Duncan v. STTCPL, LLC

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 28, 2017
DocketK16C-12-020 JJC
StatusPublished

This text of Duncan v. STTCPL, LLC (Duncan v. STTCPL, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duncan v. STTCPL, LLC, (Del. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

ROBERT DUNCAN, : : Plaintiff, : K16C-12-020 JJC : In and For Kent County v. : : STTCPL, LLC, SERVICE ENERGY, : LLC, and COASTAL PUMP AND : TANK, INC., : : Defendants. : :

Submitted: January 27, 2017 Decided: February 28, 2017

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Upon Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss – DENIED

Patrick C. Gallagher, Esquire, Law Office of Curley, Dodge, Funk & Street, LLC, Dover, Delaware, Attorney for Plaintiff.

Michael W. Arrington, Esquire, Parkowski, Guerke & Swayze, P. A., Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for the Defendants.

Scott T. Earle, Esquire, Cohen, Seglias, Pallas, Greenhall & Furman, P.C., Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for the Defendants.

Clark, J. I. Introduction Before the Court is a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim filed by Defendants STTCPL L.L.C. and Service Energy L.L.C. (hereinafter collectively “STTCPL”).1 STTCPL leased Plaintiff Robert Duncan’s (hereinafter “Mr. Duncan’s”) gasoline station in Harrington, Delaware. In 2009, the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (hereinafter “DNREC”) found environmental contamination at that location. After that discovery, Mr. Duncan and STTCPL entered into a Settlement Agreement and Release of Claims (hereinafter “Settlement Agreement”) that broadly addressed liability for contamination at the Harrington site. On January 23, 2012, DNREC issued another notice of violation regarding the Harrington gas station. The notice cited the same project identification number that was the subject of the Settlement Agreement. DNREC seeks significant additional compensation from Mr. Duncan for the remediation costs associated with the 2012 environmental contamination at the Harrington property. As a result, Mr. Duncan is suing STTCPL for those costs, alleging STTCPL’s failure to indemnify him as required under the original lease agreement. Mr. Duncan is also suing Defendant Coastal Tank and Pump, Inc. (hereinafter “Coastal”) for the negligent cleanup of the site and STTCPL as Coastal’s alleged principal. STTCPL responds seeking dismissal of Mr. Duncan’s claims alleging that the Settlement Agreement between the parties released his future claims against STTCPL for environmental contamination at the property. STTCPL also seeks dismissal of the negligence claim alleging insufficiency of the Complaint. When

1 At this stage, the record does not reveal the relationship between STTCPL and Service Energy. However, in the Settlement Agreement the two entities are referred to interchangeably and one person signed on behalf of STTCPL and Service Energy without identifying that person’s capacity. Therefore, the Court refers to these entities collectively as STTPCL throughout this memorandum.

2 reading the Settlement Agreement as a whole, however, and considering documents integral to the Complaint, Mr. Duncan could conceivably recover for his claims. For this reason and those set forth herein, STTCPL’s and Coastal’s motions to dismiss are DENIED.2

II. Background and Arguments of the Parties As this is a motion to dismiss pursuant to Superior Court Civil Rule 12(b) (6), the facts referenced herein are those found in Mr. Duncan’s Complaint and the two documents incorporated by reference in the Complaint. Prior to 1994, Mr. Duncan owned and operated a gasoline station in Harrington, Delaware, and during the time he operated it, the station sold only leaded gasoline. In 1994, Mr. Duncan entered into a lease agreement with New Dawn Enterprises, Inc. (hereinafter “New Dawn”) for several properties including the gasoline station at issue here. This agreement contained an indemnity clause, which provided Lessee will indemnify and hold Lessor harmless against, all claims, demands and causes of action, . . . for . . . damage to any property arising from Lessee’s tenancy of the premises and not caused by the negligence, omission, intentional act or breach of duty by Lessor or its agents. At some point during the end of 1999 or the beginning of 2000, New Dawn sold or assigned its business to STTCPL which included an assignment of the lease for Mr. Duncan’s gasoline station. Mr. Duncan consented to this assignment, and in furtherance of it, he entered an Assignment and Lease Modification with New Dawn and STTCPL whereby the original lease remained in effect, including its indemnification clause. This amended lease included a provision stating “[t]he

2 After oral argument on this motion, Coastal filed a motion to dismiss as well. Its motion incorporated only the arguments set forth by STTCPL and asserted no additional basis for dismissal of Mr. Duncan’s negligence claim against Coastal. Accordingly, for the reasons set forth herein, Defendant Coastal Pump and Tank’s motion to dismiss is also denied.

3 Landlord shall be responsible for and shall hold harmless STTCPL . . . from any claims for environmental damage which has occurred prior to the time that they have become a tenant on the property.” DNREC, prior to May 2009, alleged the existence of environmental contamination at the gasoline station due to lead in the soil. After DNREC issued its notice of violation, Mr. Duncan and STTCPL entered the Settlement Agreement on May 12, 2009. Pursuant to this agreement, Mr. Duncan assumed responsibility, financial and otherwise, for all future costs related to alleged environmental damage at the Harrington property. The Settlement Agreement also specifically references Mr. Duncan’s release of future claims for contamination involving DNREC Project Identification Number K0804036. Elsewhere, the Settlement Agreement broadly references Mr. Duncan’s intention to indemnify STTCPL for all future monitoring and remediation costs at the Harrington location. On the other hand, still elsewhere in the Settlement Agreement, this assumption of responsibility, contradictorily, is “limited to solely those environmental matters currently identified by DNREC and the remediation required by DNREC in regard thereto . . . .” The present controversy centers on a January 23, 2012 DNREC notice of violation to both Mr. Duncan and STTCPL for alleged gasoline contamination of soil and groundwater at the Harrington station. The January 2012 DNREC notice references Project Identification Number K0804036 which was also specifically referenced by the Settlement Agreement as being included in Mr. Duncan’s release of any future claims. The new January 2012 notice related to the underground storage tanks at the station. As alleged however, that notice applied to contamination from unleaded gasoline as opposed to leaded gasoline, which had been the subject of the prior remediation.

4 On December 18, 2013, STTCPL hired Costal to remove the underground storage tanks at the station. As alleged, once Coastal excavated and removed the storage tanks, the company negligently took the contaminated fill dirt and placed it directly back into the ground, worsening the contamination. In June 2014, DNREC and STTCPL, apart from Mr. Duncan, entered into a Settlement Agreement and Release regarding the 2012 environmental damage. Pursuant to that agreement, STTCPL paid $70,000 to DNREC in exchange for DNREC releasing STTCPL from further liability for the 2012 environmental damage. After STTCPL reached this agreement with DNREC, DNREC asserted that Mr. Duncan was responsible for a remaining $492,014 in remediation costs incurred at the site. Thereafter, when STTCPL refused to indemnify him as required by the terms of the original lease, Mr. Duncan filed a complaint alleging that STTCPL breached the lease’s indemnity provision. He argues that the Settlement Agreement’s release of liability did not cover what he characterizes as a new DNREC violation, and therefore, under the lease’s indemnity clause, STTCPL is responsible for the contamination and its remediation. Additionally, Mr.

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Duncan v. STTCPL, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-v-sttcpl-llc-delsuperct-2017.