Department of Environmental Resources v. Berks Associates, Inc.

66 Pa. D. & C.2d 572
CourtPennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board
DecidedJuly 31, 1973
Docketno. 72-309
StatusPublished

This text of 66 Pa. D. & C.2d 572 (Department of Environmental Resources v. Berks Associates, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Environmental Resources v. Berks Associates, Inc., 66 Pa. D. & C.2d 572 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1973).

Opinion

BROUGHTON, Chairman of the Board,

This is a civil penalties case brought by the Department of Environmental Resources (“department”), against Berks Associates, Inc., (“Berks”) a corporation that operates a plant in Douglasville, Pa., in which it rerefines — recycles - used automobile crankcase oil. The complaint is based on an alleged discharge of approximately 3,000,000 gallons of waste sludge from one or more lagoons at defendant’s plant on November 13, 1970. Hearings were held before the [573]*573Hon. Michael H. Malin, then Chairman of the Environmental Hearing Board, on October 30, 1972, and October 31, 1972, at the State Office Building in Philadelphia.

The board makes the following

FINDINGS OF FACT

(1) Berks is a Pennsylvania Corporation, having its principal place of business in Douglasville, Union Township, Berks County, Pa.

(2) At its principal place of business, Berks is engaged in the reprocessing of used automobile crankcase oil.

(3) In connection therewith, certain residuals or waste products are produced which, as of November 13,1970, were stored in lagoons on Berks premises.

(4) The lagoons are adjacent to the Schuylkill River, upstream from several municipal water supply intakes, including those for Pottsville and Phoenixville, Pa.

(5) The waste material in said lagoons consisted of residuals from the rerefining process consisting of various long chain hydrocarbons, derived from motor oil and gasoline, and lead compounds derived from gasoline.

(6) On November 13, 1970, following several days of rain, two lagoon walls gave way, releasing approximately 3,000,000 gallons of oil compounds into the Schuylkill River.

(7) Prior to the break on November 13, 1970, the lagoons had less than two feet of “freeboard,” which is the vertical distance between the top of the liquid and the top of the lagoon wall, on several occasions; in addition, the walls were in places excessively narrow and in need of shoring up.

(8) Berks had, previously to the breach on November 13, 1970, been notified on numerous occasions by [574]*574the department that, in the department’s opinion, the lagoon walls needed strenghthening.

(9) Following the discharge, the Commonwealth, including the Department of Environmental Resources or its predecessor, and the Fish Commission, expended $8,680.45 in monitoring, testings and various other activities related to determining the magnitude of the danger to the public from said spill, and protecting the public from said danger.

(10) The Federal government also became involved extensively in the monitoring and cleanup effort following the discharge.

(11) The concentration of lead in the material in the lagoon was tested, prior to the spill, at 10,000 parts per million (ppm). Phenol concentrations were also high. This was widely reported to and known by the officials who were monitoring the effects of the discharge.

(12) Because of the spill, a number of municipal water companies were forced to shut down for varying periods of time.

(13) Following the discharge, at least a 30-mile -stretch of both banks of the Schuylkill River was covered with oil.

(14) In Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, following the discharge and because of it, several hundred geese were unable to fly.

(15) According to one Commonwealth witness, this was the largest oil spill he had ever seen, aside from those caused by Agnes.

(16) Given the magnitude of the discharge, and the reported, and plausible, concentrations of lead in the discharged material, the activities of the Commonwealth, local governments, and the Federal government were reasonable.

[575]*575(17) Between November 10, 1970, and November 13, 1970, approximately 2V4 to 2Vz inches of rain fell in the vicinity of Berks’ plant.

(18) Had the lagoons been properly maintained, with the required amount of freeboard, the breach and discharge would not have occurred.

(19) Berks spent approximately $40,000 prior to the discharge in question investigating ways to reuse the Waste material that had been stored in the lagoons.

(20) As of the time of the hearing, Berks had discovered ways to reuse the material formerly disposed of in the lagoons, and the lagoons had been filled in and were no longer being used.

(21) Shortly following the discharge in question, Berks filed a petition in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania for an arrangement with creditors under Subchapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act of July 1, 1898, as amended, 52 Stat. 913,11 U.S.C. §786. (Exh. D-5)

(22) Said action was settled by Berks paying its creditors in full.

(23) Berks is not now insolvent, nor would an obligation in any amount up to and including $10,000 be such a hardship to Berks that insolvency would be made imminent or even probable.

DISCUSSION

The only real issue raised is the amount of the civil penalties. See United States Steel Corp. v. Department of Environmental Resources, 7 Comm. Ct. 429, 441-42, 300 A.2d 508 (1973). With respect to this, several subsidiary legal issues were raised by department: (1) Whether the fact that the lagoons in question were no longer being used should be taken to reduce the penalty to zero; (2) whether defendant’s precarious [576]*576financial condition should be taken into account; (3) whether the utility of defendant’s operation with respect to other environmental problems not directly at issue in this case should be considered by the board in setting the amount of civil penalties; (4) the degree of fault or negligence on the part of Berks; (5) defendant also contests whether the expenditures made by the Commonwealth in connection with a discharge are relevant to setting the amount of civil penalties and, if so, whether the expenditures made by the department in this case were necessary and reasonable in connection with this spill. 1

(1) We do think that the fact the lagoons are no longer being used is relevant. One factor that can be used to assess the degree of wilfulness or negligence is whether defendant has taken steps to see that the incident will not be repeated. The fact that Berks is now recycling the waste material, and that a repetition of this incident will not occur, should be taken in mitigation of whatever civil penalties we assess; we do not conclude, as defendant would have us conclude, that a nominal penalty should be awarded on this ground, especially where, as here, other considerations argue for a very substantial penalty. Civil penalties are analogous to punitive and compensatory damages in courts. The listing of both wilfulness and harm to the waters of the Commonwealth as factors we must consider in assessing civil penalties almost forces this conclusion. See Prosser, Torts, 7-23 (4th Ed., 1971).

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