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- Minnesota v. American Petroleum Institute
Minnesota v. American Petroleum Institute
Geography
Date
2020
Document type
Litigation
Part of
About this cases
Filing year
2020
Status
Stay lifted and case remanded to state court.
Geography
Docket number
0:20-cv-01636
Court/admin entity
United States → United States Federal Courts → United States District of Minnesota (D. Minn.)
Case category
Adaptation → Actions seeking money damages for lossesCommon Law ClaimsState Law Claims → Enforcement Cases
Principal law
United States → State Law–Strict LiabilityUnited States → State Law—FraudUnited States → State Law—Negligence
At issue
Action brought by Minnesota against members of the fossil fuel industry for allegedly causing climate change harms by misleading the public by downplaying the threat of climate change and the role of their products in causing climate change.
Documents
Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Summary
Document
01/24/2024
Decision
Stay lifted and case remanded to state court.
On January 24, 2024 (15 days after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the Eighth Circuit’s affirmance of the remand order in Minnesota’s case), the federal district court for the District of Minnesota lifted the stay on the case and remanded it to state court.
08/20/2021
Decision
Defendants' motion to stay execution of remand order granted and plaintiff's motion for attorney fees denied.
The federal district court for the District of Minnesota stayed its order remanding Minnesota’s climate change lawsuit against the fossil fuel industry. The court found that a stay was prudent both due to uncertainty about the impacts on the Eighth Circuit’s consideration of the remand order of the Supreme Court’s decision in Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. BP p.l.c. and the Second Circuit’s decision in City of New York v. Chevron Corp. and also because it was possible there might be a final disposition in state court prior to resolution of the Eighth Circuit’s appeal, which would be a “concrete and irreparable” injury to the defendants. The court also found that judicial economy and conservation of resources weighed in favor of a stay. Because the balance of factors was likely to shift over time, the court said it would reevaluate the stay if the Eighth Circuit appeal was not resolved in 12 months. The court also denied Minnesota’s motion for attorney fees, concluding that “removal advanced critical legal questions that have not yet been resolved by the higher courts.”
06/24/2021
Response
Response filed by defendants to plaintiff's notice of supplemental authority (denial of certiorari in Chevron Corp. v. Oakland).
–
06/15/2021
Notice
Notice of supplemental authority (denial of certiorari in Chevron Corp. v. Oakland) filed by Minnesota.
–
06/03/2021
Notice
Notice of supplemental authority filed by defendants in support of motion to stay remand.
–
05/28/2021
Response
Response filed by defendants to plaintiff's notice of supplemental authority.
–
04/15/2021
Brief
Memorandum of law filed in support of plaintiff State of Minnesota's motion for just costs and attorneys' fees pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c).
Minnesota filed a motion for costs and expenses, including attorney fees, incurred as a result of defendants’ “improper removal.”
04/14/2021
Reply
Reply filed in support of motion to stay execution of remand order pending appeal.
–
04/07/2021
Motion
Memorandum filed in support of defendants' motion to stay execution of the remand order pending appeal.
–
03/31/2021
Motion
Emergency motion for temporary stay of execution of the remand order filed by defendants.
–
03/31/2021
Decision
Motion to remand granted and motion to stay pending Supreme Court actions denied.
The district court granted the State of Minnesota’s motion to remand its case, which asserts state law claims under common law and consumer protection statutes. The district court found that the defendants failed to establish that federal jurisdiction was warranted on any of the seven independent grounds they asserted: federal common law; presence of disputed and substantial federal issues (the Grable doctrine); the federal officer removal statute; the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act; federal enclaves; the Class Action Fairness Act; and diversity.
03/12/2021
Response
Response to plaintiff's notice of supplemental authority filed by FHR defendants.
–
02/24/2021
Response
Response filed by defendants to plaintiff's notice of supplemental authority (District of Hawai'i decision in Honolulu and Maui cases).
–
02/16/2021
Notice
Notice of supplemental authority filed by plaintiff (District of Hawai'i decision in Honolulu and Maui cases).
–
01/15/2021
Decision
Memorandum filed by FHR defendants in support of motion to stay.
Three defendants in Minnesota’s case seeking to hold the fossil fuel industry liable for causing a “climate-change crisis” moved to stay the case and hold in abeyance a decision on Minnesota’s motion to remand until the Supreme Court issues a decision in the Baltimore case and on the petition for writ of certiorari in Oakland and San Francisco’s case. Minnesota opposed the stay.
12/09/2020
Letter
Letter submitted by defendants regarding Baltimore case pending in the Supreme Court.
–
09/10/2020
Brief
Memorandum of law filed in support of plaintiff's motion to remand to state court.
–
07/27/2020
Notice Of Removal
Notice of removal filed.
Fossil fuel companies and other defendants removed Minnesota's climate change-based consumer protection cases to federal court. Minnesota’s case also involves other claims, including strict liability and negligent failure to warn claims. The defendants asserted multiple grounds for removal: that the cases raise disputed and substantial federal questions, that the claims necessarily arise under federal common law, that the claims arise out of federal enclaves, that federal-officer removal applies, that jurisdiction is proper under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, that the case is removable under the Class Action Fairness Act, and that diversity citizenship creates removal jurisdiction.
Summary
Action brought by Minnesota against members of the fossil fuel industry for allegedly causing climate change harms by misleading the public by downplaying the threat of climate change and the role of their products in causing climate change.