JON E. DEGUILIO, Judge.
This case arises under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA), 42 U.S.C. § 9601 et seq. Plaintiffs Valbruna Slater Steel Corporation and Fort Wayne Steel Corporation (collectively Valbruna) filed a cost recovery claim under § 107(a). Defendants Joslyn Manufacturing Company, Joslyn Corporation and Joslyn Manufacturing Company, LLC (collectively Joslyn) filed a contribution counterclaim under § 113(f). The parties tried Phase I of this bifurcated bench trial, on damages, from February 6, 2017 to February 7, 2017. Having considered the evidence, the Court now enters its findings of fact and conclusions of law as to that phase of trial.
This environmental litigation has endured for more than seven years. To summarize briefly, the Plaintiffs own a contaminated steel processing site, which they claim to have spent more than two million dollars to remediate. Their only cause of action (cost recovery under § 107(a)) seeks to require the Defendants, who used to own the site, to reimburse them for their cleanup costs.
While the full factual and procedural background of this matter is extensive (and set forth in prior orders), this case now boils down to two issues. First is the appropriate measure of damages. On summary
The parties stipulated to the following facts:
[DE 163 at 5-6]. The Court will set forth additional facts as they are relevant to its analysis below. Most of the evidence at trial was undisputed, though the Court also notes and explains its resolution of factual conflicts where necessary.
This phase of trial addressed which of Valbruna's expenses meet the requirements for compensability under CERCLA. To be recoverable, expenses must be both necessary and consistent with the National Contingency Plan. Costs are "necessary" if they are incurred in response to a threat to human health or the environment and they are necessary to address that threat. G.J. Leasing Co. v. Union Elec. Co., 854 F.Supp. 539, 562 (S.D. Ill. 1994) aff'd, 54 F.3d 379 (7th Cir. 1995). This is an objective inquiry. Carson Harbor Vill., Ltd. v. Unocal Corp., 270 F.3d 863, 872 (9th Cir. 2001) ("In determining whether response costs are `necessary,' we focus not on whether a party has a business or other motive in cleaning up the property, but on whether there is a threat to human health or the environment and whether the response action is addressed to that threat.").
A private party response action is consistent with the NCP if it is in substantial compliance with the requirements set forth in 40 C.F.R. § 300.700(c)(5) to (6) and results in a CERCLA-quality cleanup. 40 C.F.R. § 300.700(c)(3)(i). A state environmental protection agency's substantial involvement in a cleanup can also establish compliance with the NCP. NutraSweet Co. v. X-L Eng'g Co., 227 F.3d 776, 791 (7th Cir. 2000); Valbruna Slater Steel Corp. v. Joslyn Mfg. Co., No. 1:10-CV-044, 2015 WL 8055999, at *6 n. 4 (N.D. Ind. Dec. 4, 2015); Allied Waste Transportation, Inc. v. John Sexton Sand & Gravel Corp., No. 13 C 1029, 2016 WL 3443897, at *19 (N.D. Ill. June 23, 2016). Preliminary site-assessment and monitoring costs need not comply with the NCP. PMC, Inc. v. Sherwin-Williams Co., 151 F.3d 610, 617 (7th Cir. 1998); Valbruna, 2015 WL 8055999, at *6.
Joslyn argues that a number of Valbruna's costs do not satisfy these criteria. Specifically, it contests expenditures associated with: (1) an escrow contribution Valbruna made to buy the site under a prospective purchasers agreement with the Indiana Department of Environmental Management, (2) environmental due diligence assessments conducted by Pioneer and RSSI, (3) demolition of the old melt shop, (4) installation of a vapor barrier at the old melt shop site, (5) radiological contamination surveys conducted by SAIC and AECOM, (6) removal of the passivation sump, (7) excavation and disposal of contaminated soil at the steel ingot storage area, (8) disposal of a PCB transformer and bunker oil tanks and (9) costs that purportedly exceed Valbruna's own cost-tracking records. At this phase of trial, Joslyn does not challenge any other expenses. The Court addresses each category of disputed costs in turn.
Joslyn first argues that the $500,000 Valbruna paid into escrow under a prospective purchasers agreement with the Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) is not compensable. The agreement provided that the escrow funds would be used to remediate the site.
The Court already rejected this argument on summary judgment. In a prior order, the Court concluded that G.J. Leasing referenced the business motivation underlying a cleanup effort not because it determined compensability, but because it underscored the absence of a public health threat. This Court further found that even if it did "subscribe to Joslyn's interpretation of G.J. Leasing, it still would not find subjective motivation to be a relevant consideration in the necessary cost calculus." [DE 124 at 8] (citing Carson Harbor, 270 F.3d at 872). That approach has since received further support in this circuit. Allied Waste, 2016 WL 3443897, at *18 ("Additionally, as the Ninth Circuit has explained, as long as the costs were incurred in response to a threat to human health or the environment, and the actions were taken to address that threat, the underlying motivation for incurring costs is irrelevant."); see also MPM Silicones, LLC v. Union Carbide Corp., No. 1:11-CV-1542, 2016 WL 3962630, at *23 (N.D.N.Y. July 7, 2016) ("The fact that MPM undertook its project at the WWTU with a business purpose in mind is not determinative: In determining whether costs are necessary, the focus is not on whether a party has a business or other motive for cleaning up the property, but on whether there is a threat to human health or the environment and whether the response action is addressed to that threat.") (internal quotation marks omitted). As such, the motivation behind the escrow contribution does not affect Valbruna's ability to recover it from Joslyn under § 107(a).
Further, the escrow contribution funded work that was necessary and consistent with the NCP. It was used to conduct electrical resistance heating (ERH) remediation, which is a means of removing TCE from contaminated soil and groundwater. The parties have stipulated that TCE is a hazardous substance. IDEM viewed removing it as the highest priority at the site in light of its potential to migrate. [DE 170 at 84]. The ERH remediation was ultimately successful, removing more than ninety-three percent of TCE contamination. [DE 169 at 184-85].
Joslyn next contests the fees Valbruna paid to two environmental consultants, Pioneer and RSSI. Valbruna commissioned these companies to perform environmental due diligence prior to closing on the site. Valter Viero, a Valbruna officer, testified that Pioneer first conducted a routine Phase I assessment at a cost of about $2,000. When that revealed potential environmental issues, Valbruna commissioned a more thorough Phase II assessment through Pioneer and a radiological contamination survey through RSSI. [DE 169 at 28-29]. Joslyn argues that Valbruna should not be able to recover the expenses associated with these assessments because they were incurred to evaluate Valbruna's risk in buying the property rather than to mitigate a threat to human health or the environment.
This is simply another permutation of Joslyn's argument regarding the escrow funds. For reasons already noted, the Court does not find Valbruna's motivation in ordering the site assessments relevant at this phase of trial. Rather, the inquiry is whether they were commissioned in response to a threat to human health or the environment and were necessary to address that threat. Evidence at trial indicated that they were. The Phase I assessment was a broad, inexpensive survey of environmental issues. It yielded some areas of concern that Valbruna then investigated in greater detail. The Phase II assessment focused on the presence of TCE at the site. [DE 169 at 30]. Consistent with the above discussion, that was indisputably a serious environmental problem. The RSSI assessment investigated radiological contamination. It was reasonable to conduct that in light of the Phase I assessment, which revealed that Joslyn had previously used the site to roll uranium and indicated the potential presence of radiological contamination. [DE 169 at 62, 95]. This is true even if radiological contamination at the site did not ultimately require remediation. See Cont'l Title Co. v. Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co., No. 96 C 3257, 1999 WL 753933, at *3 (N.D. Ill. Sept. 15, 1999) (noting that site assessment and monitoring costs are compensable even absent any subsequent recoverable response costs).
Further, these assessments appear to have been both cost effective and useful. IDEM's Robertson-Habeck testified that due diligence information is generally helpful in defining where contamination is located at a particular site. [DE 170 at 73]. And Plaintiffs' expert Mundell testified that the due diligence assessments were a reasonable means of conducting investigatory work, which is a standard component of remediation. [DE 170 at 136-39]. The RSSI assessment also led to further examination of the site by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the enrollment of the site in the Formally Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program. [DE 169 at 35]; [DE 170 at 15-16]. The Court thus concludes that the costs associated with the Pioneer and RSSI assessments were necessary. See Norfolk S. Ry. Co. v. Gee Co., No. 98 C 1619, 2002 WL 31163777, at *35 (N.D. Ill.
Joslyn next disputes the compensability of costs Valbruna incurred to raze an old melt shop. It argues that Valbruna did this to construct a new building at the site, rather than to mitigate an environmental or public health threat. Valbruna responds that the melt shop was contaminated, posed a hazard and was "coming down whether we wanted it or not." [DE 170 at 167].
The evidence does not support Valbruna's position. While Valbruna argues that the melt shop was inevitably coming down, it has not designated any evidence to support that contention. More importantly, it is unclear what, if any, threat the melt shop posed either as it existed or if it had collapsed or how demolishing it otherwise advanced remediation of the site. Though the groundwater in that area was contaminated, see, e.g. [DE 169 at 147], there is no evidence that the building itself posed an environmental harm. It did contain asbestos, [DE 170 at 28], but asbestos is not a threat absent a risk that it could escape into the environment. See Sycamore Indus. Park Assocs. v. Ericsson, Inc., 546 F.3d 847, 851-53 (7th Cir. 2008) (finding no "disposal" or "release" of asbestos where it was "either inside a building or enclosed in a pipe chase or metal case" and "even if the asbestos broke off, asbestos fibers would remain in the building."); G.J. Leasing, 854 F.Supp. at 562 (finding costs to remove asbestos unnecessary where there was no evidence that it threatened to contaminate nearby grain or water). Indeed, Valbruna's environmental manager indicated that IDEM never ordered Valbruna to demolish the melt shop. [DE 170 at 15]. Rather, Valbruna demolished the melt shop in order to construct a new finishing operation building. [DE 170 at 13]. While expenses that facilitate new construction are not per se noncompensable, they are where, as here, they do not concurrently mitigate a threat to human health or the environment. G.J. Leasing, 54 F.3d at 386 (CERCLA cannot be invoked "to improve one's property and charge the expense of improvement to someone else"). As such, Valbruna cannot recover the funds it spent to demolish the melt shop.
Once Valbruna demolished the old melt shop, it constructed a new building where the melt shop had stood. As part of that process, Valbruna installed a "spray-on membrane" between the new building and volatile organic chemicals in groundwater beneath it. [DE 169 at 134-36]; [DE 170 at 44]. This acted as a protective barrier, which prevented chemical vapors from wafting up into the building "at concentrations that might be above a health protective indoor air concentration." [DE 169 at 136].
For similar reasons, the expenses associated with the SAIC and AECOM assessments were not necessary. While the evidence at trial regarding these assessments was scant, it indicated that both tests were performed to protect worker safety. Valbruna's environmental manager, Jonathan Hacker, testified that Valbruna commissioned the AECOM study "so that we feel comfortable in the demolition [of the melt shop], people's potential exposure to radiation, and future workers' exposure to that." [DE 170 at 21]. As to the SAIC study, Hacker testified that this too was conducted "to ensure that there was no radiological exposure to workers." [DE 170 at 37]. He further indicated that the SAIC study was not ordered by IDEM. Id. Thus, these studies were performed to ensure that conditions were suitable for Valbruna employees. Though the AECOM study seems to have also furthered the demolition of the melt shop building, that does not render it compensable since, as discussed above, the demolition of the melt shop was itself unnecessary. Moreover, there is no evidence that either the AECOM assessment or the SAIC assessment materially assisted in determining the need for remediation work or planning or executing remediation work. As such, the expenses Valbruna incurred in association with them are not compensable.
Joslyn next contends that it should not be liable for costs associated with removing the passivation sump and remediating the area around it. It argues that the costs relating to the passivation sump removal are capable of apportionment, as the contamination at issue was not released during Joslyn's ownership of the site. Further, it says that many of the costs associated with remediation of the passivation area are not compensable because they were not consistent with the NCP and IDEM was not substantially involved with them.
Neither of Joslyn's arguments is well taken. While a CERCLA defendant can escape liability to the extent certain
Even if the Court were to reach this issue, Joslyn misunderstands the nature of divisibility. It argues that "there is no evidence that the hole caused a release during the time Joslyn owned and operated the site." [DE 174 at 24]. But an absence of evidence is not sufficient for Joslyn to avoid liability. Rather, "CERCLA defendants seeking to avoid joint and several liability bear the burden of proving that a reasonable basis for apportionment exists." Burlington, 556 U.S. at 614, 129 S.Ct. 1870. Joslyn has failed to meet that burden. Joslyn also does not deny that it made use of the sump on the property. So, even if another party subsequently used or failed to maintain it, that would not necessarily relieve Joslyn of liability under CERLCA's strict liability regime. See id. ("where two or more persons cause a single and indivisible harm, each is subject to liability for the entire harm"). Accordingly, the Court rejects Joslyn's divisibility defense.
That leaves Joslyn's argument that the costs associated with the removal of the passivation sump were not all consistent with the NCP. Specifically, Joslyn says that IDEM was not involved in the removal of rainwater from the sump or the initial removal of the sump itself and the associated disposal of acid solids. Rather, it says IDEM only became involved with this operation when Valbruna discovered a tennis-ball-sized hole in the sump during the process of excavating it. As such, Joslyn argues that costs incurred before the discovery of the hole are not consistent with the NCP.
However, the evidence indicates that IDEM's involvement with the passivation sump was broader than Joslyn represents. The passivation area was initially identified as an area of concern in a 2002 voluntary remediation agreement with IDEM (though at that time IDEM indicated that no action was required because the tanks were "in a concrete overflow pit that appear
There also seems little doubt that these expenses were necessary. The sump had a hole in it which could have permitted passivation acids to enter the ground. See, e.g., [DE 170 at 58]. Those acids contained traces of heavy metal, which the parties have stipulated is hazardous. [DE 169 at 158]. Further, the building around the sump was deteriorating. So, the sump collected rainwater, which became contaminated with acids and regularly had to be removed before it overflowed. [DE 170 at 31].
Joslyn next argues that Valbruna's expenses for excavating and removing contaminated soil at the steel ingot storage area are not compensable. It again argues that these expenses were incurred to facilitate new construction. That much is true — Hacker testified that Valbruna removed the soil as part of an effort to construct a
Nevertheless, it does not matter why Valbruna removed the contaminated soil, so long as doing so was a reasonable means of mitigating a threat to human health or the environment. The evidence indicates that it was. Both Valbruna's environmental manager and IDEM's Lam testified that the soil at the ingot storage area was contaminated with metals. [DE 170 at 43] (Hacker indicating that "metallic contaminated" soil was excavated from the site in 2013); [DE 170 at 105-06] (Lam indicating he was aware of "contamination in what we call the ingot storage area"); see also [DE 170 at 142] (Mundell implying that the ingot storage area was a "heavy metal hot spot").
Joslyn also says that these expenses were not consistent with the NCP and that there is no evidence IDEM was substantially
Joslyn also argues that two other expenses Valbruna incurred were not necessary or consistent with the NCP. First, it points to the disposal of old bunker oil tanks and the concrete saddles upon which they rested. Second, it identifies Valbruna's disposal of a PCB transformer and associated oil and debris.
The Court finds that these expenses are not compensable. There was very little testimony at trial about them. Witnesses did testify that both the bunker oil tanks and the PCB transformer contained hazardous substances (the former fuel-oil sludge and the latter oil containing PCBs). However, there was no testimony that either of these substances were at any risk of escaping into the environment such that they would pose a threat. The PCB oil was presumably confined inside of the transformer. And the sludge was not at imminent risk of escape, as it had been inside of the bunker oil tanks since the 1950s. [DE 170 at 55]. As such, these contaminants appear to have been contained such that remediating them was not necessary to address an environmental threat. See G.J. Leasing, 854 F.Supp. at 562.
Finally, Joslyn argues that Valbruna seeks reimbursement for expenses which purportedly exceed those Valbruna incurred as documented by its own records. Specifically, Joslyn points to "cost-tracking" sheets, which indicate that Valbruna has incurred $224,221.18 less than the expenses it now claims (excluding the $500,000 escrow contribution and other disputed costs listed above, which are not included in these cost-tracking statements). Joslyn argues that these expenses are not reimbursable as "none of Valbruna's witnesses provided specific facts to demonstrate how [this] $224,221.18 was spent." [DE 174 at 16].
This argument is not well taken. Evidence at trial indicated that these cost-tracking records are not all inclusive because they are limited to costs incurred by Valbruna's environmental consultant, Stantec. Valbruna incurred costs from parties other than Stantec, including from the local contractors it hired to cut costs. [DE 170 at 57]; [DE 170 at 10-11]. Indeed, Joslyn acknowledged this following closing
Further, Valbruna provided documentation to substantiate all of its costs. See ex. 33, 34 (itemization of expenses); Ex. 10,654-10,678 (invoices for itemized expenses). It likewise provided evidence that its costs have generally been both necessary and consistent with the NCP. Since the electrical resistance heating remediation, Valbruna's cleanup has been conducted under the auspices of the IDEM Voluntary Remediation Program. See ex. 15-16. That program involves significant supervision and comment by IDEM and ultimately will require IDEM approval to complete. See, e.g., ex. 23-26; [DE 170 at 128-132]; [DE 170 at 93-94]. Valbruna's expert also testified that he reviewed Valbruna's invoices and found them "all within reasonable ranges" and that they all served to mitigate an environmental threat. [DE 170 at 145-46].
The Court finds the expenses associated with the melt shop ($88,019.39), the vapor barrier ($25,000), the SAIC ($12,500) and AECOM ($19,730) radiation surveys, the bunker oil tanks ($13,201.15) and the PCB transformer ($22,930.29) are not compensable. Valbruna's remaining expenses are compensable. Subtracting the disallowed costs from Valbruna's claimed expenses of $2,211,251.92 yields total damages of $ 2,029,871.09, subject to contribution. This does not include interest or attorneys' fees, which the parties have agreed to resolve at a future proceeding. It also does not include any costs incurred after December 14, 2016.
SO ORDERED.