Philip Morris
Flue-Cured Tobacco Cooperative Stabilization Corporation, Plaintiffs, V. United States Environmental Protection Agency, Defendants. Memorandum in Support of Plaintiffs' Motion to Hold in Abeyance Defendants' Motions for Judgement on the Pleadings, to Dismiss Count IV (Due Process) or to Stay Consideration of Count IV Civil Action No. 6:93cv370
Fields
- Author
- Blount, J.D.
- Dorsett, J.K., J.R.
- Egerton, L.P.
- Furr, J.L.
- Vaughan, K.W.
- Wells, D.W.
- White, W.T.
- Dorsett, J.K., J.R.
- Area
- HAN,VICTOR/SEC'Y FILES
- Type
- PLEA, PLEADING
- Attachment
- 2046458002/2046458015
- Named Organization
- Epa, Environmental Protection Agency
- Flue Cured Tobacco Cooperative Stabiliza
- Mfg Assn
- Flue Cured Tobacco Cooperative Stabiliza
- Named Person
- Hanson, J.N.
- Mattice, A.L.
- Recipient (Organization)
- Usdc Middle District NC Winston Salem Di
- Request
- Stmn/R1-048
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Author (Organization)
- Universal Leaf Tobacco
- Williams Mullen
- Womble Carlyle
- Allman Spry
- Apo, Arnold & Porter
- Berry Floyd
- Beveridge Diamond
- Council for Burley Tobacco
- Flue Cured Tobacco Cooperative Stabiliza
- Gallins Vending
- Jones Day
- PM, Philip Morris
- RJR, R.J.Reynolds
- Shb, Shook,Hardy & Bacon
- Smith Anderson
- Williams Mullen
- Master ID
- 2046458005/8185
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- Characteristic
- ILLE, ILLEGIBLE
- Site
- N332
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- UCSF Legacy ID
- nva65e00
Document Images
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA
WINSTON-SALEM DIVISION
)
FLUE-CURED TOBACCO COOPERATIVE )
STABILIZATION CORPORATION, et al., )
)
Plaintiffs, )
)
V. ) Civil Action No. 6:93CV370
)
UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL )
PROTECTION AGENCY, et al., )
)
Defendants. )
)
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF
PLAINTIFFS' MOTION TO HOLD IN ABEYANCE
DEFENDANTS' MOTIONS FOR JUDGMENT ON THE PLEADINGS,
TO DISMISS COUNT IV (DUE PROCESS) OR
TO STAY CONSIDERATION OF COUNT IV
Three of the five motions defendants filed on September 30,
1994, challenge plaintiffs' standing, and seek to dismiss
plaintiffs' due process claims, or in the alternative, to stay
consideration of those claims.l/ Because these motions
contradict the Court's Opinion and Order of July 20, 1994,
plaintiffs ask that these motions be held in abeyance until
discovery is closed.
When this Court rejected defendants' motion to dismiss
Counts I, II, and III, it deferred ruling on plaintiffs' motion
to dismiss the Count IV due process claims until "after the
1/ Plaintiffs' opposition to the defendants' motion for partial
summary judgment limiting judicial review in this case to the
"administrative record" that EPA recently constructed, and
plaintiffs' opposition to the defendants' motion for a protective
order are also being filed today.

parties have developed the factual record" when "any further
dispositive motions are filed." See Order at 1; Opinion at 20.
The Court did instruct the parties to address standing issues,
but only "when such motions are filed" -- that is, after the
development of the factual record. Order at 2. Despite this
clear direction, defendants have filed a second round of
dispositive motions before any discovery has taken place. For
the reasons set forth below, these premature motions should be
held in abeyance until the discovery period contemplated by the
Court concludes.?/
Due Process
Defendants violate the July 20 Order by moving now to
dismiss plaintiffs' due process claims. The Court's Order is
unambiguous -- a ruling on the legal sufficiency of plaintiffs'
due process claims has been deferred until "after the parties
have developed the factual record." Opinion at 20.
There is no
reason why this renewed motion to dismiss Count IV must be
decided now rather than after discovery closes. Defendants
simply do not want to submit to discovery or to wait until it is
closed before taking another shot at Count IV. The Court has
2/ At this stage of this case, the parties should be engaging
in the normal process of working out specific discovery disputes
and completing discovery promptly, rather than debating broad
discovery principles in a vacuum filled only by information the
defendants chose to disclose. Plaintiffs have already taken a
significant step to advance the normal discovery process by
specifically addressing defendants' many inadequate responses to
our long-pending discovery requests and suggesting some possible
solutions. See Letter to Alice L. Mattice, Esq., from John N.
Hanson, October 28, 1994 (attached).
- 2 -

already decided to defer consideration of defendants' efforts to
dismiss Count IV until the facts in this case have been fully
developed. Because that has not happened yet, defendants' motion
to dismiss Count IV should be held in abeyance.
Standing
By inviting the government to address the issue of standing
when further dispositive motions are filed, the Court anticipated
that this litigation would follow the usual course, in which
dispositive motions might be filed after the close of discovery.
Defendants could have raised standing issues on July 20, 1993
when they asked this Court to dismiss plaintiffs' complaint, but
they chose not to do so. Defendants raise standing issues now
purportedly in response to the Court's direction in its July 20,
1994 Opinion and Order. But defendants' timing is wrong.
Although the Court asked that standing be addressed when
further dispositive motions might be filed (Order at 2), it is
apparent that the next dispositive stage of the litigation should
be "after the parties have developed the factual record."
Opinion at 19. If the Court had wanted standing addressed before
discovery is completed, it would have said so.3/ Moreover, had
3/ Should the Court want the standing issue briefed now,
plaintiffs request 15 days to provide a response to EPA's motion.
Plaintiffs easily satisfy the redressability prong of
Article III standing tests, as well as the prudential zone of
interest standard. Plaintiffs have alleged general and specific
facts in the Complaint demonstrating that a decision rescinding
the classification of ETS as a Group A carcinogen would redress
its injuries. On a motion to dismiss, general factual
allegations of injury resulting from the defendants' conduct
(continued...)
c~t
- 3 -

the Court wanted the "factual development" in this case to be
limited to a unilateral construction of a "record" by EPA, it
would have said so. Instead, by ordering the "parties" to
develop the factual record, the Court ordered discovery -- after
which defendants' standing motion and other dispositive motions
will be considered.
Accordingly, defendants' standing motion should also be held
in abeyance until discovery concludes.
CONCLUSION
For the aforementioned reasons, plaintiffs' Motion to Hold
in Abeyance should be granted.
3/(...continued)
suffice to demonstrate a redressable injury. See Lulan v.
National Wildlife Federation, 497 U.S. 871, 889 (1990). The
court "presum[es] that general allegations embrace the specific
facts that are necessary to support the claim." Id.
As to the zone of interests, this Court already has found
that EPA's action is reviewable and has a regulatory effect on
plaintiffs, thus bringing this case within the ambit of the vast
body of precedent that recognizes standing in analogous cases.
See, e.a., Chemical Manufacturers Ass'n v. EPA, 28 F.3d 1259
(D.C. Cir. 1994) (EPA pollutant designation vacated on petition
of manufacturers' association); International Fabricare Institute
v. EPA, 972 F.2d 384, 389-90 (D.C. Cir. 1992) (uer curiam)
(parties who use chemicals directly or indirectly regulated are
within zone of interest); Calumet Industries, Inc. v. Brock, 807
F.2d 225, 229 n.3 (D.C. Cir. 1986) (manufacturers of regulated
chemical have standing to contest regulation of that chemical).
Plaintiffs' interest is not remote or academic. The Radon Act
protects plaintiffs and tobacco product consumers and, in Section
404, expressly prohibits EPA from taking action beyond its
statutory mandate. EPA's unauthorized decision to classify ETS
as a Group A carcinogen breaches that prohibition.
- 4 -

Dated: November 1, 1994
Of Counsel:
BEVERIDGE & DIAMOND, P.C.
Suite 700
1350 I Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20005-3311
ARNOLD & PORTER
1200 New Hampshire Avenue,
N.W.
Washington, DC 20036-6885
SHOOK, HARDY & BACON
One Kansas City Place
1200 Main Street
Kansas City, MO 64105-2118
Attorneys for Philip Morris
Incorporated
JONES, DAY, REAVIS & POGUE
North Point
901 Lakeside Avenue
Cleveland, OH 44114
Attorneys for R. J. Reynolds
Tobacco Company
BERRY & FLOYD, P.S.C.
407 N. Main Street
Post Office Box 245
New Castle, KY 40050
Attorneys for The Council for
Burley Tobacco, Inc.
Respectfully submitted,
; J-
L-~
W
ll
D
W
s .
e
ewey
.
N.C. State Bar No.
Keith W. Vaughan
4645
N.C. State Bar No. 6895
Jeffrey L. Furr
N.C. State Bar No. 14107
Lawrence Pierce Egerton
N.C. State Bar No. 16617
WOMBLE CARLYLE SANDRIDGE
& RICE
1600 Southern National
Financial Center
200 W. Second Street
Winston-Salem, NC 27102
(910) 721-3600
Attorneys for Plaintiffs
Universal Leaf Tobacco
Company, Incorporated,
Philip Morris Incorporated,
and
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company
James K. Dorsett, Jr.
N.C. State Bar No. 1212
James D. Blount
N.C. State Bar No. 378
SMITH, ANDERSON, BLOUNT,
DORSETT, MITCHELL & JERNIGAN
2500 First Union Capital
Center
Post Office Box 2611
Raleigh, NC 27602-2611
Attorneys for Plaintiffs
Flue-Cured Tobacco Cooperative
Stabilization Corporation
and
The Council for Burley
Tobacco, Inc.

WILLIAMS, MULLEN, CHRISTIAN
& DOBBINS
1021 E. Cary Street
Richmond, VA 23219
Attorneys for Universal Leaf
Tobacco Company,
Incorporated
W. Thomas White
N.C. State Bar No. 005216
ALLMAN SPRY HUMPHREYS LEGGETT
& HOWINGTON, P.A.
Suite 700
380 Knoliwood Street
Winston-Salem, NC 27103
(910) 722-2300
Attorneys for Gallins Vending
Company
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