DNREC v. McGinnis Auto & Mobile Home Salvage, LLC

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 20, 2020
Docket139, 2019
StatusPublished

This text of DNREC v. McGinnis Auto & Mobile Home Salvage, LLC (DNREC v. McGinnis Auto & Mobile Home Salvage, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DNREC v. McGinnis Auto & Mobile Home Salvage, LLC, (Del. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

STATE OF DELAWARE § DEPARTMENT OF § No. 139, 2019 NATURAL RESOURCES AND § ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL, § § Plaintiff Below, § Appellant, § Court Below: Superior Court § of the State of Delaware v. § § C.A. No. K17A-09-001 MCGINNIS AUTO & MOBILE § HOME SALVAGE, LLC, § § Defendant Below, § Appellee. §

Submitted: December 11, 2019 Decided: February 20, 2020

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, VAUGHN, TRAYNOR, Justices; and NEWELL, Chief Judge,* constituting the Court en Banc.

Upon appeal from the Superior Court. AFFIRMED in part, and REVERSED in part.

Ralph K. Durstein III, Esq., Department of Justice, Dover, Delaware, Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellant State of Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control.

John W. Paradee, Esq., Daniel F. McAllister, Esq., Stephen A. Spence, Esq., Brian V. DeMott, Esq., BAIRD MANDALAS BROCKSTEDT, LLC, Dover, Delaware Attorneys for Defendant-Appellee McGinnis Auto and Mobile Home Salvage, LLC.

_______________________ *Sitting by designation under Del. Const. Art. IV § 12. SEITZ, Chief Justice, for the majority:

McGinnis Auto & Mobile Home Salvage, LLC salvages discarded and

dilapidated mobile homes on its property in Kent County, Delaware. According to

the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, a large and

unsightly waste pile, possibly contaminated with asbestos, had accumulated over

time. DNREC cited McGinnis for environmental violations and for operating a

reclamation facility without a permit. DNREC gave McGinnis a chance to bring the

property into compliance. McGinnis failed to do so. DNREC responded by issuing

a cease and desist order. In addition to other actions, the cease and desist order

required McGinnis to remove the waste pile from the property in an environmentally

responsible manner.

McGinnis appealed the order to the Environmental Appeals Board. It argued

that DNREC could order the illegal activity to stop, but could not order McGinnis

to take affirmative action to remove the waste pile from the property. The EAB

agreed with McGinnis, finding that the order exceeded the scope of its authority.

The Superior Court affirmed the EAB’s decision, finding that DNREC did not have

the authority under its cease and desist power to require McGinnis to remove the

waste pile, direct how the waste must be removed, or demand documentation.

On appeal, DNREC contends that the EAB and Superior Court took too

cramped a view of DNREC’s cease and desist authority. We agree. When, as here,

2 the presence of a waste pile is a violation, it follows that the only way to cease and

desist from the violation is to remove the contaminated debris from the site. With

two exceptions, we also uphold the other requirements of the cease and desist order.

I.

McGinnis operates a business that dismantles and salvages material from

mobile homes. In February 2015, DNREC officers inspected McGinnis’s facility

and observed a large pile of solid waste composed of framing lumber, plastics,

insulation, metal, degraded wood or soils, and wire. DNREC noted that McGinnis

violated 7 Del. C. § 6003(a)(4) and Rule 4.1.1.1—collecting, storing, and processing

waste, and operating a solid waste facility without a permit—and 7 Del C.

§ 6025(b)(2)—disposing of solid waste in a facility without a permit.1 In August

2015, DNREC issued McGinnis a Notice of Violation requiring McGinnis to submit

a plan to remove the waste pile and to apply for a Resource Recovery Facility Permit

application within 90 days.2 The following month, McGinnis responded with a

disposal plan and agreed to remove the waste pile by July 2016, but never applied

for a permit.

1 7 Del. C. § 6003(a)(4) (“No person shall, without first having obtained a permit from the Secretary, undertake any activity: [i]n a way which may cause or contribute to the collection, transportation, storage, processing, or disposal of solid wastes . . . .”); 7 Del. Admin. Code § 1301- 4.0, Rule 4.1.1.1 (“No person shall engage in the . . . operation . . . of a solid waste facility . . . without first having obtained a permit from the Department.”); 7 Del C. § 6025(b)(2) (“No person shall cause or contribute to the disposal or discharge of solid waste . . . except: [i]n solid waste disposal facilities which have received a permit from the Department.”). 2 App. to Opening Br. at A012-13. 3 In March 2016, DNREC conducted a follow-up inspection of McGinnis’s

property. Although McGinnis removed some waste from the pile, it did not

document proper disposal procedures or estimate the volume removed. DNREC

officers thought any waste removal was negligible and, in fact, more waste had been

added to the pile. And in June 2016, DNREC advised McGinnis of possible asbestos

in the mobile home debris. It imposed a deadline to cleanup and remove the waste

pile.

McGinnis did not remove the waste pile, continued violating statutory and

regulatory requirements, and ignored DNREC’s formal notifications. Finally, in

August 2016, DNREC through its Secretary issued a cease and desist order under 7

Del C. § 6018, which required McGinnis to:

(1) cease and desist receiving and dismantling mobile homes and construction and demolition waste;

(2) remove, within thirty days, all solid wastes including, but not limited to, discarded mobile homes and piles of construction and demolition waste on land and in containers;

(3) complete the above-referenced requirements in compliance with all applicable laws and regulations, and only utilize transportation companies, disposal facilities, and contractors holding valid permits;

(4) provide, within thirty days, written documentation confirming the proper disposal or recycling of the solid wastes;

(5) provide, within thirty days, a list of all mobile homes received by McGinnis since 2001, the date received, the vehicle identification number, and date of manufacture;

4 (6) provide, within thirty days, a detailed explanation of inspection, handling, storage, disposal, and recycling procedures for all materials removed from, or contained within, mobile homes; and

(7) apply, within thirty days, for a Resource Recovery Facility permit if McGinnis desired to operate its facility.3

McGinnis appealed the Secretary’s order to the EAB claiming that DNREC

exceeded its authority under § 6018 because paragraphs (2) through (6) functioned

as mandatory injunctions, a remedy within the sole discretion of the Court of

Chancery.4 DNREC responded that its authority should be broadly interpreted as

equivalent in scope to that of the Court of Chancery. The EAB held that, while

§ 6018 authorized the Secretary to proscribe conduct, the Secretary lacked “adequate

legal authority” to order “affirmative injunctive relief” by way of a cease and desist

order.5 According to the EAB, other means exist to compel compliance with the

affirmative mandates. The cease and desist order was the improper enforcement

mechanism. Thus, paragraphs (1) and (7) were within DNREC’s authority, but

paragraphs (2) through (6) were not.6

On appeal, the Superior Court agreed and found that the ordinary meaning of

“cease” and “desist” limited the Secretary’s power to ordering a violator to stop

3 App. to Opening Br. at A028-29. 4 Even though McGinnis denies that it committed any violation, on appeal the parties assume the violations occurred and only argue the scope of DNREC’s authority under § 6018. See Answering Br. at 1-2; App. to Answering Br. at B001.

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