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Juliana v. United States 

Date: 17 January 2020 

Court: U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit 

Citation(s): Juliana v. United States, 947 F.3d 1159 (9th Cir. 2020)

Short summary  

A group of young people sued the United States government for failing to prevent climate change, seeking an order requiring the government to develop a plan to phase out domestic fossil fuel emissions. The plaintiffs claimed violations of their substantive due process, equal protection, the Ninth Amendment, and the public trust doctrine. The court found that the plaintiffs established injury-in-fact and causation for Article III standing but that their claim failed for lack of redressability. 

Summary by: Nicole Gasmen and Luke Hancox

Link to Original Judgement

Click here to open the case in PDF format


Weight of decision  

This decision comes from the Ninth Circuit of the United States Court of Appeals and is therefore binding on all courts in the Circuit and persuasive in other federal courts.   

Key facts 

The plaintiffs were twenty-one young citizens, an environmental organization, and a “representative of future generations.” [1165] They sued the President (later dismissed from the action), the United States, and federal agencies. The complaint accused the government of continuing to “permit, authorize, and subsidize” [1165] fossil fuel use, despite awareness of its risks, leading to various climate-change-related injuries. The plaintiffs’ claims varied from psychological harm and impairment of recreational interests to exacerbated medical conditions and property damage. 

The complaint asserted violations of the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights: 

“(1) the plaintiffs’ substantive rights under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment; (2) the plaintiffs’ rights under the Fifth Amendment to equal protection of the law; (3) the plaintiffs’ rights under the Ninth Amendment; and (4) the public trust doctrine.” [1165] 

The plaintiffs sought declaratory relief and an injunction ordering the government to implement a plan to “phase out fossil fuel emissions and draw down excess atmospheric [carbon dioxide].” [1165] 

The court noted that the District Court record and this appeal recognized climate change is occurring at a rapid pace. The court stated that rising carbon emissions would wreak havoc on the Earth’s climate if left unchecked, and that the federal government long understood these risks and affirmatively contributed to their worsening. 

The government largely did not contest the factual basis for the plaintiffs’ claims, only that they lacked standing to pursue them. 

Previous instances  

The District Court denied the government’s motion to dismiss. That court stated that the plaintiffs had standing to pursue their claims that the government violated their constitutional rights, including a Fifth Amendment right to a “climate system capable of sustaining human life.” [1165] The District Court also found a separate viable “danger-creation due process claim” [1165] based on the government’s lack of regulation on third-party emissions and a public trust doctrine claim. 

At summary judgment, the District Court dismissed the President as a defendant and dismissed the plaintiffs’ Equal Protection claim in part. That court also dismissed the plaintiffs’ Ninth Amendment claims. The government then sought this interlocutory appeal to resolve the standing issue and other grounds for dismissal. 

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Simunek, Hastings, Tuzilova and Prochazka v. The Czech Republic, Communication No. 516/1992, U.N. Doc. CCPR/C/54/D/516/1992 (1995)

Date of judgement: 31 July 1995

Court: United Nations Human Rights Committee

Citation(s): Communication No. 516/1992, U.N. Doc. CCPR/C/54/D/516/1992 (1995)

Short summary 

This decision of the United Nations Human Rights Committee Violation of Article 26 ICCPR; OHCHR decision on Czech law requiring citizenship as a necessary condition for restitution of confiscated property.

Summary by: Yusuf Lahham

Link to original judgement 

Click here to open the case in PDF format


Weight of decision 

This case concerns the Czech Republic, a signatory of the Optional Protocol of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, thus the ruling is legally binding in the sphere of International Law.

Key facts

The applicants, Alina Simunek (a Polish citizen) and Jaroslav Simunek (a Czech citizen), were forced to leave former Czechoslovakia in 1987 due to the actions of the security forces of the Communist regime. 

In 1990, following the fall of the Communist government, both applicants returned to the country in order to reacquire their property through the regulations that had been put in place for returning Czech citizens. However, the applicants were informed that between 1989 and 1990, their property had been auctioned and sold by the District National Committee (DNC) of Jablonece. Whilst some items had been destroyed, the real estate was transferred to Mr Simunek’s employer, the Sklarny factory in Jablonece. 

Previous instances 

An arbitration hearing was arranged between the applicants and representatives of the factory after a complaint was lodged against the DNC. However, the latter’s representatives argued that the transfer of real estate had not been conducted illegally. The applicants then requested an investigation by the district public prosecutor on the grounds that the transfer of property had taken place without court proceedings or a court order. An investigation was launched, and a report was produced in November 1990. It asserted that there had been no violation of the relevant regulations and that the applicants’ claims should be dismissed. 

In February 1991, the regulations were amended by Act 87/1991, which set out the conditions for returning Czech citizens to be entitled to restitution. Section 3(1) of the Act stated that those with State-seized property were only entitled to restitution if they were both citizens of the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic, and permanent residents in its territory. Other sections of the Act set out that where a property is illegally possessed and the claimant requests restitution, the burden of proof would be with the applicant to show that there was a valid claim to the property, and to prove how the property was turned over to the State. 

The Act stipulated that a request for restitution had to be submitted within 6 months of the entry into force of the Act, and failure to do so meant that the claim could be submitted to a tribunal within one year of the date of entry into force of the Act.

The applicants had not submitted a claim for restitution to the local courts as required by the Act, because due to Alina Simunek’s Polish citizenship, they did not fulfil the citizenship and residency requirements set out in Section 3(1).

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