Black Warrior River-Keeper, Inc. v. Drummond Co.
This text of 387 F. Supp. 3d 1271 (Black Warrior River-Keeper, Inc. v. Drummond Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
ABDUL K. KALLON, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
Black Warrior Riverkeeper ("BWR"), an environmental advocacy organization, brings this citizen enforcement action against Drummond Company, a coal mining company, under the Clean Water Act ("CWA"),
Before the court are Drummond's motion for summary judgment on all claims, doc. 48, and BWR's motion for partial summary judgment as to liability on Counts I and, alternatively, IV, doc. 51. After careful consideration of the law and the parties' briefs, docs. 49, 52, 59, 60, 68, 69, the court finds that BWR's motion is due to be granted in part, and Drummond's motion is due to be denied.
Due to the length of this opinion, a brief roadmap may be helpful to the reader. Sections I and II, which do not address the specific contentions in this case, outline the *1277standard of review and the statutory and regulatory framework, respectively. Section III outlines the factual and procedural background of this dispute. In section IV, the court turns to the parties' respective contentions, beginning in subsection A with BWR's contention that it has established that Drummond has engaged in unpermitted discharges in violation of § 402 of the CWA. After finding for BWR in part-specifically, as to the acid mine drainage ("AMD") discharges into Locust Fork and the point sources, the court addresses in subsections B - E Drummond's various arguments in support of its motion for summary judgment, beginning with the statute of limitations defense. Finally, subsections F and G address the parties' respective contentions in support of their motions on the RCRA claim. Ultimately, the court concludes in section V that only BWR's motion related to AMD discharges into Locust Fork is due to be granted.
I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Under Rule 56(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, summary judgment is proper "if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56. " Rule 56 [ ] mandates the entry of summary judgment, after adequate time for discovery and upon motion, against a party who fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party's case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial." Celotex Corp. v. Catrett ,
The simple fact that both sides have filed a motion for summary judgment does not alter the ordinary standard of review. See Chambers & Co. v. Equitable Life Assurance Soc. ,
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ABDUL K. KALLON, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
Black Warrior Riverkeeper ("BWR"), an environmental advocacy organization, brings this citizen enforcement action against Drummond Company, a coal mining company, under the Clean Water Act ("CWA"),
Before the court are Drummond's motion for summary judgment on all claims, doc. 48, and BWR's motion for partial summary judgment as to liability on Counts I and, alternatively, IV, doc. 51. After careful consideration of the law and the parties' briefs, docs. 49, 52, 59, 60, 68, 69, the court finds that BWR's motion is due to be granted in part, and Drummond's motion is due to be denied.
Due to the length of this opinion, a brief roadmap may be helpful to the reader. Sections I and II, which do not address the specific contentions in this case, outline the *1277standard of review and the statutory and regulatory framework, respectively. Section III outlines the factual and procedural background of this dispute. In section IV, the court turns to the parties' respective contentions, beginning in subsection A with BWR's contention that it has established that Drummond has engaged in unpermitted discharges in violation of § 402 of the CWA. After finding for BWR in part-specifically, as to the acid mine drainage ("AMD") discharges into Locust Fork and the point sources, the court addresses in subsections B - E Drummond's various arguments in support of its motion for summary judgment, beginning with the statute of limitations defense. Finally, subsections F and G address the parties' respective contentions in support of their motions on the RCRA claim. Ultimately, the court concludes in section V that only BWR's motion related to AMD discharges into Locust Fork is due to be granted.
I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Under Rule 56(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, summary judgment is proper "if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56. " Rule 56 [ ] mandates the entry of summary judgment, after adequate time for discovery and upon motion, against a party who fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party's case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial." Celotex Corp. v. Catrett ,
The simple fact that both sides have filed a motion for summary judgment does not alter the ordinary standard of review. See Chambers & Co. v. Equitable Life Assurance Soc. ,
*1278Bricklayers, Masons & Plasterers Int'l Union v. Stuart Plastering Co. ,
II. STATUTORY AND REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
A. The Clean Water Act
Congress enacted the CWA to "restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation's waters."
The CWA authorizes citizen enforcement actions against any person "alleged to be in violation" of an effluent limitation or standard under the CWA or an administrative order by the EPA or a state.
B. The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
The primary purpose of the RCRA "is to reduce the generation of hazardous waste and to ensure the proper treatment, storage, and disposal of that waste which is nonetheless generated, 'so as to minimize the present and future threat to human health and the environment.' " Meghrig v. KFC Western, Inc. ,
C. The Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act
Congress enacted the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 (SMCRA),
SMCRA specifies that persons engaging in surface coal mining operations must obtain a permit from an approved state agency "no later than eight months from the date on which a State program is approved[.]"
III. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In August 1953, the Maxine Mine began operation as an underground coal mine pursuant to a contract between the Alabama By-Products Corporation (ABC), and the Alabama, Georgia, and Gulf Power Companies. Doc. 50-3 at 41-42, 50-8 at 103-24. The surface portion of this mine was on land adjacent to the Locust Fork, a navigable-in-fact tributary of the Black Warrior River. Docs. 53-6 at 24; 53-2 ¶ 8. Over the course of its operation, the Maxine Mine site included multiple mining refuse and rock disposal areas. See doc. 50-1 at 69-73, 119. The mining refuse pile2 at issue in this case was originally created in the early 1950s on a ridge adjacent to the Locust Fork. See doc. 53-6 at 24, 26; 50-1 at 119. The pile is composed of coarse rock *1280refuse, coal fragments, sandstone, shale, and washer rock removed and deposited by ABC during the course of its operations. See docs. 53-6 at 47; 55-2 at 16; 61-9 ¶ 13. The pile is either geologic overburden, hence the "GOB" or "GOB pile" reference, i.e. , consisting of rock above or below the mine coal seams, as defined by Gordon Johnson, doc. 53-6 at 26, or according to Drummond's expert Lois George, it is "inter-burden," doc. 61-9 ¶ 13; 54-14 at 18, which BWR's expert Johnson explains consists of rock "within the mined seams," doc. 53-6 at 26.
Over the course of the operation of Maxine Mine, ABC repeatedly worked with state regulators and environmental consultants to address the ongoing issue of acidic water that discharged from the refuse pile into the Locust Fork. See docs. 55-3 at 2; 55-4 at 2; 55-5 at 2; 55-1 at 28; 53-1 at 23; 55-21 at 5. For instance, in 1979, pursuant to the SMCRA, the Alabama Surface Mining Reclamation Commission (ASMRC, later known as ASMC) issued a notice of violation (NOV) to ABC concerning discharges of water with low pH and elevated iron and manganese levels from a portion of the refuse pile. Doc. 50-2 at 78-80. ABC subsequently retained environmental consultants P.E. LaMoreaux & Associates ("PELA") to address the NOV, doc. 50-2 at 115-17, which the ASMC ultimately vacated and referred instead to the Alabama Water Improvement Commission (AWIC) for action, doc. 50-3 at 77.
In 1982, ABC submitted an application to ASMC for a mining permit and a supplement to this permit application, which contained a supplemental permit map featuring a portion of the refuse pile. See docs. 50-1 at 119; 50-11 at 14-16. In February 1983, ASMC approved ABC's plan for reclamation of a western portion of the refuse pile, and ordered ABC to post a bond. Doc. 50-8 at 58. The plan involved covering the surface of this portion of the refuse pile with clay, planting vegetation, and constructing a "diversion ditch" to carry surface-runoff from the old refuse pile through a sediment basin and into the Locust Fork. See doc. 50-1 at 71-72. Subsequently, ABC reclaimed this portion of the refuse pile (referred to in ABC and Drummond documents as the "post-law" area because it post-dated the SMCRA) by capping it with clay, sloping it, and planting vegetation. Docs. 54-14 at 45; 55-1 at 45. However, the eastern portion of the refuse pile adjacent to the Locust Fork-referred to as the "pre-law" area-was never permitted or reclaimed by ABC or Drummond. See docs. 50-11 at 45; 54-14 at 45.3
*1281During its operation of the mine, ABC installed or improved ditches that ran through the refuse pile, and constructed basins and dams, as part of a drainage system from the refuse pile. Doc. 61-9 ¶ 20. Specifically, ABC built two dams, one upstream of the other, and sediment basins upstream of each dam to capture sediment from the refuse area. Docs. 53-1 at 30-32; 54-14 at 24-25; see docs. 53-6 at 74; 55-11; 55-12. These dams and sediment basins were built over an intermittent stream that discharged into the Locust Fork, a stream that BWR refers to as "Tributary 1" or "T1." Doc. 53-6 at 74; see docs. 55-1 at 15, 17; 55-17 at 2; 54-14 at 24-25; 55-12. At least as far back as 1946, a slough existed at the confluence of this stream and Locust Fork and, by 1975, this stream had intermittent flow. See docs. 53-6 at 31; 54-1 at 21-22; 54-3 at 20; 61-9 ¶ 11; 54-3 at 20; 61-9 ¶ 11(b).
In September 1983, ABC ceased coal mining operations at Maxine Mine. Doc. 50-2 at 100. Thereafter, in March 1985, ASMC issued an order stating that ABC had "substantially completed reclamation" at the "old coal processing waste disposal area" and that ABC's "corrective action and reclamation activities have effectively eliminated any contribution of non-permissible effluent" from the area, but that "there remains remedial corrective action necessary ... on certain areas." Doc. 50-8 at 52. ABC subsequently merged with Drummond, making Drummond the permittee for the mine and the "post-law" portion of the refuse pile. See doc. 55-1 at 29, 31-32; 50-3 at 43, 68. Finally, ASMC approved a final bond release for Drummond's permit for the mine in May 1992. Doc. 50-9 at 2-3.
In 1988, ADEM reissued an existing NPDES permit to Drummond, which covered an outfall in the refuse pile that discharged to an "unnamed tributary of Locust Fork." Doc. 50-4 at 41; 55-24. In June 1992, ASMC granted final Phase II and III bond release for the permitted section of the mine site. Docs. 50-9 at 1-2; 50-4 at 29-30. Then, in July 1992, ADEM released Drummond from monitoring requirements under its NPDES permit. Doc. 50-4 at 27. In March 1993, ADEM inspected the mine and did not find any "deficiencies or violations," stating in its reports that the "site appears to be totally reclaimed," there was "no discharge at the time of inspection," and that "no deficiencies or violations were noted." Doc. 50-5 at 32-33. Since 1992, Drummond has not obtained a permit for the mine site, nor has it performed any maintenance or monitoring of the site. See doc. 53-1 at 39-40, 45. Since at least 2009, Drummond employees and other residents of the surrounding areas have used the site for hunting. Doc. 50-11 at 11.
The ditches, dams, and basins at the refuse pile ABC constructed still exist today. Doc. 53-6 at 73-76; see doc. 61-9 ¶ 20. Currently, the upper and lower sediment basins above the lower dam contain sediment, some of which originated from the refuse area. See docs. 53-1 at 29, 33; 54-14 at 17, 24.4 Each dam has an outlet or "spillway": the outlet of the upper dam allows surface water to move to the lower sediment basin, and the outlet of the lower *1282dam allows surface water to discharge to the Locust Fork. Doc. 53-1 at 31, 32, 34; see doc. 55-1 at 17. Man-made ditches drain surface runoff from both the "post-law" and "pre-law" portions of the refuse pile. See doc. 53-6 at 73-74. Surface water also percolates into sediment in the basins and flows as groundwater, where it discharges to the Locust Fork via groundwater seeps. Doc. 53-6 at 74, 78.
This lawsuit's origins may trace back to May 2006, when Nelson Brooke, the "Riverkeeper" for BWR, first identified discolored riprap at the spillway of the lower dam to the Locust Fork and took readings that revealed acidic pH levels at the site. Doc. 50-10 at 3, 25. Brooke took no further action with these samples. See Doc. 53-2 ¶ 11. Instead, Brooke obtained additional samples of discharges at the lower dam spillway in February 2007, October 2011, and four years later in June 2015. Docs. 53-2 ¶¶ 13-15; 50-10 at 25-26. Thereafter, on June 29, 2016, BWR issued its notice of intent to sue Drummond for violations of the CWA and RCRA. Doc. 24, Ex. A. After the sixty-day notice period, BWR filed this citizen suit alleging CWA violations and, after the ninety-day notice period, amended its complaint to allege RCRA violations. Docs. 1; 21. As a result of the lawsuit, BWR conducted field investigations with Drummond representatives to obtain surface water, groundwater, and sediment samples in September 2016 and August 2017, and conducted a site inspection in June 2017. See docs. 56-1 ¶¶ 7-8; 56-3 at 44.
IV. ANALYSIS
The court turns now to the parties' respective contentions. Basically, BWR pleads four claims: (1) unpermitted discharges under CWA § 402 (Count I), (2) unpermitted discharges of dredged or fill material under CWA § 404 (Count II), (3) unpermitted discharges containing both "contaminated water" and dredged or fill material under CWA §§ 402 and 404 (Count III), and (4) a RCRA endangerment claim (Count IV). Presently before the court are Drummond's motion for summary judgment on all claims, doc. 48, and BWR's motion for partial summary judgment as to liability on its CWA § 402 claim (Count I) and RCRA claim (Count IV), doc. 51. The court addresses these motions, beginning with Count I on which both parties have moved for summary judgment.
A. Alleged Violation of CWA § 402-Count I
In Count I, BWR asserts that Drummond has violated CWA § 402 through unpermitted discharges to Locust Fork, "T1," and the "east" and "west" ditches. To prevail on this claim, BWR must show that Drummond (1) discharged; (2) a pollutant; (3) into waters of the United States ("WOTUS"); (4) from a point source; (5) without a permit.5 See *1283Parker ,
1. Discharge of a pollutant
The first element requires a showing of a discharge of a pollutant. Parker ,
BWR has produced extensive evidence of historical and ongoing discharges of AMD from the refuse pile into Locust Fork. This evidence includes, first, ABC's correspondence with state regulators and numerous reports produced by ABC's consultants, PELA, during the late 1970s and 1980s which describe acid water discharges from the refuse pile.8 Second, according to BWR's expert, Gordon Johnson, the acid-based accounting analysis of his soil/sediment samples taken from various locations at the refuse pile indicate that "[a]ll mine waste samples are acidic and acid-generating." Doc. 54-7 at 4. His conclusion is based, in part, on evidence showing that total sulfide concentrations in the samples were "below the method detection limit, which indicates the acidification process is either well progressed or complete in the samples that were collected." Doc. 54-3 at 35. Third, BWR collected numerous surface water, sediment, and groundwater samples in 2016 and 2017 from various locations at the site, which its experts, Johnson, Anthony Brown, and Barry Sulkin, contend reveal AMD discharges based on the elevated concentrations of numerous metals and low pH in the samples. See doc. 53-6 at 60-61, 76, 79; 54-3 at 25-30; 56-1 at 3-8.9 In particular, samples of surface water taken below the lower dam that runs into Locust Fork on September 20, 2016, June 12, 2017, and August 1, 2017, contain elevated concentrations of metals and acidic pH levels that Brown and Johnson contend are associated with AMD. Doc. 53-6 at 76. Sulkin also opines that surface water samples, taken near the spillway of the lower dam in September 2016, reflect low pH and "elevated" levels of various metals "far in excess of what would be coming from the unpolluted stream that once flowed there." Doc. 56-2 at 6-8. Finally, the water samples taken from below the lower dam in 2016 and 2017 have higher metal concentrations and more acidic pH levels than the background samples from Locust Fork. Doc. 53-6 at 75, 90, 94-96. This evidence is sufficient to establish that AMD discharged from the site into the Locust Fork in September 2016, June 2017, and August 2017.10
*1285To no surprise, as one would expect when complex science matters are in issue, Drummond's experts Lynn Sisk, Bruce Wielinga, and Lois George disagree with BWR's experts, and contend that the data does not show AMD discharges. Specifically, Sisk contends that AMD is not discharging from the lower dam at the site because AMD "usually has some subsurface component associated with it," and she asserts that only "surface runoff" is discharging over the lower dam. Doc. 50-14 at 17-18. This contention does not alter the court's finding because Sisk admits that she did not take any water or soil samples from the refuse pile to support her conclusion that AMD could not flow over the lower dam. Id. at 18. For his part, Wielinga contends that findings that sulfide was below the analytical detection limit in Johnson's soil/sediment samples means that there are no "sulfide-bearing minerals" in the "GOB [geologic overburden] waste" that could generate AMD. See docs. 61-6 ¶ 5; 61-32 at 27-28. Critically, however, Wielinga fails to contest Johnson's explanation that the lack of sulfide indicates the oxidation process that generates AMD is complete. Lastly, Drummond, through its expert George, contends that Brown cannot fairly and accurately testify that surface water "with elevated concentrations of pollutants associated with AMD" is ultimately discharged to Locust Fork, given that storm water runoff is "driven ... by precipitation" and BWR's samples were taken from "essentially standing or stagnant points." Doc. 61-9 ¶ 28. This contention also does not alter the court's finding because George and Drummond's other experts do not dispute the validity of BWR's data showing the presence of elevated levels of metals and acidic pH in water samples taken at the lower dam where it discharges into Locust Fork and along the banks of the Locust Fork below the dam. In that respect, while Drummond's experts have shown general weakness in their counterparts' analyses on the issue of AMD, their showing is insufficient to create an issue of fact regarding the discharge of AMD into Locust Fork, a water of the United States. See Walker v. Darby ,
2. To waters of the United States
To prevail, BWR must also show that the discharge of a pollutant was to a WOTUS. As stated previously, Drummond concedes that the Locust Fork is a WOTUS.
*1286At issue as to this element is BWR's contention that Drummond also discharges alleged pollutants from the refuse pile to "T1," the "east" ditch, and the "west" ditch and that each of these water bodies are purportedly "navigable waters," or "waters of the United States," under the CWA. See 33 U.S.C. 1362(7). To address whether "T1" or the ditches qualify as a navigable water, the court turns to Rapanos v. United States for guidance. Rapanos involved wetlands that drained into navigable-in-fact waters, and the Supreme Court issued a fractured opinion construing the term "navigable waters."
As for what constitutes a "significant nexus," Justice Kennedy's opinion is instructive:
Wetlands possess the requisite nexus, and thus come within the statutory phrase "navigable waters," if the wetlands, either alone or in combination with similarly situated lands in the region, significantly affect the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of other covered waters more readily understood as "navigable." When, in contrast, wetlands' effects on water quality are speculative or insubstantial, they fall outside the zone fairly encompassed by the statutory term "navigable waters."
The "significant nexus" test is a "flexible ecological inquiry into the relationship between the [waters] at issue and traditional navigable waters." See Precon Dev. Corp. v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers ,
[I]n announcing this test, [Justice Kennedy] clearly intended for some evidence *1287of both a nexus and its significance to be presented. Otherwise, it would be impossible to engage meaningfully in an examination of whether a wetland had "significant" effects or merely "speculative or insubstantial" effects on navigable waters.
Precon ,
Justice Kennedy's concurrence left open the possibility that an intermittent stream can constitute a WOTUS, noting:
[E]ven granting the plurality's preferred definition, ... the dissent is correct to observe that an intermittent flow can constitute a stream, in the sense of a current or course of water or other fluid, flowing on the earth, while it is flowing. It follows that the Corps can reasonably interpret the Act to cover the paths of such impermanent streams.
Rapanos ,
a) "Tributary 1" or "T1"
The parties do not dispute that the so-called "T1" is a naturally-occurring stream to the south and west of the refuse pile that has a temporary physical connection to the Locust Fork. See doc. 53-6 at 28; doc. 61-5 ¶ 5. BWR advances several arguments for why "T1" is a water of the United States. First, based on declarations from BWR's members that they and their families used to fish in the slough, docs. 54-10 ¶ 7; 54-11 ¶ 7; 54-12 ¶ 5, BWR contends that part of "T1"- the slough-was once navigable-in-fact. See SWANCC ,
Next, BWR contends "T1" was and is a tributary of Locust Fork. EPA and Army Corps regulations indeed state that "waters of the United States" include tributaries of traditional navigable waters. See
Whether "T1" constitutes WOTUS under the CWA, however, is dependent on the "significant nexus" test. In support of its position, BWR cites to one of its experts, Brown, who asserts that "T1" is and was physically and chemically connected to Locust Fork. Doc. 53-6 at 28. Based on site observations and calculations, Brown contends that "T1" satisfies the Corps' definition of an "intermittent stream," meaning it "has flowing water during certain times of the year, when groundwater provides water for stream flow. During dry periods, intermittent streams may not have flowing water. Runoff from rainfall is a supplemental source of water for stream flow." Doc. 53-6 at 28; see docs. 53-9 at 5; 53-10 at 6. Brown also contends that "T1" had and has a bed and banks. See doc. 53-6 at 28, *128913.13 To show a chemical connection, Brown contends that "elevated concentrations of chemicals, metals, and total dissolved solids are discharged to Locust Fork" via "T1" and the sediment basins. Doc. 53-6 at 75-76. Brown relies, in part, on a surface water sample (SW3) taken from the course of "T1"-specifically, from surface water discharging into Locust Fork over the lower dam-which reflects elevated concentrations of contaminants indicative of acid mine drainage. See docs. 53-6 at 75; 53-10 at 6.
For its part, Drummond contends that there is no evidence of the "requisite 'chemical, physical, or biological effect' on the Locust Fork." Doc. 59 at 33. Although Drummond's experts Lois George and Thomas Simpson appear to concede that "T1" is an intermittent stream, Drummond's expert Leslie Noble contends that "T1" is only an "ephemeral stream," which she defines as having "less flow than intermittent streams" and having "flowing water only for brief periods in response to rainfall." See docs. 61-24 ¶ 6; 54-14 at 23-24; 61-5 ¶ 6. Noble also contends that the low levels of chemicals in surface water samples SW1 and SW15, collected downstream and upstream of the refuse pile, indicate that "T1" has no effect on the water quality of Locust Fork. Doc. 61-5 ¶ 9; see doc. 53-10 at 6. Moreover, Drummond's expert Lynn Sisk contends that the results from samples SW1 and SW15 are consistent with a water sample analysis of the Locust Fork she conducted in November 2016 and February 2017, further proof that "T1" has no effect on the water quality. See doc. 61-10 at 10.
Based on this record, even assuming BWR has shown a significant physical and chemical connection, it has not pointed to the evidence, if any, that indicates a significant biological connection between "T1" and the Locust Fork. See Flambeau Min. Co. ,
b) "East" and "West" Ditches
BWR contends also that the east and west man-made ditches qualify as WOTUS. "[A]rtificial waterways may [indeed] be jurisdictional waters under the CWA." Tri-Realty Co. v. Ursinus Coll. ,
*1290
3. From a point source
Finally, to constitute a violation under the CWA, the discharge of pollutants into a water of the United States must be from a point source. See Parker ,
BWR contends that the various components of Drummond's drainage system-the ditches, channels, basins, dams, groundwater seeps, and the refuse pile itself-are "point sources." The record indicates that, during precipitation events, surface runoff carrying alleged pollutants from both the "pre-law" and "post-law" portions of the refuse pile drain into man-made ditches and channels, which ultimately feed into either the so-called "east" or "west" ditch. See doc. 53-6 at 48-49. Runoff in the "east" ditch travels into an upper sediment basin and dam, through a "spillway" in the upper dam, to the lower sediment basin and dam, where it ultimately discharges into the Locust Fork over an outlet or "spillway" composed of rip-rap. See docs. 53-1 at 31, 32, 34, 47; 55-1 at 17; 53-6 at 49, 74. Runoff in the "west" ditch also ultimately flows into this outlet and discharges into Locust Fork. See doc. 53-6 at 74. Additionally, various gullies in the refuse pile drain surface runoff into the ditches, sediment basins, or directly to the Locust Fork. See doc. 53-6 at 31, 47, 75.
*1291Whether a ditch or basin can qualify as a point source is a settled question of law. Indeed, this circuit addressed the issue forty years ago, when it considered whether "point source pollution" existed at another coal mining site. Sierra Club v. Abston Constr. Co., Inc. ,
Gravity flow, resulting in a discharge into a navigable body of water, may be part of a point source discharge if the miner at least initially collected or channeled the water and other materials. A point source of pollution may also be present where miners design spoil piles from discarded overburden such that, during periods of precipitation, erosion of spoil pile walls results in discharges into a navigable body of water by means of ditches, gullies and similar conveyances, even if the miners have done nothing beyond the mere collection of rock and other materials. The ultimate question is whether pollutants were discharged from "discernible, confined, and discrete conveyance(s)" either by gravitational or nongravitational means. Nothing in the Act relieves miners from liability simply because the operators did not actually construct those conveyances, so long as they are reasonably likely to be the means by which pollutants are ultimately deposited into a navigable body of water. Conveyances of pollution formed either as a result of natural erosion or by material means, and which constitute a component of a mine drainage system, may fit the statutory definition and thereby subject the operators to liability under the Act.
In light of Abston Construction Co. and the Eleventh Circuit's broad construction of the term "point source," the court finds that the ditches, channels, gullies, basins, and dams that form the drainage system at the site are indeed point sources. See
Likewise, the sediment basins and dams, constructed by ABC to impound sediment, and which discharge surface runoff containing pollutants via outlets, also qualify as conveyances and "containers ... from which pollutants are or may be discharged."
Furthermore, the refuse pile itself is also a "point source" under the Eleventh Circuit's broad construction of the term. See Parker ,
Finally, BWR contends that groundwater seeps transport acid mine drainage to the Locust Fork. See doc. 53-6 at 48, 50-51. Based on sampling data and site observations, one of BWR's experts, Brown, contends that polluted groundwater discharges to the Locust Fork on the east side of the refuse pile, into surface water flowing in the sediment basins, and flows into the Locust Fork as "bed-seepage or at near-shore seeps." Doc. 53-6 at 70. Whether groundwater seeps constitute point sources or are otherwise subject to regulation under the CWA is an issue that the Eleventh Circuit has not addressed. See , e.g. , *1293Day, LLC v. Plantation Pipe Line Co. ,
In summary, the court finds that BWR has established that Drummond has violated CWA § 402 by discharging AMD to the Locust Fork from the point sources in its drainage system. However, disputed issues of fact exist regarding if "T1," the "east" ditch, and the "west" ditch are waters of the United States.
Before finding that BWR is due summary judgment on the discharge of AMD, the court must first address Drummond's motion for summary judgment. Drummond contends that BWR's claims are barred by the statute of limitations, the equitable doctrine of laches, Drummond's compliance with the SMCRA, and the equitable doctrines of grandfathering and reliance. Doc. 49 at 17-33. Moreover, Drummond contends that BWR's RCRA claim is barred by the anti-duplication provisions, and that BWR cannot demonstrate the requisite "imminent and substantial endangerment" necessary to establish its claim. Id. at 33-37. The court addresses each of these contentions in turn.
B. Whether BWR's Claims are Barred by the Statute of Limitations
Even if BWR can establish violations of the CWA (as well as RCRA), BWR must still show that its claims for legal, injunctive, and declaratory relief are not barred by the statute of limitations under
Except as otherwise provided by Act of Congress, an action, suit or proceeding for the enforcement of any civil fine, penalty, or forfeiture, pecuniary or otherwise, shall not be entertained unless commenced within five years from the date when the claim first accrued ....
Under the continuing violations doctrine, the statute of limitations is tolled for a claim that otherwise would be time-barred where the violation giving rise to the claim continues to occur within the limitations period. In determining whether to characterize a violation as continuing, it is important to distinguish between the 'present consequences of a one-time violation,' which do not extend the limitations period, and 'a continuation of a violation into the present,' which does.
Nat'l Parks ,
The parties agree that § 2462 applies to BWR's claims for civil penalties under the *1294CWA, thereby imposing a five-year limitation "from the date when the claim[s] first accrued."
For its part, BWR asserts that its CWA § 402 claims serially accrued on each day that an unpermitted discharge occurred. Doc. 60 at 10. However, it does not cite any case that stands for this proposition, relying instead on cases calculating civil penalties for CWA violations "per day for each violation." See doc. 60 at 10-11 (citing Atl. States Legal Found., Inc. v. Tyson Foods, Inc. ,
Alternatively, BWR contends that Drummond's violations are ongoing. See doc. 60 at 15-20. Relevant here, the Supreme Court has interpreted the citizen suit provision of the CWA, which permits actions "against any person ... alleged to be in violation of ... an effluent standard or limitation," as precluding "wholly past" violations. Gwaltney of Smithfield v. Chesapeake Bay Found. Inc. ,
To establish continuing violations, BWR must show either: (1) violations that continue on and after the date it filed the complaint or (2) a "continuing likelihood of a recurrence in intermittent or sporadic violations." Tyson Foods ,
Likewise, the dormant or inoperable status of the Maxine Mine is not dispositive. In Sierra Club v. El Paso Gold Mines , the Tenth Circuit held that the current owner of an inactive gold mine, who never operated the mine, was liable for discharges of pollutants to navigable waters from a mine shaft.
When [the CWA] is viewed as a whole, it is apparent the liability and permitting sections of the Act focus on the point of discharge, not the underlying conduct that led to the discharge. See , e.g. ,33 U.S.C. § 1311 (e) ;id. at § 1342(a)(1); see alsoid. at § 1251(a)(3). Furthermore, ... the Act consistently refers to the obligations of the 'owners and operators' of a point source, suggesting that successor land owners such as [the defendant] are covered by the Act's provisions if they are responsible for a functional point source. See , e.g. ,id. at § 1311(g)(2) ;id. at § 1318(a).... Although we agree the term "addition" [in33 U.S.C. § 1362 (12) ] implies affirmative conduct, such a requirement is satisfied by the contemporaneous introduction of polluted water from [the defendant]'s property, through a point source owned and maintained by [the defendant], to a navigable stream.
The court turns now to whether BWR has established, or at least raised a question of fact, that Drummond's alleged violations of the CWA are continuous.
1. Whether BWR has shown a continuing violation of CWA § 402
As explained above, BWR has established that Drummond has discharged AMD from point sources into navigable waters, thereby establishing a violation under *1296CWA § 402. Moreover, because BWR has shown, based on its sampling data from September 2016, June 2017, and August 2017, that violations occurred after the date it filed this lawsuit and that violations are reasonably likely to occur during rainfall events in the future, it has established a continuing violation. See Gwaltney ,
2. Whether BWR has shown a continuing violation of CWA § 404
BWR's section 404 claims present a slightly different issue, as BWR contends that Drummond violates CWA § 404 by continuously discharging sediment from the refuse pile into "T1," and that the continuing presence of the dams and sediment in "T1" constitutes an ongoing violation of § 404. See doc. 24 at 23; 60 at 19.16 To establish a violation of CWA § 404, BWR must show that Drummond discharged dredged or fill material into a water of the United States without a permit issued by the Corps. See
The parties do not dispute that ABC constructed dams across "T1" or that sediment from the refuse pile remains in "T1." At issue is whether those facts show a continuing violation. Doc. 69 at 8-9. In addressing the parties' respective contentions, the court notes that the Eleventh Circuit has not yet addressed whether past discharges of a pollutant into navigable waters constitute an ongoing violation while the pollutant remains in the water. Moreover, the numerous courts that have addressed this issue reached differing results, with some finding that the unpermitted discharge of dredged or fill material under § 404 constitutes an ongoing violation for as long as the material remains in protected waters,17 and others finding that the mere continuing presence of previously discharged pollutants in navigable waters does not constitute an ongoing violation.18
*1297Justice Scalia's concurrence in Gwaltney , joined by two other justices, is instructive in resolving this split. Analyzing the citizen suit provision of the CWA, Justice Scalia stated:
When a company has violated an effluent standard or limitation, it remains, for purposes of § 505(a), "in violation" of that standard or limitation so long as it has not put in place remedial measures that clearly eliminate the cause of the violation.
Gwaltney ,
As discussed above, BWR has raised a genuine issue of material fact that "T1" is a water of the United States. See supra p. 1289. Correspondence between ABC and AWIC suggest that ABC constructed the two dams in the course of "T1" at some point after March 1976, although the exact date is not clear, see docs. 50-8 at 25-30; 50-3 at 8, and the dams remain in "T1" today. Given that the Corps' regulation includes the construction of "dams and dikes" in its definition of "discharge of fill material," this is sufficient to show that Drummond's predecessor discharged fill material into "T1." See
In addition, with respect to the discharge of sediment into "T1," BWR members testified that, over time, they witnessed the slough in the course of "T1" fill up with sediment. Docs. 54-10 ¶ 8; 54-12 ¶ 5. Furthermore, documents produced by Drummond from the 1979 and 1980 period describe an unidentified "tributary" and "estuary" filled with sediment from the refuse pile. See doc. 54-13 at 2-3; 54-15 at 2-3; 54-14 at 34. Finally, BWR's expert Anthony Brown also contends that "T1" has been buried and filled with waste from the refuse pile, relying on topographic maps and spatial analysis software to estimate that 60,000 cubic yards of waste has eroded into the sediment basins in which *1298"T1" is located. Doc. 53-6 at 64. Drummond's experts Lois George and Michael Zanotti assert that Brown's "assumptions are purely speculative," and contend that some of the sediment in the basins eroded from unmined, natural areas. See docs. 61-9 ¶¶ 18-19; 61-7 ¶¶ 5-6. However, the evidence in the record is sufficient to raise a genuine issue of material fact as to whether sediment from the refuse pile has replaced a portion of "T1" with dry land or changed the bottom elevation of "T1," see
3. Whether the Statute of Limitations Bars the RCRA Claim (Count IV)
Drummond contends that, under the concurrent remedy rule, § 2462 bars the RCRA endangerment claim for equitable relief because it bars BWR's "concurrent" claims for legal relief under the CWA. See doc. 69 at 10-11. The concurrent remedy rule provides that "where a party's legal remedies are time-barred, that party's concurrent equitable claims generally are barred." Nat'l Parks ,
C. Whether BWR's Claims are Barred by the Doctrine of Laches
Drummond also challenges BWR's claims on the equitable doctrine of laches. Doc. 49 at 26-27. To establish a laches defense, "[t]he defendant must show a delay in asserting a right or claim, that the delay was not excusable and that there was undue prejudice to the party against whom the claim is asserted." Ecology Ctr. of La., Inc. v. Coleman ,
D. Whether BWR's Claims are Barred by Drummond's Reliance or by Grandfathering
Drummond contends that, because it reasonably relied on ASMC's and ADEM's primary regulatory authority, directives, and bond and monitoring releases, holding it liable for alleged violations would constitute "manifest injustice." See doc. 49 at 28-31. Drummond asserts also that retroactive application of the Corps' 2002 "fill material" definition is inequitable, and that *1299the Corps' 1991 "grandfathering" provision should apply to preclude liability under CWA § 404. Id. at 32-33.
To support its contentions, Drummond relies on two Eleventh Circuit cases that held that plaintiffs were not required to obtain CWA § 404 permits for equitable reasons: Buccaneer Point Estates, Inc. v. United States ,
Similarly, in Context-Marks Corp ., the Corps issued a cease and desist order to plaintiffs engaged in a fill operation below the MHTL, even though the Corps had not previously required such a permit to fill below the MHTL in that area. 729 F.2d at 1295. The court found that, had the Corps not intervened, the plaintiffs could have developed the land above the MHTL before implementation of the Corps' new regulations requiring permits above the MHTL, and "thus would have been 'grandfathered' in." Id. at 1296. Again, the court held that retroactive application of the Corps' new regulations "would not be appropriate." Id.
Here, however, Drummond has not identified any regulations that would be retroactively applied if the court were to find for BWR on these claims. For that reason, this case-at least with respect to the § 402 and RCRA claims-is distinguishable from Buccaneer and Context-Marks . See United States v. Cumberland Farms of Connecticut, Inc. ,
Water sample taken at rock filter dam < 3.0.... Have had continuing meetings with legal division and ABC on this problem. Has also been referred to ADEM-this is not an NPDES discharge point.
*1300Doc. 50-9 at 18. Third, Drummond references handwritten comments on an internal memo on July 26, 1983 from an ABC representative that state:
Bill Gibson [an ADEM inspector] insinuated that NPDES permits may be required for the limestone filter and the diversion ditch (draining recent reclaimed area) at the No. 1 dam. As I understand it, this was not part of the agreement as signed by Joe Myers [of ADEM].
Doc. 50-8 at 42. Finally, Drummond points to handwritten notes from a meeting between ABC and ADEM representatives on September 2, 1983 that indicate that the parties discussed the "filter dam" at the refuse pile and an earlier meeting with AWIC, where the notes state, "filter structure to get away from point source." Doc. 50-8 at 54-57.
To begin, these instances are distinguishable from the Corps' communications in Buccaneer and Context-Marks . Moreover, the record is not as clear cut as Drummond contends on this point. For example, it is not clear that ADEM, the state agency with primary authority to issue NPDES discharge permits, informed ABC that it did not need to obtain an NPDES permit for discharges from the refuse pile into Locust Fork. The July 12, 1983 inspection report, which suggests that the dam "is not an NPDES discharge point," was written by an ASMC inspector with no regulatory authority under the CWA. It is also not clear what "agreement" is referred to in ABC's July 26, 1983 internal memo, but the fact that an ADEM inspector implied that NPDES permits might be required for the lower dam and "diversion ditch" in the refuse pile cuts against Drummond's reliance argument. Indeed, ADEM ultimately required ABC to obtain an NPDES permit for an outfall in the refuse pile that discharged into an "unnamed tributary of Locust Fork," i.e. the west ditch in the refuse pile, which also undermines the reliance argument. See doc. 55-24 at 34-35; 55-1 at 42-43. Accordingly, based on the record, Drummond has not established that it is entitled to summary judgment on the CWA § 402 and RCRA claims on a reasonable reliance theory.
Drummond has an arguably better argument with respect to the alleged discharges of "fill material" into "T1" and Locust Fork. Drummond points here to specific Corps regulations which, it contends, would be retroactively applied if this court were to grant relief on BWR's section 404 claims. Under CWA § 404, the Corps' pre-2002 definition of "fill material" excluded unpermitted discharges that were for the "primary purpose" of waste disposal. 42 Fed.Reg. 37,122, 37,130 (July 19, 1977). Corps regulations indicate that "mine overburden" and "material such as soil, rock, and earth" constituted "waste" under this prior regulation. See 67 Fed.Reg. 31129, 31133 (May 9, 2002). Still, these facts do not establish, at this juncture of the case, a manifest injustice for multiple reasons. Unlike in Buccaneer and Context-Marks , Drummond has not cited to documents showing any communications with the Corps concerning the drainage system, nor have they provided evidence that any ABC or Drummond representative relied on the pre-2002 regulation. Rather, AWIC, the predecessor to ADEM, approved ABC's 1976 plans to construct ditches and a dam to "correct the siltation problem" at the refuse pile, referring to the siltation of Locust Fork from the refuse pile. Docs. 50-8 at 25-30; 50-3 at 8. ABC appears to have conceived its plans in response to a notice from AWIC that ABC was in violation of "AWIC permit conditions and Alabama's pollution control law," but there is no mention of the CWA in AWIC's notice. Doc. 50-8 at 31. Moreover, it was AWIC, *1301rather than the Corps, that approved ABC's 1981 "pollution abatement" plan to construct and extend drainage ditches and channels. Doc. 50-2 at 19-20. Finally, as BWR notes, its CWA § 404 claim is for ongoing discharges of sediment from the refuse pile, as well as the continuing presence of sediment and dams in "T1." See doc. 24 ¶ 68-69; Scheerer v. U.S. Atty. Gen. ,
Finally, Drummond contends that the Corps' 1991 regulations,
The following activities were permitted by [nationwide permits] issued on July 19, 1977, and, unless the activities are modified, they do not require further permitting: ... (b) Structures or work completed before December 18, 1968, or in waterbodies over which the DE had not asserted jurisdiction at the time the activity occurred, provided in both instances, there is no interference with navigation. Activities completed shoreward of applicable Federal Harbor lines before May 27, 1970 do not require specific authorization. (section 10).
E. Whether SMCRA Compliance Precludes BWR's CWA Claims
Drummond contends that its compliance with ASMC's regulatory requirements under the SMCRA renders it immune from liability under the CWA. Doc. 49 at 28-31.19 Specifically, Drummond asserts that ASMC's adjudication that ABC substantially completed reclamation in March 1985 and ABC's final bond release by ASMC in June 1992 bar liability under the CWA. This contention is contrary to the plain language of the SMCRA, which states that "nothing [under the SMCRA] shall be construed as superseding, amending, modifying, or repealing" the CWA. See
F. Whether SMCRA Compliance Precludes BWR's RCRA Claim
Drummond contends that its compliance with SMCRA-specifically, its reclamation of a portion of the refuse pile and bond release-bars any liability under the RCRA.20 Drummond relies on RCRA's anti-duplication and integration provisions, which address integration with the SMCRA, stating:
The Secretary of the Interior shall have exclusive responsibility for carrying out any requirement of subchapter III of this chapter with respect to coal mining wastes or overburden for which a surface coal mining and reclamation permit is issued or approved under [SMCRA]. The Secretary shall, with the concurrence of the Administrator, promulgate such regulations as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of this subsection and shall integrate such regulations with regulations promulgated under [SMCRA].
Thus, to establish that RCRA's anti-duplication provision applies, Drummond must show that the mining refuse pile or acid mine discharges constitute "hazardous waste" that is regulated under RCRA subtitle C, as opposed to "solid waste" that is regulated under RCRA subtitle D. See
Drummond further contends that the RCRA claim fails because BWR "seeks *1303essentially to direct a 'reclamation' that has previously been completed in accordance with the law." Doc. 49 at 34. In support of this contention, Drummond cites a decision from the Eastern District of New York, in which the court held that the RCRA endangerment claim was "inappropriate" because the state environmental agency, working together with the plaintiffs, was supervising an ongoing remediation of the contaminated sites. See Rococo Assocs., Inc. v. Award Packaging Corp. ,
Finally, Drummond contends that the RCRA claim is an improper collateral attack on its previous ASMC and ADEM permits. Doc. 49 at 34 (citing Greenpeace, Inc. v. Waste Technologies Ind. ,
G. Imminent and Substantial Endangerment-Count IV
In Count IV, BWR contends that mining waste at the refuse pile constitutes an "imminent and substantial endangerment" to the environment in violation of RCRA.
*1304see
Drummond maintains that the evidence is insufficient to make this showing, asserting that the refuse pile does not pose an "imminent" threat because, first, BWR waited ten years to commence this lawsuit after Brooke obtained the initial samples. The timing of BWR's suit is irrelevant to whether there is "imminent" endangerment:
Imminence ... applies to the nature of the threat rather than identification of the time when the endangerment arose. The section, therefore, may be used for events which took place at some time in the past but which continue to present a threat to the public health or the environment.
Cox ,
Drummond contends next that BWR cannot establish a "substantial endangerment" because BWR has not produced a risk assessment to evaluate the degree of risk to humans and the environment or the seriousness of the risk. Drummond has not pointed to any authority to support its proposition. Rather, in two of the cases Drummond cites, the court found that no "imminent and substantial endangerment" existed, in part because the plaintiffs failed to conduct a risk assessment despite the plaintiff's own expert opining that such an assessment was necessary to evaluate the potential threat to the environment. See Simsbury-Avon Pres. Club, Inc. v. Metacon Gun Club, Inc. ,
Drummond counters that Mitchelmore's WET testing results are insufficient to establish that surface water at the refuse pile is acutely and chronically toxic to aquatic life. Doc. 61-10 ¶ 13. Specifically, Drummond's experts Sisk and Simpson contend that there is no threat to aquatic life because "aquatic communities" do not exist in the water bodies BWR's experts sampled. See docs. 61-24 ¶ 9; 61-10 ¶ 13. Moreover, Sisk points out that BWR has provided no evidence that this toxicity has eliminated aquatic life in the streams of the refuse pile. Doc. 61-10 ¶ 13.
Although the "mere presence" of contaminants in the environment "is alone not enough to constitute an imminent and substantial endangerment," Smith v. Potter ,
To succeed on its RCRA endangerment claim, BWR "need only demonstrate that the waste disposed of 'may present' an imminent and substantial threat." Parker ,
*1306V. CONCLUSION AND ORDER
In light of the foregoing analysis, BWR's motion for partial summary judgment, doc. 51, is GRANTED solely as to liability on BWR's claim that Drummond violated CWA § 402 by discharging AMD from the refuse pile, ditches, channels, gullies, basins, and dams at the site into Locust Fork. In all other respects, BWR's motion is DENIED . Drummond's motion for summary judgment, doc. 48, is also DENIED .
Although this matter is ready to proceed to trial, in light of the appeal pending before the Supreme Court which concerns the issue of groundwater discharges, the court finds that a stay is warranted in this case. See Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Fla. v. S. Fla. Water Mgmt. Dist. ,
DONE the 7th day of May, 2019.
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