Save the Park and Build the School v. National Park Service ( 2020 )


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  • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 11 SAVE THE PARK AND BUILD THE Case No. 20cv1080-LAB-AHG 12 SCHOOL, ORDER: 13 Plaintiff, 1) GRANTING FEDERAL 14 v. DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS [Dkt. 49]; 15 NATIONAL PARK SERVICE; 2) GRANTING IN PART LISA 16 DAVID L. BERNHARDT, in his MANGAT’S MOTION TO official capacity as Secretary of the DISMISS [Dkt. 50]; AND 17 United States Department the Interior; DAVID VELA, in his official 3) DIRECTING SAVE THE PARK 18 capacity as Director of the National AND CARDIFF SCHOOL Park Service; LISA MANGAT, in her DISTRICT TO SHOW CAUSE 19 official capacity as Director of the California Department of Parks and 20 Recreation; and CARDIFF SCHOOL DISTRICT, 21 Defendants. 22 23 This case involves school renovations that encroach on George Berkich Park, 24 a park in the City of Encinitas owned by the District. The District can’t convert Park 25 land within a defined boundary (the “6(f)(3) boundary”) from public outdoor 26 recreational use unless the Secretary of the Interior (acting through the National Park 27 Service) finds a proper substitution of similar recreation properties. 54 U.S.C. 28 § 200305(f)(3). The District submitted an application to NPS for approval of a school 1 construction project in the Park. The California Department of Parks and Recreation 2 recommended that NPS grant that approval. NPS did so, and the District was 3 proceeding with construction when Plaintiff Save the Park and Build the School filed 4 this case. After the Court preliminarily enjoined the District from further construction 5 in the Park, NPS rescinded its approval of the project. Dkt. 44. 6 Defendants NPS, David L. Bernhardt as Secretary of the Interior, David Vela 7 as Director of NPS (collectively with Bernhardt and NPS, the “Federal Defendants”), 8 and Lisa Mangat as Director of the California Department of Parks and Recreation 9 (the “State Parks”) have each moved to dismiss the claims against them. Dkt. 49; 10 Dkt. 50. Five of those six claims are based on the the now-rescinded order’s alleged 11 inconsistency with federal law. The sixth, asserted ag ainst the State Parks and the 12 District, but not against the Federal Defendants, is a state law claim for violation of 13 California’s public trust doctrine. 14 As discussed below, each of the federal law claims against the Federal 15 Defendants and the State Parks is moot. The Federal Defendants’ Motion, Dkt. 49, is 16 GRANTED and the State Parks’ Motion, Dkt. 50, is GRANTED IN PART. 17 Dismissing those five claims leaves only two claims in the case: the claim for 18 injunctive relief against the District and the public trust doctrine claim against both 19 the District and the State Parks. Because the preliminary injunction appears ripe for 20 conversion into a permanent injunction, and because doing so would leave only a 21 state law claim, the Court ORDERS Save the Park and the remaining Defendants— 22 the District and the State Parks—to SHOW CAUSE as described at the end of this 23 Order. State Parks’ Motion is DENIED IN PART WITHOUT PREJUDICE as to 24 the public trust doctrine claim. 25 I. Dismissal of Federal Claims Arising from NPS’s Rescinded Approval 26 Save the Park’s First through Fourth Causes of Action allege that the State 27 NPS’s approval of the District’s conversion application, the State Parks’ 28 recommendation of that application, and the agencies’ associated failure to prevent 1 the District from converting parkland violated the Land and Water Conservation 2 Fund Act, the National Environmental Policy Act, and the National Historic 3 Preservation Act. Compl., Dkt. 1, ¶¶ 165-167, 178-184, 187-193. In connection with 4 these claims, Save the Park seeks an injunction requiring reversal of NPS’s approval 5 and an order declaring that those statutes required NPS to deny the application. 6 Compl. pp. 45-47.1 Save the Park’s Seventh Cause of Action similarly seeks a 7 declaration that the District’s conversion application doesn’t satisfy the LWCFA. Id. 8 NPS has rescinded its approval and has requested changes to the District’s 9 application, so there’s no live controversy as to either the approval or the application. 10 While courts may nevertheless address actions that are capable of repetition, yet 11 evading review, that isn’t the case here. Rubin v. City of Santa Monica, 308 F.3d 12 1008, 1013 (9th Cir. 2002) (court may exercise jurisdiction over otherwise moot case 13 based on acts “capable of repetition, yet evading review”). The mere possibility that 14 the District will submit a substantially similar application contrary to NPS’s 15 instruction and that NPS will approve such an application is too remote and 16 speculative to avoid mootness. See Dkt. 44; Dkt. 56 at 4-5 (NPS letter to State Parks 17 discussing revisions to conversion application). 18 Save the Park’s claims based on a nullified administrative action are moot, as is 19 its claim seeking a declaration that an outdated application wouldn’t comport with 20 the LWCFA. The Court doesn’t have jurisdiction to hear those claims. See Preiser v. 21 Newkirk, 422 U.S. 395, 401-02 (1975) (Article III doesn’t give courts power to issue 22 declaratory relief as to agency action that agency has since reversed). The Court 23 DISMISSES the First, Second, Third, Fourth, and Seventh Causes of Action in the 24 Complaint WITH PREJUDICE. 25 26 1 Save the Park doesn’t seek any relief against the State Parks in connection with 27 these claims. Id. 28 ] II. Save the Park’s Remaining Claims against the District and the State 2 Parks 3 With those five claims dismissed, only two remain: a claim that the District and 4 | the State Parks violated the public trust doctrine and a claim that the District can’t 5 | proceed with a conversion without proper NPS approval. 6 As to the latter, the Court directs Cardiff School District to SHOW CAUSE, no 7 | later than October 26, 2020, why the Court should not convert its existing 8 || preliminary injunction to a permanent injunction enjoining the District from 9 | converting land within the 6(f)(3) boundary without NPS approval. See 54 U.S.C. 10 | § 200305(f)(3). The District’s brief may not exceed fifteen pages. Save the Park may 11 || respond by filing a brief no longer than ten pages on or before November 2, 2020. 12 The Court does not intend to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state 13 | law claim once all federal claims have been resolved. See, e.g., Carlsbad Technology, 14 | Inc. v. HIF Bio, Inc., 556 U.S. 635, 639 (2009) (district court has discretion to 15 | exercise supplemental jurisdiction after dismissing all claims over which it has 16 | original jurisdiction). Save the Park is ordered to SHOW CAUSE why, if the Court 17 | issues a permanent injunction, it shouldn’t decline to exercise jurisdiction over the 18 | remaining state claim. Save the Park’s brief should be no longer than ten pages and 19 | must be filed by October 26, 2020. The State Parks and the District may respond in 20 | briefs no longer than five pages each by November 2, 2020. 21 99 | Dated: October 8, 2020 □□□ A ‘f Zu) Hon. Larry A. Burns 23 Chief United States District Judge 24 25 26 27 28

Document Info

Docket Number: 3:20-cv-01080

Filed Date: 10/8/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/20/2024