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GLENDA Q. MAHANEY vs DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, 17-002518 (2017)

Court: Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 17-002518 Visitors: 20
Petitioner: GLENDA Q. MAHANEY
Respondent: DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
Judges: BRAM D. E. CANTER
Agency: Department of Environmental Protection
Locations: Orlando, Florida
Filed: Apr. 26, 2017
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Wednesday, November 15, 2017.

Latest Update: Nov. 27, 2019
Summary: The issue to be determined in this case is whether the Notice of Intent to Issue Order Requiring Access to Property (“Access Order”) issued by the Department of Environmental Protection (“Department”) and directed to Glenda Mahaney, as the property owner, is a valid exercise of the Department’s authority.The Department's Order Requiring Access to Property should be withdrawn or the liability provision of the order should be amended because the Department does not have authority to specify the Pe
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STATE OF FLORIDA

DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS


GLENDA Q. MAHANEY,



vs.

Petitioner,


Case No. 17-2518


DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION,


Respondent.

/


RECOMMENDED ORDER


The final hearing in this case was held on July 28, 2017, by video teleconference at sites in Tallahassee and Orlando, Florida, before Bram D.E. Canter, Administrative Law Judge of the Division of Administrative Hearings (“DOAH”).

APPEARANCES


For Petitioner: Glenda Q. Mahaney, pro se

Post Office Box 123

Mount Dora, Florida 32756


For Respondent: William W. Gwaltney, Esquire

Department of Environmental Protection Mail Station 35

3900 Commonwealth Boulevard

Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3000 STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

The issue to be determined in this case is whether the Notice of Intent to Issue Order Requiring Access to Property (“Access Order”) issued by the Department of Environmental


Protection (“Department”) and directed to Glenda Mahaney, as the property owner, is a valid exercise of the Department’s authority.

PRELIMINARY STATEMENT


On March 10, 2017, Jeff Prather, Director of the Department’s Central District Office in Orlando, issued the Access Order, which would require Petitioner to provide the Department access to her property located at 15751 Old US Highway 441, in Tavares, Florida, for the purpose of installing temporary groundwater monitoring wells and to collect groundwater samples from the temporary wells and from Petitioner’s potable water well. On or about March 29, 2017, Petitioner filed a petition for hearing to challenge the Department’s action.

At the final hearing, Petitioner testified on her own behalf. She offered no exhibits into evidence. The Department presented the testimony of Department employees Tracy Jewsbury and David Phillips. Respondent’s Exhibit 1 was admitted into evidence.

Due to disruptions caused by Hurricane Irma, the one-volume Transcript of the final hearing was not filed with DOAH until October 27, 2017. Neither Petitioner nor the Department filed a proposed recommended order.


FINDINGS OF FACT


  1. Petitioner Glenda Mahaney is a natural person and the owner of the property identified in the Access Order.

  2. The Department is the state agency which has been granted powers and assigned duties under chapters 376 and 403, Florida Statutes, for the protection and restoration of air and water quality and to adopt rules and issue orders in furtherance of these powers and duties.

    Background


  3. The groundwater beneath a parcel of land adjacent to Petitioner’s property was contaminated with petroleum when the land was used in the past for auto salvage operations.

  4. Initial groundwater sampling near the border of Petitioner’s property showed groundwater contamination by gasoline constituents which exceeded Groundwater Cleanup Target Levels (“GCTLs”). In other words, the contamination was at levels that required cleanup. However, later sampling showed the concentration of contaminants had decreased below GCTLs, probably as a result of natural attenuation.

  5. The existing data suggests that any groundwater contamination beneath Petitioner’s property is probably now at a level that would not require cleanup. However, the Department issued the Access Order because the Department is not certain


    about the contamination beneath Petitioner’s property and because Petitioner has continually requested further investigation.

  6. Petitioner believes contamination from the auto salvage site has caused illness in a tenant and even contributed to other persons’ deaths. However, no expert testimony was received on this subject and no finding is made about whether contamination exists on Petitioner’s property which has caused illness or death.

  7. The Department’s Site Investigation Section wants access to Petitioner’s property in order to determine whether contamination has migrated beneath Petitioner’s property and, if it has, the extent and concentration of the contaminants.

  8. The Department wants to: (a) install up to five temporary groundwater monitoring wells, (b) collect groundwater samples from the wells, (c) collect a groundwater sample from Petitioner’s potable water well, and (d) remove the monitoring wells after the sampling.

  9. The Access Order includes terms related to advance notice, scheduling, and related matters.

    Liability


  10. Although Petitioner believes petroleum contamination is present and wants it cleaned up, she objects to the provision of the Access Order related to liability. Paragraph 9(e) of the Access Order provides:


    Ms. Mahaney shall not be liable for any injury, damage or loss on the property suffered by the Department, its agents, or employees which is not caused by the [sic] negligence or intentional acts.


  11. Petitioner insists that she should not be liable under any circumstances for injuries or damages suffered by Department’s agents or employees who come on her property for these purposes. She demands that the Department come onto her property “at their own risk.”

  12. At the final hearing, the Department stated that it did not intend to impose on Petitioner a level of liability different than the liability that would already be applicable under Florida law. The Department offered to amend Paragraph 9(e) of the Access Order to indicate that Petitioner’s “liability, if any, shall be determined in accordance with Florida law.”

    Scope of the Investigation


  13. Petitioner objects to the proposed groundwater sampling because she does not believe it is extensive enough. Petitioner also believes the Department should test for soil contamination.

  14. The Department’s expert, David Phillips, testified that the proposed monitoring well locations were selected based on the direction of groundwater flow in the area and the wells are along the likely path of migration of any contaminated groundwater from the former auto salvage site.


  15. Another Department witness, Tracy Jewsbury, testified that no soil contamination was found on the auto salvage site, so the Department has no reason to expect there would be soil contamination on Petitioner’s property that came from the auto salvage operation.

  16. The Department will use the data collected from the wells to determine if contamination is present and whether future contamination assessment and/or remediation activities are

    necessary.


    CONCLUSIONS OF LAW


    Jurisdiction


  17. Petitioner contends that the Department lacks jurisdiction to order her to provide access, citing section 403.091(3), Florida Statutes. Section 403.091 is

    entitled “Inspections” and subsection (3) provides that the Department may make inspections of premises, equipment, and records, but only after obtaining consent of the owner or operator or by obtaining an “inspection warrant” from a county or circuit court judge. However, section 403.091 is not applicable here because it addresses the inspection of persons and facilities being regulated by the Department to determine compliance with regulations. Petitioner is not a person regulated by the Department. The Access Order is not for the


    purposes of determining whether Petitioner is in compliance with regulations.

  18. The Access Order cites section 403.061(8) and section 376.303(4), Florida Statutes, as the Department’s authority to issue the order. Section 403.061(8) grants the Department authority to issue orders “to effectuate the control of air and water pollution and enforce the same by all appropriate administrative and judicial proceedings.”

  19. Section 376.303(4) states:


    The department may require a property owner to provide site access for activities associated with contamination assessment or remedial action. Nothing herein shall be construed to prohibit an action by the property owner to compel restoration of his or her property or to recover damages from the person responsible for the polluting condition requiring assessment or remedial action activities.


  20. Section 376.303(4) imposes no condition that the Department obtain the property owner’s consent or an inspection warrant from a court as required by section 403.091(3).

  21. It is concluded that the Department has jurisdiction pursuant to section 376.303(4) to issue an administrative order to require access to property.


    Liability


  22. Most statutory statements about liability in chapters 376 and 403 are directed to persons who cause

    contamination or otherwise fail to comply with regulations; they are not directed to innocent, unregulated, adjacent property owners. However, Section 373.09(4) states:

    No person who, voluntarily or at the request of the department or its designee, renders assistance in containing or removing pollutants shall be liable for any civil damages to third parties resulting solely from acts or omissions of such person in rendering such assistance, except for acts or omissions amounting to gross negligence or willful misconduct.


  23. Petitioner, by being ordered to provide access, probably does not qualify as a person who is acting voluntarily or at the Department’s request. Furthermore, it is not clear that providing access qualifies as rendering assistance in containing or removing pollutants.

  24. Petitioner conceded at the final hearing that she would be liable for her intentional acts that caused injury or damages. However, she believes she should not be liable for any form of negligence, even gross negligence. She argues that her situation would be analogous to a fireman injured while fighting a fire in a burning house.

  25. Because the Legislature was silent on the issue of liability in this particular situation, it must be presumed that


    the Legislature did not intend to alter in any way a property owner’s potential liability in tort, if any, for injuries or damages to the Department’s agents or employees.

  26. The Department does not have special expertise to know that Paragraph 9(e) is an accurate statement of Petitioner’s potential liability in tort. Making tort liability determinations is not one of the Department’s delegated powers or duties. The Department acted beyond the authority granted to it by the Legislature when it sought to establish in the Access Order the tort liability that Petitioner would be subject to for any injuries or damages arising from rehabilitation activities on Petitioner’s property.

  27. However, the Department’s offer to amend


    Paragraph 9(e) to provide that Petitioner’s “liability, if any, shall be determined in accordance with Florida law,” would remedy this error. If this amendment is made, whatever protection Petitioner has under Florida law will not be diminished by the Access Order.

    Scope of the Investigation


  28. The Department demonstrated a reasonable basis for the scope of the investigation to be conducted pursuant to the Access Order. Petitioner was not competent by education, training, or experience to refute the Department’s technical justification for the proposed activities.


RECOMMENDATION


Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is

RECOMMENDED that the Department of Environmental Protection withdraw the Access Order or, alternatively, that Paragraph 9(e) of the Access Order be amended to provide that Ms. Mahaney’s potential liability, if any, shall be determined in accordance with Florida law.

DONE AND ENTERED this 15th day of November, 2017, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.

S

BRAM D. E. CANTER

Administrative Law Judge

Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building

1230 Apalachee Parkway

Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060

(850) 488-9675

Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us



COPIES FURNISHED:

Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 15th day of November, 2017.


William W. Gwaltney, Esquire Department of Environmental Protection Mail Station 35

3900 Commonwealth Boulevard

Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3000 (eServed)


Glenda Q. Mahaney Post Office Box 123

Mount Dora, Florida 32756


Lea Crandall, Agency Clerk

Department of Environmental Protection Douglas Building, Mail Station 35

3900 Commonwealth Boulevard

Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3000 (eServed)


Robert A. Williams, General Counsel Department of Environmental Protection Legal Department, Suite 1051-J Douglas Building, Mail Station 35

3900 Commonwealth Boulevard

Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3000 (eServed)


Noah Valenstein, Secretary

Department of Environmental Protection Douglas Building

3900 Commonwealth Boulevard

Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3000 (eServed


NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS


All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within

15 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that will issue the Final Order in this case.


Docket for Case No: 17-002518
Issue Date Proceedings
Dec. 11, 2019 Amended Notice of Appeal of Final Administrative Order filed.
Dec. 02, 2019 BY ORDER OF THE COURT: the document filed November 27, 2019, is treated as a Notice of Appeal and Appellant is ordered to file an Amended Notice of Appeal with on a copy of the order being appealed.
Nov. 27, 2019 Petition for Writ of Certiorari filed.
Jan. 23, 2018 Agency Final Order filed.
Nov. 15, 2017 Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
Nov. 15, 2017 Recommended Order (hearing held July 28, 2017). CASE CLOSED.
Oct. 27, 2017 Transcript of Proceedings (not available for viewing) filed.
Jul. 28, 2017 CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
Jul. 20, 2017 Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Witness Disclosure List filed.
Jul. 20, 2017 Notice and Certificate of Service of Department of Environmental Protection's Witness Disclosure List filed.
Jul. 20, 2017 Respondent's Proposed Exhibits filed (exhibits not available for viewing).
May 05, 2017 Order of Pre-hearing Instructions.
May 05, 2017 Notice of Hearing by Video Teleconference (hearing set for July 28, 2017; 1:00 p.m.; Orlando and Tallahassee, FL).
May 04, 2017 Department of Environmental Protection's Response to Initial Order filed.
Apr. 27, 2017 Initial Order.
Apr. 26, 2017 Notice of Intent to Issue Order Requiring Access to Property filed.
Apr. 26, 2017 Petition for Hearing filed.
Apr. 26, 2017 Request for Assignment of Administrative Law Judge and Notice of Preservation of Record filed.

Orders for Case No: 17-002518
Issue Date Document Summary
Jan. 22, 2018 Agency Final Order
Nov. 15, 2017 Recommended Order The Department's Order Requiring Access to Property should be withdrawn or the liability provision of the order should be amended because the Department does not have authority to specify the Petitioner's potential tort liability.
Source:  Florida - Division of Administrative Hearings

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