The Supreme Court of Maryland ruled last week, “[t]he question presented in this case is whether Maryland local governments may bring state common law tort claims against 26 multinational oil and gas companies to recover damages caused by global greenhouse gas emissions. We hold that they may not.”
The Court went on to say, “.. we determine that state common law has never applied to the conduct alleged by the local governments” and that such state law claims are both displaced and preempted by federal law, specifically federal common law and the Clean Air Act, because the claims effectively seek to regulate interstate and international air emissions, an area reserved for federal oversight.”
This Maryland case is significant in the wave of climate tort suits brought by states and local governments against fossil fuel companies. The U.S. Supreme Court has recently agreed to hear another of those cases, Suncor Energy Inc. v. County Commissioners of Boulder County, to determine substantially the same issue here: whether federal law (including the Clean Air Act and federal common law) preempts state law tort claims against energy companies for damages from climate change. In that case, originating from Colorado, the state court action was allowed to proceed.
The Maryland case drew the attention of 24 other states, from Alabama to Ohio, which submitted briefs in support of the oil companies.
Specifically, the Supreme Court of Maryland considered three consolidated cases, originally filed in 2018, one case filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City and two cases filed in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County. In these cases, the Mayor and Council of Baltimore City, Anne Arundel County, and the City of Annapolis filed state common law tort claims against 26 multinational oil and gas companies to recover damages caused by global greenhouse gas emissions. The local governments asserted five causes of action against the defendants, all arising under Maryland law: (1) public nuisance; (2) private nuisance; (3) trespass; (4) negligent failure to warn; and (5) strict liability failure to warn.
The local governments argued that the defendants, individually and collectively, are responsible for extracting, processing, producing, promoting, and marketing fossil fuel products, the normal and intended use of which has led to the emission of a substantial percentage of the total volume of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere for over 50 years.
The local governments contend that the defendants deceived consumers and the public about the dangers associated with their fossil fuel products when they knew of a direct link between their products and climate change threats, causing sea levels to rise, as well as other physical and environmental impacts, resulting in inundation, destruction, and/or other interference with the local governments’ property and citizenry.
The Circuit Court for Baltimore City and the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss. The Supreme Court of Maryland affirmed the judgments of the lower courts dismissing the complaints.
Justice Brynja Booth wrote for the majority here, “No amount of creative pleading can masquerade the fact that the local governments are attempting to utilize state law to regulate global conduct that is purportedly causing global harm.”
The Court held that the local governments’ state law claims are displaced and preempted by federal law. The Court determined that the local governments, through their state law claims, are attempting to regulate air emissions. The Court explained that, for over a century, the United States Supreme Court has held that cases involving regulations of interstate pollution arise under federal law. Under the United States Supreme Court’s jurisprudence, any state law claims are displaced by federal common law.
This state court buttressed its opinion with the U.S. Supreme Court decision in American Electric Power Co., Inc. v. Connecticut, 564 U.S. 410 (2011), applying federal preemption.
Finally, the Supreme Court of Maryland held that federal common law would not extend to apply to the local governments’ claims that regulate international conduct.
The rationale of the Court is interesting:
PUBLIC NUISANCE. The Maryland Supreme Court held that the local governments failed to state a claim for public nuisance under Maryland law. Maryland has not expanded the public nuisance doctrine beyond the traditional historical principles embodied in the common law, namely, that a public nuisance action was not regarded as a tort but was instead a public action by a government entity to pursue criminal prosecutions or seek injunctive relief to abate harmful conduct. Additionally, the Court has never recognized a government entity’s ability to recover damages for public nuisance. Moreover, assuming without deciding that there is a public right to be free from adverse effects of climate change, the Court stated that it nonetheless declines to expand Maryland’s common law of public nuisance to govern the conduct alleged in the local governments’ complaints, given the extensive federal statutory and regulatory framework that governs the highly complex conduct of regulating air emissions.
PRIVATE NUISANCE. The Supreme Court held that the local governments failed to state a claim for private nuisance because that tort requires that the plaintiff establish an injury to property that is different in kind from that suffered by the public generally. Here, the injuries alleged by the local governments are not unique or different from any injuries suffered by the public generally.
TRESPASS. The Court held that the local governments’ trespass claim exceeds the bounds of the tort established in Maryland’s case law, which holds that when an adjacent property is invaded by an inanimate or intangible object, the defendant must have some connection or control over that object for a trespass action to lie. The Court agreed with the Circuit Court for Baltimore City that the link between the Defendants’ activities and the harms alleged by the local governments, which are caused by human activities around the world, are far too attenuated to constitute the Defendants’ connection or control over the rainfall and storms that invaded the local governments’ property.
STRICT LIABILITY/ NEGLIGENCE ARISING FROM FAILURE TO WARN. The Court held that the local governments failed to state claims for strict liability and negligent failure to warn. The Court determined that the duty the local governments seek to impose is a duty to warn the entire human race of the effects of climate change. The Court stated that finding such a duty would stretch Maryland tort law beyond manageable bounds.
“The ultimate conduct is the use of greenhouse gases across the globe, and the ultimate harm asserted by the local governments arises from global emissions,” Booth wrote. “The local governments’ police powers do not extend beyond their respective borders and certainly do not authorize the policing of worldwide conduct.”
The majority concluded in a harshly worded rebuke, “Quite simply, the notion that a local government such as Baltimore, Annapolis or Anne Arundel County may pursue state law nuisance claims against the defendants — seeking injunctive relief to abate injuries arising from global greenhouse effects arising from worldwide conduct — is so far afield from any area of traditional state or local responsibility that it cannot be seriously contemplated.”
Read the entire opinion in Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. B.P. P.L.C., et al.; Anne Arundel County, Maryland v. B.P. P.L.C., et al; City of Annapolis v. B.P. P.L.C., et al., here.