Bitumar USA, Inc. v. Maine Dept. of Transportation

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 1, 2014
DocketCUMbcd-cv-14-050
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bitumar USA, Inc. v. Maine Dept. of Transportation (Bitumar USA, Inc. v. Maine Dept. of Transportation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bitumar USA, Inc. v. Maine Dept. of Transportation, (Me. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE BUSINESS AND CONSUMER COURT

Cumberland, ss Location: Portland Docket No.: BCD-CV-14-050

) BITUMAR USA INC., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) ) MAINE DEPARTMENT OF ) TRANSPORTATION, ) ) Defendant. )

ORDER ON PLAINTIFF'S EMERGENCY MOTION FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION

PlaintiffBitumar USA Inc. ("Bitumar") has filed a Motion for Emergency Preliminary

Injunction in this action for declaratory and injunctive relief against Defendant Maine

Department ofTransportation ("MDOT"). MDOT is the state agency responsible for

maintaining state roads and highways, other than the Maine Turnpike.

Bitumar's Motion seeks an order enjoining and restraining MDOT from implementing

a temporary ban on the use ofre-refined engine oil bottoms ("REOB") in the performance-

graded ("PG") asphalt cement (also called asphalt binder) supplied to MDOT's road and

highway paving projects. Effective August 1, 2014, MDOT is requiring all suppliers ofPG

binder to MDOT projects to certify that the binder does not contain REOB. According to

MDOT, the ban will continue until MDOT has determined whether to accept asphalt binder

containing REOB for use in its projects.

Bitumar's motion advances two essential arguments: (1) the temporary REOB ban

constitutes an improperly adopted rule because MDOT implemented the ban without complying with the rule-making provisions of the Maine Administrative Procedure Act

("APA") and (2) MDOT's ban constitutes arbitrary and capricious agency action, because there

is little or no evidence that the use ofREOB as an ingredient in asphalt binder has any negative

effect on the quality or durability of asphalt pavement. MDOT responds that (1) the REOB

ban is an interpretation of a Standard Specification, not a rule and (2) MDOT's temporary ban

ofREOB is necessary to enable MDOT to determine whether REOB complies with MDOT's

Standard Specifications for MDOT construction projects and whether REOB is a cause of

premature failure of asphalt pavement.

Bitumar's Motion came before the court for a non-testimonial hearing July SO, 2014.

For the reasons discussed below, the court denies Bitumar's motion for a preliminary

injunction.

I. Procedural History

On July 25, 2014, Bitumar flied a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief against

MDOT along with the present motion. Bitumar supports its motion with declarations from the

following individuals:

(1) Francis O'Brien, a business advisor and consultant to Bitumar who is "intimately familiar with asphalt production" and who formerly served as the president and chief operating officer of the Hudson Companies-a supplier of asphalt for road paving that entered into an agreement under which Bitumar began managing part of the Hudson Companies in 2013;

(2) John D. D'Angelo, Ph.D., a civil engineer who has published over 57 peer reviewed papers on asphalt materials and construction and was retained to assist in testing and evaluation of the use ofREOB as an asphalt binder modifier; and

(S) Mark G. Bouldin, Ph.D., a chemical engineer who is an expert in refining, asphalt, asphalt production, asphalt binder and mixture performance testing, polymers and polymer modification of asphalt, and asphalt binder specifications among others.

This case was accepted for transfer to the this court on July 28, 2014. The following

day, MDOT submitted its opposition to Bitumar's motion. In support ofits opposition,

2 MDOT offered the affidavit of Richard Bradbury, P.E., a licensed professional civil engineer in

Maine currently serving as the Director of Materials Testing and Exploration for MDOT.

At the July SO, 2014 hearing, Bitumar submitted two additional declarations, two

examples of MDOT rules and a Maine Superior Court opinion. The declarations were a

supplemental declaration by Mark Bouldin, Ph.D. and Vu Nguyen, a chemical engineer with

approximately 20 years of experience in the refining and asphalt industry. At the conclusion of

oral argument, the parties agreed to submit the matter for the court's consideration on the

arguments and documents discussed above.

The day after the hearing, Bitumar submitted a copy of a decision of the Vermont

Superior Court granting Bitumar's application for preliminary injunction against the Vermont

Agency of Transportation (VAT) and enjoining VAT from banning the use ofREOB in the

asphalt supplied to its projects. See Bitumar USA, Inc. v. Vermont Agency if Trans., Vt. Super. Ct.,

Docket No. 449-7-14 Wncv (Julys 1, 2014).

II. Factual Background

Bitumar's parent corporation, Bitumar, Inc., is a Canadian company specializing in the

production of material used in asphalt blends for road paving and the roofing industry.

Declaration ofFrancis J. O'Brien ("O'Brien Dec."), ~ 2. Bitumar supplies material to paving

contractors in all New England states. Id. In June 201S, Bitumar expanded its business in the

New England market when it entered into an agreement with The Hudson Companies. Id. at~

S. Together, Bitumar and the Hudson Companies are substantial suppliers ofliquid asphalt in

New England and produce over 50% of the asphalt used by those paving contractors who do

not produce their own asphalt. Id. at~ 4.

Asphalt pavement is a product of sand and stone aggregate mixed with asphalt cement

as a binder. Id. at ~ 5. The asphalt cement that binds the aggregate is derived from the

3 refinement of crude oil. !d. Asphalt binder is a by-product of the refinement of crude oil into

other products such as gasoline and home heating oil. Id. Maine requires that asphalt

pavement meet a PG of 64 -28, meaning that it must adequately perform at any temperature

between 64 degrees Celsius and negative 28 degrees Celsius. !d. at ~ 6.

In the 1980's, a company called Safety-Kleen developed a product-REOB- derived

from there-refinement of waste engine oil, intended to be added to asphalt binder, in order to

improve the performance of the binder. See id. at~ 8. Not long after that, Bitumar began

using REOB in its asphalt binder. Id. at ~ 9. Bitumar describes REOB as an additive or

"cutter" to asphalt binder. See Declaration of Vu Nguyen at~~ 2-4, Bouldin Supplemental

Declaration at~ 1-5. REOB has been included in asphalt sold by Bitumar in New England

since at least 2005. O'Brien Dec., ~ 9.

MDOT, however, had no knowledge ofREOB potentially being used in the asphalt

binder supplied to its paving projects "until recently." Affidavit of Richard Bradbury, P.E.

("Bradbury Aff") ~ 15. None of the Quality-Control Plans or Certificates of Analysis that

MDOT's Standard Specifications require suppliers of asphalt material to submit in connection

with MDOT projects has indicated the presence ofREOB in asphalt binder. See id. at~ 11.

MDOT learned about the use ofREOB at a Pavement Summit meeting, at which

representatives of the state highway agencies from Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and

Massachusetts gathered to discuss the premature failure of asphalt paving on highways that

several of the states had been experiencing. Id. at~ 9. At a subsequent meeting,

representatives ofthe New England state highway agencies brought up for discussion a

published study evaluating REOB. Id. The study suggested that the inclusion ofREOB as an

ingredient in the asphalt binder may have caused premature pavement failures. Id. Although

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