International Paper Company operated a paper mill in Ticonderoga, New York, that discharged effluent into Lake Champlain pursuant to an NPDES permit administered by New York (under delegated federal authority). Vermont landowners, including plaintiff Ouellette, alleged that discharges from International Paper's New York point source polluted the Vermont side of Lake Champlain, causing noxious odors, slime, and other injuries to their riparian property. They filed a putative class action seeking damages and injunctive relief in a Vermont court, advancing claims under Vermont common law (including nuisance). International Paper argued that the Clean Water Act preempted the application of Vermont law to an out-of-state source and that any state-law claims must arise, if at all, under New York (the source state) law. The lower courts allowed the Vermont-law claims to proceed. On certiorari, the Supreme Court addressed the extent to which the CWA preempts state common-law claims in interstate water pollution cases.
Does the Clean Water Act preempt a downstream (affected) state from applying its own common law (e.g., nuisance) to an out-of-state point source, or may plaintiffs pursue only the source state's law for interstate water pollution claims?
The Clean Water Act's comprehensive permitting scheme preempts the application of an affected state's common law to an out-of-state point source. However, the Act does not preempt state common-law claims brought under the law of the source state. The Act's savings provisions preserve the source state's ability to impose and enforce more stringent requirements on its own dischargers, including through common-law remedies, but do not authorize extraterritorial application of another state's tort law that would conflict with or undermine the NPDES program.
The CWA preempts application of Vermont common law to International Paper's New York discharge. Plaintiffs may not proceed under Vermont law but may pursue claims under New York (the source state's) law. The judgment was reversed and remanded to allow plaintiffs to amend their complaint to assert source-state claims.
1) Statutory structure and uniformity: The CWA establishes a nationally uniform permitting regime for point-source discharges through NPDES permits issued by EPA or authorized states. Allowing every affected state to impose its own tort law on out-of-state dischargers would subject permit holders to inconsistent, potentially conflicting obligations, eroding the uniformity and predictability the Act seeks to achieve. Both injunctive and damages remedies under affected-state law could functionally impose additional effluent limitations beyond the permit, thereby disrupting the federal-state permitting balance. 2) Savings clauses limited to source-state regulation: Section 510 (33 U.S.C. § 1370) preserves states' authority to adopt and enforce more stringent limitations than federal law, but it is best read to allow a state to regulate its own sources—not to export its law into other states. Likewise, the citizen-suit savings clause (33 U.S.C. § 1365(e)) does not broadly preserve all state-law claims that would conflict with the Act's permitting scheme. Reading the savings clauses to authorize affected-state law would permit precisely the extraterritorial regulation Congress sought to avoid. 3) Compatibility of source-state claims: By contrast, applying the source state's law is consistent with the CWA's cooperative federalism: the source state's stricter substantive standards—whether statutory or common-law—can be integrated into permitting decisions, with affected states afforded opportunities for notice and comment and with federal oversight. This approach avoids multiple, conflicting regulatory regimes while preserving state capacity to exceed federal baselines for their own dischargers. 4) Prior precedent: Building on City of Milwaukee v. Illinois (Milwaukee II), which held that the CWA displaces federal common law of interstate water pollution, the Court clarified that state common law still has a role—but limited by the Act's structure. Permitting affected-state claims would reintroduce the very fragmentation and conflict Milwaukee II and the CWA's framework sought to eliminate.
Ouellette is the leading case on the CWA's preemptive effect over interstate state-law tort claims. It delineates a bright-line choice-of-law rule: only the source state's law may govern tort suits against out-of-state point sources. This preserves state common-law remedies without allowing downstream states to impose extraterritorial standards that would destabilize the NPDES program. For law students, the case is essential for understanding environmental federalism, the scope of statutory preemption, how savings clauses operate, and the strategic implications for forum selection and choice of law in pollution litigation.
International Paper v. Ouellette strikes a careful balance between preserving state-level remedies and maintaining the CWA's nationwide permitting uniformity. By channeling private tort suits to the source state's law, the Court prevented a maze of conflicting extraterritorial standards that could destabilize the NPDES program while still allowing states to exceed federal floors for their own dischargers. In practice, Ouellette is a choice-of-law and preemption roadmap for interstate pollution cases. It instructs litigants to frame claims under the source state's law, guides courts in harmonizing savings clauses with federal objectives, and illustrates the broader principles of cooperative federalism that animate modern environmental statutes.