City of Neodesha v. BP Corp. North America

287 P.3d 214, 295 Kan. 298
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedAugust 31, 2012
DocketNo. 101,183
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 287 P.3d 214 (City of Neodesha v. BP Corp. North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Neodesha v. BP Corp. North America, 287 P.3d 214, 295 Kan. 298 (kan 2012).

Opinion

[300]*300The opinion of the court was delivered by

Biles, J.:

All persons and entities owning real property in and around the City of Neodesha, Kansas, brought a class action against the owners of a former oil refinery, alleging groundwater and subsurface soil contamination caused by the now dismantled facility. A jury found in the defendants’ favor after a 17-week trial. But in posttrial proceedings, the district court decided it had made a mistake in submitting the strict liability claim to the jury, and it granted the plaintiff class judgment as a matter of law on its strict liability claim, setting the stage for a new trial over damages. BP filed this interlocutory appeal for relief from the order granting judgment on the strict liability claim and tire conditional order for new trial.

The parties dispute whether the abnormally dangerous activities test generally used in tort law to impose strict liability is applicable when the claim relates to water contamination. The district court concluded it does not because “Kansas law provides that strict liability applies to conduct involving contamination of water resources, because of the importance of clean, safe water.” And even if the abnormally dangerous activities test applied, the court held BP’s “remediation” activities were abnormally dangerous as a matter of law.

We hold that the district court should not have granted the class judgment as a matter of law. The abnormally dangerous activities tests under the Restatement of Laws were the appropriate standards to apply to the plaintiff class’ claims, and tíre jury decided tire question. We reverse the district court’s entry of judgment for the class on its strict liability claim, and we remand this matter to the district court with directions that the jury’s verdict be reinstated and final judgment entered for the defendants.

Factual and Procedural Background

Between 1897 and 1970, Standard Oil Company and its corporate successors, BP Corporation North America, Inc.; BP America, Inc.; BP Products North America, Inc.; Atlantic Richfield Co.; and BP America Production Co. (collectively BP), owned and operated an oil refinery near Neodesha. During that time, the refinery generated wastes and by-products, including chemicals and metals [301]*301such as benzene, toluene, ethyl benzene, xylenes, polyaromatic hydrocarbons, arsenic, chromium, lead, and mercury. BP “has acknowledged its responsibility to address residual petroleum products attributable to the refinery’s operations” but it has denied habihty in this-litigation.

While the refinery was operational, the locations of its activities included: (1) the north site sludge pond, which was used for waste disposal; (2) die south site settling basins; (3) the “Tank Site” containing storage tanks and a pumping station; (4) an “Oil Separator Pond Site” that received storm water and captured oil from refinery drains; and (5) an industrial site that housed the refinery’s buildings. BP also admits petroleum products leaked or spilled onto the ground while the refinery operated, but it claims most refinery-related petroleum products that seeped into the ground and later spread beyond the former refinery property are attributable to an accident in the 1960’s when kghtning struck a storage tank and caused an explosion and fire. The class disputes this. Both the north and south sites are now considered “closed,” meaning no more remediation activities are planned and site monitoring will cease or has already ceased.

After the refinery finished operations in 1970, BP donated most of the property to the City through a quitclaim deed, which stated the conveyance was “as is” and acknowledged the refinery and surrounding property were used for gasoline production and storage. Most of the grounds are still owned-by the City, with portions reused for industrial development, while other areas are maintained as waste disposal sites or are vacant and unused. The City turned part of the site into an industrial park where class members Neodesha Plastics and Fiberglass Engineering leased facilities.

In 1980, BP met with the Neodesha mayor regarding city concerns after a welding spark ignited petroleum waste products that had seeped into a subsurface structure-that was part of the City’s water treatment facility, causing a fire. The City also expressed apprehension about an oily waste disposal pond and numerous sites of buried waste. BP subsequently began study and remediation activities. In 1981, BP-installed 17 monitoring wells. In 1983, BP installed another 13 monitoring wells and “capped” the north site [302]*302sludge pond with 2 feet of clay. In 1984, BP began a semi-annual well sampling program. And in 1985, BP consolidated, capped, and installed a gas venting system in the south site settling basins.

In 1990, BP entered into a consent agreement with the Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE), the state agency with jurisdiction over hazardous substance cleanups, in which BP agreed to undertake specific investigative, monitoring, and corrective actions. The consent agreement identifies four classes of priority pollutants and notes that one of those pollutants, benzene, was detected in groundwater samples. In 1991, BP began a remedial investigation to determine the presence and extent of groundwater contamination, which included installation of 31 additional monitoring wells. In 2000, BP installed a phase I air sparg-ing trench along the eastern and southern boundaries of the former tank site. It also removed 325 cubic yards of asphalt-like material from areas near the city ballpark. In 2002, BP implemented a phase II air sparging system that involved extraction wells to remove oil or light nonaqueous phase liquids (LNAPL) (refers to petroleum hydro carbon in its oil phase) from the groundwater. In 2003, 215 cubic yards of asphalt-like material were removed from the industrial site. According to a BP study, these activities removed 30,177 gallons of hydrocarbons, and benzene concentrations at some monitoring wells declined. BP cites this as evidence that its remediation activities successfully reduced contamination. The class disputed the effectiveness of those remediation efforts.

As a part of its case against BP, the class hired a hydrogeologist, Daniel B. Stephens, to review BP monitoring site data, conduct field investigations, and make recommendations regarding further clean-up and remediation activities for the contamination. In his report, Stephens concluded: (1) BP misrepresented and omitted information regarding historical operations and contamination sources; (2) BP presented biased environmental data that minimized tire contamination and area that overlies the groundwater contamination; (3) groundwater arsenic concentrations exceeded drinking water standards and arsenic was more likely than not reaching the Fall and perhaps Verdigris Rivers; (4) groundwater contamination was migrating away from the refinery in multiple [303]*303directions, continually expanding the polluted areas; (5) distal dissolved contaminants that migrated in groundwater into the residential neighborhoods had not been contained; and (6) BP failed to consider commonly accepted and effective remedial alternatives in developing its corrective action study.

Stephens testified at trial how spilled oil reaches groundwater by moving through air-filled pore spaces in the soil, pushing the air out, and moving downward until it reaches groundwater.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 P.3d 214, 295 Kan. 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-neodesha-v-bp-corp-north-america-kan-2012.