                                                                    [DO NOT PUBLISH]

                      IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                                   FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                                    ________________________             FILED
                                                                U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
                                       Nos. 10-15513 ; 11-11137   ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                                        Non-Argument Calendar     SEPTEMBER 15, 2011
                                      ________________________         JOHN LEY
                                                                        CLERK
                            D.C. Docket No. 8:09-cv-01070-EAK-TBM

ALFRED J. DAVIS,
CINDY DAVIS,

llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll                           Plaintiffs - Appellants,
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
                                                versus

ADMINISTRATOR OF THE UNITED STATES
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
ACTING REGIONAL ADMINISTRATOR OF THE UNITED STATES
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY REGION IV,
UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,

llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll                          Defendants - Appellees,

CITY OF ST. PETERSBURG, FLORIDA, et al.,

lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll                                     Defendants.
                                      ________________________

                          Appeals from the United States District Court
                               for the Middle District of Florida
                                 ________________________

                                           (September 15, 2011)
Before TJOFLAT, WILSON and BLACK, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM:

       This case was brought on June 9, 2009, when Appellants filed a complaint

against the Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”), its Administrator and

Regional Administrator, the City of St. Petersburg (“City”), and the Southwest

Florida Water Management District (“SWFWMD”). Before us in this appeal is

Count IX of an amended complaint against the City and David L. Moore

(“Moore”), in his capacity as Director of the SWFWMD; the EPA and its

Administrators have been dismissed by stipulation.1

       The gravamen of Count IX is that the City’s “NPDES MS42 discharges into

the Clam Bayou estuary are . . . violating the CWA [Clean Water Act] by

continuing to cause and contribute to the ongoing violations of the water quality

standards of D.O, Nutrients, Mercury, and Acute Toxicity (stormwater sediment

       1
         Appellants’ amended complaint substituted Moore in his official capacity for defendant
SWFWMD. Counts X and XI are state law claims against the City and Moore based on
continuing trespass and nuisance. After dismissing Appellant’s federal claim, Count IX, the
court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Counts X and XI.
       2
          NPDES is an acronym for National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System. MS4
standands for Municipal Separate Storm Sewer Systems. “Polluted stormwater runoff is
commonly transported through Municipal Separate Storm Sewer Systems (MS4s), from which it
is often discharged untreated into local waterbodies. To prevent harmful pollutants from being
washed or dumped into an MS4, operators [e.g., municipalities] must obtain a NPDES permit
and develop a stormwater management program.” U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES),
http://cfpub.epa.gov/npdes/stormwater/munic.cfm.

                                               2
contamination)” and that Moore is the . . . government official with the

responsibility to have SWFWMD’s stormwater discharges to Clam Bayou as a

co-permittee of the City’s MS4 permit comply with the limitations of the NPDES

MS4 permit for the stormwater discharges to Clam Bayou. The SWFWMD’s MS4

discharges into the Clam Bayou estuary are . . . violating the CWA by causing and

contributing to the ongoing violations of the water quality standards of D.O,

Nutrients, Mercury, and Acute Toxicity (stormwater sediment contamination).

Amend. Comp. at 65-66.

       The district court granted the City’s and Moore’s respective motions to

dismiss Count IX pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).

Appellants appeal those rulings and the district court’s denial of their motions to

alter and amend judgment. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 59(e). We affirm.

       The district court granted the City’s motion to dismiss because Appellants

“failed to show the City’s discharge of storm water exceeded the amount

authorized by its [NPDES] permit; therefore, [Appellants] failed to meet the

standing requirement of the Clean Water Act.” Order, July 19, 2010 at 7.3 In its

order denying Appellants’ Rule 59(e) motion, the court adhered to this holding


       3
         Appellants failed to show that the discharge exceeded the amount authorized because
they only alleged that the “City discharges 98% of the permitted discharges into Clam Bayou.”
Order, July 19, 2010 at 5.

                                               3
and added this, as an additional basis for granting the City’s motion to dismiss:

“This Court finds no merit in the [Appellant’s] ‘water quality standard’ argument

because [Appellants] fail to demonstrate any convincing facts or law to reverse the

Court’s apprehension of the effluent limitations of the [M]S4 permit. Therefore,

the Court did not err in granting the City’s Motion to Dismiss as the [Appellant’s]

lack of standing.” Order, November 18, 2010. We find no error in the district

court’s July 19 order, or an abuse of discretion in its November 18 order.

       The district court granted Moore’s motion to dismiss on the ground that the

relief Appellants sought was retrospective and therefore barred by the Eleventh

Amendment and that the Ex Parte Young doctrine did not apply. Order, July 19,

2010. In ruling on Appellants’ Rule 59(e) motion, the court recognized that the

doctrine applied to Appellants’ claim for prospective relief but denied the motion

because Appellants “do not have a claim under the Clean Water Act.” Order,

February 22, 2011 at 11. That is, Appellants “fail[ed] to allege that . . . Moore and

the City have actually violated the permit conditions of the NPDES MS4 permit . .

. to explicitly state what permit conditions [the City and Moore] are exactly

violating.”4 We agree.


       4
          In his brief in Appeal No. 11-11137, Moore represented that he, meaning SWFWMD,
is not a co-permitee with the City. He said this:


                                            4
       AFFIRM.




         In a futile attempt to support a claim against Mr. Moore for “Violation of
       NPDES MS4 Permit Limitation” (Count IX of the amended complaint), the
       Davises assert in their initial brief that Mr. Moore is “a co-permittee of the
       [City’s] MS4 permit,” citing 40 C.F.R. § 122.26(1)(b) for this assertion.
       However, 40 C.F.R. § 122.26(1)(b) defines a “co-permittee” as “a permittee to a
       NPDES permit that is only responsible for permit conditions relating to the
       discharge for which it is the operator.” (emphasis supplied). Mr. Moore is clearly
       not a permittee to the City’s NPDES MS4 permit (see Dist. App. 1 (MS4 Permit
       issued solely to the City)), and he is not a co-permittee as defined by secion
       122.26(1)(b).

The district court, in denying Appellants’ Rule 59(e) motion, apparently assumed for sake of
argument that Moore, i.e., SWFWMD, was a co-permittee with the City.

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