Skip to content
The Climate Litigation Database

County of Maui v. Sunoco LP

Geography
Year
2020
Document Type
Litigation
Part of

About this case

Filing year
2020
Status
Transmittal letter sent to Hawai'i Circuit Court.
Docket number
1:20-cv-00470
Court/admin entity
United StatesUnited States Federal CourtsUnited States District of Hawaii (D. Haw.)
Case category
AdaptationActions seeking money damages for lossesCommon Law Claims
Principal law
United StatesState Law–Strict LiabilityUnited StatesState Law—NegligenceUnited StatesState Law—NuisanceUnited StatesState Law—Trespass
At issue
Lawsuit seeking damages and other relief from fossil fuel companies for alleged conduct that the City and County of Honolulu contends actually and proximately caused climate change impacts.
Topics
, ,

Documents

Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics 
Beta
03/15/2021
Transmittal letter sent to Hawai'i Circuit Court.
Letter
03/05/2021
On March 5, 2021, the court denied the companies’ motion to stay the remand order but delayed transmission of the order to the state court for 10 days to allow the companies to seek relief in the Ninth Circuit.
Decision
02/26/2021
Opposition filed to defendants' motion to stay.
Opposition
02/18/2021
Motion to stay execution of remand order pending appeal filed by defendants.
Motion
02/18/2021
Notice of appeal filed by defendants.
Appeal
02/16/2021
Transmission of remand order temporarily stayed.
Decision
02/12/2021
Letter filed by Chevron defendants requesting delay in transmission of remand order to state courts.
Letter
02/12/2021
Motion to remand granted.
The federal district court for the District of Hawai‘i remanded the cases brought by the County of Maui seeking to hold fossil fuel companies liable for climate change-related damages. The court rejected three grounds for federal jurisdiction because the Ninth Circuit rejected them in City of Oakland v. BP p.l.c., 969 F.3d 895 (9th Cir. 2020): (1) that the plaintiffs’ claims arose under federal common law; (2) that federal law preempted the claims; and (3) that the claims necessarily raised disputed and substantial federal issues (Grable jurisdiction). The court then concluded that because the plaintiffs elected to pursue claims based on the companies’ alleged concealment of the climate change risks of fossil fuels and not on the defendants’ extraction and production of fossil fuels, their claims did not relate to the companies’ activities on the Outer Continental Shelf, under the direction of federal officers, or on federal enclaves, and the companies therefore established no other basis for federal jurisdiction. With respect to federal-officer jurisdiction, the district court noted that this case was similar to County of San Mateo v. Chevron Corp. in which the Ninth Circuit affirmed a district court finding that the federal-officer removal statute did not provide jurisdiction. The Hawai‘i district court found that any additional evidence provided by the companies in these cases did not establish that the companies acted under a federal officer with respect to oil and gas leases, operation of a National Petroleum Reserve, or supplying to the strategic petroleum reserve; the court also found no causal connection between the plaintiffs’ concealment-based claims and actions the companies contended were taken at the direction of a federal officer. In addition, the court found that the companies made only conclusory assertions that colorable federal defenses existed.
Decision
12/22/2020
Opposition filed to motion to remand.
Opposition
12/11/2020
Joint request to vacate scheduling conference filed.
Request
11/25/2020
Motion to remand filed by County of Maui.
Motion
11/04/2020
Briefing schedule set for anticipated remand motion and all other proceedings and deadines stayed.
Decision
10/30/2020
Notice of removal filed.
Defendants Chevron Corporation and Chevron U.S.A. Inc. removed the case to federal court on October 30, 2020 and indicated that all other joined and served defendants consented to removal.
Notice Of Removal

Summary

Lawsuit seeking damages and other relief from fossil fuel companies for alleged conduct that the City and County of Honolulu contends actually and proximately caused climate change impacts.

 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
Just transition
Renewable energy
Fossil fuel
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector