Wagner v. Scheirer

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Wagner v. Scheirer

Trial Court Opinion

             UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Joseph Wagner,                         File No. 23-cv-1162 (ECT/LIB)      

     Plaintiff,                                                      

v.                                       OPINION AND ORDER                

Lisa Scheirer, Randall Hukriede, Scott                                    
Schroeder, and Rachel Studanski,                                          

     Defendants.                                                     
________________________________________________________________________  
Matthew C. Berger, Gislason & Hunter LLP, New Ulm, MN, for Plaintiff Joseph Wagner. 

Christina  M.  Brown,  Office  of  the  Minnesota  Attorney  General,  St.  Paul,  MN,  for 
Defendants Lisa Scheirer, Randall Hukriede, Scott Schroeder, and Rachel Studanski. 

Plaintiff Joseph Wagner is a Minnesota livestock farmer with operations in Otter 
Tail and Douglas Counties.  He owns a cow/calf operation and a separate feedlot.  In this 
case, Mr. Wagner claims that Defendants—four employees of the Minnesota Pollution 
Control Agency (“MPCA”)—violated his due-process and free-speech rights under the 
United States and Minnesota Constitutions and tortiously interfered with his prospective 
economic advantage.  Among other abusive activities, Mr. Wagner claims that Defendants 
withheld issuance of a permit that would have enabled Mr. Wagner to expand his feedlot 
operation and sought to impose on Mr. Wagner (or perhaps his business organization) the 
largest animal feedlot fine in state history.  Mr. Wagner seeks damages from Defendants 
in their individual capacities.                                           
Defendants seek dismissal of Mr. Wagner’s operative Amended Complaint under 
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), and the motion will be granted.  The short story 
is that Mr. Wagner’s federal constitutional claims are not plausibly alleged, and they will 

be dismissed with prejudice.  Mr. Wagner’s state-law claims will be dismissed without 
prejudice, leaving Mr. Wagner free to pursue those claims in Minnesota state court.   
                           I1                                        
Mr. Wagner owns a cow/calf operation and a separate feedlot.  Am. Compl. [ECF 
No. 20] ¶¶ 19–21.  A “cow/calf operation” is a beef farming operation in which a herd of 

cows is maintained and bred on a regular basis, and calves are sold or transferred to another 
location for finishing.  Id. ¶¶ 16–17.  The animals in a cow/calf operation generally are 
raised on pastures.  Id. ¶ 18.  During the relevant period, Mr. Wagner operated his cow/calf 
operation on several pastures he owned or leased in Douglas and Otter Tail Counties.  Id. 
¶ 19.  Mr. Wagner’s feedlot is located in Douglas County; during the relevant period, it 

consisted of “a series of open lots, a runoff settling area, a vegetated infiltration area for 
filtering and treating runoff, two feed storage areas, and two commodity buildings.”  Id. 
¶ 20.  Mr. Wagner’s feedlot had a maximum capacity of 679 animal units.  Id.2   


1    In accordance with the standards governing a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the facts are 
drawn from Mr. Wagner’s Amended Complaint, materials embraced by it, and applicable 
legal authorities.  Gorog v. Best Buy Co., Inc., 
760 F.3d 787, 792
 (8th Cir. 2014) (citation 
omitted).                                                                 
2    An “animal unit” is a unit of measurement “used to compare differences in the 
production of animal manure.”  
Minn. R. 7020
.0300, subp. 5.  For example, one mature 
dairy cow under 1,000 pounds is equal to 1.0 animal unit, but a mature dairy cow over 
1,000 pounds equals 1.4 animal units, and a calf equals 0.2 units.  
Minn. R. 7020
.0300, 
subp. 5(A).                                                               
Minnesota law distinguishes between cow/calf operations and feedlots.  Rules 
promulgated by the MPCA supply the controlling definitions.  Under these rules: 
     “Animal feedlot” means a lot or building or combination of lots 
     and  buildings  intended  for  the  confined  feeding,  breeding, 
     raising, or holding of animals and specifically designed as a   
     confinement area in which manure may accumulate, or where       
     the concentration of animals is such that a vegetative cover    
     cannot be maintained within the enclosure. . . . Pastures shall 
     not be considered animal feedlots under these parts.            

Minn. R. 7020
.0300, subp. 3 (emphasis added).  “Pastures,” by contrast, are: 
     areas, including winter feeding areas as part of a grazing area, 
     where grass or other growing plants are used for grazing and    
     where the concentration of animals allows a vegetative cover    
     to  be  maintained  during  the  growing  season,  .  .  .  or  .  .  . 
     agricultural land: (1) where livestock are allowed to forage    
     during the winter; (2) that is used for cropping purposes in the 
     growing season; and (3) where the concentration of animals is   
     such that a vegetative cover, whether of grass, growing plants, 
     or crops, is maintained during the growing season, except in    
     the immediate vicinity of temporary supplemental feeding or     
     watering devices.                                               

Minn. R. 7020
.0300, subp. 18.  Thus, for example, one difference between a “feedlot” and 
a “pasture” appears to be whether the concentration of animals prevents maintenance of a 
vegetative cover (in the case of an “animal feedlot”) or allows it (in the case of a “pasture”).   
Defendants are MPCA employees who regulate feedlots.  Am. Compl. ¶¶ 3–12.  The 
MPCA possesses authority generally to promote waste disposal and improve air quality.  
Minn. Stat. §§ 116.02
, 116.07.  Under this general authority, the MPCA is “authorized to 
‘adopt rules governing the issuance and denial of permits for livestock feedlots, poultry 
lots or other animal lots.’”  Am. Compl. ¶ 22 (quoting 
Minn. Stat. § 116.07
, subdiv. 7(h)).  
The MPCA also has enforcement power, and may pursue remedies such as civil penalties, 
injunctions,  and  criminal  prosecutions.    
Minn. Stat. § 115.071
.    Defendant  Randall 
Hukriede worked as program manager of the MPCA’s feedlot program and supervised 
Defendant Lisa Scheirer.  Am. Compl. ¶ 6.  Ms. Scheirer, in turn, was supervisor of the 

West Feedlot Unit.  
Id. ¶ 3
.  Defendant Scott Schroeder was an Environmental Specialist 
working under Ms. Scheirer’s direction.  
Id. ¶ 9
.  Defendant Rachel Studanski was a 
compliance coordinator with the MPCA’s feedlot program.  
Id. ¶ 12
.        
Mr. Wagner received and settled MPCA “Alleged Violation Letters” in 2014 and 
2015.3  The 2014 letter concerned Mr. Wagner’s alleged failure to obtain a permit for his 

cow/calf operation in Douglas County.  
Id. ¶ 24
.  Mr. Wagner disputed this alleged 
violation; he maintained that the unpermitted lands were not feedlots, but pastures not 
subject to the MPCA’s feedlot permitting requirements.  
Id. ¶ 25
.  Mr. Wagner nonetheless 
paid a $12,000 penalty to resolve the alleged violation because it made better economic 
sense; the cost of pursuing a legal defense and remedies would have exceeded the cost of 

the penalty.  
Id. ¶ 26
.  The 2015 Alleged Violation Letter concerned Mr. Wagner’s failure 
to obtain a permit for his cow/calf operation in Otter Tail County.  
Id. ¶ 28
.  Defendants 
“participated in the decision to impose a $20,000 penalty against Mr. Wagner” arising from 
this alleged violation.  
Id. ¶ 29
.  Mr. Wagner maintained that the land in Otter Tail County 
contained pastures, not feedlots, and denied that he was required to obtain a permit.  
Id. ¶ 30
.  “In October 2016, Mr. Wagner and the MPCA entered into a Settlement Agreement 
in which the MPCA agreed to abate $12,444.50 of the $20,000 penalty it had previously 

3    It is unclear whether disputes between Mr. Wagner and the MPCA predate the 2014 
Alleged Violation Letter.  This is the first dispute referenced in the Amended Complaint.   
imposed[,] and Mr. Wagner agreed to pay the remaining $7,555.50 of such penalty.”  
Id. ¶ 32
.                                                                     
Mr. Wagner applied for an NPDES feedlot permit in 2015 and received the permit 

in 2016.  In December 2015, Mr. Wagner applied for a National Pollutant Discharge 
Elimination System (or “NPDES”) permit to modify and expand his existing feedlot in 
Douglas County.  
Id. ¶ 33
.4  By constructing new lots, barns, storage areas, and more, Mr. 
Wagner’s proposed expansion would increase his feedlot’s capacity roughly tenfold, from 
679 animal units to 6,800 animal units.  
Id. ¶¶ 20, 33
.  Mr. Schroeder sent a draft permit to 

Mr. Wagner on July 8, 2016.  
Id. ¶ 35
.  The draft “ignored the separate nature of Mr. 
Wagner’s  cow/calf  operation  and  his  animal  feedlot”  and,  if  approved,  would  have 
“improperly expanded the scope of the MPCA’s regulatory powers beyond the agency’s 
legal authority by regulating Mr. Wagner’s pastures.”  
Id. ¶ 36
.  Mr. Wagner objected to 
the draft permit up front, but it was too late; the MPCA published a notice of intent to issue 

the NPDES permit as drafted and held a public comment period from July 18 to August 
17, 2016.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 38–39.  During the public comment period, Mr. Wagner wrote to Mr. 
Schroeder, emphasizing the separateness of the cow/calf (pastures) and feedlot operations 
and describing his objections to the draft permit along with proposed amendments.  
Id. ¶ 40
.  Mr. Schroeder responded that the MPCA would incorporate Mr. Wagner’s comments 


4    “NPDES permits regulate the type and quantity of pollutants that can be released 
into state and federal waters, as well as include conditions to ensure compliance with state 
water quality standards.”  Defs.’ Mem. in Supp. [ECF No. 22] at 3 n.5 (citing 
33 U.S.C. § 1342
(a)(1) and 
40 C.F.R. § 122.44
(d)).  Issuance of an NPDES permit involves a public 
notice and comment period.  
Minn. Stat. § 116.07
, subdiv. 7c.             
as amendments to the final permit.  
Id. ¶ 41
.  The MPCA issued the final permit on October 
6, 2016.  
Id. ¶ 42
.  The permit “expressly acknowledged that Mr. Wagner’s cow/calf 
operation is ‘separate’ from his feedlot and is ‘managed through a “Cow/Calf Management 

Plan” submitted by [Mr. Wagner] to the MPCA on January 2, 2016, and approved by the 
MPCA on February 5, 2016.’”  
Id.
 (alteration in original).5               
Mr. Wagner requested an NPDES permit modification.  After receiving the NPDES 
permit, Mr. Wagner decided to make changes to some of the permitted buildings and land.  
Id. ¶ 43
.  In Mr. Wagner’s view, these changes were minor, but the MPCA disagreed; it 

considered the changes to be a “major modification” and published another notice of intent 
and public comment period, which ran from April 3 to May 3, 2017.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 43–44.  No 
public comments were received.  
Id. ¶ 44
.  Mr. Wagner alleges that the MPCA’s normal 
practice when no comments are received is to issue a permit within 40 days of the comment 
period ending.  
Id. ¶ 56
.                                                 

On May 3, 2017—the last day of the public comment period—the MPCA conducted 
an inspection of Mr. Wagner’s cow/calf operation.  
Id. ¶ 45
.  Mr. Wagner alleges the 
inspection was “a pretext to manufacture alleged violations and use the pending application 
to coerce [him] into paying a penalty, refraining from exercising his legal right to challenge 
the alleged violations and penalty, and accepting the MPCA’s authority to regulate his 


5    The February 2016 “Cow/Calf Management Plan” does not seem essential to Mr. 
Wagner’s claims in this case or material to Defendants’ Rule 12(b)(6) motion.  The plan’s 
purpose was to ensure that Mr. Wagner managed his cow/calf operation consistent with the 
“pasture” definition of 
Minn. R. 7020
.0300, subp. 18.  In other words, it seems the plan 
was intended to ensure that Mr. Wagner’s cow/calf operation did not become a feedlot, 
either intentionally or unintentionally.                                  
pastures  and  cow/calf  operation.”    
Id. ¶ 46
.    He  claims  Ms.  Scheirer  scheduled  the 
inspection and that Mr. Hukriede, Mr. Schroeder, and Ms. Studanski participated in the 
decision to schedule the inspection, manufacture violations, and coerce Mr. Wagner into 

paying penalties.  
Id.
                                                    
The MPCA issued an Alleged Violation Letter arising from the May 3 inspection on 
May 23, 2017.  
Id. ¶ 47
.  This letter alleged that one of Mr. Wagner’s buildings was a 
feedlot requiring a permit and that a discharge of manure and manure-contaminated runoff 
had occurred at one of Mr. Wagner’s Otter Tail County pastures.  
Id.
  Mr. Wagner denied 

the violations.  
Id. ¶ 48
.  The MPCA conducted another inspection in October 2017, then 
issued an administrative order restating the alleged violations and adding violations.  
Id.
 
¶¶ 49–50.  Mr. Wagner continued to dispute the allegations, and in March 2019, Mr. 
Hukriede  issued  three  administrative  penalty  orders  totaling  $28,020.00  against  Mr. 
Wagner.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 52–53.  Mr. Wagner commenced administrative proceedings and, after 

extensive discovery, settled with the MPCA in January 2020.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 54–55.   
The MPCA delayed issuing the modified NPDES permit, prompting Mr. Wagner to 
bring suit in Ramsey County District Court.  The MPCA withheld Mr. Wagner’s modified 
NPDES permit pending resolution of the alleged violations resulting from the May 3, 2017 
inspection.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 58–61.  On October 4, 2018, Mr. Wagner filed suit against the MPCA 

in Ramsey County District Court for a writ of mandamus to approve the modified NPDES 
permit.  
Id. ¶ 64
.  The MPCA issued the permit on November 20, 2018.  
Id. ¶ 65
.   
Mr. Wagner alleges he lost business opportunities resulting from the MPCA’s delay 
in issuing the modified NPDES permit.  Mr. Wagner had been awarded a “Conservation 
Program Contract” for $450,000 in financial assistance for feedlot components through a 
program with the National Resources Conservation Service, which was eventually revoked 
for failure to complete construction.  
Id. ¶¶ 67, 74
.  Mr. Wagner also planned to obtain a 

construction loan from his lender and says the loan would have been approved had he 
received the modified permit.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 68–69.  “Mr. Wagner (individually or through 
representatives or agents acting on his behalf) repeatedly informed the MPCA that the 
wrongful refusal to issue the modified NPDES permit . . . was preventing Mr. Wagner from 
moving forward with the planned construction.”  
Id. ¶ 72
.  Mr. Wagner claims that the 

MPCA’s failure to issue the modified permit prevented him from completing construction 
and caused him to “suffer[] extensive damages, including . . . increased construction costs, 
increased interest rates, and lost profits.”  
Id.
 ¶¶ 74–75.               
Mr. Wagner’s legislative petitioning led to a 2019 statutory change.  Mr. Wagner’s 
dispute with the MPCA over the definition of “pastures” prompted Mr. Wagner to petition 

the Minnesota legislature to clarify the law in this area.  
Id. ¶ 76
.  During a 2019 special 
session, and in response to Mr. Wagner’s petitioning, the legislature     
     modified the statutory definition of “pastures” to expressly    
     recognize that “a cover of vegetation or crop residues is not   
     required . . . in sacrificial areas” for agricultural land to qualify 
     as a pasture and to clarify that a feedlot permit may not “impose 
     any requirements related to any pastures owned or utilized by   
     the feedlot operator other than restrictions under a manure     
     management plan.”  See 2019 Minn. Sess. Law, 1st Sp. Sess.      
     ch. 1, art. 2, §§ 16-17.                                        
Id. ¶ 77.                                                                 
In March 2021, the MPCA sued Mr. Wagner in Douglas County District Court.  The 
MPCA alleged that Mr. Wagner had allowed unauthorized discharges from his feedlot, 
overstocked the feedlot, and maintained unauthorized manure stockpiles on the feedlot.  Id. 

¶ 78.  The MPCA sought to impose a civil penalty in excess of $150,000.  Id.  According 
to Mr. Wagner, the penalty would be the largest the MPCA ever has imposed on a feedlot.  
Id. ¶ 80.  Mr. Wagner alleges that each defendant participated in the decision to commence 
the action, and that the decision to sue was based on Mr. Wagner’s appeals of prior 
administrative penalties and his legislative advocacy with respect to the definition of 

“pasture.”  Id. ¶¶ 81–82.                                                 
Mr. Wagner filed this suit in April 2023.  ECF No. 1.  Mr. Wagner asserts claims 
arising under federal and Minnesota law.  (1) Through 
42 U.S.C. § 1983
, Mr. Wagner 
claims Defendants violated substantive and procedural due process rights guaranteed him 
under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.  Am. Compl. ¶¶ 83–

94.  Mr. Wagner also bases this claim on Article I, Section 7 of the Minnesota Constitution.  
Id. ¶ 84
.  (2) Again through § 1983, Mr. Wagner claims that Defendants undertook their 
enforcement activities in retaliation for Mr. Wagner’s exercise of his First Amendment 
rights to challenge the MPCA’s enforcement activities and to petition the Minnesota 
legislature.  Id. ¶¶ 95–107.  Mr. Wagner also bases this claim on Article I, Section 7 of the 

Minnesota Constitution.  Id. ¶ 103.  (3) Mr. Wagner asserts a claim for tortious interference 
with  prospective  economic  advantage  under  Minnesota  common  law,  alleging  that 
Defendants’ delay in issuing the modified NPDES permit “intentionally interfered with 
Mr. Wagner’s ability to timely construct the modified and expanded feedlot and thus 
intentionally interfered with the economic advantage that Mr. Wagner reasonably expected 
to realize from the operation of the modified and expanded feedlot.”  Id. ¶¶ 108–114.  For 
relief,  Mr.  Wagner  seeks  damages,  “costs  and  disbursements  . . .,  including  without 

limitation any allowable attorneys’ fees and expert fees[,]” and “such other and further 
relief as the Court may deem just and equitable.”  Id. at 41 (following “WHEREFORE” 
clause).                                                                  
                          II6                                        
In reviewing a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6), a 

court must accept as true all of the factual allegations in the complaint and draw all 
reasonable inferences in the plaintiff’s favor.  Gorog v. Best Buy Co., Inc., 
760 F.3d 787, 792
 (8th Cir. 2014) (citation omitted).  Although the factual allegations need not be 
detailed, they must be sufficient to “raise a right to relief above the speculative level.”  Bell 
Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
550 U.S. 544, 555
 (2007) (citation omitted).  The complaint must 

“state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.”  
Id. at 570
.  “A claim has facial 
plausibility when the plaintiff pleads factual content that allows the court to draw the 


6    Defendants originally brought their motion to dismiss under Rules 12(b)(1) and 
12(b)(6).  ECF No. 21.  Defendants, however, do not mention Rule 12(b)(1) or identify any 
argument challenging subject-matter jurisdiction in their briefs.  And no subject-matter 
jurisdiction problem is apparent.  It is true that the Eleventh Amendment bars claims for 
damages against state employees sued in their official capacities.  Kentucky v. Graham, 
473 U.S. 159, 169
 (1985); Andrus ex rel. Andrus v. Arkansas, 
197 F.3d 953
, 955 (8th Cir. 
1999).  But the Amended Complaint seeks relief against the individual defendants only in 
their individual or personal capacities.  See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 4, 7, 10, 13. (stating that Mr. 
Wagner  asserts  claims  against  each  defendant  in  his  or  her  “individual  capacity”).  
Defendants’ motion will therefore be adjudicated only under Rule 12(b)(6).   
reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.”  Ashcroft v. 
Iqbal, 
556 U.S. 662, 678
 (2009).                                          
Ordinarily, courts do not consider matters outside the pleadings in resolving a Rule 

12(b)(6) motion, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(d), but documents that are necessarily embraced by 
the pleadings may be considered without transforming the motion into one for summary 
judgment.  Mattes v. ABC Plastics, Inc., 
323 F.3d 695
, 697 n.4 (8th Cir. 2003) (citation 
omitted).  Materials embraced by the complaint include “documents whose contents are 
alleged in a complaint and whose authenticity no party questions, but which are not 

physically attached to the pleading.”  Kushner v. Beverly Enters., Inc., 
317 F.3d 820
, 831 
(8th Cir. 2003) (quoting In re Syntex Corp. Sec. Litig., 
95 F.3d 922, 926
 (9th Cir. 1996)).  
Filings in other cases referenced in the complaint may be considered both embraced by the 
complaint and matters of public record.  Fredin v. Miller, No. 19-cv-3051, 
2020 WL 3077708
, at *5 (D. Minn. June 10, 2020) (“Given that [the] Complaint refers directly to 

other cases, the Court finds that the filings in those cases are matters embraced by the 
pleadings, as well as matters of public record.”), aff’d, 
840 F. App’x 61
 (8th Cir. 2021); 
see also Leonardo v. MSW Cap., LLC, No. 16-cv-3845, 
2017 WL 2062852
, at *2 (D. Minn. 
May 12, 2017) (stating defendants’ exhibits were “a quintessential example of materials 
that are ‘necessarily embraced by the pleadings’” in part because the complaint “repeatedly 

references the state-court action.”).                                     
Here, Defendants filed a declaration and fourteen exhibits with their motion.  See 
Brown Decl. [ECF No. 23].  Mr. Wagner argues that Exhibits 2, 8, 11, and 14 should be 
excluded from consideration because they are not embraced by the Amended Complaint.  
Exhibit 2 is an email exchange between Mr. Wagner and Schroeder, the contents of which 
are referenced in the Amended Complaint.  Am. Compl. ¶ 38.  Exhibit 2 is thus embraced 
by the Amended Complaint and will not be excluded from consideration.  Exhibits 11 and 

14 are filings from the Ramsey County and Douglas County court proceedings, which the 
Amended Complaint discusses in some detail.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 64–66, 78–82.  The filings are 
necessarily embraced by the Amended Complaint because the Amended Complaint refers 
to the cases directly, and the documents are matters of public record.  See Fredin, 
2020 WL 3077708
, at *5.  Exhibit 8—a draft stipulation—is neither a public record nor embraced by 

the Amended Complaint and will therefore be excluded from consideration.   
                          III                                        
                           A                                         
Mr.  Wagner  claims  “a  constitutionally  enforceable  liberty  interest  and  a 
fundamental right,” which he says is deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition, 
“to operate his animal feedlot and to engage in farming activities on his property where 

Mr. Wagner satisfied all of the requirements necessary for the issuance of an NPDES 
permit.”  Am. Compl. ¶ 85.  Defendants argue that there is no fundamental right to farm or 
to  operate  a  business  free  from  regulations  one  dislikes,  and,  accordingly,  that  no 
substantive-due-process violation occurred.  Defs.’ Mem. in Supp. at 19.  Mr. Wagner 
responds that the right he asserts is not a right to farm or operate free from regulations, but 

a right to “freely use and enjoy his property.”  Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n [ECF No. 28] at 21.   
To state a substantive-due-process claim against a state official, a plaintiff must 
demonstrate that a fundamental right was violated.  A fundamental right is one that is 
“objectively,  ‘deeply  rooted  in  this  Nation’s  history  and  tradition.’”    Washington  v. 
Glucksberg, 
521 U.S. 702
, 720–21 (1997) (quoting Moore v. City of E. Cleveland, 
431 U.S. 494, 503
 (1977)).  The plaintiff must also demonstrate that the official’s conduct shocks 

the conscience.  Folkerts v. City of Waverly, 
707 F.3d 975, 980
 (8th Cir. 2013).  Whether 
conduct shocks the conscience is a question of law.  
Id.
 (citing Terrell v. Larson, 
396 F.3d 975
, 981 (8th Cir. 2005) (en banc)).  Conscience-shocking conduct only includes “the most 
severe violations of individual rights that result from the brutal and inhumane abuse of 
official power.”  White v. Smith, 
696 F.3d 740
, 757–58 (8th Cir. 2012) (quotation marks 

omitted).    “Only  a  purpose  to  cause  harm  unrelated  to  the  legitimate  object  of  the 
government action in question will satisfy the element of arbitrary conduct shocking to the 
conscience, necessary for a due process violation.”  Folkerts, 
707 F.3d at 981
 (cleaned up).   
Mr.  Wagner  has  not  alleged  facts  plausibly  showing  the  violation  of  any 
fundamental right.  The Eighth Circuit has explicitly declined to recognize farming as a 

fundamental right.  United States v. White Plume, 
447 F.3d 1067, 1075
 (8th Cir. 2006) 
(“The Supreme Court has not declared ‘farming’ to be a fundamental right, and we decline 
to do so today.”).  Neither has the right to “freely use and enjoy one’s property” been 
recognized as a fundamental right by the Eighth Circuit, which Mr. Wagner acknowledges.  
Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 21.  Regardless, Mr. Wagner argues the proposed right is deeply 

rooted in the Nation’s history and “is consistent with the Supreme Court’s interpretation of 
the Constitution.”  
Id.
  In support, he offers two zoning cases: Washington ex rel. Seattle 
Title Tr. Co. v. Roberge, 
278 U.S. 116
 (1928), and Levin v. Upper Makefield Twp., Bucks 
Cnty., Pa., 90 Fed. App’x 653 (3rd Cir. 2004).  In Roberge, the Supreme Court found that 
a city ordinance impermissibly delegated permitting authority to a landowner’s neighbors.  
Roberge, 
278 U.S. at 117, 122
.  Key to the Court’s decision, the neighbors were “not bound 
by any official duty, but [we]re free to withhold consent for selfish reasons or arbitrarily 

and may subject the [owner] to their will or caprice.”  
Id. at 122
.  The MPCA is different.  
It is a state agency, created by statute, with defined governing principles.  As Mr. Wagner 
points out, Levin does recognize the Third Circuit’s holding that “ownership is a property 
interest worthy of substantive due process protection.”  Levin, 90 Fed. App’x at 659 
(citations  omitted)  (emphasis  added).    But  Mr.  Wagner’s  claims  do  not  concern 

“ownership” in the sense of the Third Circuit’s rule.  Here, Mr. Wagner does not allege 
that he was deprived of ownership of his land or of anything else.        
If Mr. Wagner had plausibly alleged deprivation of a fundamental right, he has not 
alleged facts plausibly showing conscience-shocking behavior.  Mr. Wagner argues he has 
alleged conscience-shocking behavior, but also that he “need only meet the ‘deliberate 

indifference’ standard.”  Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 20.  This is not persuasive legally or 
factually.  Legally, it is true that “in some cases” deliberate indifference suffices to satisfy 
the substantive due process threshold.  Terrell, 396 F.3d at 978 (citing Cnty. of Sacramento 
v.  Lewis,  
523 U.S. 833
,  848–49  (1998)).    “When  ‘actual  deliberation  is  practical,’ 
establishing a substantive-due-process violation requires proof of deliberate indifference, 

rather than conscience-shocking conduct.”  Scott v. Baldwin, 
720 F.3d 1034, 1036
 (8th Cir. 
2013)  (quoting  Terrell,  396  F.3d  at  978).    This  statement  from  Baldwin  might  be 
understood to mean that “deliberate indifference” is a different standard from “conscience-
shocking conduct.”  But that seems incorrect in view of Lewis.  In Lewis, as the en banc 
Eighth  Circuit  recognized  in  Terrell,  the  Supreme  Court  described  the  deliberate-
indifference standard as a degree of culpability necessary to establish that conduct is 
conscience shocking, not as a degree of culpability distinct from conscience-shocking 

behavior.  Lewis, 523 U.S. at 846–851; Terrell, 396 F.3d at 978.  As the Eighth Circuit put 
it in another instance, “[i]n cases where ‘defendants acted under circumstances in which 
actual deliberation was practical . . ., their conduct may shock the conscience of federal 
judges only if they acted with deliberate indifference.’”  Est. of Johnson v. Weber, 
785 F.3d 267, 272
 (8th Cir. 2015) (quoting Moore ex rel. Moore v. Briggs, 
381 F.3d 771, 773
 (8th 

Cir. 2004)) (internal quotations omitted).                                
Regardless,  the  Amended  Complaint  does  not  allege  facts  plausibly  showing 
conscience-shocking conduct even if a deliberate-indifference standard applied.7  Mr. 
Wagner does not allege facts showing the inspections were deliberately indifferent in some 
respect.  He alleges that inspections occurred, and that Defendants participated in the 

decision to initiate them.  Am. Compl. ¶¶ 45–47.  Mr. Wagner does not allege, for example, 
that Defendants destroyed his property during the inspections or that they were especially 
forceful or cruel in some aspect of their conduct.  He alleges: “Defendants ignored the 

7    The cases applying the deliberate-indifference standard often involve state actors 
causing danger, harm, death, or inadequate prison conditions.  See Lewis, 
523 U.S. at 836
 
(applying standard after sheriffs caused a death in a high-speed automobile chase); Terrell, 
396 F.3d at 977 (applying standard when sheriffs caused a death while driving through a 
red light); Scott, 
720 F.3d at 1035
 (applying standard when Department of Corrections 
director detained prisoners past their release dates); Hayes v. Faulkner Cnty., 
388 F.3d 669
, 
674  (8th  Cir.  2004)  (finding  deliberate  indifference  to  prisoners’  rights  after  county 
detained an arrestee for 38 days without a court appearance); Estelle v. Gamble, 
429 U.S. 97
, 104–05 (1976) (applying deliberate-indifference standard to cases involving “serious 
medical needs of prisoners”).  Mr. Wagner doesn’t allege anything like that here.   
MPCA’s normal process and procedures and a clear regulation that only allows the agency 
to withhold a permit based on unresolved noncompliance at the same facility.”  Pl.’s Mem. 
in Opp’n at 19–20.  That Defendants may have misinterpreted their obligations under the 

governing  regulation  “does  not  rise  to  the  level  of  arbitrary  government  action  and 
egregious misconduct necessary to state a substantive due process claim.”  Schmidt v. Des 
Moines Pub. Sch., 
655 F.3d 811, 817
 (8th Cir. 2011).                      
                           B                                         
Mr. Wagner claims he was deprived of property in violation of his procedural due 

process rights.  He claims a property interest in the modified NPDES permit for which he 
applied, as well as in “his animal feedlot, the land on which his animal feedlot is located, 
and the NPDES permit for his feedlot.”  Am. Compl. ¶ 86; Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 23.  
Defendants argue there is no property interest in the permit, and that Mr. Wagner has not 
alleged that he has been deprived of his land, feedlot, or permit.  Defs.’ Mem. in Supp. at 

22.                                                                       
“As for the Due Process Clause, standard analysis under that provision proceeds in 
two steps: We first ask whether there exists a liberty or property interest of which a person 
has been deprived, and if so we ask whether the procedures followed by the State were 
constitutionally sufficient.”  Swarthout v. Cooke, 
562 U.S. 216
, 219 (2011).  If the plaintiff 

cannot identify any protected liberty or property interest of which he was deprived, “any 
procedural due process claim necessarily fails.”  Beulieu v. Ludeman, 
690 F.3d 1017, 1047
 
(8th  Cir.  2012);  see  Senty-Haugen  v.  Goodno,  
462 F.3d 876, 886
  (8th  Cir.  2006) 
(explaining that courts do not consider what process is due unless a plaintiff has a protected 
liberty or property interest).  To have a property interest under the Fourteenth Amendment, 
a person must have a “legitimate claim of entitlement” to the property.  Bd. of Regents of 
State Colls. v. Roth, 
408 U.S. 564, 577
 (1972).  “Property interests are not created by the 

Constitution but rather stem from an independent source such as state law.”  Stauch v. City 
of Columbia Heights, 
212 F.3d 425, 429
 (8th Cir. 2000).                   
The first question is whether Mr. Wagner has a property interest in the modified 
NPDES permit.  A review of case law in this area reveals a general rule: when a state law 
leaves the issuing department no discretion to approve or deny a permit, it creates a 

property interest, while a law that gives the issuer discretion does not.  In Austell v. 
Sprenger, 
690 F.3d 929
 (8th Cir. 2012), for example, the Eighth Circuit found Missouri 
law created no clearly established property right in the renewal of a childcare facility 
license when the issuing department was permitted to “deny, suspend, place on probation 
or revoke the license of such persons as fail to obey the provisions of [the laws] or the rules 

and regulations made by [the department].”  Austell, 
690 F.3d at 936
.  The department 
could only deny a license renewal for cause but had “substantial discretion to determine 
violations.”    
Id.
    Accordingly,  the  court  found  the  statutes  governing  licensing 
determinations were “broad, subjective, and [gave] the department substantial discretion.”  
Id.
  Similarly, in Patton v. Blum, 
105 F. Supp. 3d 934
 (E.D. Mo. 2015), a district court 

found that because a state licensing agency had “the authority to determine whether adult 
day care programs and applicants are in compliance with licensure laws and regulations 
before issuing a license,” the statutes conferred “no constitutionally protected property 
interest.”  Patton, 105 F. Supp. at 943–44.  By contrast, in Stauch v. City of Columbia 
Heights, the court found a protected property interest in rental-license renewals because 
applicants “need only meet three objective criteria to qualify.”  Stauch, 
212 F.3d at 430
.  
Unlike in Austell or Patton, the issuing body had no discretion to deny renewal.  
Id.
   

Mr. Wagner argues the issuance of the modified permit is mandatory.  Pl.’s Mem. 
in Opp’n at 23.  He relies on a part of 
Minn. R. 7001
.0140, which as relevant here provides: 
“Except as provided in subpart 2, the agency shall issue . . . or modify a permit.”  
Minn. R. 7001
.0140 subp. 1 (emphasis added).  At first glance, the rule’s use of “shall” might be 
understood to foreclose discretion, but the rest of the rule shows this is not the case.  The 

rest of the rule makes clear that a permit’s issuance or modification depends on the 
MPCA’s exercise of substantial discretion:                                
     Except as provided in subpart 2, the agency shall issue, reissue, 
     revoke and reissue, or modify a permit if the agency determines 
     that the proposed permittee or permittees will, with respect to 
     the facility or activity to be permitted, comply or will undertake 
     a  schedule  of  compliance  to  achieve  compliance  with  all 
     applicable state and federal pollution control statutes and rules 
     administered by the agency, and conditions of the permit and    
     that all applicable requirements of Minnesota Statutes, chapter 
     116D, and the rules adopted under Minnesota Statutes, chapter   
     116D,  have  been  fulfilled.    For  solid  waste  facilities,  the 
     requirements  of  Minnesota  Statutes,  section  473.823,       
     subdivisions 3 and 6, must also be fulfilled.                   
Id.
                                                                       
The MPCA thus has discretion to determine whether an applicant will comply with 
statutes, rules, and conditions before issuing or modifying a permit.  As in Patton, the 
MPCA “shall” issue the permit only once it has determined the proposed permittee will 
comply with certain rules and conditions.  Further, 
Minn. Stat. § 116.07
 subdiv. 7c(a) states 
that “[t]he agency must issue national pollutant discharge elimination system permits for 
feedlots only as required by federal law.”  Federal law, in turn, provides that when the 
director of an agency “receives a request for modification . . . he or she may determine 

whether or not one or more of the causes listed in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section for 
modification or revocation and reissuance or both exist.”  
40 C.F.R. § 122.62
 (emphasis 
added).  The MPCA and its agents have the type of discretion described in Austell, where 
the Eighth Circuit determined that the plaintiffs had failed to show they had a clearly 
established property interest in renewal of their license.  Austell, 
690 F.3d at 935
.8   

Mr. Wagner also has alleged a constitutionally protected property right in his 
feedlot, land, and application for a modified NPDES permit.  Am. Compl. ¶ 86.  Defendants 
correctly point out that Mr. Wagner has not pleaded that Defendants deprived him of his 
feedlot, land, or application.  Defs.’ Mem. in Supp. at 22.  Because, with respect to these 
items, Mr. Wagner has not identified a protected property interest of which he was 

deprived, “any procedural due process claim necessarily fails.”  Beulieu, 690 F.3d at 1047.   



8    Defendants argue that federal and state law foreclose the argument that an NPDES 
permit creates a property interest.  Chapter 7001 of Minnesota’s Administrative Rules, 
which concerns MPCA permits, states that each draft and final permit must include 
language stating “[t]he permit does not convey a property right or an exclusive privilege.”  
Minn. R. 7001
.0150, subp. 3(C).  The draft permit sent to Mr. Wagner included this 
language.  Brown Decl. at Ex. 1-44.  Similarly, Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations, 
entitled “Protection of Environment,” provides that the “issuance of a permit does not 
convey any property rights of any sort, or any exclusive privilege.”  
40 C.F.R. § 122.5
(b).  
The regulation clarifies that it applies to state programs.  
Id.
  Whether these disclaimers are 
effective need not be decided here because the relevant rule does not confer a property 
right.                                                                    
If the applicable rule conferred a property interest in the modified NPDES permit, 
Mr. Wagner does not plausibly allege he was deprived of due process.  Mr. Wagner claims 
Defendants refused to issue his modified permit “without affording Mr. Wagner a hearing 

regarding the legality of [their] actions.”  Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 25.  But the Amended 
Complaint is self-defeating on this point: a suit seeking a writ of mandamus was available, 
and Mr. Wagner took advantage of it.  Am. Compl. ¶ 64.  Mr. Wagner commenced a legal 
proceeding against the MPCA for a writ of mandamus on October 4, 2018, nearly eighteen 
months after the May 3, 2017 inspection.  
Id.
  Shortly after commencing the suit, the MPCA 

issued the modified permit.  
Id. ¶ 65
.  The Amended Complaint does not allege facts 
plausibly showing either that more or different process might have been required under the 
Fourteenth Amendment.                                                     
                           C                                         
Mr. Wagner claims Defendants retaliated against him because he exercised his First 

Amendment rights.  Specifically, Mr. Wagner alleges he exercised First Amendment-
protected rights by “disputing the MPCA’s legal authority to regulate his pastures and 
cow/calf operation as a feedlot[,]” contesting the MPCA’s enforcement activities, and 
petitioning the Minnesota legislature to clarify the law governing feedlots in a way that 
benefitted Mr. Wagner.  
Id. ¶¶ 96, 100
.  And Mr. Wagner alleges Defendants retaliated by 

delaying issuance of the modified NPDES permit and “seeking to impose against Mr. 
Wagner the largest penalty the MPCA has ever imposed against an animal feedlot[.]”  
Id. ¶¶ 97, 102
.                                                               
To state a First Amendment-retaliation claim, Mr. Wagner must allege: “(1) that he 
engaged in a constitutionally protected activity; (2) that the defendant[s] took adverse 
action against him that would chill a person of ordinary firmness from continuing in the 

activity; and (3) that the adverse action was motivated in part by [Mr. Wagner’s] exercise 
of his constitutional rights.”  Scheffler v. Molin, 
743 F.3d 619, 621
 (8th Cir. 2014); Defs.’ 
Mem. in Supp. at 23; Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 29.  Defendants acknowledge that Mr. Wagner 
engaged in protected activity.  See Defs.’ Mem. in Supp. at 23–24.  The question, then, is 
whether Mr. Wagner has alleged facts plausibly showing the second and third elements.   

It is at least plausible that the withholding of the modified NPDES permit and the 
penalty sought in MPCA’s the 2021 lawsuit—whether considered together or separately—
would chill a person of ordinary firmness from engaging in protected activity.  According 
to the Eighth Circuit:                                                    
     The ordinary-firmness test is . . . designed to weed out trivial 
     matters from those deserving the time of the courts as real and 
     substantial violations of the First Amendment. . . .  In applying 
     this “test,” we are mindful of the words of Judge Posner in Bart 
     v. Telford, 
677 F.2d 622, 625
 (7th Cir. 1982):                  
          The effect on freedom of speech may be small,              
          but since there is no justification for harassing          
          people for exercising their constitutional rights it       
          need not be great in order to be actionable.               
     The test is an objective one, not subjective.  The question is not 
     whether  the  plaintiff  [himself]  was  deterred,  though  how 
     plaintiff acted might be evidence of what a reasonable person   
     would  have  done. . . .    What  would  a  person  of  “ordinary 
     firmness” have done in reaction to the [adverse action]?  Would 
     he or she have simply ignored [it], or would he or she have     
     been slowed down, at least to some degree?                      
Garcia v. City of Trenton, 
348 F.3d 726
, 728–29 (8th Cir. 2003).  “In some cases, 
embarrassment, humiliation and emotional distress may be sufficient to support a § 1983 
claim.”  Naucke v. City of Park Hills, 
284 F.3d 923
, 928 (8th Cir. 2002).  But an adverse 

action is more likely shown when an official causes the plaintiff to experience “concrete 
consequences.”  Scheffler, 
743 F.3d at 622
.  In Garcia, for instance, a mayor’s issuance of 
$35 in retaliatory parking tickets over less than two months was enough to chill a person 
of ordinary firmness and supported a jury verdict on the plaintiff’s retaliation claim.  
Garcia, 
348 F.3d at 729
.  If $35 in parking tickets is chilling, then withholding a permit for 

over a year and initiating a lawsuit seeking over $150,000 in penalties is enough to chill a 
person of ordinary firmness.                                              
To  show  causation,  Mr.  Wagner  must  allege  facts  plausibly  showing  “that  a 
retaliatory motive of the government official was a ‘but-for cause’ of the adverse action, 
‘meaning that the adverse action against the plaintiff would not have been taken absent the 

retaliatory motive.’”  Graham v. Barnette, 
5 F.4th 872, 889
 (8th Cir. 2021) (quoting Nieves 
v. Bartlett, 587 U.S. ---, 
139 S. Ct. 1715
, 1722 (2019)).  “In other words, the plaintiff must 
show he was ‘singled out because of [his] exercise of constitutional rights.’”  Peterson v. 
Kopp, 
754 F.3d 594, 602
 (8th Cir. 2014).  Unless causation is “‘so free from doubt as to 
justify taking it from the jury,’ the issue should be tried.”  Lawrence v. City of St. Paul, 
740 F. Supp. 2d 1026, 1044
 (D. Minn. 2010) (quoting Revels v. Vincenz, 
382 F.3d 870, 876
 
(8th Cir. 2004)); De Rossitte v. Correct Care Sols., LLC, 
22 F.4th 796, 804
 (8th Cir. 2022) 
(same).                                                                   
Here, Mr. Wagner claims to possess direct evidence of a retaliatory motive.  He 
alleges:                                                                  
     According to the MPCA’s internal documents that the agency      
     produced in the state-court action, Ms. Scheirer, Mr. Hukriede, 
     Ms. Studanski, Ms. Costin, and other employees of the MPCA      
     based their decision to commence the state-court action and to  
     seek to impose against Mr. Wagner the largest penalty the       
     agency has ever imposed against an animal feedlot on the fact   
     that Mr. Wagner had exercised his legal right to appeal prior   
     administrative  penalties  the  agency  had  sought  to  impose 
     against him and the fact that Mr. Wagner “is the individual     
     behind the legislation last year that added to the definition of 
     pasture.”                                                       

Am. Compl. ¶ 82.                                                          
These allegations do not plausibly show causation.  The content of the referenced 
MPCA documents is not described.  In other words, we do not know what the documents 
produced in the state-court case say or how the documents’ contents might show that 
Defendants retaliated against Mr. Wagner because of his First Amendment-protected 
activities.  Alleging that particular evidence shows a retaliatory motive without describing 
the evidence seems the same thing as alleging a legal conclusion.  To properly assess 
whether the documents’ contents plausibly show causation, it is necessary to know what is 
in the documents.  See Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 680–81 (holding allegations that defendants 
“knew of, condoned, and willfully and maliciously agreed” to subject plaintiff to harsh 
conditions were insufficient to survive Rule 8’s plausibility standards).   
As a fallback, Mr. Wagner relies on the temporal relationship between his protected 
activity, on the one hand, and Defendants’ delay in issuing the modified NPDES permit 
and their commencement of the Douglas County lawsuit in 2021, on the other.  A temporal 
relationship  between  protected  activities  and  adverse  action  may  “support  [a] 
circumstantial claim of retaliatory action” in the First Amendment context.  L.L. Nelson 
Enters., Inc. v. Cnty. of St. Louis, 
673 F.3d 799, 809
 (8th Cir. 2012).   

Mr.  Wagner’s  temporal-relationship  allegations  are  not  sufficient.    The 
“withholding” of the permit began in May 2017, after the public comment period ended 
without comments in which case, according to Mr. Wagner, the MPCA’s normal practice 
was to issue the permit.  Id. ¶ 56.  Mr. Wagner’s alleged protected speech was in response 
to the withholding of the modified permit.  He appears to have petitioned the legislature 

about changing the definition of “pastures” beginning in 2019.  Id. ¶ 77.  He sued the 
MPCA for a writ of mandamus in October 2018.  Id. ¶ 64.  Defendants could not have 
retaliated by withholding Mr. Wagner’s permit in May 2017 before he engaged in protected 
speech in 2018 and 2019.  The MPCA’s Douglas County suit against Mr. Wagner comes 
closer to providing chronological support for the retaliation claim—because Defendants 

acted after Mr. Wagner exercised his First Amendment rights—but nonetheless fails for 
being too remote.  After Mr. Wagner challenged his administrative violations between 
2017 and 2019, see Am. Compl. ¶¶ 48, 51–52, he sued the MPCA for a writ of mandamus 
in Ramsey County in 2018, see id. ¶ 64, and he petitioned the legislature to change the law 
in 2019, see id. ¶¶ 76–77.  The MPCA sued him “[i]n or around March 2021,” two years 

after the most recent alleged exercise of his First Amendment rights.  Id. ¶ 78.  In Kilpatrick 
v. King, 
499 F.3d 759
 (8th Cir. 2007), the Eighth Circuit found that timing “weigh[ed] 
against an inference of retaliatory intent” when the protected speech and adverse action 
were separated by nine months.  Kilpatrick, 
499 F.3d at 768
.  By contrast, in Peterson v. 
Kopp, 
754 F.3d 594
 (8th Cir. 2014), the court found chronology relevant to the retaliation 
analysis when a person exercised protected speech “moments before” the defendant’s 
adverse actions.  Peterson, 
754 F.3d at 603
.  Mr. Wagner does not allege retaliation within 

moments—or even days or weeks—of his protected speech.  Mr. Wagner alleges he 
engaged in protected speech through 2019 and was sued many months or years later in 
2021.  Under Eighth Circuit precedents, this chronology is too remote to support an 
inference of retaliation.9                                                

                          IV                                         
A district court “may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a claim . . . 
if . . . the district court has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction.”  
28 U.S.C. § 1367
(c)(3).  “[I]n the usual case in which all federal-law claims are eliminated 
before  trial,  the  balance  of  factors  to  be  considered  under  the  pendent  jurisdiction 
doctrine—judicial  economy,  convenience,  fairness,  and  comity—will  point  toward 

declining to exercise jurisdiction over the remaining state-law claims.”  Barstad v. Murray 
Cnty., 
420 F.3d 880, 888
 (8th Cir. 2005) (quoting Carnegie–Mellon Univ. v. Cohill, 
484 U.S. 343
, 350 n.7 (1988)).  And the Eighth Circuit has instructed district courts not to 
exercise supplemental jurisdiction over state-law claims when, as here, all federal claims 


9    Mr. Wagner alleges that Defendants conspired with each other and perhaps one or 
more other MPCA employees to violate his federal and state constitutional rights.  Among 
other things, a plaintiff is “required to prove a deprivation of a constitutional right or 
privilege in order to prevail on a § 1983 civil conspiracy claim.”  White v. McKinley, 
519 F.3d 806, 814
 (8th Cir. 2008) (citing Askew v. Millerd, 
191 F.3d 953
, 957 (8th Cir. 1999)).  
As  discussed  above,  Mr.  Wagner  has  failed  to  allege  facts  plausibly  showing  a 
constitutional violation.  For at least this reason, then, his conspiracy claim also fails.   
are dismissed well before trial.  See Hervey v. Cnty. of Koochiching, 
527 F.3d 711
, 726–
27 (8th Cir. 2008).                                                       
There is no reason to deviate from this general rule here.  Mr. Wagner has had one 

opportunity to amend his complaint, and he did not request an opportunity to amend in 
compliance with D. Minn. L.R. 15.1(b) in response to Defendants’ motion.  Therefore, Mr. 
Wagner’s federal claims will be dismissed with prejudice, and Mr. Wagner’s state claims 
will be dismissed without prejudice to be litigated in state court, should he choose to pursue 
them there.10                                                             

ORDER

Therefore, based on the foregoing, and on the files, records, and proceedings herein, 
IT IS ORDERED THAT:                                                       
1.  The Motion to Dismiss [ECF No. 21] of Defendants Lisa Scheirer, Randall 
Hukriede, Scott Schroeder, and Rachel Studanski is GRANTED.               


10   One might reasonably question whether Mr. Wagner’s claims under the Minnesota 
Constitution should be dismissed at this stage.  Though Mr. Wagner sued under the 
Minnesota Constitution alongside his claims under the United States Constitution, he did 
not distinguish his state constitutional claims or treat them separately in any respect from 
his federal constitutional claims.  In other words, as Mr. Wagner’s federal constitutional 
claims go, so go his state constitutional claims.  If that weren’t so, Mr. Wagner’s state 
constitutional claims are not actionable under § 1983 and lack a § 1983 analog.  As the 
Eighth Circuit has observed, “Minnesota courts explicitly refuse to find causes of action 
for damages under the Minnesota Constitution on their own unless the Minnesota Supreme 
Court has recognized the cause of action.”  Riehm v. Engelking, 
538 F.3d 952, 969
 (8th 
Cir. 2008) (citing Mitchell v. Steffen, 
487 N.W.2d 896, 905
 (Minn. Ct. App. 1992), aff’d 
on other grounds, 
504 N.W.2d 198
 (Minn. 1993)).  Mr. Wagner cites no case in which the 
Minnesota Supreme Court has recognized a damages cause of action for the claims he 
asserts.  Regardless, Mr. Wagner asked specifically that his right to pursue these claims be 
preserved so that he might advocate for recognition of an applicable damages claim under 
the Minnesota Constitution.  That request will be honored.                
2.  Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), the claims asserted in 
Counts I and II of the Amended Complaint under 
42 U.S.C. § 1983
 are DISMISSED 
WITH PREJUDICE.                                                           

3.  Pursuant to 
28 U.S.C. § 1367
(c), the claims asserted in the Amended Complaint 
under Minnesota law are DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE.                      
       LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.                          

Date: January 24, 2024             s/ Eric C. Tostrud                     
                              Eric C. Tostrud                        
                              United States District Court           

Trial Court Opinion

             UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Joseph Wagner,                         File No. 23-cv-1162 (ECT/LIB)      

     Plaintiff,                                                      

v.                                       OPINION AND ORDER                

Lisa Scheirer, Randall Hukriede, Scott                                    
Schroeder, and Rachel Studanski,                                          

     Defendants.                                                     
________________________________________________________________________  
Matthew C. Berger, Gislason & Hunter LLP, New Ulm, MN, for Plaintiff Joseph Wagner. 

Christina  M.  Brown,  Office  of  the  Minnesota  Attorney  General,  St.  Paul,  MN,  for 
Defendants Lisa Scheirer, Randall Hukriede, Scott Schroeder, and Rachel Studanski. 

Plaintiff Joseph Wagner is a Minnesota livestock farmer with operations in Otter 
Tail and Douglas Counties.  He owns a cow/calf operation and a separate feedlot.  In this 
case, Mr. Wagner claims that Defendants—four employees of the Minnesota Pollution 
Control Agency (“MPCA”)—violated his due-process and free-speech rights under the 
United States and Minnesota Constitutions and tortiously interfered with his prospective 
economic advantage.  Among other abusive activities, Mr. Wagner claims that Defendants 
withheld issuance of a permit that would have enabled Mr. Wagner to expand his feedlot 
operation and sought to impose on Mr. Wagner (or perhaps his business organization) the 
largest animal feedlot fine in state history.  Mr. Wagner seeks damages from Defendants 
in their individual capacities.                                           
Defendants seek dismissal of Mr. Wagner’s operative Amended Complaint under 
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), and the motion will be granted.  The short story 
is that Mr. Wagner’s federal constitutional claims are not plausibly alleged, and they will 

be dismissed with prejudice.  Mr. Wagner’s state-law claims will be dismissed without 
prejudice, leaving Mr. Wagner free to pursue those claims in Minnesota state court.   
                           I1                                        
Mr. Wagner owns a cow/calf operation and a separate feedlot.  Am. Compl. [ECF 
No. 20] ¶¶ 19–21.  A “cow/calf operation” is a beef farming operation in which a herd of 

cows is maintained and bred on a regular basis, and calves are sold or transferred to another 
location for finishing.  Id. ¶¶ 16–17.  The animals in a cow/calf operation generally are 
raised on pastures.  Id. ¶ 18.  During the relevant period, Mr. Wagner operated his cow/calf 
operation on several pastures he owned or leased in Douglas and Otter Tail Counties.  Id. 
¶ 19.  Mr. Wagner’s feedlot is located in Douglas County; during the relevant period, it 

consisted of “a series of open lots, a runoff settling area, a vegetated infiltration area for 
filtering and treating runoff, two feed storage areas, and two commodity buildings.”  Id. 
¶ 20.  Mr. Wagner’s feedlot had a maximum capacity of 679 animal units.  Id.2   


1    In accordance with the standards governing a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the facts are 
drawn from Mr. Wagner’s Amended Complaint, materials embraced by it, and applicable 
legal authorities.  Gorog v. Best Buy Co., Inc., 
760 F.3d 787, 792
 (8th Cir. 2014) (citation 
omitted).                                                                 
2    An “animal unit” is a unit of measurement “used to compare differences in the 
production of animal manure.”  
Minn. R. 7020
.0300, subp. 5.  For example, one mature 
dairy cow under 1,000 pounds is equal to 1.0 animal unit, but a mature dairy cow over 
1,000 pounds equals 1.4 animal units, and a calf equals 0.2 units.  
Minn. R. 7020
.0300, 
subp. 5(A).                                                               
Minnesota law distinguishes between cow/calf operations and feedlots.  Rules 
promulgated by the MPCA supply the controlling definitions.  Under these rules: 
     “Animal feedlot” means a lot or building or combination of lots 
     and  buildings  intended  for  the  confined  feeding,  breeding, 
     raising, or holding of animals and specifically designed as a   
     confinement area in which manure may accumulate, or where       
     the concentration of animals is such that a vegetative cover    
     cannot be maintained within the enclosure. . . . Pastures shall 
     not be considered animal feedlots under these parts.            

Minn. R. 7020
.0300, subp. 3 (emphasis added).  “Pastures,” by contrast, are: 
     areas, including winter feeding areas as part of a grazing area, 
     where grass or other growing plants are used for grazing and    
     where the concentration of animals allows a vegetative cover    
     to  be  maintained  during  the  growing  season,  .  .  .  or  .  .  . 
     agricultural land: (1) where livestock are allowed to forage    
     during the winter; (2) that is used for cropping purposes in the 
     growing season; and (3) where the concentration of animals is   
     such that a vegetative cover, whether of grass, growing plants, 
     or crops, is maintained during the growing season, except in    
     the immediate vicinity of temporary supplemental feeding or     
     watering devices.                                               

Minn. R. 7020
.0300, subp. 18.  Thus, for example, one difference between a “feedlot” and 
a “pasture” appears to be whether the concentration of animals prevents maintenance of a 
vegetative cover (in the case of an “animal feedlot”) or allows it (in the case of a “pasture”).   
Defendants are MPCA employees who regulate feedlots.  Am. Compl. ¶¶ 3–12.  The 
MPCA possesses authority generally to promote waste disposal and improve air quality.  
Minn. Stat. §§ 116.02
, 116.07.  Under this general authority, the MPCA is “authorized to 
‘adopt rules governing the issuance and denial of permits for livestock feedlots, poultry 
lots or other animal lots.’”  Am. Compl. ¶ 22 (quoting 
Minn. Stat. § 116.07
, subdiv. 7(h)).  
The MPCA also has enforcement power, and may pursue remedies such as civil penalties, 
injunctions,  and  criminal  prosecutions.    
Minn. Stat. § 115.071
.    Defendant  Randall 
Hukriede worked as program manager of the MPCA’s feedlot program and supervised 
Defendant Lisa Scheirer.  Am. Compl. ¶ 6.  Ms. Scheirer, in turn, was supervisor of the 

West Feedlot Unit.  
Id. ¶ 3
.  Defendant Scott Schroeder was an Environmental Specialist 
working under Ms. Scheirer’s direction.  
Id. ¶ 9
.  Defendant Rachel Studanski was a 
compliance coordinator with the MPCA’s feedlot program.  
Id. ¶ 12
.        
Mr. Wagner received and settled MPCA “Alleged Violation Letters” in 2014 and 
2015.3  The 2014 letter concerned Mr. Wagner’s alleged failure to obtain a permit for his 

cow/calf operation in Douglas County.  
Id. ¶ 24
.  Mr. Wagner disputed this alleged 
violation; he maintained that the unpermitted lands were not feedlots, but pastures not 
subject to the MPCA’s feedlot permitting requirements.  
Id. ¶ 25
.  Mr. Wagner nonetheless 
paid a $12,000 penalty to resolve the alleged violation because it made better economic 
sense; the cost of pursuing a legal defense and remedies would have exceeded the cost of 

the penalty.  
Id. ¶ 26
.  The 2015 Alleged Violation Letter concerned Mr. Wagner’s failure 
to obtain a permit for his cow/calf operation in Otter Tail County.  
Id. ¶ 28
.  Defendants 
“participated in the decision to impose a $20,000 penalty against Mr. Wagner” arising from 
this alleged violation.  
Id. ¶ 29
.  Mr. Wagner maintained that the land in Otter Tail County 
contained pastures, not feedlots, and denied that he was required to obtain a permit.  
Id. ¶ 30
.  “In October 2016, Mr. Wagner and the MPCA entered into a Settlement Agreement 
in which the MPCA agreed to abate $12,444.50 of the $20,000 penalty it had previously 

3    It is unclear whether disputes between Mr. Wagner and the MPCA predate the 2014 
Alleged Violation Letter.  This is the first dispute referenced in the Amended Complaint.   
imposed[,] and Mr. Wagner agreed to pay the remaining $7,555.50 of such penalty.”  
Id. ¶ 32
.                                                                     
Mr. Wagner applied for an NPDES feedlot permit in 2015 and received the permit 

in 2016.  In December 2015, Mr. Wagner applied for a National Pollutant Discharge 
Elimination System (or “NPDES”) permit to modify and expand his existing feedlot in 
Douglas County.  
Id. ¶ 33
.4  By constructing new lots, barns, storage areas, and more, Mr. 
Wagner’s proposed expansion would increase his feedlot’s capacity roughly tenfold, from 
679 animal units to 6,800 animal units.  
Id. ¶¶ 20, 33
.  Mr. Schroeder sent a draft permit to 

Mr. Wagner on July 8, 2016.  
Id. ¶ 35
.  The draft “ignored the separate nature of Mr. 
Wagner’s  cow/calf  operation  and  his  animal  feedlot”  and,  if  approved,  would  have 
“improperly expanded the scope of the MPCA’s regulatory powers beyond the agency’s 
legal authority by regulating Mr. Wagner’s pastures.”  
Id. ¶ 36
.  Mr. Wagner objected to 
the draft permit up front, but it was too late; the MPCA published a notice of intent to issue 

the NPDES permit as drafted and held a public comment period from July 18 to August 
17, 2016.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 38–39.  During the public comment period, Mr. Wagner wrote to Mr. 
Schroeder, emphasizing the separateness of the cow/calf (pastures) and feedlot operations 
and describing his objections to the draft permit along with proposed amendments.  
Id. ¶ 40
.  Mr. Schroeder responded that the MPCA would incorporate Mr. Wagner’s comments 


4    “NPDES permits regulate the type and quantity of pollutants that can be released 
into state and federal waters, as well as include conditions to ensure compliance with state 
water quality standards.”  Defs.’ Mem. in Supp. [ECF No. 22] at 3 n.5 (citing 
33 U.S.C. § 1342
(a)(1) and 
40 C.F.R. § 122.44
(d)).  Issuance of an NPDES permit involves a public 
notice and comment period.  
Minn. Stat. § 116.07
, subdiv. 7c.             
as amendments to the final permit.  
Id. ¶ 41
.  The MPCA issued the final permit on October 
6, 2016.  
Id. ¶ 42
.  The permit “expressly acknowledged that Mr. Wagner’s cow/calf 
operation is ‘separate’ from his feedlot and is ‘managed through a “Cow/Calf Management 

Plan” submitted by [Mr. Wagner] to the MPCA on January 2, 2016, and approved by the 
MPCA on February 5, 2016.’”  
Id.
 (alteration in original).5               
Mr. Wagner requested an NPDES permit modification.  After receiving the NPDES 
permit, Mr. Wagner decided to make changes to some of the permitted buildings and land.  
Id. ¶ 43
.  In Mr. Wagner’s view, these changes were minor, but the MPCA disagreed; it 

considered the changes to be a “major modification” and published another notice of intent 
and public comment period, which ran from April 3 to May 3, 2017.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 43–44.  No 
public comments were received.  
Id. ¶ 44
.  Mr. Wagner alleges that the MPCA’s normal 
practice when no comments are received is to issue a permit within 40 days of the comment 
period ending.  
Id. ¶ 56
.                                                 

On May 3, 2017—the last day of the public comment period—the MPCA conducted 
an inspection of Mr. Wagner’s cow/calf operation.  
Id. ¶ 45
.  Mr. Wagner alleges the 
inspection was “a pretext to manufacture alleged violations and use the pending application 
to coerce [him] into paying a penalty, refraining from exercising his legal right to challenge 
the alleged violations and penalty, and accepting the MPCA’s authority to regulate his 


5    The February 2016 “Cow/Calf Management Plan” does not seem essential to Mr. 
Wagner’s claims in this case or material to Defendants’ Rule 12(b)(6) motion.  The plan’s 
purpose was to ensure that Mr. Wagner managed his cow/calf operation consistent with the 
“pasture” definition of 
Minn. R. 7020
.0300, subp. 18.  In other words, it seems the plan 
was intended to ensure that Mr. Wagner’s cow/calf operation did not become a feedlot, 
either intentionally or unintentionally.                                  
pastures  and  cow/calf  operation.”    
Id. ¶ 46
.    He  claims  Ms.  Scheirer  scheduled  the 
inspection and that Mr. Hukriede, Mr. Schroeder, and Ms. Studanski participated in the 
decision to schedule the inspection, manufacture violations, and coerce Mr. Wagner into 

paying penalties.  
Id.
                                                    
The MPCA issued an Alleged Violation Letter arising from the May 3 inspection on 
May 23, 2017.  
Id. ¶ 47
.  This letter alleged that one of Mr. Wagner’s buildings was a 
feedlot requiring a permit and that a discharge of manure and manure-contaminated runoff 
had occurred at one of Mr. Wagner’s Otter Tail County pastures.  
Id.
  Mr. Wagner denied 

the violations.  
Id. ¶ 48
.  The MPCA conducted another inspection in October 2017, then 
issued an administrative order restating the alleged violations and adding violations.  
Id.
 
¶¶ 49–50.  Mr. Wagner continued to dispute the allegations, and in March 2019, Mr. 
Hukriede  issued  three  administrative  penalty  orders  totaling  $28,020.00  against  Mr. 
Wagner.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 52–53.  Mr. Wagner commenced administrative proceedings and, after 

extensive discovery, settled with the MPCA in January 2020.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 54–55.   
The MPCA delayed issuing the modified NPDES permit, prompting Mr. Wagner to 
bring suit in Ramsey County District Court.  The MPCA withheld Mr. Wagner’s modified 
NPDES permit pending resolution of the alleged violations resulting from the May 3, 2017 
inspection.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 58–61.  On October 4, 2018, Mr. Wagner filed suit against the MPCA 

in Ramsey County District Court for a writ of mandamus to approve the modified NPDES 
permit.  
Id. ¶ 64
.  The MPCA issued the permit on November 20, 2018.  
Id. ¶ 65
.   
Mr. Wagner alleges he lost business opportunities resulting from the MPCA’s delay 
in issuing the modified NPDES permit.  Mr. Wagner had been awarded a “Conservation 
Program Contract” for $450,000 in financial assistance for feedlot components through a 
program with the National Resources Conservation Service, which was eventually revoked 
for failure to complete construction.  
Id. ¶¶ 67, 74
.  Mr. Wagner also planned to obtain a 

construction loan from his lender and says the loan would have been approved had he 
received the modified permit.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 68–69.  “Mr. Wagner (individually or through 
representatives or agents acting on his behalf) repeatedly informed the MPCA that the 
wrongful refusal to issue the modified NPDES permit . . . was preventing Mr. Wagner from 
moving forward with the planned construction.”  
Id. ¶ 72
.  Mr. Wagner claims that the 

MPCA’s failure to issue the modified permit prevented him from completing construction 
and caused him to “suffer[] extensive damages, including . . . increased construction costs, 
increased interest rates, and lost profits.”  
Id.
 ¶¶ 74–75.               
Mr. Wagner’s legislative petitioning led to a 2019 statutory change.  Mr. Wagner’s 
dispute with the MPCA over the definition of “pastures” prompted Mr. Wagner to petition 

the Minnesota legislature to clarify the law in this area.  
Id. ¶ 76
.  During a 2019 special 
session, and in response to Mr. Wagner’s petitioning, the legislature     
     modified the statutory definition of “pastures” to expressly    
     recognize that “a cover of vegetation or crop residues is not   
     required . . . in sacrificial areas” for agricultural land to qualify 
     as a pasture and to clarify that a feedlot permit may not “impose 
     any requirements related to any pastures owned or utilized by   
     the feedlot operator other than restrictions under a manure     
     management plan.”  See 2019 Minn. Sess. Law, 1st Sp. Sess.      
     ch. 1, art. 2, §§ 16-17.                                        
Id. ¶ 77.                                                                 
In March 2021, the MPCA sued Mr. Wagner in Douglas County District Court.  The 
MPCA alleged that Mr. Wagner had allowed unauthorized discharges from his feedlot, 
overstocked the feedlot, and maintained unauthorized manure stockpiles on the feedlot.  Id. 

¶ 78.  The MPCA sought to impose a civil penalty in excess of $150,000.  Id.  According 
to Mr. Wagner, the penalty would be the largest the MPCA ever has imposed on a feedlot.  
Id. ¶ 80.  Mr. Wagner alleges that each defendant participated in the decision to commence 
the action, and that the decision to sue was based on Mr. Wagner’s appeals of prior 
administrative penalties and his legislative advocacy with respect to the definition of 

“pasture.”  Id. ¶¶ 81–82.                                                 
Mr. Wagner filed this suit in April 2023.  ECF No. 1.  Mr. Wagner asserts claims 
arising under federal and Minnesota law.  (1) Through 
42 U.S.C. § 1983
, Mr. Wagner 
claims Defendants violated substantive and procedural due process rights guaranteed him 
under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.  Am. Compl. ¶¶ 83–

94.  Mr. Wagner also bases this claim on Article I, Section 7 of the Minnesota Constitution.  
Id. ¶ 84
.  (2) Again through § 1983, Mr. Wagner claims that Defendants undertook their 
enforcement activities in retaliation for Mr. Wagner’s exercise of his First Amendment 
rights to challenge the MPCA’s enforcement activities and to petition the Minnesota 
legislature.  Id. ¶¶ 95–107.  Mr. Wagner also bases this claim on Article I, Section 7 of the 

Minnesota Constitution.  Id. ¶ 103.  (3) Mr. Wagner asserts a claim for tortious interference 
with  prospective  economic  advantage  under  Minnesota  common  law,  alleging  that 
Defendants’ delay in issuing the modified NPDES permit “intentionally interfered with 
Mr. Wagner’s ability to timely construct the modified and expanded feedlot and thus 
intentionally interfered with the economic advantage that Mr. Wagner reasonably expected 
to realize from the operation of the modified and expanded feedlot.”  Id. ¶¶ 108–114.  For 
relief,  Mr.  Wagner  seeks  damages,  “costs  and  disbursements  . . .,  including  without 

limitation any allowable attorneys’ fees and expert fees[,]” and “such other and further 
relief as the Court may deem just and equitable.”  Id. at 41 (following “WHEREFORE” 
clause).                                                                  
                          II6                                        
In reviewing a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6), a 

court must accept as true all of the factual allegations in the complaint and draw all 
reasonable inferences in the plaintiff’s favor.  Gorog v. Best Buy Co., Inc., 
760 F.3d 787, 792
 (8th Cir. 2014) (citation omitted).  Although the factual allegations need not be 
detailed, they must be sufficient to “raise a right to relief above the speculative level.”  Bell 
Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
550 U.S. 544, 555
 (2007) (citation omitted).  The complaint must 

“state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.”  
Id. at 570
.  “A claim has facial 
plausibility when the plaintiff pleads factual content that allows the court to draw the 


6    Defendants originally brought their motion to dismiss under Rules 12(b)(1) and 
12(b)(6).  ECF No. 21.  Defendants, however, do not mention Rule 12(b)(1) or identify any 
argument challenging subject-matter jurisdiction in their briefs.  And no subject-matter 
jurisdiction problem is apparent.  It is true that the Eleventh Amendment bars claims for 
damages against state employees sued in their official capacities.  Kentucky v. Graham, 
473 U.S. 159, 169
 (1985); Andrus ex rel. Andrus v. Arkansas, 
197 F.3d 953
, 955 (8th Cir. 
1999).  But the Amended Complaint seeks relief against the individual defendants only in 
their individual or personal capacities.  See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 4, 7, 10, 13. (stating that Mr. 
Wagner  asserts  claims  against  each  defendant  in  his  or  her  “individual  capacity”).  
Defendants’ motion will therefore be adjudicated only under Rule 12(b)(6).   
reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.”  Ashcroft v. 
Iqbal, 
556 U.S. 662, 678
 (2009).                                          
Ordinarily, courts do not consider matters outside the pleadings in resolving a Rule 

12(b)(6) motion, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(d), but documents that are necessarily embraced by 
the pleadings may be considered without transforming the motion into one for summary 
judgment.  Mattes v. ABC Plastics, Inc., 
323 F.3d 695
, 697 n.4 (8th Cir. 2003) (citation 
omitted).  Materials embraced by the complaint include “documents whose contents are 
alleged in a complaint and whose authenticity no party questions, but which are not 

physically attached to the pleading.”  Kushner v. Beverly Enters., Inc., 
317 F.3d 820
, 831 
(8th Cir. 2003) (quoting In re Syntex Corp. Sec. Litig., 
95 F.3d 922, 926
 (9th Cir. 1996)).  
Filings in other cases referenced in the complaint may be considered both embraced by the 
complaint and matters of public record.  Fredin v. Miller, No. 19-cv-3051, 
2020 WL 3077708
, at *5 (D. Minn. June 10, 2020) (“Given that [the] Complaint refers directly to 

other cases, the Court finds that the filings in those cases are matters embraced by the 
pleadings, as well as matters of public record.”), aff’d, 
840 F. App’x 61
 (8th Cir. 2021); 
see also Leonardo v. MSW Cap., LLC, No. 16-cv-3845, 
2017 WL 2062852
, at *2 (D. Minn. 
May 12, 2017) (stating defendants’ exhibits were “a quintessential example of materials 
that are ‘necessarily embraced by the pleadings’” in part because the complaint “repeatedly 

references the state-court action.”).                                     
Here, Defendants filed a declaration and fourteen exhibits with their motion.  See 
Brown Decl. [ECF No. 23].  Mr. Wagner argues that Exhibits 2, 8, 11, and 14 should be 
excluded from consideration because they are not embraced by the Amended Complaint.  
Exhibit 2 is an email exchange between Mr. Wagner and Schroeder, the contents of which 
are referenced in the Amended Complaint.  Am. Compl. ¶ 38.  Exhibit 2 is thus embraced 
by the Amended Complaint and will not be excluded from consideration.  Exhibits 11 and 

14 are filings from the Ramsey County and Douglas County court proceedings, which the 
Amended Complaint discusses in some detail.  
Id.
 ¶¶ 64–66, 78–82.  The filings are 
necessarily embraced by the Amended Complaint because the Amended Complaint refers 
to the cases directly, and the documents are matters of public record.  See Fredin, 
2020 WL 3077708
, at *5.  Exhibit 8—a draft stipulation—is neither a public record nor embraced by 

the Amended Complaint and will therefore be excluded from consideration.   
                          III                                        
                           A                                         
Mr.  Wagner  claims  “a  constitutionally  enforceable  liberty  interest  and  a 
fundamental right,” which he says is deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition, 
“to operate his animal feedlot and to engage in farming activities on his property where 

Mr. Wagner satisfied all of the requirements necessary for the issuance of an NPDES 
permit.”  Am. Compl. ¶ 85.  Defendants argue that there is no fundamental right to farm or 
to  operate  a  business  free  from  regulations  one  dislikes,  and,  accordingly,  that  no 
substantive-due-process violation occurred.  Defs.’ Mem. in Supp. at 19.  Mr. Wagner 
responds that the right he asserts is not a right to farm or operate free from regulations, but 

a right to “freely use and enjoy his property.”  Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n [ECF No. 28] at 21.   
To state a substantive-due-process claim against a state official, a plaintiff must 
demonstrate that a fundamental right was violated.  A fundamental right is one that is 
“objectively,  ‘deeply  rooted  in  this  Nation’s  history  and  tradition.’”    Washington  v. 
Glucksberg, 
521 U.S. 702
, 720–21 (1997) (quoting Moore v. City of E. Cleveland, 
431 U.S. 494, 503
 (1977)).  The plaintiff must also demonstrate that the official’s conduct shocks 

the conscience.  Folkerts v. City of Waverly, 
707 F.3d 975, 980
 (8th Cir. 2013).  Whether 
conduct shocks the conscience is a question of law.  
Id.
 (citing Terrell v. Larson, 
396 F.3d 975
, 981 (8th Cir. 2005) (en banc)).  Conscience-shocking conduct only includes “the most 
severe violations of individual rights that result from the brutal and inhumane abuse of 
official power.”  White v. Smith, 
696 F.3d 740
, 757–58 (8th Cir. 2012) (quotation marks 

omitted).    “Only  a  purpose  to  cause  harm  unrelated  to  the  legitimate  object  of  the 
government action in question will satisfy the element of arbitrary conduct shocking to the 
conscience, necessary for a due process violation.”  Folkerts, 
707 F.3d at 981
 (cleaned up).   
Mr.  Wagner  has  not  alleged  facts  plausibly  showing  the  violation  of  any 
fundamental right.  The Eighth Circuit has explicitly declined to recognize farming as a 

fundamental right.  United States v. White Plume, 
447 F.3d 1067, 1075
 (8th Cir. 2006) 
(“The Supreme Court has not declared ‘farming’ to be a fundamental right, and we decline 
to do so today.”).  Neither has the right to “freely use and enjoy one’s property” been 
recognized as a fundamental right by the Eighth Circuit, which Mr. Wagner acknowledges.  
Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 21.  Regardless, Mr. Wagner argues the proposed right is deeply 

rooted in the Nation’s history and “is consistent with the Supreme Court’s interpretation of 
the Constitution.”  
Id.
  In support, he offers two zoning cases: Washington ex rel. Seattle 
Title Tr. Co. v. Roberge, 
278 U.S. 116
 (1928), and Levin v. Upper Makefield Twp., Bucks 
Cnty., Pa., 90 Fed. App’x 653 (3rd Cir. 2004).  In Roberge, the Supreme Court found that 
a city ordinance impermissibly delegated permitting authority to a landowner’s neighbors.  
Roberge, 
278 U.S. at 117, 122
.  Key to the Court’s decision, the neighbors were “not bound 
by any official duty, but [we]re free to withhold consent for selfish reasons or arbitrarily 

and may subject the [owner] to their will or caprice.”  
Id. at 122
.  The MPCA is different.  
It is a state agency, created by statute, with defined governing principles.  As Mr. Wagner 
points out, Levin does recognize the Third Circuit’s holding that “ownership is a property 
interest worthy of substantive due process protection.”  Levin, 90 Fed. App’x at 659 
(citations  omitted)  (emphasis  added).    But  Mr.  Wagner’s  claims  do  not  concern 

“ownership” in the sense of the Third Circuit’s rule.  Here, Mr. Wagner does not allege 
that he was deprived of ownership of his land or of anything else.        
If Mr. Wagner had plausibly alleged deprivation of a fundamental right, he has not 
alleged facts plausibly showing conscience-shocking behavior.  Mr. Wagner argues he has 
alleged conscience-shocking behavior, but also that he “need only meet the ‘deliberate 

indifference’ standard.”  Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 20.  This is not persuasive legally or 
factually.  Legally, it is true that “in some cases” deliberate indifference suffices to satisfy 
the substantive due process threshold.  Terrell, 396 F.3d at 978 (citing Cnty. of Sacramento 
v.  Lewis,  
523 U.S. 833
,  848–49  (1998)).    “When  ‘actual  deliberation  is  practical,’ 
establishing a substantive-due-process violation requires proof of deliberate indifference, 

rather than conscience-shocking conduct.”  Scott v. Baldwin, 
720 F.3d 1034, 1036
 (8th Cir. 
2013)  (quoting  Terrell,  396  F.3d  at  978).    This  statement  from  Baldwin  might  be 
understood to mean that “deliberate indifference” is a different standard from “conscience-
shocking conduct.”  But that seems incorrect in view of Lewis.  In Lewis, as the en banc 
Eighth  Circuit  recognized  in  Terrell,  the  Supreme  Court  described  the  deliberate-
indifference standard as a degree of culpability necessary to establish that conduct is 
conscience shocking, not as a degree of culpability distinct from conscience-shocking 

behavior.  Lewis, 523 U.S. at 846–851; Terrell, 396 F.3d at 978.  As the Eighth Circuit put 
it in another instance, “[i]n cases where ‘defendants acted under circumstances in which 
actual deliberation was practical . . ., their conduct may shock the conscience of federal 
judges only if they acted with deliberate indifference.’”  Est. of Johnson v. Weber, 
785 F.3d 267, 272
 (8th Cir. 2015) (quoting Moore ex rel. Moore v. Briggs, 
381 F.3d 771, 773
 (8th 

Cir. 2004)) (internal quotations omitted).                                
Regardless,  the  Amended  Complaint  does  not  allege  facts  plausibly  showing 
conscience-shocking conduct even if a deliberate-indifference standard applied.7  Mr. 
Wagner does not allege facts showing the inspections were deliberately indifferent in some 
respect.  He alleges that inspections occurred, and that Defendants participated in the 

decision to initiate them.  Am. Compl. ¶¶ 45–47.  Mr. Wagner does not allege, for example, 
that Defendants destroyed his property during the inspections or that they were especially 
forceful or cruel in some aspect of their conduct.  He alleges: “Defendants ignored the 

7    The cases applying the deliberate-indifference standard often involve state actors 
causing danger, harm, death, or inadequate prison conditions.  See Lewis, 
523 U.S. at 836
 
(applying standard after sheriffs caused a death in a high-speed automobile chase); Terrell, 
396 F.3d at 977 (applying standard when sheriffs caused a death while driving through a 
red light); Scott, 
720 F.3d at 1035
 (applying standard when Department of Corrections 
director detained prisoners past their release dates); Hayes v. Faulkner Cnty., 
388 F.3d 669
, 
674  (8th  Cir.  2004)  (finding  deliberate  indifference  to  prisoners’  rights  after  county 
detained an arrestee for 38 days without a court appearance); Estelle v. Gamble, 
429 U.S. 97
, 104–05 (1976) (applying deliberate-indifference standard to cases involving “serious 
medical needs of prisoners”).  Mr. Wagner doesn’t allege anything like that here.   
MPCA’s normal process and procedures and a clear regulation that only allows the agency 
to withhold a permit based on unresolved noncompliance at the same facility.”  Pl.’s Mem. 
in Opp’n at 19–20.  That Defendants may have misinterpreted their obligations under the 

governing  regulation  “does  not  rise  to  the  level  of  arbitrary  government  action  and 
egregious misconduct necessary to state a substantive due process claim.”  Schmidt v. Des 
Moines Pub. Sch., 
655 F.3d 811, 817
 (8th Cir. 2011).                      
                           B                                         
Mr. Wagner claims he was deprived of property in violation of his procedural due 

process rights.  He claims a property interest in the modified NPDES permit for which he 
applied, as well as in “his animal feedlot, the land on which his animal feedlot is located, 
and the NPDES permit for his feedlot.”  Am. Compl. ¶ 86; Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 23.  
Defendants argue there is no property interest in the permit, and that Mr. Wagner has not 
alleged that he has been deprived of his land, feedlot, or permit.  Defs.’ Mem. in Supp. at 

22.                                                                       
“As for the Due Process Clause, standard analysis under that provision proceeds in 
two steps: We first ask whether there exists a liberty or property interest of which a person 
has been deprived, and if so we ask whether the procedures followed by the State were 
constitutionally sufficient.”  Swarthout v. Cooke, 
562 U.S. 216
, 219 (2011).  If the plaintiff 

cannot identify any protected liberty or property interest of which he was deprived, “any 
procedural due process claim necessarily fails.”  Beulieu v. Ludeman, 
690 F.3d 1017, 1047
 
(8th  Cir.  2012);  see  Senty-Haugen  v.  Goodno,  
462 F.3d 876, 886
  (8th  Cir.  2006) 
(explaining that courts do not consider what process is due unless a plaintiff has a protected 
liberty or property interest).  To have a property interest under the Fourteenth Amendment, 
a person must have a “legitimate claim of entitlement” to the property.  Bd. of Regents of 
State Colls. v. Roth, 
408 U.S. 564, 577
 (1972).  “Property interests are not created by the 

Constitution but rather stem from an independent source such as state law.”  Stauch v. City 
of Columbia Heights, 
212 F.3d 425, 429
 (8th Cir. 2000).                   
The first question is whether Mr. Wagner has a property interest in the modified 
NPDES permit.  A review of case law in this area reveals a general rule: when a state law 
leaves the issuing department no discretion to approve or deny a permit, it creates a 

property interest, while a law that gives the issuer discretion does not.  In Austell v. 
Sprenger, 
690 F.3d 929
 (8th Cir. 2012), for example, the Eighth Circuit found Missouri 
law created no clearly established property right in the renewal of a childcare facility 
license when the issuing department was permitted to “deny, suspend, place on probation 
or revoke the license of such persons as fail to obey the provisions of [the laws] or the rules 

and regulations made by [the department].”  Austell, 
690 F.3d at 936
.  The department 
could only deny a license renewal for cause but had “substantial discretion to determine 
violations.”    
Id.
    Accordingly,  the  court  found  the  statutes  governing  licensing 
determinations were “broad, subjective, and [gave] the department substantial discretion.”  
Id.
  Similarly, in Patton v. Blum, 
105 F. Supp. 3d 934
 (E.D. Mo. 2015), a district court 

found that because a state licensing agency had “the authority to determine whether adult 
day care programs and applicants are in compliance with licensure laws and regulations 
before issuing a license,” the statutes conferred “no constitutionally protected property 
interest.”  Patton, 105 F. Supp. at 943–44.  By contrast, in Stauch v. City of Columbia 
Heights, the court found a protected property interest in rental-license renewals because 
applicants “need only meet three objective criteria to qualify.”  Stauch, 
212 F.3d at 430
.  
Unlike in Austell or Patton, the issuing body had no discretion to deny renewal.  
Id.
   

Mr. Wagner argues the issuance of the modified permit is mandatory.  Pl.’s Mem. 
in Opp’n at 23.  He relies on a part of 
Minn. R. 7001
.0140, which as relevant here provides: 
“Except as provided in subpart 2, the agency shall issue . . . or modify a permit.”  
Minn. R. 7001
.0140 subp. 1 (emphasis added).  At first glance, the rule’s use of “shall” might be 
understood to foreclose discretion, but the rest of the rule shows this is not the case.  The 

rest of the rule makes clear that a permit’s issuance or modification depends on the 
MPCA’s exercise of substantial discretion:                                
     Except as provided in subpart 2, the agency shall issue, reissue, 
     revoke and reissue, or modify a permit if the agency determines 
     that the proposed permittee or permittees will, with respect to 
     the facility or activity to be permitted, comply or will undertake 
     a  schedule  of  compliance  to  achieve  compliance  with  all 
     applicable state and federal pollution control statutes and rules 
     administered by the agency, and conditions of the permit and    
     that all applicable requirements of Minnesota Statutes, chapter 
     116D, and the rules adopted under Minnesota Statutes, chapter   
     116D,  have  been  fulfilled.    For  solid  waste  facilities,  the 
     requirements  of  Minnesota  Statutes,  section  473.823,       
     subdivisions 3 and 6, must also be fulfilled.                   
Id.
                                                                       
The MPCA thus has discretion to determine whether an applicant will comply with 
statutes, rules, and conditions before issuing or modifying a permit.  As in Patton, the 
MPCA “shall” issue the permit only once it has determined the proposed permittee will 
comply with certain rules and conditions.  Further, 
Minn. Stat. § 116.07
 subdiv. 7c(a) states 
that “[t]he agency must issue national pollutant discharge elimination system permits for 
feedlots only as required by federal law.”  Federal law, in turn, provides that when the 
director of an agency “receives a request for modification . . . he or she may determine 

whether or not one or more of the causes listed in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section for 
modification or revocation and reissuance or both exist.”  
40 C.F.R. § 122.62
 (emphasis 
added).  The MPCA and its agents have the type of discretion described in Austell, where 
the Eighth Circuit determined that the plaintiffs had failed to show they had a clearly 
established property interest in renewal of their license.  Austell, 
690 F.3d at 935
.8   

Mr. Wagner also has alleged a constitutionally protected property right in his 
feedlot, land, and application for a modified NPDES permit.  Am. Compl. ¶ 86.  Defendants 
correctly point out that Mr. Wagner has not pleaded that Defendants deprived him of his 
feedlot, land, or application.  Defs.’ Mem. in Supp. at 22.  Because, with respect to these 
items, Mr. Wagner has not identified a protected property interest of which he was 

deprived, “any procedural due process claim necessarily fails.”  Beulieu, 690 F.3d at 1047.   



8    Defendants argue that federal and state law foreclose the argument that an NPDES 
permit creates a property interest.  Chapter 7001 of Minnesota’s Administrative Rules, 
which concerns MPCA permits, states that each draft and final permit must include 
language stating “[t]he permit does not convey a property right or an exclusive privilege.”  
Minn. R. 7001
.0150, subp. 3(C).  The draft permit sent to Mr. Wagner included this 
language.  Brown Decl. at Ex. 1-44.  Similarly, Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations, 
entitled “Protection of Environment,” provides that the “issuance of a permit does not 
convey any property rights of any sort, or any exclusive privilege.”  
40 C.F.R. § 122.5
(b).  
The regulation clarifies that it applies to state programs.  
Id.
  Whether these disclaimers are 
effective need not be decided here because the relevant rule does not confer a property 
right.                                                                    
If the applicable rule conferred a property interest in the modified NPDES permit, 
Mr. Wagner does not plausibly allege he was deprived of due process.  Mr. Wagner claims 
Defendants refused to issue his modified permit “without affording Mr. Wagner a hearing 

regarding the legality of [their] actions.”  Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 25.  But the Amended 
Complaint is self-defeating on this point: a suit seeking a writ of mandamus was available, 
and Mr. Wagner took advantage of it.  Am. Compl. ¶ 64.  Mr. Wagner commenced a legal 
proceeding against the MPCA for a writ of mandamus on October 4, 2018, nearly eighteen 
months after the May 3, 2017 inspection.  
Id.
  Shortly after commencing the suit, the MPCA 

issued the modified permit.  
Id. ¶ 65
.  The Amended Complaint does not allege facts 
plausibly showing either that more or different process might have been required under the 
Fourteenth Amendment.                                                     
                           C                                         
Mr. Wagner claims Defendants retaliated against him because he exercised his First 

Amendment rights.  Specifically, Mr. Wagner alleges he exercised First Amendment-
protected rights by “disputing the MPCA’s legal authority to regulate his pastures and 
cow/calf operation as a feedlot[,]” contesting the MPCA’s enforcement activities, and 
petitioning the Minnesota legislature to clarify the law governing feedlots in a way that 
benefitted Mr. Wagner.  
Id. ¶¶ 96, 100
.  And Mr. Wagner alleges Defendants retaliated by 

delaying issuance of the modified NPDES permit and “seeking to impose against Mr. 
Wagner the largest penalty the MPCA has ever imposed against an animal feedlot[.]”  
Id. ¶¶ 97, 102
.                                                               
To state a First Amendment-retaliation claim, Mr. Wagner must allege: “(1) that he 
engaged in a constitutionally protected activity; (2) that the defendant[s] took adverse 
action against him that would chill a person of ordinary firmness from continuing in the 

activity; and (3) that the adverse action was motivated in part by [Mr. Wagner’s] exercise 
of his constitutional rights.”  Scheffler v. Molin, 
743 F.3d 619, 621
 (8th Cir. 2014); Defs.’ 
Mem. in Supp. at 23; Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 29.  Defendants acknowledge that Mr. Wagner 
engaged in protected activity.  See Defs.’ Mem. in Supp. at 23–24.  The question, then, is 
whether Mr. Wagner has alleged facts plausibly showing the second and third elements.   

It is at least plausible that the withholding of the modified NPDES permit and the 
penalty sought in MPCA’s the 2021 lawsuit—whether considered together or separately—
would chill a person of ordinary firmness from engaging in protected activity.  According 
to the Eighth Circuit:                                                    
     The ordinary-firmness test is . . . designed to weed out trivial 
     matters from those deserving the time of the courts as real and 
     substantial violations of the First Amendment. . . .  In applying 
     this “test,” we are mindful of the words of Judge Posner in Bart 
     v. Telford, 
677 F.2d 622, 625
 (7th Cir. 1982):                  
          The effect on freedom of speech may be small,              
          but since there is no justification for harassing          
          people for exercising their constitutional rights it       
          need not be great in order to be actionable.               
     The test is an objective one, not subjective.  The question is not 
     whether  the  plaintiff  [himself]  was  deterred,  though  how 
     plaintiff acted might be evidence of what a reasonable person   
     would  have  done. . . .    What  would  a  person  of  “ordinary 
     firmness” have done in reaction to the [adverse action]?  Would 
     he or she have simply ignored [it], or would he or she have     
     been slowed down, at least to some degree?                      
Garcia v. City of Trenton, 
348 F.3d 726
, 728–29 (8th Cir. 2003).  “In some cases, 
embarrassment, humiliation and emotional distress may be sufficient to support a § 1983 
claim.”  Naucke v. City of Park Hills, 
284 F.3d 923
, 928 (8th Cir. 2002).  But an adverse 

action is more likely shown when an official causes the plaintiff to experience “concrete 
consequences.”  Scheffler, 
743 F.3d at 622
.  In Garcia, for instance, a mayor’s issuance of 
$35 in retaliatory parking tickets over less than two months was enough to chill a person 
of ordinary firmness and supported a jury verdict on the plaintiff’s retaliation claim.  
Garcia, 
348 F.3d at 729
.  If $35 in parking tickets is chilling, then withholding a permit for 

over a year and initiating a lawsuit seeking over $150,000 in penalties is enough to chill a 
person of ordinary firmness.                                              
To  show  causation,  Mr.  Wagner  must  allege  facts  plausibly  showing  “that  a 
retaliatory motive of the government official was a ‘but-for cause’ of the adverse action, 
‘meaning that the adverse action against the plaintiff would not have been taken absent the 

retaliatory motive.’”  Graham v. Barnette, 
5 F.4th 872, 889
 (8th Cir. 2021) (quoting Nieves 
v. Bartlett, 587 U.S. ---, 
139 S. Ct. 1715
, 1722 (2019)).  “In other words, the plaintiff must 
show he was ‘singled out because of [his] exercise of constitutional rights.’”  Peterson v. 
Kopp, 
754 F.3d 594, 602
 (8th Cir. 2014).  Unless causation is “‘so free from doubt as to 
justify taking it from the jury,’ the issue should be tried.”  Lawrence v. City of St. Paul, 
740 F. Supp. 2d 1026, 1044
 (D. Minn. 2010) (quoting Revels v. Vincenz, 
382 F.3d 870, 876
 
(8th Cir. 2004)); De Rossitte v. Correct Care Sols., LLC, 
22 F.4th 796, 804
 (8th Cir. 2022) 
(same).                                                                   
Here, Mr. Wagner claims to possess direct evidence of a retaliatory motive.  He 
alleges:                                                                  
     According to the MPCA’s internal documents that the agency      
     produced in the state-court action, Ms. Scheirer, Mr. Hukriede, 
     Ms. Studanski, Ms. Costin, and other employees of the MPCA      
     based their decision to commence the state-court action and to  
     seek to impose against Mr. Wagner the largest penalty the       
     agency has ever imposed against an animal feedlot on the fact   
     that Mr. Wagner had exercised his legal right to appeal prior   
     administrative  penalties  the  agency  had  sought  to  impose 
     against him and the fact that Mr. Wagner “is the individual     
     behind the legislation last year that added to the definition of 
     pasture.”                                                       

Am. Compl. ¶ 82.                                                          
These allegations do not plausibly show causation.  The content of the referenced 
MPCA documents is not described.  In other words, we do not know what the documents 
produced in the state-court case say or how the documents’ contents might show that 
Defendants retaliated against Mr. Wagner because of his First Amendment-protected 
activities.  Alleging that particular evidence shows a retaliatory motive without describing 
the evidence seems the same thing as alleging a legal conclusion.  To properly assess 
whether the documents’ contents plausibly show causation, it is necessary to know what is 
in the documents.  See Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 680–81 (holding allegations that defendants 
“knew of, condoned, and willfully and maliciously agreed” to subject plaintiff to harsh 
conditions were insufficient to survive Rule 8’s plausibility standards).   
As a fallback, Mr. Wagner relies on the temporal relationship between his protected 
activity, on the one hand, and Defendants’ delay in issuing the modified NPDES permit 
and their commencement of the Douglas County lawsuit in 2021, on the other.  A temporal 
relationship  between  protected  activities  and  adverse  action  may  “support  [a] 
circumstantial claim of retaliatory action” in the First Amendment context.  L.L. Nelson 
Enters., Inc. v. Cnty. of St. Louis, 
673 F.3d 799, 809
 (8th Cir. 2012).   

Mr.  Wagner’s  temporal-relationship  allegations  are  not  sufficient.    The 
“withholding” of the permit began in May 2017, after the public comment period ended 
without comments in which case, according to Mr. Wagner, the MPCA’s normal practice 
was to issue the permit.  Id. ¶ 56.  Mr. Wagner’s alleged protected speech was in response 
to the withholding of the modified permit.  He appears to have petitioned the legislature 

about changing the definition of “pastures” beginning in 2019.  Id. ¶ 77.  He sued the 
MPCA for a writ of mandamus in October 2018.  Id. ¶ 64.  Defendants could not have 
retaliated by withholding Mr. Wagner’s permit in May 2017 before he engaged in protected 
speech in 2018 and 2019.  The MPCA’s Douglas County suit against Mr. Wagner comes 
closer to providing chronological support for the retaliation claim—because Defendants 

acted after Mr. Wagner exercised his First Amendment rights—but nonetheless fails for 
being too remote.  After Mr. Wagner challenged his administrative violations between 
2017 and 2019, see Am. Compl. ¶¶ 48, 51–52, he sued the MPCA for a writ of mandamus 
in Ramsey County in 2018, see id. ¶ 64, and he petitioned the legislature to change the law 
in 2019, see id. ¶¶ 76–77.  The MPCA sued him “[i]n or around March 2021,” two years 

after the most recent alleged exercise of his First Amendment rights.  Id. ¶ 78.  In Kilpatrick 
v. King, 
499 F.3d 759
 (8th Cir. 2007), the Eighth Circuit found that timing “weigh[ed] 
against an inference of retaliatory intent” when the protected speech and adverse action 
were separated by nine months.  Kilpatrick, 
499 F.3d at 768
.  By contrast, in Peterson v. 
Kopp, 
754 F.3d 594
 (8th Cir. 2014), the court found chronology relevant to the retaliation 
analysis when a person exercised protected speech “moments before” the defendant’s 
adverse actions.  Peterson, 
754 F.3d at 603
.  Mr. Wagner does not allege retaliation within 

moments—or even days or weeks—of his protected speech.  Mr. Wagner alleges he 
engaged in protected speech through 2019 and was sued many months or years later in 
2021.  Under Eighth Circuit precedents, this chronology is too remote to support an 
inference of retaliation.9                                                

                          IV                                         
A district court “may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a claim . . . 
if . . . the district court has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction.”  
28 U.S.C. § 1367
(c)(3).  “[I]n the usual case in which all federal-law claims are eliminated 
before  trial,  the  balance  of  factors  to  be  considered  under  the  pendent  jurisdiction 
doctrine—judicial  economy,  convenience,  fairness,  and  comity—will  point  toward 

declining to exercise jurisdiction over the remaining state-law claims.”  Barstad v. Murray 
Cnty., 
420 F.3d 880, 888
 (8th Cir. 2005) (quoting Carnegie–Mellon Univ. v. Cohill, 
484 U.S. 343
, 350 n.7 (1988)).  And the Eighth Circuit has instructed district courts not to 
exercise supplemental jurisdiction over state-law claims when, as here, all federal claims 


9    Mr. Wagner alleges that Defendants conspired with each other and perhaps one or 
more other MPCA employees to violate his federal and state constitutional rights.  Among 
other things, a plaintiff is “required to prove a deprivation of a constitutional right or 
privilege in order to prevail on a § 1983 civil conspiracy claim.”  White v. McKinley, 
519 F.3d 806, 814
 (8th Cir. 2008) (citing Askew v. Millerd, 
191 F.3d 953
, 957 (8th Cir. 1999)).  
As  discussed  above,  Mr.  Wagner  has  failed  to  allege  facts  plausibly  showing  a 
constitutional violation.  For at least this reason, then, his conspiracy claim also fails.   
are dismissed well before trial.  See Hervey v. Cnty. of Koochiching, 
527 F.3d 711
, 726–
27 (8th Cir. 2008).                                                       
There is no reason to deviate from this general rule here.  Mr. Wagner has had one 

opportunity to amend his complaint, and he did not request an opportunity to amend in 
compliance with D. Minn. L.R. 15.1(b) in response to Defendants’ motion.  Therefore, Mr. 
Wagner’s federal claims will be dismissed with prejudice, and Mr. Wagner’s state claims 
will be dismissed without prejudice to be litigated in state court, should he choose to pursue 
them there.10                                                             

ORDER

Therefore, based on the foregoing, and on the files, records, and proceedings herein, 
IT IS ORDERED THAT:                                                       
1.  The Motion to Dismiss [ECF No. 21] of Defendants Lisa Scheirer, Randall 
Hukriede, Scott Schroeder, and Rachel Studanski is GRANTED.               


10   One might reasonably question whether Mr. Wagner’s claims under the Minnesota 
Constitution should be dismissed at this stage.  Though Mr. Wagner sued under the 
Minnesota Constitution alongside his claims under the United States Constitution, he did 
not distinguish his state constitutional claims or treat them separately in any respect from 
his federal constitutional claims.  In other words, as Mr. Wagner’s federal constitutional 
claims go, so go his state constitutional claims.  If that weren’t so, Mr. Wagner’s state 
constitutional claims are not actionable under § 1983 and lack a § 1983 analog.  As the 
Eighth Circuit has observed, “Minnesota courts explicitly refuse to find causes of action 
for damages under the Minnesota Constitution on their own unless the Minnesota Supreme 
Court has recognized the cause of action.”  Riehm v. Engelking, 
538 F.3d 952, 969
 (8th 
Cir. 2008) (citing Mitchell v. Steffen, 
487 N.W.2d 896, 905
 (Minn. Ct. App. 1992), aff’d 
on other grounds, 
504 N.W.2d 198
 (Minn. 1993)).  Mr. Wagner cites no case in which the 
Minnesota Supreme Court has recognized a damages cause of action for the claims he 
asserts.  Regardless, Mr. Wagner asked specifically that his right to pursue these claims be 
preserved so that he might advocate for recognition of an applicable damages claim under 
the Minnesota Constitution.  That request will be honored.                
2.  Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), the claims asserted in 
Counts I and II of the Amended Complaint under 
42 U.S.C. § 1983
 are DISMISSED 
WITH PREJUDICE.                                                           

3.  Pursuant to 
28 U.S.C. § 1367
(c), the claims asserted in the Amended Complaint 
under Minnesota law are DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE.                      
       LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.                          

Date: January 24, 2024             s/ Eric C. Tostrud                     
                              Eric C. Tostrud                        
                              United States District Court           

Reference

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