A federal appeals court has reversed itself, throwing out a judge's landmark ruling that the Army Corps of Engineers was liable for billions of dollars in Hurricane Katrina flood damage that property owners blame on the corps' maintenance of a shipping channel.
Following the August 2005 hurricane, more than 400 property owners had filed lawsuits, many of which were directed at the Corps of Engineers. The plaintiffs had alleged that the Corps of Engineers delayed armoring the Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet shipping channel. This failure to respond appropriately, they argued, attributed to the considerable ensuing flood damage to their homes.
In an unexpected move, a three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans on Sept. 24 withdrew its earlier March ruling, which had been in the plaintiffs' favor. This latest ruling came after the federal government sought review of the panel's earlier decision by the full appeals court.
According to Reuters, Judge Jerry Smith, in writing for the court, said the Corps of Engineers was "immune from being held liable for property damage under the 'discretionary function exemption' to the Federal Tort Claims Act."
The Sept. 24 ruling effectively reverses a 2009 ruling rendered by U.S. District Judge Stanwood Duval Jr. in New Orleans. Duval had awarded hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages to each of five families. His decision opened the way for close to 100,000 other homes and businesses in the affected area to seek compensation, in turn making the government liable for tens of millions of dollars.
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