Hawaiian Electric Industries on Monday lost its bid to remove the cases to federal court.

At least 90 lawsuits related to the Maui wildfires against Hawaiian Electric Industries, Spectrum, Kamehameha Schools and other defendants will be sent back to Maui state court, where they were originally filed, a federal judge ruled Monday.

In remanding the cases, U.S. District Judge Jill Otake rejected an argument by HECO’s lawyer that the town of Lahaina, where most of the 101 deaths occurred — in structures, vehicles, outdoors and in the ocean — was a single “discrete location鈥 under a federal law concerning mass disasters.

Because Lahaina and the disparate places where people died were not a “discrete location,” Otake wrote, the federal law did not apply and the federal court did not have jurisdiction over the cases.聽

A brush fire razed Lahaina in West Maui, Aug. 8. (Nathan Eagle/Civil Beat/2023)
In sending cases back to state court on Maui, U.S. District Court Judge Jill Otake rejected Hawaiian Electric Industries’ argument that the 101 deaths caused by the fire occurred at one “discrete location.” (Nathan Eagle/Civil Beat/2023)

In summing up her reasoning, Otake鈥檚 30-page order stated simply, 鈥渋t is undisputed that the deaths here occurred across the entirety of Lahaina, and the Court concludes that Lahaina is not a 鈥榙iscrete location.鈥欌

Plaintiffs鈥 lawyer Jesse Creed called the ruling “a huge victory” and said, “Now these cases will be decided by a Maui jury.”

鈥淭hat鈥檚 important because the jury鈥檚 the conscience of the community,鈥 he added.

Creed previously accused HECO of using the removal of the cases from Maui to federal court as a procedural stalling tactic. With the cases now back before Maui Judge Peter Cahill, Creed said, the plaintiffs can resume the work of seeking justice for victims. 

鈥淲e just missed about four months of work we could have done to get justice for these victims, and we fully intend to make up for that lost time,鈥 he said.

HECO鈥檚 attorney, , declined an interview request.

The definition of 鈥渄iscrete location鈥 was central to the question of which court would hear the cases. Injury, property damage and wrongful death cases normally fall under the jurisdiction of state courts, with some exceptions. But the federal , passed by Congress in 2002, allows federal courts to hear cases arising out of a 鈥渟ingle accident, where at least 75 natural persons have died in the accident at a discrete location鈥 as long as some other criteria are met.

The challenge for Otake was that Congress didn鈥檛 define 鈥渄iscrete location.鈥 So it was up to the judge to fill in the blanks, relying on the plain language of the statute, tools of statutory interpretation and cases from other places. A deadly fire that destroyed a nightclub in Rhode Island in 2003, for instance, was found to have been a 鈥渄iscrete location.鈥 In another case, a court found the New Orleans metro area was not a discrete location.

Jill Otake, shown here when she was nominated to fill a vacancy in the U.S. District Court of Hawaii in 2018, remanded 90 Maui wildfire cases back to Maui court on Monday (Nick Grube/Civil Beat/2018)

Otake found the New Orleans case analogous. 鈥淛ust like the entirety of New Orleans was not a 鈥榙iscrete location,鈥 neither is the entirety of Lahaina,鈥 she wrote.

鈥淭here were approximately 42 people recovered from inside structures, 39 from outdoor locations, 15 from inside vehicles, and one in the water,鈥 the judge wrote. 鈥淎n additional three deaths were later reported to have occurred in hospital on Oahu due to fire related injuries.鈥 

Otake included in her order a map showing that the locations of the fatalities were spread across Lahaina鈥檚 seven square miles. 

U.S. District Court Judge Jill Otake a map of Lahaina with red dots showing the location of fatalities in her oder sending cases back to state court. (U.S. District Court file)

鈥淭he map makes clear the Lahaina Fire impacted miles of land, destroying various structures including homes, hotels, and businesses, crossing major thoroughfares in its path, and causing deaths miles apart up and down the coast of West Maui, and miles apart mauka to makai,鈥 Otake wrote. 

The judge took particular issue with an attempt by Brian to twist the common usage of 鈥渁t a discrete location鈥 to serve his argument. 

鈥淲hen asked what his discrete location was during the hearing, counsel for HECO initially said 鈥楬onolulu,鈥欌 Otake wrote. 鈥淥f course, it is hard to imagine the entire city of Honolulu as a discrete location. But, when pushed to explain whether he was 鈥榠n鈥 or 鈥榓t鈥 Honolulu, his answer that he was 鈥榓t Honolulu鈥 was certainly curious at best.鈥

While not assessing the allegations in the lawsuits, Otake鈥檚 order provides a summary of the sweeping litigation that at this point includes 90 separate lawsuits. 

Defendants include Hawaiian Electric Industries, Hawaiian Electric Co., Hawaii Electric Light Co., Maui Electric Co., Charter Communications, Oceanic Time Warner, Cincinnati Bell, Hawaiian Telcom, the trustees of the Estate of Bernice Pauahi Bishop, Hope Builders, Wainee Land & Homes, the State of Hawaii, Maui County and Herman Andaya.

The plaintiffs 鈥渇ault HECO and the Telecom Defendants for failing to prevent the Lahaina Fire and its spread by failing to design, construct, inspect, and maintain their infrastructure in a manner necessary to avoid known fire risks, which includes HECO鈥檚 refusal to de-energize their facilities on August 8, 2023,鈥 despite warnings that the town was at risk, according to the lawsuits.

The plaintiffs also blame landowners like Kamehameha Schools for failing to properly manage vegetation on their lands, which they say allowed the fire to spread more rapidly.

The suits say the state and Maui County failed to mitigate known wildfire risks on Maui and implement evacuation procedures, 鈥渁ll of which resulted in chaos, destruction, and death.鈥

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