Dailey v. Bridgeton Landfill, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedMarch 23, 2020
Docket4:17-cv-00024
StatusUnknown

This text of Dailey v. Bridgeton Landfill, LLC (Dailey v. Bridgeton Landfill, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dailey v. Bridgeton Landfill, LLC, (E.D. Mo. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI EASTERN DIVISION

MICHAEL DAILEY, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) Case No. 4:17 CV 24 CDP ) BRIDGETON LANDFILL, LLC, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER OF REMAND

After filing their second amended complaint in this removed case, plaintiffs Michael and Robbin Dailey move to remand this action to state court for lack of federal subject-matter jurisdiction. Because this Court neither currently has nor ever had subject-matter jurisdiction over this action, I will remand the case to state court under 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c). Background Husband and wife plaintiffs, Michael and Robbin Dailey, seek damages and injunctive relief for radioactive contamination of their home allegedly caused by neighboring West Lake Landfill, located in North St. Louis County, Missouri. The Daileys assert that their property has been damaged by soil, dust, and air contamination from improper generation, handling, storage, and disposal of radioactive materials by several corporate defendants.1 The remaining defendants in this action are the owners and operators of the Landfill – namely Bridgeton

Landfill, LLC; Republic Services, Inc.; Allied Services, LLC; and Rock Road Industries, Inc. (collectively, “the Landfill Defendants”) – as well as a waste generator and disposer, Cotter Corporation.

The Daileys originally filed this suit in St. Louis County Circuit Court in November 2016, pleading state-law claims of trespass, permanent nuisance, temporary nuisance, negligence, negligence per se, strict liability, and medical monitoring. On January 6, 2017, defendants invoked federal-question jurisdiction

under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and removed the action to this Court, arguing that the allegations in the state-court petition arise under federal law – specifically the Price-Anderson Act (PAA) as amended in 1988, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2010, et seq., which

provides a federal compensation regime for damages resulting from a nuclear incident; and the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601, et seq., which established a federal “Superfund” to clean up uncontrolled or abandoned hazardous-waste sites, and

provides for liability of persons responsible for releases of hazardous waste at these sites.

1 The detailed history of the events and circumstances that allegedly caused this radioactive contamination is set out in my Memorandum and Order entered October 27, 2017, and is incorporated herein. (See ECF 89 at pp. 3-5.) Shortly after removal, defendants moved to dismiss the case, arguing, first, that the PAA preempted the Daileys’ state-law claims and, second, that the petition

failed to state a PAA claim because it failed to allege an essential element, that is, that the Daileys were exposed to radiation in excess of federal dose limits.2 Before responding to the motions to dismiss, the Daileys moved to remand the case to

state court, arguing that their petition did not plead any federal claims, that the PAA did not apply to the claims, and that no “nuclear incident” (which is required for a PAA claim) was pled or could be inferred from the petition’s factual averments.

After the motion to remand was fully briefed, the Daileys abruptly withdrew the motion without explanation. Thereafter, in lieu of a response to defendants’ pending motions to dismiss, the Daileys filed an amended complaint (with

defendants’ consent), which restated the factual averments nearly verbatim from their original state-court petition. In an apparent nod to defendants’ motions to dismiss, however, the Daileys added a new factual allegation that the radioactive material contaminated their property at specific dosage levels greater than what

relevant federal safety regulations allowed. Accordingly, in addition to state-law claims of nuisance and strict liability for abnormally dangerous activity, the Daileys added a separate and distinct claim for relief under the PAA, that is, that

2 Although defendants invoked CERCLA as a basis for removal, none of the defendants addressed CERCLA in their motions to dismiss. defendants’ conduct caused a “nuclear incident” or a series of “nuclear incidents” under the PAA, thus making this a “‘public liability action’ arising under 42 U.S.C.

§ 2210 asserting legal liability resulting from a ‘nuclear incident[.]’” (ECF 70 at ¶ 105.) On defendants’ renewed motions to dismiss the amended complaint, I

dismissed the Daileys’ state-law claims as being preempted by the explicitly pled PAA claim. To the extent defendants argued that the PAA claim failed on its face as well because it did not adequately allege exposure to radiation in excess of the relevant federal standards, I determined that the federal dose limit did not appear to

apply to the claim raised here, that is, “a property damage claim against a non- NRC3 licensed facility.” (ECF 89 at p. 19.) On this basis, I allowed the Daileys’ PAA-captioned claim to proceed.

In the meanwhile, another judge of this Court determined that the “nuclear incidents” to which the PAA applies are only those occurrences involving NRC licensees or those with an indemnity agreement as described in the statute. See generally Strong v. Republic Servs., Inc., 283 F. Supp. 3d 759 (E.D. Mo. 2017).

Where neither an NRC licensee nor an indemnity agreement is involved, there can be no “nuclear incident” under the PAA and thus no federal subject-matter jurisdiction under the PAA. Id.

3 Nuclear Regulatory Commission. In both their state-court petition and amended complaint, the Daileys made the factual averment that the Landfill was not a licensed nuclear facility. And in

their amended complaint, they alleged that Cotter did not hold the required license to transport radioactive waste to the Landfill. Moreover, the Daileys never alleged at any time that any defendant operated under an indemnity agreement as

contemplated by the PAA. After the Court’s determination in Strong, the Daileys moved to amend their complaint again, seeking to eliminate the PAA claim first asserted in their amended complaint and to reinstate their state-law claims as originally pled in their

state-court petition. In support of their motion to amend, the Daileys argued that the PAA never applied to this action from the outset because defendants never possessed the appropriate federal license or indemnity agreement needed to trigger

the PAA. I granted leave to file this second amended complaint on October 22, 2019. The second amended complaint tracks the factual averments and allegations made in the original state-court petition, expands the explanation regarding the mill

tailings Cotter allegedly transported to and disposed of at the Landfill, and omits the first amended complaint’s allegations regarding levels of contamination meeting federal standards. The claims for relief are those set out in the original

petition, namely, state-law claims of trespass, permanent nuisance, temporary nuisance, negligence, negligence per se, strict liability/absolute liability, injunctive relief (medical monitoring), and punitive damages. And the second amended

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Dailey v. Bridgeton Landfill, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dailey-v-bridgeton-landfill-llc-moed-2020.