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LEED Critic Files Class Action Lawsuit Against USGBC
Written by Paul Nutcher
Tuesday, 19 October 2010 13:45
A public critic of LEED has filed a class action law suit against the USGBC and its founders personally on behalf of "consumers, taxpayers, building design and construction professionals," according to several published reports.
Henry Gifford, a mechanical systems designer whose criticisms of the green building rating system have been published in the New York Times, alleges that USGBC's actions have essentially been fraudulent, false advertising, and go against anti-trust laws, and potentially violate the RICO laws, in the Oct. 8, 2010, filing with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.
His theory is that the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) has falsely claimed that its rating system makes buildings save energy, and that building owners have spent more money to have their buildings certified, that professionals have gotten worthless professional credentials and people in general have been duped into thinking LEED has meaning.
The plaintiffs in this case are Gifford, his company, and a resident of the state of Arizona, presumably representing the taxpayer, as nothing is stated in the complaint about his occupation or other way he might have been harmed personally.
According to the Environmental Building News (EBN), Gifford's critiques rely heavily on a 2008 study from New Buildings Institute (NBI) and the USGBC to support his allegations. The study is, to date, the most comprehensive look at actual energy performance of buildings certified under LEED for New Construction and Major Renovations (LEED-NC), according to EBN. The NBI and USGBC study found that LEED buildings are on average 25% to 30% more efficient than the national average. However, soon after Gifford issued his own report, in which he concluded that LEED buildings are on average 29% less efficient. While the National Research Council of Canada supported NBI's findings, the methods in the study have been questioned by EBN.
It remains to be seen whether or not this suit will survive class certification. In a class action suit, you must consider (among other things) whether the plaintiffs are enough alike so that their claims can be adjudicated together, whether the questions of fact and law are sufficiently similar, and whether the lead plaintiffs adequately represent members of the class.
Here, the plaintiffs are purporting to file suit on behalf of a whole range of plaintiffs with all different harms -- harms to building and design professionals who sought educational certifications, building owners who paid additional money to have their buildings certified and other unspecified "consumers," and taxpayers.
First of all, according to Shari Shapiro writing for Greener World Media, as a general proposition, taxpayers do not have standing to sue, and: "There is a commonality problem and a causation problem for the class -- did the USGBC's false statements cause the same type of harm to the same type of plaintiff. Indeed, did the false statements cause any harm at all to these plaintiffs."
It matters because the allegations in the suit matter. Is the USGBC engaging in intentional, fraudulent actions? Or was it a good organization seeking to benefit the world by promoting more ecologically friendly building practices? Or a little from column A and a little from column B.
A good lawsuit would elucidate this -- through the discovery process, emails might come to light showing that the USGBC did or did not intentionally defraud its constituent groups. But if the class is not certified, it will be Gifford, suing on his own behalf. Was Gifford harmed by USGBC's actions? Probably not, Shapiro added.
She also added, "To the best of my research, Gifford is not a LEED AP, and indeed, from his website and publications, he has outspokenly denounced the USGBC and LEED. Gifford does not appear to own any LEED-certified property. In short -- the USGBC's actions have not harmed him. His career, if anything, has been enhanced by the USGBC's position."
Gifford is a self-proclaimed energy efficiency guru, his website does not provide any case studies on the buildings he has done, and a quick google search reveals Gifford is involved in a number of Passive House projects (passivhaus is a competing system for energy efficient buildings). If Gifford is the last plaintiff left standing, it will be a much harder lawsuit to bring, let alone win, Shapiro concluded.
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You had to know this was coming. I even predicted a Lanham Act and Consumer Fraud Act claim would be part of a good green litigation.
Recently, Henry Gifford, public critic of LEED (you may have read his op-eds in the New York Times, filed a class action law suit against the USGBC and its founders personally on behalf of "consumers, taxpayers, building design and construction professionals."
The allegations are essentially fraud and false advertising, an anti-trust claim and a RICO claim thrown in for good measure. His theory is that the USGBC has falsely claimed that its rating system makes buildings save energy, and that building owners have spent more money to have their buildings certified, that professionals have gotten worthless professional credentials and people in general have been duped into thinking LEED has meaning. The complaint can be downloaded here.
There will be a lot written on this suit -- blog posts, client alerts, articles will dissect the wrongness or the rightness of the claims. Real estate and construction lawyers, including me, lit up at the sound of the stamp of the clerk in the Southern District of New York where the case was filed.
My initial take (hey -- I have to get in my fair share of the follow-on publication) is that the case may have merit, but it has a bad plaintiff. Rosa Parks was not the only person to object to segregated buses by refusing to give up their seat. She was chosen by the NAACP because she made a good plaintiff.
The plaintiffs in this case are Gifford, his company, and a resident of the state of Arizona, presumably representing the taxpayer, as nothing is stated in the complaint about his occupation or other way he might have been harmed personally.
I don't think that, as alleged, this suit will survive class certification. In a class action suit, you must consider (among other things) whether the plaintiffs are enough alike so that their claims can be adjudicated together, whether the questions of fact and law are sufficiently similar, and whether the lead plaintiffs adequately represent members of the class.
Here, the plaintiffs are purporting to file suit on behalf of a whole range of plaintiffs with all different harms -- harms to building and design professionals who sought educational certifications, building owners who paid additional money to have their buildings certified and other unspecified "consumers," and taxpayers.
Let's put aside the fact that, as a general proposition, taxpayers do not have standing to sue. There is a commonality problem and a causation problem for the class -- did the USGBC's false statements cause the same type of harm to the same type of plaintiff. Indeed, did the false statements cause any harm at all to these plaintiffs.
Why go through this academic class certification exercise, except to prove to Professor Burbank, the professor of my Advance Civil Procedure Class on Class Actions at the University of Pennsylvania that, despite the fact that I rarely got up for his 8 a.m. class, I did, in fact, learn something?
It matters because the allegations in the suit matter. Is the USGBC engaging in intentional, fraudulent actions? Or was it a good organization seeking to benefit the world by promoting more ecologically friendly building practices? Or a little from column A and a little from Column B.
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A good lawsuit would elucidate this -- through the discovery process, emails might come to light showing that the USGBC did or did not intentionally defraud its constituent groups. But if the class is not certified, it will be Gifford, suing on his own behalf. Was Gifford harmed by USGBC's actions? Probably not.
To the best of my research, Gifford is not a LEED AP, and indeed, from his website and publications, he has outspokenly denounced the USGBC and LEED. Gifford does not appear to own any LEED-certified property. In short -- the USGBC's actions have not harmed him. His career, if anything, has been enhanced by the USGBC's position.
Gifford is a self-proclaimed energy efficiency guru, his website does not provide any case studies on the buildings he has done, and a quick google search reveals Gifford is involved in a number of Passive House projects (passivhaus is a competing system for energy efficient buildings). If Gifford is the last plaintiff left standing, it will be a much harder lawsuit to bring, let alone win.
It does beg the question, though, even if this lawsuit fails, are there other plaintiffs waiting in the wings? For my next post -- assuming the class is certified, do the claims have any merit?
Shari Shapiro, J.D., LEED AP, is an associate with Obermayer Rebmann Maxwell & Hippel LLP in Philadelphia. Shari heads the company's green building initiative. She also writes about green building and the law on her blog a www.greenbuildinglawblog.com, where this post originally appeared.
Given that this was foreseeable, the value in pursuing it may actually be immunization against other plaintiffs. I hope the class is certified, and I look forward to seeing it play out.
From EBN: “Shapiro, assuming that Gifford has benefited from the green building wave, even questions whether Gifford has even been harmed, as he would have to be to take part in the lawsuit. However, Gifford told EBN that there’s no question about that. “Nobody hires me to fix their buildings,” he said. Though not an engineer, Gifford is respected in energy efficiency circles for his technical knowledge.”
My thoughts: He is not a licensed engineer – maybe that is why people don’t hire him to fix their buildings. Or maybe it is because he only works on residential buildings, boilers in particular, in New York City.
His claims are based on false pretenses – LEED certification does not guarantee building performance. The energy portion of the certification is based on an energy model which compares the design building against a minimally compliant ASHRAE 90.1 Appendix G building. Energy modeling, which Henry hates, is a comparative tool during the design phase to compare building options based on the drawings, specifications, control sequences, and a fixed set of assumptions about building use. If these assumptions change, especially the operating schedules, and the ultimately do, the model can not stand as a true estimate of the building performance. In the end, it is the building tenants and operators who determine how the building performs.
All that being said, Henry does have one point. There are buildings which consume more energy than the models predicted. And we need to find out why. And the new version of LEED requires actual performance data for several years after construction to ensure the building was built and is operating as designed.
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