Background
Los Angeles County sued Chiquita Canyon, LLC (owned by Waste Connections) over severe odors emanating from the Chiquita Canyon landfill that have plagued nearby communities in Castaic and Val Verde. The County sought a preliminary injunction requiring Chiquita to establish an approximately $20 million relocation and remediation fund for affected residents.
The district court issued an order stating it “granted as modified” the County’s injunction motion, finding the preliminary injunction factors were satisfied. However, the court determined the proposed remedy was insufficiently tailored and ordered the parties to meet and confer on a narrower injunctive remedy. Chiquita immediately appealed, arguing the order was an appealable injunction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and National Waste & Recycling Association filed amicus briefs supporting Chiquita.
The Court’s Holding
The Ninth Circuit dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. The court held that the district court’s order was not an “injunction” within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) because it did not provide any of the substantive relief the County sought, was not enforceable by contempt (beyond the meet-and-confer obligation), and did not comply with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65’s specificity requirements.
The court emphasized that an order must actually grant or deny injunctive relief to be immediately appealable — an order that merely finds the legal prerequisites satisfied and directs further proceedings on the remedy’s form does not qualify. The court noted Chiquita faces no forfeiture risk: when the district court eventually issues an actual injunction with specific terms, that order will be independently appealable.
Key Takeaways
- An order that finds preliminary injunction factors satisfied but directs further proceedings on the form of relief is not an appealable “injunction” under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1).
- To qualify as an appealable injunction, an order must grant or deny the substantive relief sought, be enforceable by contempt, and satisfy Rule 65’s specificity requirements.
- The Chiquita Canyon landfill litigation continues in the district court, where the parties must negotiate the scope of an actual injunctive remedy.
- The district court’s finding that the preliminary injunction factors were met suggests the County is well positioned for relief once the remedy is properly formulated.
Why It Matters
While the Ninth Circuit’s ruling is procedural, the underlying dispute is one of the most significant environmental cases in Southern California. The Chiquita Canyon landfill has been the subject of extensive community complaints and regulatory action over odors described as overwhelming and debilitating. The district court’s finding that the preliminary injunction factors are satisfied is a strong signal that some form of injunctive relief is coming — the only question is what form it will take.
For environmental litigators and local governments pursuing injunctive remedies, the decision also provides a practical reminder: courts should issue specific, enforceable injunctive orders rather than preliminary findings followed by meet-and-confer directives, or the resulting appeal will be dismissed and the case will be delayed further.