Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products LP v. NCR Corp.

980 F. Supp. 2d 821, 2013 WL 5428729, 77 ERC (BNA) 1977, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 138157
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedSeptember 26, 2013
DocketCase No. 1:11-CV-483
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 980 F. Supp. 2d 821 (Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products LP v. NCR Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products LP v. NCR Corp., 980 F. Supp. 2d 821, 2013 WL 5428729, 77 ERC (BNA) 1977, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 138157 (W.D. Mich. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

ROBERT J. JONKER, District Judge.

Georgia Pacific (“GP”) claims that NCR Corporation (“NCR”), International Paper Company (“IP”), and Weyerhaeuser Company (“Weyerhaeuser”) are liable under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (“CERCLA”), 42 U.S.C. § 9601 et seq., for the costs of investigating and [824]*824cleaning up polychlorinated biphenyl (“PCB”) contamination at the Kalamazoo River Superfund Site (“the Site”). Weyerhaeuser has admitted liability but reserves the right to contest all remedial issues, including divisibility of harm and allocation; NCR and IP have denied liability. The question presently before the Court is whether NCR and IP are, in fact, liable under CERCLA for any of the response costs at the Site.

GP says NCR is liable for arranging— either directly or through affiliates—the disposal of PCBs at the Site. Specifically, GP charges that scraps (“broke” or “broke and trim”) from NCR’s carbonless copy paper (“CCP”) were a major source of PCBs; that, at the time it was manufacturing CCP, NCR knew the PCBs in CCP broke were hazardous and would be released in the recycling process; and that NCR arranged to have paper recycling mills, like the ones all along the Site, recycle CCP broke as a means of avoiding the costs of disposing of the PCBs in some other way (such as incineration). NCR denies liability, claiming, first, that GP cannot prove any CCP broke went to the paper mills at the Site, and, second, that CCP broke was not a waste, but a useful product, such that any release of PCBs in the recycling process cannot be the basis for arranger liability under CERCLA.

GP says IP is liable as the corporate successor to St. Regis Corporation (“St. Regis”), which owned or operated the Bryant Mill, and which allegedly recycled CCP broke and discharged PCBs at the Site. At a minimum, GP argues, even if St. Regis did not directly dispose of the PCBs through its own operations at the Bryant Mill, it held title to the Mill while another company operated the Mill in a way that caused the disposal of PCBs at the Site. IP denies liability because, it says, GP cannot prove that CCP broke reached the Bryant Mill before July 1, 1956, the date on which St. Regis stopped operating the Mill itself, and sold or leased Mill assets to a new company. IP further argues that, even if the Bryant Mill did recycle CCP at some point after July 1,1956, IP cannot be liable for the resulting PCB disposal as an owner because it continued to hold title to the Mill only to secure performance of a lease financing transaction with the new operator.

The Court conducted a two-week bench trial in this matter, featuring 25 expert and lay witnesses, and hundreds of exhibits. The trial record fills 50 binders and covers thousands of pages. This Opinion and Order constitutes the Court’s Rule 52 findings of fact and conclusions of law based on the trial record. The Court concludes that NCR is directly liable as an arranger under CERCLA, 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a)(3). The Court’s conclusion is based on its finding, as a matter of fact, that NCR understood, no later than 1969, that CCP broke was a waste, not a useful product, because no rational paper recycler, fully apprised of the facts as NCR was, would use CCP broke in its recycling process. Even after NCR knew hazardous waste disposal necessarily resulted from the process of recycling CCP broke, NCR continued to manufacture CCP and encourage recyclers—like those in the Kalamazoo River Valley—to use CCP broke in their recycling operations to avoid other, higher cost means of disposing of the CCP broke. That makes NCR an arranger under CERCLA. The Court further concludes that IP is liable under CERCLA as an owner at the time of disposal of PCBs from the Bryant Mill. This conclusion is based on the Court’s finding, as a matter of fact, that IP’s predecessor in interest, St. Regis, owned the Bryant Mill at a time when the Mill was recycling CCP and thereby disposing of PCBs at the Site. The Court does not find that GP has proven by [825]*825a preponderance of the evidence that CCP broke reached the Bryant Mill before July 1, 1966, while IP was both an owner and operator of the Mill. But the Court finds that GP has made the necessary showing that the Mill disposed of PCBs from CCP waste while IP remained an owner of the Mill, and the Court further finds that IP does not qualify for CERCLA’s secured lender exception.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Overview of the Site

The Kalamazoo River and its tributary, Portage Creek, run through Southwestern Michigan. They are contaminated with PCBs, a hazardous substance under CERCLA. The PCBs in the Kalamazoo River and Portage Creek were discharged by paper mills in the Kalamazoo River Valley. The mills recycled wastepaper as a source of pulp. Some of the wastepaper recycled by the mills was NCR’s CCP. From 1954 to 1971 (“the production period”), CCP was made using Aroclor 1242, a source of PCBs. In the course of the recycling process, some of the PCBs from the recycled CCP found their way into waste-water effluent, which the mills discharged into the Kalamazoo River and Portage Creek. Because of the PCB contamination, the area is now listed on the National Priorities List, a list of national priorities of known or threatened releases of hazardous substances. It has been labeled as the Allied Paper, Inc./Portage Creek/Kalamazoo River Superfund Site.

B. The Bryant Mill and Bryant Mill Pond

One of the paper mills located at the Site is the Bryant Mill (“the Mill”). The Mill was built in 1895 along Portage Creek. As part of the Mill’s construction, Portage Creek was dammed. Damming Portage Creek provided water and a power source for the Mill. It also created the Bryant Mill Pond (“the Pond”), which became an important part of the Mill’s operations. The Mill coated, manufactured, and disposed of paper. It was not, however, equipped to produce pulp, the base component of paper. Because the Mill could not produce its own pulp, it relied on purchased wastepaper and externally-sourced pulp in its paper manufacturing. By 1953, recycled wastepaper accounted for over two-thirds of the fiber used at the Mill.

Workers at the Mill usually had to deink waste paper before they used it for paper manufacturing. During the de-inking process, ink, clay, and other residuals were removed from the desirable paper fibers through a combination of chemical washing, heat, and mechanical agitation. Until the 1950s, this mixture of ink, clay, and other residuals was discharged, untreated, directly into Portage Creek. Sometime during the early 1950s, IP’s predecessor in interest, St. Regis, constructed a clarifier at the Mill to help settle out solid material from the effluent that was discharged into Portage Creek. Even with the clarifier, however, roughly 70% of the suspended solids in the Mill effluent made it into Portage Creek.

St. Regis acquired the Mill in 1946. Three years later, Panelyte—one of St. Regis’s subsidiaries—acquired a property (“the Panelyte property”) abutting the Pond and adjacent to the Mill, for use in producing injection-molded plastics. Part of the Panelyte property was inundated upon creation of the Pond. Panelyte’s activities on the Panelyte property involved neither paper manufacture nor the purchase or use of recycled wastepaper.

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Bluebook (online)
980 F. Supp. 2d 821, 2013 WL 5428729, 77 ERC (BNA) 1977, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 138157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-pacific-consumer-products-lp-v-ncr-corp-miwd-2013.