Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products LP v. NCR Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedApril 9, 2024
Docket1:11-cv-00483
StatusUnknown

This text of Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products LP v. NCR Corporation (Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products LP v. NCR Corporation) 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 Corporation, (W.D. Mich. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION GEORGIA-PACIFIC CONSUMER PRODUCTS LP, FORT JAMES CORPORATION, and GEORGIA-PACIFIC LLC, Plaintiffs, CASE No. 1:11-CV-483 v. HON. ROBERT J. JONKER NCR CORPORATION, INTERNATIONAL PAPER CO., and WEYERHAEUSER CO., Defendants. _______________________________/ OPINION INTRODUCTION This matter is before the Court on remand from the Court of Appeals. The parties disagree on what proper implementation of the Mandate requires. International Paper and Weyerhaeuser maintain that the Mandate requires this Court to enter judgment in their favor dismissing not only the award of contribution against them but also the declaratory judgment holding them liable for future costs at the superfund site. Georgia Pacific argues that only the contribution award is subject to vacatur and dismissal and that the Court should leave other aspects of the Judgment, including the declaration of liability, in effect.1 The parties have briefed their positions, and the matter is ready for decision. 1 This Court’s Judgment also found NCR liable and awarded contribution against it in favor of Georgia Pacific. NCR appealed but then entered a Consent Decree with the United States and the State of Michigan. This Court approved and entered the Consent Decree over the objection of Georgia Pacific, International Paper and Weyerhaeuser while the appeal in this case was BACKGROUND A. The Site This case involves PCB contamination of the Kalamazoo River. The Superfund Site at issue includes about eighty miles of the Kalamazoo River, about three miles of Portage Creek, as

well as various waste disposal areas near the water, adjacent riverbanks and contiguous flood plains. The EPA has divided the overall Superfund Site into multiple Operable Units. The River itself is Operable Unit 5, which the EPA has further divided into seven separate Work Areas. At the time of the Phase II trial (addressing the amount of recoverable costs and equitable allocation), the EPA had not yet finalized a remedy for any portion of the River except Area 1 of Operable Unit 5. Estimates for the total amount yet to be spent on cleanup of the River vary from about $600 million to $850 million.2 B. The Litigation in this Court Georgia Pacific filed this action to establish the liability of NCR, International Paper and Weyerhaeuser under CERCLA, and to recover a portion of the approximately $100 million it

claimed to have spent on investigation and remediating the Site. Phase I of the proceedings

dismissed its appeal in this case and paid Georgia Pacific the contribution amount awarded by this Court’s Judgment. The Court of Appeals’ decision does not disturb any provision of the original Judgment regarding NCR. 2 This is a rough approximation of current estimates. In Georgia Pacific’s Petition for a Writ of Certiorari, it noted that “site-wide cleanup is projected to continue for at least another decade and cost at least hundreds of millions of additional dollars.” (Petition for a Writ of Certiorari 12 n.6, Case No. 22-465 (Nov. 14, 2022). In separate proceedings related to NCR’s eventual Consent Decree settlement with the United States and the State of Michigan, the EPA estimated future costs at OU5 (the Kalamazoo River and Portage Creek) were $609 Million (Saric Decl. ¶ 3, Case No. 1:19-cv-1041, ECF No. 8, PageID.257). Total costs at the Superfund Site are projected to be $851 million. (Id.). Georgia Pacific maintains that the EPA’s estimate is incomplete by at least $106 million. (GP’s Br. in Opposition at 11, Case No. 1:19-cv-1041, ECF No. 32, PageID.485). It notes the EPA has not withdrawn a 2009 projection that pegged total costs to clean up OU5 at 2.4 billion. (Id. at PageID.484). While Georgia Pacific states it does “not believe that number is realistic” it observes that the EPA has not stipulated that future costs will not exceed 150% of its current estimate (or roughly $914 million) either. (Id. at PageID.492). focused on liability. Like Georgia Pacific, Weyerhaeuser admitted liability under CERCLA. The Court found NCR and International Paper liable after a bench trial. (ECF No. 432). Phase II of the proceedings focused on establishing the total recoverable past costs at issue, and on equitably allocating responsibility for those costs among the liable parties. The Court issued its decision on

those issues after the Phase II trial. (ECF No. 921). Before proceeding to the Phase II trial, the parties addressed whether and how CERCLA’s statute of limitations applied to Georgia Pacific’s contribution claims. In an earlier case, this Court entered a declaratory judgment declaring Georgia Pacific liable for PCB contamination in the River. That case was filed in 1985 by the Kalamazoo River Study Group, of which Georgia Pacific was a member, and ended with the declaratory judgment in 1988. Neither NCR, International Paper or Weyerhaeuser were parties to that case, and Georgia Pacific had not yet incurred the costs for which it sought contribution in this case. Even so, the defendants in this case argued that CERCLA’s 3-year statute of limitations on contribution claims should run from the 1988 declaratory judgment—or at a minimum from later

re-affirmations of that liability determination in the same case in 2000 and 2003—and bar Georgia Pacific’s contribution claims here. This Court noted the position of the defense “would effectively bar some contribution claims even before they would normally accrue,” and rejected such an “expansive interpretation.” (ECF No. 787, PageID.24189-24190). The Court did find some of the contribution claims Georgia Pacific was advancing barred by the statute of limitations applicable to various administrative agreements under which Georgia Pacific had incurred actual costs. (Id. at PageID.24910-24196). The Court incorporated these determinations into its assessment of the total recoverable past costs and equitable allocation shares after the Phase II trial. (ECF No. 921, PageID.34653-34660). On June 19, 2018, this Court entered Final Judgment implementing its decisions. The Final Judgment included the Phase I liability determinations and the declaratory judgment language mandated by Section 113(g)(2) of CERCLA. (ECF No. 925, PageID.34746). The Judgment also included the recoverable past costs and equitable allocation decisions this Court made, including

those on the limitations issues. All parties appealed. (ECF Nos. 930 (NCR), 931(International Paper), 935 (Georgia Pacific) and 939 (Weyerhaeuser)). C. The Appeals Ultimately, NCR, Georgia Pacific and Weyerhaeuser dismissed their appeals. (ECF Nos. 969 (NCR), 971 (Weyerhaeuser) and 972 (Georgia Pacific)). In NCR’s case, the decision to dismiss was tied to NCR’s entry of a Consent Decree with the United States and the State of Michigan, as previously noted. International Paper continued with its appeal, raising not only the 3-year statute of limitations issue but also a claim that this Court erroneously found it liable despite the “secured creditor” exception to CERCLA owner liability. This Court had rejected International Paper’s position on that issue after the Phase I trial based on this Court’s fact findings and conclusions of law. (ECF No. 432, PageID.12749-12756).3

The Court of Appeals reversed this Court’s decision on the 3-year statute of limitations and held that the clock started for Georgia Pacific with the 1988 declaratory judgment of liability: “Because the 1998 KRSG judgment caused the statute of limitations to begin to run, the three-year statute-of-limitations period concluded before GP filed its 2010 action, and we must dismiss GP’s action on limitations grounds.” (ECF No. 973, PageID.35355). The Court of Appeals further concluded that Weyerhaeuser was also entitled to the benefit of this limitations

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Yu Kikumura
947 F.2d 72 (Third Circuit, 1991)
Robert Jones, Jr. v. James E. Lewis and Gary Ashby
957 F.2d 260 (Sixth Circuit, 1992)
United States v. McFalls
675 F.3d 599 (Sixth Circuit, 2012)
United States v. James F. Moored
38 F.3d 1419 (Sixth Circuit, 1994)
United States v. Township of Brighton
282 F.3d 915 (Sixth Circuit, 2002)
Brunet v. City of Columbus
58 F.3d 251 (Sixth Circuit, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products LP v. NCR Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-pacific-consumer-products-lp-v-ncr-corporation-miwd-2024.