Geraghty & Miller, Inc. v. Conoco Inc.

234 F.3d 917, 2000 WL 1752841
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 14, 2000
Docket99-20020
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 234 F.3d 917 (Geraghty & Miller, Inc. v. Conoco Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Geraghty & Miller, Inc. v. Conoco Inc., 234 F.3d 917, 2000 WL 1752841 (5th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

JOHN R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge:

Conoco Inc. and Condea Vista Chemical Company appeal the district court’s order granting summary judgment to Geraghty and Miller, Inc. (“G&M”) in this environmental clean-up action. This case includes a claim under CERCLA, the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act, as well as state common law claims. We affirm in part and, because a genuine issue exists as to certain material facts, we reverse in part.

The parties do agree on a sufficient number of background facts to set the stage. This dispute arises out of an environmental clean-up at the Lake Charles Chemical Complex in Westlake, Louisiana. The Complex has been owned and operated by Conoco or Vista since 1961, and in 1968 Conoco began managing ethylene dichloride at the facility. Ethylene dichloride, a feedstock in the production of vinyl chloride monomer, is a “hazardous substance” as CERCLA defines that term. As a result of historic releases and migration, ethylene dichloride contamination occurred in soil from the surface to at least twenty-five feet down and in shallow groundwater zones.

The Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality required Conoco to investi *921 gate and address the ethylene dichloride contamination under state groundwater protection laws and regulations and federal and state solid waste laws and regulations. It also required Conoco to put in place a groundwater monitoring and assessment program pursuant to the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 6901-6992k (1994), and its corresponding regulations and their Louisiana state counterparts. As is often the case in such clean-ups, the process was set to take place in stages. Conoco and G&M entered into a contract on March 12, 1985 under which G&M was to furnish all required services for “Ground-Water Quality Assessment, Phase 2” at the Vinyl Chloride Monomer Plant Area and Waste Water Treatment Area (“the Plant”) of the Complex. Vista was a third-party beneficiary under the contract.

Under the contract, G&M was to assess possible contamination beneath several suspected source areas at the Complex. It was to perform that assessment by 1) preparing design specifications for the installation of groundwater monitor wells and piezometers used to monitor possible groundwater contamination at the Complex; 2) installing the monitor wells and piezometers; and 3) sampling the monitor wells following installation. G&M completed the installation of fifty monitor wells on July 23,1985.

For approximately the following year, G&M sampled the monitor wells and interpreted the monitoring data to determine the nature and extent of contamination. G&M submitted quarterly reports to Co-noco/Vista to advise them of the results.

Sometime before May 1988, Conoco/Vis-ta began to suspect potentially serious technical and physical deficiencies in three of the monitor wells G&M had installed. They were concerned that such deficiencies were aggravating the contamination. Conoco/Vista received approval from the Louisiana Department in May 1988 to plug and abandon those wells. Conoco/Vista allege that they uncovered physical evidence that the three wells were not installed according to the contract specifications, and they- sent a series of letters to G&M concerning the deficiencies. In December 1989, Conoco/Vista plugged and abandoned a fourth well, and they allege that this well, also was not installed according to specifications.

These experiences caused Conoco/Vista to question the soundness of the remaining wells and other parts of the groundwater monitoring system. Conoco/Vista and G&M discussed who was responsible for the costs associated with these allegedly defective wells, but they were unable to resolve the issue. On August 27, 1990, the parties entered into the Groundwater Wells Interim Agreement. The Interim Agreement called for the parties to agree upon criteria for determining whether a given, monitor well was “suspect” or “not suspect” of being improperly installed, and to agree upon criteria for determining whether a given well was “properly” or “not properly” installed. Once the criteria were in place, the parties would apply them to each of the wells to determine which needed to be removed and who would bear the costs. That never occurred, however, because the parties never agreed on the criteria.

The parties entered into the Interim Agreement to allocate responsibility between them for the costs of plugging and abandoning additional wells that they were to agree upon as being “suspect.” G&M maintains that there was no other purpose for entering into the deal, but Conoco/Vis-ta insist that the Interim Agreement gave the parties time to investigate the integrity of the wells while not allowing the statute of limitations to run on any defect claims that remained unresolved. Conoeo/Vista assert that G&M received, as consideration for the deal, a release from approximately $250,000 in monitor well plugging and abandonment costs.

Conoco/Vista retained other environmental consulting firms to continue the *922 groundwater assessment program. Upon the recommendation of one such consultant, Conoco/Vista plugged and abandoned the remaining G&M-installed wells in 1993 and replaced them.

In April 1993, Conoco/Vista filed suit against G&M in Texas state court, alleging state common law causes of action. During the course of that litigation, the Texas Court of Appeals held that the language in the Interim Agreement concerning a possible tolling and extension of the statute of limitations was ambiguous as a matter of law.

In April 1997, with the state court lawsuit still pending, G&M filed the instant CERCLA action, seeking reimbursement from Conoco/Vista for G&M’s past and future response costs. Conoco/Vista filed a counterclaim two months later, also seeking relief under sections 107 and 113 of CERCLA. Meanwhile, the state court case was trifurcated for trial, with the first phase focused on whether the Interim Agreement tolled the statutes of limitations. Trial began in phase one in November 1997 and, while the jury was deliberating, Conoco/Vista took a voluntary non-suit and the state court judge dismissed the lawsuit.

After the district court granted partial summary judgment to G&M, Conoco/Vista amended their counterclaim to omit their section 107 CERCLA claim and to add the state common law claims. Ultimately, G&M voluntarily dismissed its complaint, leaving only Conoco/Vista’s CERCLA section 113 and state common law counterclaims at issue.

Less than a month before this case was to begin trial, G&M unsuccessfully sought leave to file a partial summary judgment motion on the basis that Conoco/Vista’s CERCLA counterclaim was time-barred. When the parties appeared for trial on the scheduled date, the district court discussed the case with counsel and suspended the start of the trial. Less than a week later, the district court granted summary judgment to G&M on several grounds including that the CERCLA claim was time-barred.

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Bluebook (online)
234 F.3d 917, 2000 WL 1752841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geraghty-miller-inc-v-conoco-inc-ca5-2000.