Skip to content
The Climate Litigation Database

County of Marin v. Chevron Corp.

Geography
Year
2017
Document Type
Litigation
Part of

About this case

Filing year
2017
Status
Complaint filed.
Docket number
CIV1702586
Court/admin entity
United StatesState CourtsCal. Super. Ct.
Case category
AdaptationActions seeking money damages for lossesCommon Law Claims
Principal law
United StatesState Law—NegligenceUnited StatesState Law—NuisanceUnited StatesState Law—Tort LawUnited StatesState Law—TrespassUnited StatesSupremacy Clause
At issue
Action by California counties and cities seeking damages and other relief from fossil fuel companies for sea level rise.
Topics
, ,

Documents

Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics 
Beta
Search results
07/17/2017
Complaint filed.
Three local governments in California (San Mateo County, Marin County, and the City of Imperial Beach) filed separate lawsuits in California Superior Court alleging that fossil fuel companies’ “production, promotion, marketing, and use of fossil fuel products, simultaneous concealment of the known hazards of those products, and their championing of anti-regulation and anti-science campaigns, actually and proximately caused” injuries to the plaintiffs, including more frequent and more severe flooding and sea level rise that jeopardized infrastructure, beaches, schools, and communities. Their complaints included claims for public nuisance, strict liability for failure to warn, strict liability for design defect, private nuisance, negligence, negligent failure to warn, and trespass. The relief sought by the local governments includes compensatory damages, abatement of the alleged nuisance, attorneys’ fees, punitive damages, and disgorgement of profits.
Complaint

Summary

Action by California counties and cities seeking damages and other relief from fossil fuel companies for sea level rise.

 Topics mentioned most in this case  
Beta

See how often topics get mentioned in this case and view specific passages of text highlighted in each document. Accuracy is not 100%. Learn more

Group
Topics
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Renewable energy
Fossil fuel
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector
Climate finance
Public finance actor