Attorney General Rob Bonta | Attorney General Rob Bonta Official website
Attorney General Rob Bonta | Attorney General Rob Bonta Official website
OAKLAND — California Attorney General Rob Bonta, leading a coalition of 16 attorneys general, filed an amicus brief in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals supporting the City of Oakland and the City and County of San Francisco’s efforts to hold major fossil fuel-producing companies accountable for their misleading actions that have worsened the climate crisis. In their consolidated case,brief et al., the California municipalities seek to hold fossil fuel companies accountable for misleading the public about the known dangers of fossil fuel combustion and exacerbating the effects of climate change. In the amicus brief filed today, the attorneys general ask the Ninth Circuit to uphold a federal district court ruling and allow the case to proceed in state court.
“Our state and local governments have a duty to protect the welfare of our residents, and for decades, Big Oil has relied on deceptive tactics to mislead consumers about the harms of fossil fuel use,” said Attorney General Bonta. “In today’s amicus brief we’re supporting Oakland and San Francisco’s efforts to hold accountable corporations looking to fill their pockets at the expense of the health and wellbeing of the American people. We ask the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to protect our residents and future generations by allowing the case to proceed in state court. At the California Department of Justice, we will use every tool at our disposal to ensure Big Oil is held responsible for deceiving the public and exacerbating our climate crisis.”
Although San Francisco and Oakland originally filed separate cases in state court in September 2017, the cases were removed to federal court and consolidated. The plaintiffs then filed a motion to remand the cases to state court, which the federal district court initially denied. The Ninth Circuit reversed on appeal in May 2020, finding that Oakland and San Francisco’s state nuisance claims do not arise under federal law. Subsequently, the federal district court granted the plaintiffs’ renewed motion to remand the cases to state court. The case is currently pending in Ninth Circuit after the oil companies’ November 2022 appeal of the district court’s decision that ruled the suit belongs in state court.
In today’s amicus brief, the attorneys general argue that:
- States and municipalities play a vital role in protecting their citizens’ health and welfare from deceptive commercial conduct and environmental harms, including the local effects of climate change.
- State courts are entrusted with, and uniquely capable of, adjudicating state-law claims, even when state-law claims involve issues of national importance.
- Plaintiffs’ state-law claims do not raise a substantial issue of federal law, and fossil fuel companies’ contracts with the military do not entitle the companies to federal jurisdiction.
In filing the amicus brief, Attorney General Bonta was joined by the attorneys general of Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Washington, and the District of Columbia.
A copy of the brief can be found here.
Original source can be found here.