Case: 22-30069 Document: 00516494846 Page: 1 Date Filed: 10/04/2022
United States Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit
United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
October 4, 2022
No. 22-30069 Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
Juanea L. Butler, Individually and as representative of all others similarly
situated,
Plaintiff—Appellant,
versus
E I DuPont de Nemours & Company; State of Louisiana,
Through the Department of Health, Incorrectly named as
Louisiana State Through the Department of Health and Hospitals; Dupont
Performance Elastomers, L.L.C., formerly known as DuPont
Dow Elastomers, L.L.C.,
Defendants—Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Louisiana
USDC No. 2:18-CV-6685
Before Clement, Duncan, and Wilson, Circuit Judges.
Per Curiam:*
*
Pursuant to 5th Circuit Rule 47.5, the court has determined that this
opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited
circumstances set forth in 5th Circuit Rule 47.5.4.
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No. 22-30069
After another dismissal, Juanea Butler’s environmental tort case now
comes before us for the third time. We find that she has failed to state a claim,
and so AFFIRM.
I
We have set out the facts of this matter twice before. See Butler v.
Denka Performance Elastomer LLC (Butler I), 806 F. App’x 271, 272–73 (5th
Cir. 2020) (per curiam); Butler v. Denka Performance Elastomer LLC (Butler
II), 16 F.4th 427, 432–35 (5th Cir. 2021). We do so again here only briefly.
E. I. DuPont de Nemours & Company owned and operated the
Pontchartrain Works Facility (PWF) from 1969 until 2015, when it sold the
plant (but retained the underlying land) to Denka Performance Elastomer
LLC. 1 Butler claims that for decades, the PWF emitted unsafe levels of
chloroprene into the air, thereby injuring nearby residents. She sued several
parties in Louisiana state court, seeking class certification.
The defendants removed to federal court (which we blessed, see
Butler II, 16 F.4th at 435–37), and throughout the litigation, more and more
defendants were dismissed. After our last remand, only two remained:
DuPont and the Louisiana Department of Health. They did not last long.
Shortly after the case returned to the district court, they were both dismissed
in two separate orders, finding that Butler failed to state a claim against
either. Butler appealed both orders after the second left her with no
remaining claims. 2
1
Denka used to be a defendant in this action. After Butler’s previous stop in our
court, it is no longer. See Butler II, 16 F.4th at 443–46.
2
DuPont mentions in passing that Butler appealed before the district court entered
a final judgment that complied with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 58, implying that the
appeal was premature. But a district court’s noncompliance with Rule 58 does not bar
Butler’s appeal. See Ueckert v. Guerra, 38 F.4th 446, 451–53 (5th Cir. 2022); see also Fed.
2
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II
We review de novo a grant of a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6).
Meador v. Apple, Inc., 911 F.3d 260, 264 (5th Cir. 2018). A complaint survives
a motion to dismiss when it “pleads factual content that allows the court to
draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct
alleged.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009).
A
First, DuPont. Against DuPont, Butler asserted claims of negligence,
custodial liability, and battery. The district court found that Butler’s claims
were substantively identical to her prior claims against Denka—dismissal of
which we already approved—and so dismissed them on the same grounds.
Specifically, the court found that Butler failed to identify any specific
standard of care to which DuPont had a duty to conform (for either
negligence or strict custodial liability) and failed to offer anything other than
conclusory allegations of battery.
Butler, unsurprisingly, disagrees. First, Butler argues that Louisiana
Civil Code Articles 2315 and 2316 require DuPont to “conform to the
standard conduct associated with a reasonable and prudent owner and
operator of a chemical plant,” such that they impose a duty sufficient to
sustain a claim of negligence. Second, Butler argues that Louisiana Civil
Code Article 2317.1 compels DuPont to “keep [its] property in a reasonably
safe condition[,] . . . discover any unreasonably dangerous condition on the
premises, and either correct the condition or warn potential victims of its
existence” such that “custodial” liability lies. And third, Butler argues that
R. App. P. 4(a)(2) (“A notice of appeal filed after the court announces a decision or
order—but before the entry of the judgment or order—is treated as filed on the date of and
after the entry.”).
3
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several paragraphs (which she numbers but does not otherwise discuss) from
her petitions show that DuPont knew of and intended harm to her such that a
claim for battery survives.
We’ll begin by noting that we need not now address Butler’s
arguments that Articles 2315 or 2316 can sustain her negligence claim or that
Article 2317.1 can sustain her custodial liability claim. Indeed, we already
addressed those exact arguments in this very case. See Butler II, 16 F.4th at
443–46 (holding that none of the three code articles, nor “any other source
of law,” sustains a “sufficient legal duty to support a negligence or custodial
liability claim” on Butler’s facts). Butler does not attempt to grapple with
that holding. She mentions it only once in passing, 3 and instead points us
again to many of the very same cases (for the very same propositions) that we
already found wanting in our previous review. Butler alleges nothing
additional against DuPont that renders our previous holding inapplicable.
Butler II resolves those arguments here against DuPont just as we resolved
them before against Denka. 4
3
In doing so, she argues that the district court was wrong to adopt against DuPont
the same reasoning it previously adopted against Denka. Butler argues that some of that
reasoning was overturned on appeal, so adopting it again was error. Butler misunderstands
what the district court did. The rest of the court’s order makes clear it only reapplied the
reasoning we affirmed on appeal.
4
Butler argues (albeit unclearly) that Louisiana Civil Code Article 2322 sufficiently
modified other duties under Louisiana law such that DuPont should be liable for failure to
exercise reasonable care in its operation of the PWF, or that DuPont should be separately
liable for violating Article 2322 itself. We are unconvinced on either front. Article 2322
establishes a claim for premises liability. See Fruge ex rel. Fruge v. Parker Drilling Co., 337
F.3d 558, 565 (5th Cir. 2003). To recover under Article 2322, Butler needed to allege facts
that showed the PWF was “ruin[ed],” which, “for purposes of Article 2322 means the fall
or collapse of a substantial component of the building.” Mott v. ODECO, 577 F.2d 273, 276
(5th Cir. 1978). Butler alleges no such thing, so Article 2322 does not save her claims.
4
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Butler’s battery claim fares no better. To sustain a claim for battery,
Butler needs to plausibly allege that DuPont caused “intentional offensive
contact” with her. Lawrence v. Sec. Pros., 743 So. 2d 247, 250 (La. Ct. App.
1999). DuPont intended offensive contact if it either “consciously desire[d]
the physical result of [its] act, or [knew] that the result [was] substantially
certain to follow from [its] conduct.” Id.
The district court found that Butler asserted only conclusory
allegations of battery, and on appeal, Butler does not meaningfully challenge
that finding. Instead, in her brief, she spends two pages defining battery, and
then asserts the conclusion that she “raise[d] a multitude of factual
allegations sufficient to establish” that DuPont knew its actions would
inevitably cause offensive contact. She points us—by paragraph number
alone—to twenty-eight different paragraphs across three separate petitions
(her original petition and two amended petitions) that she believes satisfies
her pleading burden. We decline the invitation to divine the record on her
behalf. Butler failed to adequately brief her argument, and thus we deem that
argument waived. See JTB Tools & Oilfield Servs., LLC v. United States, 831
F.3d 597, 601 (5th Cir. 2016); cf. United States v. Dunkel, 927 F.2d 955, 956
(7th Cir. 1991) (per curiam) (“Judges are not like pigs, hunting for truffles
buried in briefs.”). 5
All told, then, the district court did not err in finding that Butler failed
to state a claim against DuPont.
5
Butler tries to go into more detail in her reply brief, but nevertheless fails to make
any argument beyond that her factual allegations are, apparently, self-evidently sufficient.
Like the district court, we are unconvinced.
5
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B
Now for LDH. Against LDH, Butler asserted a claim of negligence,
claiming that despite notice of the PWF’s unsafe emissions, LDH
nevertheless failed to investigate the PWF or notify the public. The district
court found that Butler failed to identify any legally cognizable duty that LDH
owed her, and thus that her negligence claim failed.
It’s hornbook law that “[a] threshold issue in any negligence action is
whether the defendant owed the plaintiff a duty.” Audler v. CBC Innovis Inc.,
519 F.3d 239, 249 (5th Cir. 2008) (citation omitted). “In deciding whether to
impose a duty in a particular case, Louisiana courts examine whether the
plaintiff has any law (statutory, jurisprudential, or arising from general
principles of fault) to support the claim that the defendant owed him a duty.”
Id. (quotations and citation omitted).
Butler argues that such a duty derives from several sources. First, she
points to a bevy of Louisiana code provisions—La. Rev. Stat. §§ 36:251,
40:4, 40:5, & 40:1290.2 6—which she claims “assign general duties owed by
LDH to the general public . . . relating to public health and safety[.]” In
Butler’s reading, investigation of and warning about the PWF fall under
LDH’s general duties “[t]o take such action as is necessary to accomplish
the subsidence and suppression of diseases of all kinds” and “make all
sanitary inspections.” La. Rev. Stat. § 40:5(A)(2), (A)(7). LDH
disagrees, and instead argues that the statutes Butler cites only establish the
department and set general parameters for its goals and activities. Such
6
Section 40:1290.2 (which Butler cites but does not otherwise explain) is clearly
inapplicable here. It directs LDH to “lead a collaborative effort to evaluate the issues and
conditions of drinking water treatment and distribution in communities throughout
Louisiana” by performing various tasks. La. Rev. Stat. § 40:1290.2. Nothing in this
case involves evaluating the quality of drinking water.
6
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general language cannot sustain a specific duty, says LDH. LDH argues that
Butler fails to point to any specific standard of care, and thus that Butler’s
claim of negligence cannot lie.
We agree with LDH. Just as Butler needed to do for its claims against
DuPont, she must identify a “specific standard of care” that LDH had to
maintain. Butler II, 16 F.4th at 444–45 (quotations and citation omitted). The
statutes Butler points to do not set any specific standard. Instead, they merely
establish LDH’s general role in the state, the general powers it holds, and the
general contours of its actions. Though LDH may be empowered to
“develop[] and provid[e] . . . health and medical services for the prevention
of disease for the citizens of Louisiana,” La. Rev. Stat. § 36:251(B),
and to “accomplish the subsidence and suppression of diseases of all kinds,”
La. Rev. Stat. § 40:5(A)(2), we fail to see how such general grants of
authority yield a specific duty here. The statutes, if read as Butler suggests,
would make LDH the guarantor of Louisiana’s health—and sustain a cause
of action against LDH for any ill person in the state. Butler provides no
authority—and we have found none—to indicate the Louisiana legislature
intended to saddle LDH with that responsibility. We will not do so here.
Butler makes two other last-ditch arguments, neither of which we
accept. First, she claims that Louisiana Civil Code Article 2315 imposes on
LDH the “general duty to conform to the standard conduct associated with
a reasonable and prudent governmental health agency whose function is to
provide health services for the prevention of disease.” But as we made clear
before, Butler’s “retreat to generalized grievances” does not identify a
specific standard of care that LDH needed to maintain. See Butler II, 16 F.4th
at 444.
Second, she argues that LDH, through its Health Education and
Communication Program, undertook a duty to respond to hazardous
7
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substance exposure issues, evaluate those exposures, and disseminate
information about them to the community. Because LDH undertook such a
duty to warn, she says, it was liable for negligent performance of that duty.
In support, she cites only to Indian Towing Co. v. United States, 350
U.S. 61 (1955). In that case, the U.S. Coast Guard negligently operated a
lighthouse, causing a barge to run aground. Id. at 62, 68. The Court held that
the Federal Torts Claim Act did not foreclose governmental liability for
activities that private people do not usually perform (like operating
lighthouses). Id. at 68–69.
Butler does not explain why we should generalize Indian Towing’s
holding to the situation we face here (which involves neither the FTCA nor
the federal government). But even if we were inclined to do so, in her petition
Butler does not mention, allege details about, or otherwise explain LDH’s
Health Education and Communication Program. She provides only a single
example of LDH’s warning anyone about chloroprene’s effects. Such an
allegation does not suffice to show that LDH undertook a specific duty to
investigate and warn of chloroprene as it regards the PWF. Butler’s argument
is unavailing.
* * *
Thus, the district court correctly granted DuPont’s and LDH’s
motions.
AFFIRMED.
8