Bitler Investment Venture II v. Marathon Petroleum Company LP

741 F.3d 832, 44 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20022, 2014 WL 280937, 77 ERC (BNA) 2009, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 1659
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 27, 2014
Docket12-3722
StatusPublished

This text of 741 F.3d 832 (Bitler Investment Venture II v. Marathon Petroleum Company LP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bitler Investment Venture II v. Marathon Petroleum Company LP, 741 F.3d 832, 44 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20022, 2014 WL 280937, 77 ERC (BNA) 2009, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 1659 (7th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

The appeal in this diversity suit governed by Indiana and Michigan law presents issues of contract and property law (the venerable doctrine of waste). Affiliated real estate firms that we’ll pretend are one and call Bitter sued affiliated oil companies that we’ll also pretend are one and call Marathon. Bitter seeks damages for harm caused by Marathon in attempting to clean up pollution at gas stations that Bit-ler had leased to it. According to Bitter’s law firm, the suit sought more than $9 million in damages. “Beckman Lawson, LLP Announces Complaint Filed Against Marathon Ashland Petroleum, LLC,” Business Wire (2004), www.businesswire. com/news/home/20041217005529/en/ Beckman-Lawson-LLP-Announces-Complaint-Filed-Marathon# .UuarIbTna70 (visited Jan. 27, 2014). Later its expert witness estimated Bitter’s damages at $17.4 million. But the final judgment was for only $269,000, and Bitter appeals.

The leases, all signed in 1983, were for eleven years, but Marathon had an option to renew for another ten. Eight of the leased properties (all in either Indiana or Michigan) are at issue in this appeal.

In the late 1980s the Environmental Protection Agency adopted new regulations concerning pollution from underground storage tanks for gasoline and other petroleum products; the storage tanks that Bitter had leased to Marathon were underground. The regulations required that the tanks and their pipes be removed, upgraded, or replaced by December 1998. 40 C.F.R. § 280.21(a). Bitter and Marathon agreed to remove the tanks, and so the gas stations had to be closed, as they couldn’t sell gasoline without a place to store it, and no arrangements had been made to replace the underground tanks with above-ground ones. All the gas stations were closed in the 1990s.

The leases had had to be adjusted in light of the unforeseen adverse development (the new regulations), and in 1992 the parties agreed to what they called a “Master Amendment to Leases.” The amendment transferred ownership of the underground tanks to Marathon and made it “fully responsible for removing” the tanks and pipes, filling the holes created by the removal, complying fully with all environmental laws, “leaving] the Premises in a condition reasonably useful for future commercial use,” and thus “replacing] any asphalt, concrete, or other surface, including landscaping, which is damaged or destroyed during the tank and pipe removal operation.” Marathon also agreed to “return the Premises to [Bitter] as nearly as possible in the same condition as it was in prior to such remediation work,” and to be responsible “for any and all liability, losses, damages, costs and expenses resulting from [Marathon’s] use of the Premises and the removal of the underground storage tanks and piping,” and, with an immaterial exception, to continue paying rent at the rates specified in the leases.

Although stripped of their underground tanks, the properties can be restored as gas stations with above-ground storage tanks, and may well be suitable sites for other commercial outlets as well, such as fast-food outlets, because gas stations tend to be strategically located in relation to automobile traffic. For a time Marathon *835 used one of the properties as a tobacco shop.

Bitler advances both a breach of contract claim and a waste claim with regard to each of the eight properties in contention. The district judge rejected all the contract claims on summary judgment, along with the waste claims relating to two of the Michigan properties, located in Adrian and Michigan Center respectively. The other six waste claims went to trial before a jury, and Bitler prevailed. But the judge refused to award double damages for waste, sought by Bitler pursuant to a Michigan statute, with regard to the four properties (of the six) that were in Michigan. See Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.2919(2)(a). We begin with the contract claims.

Bitler leads with its weakest argument&emdash;that the indemnity clause that we quoted from the Master Amendment required Marathon to pay for any damage to the properties during the cleaning up of the pollution. That’s not correct. The Master Amendment requires Marathon to indemnify Bitler for liability that Bitler might have to third parties as a consequence of Marathon’s remediation activities. The next paragraph of the Master Amendment describes the amendment as “this Agreement to indemnify, defend, and hold [Bitler] harmless.” And the paragraph after that requires, just as in an insurance contract&emdash;of which an indemnity agreement is a form&emdash;that Bitler notify Marathon “of any act or occurrence involving a liability, claim, demand, or costs indemnified against herein,” within a specified time “after the occurrence of such act or occurrence shall have come to [Bitler’s] knowledge.”

Bitler’s stronger claim of breach of contract is based on the requirements in the Master Amendment that Marathon “leave the Premises in a condition reasonably useful for future commercial use,” including repairing surface damage from the removal of the tanks and piping, and “return the Premises to [Bitler] as nearly as possible in the same condition as it was in prior to such remediation work.” These provisions might seem to require Marathon to rebuild the gas stations, complete with the installation of new underground storage tanks. Obviously this was not contemplated. Otherwise the Master Amendment would not have required Marathon to fill the holes created by removing the underground storage tanks; for to restore the property to its original condition Marathon would have had to redig the holes in order to install new underground tanks, which was never contemplated. Presumably therefore “premises” refers to the surface of the properties, not the underground.

But if as Bitler alleges Marathon made an inexcusable mess in “remediating” the properties, so that without great expense they could not be restored to any commercial use, then it violated the provisions of the Master Amendment that we quoted. Bitler argues that through failure to make simple repairs Marathon allowed the buildings on two of the Michigan properties&emdash; the ones in Adrian and Michigan Center&emdash; to collapse, and left them to rot where they fell, to be condemned (and they were) by local government as unsafe, abandoned eyesores. The judge, rejecting both the contract claims and the waste claims relating to these properties, said that Bitler had “consented” to the removal of the buildings. But it had had no choice; as we said, they had been condemned. Bitler’s contract and waste claims concerning these buildings should not have been dismissed.

Bilter's further claim, for what it calls “delay damages” resulting from al *836 leged breaches, fails. It argues that Marathon took an unconscionable time to complete the remediation that it was required to do, thus improperly depriving Bitler of timely opportunities to put the remediated properties to new commercial uses. Yet pursuant to the Master Amendment Marathon continued paying the rent specified in the original leases. Since it was earning no money from the properties during the remediation period, the obligation to pay rent was a spur to its completing the remediation.

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Bluebook (online)
741 F.3d 832, 44 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20022, 2014 WL 280937, 77 ERC (BNA) 2009, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 1659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bitler-investment-venture-ii-v-marathon-petroleum-company-lp-ca7-2014.