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
the study is not specifically identified by MDOT, Bitumar contends-and MDOT has not
4 disputed-that the aforementioned study was one conducted by Professor Simon Hesp after a
pavement failure in Ontario, Canada. See O'Brien Dec., ~ 11. The Hesp study indicated that a
high (15-SO%) concentration ofREOB in asphalt could lead to premature failure of asphalt
pavement. Id. Bitumar's product uses a lower, 2-8% concentration ofREOB. !d.
Following the Hesp study, Safety-Kleen commissioned a series of extensive studies and
testing by an independent laboratory in Tampa, Florida, a world-wide leader in asphalt analysis
and testing, to evaluate REOB and its effect on asphalt. Declaration of Mark G. Bouldin, Ph.D.
("Bouldin Dec."), S. Based on this work, Dr. D'Angelo and some ofhis colleagues published a
number of papers and presentations. Id. at 4. The resulting papers and publications were
unable to attest to any adverse effect ofREOB even at concentrations far greater than
commonly used in standard formulations. Id.; O'Brien Dec., ~ 12.
Around the time ofthe Pavement Summit, Safety-Kleen approached suppliers of
pavement binders in Maine offering to sell them REOB as a lower cost additive for asphalt.
Bradbury Aff. ~ 10. Several suppliers have contacted MDOT to inquire if REOB was
acceptable for use on MDOT projects. Id. MDOT also met with the Maine Asphalt Pavement
Association ("MAPA") to discuss its concerns regarding REOB. Id. at~ 16. MDOT claims
many members ofMAPA were unaware that REOB was being added to PG asphalt binder, and
that they were concerned that the addition ofREOB may negatively affect the performance of
asphalt pavement. Id.
In an attempt to determine the extent ofREOB use in Maine, MDOT contacted its
primary paving contractors and several approved asphalt suppliers for Maine highway projects
and determined that only Bitumar uses REOB, and that Bitumar's contracts to supply liquid
asphalt to MDOT contractors amounted to less than 1% ofMDOT's highway paving program.
Id. at~~ 17-18.
5 Based on this information, MDOT determined that it "would not place highway projects
and the environment at risk without a better understanding of the long term effects of the
REOB additive." Id. at ~ 19. To that end, MDOT is participating in a laboratory study
underway at the University of Massachusetts with the explicit purpose of determining whether
REOB contributes to the early failure of highway pavement. Id. at~ 20. Although MDOT has
not provided a timeline during which these events took place, the record suggests that they all
occurred before June 16, 2014.
On June 16, 2014 MDOT issued a letter (the "letter" or "6/16letter") explaining that it
has decided to implement the following requirements:
Effective immediately, all Lots ofPG binder containing [REOBJ must be clearly identified on the Certificate of Analysis.
Effective August 1, 2014, all suppliers ofPG binder must certify that PG binder supplied for use on Department projects does not contain [REOBJ.
Exhibit D. to MDOT's Opposition to Bitumar's Motion for Preliminary Injunction ("MDOT's
Opp. to Prelim. Inj. Mot.").
The 6/16letter explains that the requirements were being enacted in response to
"documented incidents of premature failure of pavements that were produced with asphalt
containing [REOB]" and that the certification that REOB is not being used "will be required
until there is sufficient research into the effects of these materials on the long-term performance
of asphalt pavements for us to make an informed decision on their suitability as a constituent of
asphalt binder." Id. Beyond the reference to what Bitumar assumes to be the Hesp study,
however, MDOT has not provided specifics regarding the "documented incidents" referenced in
the 6116letter. See O'Brien Dec., ~ ~ 15-20.
MDOT's Opposition to Bitumar's Motion says that MDOT is not able, at least yet, to
confirm that REOB complies with MDOT's Standard Specifications for its construction
6 projects. MDOT Opp. to Mot. for Prelim. Inj., 2. MDOT adopted the Standard Specifications
pursuant to 23 M.R.S.A. § 4243 (MDOT "may adopt its own standard contract specifications").
The Standard Specifications consist of over 670 pages of general and technical requirements
that are referenced in all contracts for construction and maintenance of transportation projects
for MDOT. Bradbury Aff., ~ 6.
Division 700, Section 702.01 of the Specifications requires that "Performance Graded
Asphalt Binder shall conform to the requirements of [American Association of State Highway
and Transportation Officials] ("AASHTO") M 320. Id. at~ 11. Specifically, AASHTO M 320
section 5.2 provides that "modifiers may be any organic material of suitable manufacture that is
used in virgin or recycled condition and that is dissolved, dispersed, or reacted in asphalt binder
to enhance its performance. Id. at~ 13. AASHTO M 320 section 5.S requires that asphalt
must be homogeneous, free from water and deleterious materials. Id. It is whether REOB
meets these criteria that MDOT has yet to determine.
Implicit in MDOT's argument is the premise that REOB constitutes a "modifier" for
purposes of the AASHTO M S20 standard. See id. at ~ 1S. Bitumar disputes that premise,
arguing that REOB is a "cutter," not a modifier. See Nguyen Dec., ~ ~ 2-4; Supp. Bouldin Dec.,
~~ 1-3.
After MDOT issued the 6II6letter, Bitumar and Safety-Kleen met with MDOT
representatives to discuss REOB and its use in PG asphalt binder. O'Brien Dec., ~ 21. At the
meeting, MDOT requested that Bitumar and Safety-Kleen provide information about the
constituents ofREOB and how contaminants and unacceptable additives are removed during
the REOB re-refining process. Bradbury Aff., ~ 14. MDOT requested evidence, such as test
results, showing that the inclusion ofREOB does not negatively affect pavement durability or
7 performance. Id. As of the July SO hearing, according to MDOT, Bitumar and Safety-Kleen
had not provided MDOT with the requested information.
On July 22, 2014, Bitumar formally demanded that the REOB ban be rescinded or at
least stayed. Exhibit 3 to O'Brien Aff MDOT has not complied with that demand.
III. Discussion
Bitumar's request for a preliminary injunction is governed by Maine Rule of Civil
Procedure 65(b). In the leading case of Ingraham v. University ofMaine at Orono, the Law Court
held, "Before granting a preliminary injunction, the Court must find that four criteria are met:
(I) that plaintiffwill suffer irreparable injury if the injunction is not granted,
(2) that such injury outweighs any harm which granting the injunctive relief would inflict on the defendant,
(3) that plaintiffhas exhibited a likelihood of success on the merits (at most, a probability; at least, a substantial possibility), [and]
(4) that the public interest will not be adversely affected by granting the injunction.
441 A.2d 691, 693 (Me. 1983) (per curiam).
These criteria "are not to be applied woodenly or in isolation from each other; rather,
the court of equity should weigh all of these factors together in determining whether injunctive
relief is proper in the specific circumstances of each case." Dept. cifEnvt'l Prot. v. Emerson, 563
A.2d 762, 768 (Me. 1989). For example "[c]lear evidence ofirreparable injury should result in
a less stringent requirement of certainty ofvictory; greater certainty ofvictory should result in
a less stringent requirement of proof of irreparable injury." Id. (quoting Developments in the
Law-Injunctions, 78 Harv. L. Rev. 994, 1056 (1965)).
A. Likelihood of Success.
A "likelihood of success on the merits" is "at most, a probability; at least, a substantial
possibility." Bangor Historic Track, Inc. v. Dep't cifAgric., 2003 ME 140, ~ 9, 837 A.2d 129.
8 Bitumar argues that its challenge to the MDOT ban is likely to succeed on the merits
because (l) the ban is a rule that MDOT adopted without complying with the rule-making
procedure of the Maine APA; and (2) the ban is arbitrary, capricious and an abuse ofMDOT's
discretion because it is not based on sufficient evidence. MDOT responds by arguing that ( l)
the rulemaking procedure set forth in the APA is inapplicable to the REOB ban because it is
not a rule and (2) its ban ofREOB in its projects is a reasonable temporary measure designed to
give MDOT the opportunity to investigate the suitability of a new (to MDOT) ingredient that
has been linked to premature pavement failure and that has not been shown to meet MDOT's
Standard Specifications, before that ingredient is used in MDOT's paving projects.
l. The REOB Ban is Not a Rule for Purposes cifAPA's Rulemaking Procedure.
The APA defines a "Rule" as "the whole or any part of every regulation, standard, code,
statement of policy, or other agency guideline or statement of general applicability ... that is or
is intended to be judicially enforceable and implements, interprets or makes specific the law
administered by the agency, or describes the procedures or practices of the agency." 5 M.R.S.A.
§ 8002(9)(A). A rule is not judicially enforceable unless it is adopted in a manner consistent
with [the APA]." 5 M.R.S.A. § 8002(9). MDOT does not dispute that the REOB ban was not
adopted in a manner consistent with the APA's rule making process. Instead, MDOT argues
the REOB ban is a contractual standard, not a rule. MDOT Mot. for Prelim. Inj., 5-6.
Because the MDOT ban operates only to preclude those who choose to contract with
MDOT from supplying asphalt binder with REOB, and does not regulate the use ofREOB, the
REOB ban is either an interpretation of an existing specification, as MDOT contends, or at
best is a new specification, and in either case, is not a rule for purposes of the APA. See
Bradbury Aff, ~~ 12-lS.
9 Maine courts have yet to address whether MDOT's Standard Specifications constitute a
rule, but courts in other states have examined the issue in the context of similar statutes and
specifications and determined that a state highway agency's contract specifications are not
subject to rulemaking requirements. In Greenfield Constr. Co. v. Mich. Dep't ofTransp., the
Michigan Supreme Court rejected a contractor's claim that the state's "1970 Standard
Specifications for Highway Construction" were rules under Michigan's APA because the
specifications were "one of hundreds of standard contract terms and specifications governing
the contractual relationship between the state and contractors engaged in state highway work."
261 N.W.2d 718, 721-23 (Mich. 1978); see alsoAbari Constr. Co. v. Illinois, 59 Ill. Ct. Cl. 316,318
(2007) (limitations period in Illinois DOT's Standard Specifications is a contractual term, not
an APA rule). In support of its holding, Green.fi'eld explained that no part of the specifications
"have ever been promulgated as agency rules within the [Michigan APAJ, as a condition of
their validity." Greerifield261 N.W.2d at 722. Similarly, the Alabama Supreme Court in Ala.
Dep't ofTransp. v. Blue Ridge Sand & Grave~ Inc., rejected an argument analogous to the
argument adopted by Bitumar. 718 So.2d 27, 29 (Ala. 1998). In particular, the Alabama DOT
interpreted portions of Alabama's "Standard Specifications for Highway Construction" to
require hot asphalt mix for roads to have a "bulk specific gravity greater than 2.550" to avoid
premature road surface failures as "simply a term that may be incorporated into a contract
between the Department and some other party." Id. at 29. The court explained that the fact
that the Alabama DOT "has established standard specifications that it may incorporate by
reference rather than setting forth all specifications in each highway construction contract does
not elevate those specifications to the statute of'rules' [under the Alabama APA]." Id.; see also
Dep't ofTransp. v. Blackhawk Quarry Co. of Fla., 528 So.2d 447, 450 (Fla. App. 1988)
10 (specifications for acceptable material as part "of comprehensive standards for state road and
bridge construction" are contract terms, not rules under the APA). 1
Furthermore, the statutory structure authorizing the Standard Specifications suggests
that they are not rules within the meaning of the APA. 23 M.R.S.A. § 4243, Contractsfor
construction and maintenance, authorizes MDOT "to adopt its own standard contract
specifications" as part of its "full power in the procurement and letting of all contracts to
construct, demolish or maintain transportation infrastructure."
Section 4243 does not require MDOT to promulgate its Standard, Special or
Supplemental Specifications through the APA's rulemaking process. Id. Title 23, however,
does contain several instances where the Legislature has expressly directed MDOT to
promulgate rules concerning certain aspects of its transportation regulatory duties under
Maine's APA. See 23 M.R.S.A. § 704(9) (MDOT to promulgate rules under APA for entrances
to highways); 23 M.R.S.A. §704-A(9) (MDOT to promulgate rules under APA for traffic
movement permits); 23 M.R.S.A. § 4404 (MDOT to promulgate rules under APA for ferry line
tolls).
The contrast between those provisions and section 4243 implies that the Maine
Legislature did not intend that MDOT be required to promulgate its Standard Specifications
through the APA's rulemaking process. See Blue Yonder, LLC v. State Tax Assessor, 2011 ME 49,
~ 10, 17 A.3d 667 (courts may "not read additional language into a statute"). Accordingly,
given that neither the REOB ban nor the Standard Specifications is a "rule" within the meaning
of the APA, MDOT was not required to follow the APA rulemaking process in adopting the
temporary ban on the use ofREOB in its projects.
1 The definition of a rule in the Michigan (Mich. Comp. Laws. § 24.207), Illinois (5 Ill. Compl. Stat. § 100/1-70), Alabama (Ala. Code§ 41-22-5(9), and Florida (Fla. Stat.§ 120.52(16)) APAs are substantially similar to, if not identical to the definition of a rule in the Maine APA.
11 2. The REOB Ban is Not Arbitrary, Capricious, or an Abuse ofMDOT's Discretion.
Bitumar's alternative argument is that MDOT's temporary ban on REOB is an
arbitrary and capricious agency action and an abuse of discretion that is reviewable under the
appeal provisions of the APA. See 5 M.R.S.A. § 11001 ("[A]ny person who is aggrieved by
final agency action shall be entitled to judicial review thereof in the Superior Court ... " ). The
court may reverse or modify the agency's final action if it is "[u]nsupported by substantial
evidence on the whole record; or [a]rbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of
discretion." 5 M.R.S.A. § 11007(4)(C)(5)-(6). "Final Agency action" means a decision by an
agency which affects the legal rights, duties or privileges of specific persons, which is
dispositive of all issues, legal and factual, and for which no further recourse, appeal or review is
provided within the agency." 5 M.R.S.A. § 8002( 4 ).
At least at this early stage of the case, the court is prepared to assume that MDOT"s
REOB ban, although temporary, constitutes final agency action because it affects Bitumar's
legal rights, is dispositive of all issues, and no further recourse is available within MDOT, and
also that Bitumar's declaratory judgment action is a proper vehicle by which to challenge the
ban.
Consistent with the general rule that the party seeking to overturn government action
has the burden of persuasion, see Seven Islands Land Co. v. Maine Land Use Regulation Comm'n,
450 A.2d 475, 479 (Me.l982), Bitumar has the burden to show that MDOT acted arbitrarily
and capriciously, or abused its discretion in adopting the temporary ban on REOB.
Framing the exact issue before the court is always helpful to analysis, and especially so
here, because the parties frame the issue differently. Bitumar sees the issue as whether REOB
is or is not a suitable additive or modifier to asphalt binder, and asks that the court determine
that issue by enjoining MDOT from refusing to accept REOB until it has made its own
12 determination. MDOT says the issue is whether it should be allowed to investigate REOB and
its suitability for MDOT projects before being required to use REOB in its projects.
Because the MDOT ban is temporary, and because MDOT is actively investigating
REOB, and in fact is waiting for information on REOB from Bitumar and Safety-Kleen, the
court agrees with MDOT's framing of the exact issue raised by Bitumar's Motion. The exact
issue is whether Bitumar has shown a likelihood of success on its claim that MDOT has acted
arbitrarily and capriciously in deciding to ban REOB at least until MDOT has determined that
REOB is both consistent with MDOT's Standard Specifications and will not contribute to
premature pavement failure.
Bitumar's arguments mostly go to the ultimate issue, not to the issue as just defined.
Bitumar says the REOB ban is not based on competent evidence and is contrary to all of the
empirical evidence showing the strong performance of asphalt made with REOB. Bitumar Mot.
for Prelim. Inj., 8-9. 2
It may be that MDOT will agree to accept REOB in its asphalt binder once it has
evaluated the evidence marshaled by Bitumar. lfthe Hesp study indeed forms part of the basis
for MDOT's concern about REOB, it may be that MDOT will come to agree with Bitumar that
the level ofREOB in Bitumar's product should not be equated to the level ofREOB in the
pavement involved in the Hesp study. However, even Bitumar's characterization of the Hesp
study indicates that the study's conclusions link REOB to premature failure of asphalt
2 According to Bitumar, MDOT has failed to identify a single scientific reason for the ban. Bitumar
Mot. for Prelim. Inj., 9. The one study that the New England state highway agencies have apparently relied upon is the Hesp Study. Id. at 9-10. Bitumar argues that the Hesp study, which suggested a 15- .SO% concentration ofREOB in asphalt could lead to premature failure of asphalt pavement is inapposite because Bitumar only uses a 2-8% concentration ofREOB. O'Brien Decl., ~ 11. Furthermore, Bitumar's REOB supplier, Safety-Kleen commissioned a series of extensive studies and testing by an independent laboratory in Tampa, Florida, a world-wide leader in asphalt analysis and testing, to evaluate REOB and its effect on asphalt. Id. at~ 12. These studies allegedly showed no adverse effect on the durability or longevity of asphalt pavement with REOB and, to the contrary, found REOB improved asphalt performance in many instances. Id. at~~ 14, 1.
13 pavement. That linkage and the observed but thus far unexplained premature failure of
asphalt pavement discussed at the Pavement Summit meeting, taken together, clearly justify
further investigation ofREOB, and furnish a rational basis for MDOT's desire to investigate
REOB before agreeing to use it.
Moreover, the risk of premature pavement failure is not MDOT's sole concern.
MDOT's decision to ban REOB temporarily was based also on lack of sufficient information to
determine whether REOB complies with the AASHTO M 320 standard for modifiers of asphalt
binder. MDOT Opp. to Mot. for Prelim. Inj., 10. Bitumar's response that REOB is an additive,
not a "modifier," for purposes of AASHTO M 320, seems nuanced at best. Whatever label is
applied to the use ofREOB in asphalt binder, MDOT's desire to investigate whether REOB is
suitable before agreeing to accept it as an ingredient in asphalt binder is reasonable. In that
regard, MDOT has invited Bitumar and Safety-Kleen to support their contentions about REOB
with concrete information, so to speak, about how REOB is made and what is in it, and has yet
to receive that information. ld. at 11.
The core issue raised by Plaintiffs Motion is, indeed, whether MDOT should have a
reasonable opportunity to investigate the suitability ofREOB as an ingredient in asphalt binder
before being compelled to accept it. However long REOB has been in use by Bitumar, it is
apparently a new and unfamiliar ingredient to MDOT and, according to the Bradbury affidavit,
MDOT's counterpart agencies in other New England states. Bitumar's argument assumes
that MDOT should have the burden to prove that REOB is inconsistent with MDOT's
Standard Specifications, but it seems no less logical to put the burden on Bitumar to justify its
claim that REOB meets the specifications and will not lead to premature pavement failure.
That justification is exactly what MDOT is seeking, and has already requested from Bitumar.
14 As MDOT has pointed out, the Maine Legislature has directed it to provide safe,
efficient, and effective roads. 2S M.R.S.A. § 4206(1)(A). The temporary nature ofMDOT's ban
and MDOT's intention of investigating the suitability ofREOB render the ban a reasonable
response to a founded concern about REOB's compliance with MDOT's specifications and its
effect on durability and performance of the asphalt in which it us used. For these reasons,
Bitumar has not met the likelihood of success criterion in terms of showing that MDOT's
temporary ban is potentially or likely liable to be overturned as an arbitrary or capricious
agency decision or an abuse of discretion.
B. Irreparable Injury to Bitumar.
Bitumar argues that its reputation and business will suffer irreparable injury if the
REOB ban is not enjoined. Bitumar Mot. for Prelim. Inj., 10. The REOB ban could prevent
Bitumar from satisfying its clients' existing needs for this year's road paving season, or at least
make it more costly. Id. Bitumar may not be able to recoup these costs due to MDOT's
sovereign immunity. Bitumar also fears that its clients will find new suppliers and would be
unlikely to work with Bitumar in the future. Id. Finally, Bitumar points to the cost the ban
will impose on it to move its inventory out of storage facilities where the mixture is not banned
and re-supply the storage tanks in New England with new product containing different
additives. Id. at 11.
MDOT claims that the harm Bitumar alleges is not the result of any retraction of
approval ofREOB by MDOT, since no such approval ever existed. MDOT Opp. to Mot. for
Prelim. Inj. 12. MDOT also argues Bitumar has not presented concrete evidence of damages it
will incur as a result of the REOB ban and that Bitumar has not established MDOT is entitled
to sovereign immunity. Id. at 1S. Finally, MDOT argues any damages Bitumar faces are the
15 result of business decisions without any reliance on the viability ofREOB in MDOT paving
projects.
On this record, Bitumar has met the irreparable harm criterion, although the extent of
harm is limited.
C. Balance of Harms Criterion
The irreparable injury Bitumar faces is real, but limited. Bitumar had contracts with
paving contractors to supply liquid asphalt that amounted to less than 1% ofMDOT's highway
paving program. Bradbury Aff. ~ 18. The potential harm to MDOT and the users of the
roads and highways maintained by MDOT is less certain, because the evidence linking REOB
to premature pavement failure is mixed. However, if the risk about which MDOT is concerned
materializes, the resulting harm would vastly outweigh the harm to Bitumar. Accordingly, the
court deems the balance of harms criterion to be in equipoise between the parties.
E. Public Interest.
MDOT contends that the public interest favors its position, in that MDOT should be
able to verify the suitability of the materials furnished to pave the public roads and highways
for which MDOT is responsible. MDOT Opp. to Mot. for Prelim. Inj., 15-16. Bitumar
counters that enjoining the REOB ban will not harm the public interest because the risks that
concern MDOT are unsubstantiated in evidence. Bitumar Mot. for Prelim. Inj., 11-12.
Bitumar also argues that allowing the REOB ban to stand could prevent many paving
contractors from fulfilling their contractual obligations, delaying paving jobs, and putting
workers temporarily out of work or causing layoffs. Id.
MDOT also makes a separation ofpowers argument that has some merit. This court is
obviously vested with authority to review and, if appropriate, enjoin action by MDOT. If this
case were in the posture ofMDOT having completed its investigation ofREOB and
16 determined to ban its use in MDOT projects permanently, there would be no real separation of
powers issue. Reviewing and, if appropriate, overturning agency decisions and enjoining
agency action are steps that courts can and do take in the ordinary course of exercising
jurisdiction. However, when the court is asked to adjudicate an issue over which MDOT has at
least primary jurisdiction before MDOT has had a reasonable opportunity to adjudicate the
issue itself, the issue of separation of powers is raised more substantially. Bitumar would have
the court adjudicate the suitability ofREOB for MDOT projects and, at least in effect, require
MDOT to accept it. Thus, this is a case in which the court is being asked to do much more
than to overturn an administrative agency decision. The court is being asked, not just to take
away the agency's decision, but to take away the agency's decision making process as well. On
this record, there is not a sufficient reason-in terms of unwarranted footdragging or other
undue delay on MDOT's part-to justify that level of intrusion by the court into a decision
making process allocated by law to MDOT.
On balance, the court is persuaded that the public interest favors denying injunctive
relief. MDOT's concerns about REOB have a reasonable basis, as discussed above. Also, the
potential adverse economic effect of the ban on paving contractors and their employees appears
limited to Bitumar 's 1% of MDOT' s highway paving. The public interest criterion weighs
against granting injunctive relief
IV. Conclusion
In this instance, the likelihood of success and public interest factors weigh against the
grant of injunctive relief, and Bitumar's showing ofirreparable harm is not compelling. The
17 court concludes that Bitumar has not made the requisite showing that it is entitled to the
injunctive relief it seeks:3
The entry will be: Bitumar's Emergency Motion for Preliminary Injunction is denied.
Pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 79(a), the Clerk is hereby directed to incorporate this Order by
reference in the docket. ,3~ d ~ Dated: August 1, 2014 _ - · A.M. Horton Justice, Business & Consumer Court
s It needs to be acknowledged that this decision departs from that ofthe Vermont Superior Court in Bitumar USA, Inc. v. Vermont Agency ojTrans., Vt. Super. Ct., Docket No. 449-7-14 Wncv (July S1, 2014). A significant distinguishing consideration is that the Vermont Agency of Transportation (VAT) evidently gave specific approval to Bitumar's product in 2014, after receiving samples and a quality control report from Bitumar, and that Bitumar expects to sell $7 million worth of product containing REOB to VAT's paving contractors this year. Id. Nothing comparable has been presented in this case. Another difference is that the Vermont decision appears to attach no significance to the fact that Bitumar failed to disclose to VAT that its product included REOB. I d. at S n.2. This court has a different view. In this case, the fact--undisputed on this record-that the MDOT had no knowledge until recently that REOB might be included in the asphalt binder used in the pavement supplied to it makes all the difference. Were it shown that MDOT had a practice of knowingly accepting asphalt binder with REOB, its claim of needing to impose a temporary ban in order to investigate REOB might have fared differently in this order.
Ent~red on~ Docket: J---1-/ L/ 18 Cop1es sent v1a Mail _ Electronically::;:("' Bitumar USA, Inc. v. Maine Department of Transportation BCD-CV-14-50
Bitumar USA, Inc. Petitioner I Plaintiff
Counsel: John Aromando, Esq. Merrills Warf 254 Commercial St Portland, ME 04101
Maine Department of Transpostation Respondents I Defendants
Counsel: Rebecca Farnum, Esq. Three Canal Plaza PO Box4630 Portland, ME 04112-4630