Brent Towing v. Scott Petroleum Co.

735 So. 2d 355, 1999 Miss. LEXIS 137, 1999 WL 191855
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1999
Docket97-CA-01294-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 735 So. 2d 355 (Brent Towing v. Scott Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brent Towing v. Scott Petroleum Co., 735 So. 2d 355, 1999 Miss. LEXIS 137, 1999 WL 191855 (Mich. 1999).

Opinion

735 So.2d 355 (1999)

BRENT TOWING COMPANY, INC.
v.
SCOTT PETROLEUM CORPORATION.

No. 97-CA-01294-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

April 8, 1999.

*356 E. Randolph Noble, Jr., Greenville, Attorney for Appellant.

Charles Victor McTeer, Kimberly G. Jones, Greenville, Attorneys for Appellee.

BEFORE PRATHER, C.J., BANKS AND McRAE, JJ.

McRAE, Justice, for the Court:

¶ 1. Before us is a case that revolves around a contract clause. Appellee Scott Petroleum Corporation ("Scott") filed a complaint for declaratory judgment pursuant to paragraph six ("¶ 6"), an environmental clean-up clause, of a Contract of Sale between Scott and Appellant Brent Towing Company, Inc. ("Brent"). Summary judgment was granted Scott. Brent appealed. We affirm pursuant to ¶ 6 of the contract and in light of the judgment of the court below.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

¶ 2. On November 16, 1994, Scott filed a complaint for declaratory judgment against Brent pursuant to ¶ 6 of a contract of sale between Scott and Brent. Scott requested that the contract be declared valid and the possibility of Brent being required to indemnify Scott confirmed. The parties filed motions for summary judgment, which were denied February 27, 1996. In 1997, the parties once again filed motions for summary judgment. On September 17, 1997, Washington County Circuit Court Judge Frank Vollor granted summary judgment to Scott while declaring that the parties' original contract of sale remained valid and enforceable. In October, 1997, Brent filed a notice of appeal.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS

¶ 3. In 1979, Brent Terminals, a sister corporation to Brent Towing ("Brent"), purchased property from Chevron to store nitrate fertilizers being moved down the river. Chevron previously used the property for tank storage of petroleum products, including diesel fuel and gasoline, and maintained a terminal there. However, at the time of purchase, no inquiry was made *357 of Chevron as to whether the property was contaminant free. The property was later transferred to Brent Towing just before Brent Towing's 1988 sale of the property to Scott Petroleum.

¶ 4. Scott's reason for purchase was to salvage the large above-ground tanks and other terminal equipment, then resell the land. Brent states that no investigations regarding contaminants were made from Chevron's sale to Scott's purchase of the property. Further, Brent did not use the tanks from approximately the years 1986 to 1988. Brent states that at the time of sale to Scott, the tanks were free of contaminants; although, Brent is unsure of whether the property was free of contaminants at that time.

¶ 5. The contract of sale between Brent and Scott was effected November 17, 1988. The property at issue, known in the contract as "Seller's Bulk Terminal Facility," covers approximately 8.842 acres, and is located at 942 North Broadway, in Section 2 and 3, Township 18 North, Range 8 West, in Greenville, Mississippi. Among documents related to the contract were a Promissory Note, a Security Agreement, a Land Deed of Trust, and a UCC Financing Statement. Paragraph 6 of the contract deals with the issue of site cleanup indemnity of Scott by Brent.[1]

¶ 6. Pursuant to the contract, Scott made three full payments of principal and interest. The final payment of $150,000.00 plus interest was due December 1, 1990. Scott sought and received a payment deadline extension from December 1 to December 31. On January 8, 1991, Scott paid $51,273.97 of the requisite amount. Scott states that it withheld the remaining $100,000.00 because Brent would not offer proof of its capability to satisfy its ¶ 6 indemnification responsibilities. Scott held the money pending a site assessment by Hess Environmental Services. Brent, on the other hand, states that it never refused to provide information as to its capability to indemnify; Brent maintains that it simply wished to be paid the money owed it before providing the indemnification-related information. Further, Scott apparently sold some of its operation to another party —Farmkist—in 1991.

¶ 7. As to the property itself, from the time of Scott's purchase to this litigation, Brent's President, Howard Hays Brent, says he once drove by and saw spilled product—believed by him to be fertilizer— on the property after Scott purchased it. He further states that on at least ten different occasions after December 1990 he saw trucks and product-containing fiberglass storage tanks that were added by Scott. Yet, Scott has stated that it "at no time conducted any operations on the property which have in any way contributed to any contamination.... Of Chevron, Brent and Scott, only Scott conducted no activities which might have contaminated the property."

¶ 8. In 1991, Hess Environmental Services was retained by Scott to conduct an initial environmental assessment. Then, as early as October 1991, Chevron, Scott, and Brown began negotiations as to site *358 assessments and cleanup plans requested by the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality ("DEQ"). As of May 1993, Chevron had accepted the crux of the testing costs. A follow-up assessment paid for by Chevron and conducted by Zimmerman Environmental Consultants, Inc., confirmed hydrocarbon contamination as it discovered arsenic, nitrite, and nitrate contamination. At some point, it was also determined that there is an underground tank on the property.

¶ 9. Due to Scott's failure to pay and its alleged breach of ¶ 5 of the contract by an unpermitted early 1991 tank removal, Brent initiated foreclosure proceedings via a May 3, 1993, certified mailing to Scott and by publishing notice on May 25, 1993, of an intended public sale of the property's tanks to be held on June 3, 1993. On May 28, 1993, Scott filed a Complaint for Temporary Restraining Order, Preliminary Injunction, Declaratory Judgment and Other Relief. As part of the foreclosure proceedings, Scott deposited $100,000.00 principal and $24,191.75 interest as bond with the chancery court. A June 2, 1993, Chancery Court Agreed Order dismissed Scott's Complaint and Brent's Counterclaim without prejudice; but, in that Order, Scott agreed to pay Brent the $124,191.75 previously deposited with the court, as well as $12,528.77 in attorneys' fees for a total of $136,720.52. Brent received the mandated sums.

¶ 10. In May 1994, DEQ conducted a site inspection. At the time of the November 1994 Complaint for Declaratory Judgment, no cleanup Order had been entered by either DEQ or the United States Environmental Protection Agency ("U.S.EPA"). In May 1996, Miss. DEQ sent a letter to Scott, Brett, and Chevron requesting each party, as a potentially responsible party ("PRP"), to produce a work plan within 45 days of the date of the letter. The work plan was to address systematically located soil samples and the installation and sampling of a monitoring well.

¶ 11. According to Scott's Complaint for Declaratory Judgment of November 16, 1994, Brent stated that it would not honor its indemnity duty under ¶ 6 of the contract even if a cleanup order was entered by either DEQ or U.S. EPA. Scott construed Brent's statement as an anticipatory repudiation. Brent insisted that any potential cleanup costs were not its responsibility as it argued that ¶ 6 of the contract of sale was null from Scott's failure to pay, i.e., Scott's default, without foreclosure action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
735 So. 2d 355, 1999 Miss. LEXIS 137, 1999 WL 191855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brent-towing-v-scott-petroleum-co-miss-1999.