GORTON, District Judge.
This dispute arises from the government's claim under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act ("CERCLA"), 42 U.S.C. § 9607, to recover costs incurred by the United States Navy ("the Navy") in response to the release of chlorinated solvents from the Naval Weapons Industrial Reserve Plant ("NWIRP" or "the facility") in Bedford, Massachusetts.
In or about 1989, while Raytheon Company ("Raytheon" or "defendant") operated NWIRP as the Navy's contractor, the Navy identified chlorinated solvents in the groundwater under the facility. Several years later, in or about 1995, the Navy began to build a pump-and-treat system to stop the chlorinated solvent plume from migrating beyond the facility. That pump-and-treat system became operational in or about 1997. In 2010, the Navy issued a record of decision ("ROD") for NWIRP, which selected a final remedial action to address the solvent plume. The Navy now alleges under 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a)(2) that defendant is liable for unreimbursed response costs incurred and to be incurred by the Navy, including enforcement costs, stemming from the contamination at NWIRP that began around 1989. The Navy also seeks declaratory judgment under 42 U.S.C. §§ 9613(g)(2) and 9607(a), respectively. Pending before the Court is the defendant's motion to dismiss the complaint.
In or about 1989, while Raytheon operated NWIRP as the Navy's contractor, the Navy identified chlorinated solvents in the groundwater under its facility. Following an identified leak of such solvents, the Town of Bedford ("the Town") filed suit against the Navy, Raytheon and others, alleging that the NWIRP facility contaminated the Town's water wells (herein referred to as the "Bedford Litigation"). In March, 1993, another session of this Court entered a judgment dismissing with prejudice the Bedford Litigation, including the Navy's cross claims against then co-defendant Raytheon. That dismissal was based upon six separate settlement agreements, including one overarching settlement agreement ("the Global Agreement"). The Court also retained jurisdiction with respect to the provisions of 1) the Agreement Between the Town of Bedford and the Department of the Navy Regarding Site Y ("Site Y Agreement"), 2) the Settlement Agreement Between the Department of the Navy and the Department of the Air Force and Raytheon ("Navy-Raytheon Agreement") and 3) Massport's cross claims against the Air Force.
In 1999, after the pump-and-treat system built by the Navy was operable, the Navy negotiated a separate agreement, the Federal Facility Agreement ("the FFA"), with the United States Environmental Protection Agency ("the EPA").
To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to "state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face".
Furthermore, the Court must accept all factual allegations in the complaint as true and draw all reasonable inferences in the plaintiff's favor.
Although a court must accept as true all of the factual allegations contained in a complaint, that doctrine is not applicable to legal conclusions.
In appropriate cases an "affirmative defense may be adjudicated on a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim".
Furthermore, to establish the affirmative defense of res judicata, defendants must show that 1) "there is a final judgment on the merits in an earlier action", 2) "sufficient identity" exists between the parties in the earlier and later suits and 3) "sufficient identity" exists between the causes of actions in the two suits.
The parties do not dispute the authenticity of the public documents in question, namely the order of dismissal of all claims issued by another session of this Court in the Bedford Litigation, the corresponding settlement agreements and the Navy's agency records on the alleged removal and remedial actions at the facility. Because those documents are of public record and their authenticity is not in dispute, this Court takes judicial notice thereof and
For the purposes of res judicata, a voluntary dismissal with prejudice is a final judgment on the merits.
The Navy now alleges it preserved its claims against Raytheon because the Bedford Litigation did not include the Navy's CERCLA § 9607 claims for three reasons: 1) the Global Agreement in the Bedford Litigation reserves this Court's jurisdiction under the Site Y Agreement and the Navy-Raytheon Agreement (hereafter collectively referred to as the "Separate Agreements"); 2) the Global Agreement only relates to claims that arose in or before 1993 and 3) the Separate Agreements cite CERCLA § 9604, thus expressly reserving the Navy's § 9607 claims.
This Court recognizes that the Global Agreement reserves to this Court jurisdiction with respect to the Separate Agreements. Those agreements, however, have no bearing on this litigation. As defendant explains, Raytheon is not a party to the Site Y Agreement, this Court's continuing jurisdiction is limited to disputes with respect to the remedy selected by the Navy for Site Y and the Navy-Raytheon Agreement called for the dismissal of all claims with prejudice.
Furthermore, the Global Agreement does not limit the scope of the Bedford Litigation to claims discovered in or before 1993 because it is clear from the public documents that the Navy was aware of the contamination at issue, and the potential ongoing response costs, at the time of the prior suit.
Finally, nothing in the Separate Agreements reserves the Navy's § 9607 claims. Those agreements provide that:
The Navy cannot justifiably claim that the general reference to § 9604 preserves its § 9607 claims. Even if it did, § 9604 utilizes broad language to reference the executive's authority to bring civil settlement actions under § 9622, but because the proscription of a limitation on a broad claim does not amount to an express reservation of a specific claim, the Navy has not expressly preserved its § 9607 claims.
Thus, in accordance with the
To assert res judicata, "sufficient identity" must exist between the parties in the earlier and later suits.
To determine whether the original and later claims have "sufficient identity", this Court applies the "transactional approach", which extinguishes subsequent
The Navy contends that the allegations in its 2017 complaint differ from the claims made in the Bedford Litigation. Knowledge of potential CERCLA claims, however, is sufficient to make a claim ripe for res judicata purposes.
Because defendant has shown conclusively that the three elements of res judicata have been satisfied, its motion to dismiss will be allowed.
Even though the Court's finding with respect to res judicata renders defendant's alternative argument moot, the Court proceeds to consider it in the interest of completeness.
The defendant asserts that the Navy does not have a viable claim because CERCLA-related settlements bar § 9607 recovery costs and limits the Navy to an untimely contribution claim under § 9613 if that claim is commenced within three years of the purported settlement. The defendant's argument hinges on the finding that the FFA resolves the Navy's liability at the facility.
This Court is cognizant of the fact that the FFA cites § 9622 (which relates to settlements), that the Navy was also subject to stipulated EPA penalties with respect to any remediation action at the subject facility and that the EPA threatened to issue an order against the Navy pursuant to § 9606 if it failed to negotiate with the EPA in a timely manner. Section 9620 (e)(2) of CERCLA, however, requires an agency whose facility is on the National Priorities List to enter into an inter-agency agreement with the EPA for the "expeditious completion" of all "necessary remedial action" at a contaminated government facility. § 9620 (e)(2). The citation in the FFA to § 9620 (e)(2) and the conspicuous absence of an admission of liability in that agreement, insinuates an inference that the Navy entered into the FFA with the EPA as part of an inter-agency agreement, not to resolve a liability. Accordingly, the Navy has stated facts sufficient to infer that its § 9607 claims are not barred by the FFA. Defendant's motion to dismiss the government's claim on that ground will be denied.
Section 9613 of CERCLA provides for differing statutes of limitations for § 9607 claims depending upon whether the recovery relates to "removal" or "remedial" actions. Lawsuits related to removal actions must be commenced within three years after completion of the removal action. § 9613(g)(2)(A). Lawsuits related to remedial actions, on the other hand, need not be
The Navy alleges that the ROD denotes the end of the removal period and beginning of the remedial period. Because the Navy claims that the removal period ended concurrently with the start of the remedial period, the Navy asserts that it is entitled to the six-year statute of limitations under § 9613(g)(2)(B), which allows for recovery of both removal and remedial costs if the remedial actions are initiated within three years of the end of the removal period.
Raytheon responds that the Navy's pump-and-treat system, which was begun in 1995 and became operational in 1997, was remedial in nature because it treated 97 million gallons of contaminated groundwater and has been in continuous operation for the past 20 years. Accordingly, Raytheon asserts that the Navy was required, pursuant to § 9613(g)(2)(B), to bring its remedial action costs claim within six years of the initiation of the construction of the pump-and-treat system,
The First Circuit Court of Appeals has not addressed the question of whether the ROD represents the end of the removal period but two other circuits have yielded conflicting opinions. The Ninth Circuit has adopted a holistic approach, holding that remedial action starts when the final remedial plan is adopted.
This Court recognizes, that while another session of this Court has concluded that an ROD is relevant in determining whether an action is "removal" or "remedial" in nature, other factors, such as the conclusion of final monitoring or the evaluation or some other determination that no further action is necessary, are also relevant to determining when a removal period has ended.
The only question left for resolution is therefore whether the Navy's response action was "removal" or "remedial" in nature. That question, pursuant to § 9607, is one of law.
Raytheon has alleged sufficient facts for this Court to infer that the pump-and-treat system at NWIRP is remedial in
Accordingly, while this Court recognizes that there was some overlap between the alleged removal and remedial acts in question, there is sufficient evidence to suggest that the pump-and-treat system served primarily as a long-term, remedial action. Thus, the six-year statute of limitations on the remedial action applies from the time the pump-and-treat system was begun and the Navy's § 9607 claims are time barred as a matter of law. Defendant's motion to dismiss on statute of limitations grounds will be allowed.
On res judicata and statute of limitation grounds (but not on the government's § 9607 claim under the Federal Facilities Agreement), the motion of defendant Raytheon to dismiss (Docket No. 10) is