El Paso Natural Gas Co. v. United States

390 F. Supp. 3d 1025
CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedMay 16, 2019
DocketNo. CV14-8165-PCT-DGC
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 390 F. Supp. 3d 1025 (El Paso Natural Gas Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
El Paso Natural Gas Co. v. United States, 390 F. Supp. 3d 1025 (D. Ariz. 2019).

Opinion

David G. Campbell, Senior United States District Judge

This case concerns environmental liability under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act ("CERCLA") for 19 uranium mines located near Cameron, Arizona, on the Navajo Nation Reservation (the "Mine Sites"). Plaintiff El Paso Natural Gas Company, LLC, whose predecessors operated the mines in the 1950s and 1960s, brings claims against Defendants United States of America, the Department of the Interior ("DOI"), the Bureau of Indian Affairs ("BIA"), the United States Geological Survey ("USGS"), and the Department of Energy ("DOE") (collectively, the "United States") for cost recovery and contribution. Doc. 55 ¶¶ 1-2.1 The United States asserts a CERCLA counterclaim against El Paso for contribution. Docs. 53, 66.2

*1029El Paso stipulates that it was an operator of the Mine Sites for purposes of CERCLA liability (Doc. 108), and the Court previously held that the United States is liable as an owner of the land where the mines are located (Doc. 135). The parties assert additional grounds for CERCLA liability against each other and ask the Court to make an equitable allocation of past and future response costs under CERCLA § 113.

The Court held an eight-day bench trial in February and March, 2019. Each side presented many witnesses, live or by deposition, and hundreds of exhibits. The parties also submitted extensive proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, as well as post-trial briefing on specific issues addressed in this order. For reasons set forth below, the Court will allocate 65% of past and future response costs to El Paso and 35% of such costs to the United States.

I. Findings of Fact.

This order sets forth the Court's findings of fact and conclusions of law under Rule 52 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The Court provides some citations to the record, but the citations should not be regarded as the sole basis for the Court's ruling. The Court's findings and conclusions are based on all of the testimony and exhibits admitted in evidence.

A. The Parties.

El Paso is the corporate successor of Arrowhead Uranium Company ("Arrowhead"), Rare Metals Corporation of America ("Rare Metals"), and El Paso Natural Gas Company. Doc. 159 at 8.3 Arrowhead and Rare Metals mined uranium at the Mine Sites. Arrowhead was one of the original uranium mining companies in the Cameron region of Northern Arizona, operating from 1952 to 1954. Ex. 28 at 7-8. Rare Metals was formed in 1954 to prospect, explore, and acquire properties containing uranium deposits and other valuable minerals. Rare Metals acquired Arrowhead in December 1954 and took over its uranium mining operations. See Exs. 1040-44. Rare Metals also engaged in uranium exploration and development in Utah, New Mexico, California, and other locations. Exs. 1041 at 7; 1042 at 6, 8; 1043 at 5-7, 9. Rare Metals merged with El Paso in 1962. Ex. 1056. El Paso also takes responsibility for the mining activities of Cameron Mining Company at several of the Mine Sites. Doc. 159 at 8.

The land where the Mine Sites are located is owned by the United States in trust for the Navajo Nation. See 25 U.S.C. § 640d-9(a) ; Doc. 159 at 7. The DOI and the BIA, as part of their tribal trust responsibilities, oversaw some aspects of the mining permits and leases for the Nation. Doc. 159 at 8; Ex. 12 at 2. The USGS, which is part of the DOI, collects, analyzes, monitors, and provides information about natural resources. Docs. 1 ¶ 19; 23 ¶ 19. DOE is the successor agency to the former Atomic Energy Commission ("AEC"). Doc. 23 ¶ 20. After World War II, the AEC was responsible for creating and managing a program to procure uranium for nuclear weapons, known as the Domestic Uranium Procurement Program ("DUPP"). Ex. 74 at 6.

B. The Cold War and the Domestic Uranium Industry.

The United States' use of atomic bombs in Japan both hastened the end of World War II and sparked the Cold War with the *1030Soviet Union. Both nations aggressively developed nuclear weapons. Obtaining uranium, a naturally occurring metal that was an indispensable component of such weapons, became a driving objective of the United States' national defense effort. Doc. 158 ¶ 12.

In 1946, Congress passed the Atomic Energy Act, which formed the AEC. See 60 Stat. 755. The Act also established the DUPP, a program for "the production, ownership, and use of fissionable material to assure the common defense and security and to insure the broadest possible mining of the fields." Ex. 74 at 6. Viewing foreign sources of uranium as unreliable, the United States sought, through the DUPP, to locate and develop domestic sources using a combination of government-led exploration and private enterprise incentives. Tr. at 94-95. At the time, the federal government was the only authorized purchaser of uranium in the United States. Atomic Energy Act of 1946 § 5(2); Ex. 74 at 14.

Between 1948 and 1956, the AEC published nine circulars offering guaranteed minimum prices and bonus payments for uranium ore (the "Circulars"). See Ex. 41. Circulars 3, 4, 5, and 6 applied to uranium mining on the Colorado Plateau, a geographic area encompassing some 140,000 square miles in Arizona, Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico. Ex. 1002; Doc. 159 at 7. Circular 3 guaranteed, for three years, a minimum price and "development allowance" of fifty cents per pound for uranium ore of .15% grade or more. Ex. 41 at 3-4; see also id. at 8-9 (Circular 5 Revised). Circular 4 established a haulage allowance of six cents per mile for the first 100 miles. Id. at 5. Circular 5 also guaranteed a minimum price and expanded the development allowance to ore with uranium concentrations as low as .10%. Id. at 6. Circular 6 created an additional bonus for the production of uranium ore from new domestic mines. Id. at 13-14.

The AEC assisted the young domestic uranium industry by conducting geologic surveys, furnishing free testing and assaying services, and agreeing to purchase uranium ore. Ex. 25 at 13. The AEC established ore-buying stations in uranium-producing areas. Id. The AEC's assistance programs included research and development that led to improvement in milling processes and other mining-related innovations. Id. ; see also Chenoweth Depo. Jan. 15, 2014, at 85.4

Beginning in 1948, the AEC, assisted by the USGS, operated a program of uranium exploration on the Colorado Plateau and several other western states. Ex. 25 at 14. The program involved temporary withdrawal of some 700 square miles of public domain land for exploration, geologic studies, drilling, examination of samples, and airborne reconnaissance. Id. The AEC employed a contractor, Walker Lybarger, to use a bulldozer to uncover any uranium outcrops that were discovered. Chenoweth Depo. Jan.

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390 F. Supp. 3d 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-paso-natural-gas-co-v-united-states-azd-2019.