A small town in Tennessee rang in the new year by celebrating a legal victory after a private group rapidly withdrew its lawsuit rather than defend its claims in court.
In November 2025, the Alabama-based organization Tennessee Riverkeeper filed a short-lived lawsuit against the City of Luttrell, Tennessee, under the Clean Water Act’s “citizen suit” provision. Just two weeks after Luttrell filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, Tennessee Riverkeeper backed down and voluntarily dismissed its case.
Tennessee Riverkeeper’s lawsuit alleged that Luttrell’s wastewater facility had exceeded the limits of its discharge permit. The City already had plans to break ground on a new wastewater facility in 2026. Although both the U.S. EPA and the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation declined to participate in the suit, the out-of-state group was able to sue with the government’s authority under a provision of the Clean Water Act (CWA).
In 1972, Congress empowered private groups to sue on the public’s behalf through the CWA’s “citizen suit” provision. But this provision wrongly delegates the executive branch’s power to unelected and unaccountable groups. The provision violates the separation of powers and enables private actors to leverage the prosecutorial powers of the government against citizens, businesses, and towns—without having to answer to voters if they wrongly use the citizen suit provision to pursue settlement fees rather than the public good.
“The Framers of the Constitution intended to preserve liberty by limiting the authority to enforce laws to one branch of government. The Clean Water Act’s citizen suit provision infringes on Americans’ constitutional rights by redistributing this core executive power to anyone who wants to wield it,” said Sean Radomski, attorney at Pacific Legal Foundation and counsel for Luttrell.
Tennessee Riverkeeper has relied on the CWA’s citizen suit provision to file lawsuits throughout Tennessee and Alabama, subjecting over two dozen small towns and businesses across the states to costly lawsuits. Many choose to settle out of court rather than devote years—and significant sums of their residents’ or stakeholders’ money—to fighting back.
Luttrell, however, decided to buck that trend.
The City partnered with Pacific Legal Foundation to challenge the constitutionality of the CWA’s citizen suit provision, arguing that a private group like Tennessee Riverkeeper should not have been permitted to sue anyone with the government’s power and authority. In a motion to dismiss filed in early December, Luttrell argued that the lawsuit should be dismissed.
In a victory for Luttrell, just weeks after the City filed its challenge, Tennessee Riverkeeper withdrew its lawsuit.
“We are pleased to see a quick conclusion in this case,” Radomski said. “Americans deserve to live and work without fearing that unaccountable actors can leverage government power against them without checks or limits. We will continue to partner with defendants to challenge the citizen suit provision until this unconstitutional delegation of executive power is struck down.”