Sanitary Brd of Charleston v. Andrew Wheeler ( 2020 )


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  •                                          UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 18-2385
    SANITARY BOARD OF THE CITY OF CHARLESTON, WEST VIRGINIA,
    Plaintiff – Appellant,
    v.
    ANDREW WHEELER, Acting Administrator of the United States Environmental
    Protection Agency; UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
    AGENCY,
    Defendants – Appellees.
    ------------------------------
    OHIO VALLEY ENVIRONMENTAL COALITION, INC.; SIERRA CLUB;
    WEST VIRGINIA HIGHLANDS CONSERVANCY, INC.; WEST VIRGINIA
    RIVERS COALITION, INC.,
    Amici Supporting Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia, at
    Charleston. Joseph R. Goodwin, District Judge. (2:16-cv-03060)
    Argued: January 29, 2020                                           Decided: April 9, 2020
    Before AGEE, DIAZ, and HARRIS, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
    ARGUED: Paul Thomas Nyffeler, AQUALAW PLC, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant.
    Tamara N. Rountree, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington,
    D.C., for Appellees. Derek Owen Teaney, APPALACHIAN MOUNTAIN ADVOCATES,
    Lewisburg, West Virginia, for Amici Curiae. ON BRIEF: F. Paul Calamita III, Justin W.
    Curtis, AQUALAW PLC, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant. Jeffrey Bossert Clark,
    Assistant Attorney General, Eric Grant, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Mark Haag,
    Sarah A. Buckley, Chloe Hamity Kolman, Environment and Natural Resources Division,
    UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C.; Thomas Glazer,
    UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, Washington, D.C.,
    for Appellees.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    2
    PER CURIAM:
    The Sanitary Board for the City of Charleston, West Virginia (the “Sanitary Board”)
    appeals from the district court’s denial of its motion for statutory attorneys’ fees under the
    Clean Water Act’s (“CWA”) fee-shifting provision, 
    33 U.S.C. § 1365
    (d). For the following
    reasons, we affirm.
    I.
    The Sanitary Board operates a public wastewater treatment plant that provides
    service to approximately 25,000 residents in and around Charleston, West Virginia. As part
    of its efforts to renew the plant’s National Pollutant Discharge Eliminating System permit,
    the Sanitary Board sought to relax its copper discharge limit in order to avoid costly
    upgrades. After the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (“WVDEP”),
    West Virginia Legislature, and West Virginia Governor signed off on a new copper water
    quality standard (the “proposed standard”), the Sanitary Board submitted the proposal to
    the EPA for its review on June 25, 2015.
    Under 
    33 U.S.C. § 1313
    (c)(3), the EPA had 60 days from that date to notify
    WVDEP whether the proposed standard complied with the CWA. If during its assessment
    the EPA determined the proposed standard did not comply, it had an additional 30 days to
    inform WVDEP what changes would achieve compliance. See 
    id.
    In reviewing the Sanitary Board’s proposed standard, the EPA did not meet either
    of these statutory deadlines. On October 2, 2015 (beyond the combined 90-day deadline of
    September 23, 2015), WVDEP received an unsolicited letter from the EPA stating that it
    3
    was “still considering the potential impact of this site-specific criterion on federally listed
    threatened and endangered species and [was] not taking a CWA [§ 1313(c)(3)] action at
    this time.” J.A. 64.
    Two months later, on December 18, 2015, the Sanitary Board served the EPA with
    a 60-day Notice of Intent to file suit. The Sanitary Board then waited an additional 104
    days before commencing this litigation on March 31, 2016. Relevant to this appeal, the
    Sanitary Board alleged in Count I of its Complaint that the EPA had violated its non-
    discretionary duty to notify WVDEP of its decision within the CWA’s statutory deadline.
    The Sanitary Board also sought a declaratory judgment that the EPA had violated its
    nondiscretionary duty under the CWA to timely review the proposed standard and an
    injunction directing the EPA to act. In its Answer, the EPA admitted that it had not taken
    final agency action within the requisite time.
    The Sanitary Board then filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings. Instead of
    filing a response, the EPA moved to hold the case in abeyance for 45 days so that it could
    continue its review. Specifically, the EPA averred that “[t]his short abeyance would allow
    [it] to expedite the action” so that it could “complete its review of the [proposed standard]
    and take final action.” J.A. 113, 115; see also J.A. 118 (representing that the EPA could
    “complete final action within 45 days of” its abeyance motion). The district court denied
    the abeyance request, but gave the EPA 45 days to complete its review or file a response
    to the Sanitary Board’s motion. The court noted that it was “hopeful that a short extension
    of time [would] permit the EPA to take final action on the matter at the heart of this
    dispute.” J.A. 123. Before the 45 days expired, the EPA sent a letter to WVDEP stating
    4
    that it disapproved the proposed standard. Having obtained the final review it sought in
    Count I, the Sanitary Board did not oppose the EPA’s motion to dismiss that count.
    Nearly two years later—after the district court dismissed the Sanitary Board’s
    revised claims in its Amended Complaint—the Sanitary Board moved for statutory
    attorneys’ fees and expenses arising from Count I in its original Complaint. The CWA’s
    fee-shifting statute provides that
    The court, in issuing any final order in any action brought pursuant to this
    section, may award costs of litigation (including reasonable attorney and
    expert witness fees) to any prevailing or substantially prevailing party,
    whenever the court determines such award is appropriate.
    
    33 U.S.C. § 1365
    (d) (emphasis added). The Sanitary Board argued that it was entitled to
    fees as a “substantially prevailing party” because its Complaint “catalyzed” the EPA to
    take the action requested in Count I.
    Denying the motion, the district court found that the Supreme Court’s decision in
    Buckhannon Board & Care Home, Inc. v. West Virginia Department of Health & Human
    Resources, 
    532 U.S. 598
     (2001), “flatly rejected the catalyst theory for determining
    whether an applicant for attorney’s fees is a ‘prevailing party[.]’” Sanitary Bd. of the City
    of Charleston, W. Va. v. Pruitt, 
    336 F. Supp. 3d 615
    , 618 (S.D. W. Va. 2018). Concluding
    that the CWA’s “fee-shifting provision requires that a party be a prevailing or substantially
    prevailing party before a court can determine whether a fee award is appropriate,” 
    id. at 619
    , the court determined that Buckhannon’s holding “applies with equal force to statutes
    like the CWA,” 
    id.
     “Given th[e] ‘clear meaning’ of ‘prevailing party,’” the court
    determined that a plaintiff could not be a “substantially prevailing party” without procuring
    5
    “at least some relief on the merits and obtaining a judicially sanctioned change in its
    relationship with the defendant.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Buckhannon, 
    532 U.S. at 603, 307
    ). As a
    result, the court found that the Sanitary Board was not a “substantially prevailing party”
    because the EPA’s action disapproving the proposed standard “was entirely voluntary and
    without judicial imprimatur.” 
    Id.
    The Sanitary Board filed a timely notice of appeal. This Court has jurisdiction under
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    II.
    A.
    Ordinarily, we review a district court’s denial of attorneys’ fees for abuse of
    discretion. Nat’l Org. for Marriage, Inc. v. United States, 
    807 F.3d 592
    , 597 n.3 (4th Cir.
    2015). However, we “review de novo [a district court’s] legal determination of whether a
    party has achieved sufficient success to be eligible for a fee award” under a “prevailing or
    substantially prevailing” provision. See Ohio River Valley Envtl. Coal., Inc. v. Green
    Valley Coal Co., 
    511 F.3d 407
    , 413 (4th Cir. 2007); Smyth ex rel. Smyth v. Rivero, 
    282 F.3d 268
    , 274 (4th Cir. 2002).
    B.
    This appeal asks us to determine whether a fee award is available under the CWA
    when a party’s claim has been mooted by government conduct in apparent response to the
    lawsuit. In considering that question, both the Sanitary Board and the EPA ask us to clarify
    what it means to be a “substantially prevailing party” under the CWA’s fee-shifting statute.
    6
    Unsurprisingly, they present conflicting definitions of that term. The Sanitary Board argues
    that “prevailing party” and “substantially prevailing party” were intended to have distinct
    meanings. In its view, the “prevailing party” provision should allow courts to grant fees
    only when a party obtains relief on the merits of a claim through a judicially sanctioned,
    involuntary change in the legal relationship of the parties. Conversely, the Sanitary Board
    proposes that the “substantially prevailing party” provision permits courts to grant fees
    under the catalyst theory whenever a party has obtained some of the relief it sought—
    judicially sanctioned or otherwise—as a result of bringing suit.
    In contrast, the EPA emphasizes that the “touchstone of the prevailing party inquiry
    must be the material alteration of the legal relationship of the parties,” which “must be
    marked by judicial imprimatur.” CRST Van Expedited, Inc. v. E.E.O.C., 
    136 S. Ct. 1642
    ,
    1646 (2016). 1 Therefore, it contends that under a plain reading of the CWA’s fee-shifting
    statute, the only distinction that Congress intended was between a party who obtained the
    requisite, judicially sanctioned relief on all its claims—a “prevailing party”—and a party
    who obtained the requisite relief on only some of its claims—a “substantially prevailing
    party.”
    We need not resolve this conflict now, however, because we conclude that even if
    the Sanitary Board’s definition is correct and the catalyst theory has any continued
    relevance under the CWA after Buckhannon—a holding we do not make in this case—the
    1
    We have omitted internal quotation marks, alterations, and citations here and
    throughout this opinion, unless otherwise noted.
    7
    Sanitary Board would not be entitled to attorneys’ fees because its lawsuit did not catalyze
    the EPA’s actions. See Kerr v. Marshall Univ. Bd. of Governors, 
    824 F.3d 62
    , 75 n.13 (4th
    Cir. 2016) (“In our review, we may affirm on any grounds supported by the record,
    notwithstanding the reasoning of the district court.”).
    Under the catalyst theory, “parties who obtain, through settlement or otherwise,
    substantial relief prior to adjudication on the merits” may be eligible for attorneys’ fees.
    Ohio River Valley Envtl. Coal., 
    511 F.3d at 414
    . To be considered a “catalyst,” a plaintiff
    must satisfy three factors: (1) the defendant’s actions must provide it with “some of the
    benefit sought” in the lawsuit; (2) its claims must not have been “frivolous”; and (3) the
    lawsuit must have been “a substantial or significant cause of [the defendant’s actions]
    providing relief.” 
    Id. at 415
     (quoting Sierra Club v. EPA, 
    322 F.3d 718
    , 726 (D.C. Cir.
    2003)). On the record before us, we conclude that the Sanitary Board cannot satisfy the
    third factor.
    At no point during the events giving rise to this litigation did the EPA suggest that
    it was refusing to act on the Sanitary Board’s proposed standard. In fact, it did the opposite.
    Long before the Sanitary Board indicated it was going to bring suit, the EPA sent WVDEP
    an unsolicited and unprompted letter maintaining that it was “still considering the
    [standard’s] potential impact” after the expiration of the statutory deadline and that it would
    not be taking a final action “at th[at] time.” J.A. 64 (emphasis added). Similarly, when
    faced with the Sanitary Board’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, the EPA represented
    to the district court that it needed only 45 days to “complete its review” of the proposed
    standard and that it could “complete final action” within that time period. J.A. 115, 118
    8
    (emphasis added). These statements plainly indicate that the EPA’s review was ongoing
    both before the Sanitary Board brought suit and throughout the duration of the litigation.
    In other words, the Sanitary Board’s Complaint did not spur the EPA into action.
    This conclusion is consistent with how we have applied the catalyst theory in past
    cases. For example, we have found that a party’s lawsuit was not the “substantial or
    significant cause of [the defendant’s actions] providing relief,” Ohio River Valley Envtl.
    Coal., 
    511 F.3d at 415
    , when the record showed that the agency simply took action after
    the suit commenced on a matter already under its review. See, e.g., Reinbold v. Evers, 
    187 F.3d 348
    , 363 (4th Cir. 1999) (holding that “the mere filing of a claim . . . in federal district
    court and subsequent compliance by an agency [with a non-discretionary requirement] does
    not mean that the plaintiff” is entitled to fees under the catalyst theory); see also Ctr. for
    Biological Diversity v. Norton, 
    262 F.3d 1077
    , 1081–82 (10th Cir. 2001) (holding that a
    party failed to prove it had catalyzed the Department of the Interior’s non-discriminatory
    action when the Agency submitted evidence that it was considering the plaintiff’s request
    well before the lawsuit was filed). Such was the case here.
    Because the Sanitary Board cannot show on this record that its lawsuit was “a
    substantial or significant cause of” the EPA’s determination, it does not matter which
    party’s definition would be applied to the term “substantially prevailing party” because the
    district court would not have erred in denying the motion for attorneys’ fees under either. 2
    2
    We also reject the Sanitary Board’s alternate argument that it was a “prevailing
    party” under the CWA based on the district court’s order granting the EPA an extension of
    time to respond to the motion for judgment on the pleadings. As a threshold matter, the
    (Continued)
    9
    III.
    For these reasons, the judgment of the district court is
    AFFIRMED.
    Sanitary Board failed to raise this issue before the district court, so it is waived. See
    Williams v. Prof’l Transp. Inc., 
    294 F.3d 607
    , 614 (4th Cir. 2002) (“Issues raised for the
    first time on appeal are generally not considered absent exceptional circumstances.”). But
    even if we were to reach the argument, we would reject it because the Sanitary Board
    misreads the district court’s underlying order, which neither constituted a ruling on the
    merits nor directed the EPA to take any action whatsoever. The order’s only effect was to
    extend the EPA’s deadline to respond to the Sanitary Board’s pending motion. Nowhere
    did it direct or require the EPA to respond or take action on the Sanitary Board’s proposed
    standard. That the EPA chose to do so before responding to the Sanitary Board’s motion
    does not transform the scope of the court’s order. As this Court held in Smyth, “a voluntary,
    unilateral act is not enough for the opposing party to be said to have prevailed.” 
    282 F.3d at 278
    . Therefore, the Sanitary Board was not a “prevailing party” in this litigation.
    10