City of Auburn v. Tri-State Rubbish, Inc.

630 A.2d 227, 24 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 21148, 1993 Me. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 5, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 630 A.2d 227 (City of Auburn v. Tri-State Rubbish, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Auburn v. Tri-State Rubbish, Inc., 630 A.2d 227, 24 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 21148, 1993 Me. LEXIS 160 (Me. 1993).

Opinion

CLIFFORD, Justice.

Defendant Tri-State Rubbish, Inc. appeals from a summary judgment entered in the Superior Court (Androscoggin County,

*229 Delahanty, C.J.) in favor of plaintiff City of Auburn and plaintiff-intervenor Mid-Maine Waste Action Corporation (MMWAC). The judgment enjoins Tri-State from violating a city ordinance requiring that all solid waste be taken to a location designated by the City, and provides for a civil penalty and damages in an amount to be established at a later hearing. Tri-State contends that the City has misconstrued the term “solid waste” in the ordinance and that the ordinance does not comply with state enabling legislation. It further asserts that the City’s interpretation of the ordinance results in a violation of the commerce clause of the federal constitution as well as federal anti-trust laws, and effects a taking of Tri-State’s property. Tri-State also contends that the ordinance as applied is an improper exercise of police power in violation of the constitutional due process and equal protection clauses. Although we are unpersuaded by most of Tri-State’s contentions, we conclude that the court erroneously entered a summary judgment on the alleged violation of the commerce clause. Accordingly, we vacate the judgment and remand for further proceedings.

In 1986, the City entered into an agreement with MMWAC, 1 by which the City was obligated to send all solid waste generated in the municipality to MMWAC once MMWAC commenced operations. The agreement further required the City to adopt a flow control ordinance designating MMWAC as the disposal site for all solid waste generated in the municipality and provided that the City would not “repeal or amend such ordinance without the prior written consent of MMWAC.” Under the agreement, which is to remain in effect for twenty-four years, the City is liable in damages for waste that is not delivered to the site. 2 The agreement further provides that neither party may terminate it for any reason whatsoever. The City thereafter adopted a flow control ordinance prohibiting the disposal of any solid waste at any location other than MMWAC.

Tri-State is a trash hauling corporation with a number of commercial accounts in Auburn. The president and principal shareholder is Guy Hart. Hart also owns and operates a recycling plant in West Paris (Recyclables Unlimited, Inc.). Hart estimates that his company picks up 3000 tons of material per year in Auburn and transports it to West Paris. 3 There the material is commingled with waste from other communities, and all of it is sorted for the purpose of separating recyclable materials that are ultimately sold. 4 The residual waste is generally transported to Maine Energy Recovery Company in Biddeford because its tipping fees are substantially lower ($35/ton as opposed to $75/ton at MMWAC), and because MMWAC will not accept refuse that has been commingled with refuse from nonmember communities.

The City filed a land use citation and complaint against Tri-State in the District Court (Lewiston). After the case was removed to the Superior Court pursuant to M.R.Civ.P. 76C, 5 the City filed an amended complaint seeking injunctive relief, a $100 *230 per day penalty for violation of the ordinance, and indemnification of the City for its liability to MMWAC. Tri-State’s answer raised a number of affirmative defenses, including all of those that are at issue in this appeal.

In granting the City’s and MMWAC’s motion for a summary judgment, the court concluded that Auburn had enacted a valid ordinance pursuant to a specific grant of authority from the legislature. It found the ordinance’s definition of solid waste to be clear and unambiguous and agreed with the City’s interpretation that a business that has placed material in a trash container and pays for it to be hauled away has discarded it. The consequence of this conclusion is that all of the material Tri-State picks up in Auburn is solid waste that must be taken to MMWAC and not to the West Paris recycling facility. The court enjoined Tri-State from taking the material to any location other than MMWAC. It also ordered a further hearing on damages and a civil penalty. The court granted a stay of the injunction pending Tri-State’s appeal.

I.

The City’s ordinance prohibits “the Disposal of any Solid Waste generated within the Municipality by any person or any place other than at [MMWAC].” City of Auburn, Solid Waste Flow Control Ordinance § 2.1. At the center of the present dispute is the construction of the term “solid waste,” defined by the ordinance as:

useless, unwanted or discarded solid material with insufficient liquid content to be free flowing, including by way of example, and not by limitation, rubbish, garbage, commercial and industrial waste, scrap materials, junk, refuse, demolition and construction debris and landscape refuse, but shall not include sludge from air or water pollution control facilities, septage tank sludge or agricultural or Unacceptable Waste.

Section 1.3.9 (emphasis added). Tri-State contends that material it collects from its commercial customers in Auburn is not useless, unwanted or discarded, and therefore is not solid waste, until Tri-State has separated recyclable items at its West Paris facility. To decide otherwise, according to Tri-State, is to grant the City and MMWAC a recycling monopoly. The City maintains, and the Superior Court determined, that once a business has placed material in a dumpster and has hired someone to remove that material, it is useless, unwanted or discarded, and thus has become solid waste subject to the ordinance. We agree with the Superior Court’s construction of the ordinance.

Although the ordinance does not expressly state who makes the determination that solid material is “useless, unwanted or discarded,” the only reasonable inference is that it is the generator of the material, i.e., the person or business that no longer wants or has any use for the material. Therefore, in deciding whether material constitutes solid waste that must be transported to MMWAC, the inquiry is whether the business entity, and not Tri-State, has any further use or plans for the solid material. When, as here, a company places material in a dumpster and hires someone to take it away, that action indicates the company has no further use for the material, and it becomes solid waste subject to the provisions of the ordinance. 6

II.

Tri-State next contends that the City’s flow control ordinance is invalid be *231 cause it does not comply with state enabling legislation. It argues that the ordinance fails to recognize that the legislature has given a higher priority to recycling than to incineration. We are unpersuaded by this argument.

The legislature has declared it is the policy of this state “to establish a coordinated statewide waste reduction, recycling and management program.” 38 M.R.S.A. § 1302 (Supp.1992).

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Bluebook (online)
630 A.2d 227, 24 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 21148, 1993 Me. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-auburn-v-tri-state-rubbish-inc-me-1993.