A. GALLO AND CO. v. McCarthy

2 A.3d 56, 51 Conn. Supp. 425, 2010 Conn. Super. LEXIS 984
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedApril 23, 2010
DocketFile CV-09-4043592-S
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 A.3d 56 (A. GALLO AND CO. v. McCarthy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. GALLO AND CO. v. McCarthy, 2 A.3d 56, 51 Conn. Supp. 425, 2010 Conn. Super. LEXIS 984 (Colo. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

DOMNARSKI, J.

In this action, the plaintiffs seek declaratory relief and money damages. The plaintiffs claim that certain provisions of Public Acts 2009, No. 09-1 (P.A. 09-1), effected a retroactive taking of their property in violation of the fifth and fourteenth amendments to the United States constitution and article first, § 11, of the constitution of Connecticut. The property at issue is unclaimed beverage container deposits. The plaintiffs have moved for summary judgment on liability, and the defendants have filed a cross motion for summary judgment. Additionally, the American Beverage Association has filed an amicus brief in support of the plaintiffs’ motion and in opposition to the defendants’ cross motion.

The plaintiffs initially sought a temporary injunction prohibiting the defendants from enforcing certain portions of P.A. 09-1. See A. Gallo & Co. v. McCarthy, Superior Court, judicial district of Hartford, Docket No. CV-09-4043592-S (May 5, 2009) (Aurigemma, J.). At the hearing on the temporary injunction, before Judge Aurigemma, the parties jointly submitted a proposed finding of facts that were not in dispute. The application for the temporary injunction was denied. Id. The parties have asked this court to rely on the facts contained in the ruling on the temporary injunction. Accordingly, *428 Judge Aurigemma’s thorough discussion of the stipulated facts, which are set forth as follows.

I

FACTS FROM RULING ON APPLICATION FOR TEMPORARY INJUNCTION

“The plaintiffs, A. Gallo & Company, Allan S. Goodman, Inc., Dichello Distributors, Inc., Dwan & Company, Inc., F&F Distributors, Inc., Franklin Distributors, Inc., G&G Beverage Distributors, Inc., Hartford Distributors, Inc., Levine Distributing Company, Inc., Northeast Beverage Corporation of Connecticut and Star Distributors, Inc., are Connecticut corporations and at all relevant times were distributors of beer in the state of Connecticut. The plaintiff Pepsi Cola Newburgh Bottling Company, Inc., is a New York corporation and at all relevant times was a distributor of soft drinks in the state of Connecticut.

“The defendant Gina McCarthy is the commissioner of the department of environmental protection (department). Commissioner McCarthy and the department are charged with administering and enforcing General Statutes § 22a-243 et seq., as amended by Public Acts [2008, No. 08-1 (P.A. 08-1)], and P.A. 09-1, and McCarthy is responsible for depositing the payment appropriated thereby in the state’s general fund.

“The state is facing a significant economic crisis. On January 20,2009, the [defendant Governor M. Jodi Rell] 1 announced that the estimated budget deficit for the current fiscal year ending June 30, 2009, was at nearly $922 million. On April 20,2009, the governor announced that the 2009 budget deficit had increased to approximately $1,056 billion and that the estimated budget deficit for the next two fiscal years combined was $7.95 *429 billion. To reduce the 2009 deficit, the governor submitted, and the legislature passed, a number of deficit mitigation plans, including P.A. 08-1 and P.A. 09-1. In addition, the governor sought state employee concessions, state agency budget rescissions, instituted a ban on state travel and nonessential purchasing by state agencies, and instituted a hiring freeze.

“[Public Acts 1978, No. 78-16], effective January 1, 1980, codified as § 22a-243 et seq., is commonly known as the ‘Bottle Bill.’ In an effort to reduce litter and solid waste levels, the Bottle Bill established a system of beverage container recycling to be administered, in part, by Connecticut’s beer and soft drink distributors such as the plaintiffs. The Bottle Bill required the plaintiffs to pay a five cent refund value upon the return of empty beer or soft drink containers of the kind, size and brand sold by the distributor.

“Under the provisions of the Bottle Bill and Connecticut’s long-standing and highly regulated three tier alcoholic beverage distribution system (distributor-retailer-consumer), the basic mechanics of the return and refund process function as follows:

“a. Beverage distributors such as the plaintiffs] ‘initiate,’ or charge and collect, a five cent refund value on each container sold to a retailer;

“b. Retailers pay the five cent refund value on each container purchased from the distributor, and, in turn, charge and collect a five cent refund value from the end-purchaser-consumer of the beverage;

“c. If a consumer returns the empty container to the retailer (or a redemption center), the retailer (or redemption center) is required to pay the consumer a refund of five cents; and

“d. The retailer (or redemption center), in turn, will return the empty container to the distributor of the *430 product, who must reimburse the retailer (or redemption center) five cents.

“The plaintiffs also incur costs and expense administering portions of the Bottle Bill, including:

“a. Paying a one and one-half cent statutory handling fee to the retailer (or redemption center) for each empty beer container returned. In the case of soft drinks, the statutory handling fee for the return of empty containers is two cents;

“b. Transporting empty containers from the retailer back to the distributor;

“c. Providing dedicated space for processing returns;

“d. Making arrangements for the processing and recycling of the empty containers; and

“e. Incurring the costs of labor, overhead and insurance necessary to perform these functions and to comply with the mandates of the Bottle Bill.

“After paying the refund value and the handling fee, the distributors own the returned containers, which are recyclable materials, and may dispose of them as they choose. Distributors may sell returns to third parties. The costs of performing the tasks described in the preceeding paragraph are borne by the Connecticut beverage distributors like the plaintiffs.

“Under the Bottle Bill, distributors do not hold refund values in a manner that makes them identifiable to a specific container or a specific consumer. The plaintiffs have a statutory obligation to pay retailers five cents when presented with an empty container of the kind, size and brand sold by the plaintiffs, regardless of when the container was actually sold to a retailer or consumer. The Bottle Bill does not refer to the amounts paid by a distributor to retailers upon the return of an empty container of the kind, size and brand sold by the *431 distributor as a ‘deposit.’ Instead, the Bottle Bill defines such payments as ‘refund values.’

“On November 25, 2008, the legislature passed [P.A.] 08-1, entitled ‘An Act Concerning Deficit Mitigation’ [2008 Deficit Mitigation Act]. [The 2008 Deficit Mitigation Act] required each of the plaintiff distributors to ‘open a special interest-bearing account at a Connecticut branch of a financial institution, as defined in section 45a-557a of the general statutes, to the credit of the deposit initiator.’ P.A.

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Bluebook (online)
2 A.3d 56, 51 Conn. Supp. 425, 2010 Conn. Super. LEXIS 984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-gallo-and-co-v-mccarthy-connsuperct-2010.