Alheim v. Mullendore

714 S.W.2d 173, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4310
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1986
DocketNo. WD 36801
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 714 S.W.2d 173 (Alheim v. Mullendore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alheim v. Mullendore, 714 S.W.2d 173, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4310 (Mo. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

CLARK, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from the order of the Missouri Hazardous Waste Management Commission which approved a decision by the Department of Natural Resources to issue a disposal facility permit to Bob’s Home Services, Inc., intervenor-respondent. The appellants are two municipalities and the named individuals, who either reside or own property in the vicinity of the disposal area.

On this appeal, the municipalities and individuals contend that the permit should not have issued, and that the Commission should have recalled the permit because the waste facility was within one-fourth mile of occupied residences and the written consent of the nearby property owners as required by § 260.430.2, RSMo.Cum.Supp. 1984 1, was not obtained. At issue also is the Commission’s order which dismissed from the proceedings the Coalition For The Environment, Missourians Against Hazardous Waste and various individuals.

We first review the procedural history of the permit in question. On May 25, 1977, Bob’s Home Services, Inc. applied for and was issued a permit to operate an industrial waste disposal facility under the then applicable statutes, §§ 260.200-260.245 RSMo.Cum.Supp.1975. That law, contrasted with additional supplementary legislation, was known as the Missouri Solid Waste Management Law. The permit authorized Bob’s to handle solid industrial wastes within a tract of 158 acres leased for the purpose and to dispose of solid wastes, apparently by landfill, on 12 acres as specified within the larger tract. There is no question here as to the validity of the May, 1977 permit.

In the legislative session of 1977, the General Assembly enacted §§ 260.350-260.-430 RSMo.1978 known as the Missouri Hazardous Waste Management Law. The effective date was September 28, 1977, some five months after Bob’s had commenced operation of its facility under the earlier permit. Pursuant to that statute, the Hazardous Waste Commission adopted rules among which was a requirement that any person operating a hazardous waste facility secure a permit from the Department of Natural Resources. Despite its earlier permit for disposal of solid industrial wastes, Bob’s recognized the obligation to obtain a permit for disposal of hazardous wastes and applied in February, 1980 for the additional permit. It is this second permit issued December 22,1982 which is at issue in the present case.

The 1982 permit differed from the 1977 permit in some respects, although the facility area remained within the original tract of 158 acres. The 1977 permit authorized disposal of solid waste within a defined 12 acre area. The 1982 permit limited the disposal site to 2.2 acres for hazardous waste within the previously permitted 12 acres where solid waste could be disposed. The 1982 permit, however, enlarged the storage, treatment and disposal area to 24 acres which included a 300 foot buffer zone mandated by § 260.430.2. Thus, under the 1982 permit, Bob’s was entitled to operate its hazardous waste facility in an area of 24 acres, including the buffer zone, but could only conduct disposal operations in the 2.2 acre plot. These terms of the permits were not in dispute and are included in the findings made by the Commission.

Appellants assert in their first point that Bob’s was disqualified from receiving the 1982 permit because they, as property owners within one-fourth mile, had not giv[175]*175en written consent. It is to be noted that the point as stated in the briefs alleges error on the part of the circuit court in entry of its judgment affirming the Commission’s decision. In cases of this nature, the appellate court reviews the findings and decisions of the agency, not the judgment of the trial court. Fleming Foods of Missouri, Inc. v. Runyan, 634 S.W.2d 183, 184 (Mo.banc 1982). The scope of review is provided by § 536.140, RSMo.1978. Review is limited to a determination of whether the agency’s action was supported by competent and substantial evidence upon the whole record or whether it was arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable, unlawful or in excess of its jurisdiction. Evangelical Retirement Homes, Inc. v. State Tax Commission, 669 S.W.2d 548, 552 (Mo.banc 1984). The process is applicable to judicial review where the issue is the denial or grant of a permit by the Hazardous Waste Management Commission. Jerry-Russell Bliss v. Hazardous Waste Management Commission, 702 S.W.2d 77 (Mo.banc 1985). We therefore look in this case to the findings and decision by the Hazardous Waste Commission and not to the judgment of the circuit court.

The Commission found that § 260.430.2 was inapplicable to the subject permit and that no consent of appellants was required because the statute by its express terms affects only a “hazardous waste disposal facility established after September 28, 1977.” The evidence showed beyond dispute that the 2.2 acres set aside for disposal of hazardous waste had been utilized for that purpose by Bob’s continuously since May 25, 1977 and, therefore, the 1982 permit did not establish a disposal facility “after September 28, 1977.” This conclusion by the Commission was correct.

The exception appellants take to this conclusion appears to be based on an assumption that reference in the statute to a hazardous waste disposal facility includes not only the area actually used for waste disposal, but surrounding areas used for waste storage and treatment and the buffer zone. Thus, they say, when the necessity for a buffer zone arose under the new statute and a new permit was required, the addition of the 12 acres altered the facility and it was no longer a hazardous waste disposal tract which existed before September 28, 1977. Resolution of this question requires that we ascertain what was intended by the legislature in its use of the term “hazardous waste disposal facility” in § 260.430.2 exempting from the consent requirement those tracts used for that purpose on or before September 28, 1977.

The term, hazardous waste disposal facility, as such, is not defined in the statutes. Both “hazardous waste facility” and “disposal” however are defined, the former in § 260.360(10) and the latter in § 260.360(5):

(10) “ ‘Hazardous waste facility,’ any property that is intended or used for hazardous waste management including, but not limited to, storage, treatment and disposal sites.”
(5) “ ‘Disposal,’ the discharge, deposit, dumping or placing of waste into or on the land as a final action.”

Also worthy of mention is the definition of hazardous waste management in § 260.-360(11):

(11) “ ‘Hazardous waste management,’ the systematic recognition and control of hazardous waste from generation to final disposition including, but not limited to, its identification, containerization, labeling, storage, collection, transfer or transportation, treatment, resource recovery or disposal.”

Throughout the act, the terms hazardous waste facility and hazardous waste disposal facility are used. The latter term is employed in § 260.430.2 to describe those facilities which must have the buffer zone and which, if not established on or before September 28, 1977, require the written consents on which appellants here rely to defeat the 1982 permit.

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Bluebook (online)
714 S.W.2d 173, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alheim-v-mullendore-moctapp-1986.