28 December, 2018

Appeals Court OKs Pre-Trial Appeal of Kids Climate Case, Siding With Government

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has granted a petition by the Trump administration for a rare pre-trial appeal in the landmark constitutional climate lawsuit, Juliana v. United States. The appeals court agreed to the interlocutory appeal, which leaves the future progress of the case unclear.
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has thrown a
wrench into Juliana v. United States, granting
 a rarely used pre-trial appeal to the government. 
Generally, interlocutory appeals consider certain aspects of a case while allowing other issues to proceed. The young plaintiffs in the case, 21 young people from around the country, have asked District Court Judge Ann Aiken to clarify how the case will move forward while the Ninth Circuit considers its appeal. They argue that they should be allowed to continue the discovery process and other pre-trial proceedings.

The Ninth Circuit’s decision came as somewhat of a surprise because it had denied repeated attempts by the government to short-circuit the case before trial. A three-judge panel voted 2-1 to grant this request, while denying other motions, including the government’s fourth writ of mandamus request. The writ of mandamus is even rarer than an interlocutory appeal because it requires the higher court to decide the lower court clearly abused its judicial power.

But granting the interlocutory appeal still throws the case into uncertainty.


Read the Climate Liability News story by Karen Savage - “Appeals Court OKs Pre-Trial Appeal of Kids Climate Case, Siding With Government.”

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