drive climate change but deliberately failed to inform the public about those risks. The city is charging the companies with eight legal violations, including public nuisance, private nuisance, failure to warn and violations of Marylands consumer protection laws.
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https://www.desmogblog.com/2019/10/02/oil-companies-sued-baltimore-discovery-state-court