Posted by Jonathan Adler:
Is the Roberts Court "Anti-Environment"?
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_05-2009_07_11.shtml#1246816746


   Recent articles in the [1]National Law Journal, [2]Daily Jorunal, and
   [3]New York Times, highlight the Roberts Court's record in
   environmental cases during the October 2008 term. All three articles
   note that the side favored by environmentalist groups lost in all five
   environmental cases heard by the Supreme Court this past term. This
   fact has also been the subject of discussion on the Environmental Law
   Profs e-mail listserv. 0-5 is certainly a poor record, but what does
   it mean?

   First, it's important to put the five cases in context. These are just
   five cases, and results from just a single term. It's also notable
   that only one of the five cases was decided 5-4, and four of the five
   cases came from -- and reversed -- the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
   Ninth Circuit. This latter fact could just as easily suggest that the
   Ninth Circuit is environmentally extreme as that the Supreme Court is
   hostile to environmental protection or particularly "pro-business" in
   environmental cases.

   The Roberts Court's record in environmental cases is but one piece of
   the larger narrative that the Court has become significantly more
   conservative with the confirmations of Chief Justice Roberts and
   Justice Alito. I've addressed this claim at length before (most
   recently [4]here), so I won't dwell on it at length. I will note,
   however, that there is no evidence -- not even from this term -- that
   Roberts and Alito have made the Court particularly more conservative
   or pro-business on environmental issues.

   The NYT story quotes Temple law prof Amy Sinden saying that the cases
   this term "could all have come out very differently if we still had
   O�Connor on the court." This strikes me as absurd. Only one of the
   five cases, Summer v. Earth Island Institute, was decided 5-4. While
   it is plausible to argue that Justice O'Connor might have voted in
   favor to confer standing on the environmentalist plaintiffs in this
   case, it's hardly a sure thing. She dissented in Lujan v. Defenders of
   Wildlife, but she joined the majority opinion in the earlier case of
   Lujan v. National Wildlife Federation and wrote a restrictive standing
   opinion in Allen v. Wright. I also think that it's highly unlikely
   that her vote would have differed from Justice Alito's in the
   remaining environmental cases -- and even then it might not have
   changed the outcome.

   So what should we make of the Roberts Court's record in environmental
   cases? This past spring I contributed a [5]paper to the Santa Clara
   Law Review symposium on business and the Roberts Court focusing on
   environmental cases. In this paper, which was published before the end
   of the October 2008 term, I noted that if one looks at all of the
   environmental cases decided by the Roberts Court thus far, there is no
   reason to conclude that the Court is particularly "pro-business" in
   these cases -- at least not yet. My article stresses that this is a
   only a preliminary assessment, and that over time evidence in support
   of the "pro-business" or "anti-environment" charge may well emerge,
   but it has not yet.

   If one wants to categorize the Roberts Court's record on environmental
   cases thus far, it seems to me there is a stronger case that the
   Roberts Court's environmental decisions are more �pro-government� than
   �pro-business.� Since John Roberts became Chief Justice, the Court has
   decided 10 of its 18 environmental cases in a �pro-business� way. At
   the same time, the federal government�s position has prevailed in 10
   of the 15 cases in which it took a position, and government positions
   prevailed against private challenges in 11 of 16 cases. Further, one
   of the government�s biggest losses was also the biggest business loss
   � Massachusetts v. EPA - and that decision will also result in a
   substantial increase in government regulation.

   Eighteen cases is still a very small sample. But if we look at the
   substance of the individual cases, so as to provide a �qualitative�
   and not merely quantitative assessment, I think the case for calling
   the Court more �pro-government� than �pro-business� only becomes
   stronger. most of the business wins maintained the status quo or
   affected a very small change in the law. (This term's Superfund
   decision on "arranger" liability is the notable exception.) The same
   cannot be said for some of the environmentalist victories.
   Massachusetts v. EPA is a more substantial environmental victory than
   the five environmental decisions combined were a loss for
   environmentalists.

   One interesting fact is that the Roberts Court does appear to be more
   aggressive in accepting cert on environmental cases than one might
   expect, particularly given the smaller size of the docket. As
   Georgetown's Richard Lazarus has observed, the Court took several
   cases in which the Solicitor General's office argued against it (and,
   in some of those cases, the federal government had lost below). This
   could be part of the larger move toward taking more business and
   regulatory cases generally, or something else. I am not sure, but it
   will be worth watching to see if this trend continues.

   A few more qualifications are in order. First, labels like
   "anti-environment" or "pro-business" are overly simplistic
   descriptions and tell us little if anything about the legal merits of
   individual cases. Even a "pro-environment" court may rule against the
   environmentalist position if their legal case is weak. Second, given
   the small number of environmental cases heard by the Roberts Court,
   any assessment is preliminary and subject to revision as the Court
   hears and decides more cases.

   If my assessment that the Court is more "pro-government" than
   "pro-business" in its environmental cases, than the change in
   Presidential administration should have an effect. Specifically, if my
   analysis is correct, then we should see the Court begin to issue more
   �pro-environment� or �anti-business� decisions as the position of the
   various agencies and the Justice Department become less business
   friendly. This is what I would predict based on what we've seen thus
   far, but we'll have to see. Indeed, now that the Court has [6]taken a
   potentially significant takings case for next term, and could well
   take another, I would be happy to see my hypothesis proven wrong, but
   I won�t hold my breath.

References

   1. 
http://www.law.com/jsp/nlj/PubArticleNLJ.jsp?id=1202431807260&src=EMC-Email&et=editorial&bu=National%20Law%20Journal&pt=NLJ.com-%20Daily%20Headlines&cn=20090629NLJ&kw=High%20court%20losses%20stun%20environmentalists&slreturn=1
   2. 
http://pda-appellateblog.blogspot.com/2009_06_01_archive.html#8090494423486760659
   3. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/04/us/04scotus.html
   4. http://www.volokh.com/posts/1246424922.shtml
   5. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1351906
   6. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_06_14-2009_06_20.shtml#1245076497

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