Chicago suit vs oil cos. may yet survive SCOTUS ruling, judge hints

Spread the love

Even as the Supreme Court considers a Colorado case that oil companies believe will decide if city and state governments can sue oil companies over emissions allegedly tied to climate change, a Cook County judge has signaled he may allow the city of Chicago to continue at least a portion of its lawsuit against oil companies, no matter what the Supreme Court decides in the Colorado case.

Cook County Circuit Judge Allen P. Walker has granted much of a request from energy producers Chevron, Shell, B.P., ExxonMobil and others to put much of Chicago’s “climate disinformation” lawsuit against the companies on hold.

That ruling had come about a month after attorneys for the energy companies had filed a motion requesting a stay in the proceedings.

The oil companies based their motion to stay entirely on the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to take up a case out of Boulder, Colorado, centered entirely on one overarching question:

Whether federal law prohibits cities, like Chicago, Boulder and a growing number of others, from using accusations of alleged “deception” over climate change to use municipal ordinances and state laws to extract potentially huge paydays from the companies.

The city and the oil companies have faced off in court since 2024, when Chicago joined with a group of trial lawyers to file a lawsuit seeking to make Chevron, BP and other petroleum producers and distributors pay for allegedly misleading consumers and the public for decades about the alleged climate altering affects of using oil and gas products in transportation and many other economic sectors.

The lawsuit particularly takes aim at what it calls “disinformation” from the oil companies, which the city claims has misled consumers into continuing to use the products for decades after the energy companies allegedly knew of the supposed harms caused by the use of their fuels.

The city’s lawsuit largely follows a path blazed by other local government lawsuits against the same energy companies, as well as by earlier litigation against tobacco companies, pharmaceutical companies and others who have supplied many of the products common to American life.

The city is joined in the action by trial lawyers from the firms of DiCello Levitt LLP, of Chicago, and Sher Edling LLP, of San Francisco.

The energy companies have succeeded in snuffing out a number of such municipal and state-level “climate disinformation” lawsuits, notably in Pennsylvania, New York, Maryland and New Jersey.

In those jurisdictions, judges have determined the cases to be improper attempts to use lawsuits to regulate federally controlled emissions standards.

However, in other locales, the cities and other local governments have been allowed to move forward with their cases.

Notably, the state Supreme Courts of Colorado and Hawaii have allowed the actions to move ahead.

Famously, in May 2025, the Colorado state high court ruled a lawsuit led by the city of Boulder could continue because state law-based “nuisance” and consumer protection-based “disinformation” claims are not preempted by the federal Clean Air Act. They found the lawsuits aren’t seeking to restrict or regulate emissions, but rather seek only to make the companies pay enormous sums of money for producing and selling the products that cause the emissions and the allegedly related climate change problems.

The energy companies, however, have essentially called that finding a legal hair-splitting distinction without a difference. They argue Democrat-dominated cities and state governments are attempting to use such lawsuits and the accompanying threat of large and potentially crippling court-ordered payments or settlements to sidestep federal regulation under the Clean Air Act and force undemocratic changes in the behavior of energy companies and consumers, achieving national energy policy and emissions goals desired by left-wing activists and politicians.

With courts divided on that question, the U.S. Supreme Court in February agreed to take up the Boulder case. When the high court delivers a ruling in the case, justices could deliver a final answer on whether Boulder and other cities can advance such lawsuits.

In the Chicago case, the companies argued a ruling in their favor from the Supreme Court should effectively end Chicago’s case, “because it is undisputed that all of Plaintiff’s claims are premised on, and seek damages for, the cumulative impact of ‘global warming’ as a result of historical emissions’ throughout the country and world.”

In response to that motion, however, the city and its trial lawyer allies disputed those “undisputed” claims.

In their motion, the city and its lawyers argued proceedings in the case should not be paused because the outcome of the Boulder case may not favor oil companies as much as they claim.

But the city also argued the Boulder case will not apply at all to two of the key counts in their complaint, namely, counts under the city’s ordinance forbidding alleged “deception” by the oil companies.

Specifically, the city asserted those claims aren’t based on any assertions of climate harms from emissions, but rather center on assertions that the city can make the energy producers pay potentially massive civil penalties and other damages for “deception inside City limits without regard to whether the deception increased emissions or worsened climate harms.”

The city said those counts are based on its claims the companies allegedly misled the public about the climate impact of the fuels they sold, and don’t seek any payment for the actual alleged harms themselves.

While the oil companies assert such arguments amount to “legal hairsplitting,” Judge Walker sided with the city on those points.

While halting most discovery and other proceedings related to most of the city’s claims, the judge said he would allow the city to continue with the portions of its lawsuit the city argued centers on “pure consumer protection claims that do not seek relief for emissions-related injuries.”

The judge appeared to agree with the city that whatever the Supreme Court decides in the Boulder case it would likely not affect those portions of Chicago’s case, essentially finding they won’t be preempted or precluded by federal law.

Judge Walker did not explain his ruling in a written decision, but specifically exempted the claims related those counts, known as Counts IX and X in the city’s complaint, from the stay order.

In response to a question from The Cook County Record about the decision, a spokesperson for the City of Chicago’s Department of Law said about Judge Walker’s ruling: “Discovery will continue under the two statutory consumer protection claims under the Municipal Code of Chicago. These claims are beyond the reach of the questions currently under review at the Supreme Court.”

The oil and gas companies are represented in the action by attorney Patricia Brown Holmes and others with the firms of Riley Safer Holmes & Cancila, of Chicago; Gibson Dunn & Crutcher, of Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., New York and San Francisco; Susman Godfrey LLP, of Houston; and Stern Kilcullen & Rufolo, of Fordham Park, New Jersey.

The city is represented by attorney Chelsey B. Metcalf, and others with the city’s Department of Law; attorney Daniel R. Flynn, and others with the DiCello Levitt firm; and Matthew K. Edling and Victor M. Sher, and others with the Sher Edling firm.

The Sher Edling firm has also served as counsel on dozens of virtually identical climate-related lawsuits against the oil and gas industry throughout the country. Published reports indicate Sher Edling has received millions of dollars in funding from a dark money group backed by billionaires, known as the Collective Action Fund for Accountability, Resilience and Adaptation.” That funding has drawn scrutiny from members of Congress, who have noted it pays for the firm’s lawsuits on behalf of local governments aimed at bankrupting the nation’s oil and gas companies.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

NFIB says economy growing, but jobs lagging

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The National Federation of Independent Business released it's job report Thursday afternoon noting that the federal jobs report expected Friday will likely be delayed by...
'I don't have anything to negotiate:' Johnson holds firm on GOP shutdown strategy

‘I don’t have anything to negotiate:’ Johnson holds firm on GOP shutdown strategy

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square As the government shutdown enters its second day, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., defended Republican leaders’ refusal to concede to Democrats’ health care policy demands...
Analyst points to inefficiencies as Pritzker touts record spending on infrastructure

Analyst points to inefficiencies as Pritzker touts record spending on infrastructure

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – After Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced the biggest infrastructure spending plan in state history, a transportation policy director...
Federal judge blocks cuts in anti-terror funding to NYC transit

Federal judge blocks cuts in anti-terror funding to NYC transit

By Chris WadeThe Center Square A federal judge has blocked the Trump administration from withholding nearly $34 million to protect New York City's transportation system from terrorist attacks over the...
Businesses seek more time to address 'diverging interests' in tariff challenge

Businesses seek more time to address ‘diverging interests’ in tariff challenge

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square A group of small businesses that brought a legal challenge against President Donald Trump's global tariffs asked the Supreme Court for more time to argue...
Israel-Hamas peace deal in limbo as clock ticks away on deadline

Israel-Hamas peace deal in limbo as clock ticks away on deadline

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square The clock is ticking for Hamas leaders to respond to the 20-point peace agreement proposed by President Donald Trump and approved by Israeli Prime Minister...
Trimming the fat: Trump boasts of shuttering government agencies amid shutdown

Trimming the fat: Trump boasts of shuttering government agencies amid shutdown

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square President Donald Trump has condemned the shutdown and laid the blame squarely at the feet of the “Radical Left Democrats”— in the meantime, he appears...
Trump freezes $18 billion in NYC infrastructure over DEI policies

Trump freezes $18 billion in NYC infrastructure over DEI policies

By Chris WadeThe Center Square The Trump administration is freezing more than $18 billion in federal funding for infrastructure projects in New York City, citing concerns about diversity, equity and...
Illinois quick hits: DHS announces more than 800 illegals arrested; utility prices drop slightly

Illinois quick hits: DHS announces more than 800 illegals arrested; utility prices drop slightly

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Midway Blitz announces 800 illegals arrested According to the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Border...
WATCH: Officials shift shutdown blame; agreed-bill process upended; GOP offers solutions

WATCH: Officials shift shutdown blame; agreed-bill process upended; GOP offers solutions

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square Editor Greg Bishop shares reaction to...
Critics: Democrat Senators supporting “Democracy’ amendment would curtail free speech

Critics: Democrat Senators supporting “Democracy’ amendment would curtail free speech

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Every Democrat in the U.S. Senate has backed a constitutional amendment designed to overturn the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election...
LA skyscrapers for homeless could cost federal taxpayers over $1 billion

LA skyscrapers for homeless could cost federal taxpayers over $1 billion

By Kenneth SchruppThe Center Square Federal taxpayers might be on the hook for more than $1 billion over the lifetime of three downtown Los Angeles skyscrapers designed to house the...

Fall 2025 Enrollment Reaches Highest Level in Many Years

Published on September 16, 2025 Lake Land College enrollment for the Fall 2025 semester has reached its highest level in many years, according to the College’s official 10th Day Enrollment Report...
Clark County Logo

Clark County Residents Confront Board Over Solar Project Concerns

Article Summary: Residents raised sharp objections to ongoing solar energy projects during the Clark County Board meeting, demanding more detailed decommissioning plans and protections for local roads. The board was...
Lawyers prepare to sue Trump 'soon' over H-1B changes

Lawyers prepare to sue Trump ‘soon’ over H-1B changes

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Employment immigration lawyers are preparing to sue the Trump administration “soon” over changes to the H-1B visa program. On Sept. 19, President Trump signed a...