Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority v. Refuse Gardens, Inc.

642 A.2d 762, 43 Conn. Super. Ct. 83, 43 Conn. Supp. 83, 1993 Conn. Super. LEXIS 3493, 1993 WL 661409
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedApril 15, 1993
DocketFile 364240
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 642 A.2d 762 (Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority v. Refuse Gardens, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority v. Refuse Gardens, Inc., 642 A.2d 762, 43 Conn. Super. Ct. 83, 43 Conn. Supp. 83, 1993 Conn. Super. LEXIS 3493, 1993 WL 661409 (Colo. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

Aronson, J.

This action was commenced with a return day of July 18,1989. The plaintiff, the Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority, filed a motion seeking a prejudgment remedy in the amount of $1,009,286.38. The plaintiff claims that this sum represents its cost to date in responding to contamination emanating from a landfill formerly owned by the defendants and purchased by the plaintiff in 1986. The defendants deny responsibility for the cost. The landfill, located in Ellington, was acquired by the plaintiff from the named defendant, Refuse Gardens, Inc. (Refuse), on July 7,1986. On July 18,1986, Refuse filed a dissolution certificate with the state, becoming a dissolved corporation.

*84 The plaintiff seeks to recover costs to remedy the effects of leachate and methane gas generated by conditions contained in the landfill during the period in which Refuse was the owner.

At this time, the plaintiff is seeking a prejudgment remedy pursuant only to count four of its five count complaint. In count four, the plaintiff claims that the defendants Anthony Botticello, Dennis Botticello, Michael Botticello, Richard Botticello and Botticello, Inc., were operators of the landfill and participated in its management.

The plaintiff claims that under General Statutes § 22a-452 (a) 1 it is entitled to reimbursement for amounts it has expended and will expend to contain, remove or mitigate the effects of leachate and methane gas.

Leachate is created by rainwater and surface water entering buried refuse in a landfill from the top and seeping through the sides and bottom of the landfill. The process of rainwater and surface water passing through the landfill creates a contaminant. This contaminant, in the form of water, comes out the sides and bottom of the landfill polluting the groundwater in the area.

*85 Methane gas is created from the household solid waste material delivered to the landfill that decomposes. Methane gas is highly flammable.

Landfill leachate and landfill gas are commonly associated with municipal solid waste landfills.

The history of the landfill in issue here is as follows. In 1966, two individuals, Parker and Sweet, opened the landfill and began its operation. In October, 1974, Anthony Botticello became the owner of the landfill. Botticello owned and operated the landfill until August, 1983, when ownership was transferred to Refuse. Refuse sold the landfill to the plaintiff in July, 1986.

During the entire period of its operation, the landfill took in solid waste for disposal from various local municipalities. The landfill operation was regulated by state and local authorities and various permits relating to the operation were issued by the state department of environmental protection (department) and the Ellington planning and zoning commission (commission).

Seven months after the plaintiff acquired the landfill, the commission, for the first time, required the owner of the landfill to undertake a comprehensive hydrogeologic investigation. The study was accomplished by the engineering firm of Fuss and O’Neil in April, 1988. This study revealed groundwater contamination and landfill gas contamination migrating beyond the boundary of the landfill.

The plaintiff offered the testimony of an expert who concluded that the landfill gas and groundwater contamination must have come from waste disposed of before the plaintiff purchased the landfill.

On the basis of the results of the investigation, in August and September, 1989, the department issued two orders to the plaintiff concerning groundwater, *86 surface water and landfill gas contamination, all of which were emanating from the landfill. In addition, the commission imposed additional requirements concerning both groundwater and landfill gas contamination.

The plaintiff hired the firm of Energy Tactics to implement the department’s 1989 orders and to comply with the commission’s 1989 requirements concerning landfill gases. Energy Tactics made a number of submissions to the department, and, after receiving the department’s approval, oversaw the installation and construction of a landfill gas recovery system.

The plaintiff claims that it has incurred, and will continue to incur, substantial expenditures in responding to this contamination. As a result of its landfill gas investigation, the plaintiff must install a landfill gas recovery system at a cost of $877,963.18. The plaintiff claims that it has spent approximately $133,661.19 studying groundwater and surface water contamination.

The defendants placed at issue the plaintiff’s standing to use § 22a-452 as a basis for this claim under count four of its complaint.

As the defendants point out in their brief, “this legislation was originally enacted in 1969 in response to a series of oil spills which had occurred in Connecticut harbors. Regulators and municipalities found it difficult to recover cleanup costs from the responsible parties and legislation was drafted to address this concern .... Since 1969, the statute has been amended to eliminate language which limited the applicability of the statute to pollution occurring in ‘waters of this state or adjoining shorelines or beaches’ and the scope of the statute has also been expanded so that it is no longer limited to oil and petroleum spills only.”

*87 Section 22a-452 (a) provides for reimbursement for contaminant removal costs only where the pollution or contamination “resulted from the negligence or other actions of such person, firm or corporation.”

The plaintiffs problems result from its ownership of a landfill, not from the negligent actions of the defendants. It was Refuse that sold the landfill to the plaintiff in 1986, not the individual defendants. The plaintiffs position is no different from that of any other purchaser complaining about the condition of property it has purchased. That condition could have been addressed by a detailed prepurchase inspection of the condition of the landfill, and by reliance on the negative covenant required by General Statutes § 22a-134a. 2

*88 Section 22a-452 provides that any party that mitigates the effects of an improper discharge of hazardous waste may recover such reasonable costs necessary to correct the effects of such discharge.

The plaintiff claims that there are three essential elements to § 22a-452: (1) that a party has contained, removed or otherwise mitigated the effects of covered substances the effects of which are causing contamination; (2) the contamination was caused by the defendants; and (3) the costs to mitigate are reasonable.

The language of § 22a-452 (a) clearly places the responsibility for noncontainment of hazardous waste on a party where the noncontainment results “from the negligence or other actions of such person, firm or corporation.” Section 22a-452 appears to address a situation where one owner’s property is contaminated by hazardous waste from another owner’s property.

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Bluebook (online)
642 A.2d 762, 43 Conn. Super. Ct. 83, 43 Conn. Supp. 83, 1993 Conn. Super. LEXIS 3493, 1993 WL 661409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-resources-recovery-authority-v-refuse-gardens-inc-connsuperct-1993.