G.J. Leasing Company, Incorporated, Doing Business as Cahokia Marine Service and S.I. Enterprises, L.P. v. Union Electric Company

54 F.3d 379, 25 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 21039, 40 ERC (BNA) 1705, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 10063, 1995 WL 257885
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 4, 1995
Docket94-2972
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 54 F.3d 379 (G.J. Leasing Company, Incorporated, Doing Business as Cahokia Marine Service and S.I. Enterprises, L.P. v. Union Electric Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G.J. Leasing Company, Incorporated, Doing Business as Cahokia Marine Service and S.I. Enterprises, L.P. v. Union Electric Company, 54 F.3d 379, 25 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 21039, 40 ERC (BNA) 1705, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 10063, 1995 WL 257885 (7th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

POSNER, Chief Judge.

G.J. Leasing — we can ignore the other plaintiff — filed this suit in 1991 against Union Electric, which in 1979 had sold a 52-acre tract containing a decommissioned power plant to G.J. Leasing’s predecessor. The suit charges that the sale constituted the disposal (or the arranging of the disposal) of a hazardous substance, namely the asbestos in the plant. If this is right, then the seller, Union Electric, as the owner of the facility at which the hazardous substance was disposed of, or, equally, as the arranger of the disposal, was responsible under sections 107(a)(2) or (3) of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA) for the costs of cleaning up. 42 U.S.C. §§ 9607(a)(2), (3). The suit also charges that the sale constituted an abnormally dangerous activity within the meaning of Illinois tort law, making Union Electric strictly liable for the consequences, which include the clean-up costs. After resolving some issues, and refusing to resolve others, at the summary judgment stage, 825 *382 F.Supp. 1363 (S.D.Ill.1993), Chief Judge Gilbert conducted an eleven-day bench trial, after which he entered judgment for Union Electric accompanied by detañed findings of fact. 854 F.Supp. 539 (S.D.Ill.1994).

The appeal is marred by a grave error on the part of the appellant. In the part of its opening brief labeled “Standard of Review,” G.J. Leasing tells us that appellate review of the district judge’s resolution of mixed questions of law and fact is plenary. The term “mixed question of law and fact” refers to questions about the application of a rule or standard to the particular facts of the case. The question whether the defendant in a personal injury suit was negligent is a famüiar ülustration. For the proposition that the district judge’s answer to such questions (when he is the trier of fact, rather than merely presiding at a jury trial or reviewing an administrative determination) is to be given no deference by us, G.J. Leasing cited a single case, and from a different circuit. In this court the rule, to which there are some exceptions but none applicable to the CERC-LA issues, is that a district judge’s determinations of mixed questions of fact and law, as of questions purely of fact, can be set aside on appeal only if clearly erroneous. E.g., Williams v. Commissioner, 1 F.3d 502, 505 (7th Cir.1993). Union Electric pointed this out in its brief, to which G.J. Leasing responded weakly in its reply brief that “while there is divergence in this Circuit on the appropriate standard of review, the older and more prevailing rule is that when the trial court’s ultimate determination is a mixed question, it is more freely reviewable than under the ‘clearly erroneous’ test. That rule has not been overturned by this Court and must govern today.” It has been overturned. The three cases that G.J. Leasing cites for the “older and more prevailing rule” come two from the 1950s and one, the most recent, from 1976. It may be the older rule; it certainly is not the prevailing rule in this circuit.

G.J. Leasing’s misstep concerning the standard of review is important because many of the questions in the case are mixed questions of fact and law, such as whether the sale of the power-plant complex was the disposal or an arrangement for the disposal of a hazardous substance, whether Union Electric used due care in preparing the property for sale, and whether the costs that G.J. Leasing incurred to remove asbestos from the site were necessary. G.J. Leasing has explained why it thinks the answers given by the district judge were erroneous, but not why it thinks the errors clear enough to be reversible by us.

We have gotten ahead of our story, however, and must return to the beginning. The beginning is 1923, when Union Electric buñt and put into operation the Cahokia Power Plant, a major coal-burning electrical-generating plant, on a tract of land in an industrialized area along the Mississippi River in Sauget, Illinois, opposite St. Louis. The generation of electricity creates tremendous heat. As was common in those days, asbestos was used as the principal material for heat insulation, not only in the walls and ceilings of the plant itself but also in the boñers, generators, turbine, steam lines, and other equipment installed in it. The Cahokia Power Plant became the major source of electricity throughout its region. Later the plant was converted from coal to oü. By 1976 the 52-acre tract included not only the plant but also a warehouse, office buüding, truck-maintenance facility, several above-ground and underground petroleum storage tanks, and mooring rights on the river shore. The rub was that the plant, including its equipment, was obsolete. All of Union Electric’s demand was being supplied by its other plants, which were newer and cheaper to operate. Union Electric decided to decommission the plant, and it did so that year. The only motive in decommissioning was that the plant had become uneconomical. The fact that there was asbestos insulation in the building and its equipment played no role. And there is no evidence that if Union Electric had continued using the plant it would have had to do something about the asbestos. The asbestos was not leaking, and there is, as we shall see, no general duty to remove asbestos from a building.

Having no further use for the property, Union Electric decided to sell it lock, stock, and barrel, as is, with all equipment included. *383 It was understood that the purchaser, rather than using the power-generating equipment or removing it for sale to someone else who could use it, might decide to demolish it on the site in order to recover the considerable amount of iron, steel, copper, and lead that the equipment contained. But Union Electric had no interest in what a purchaser might want the property for. It just wanted to sell to the highest bidder and get out. It invited bids from 82 firms. Some were specialists in salvage. Others were manufacturers, oil companies, barge operators, and other companies that might have a use for the property other than as a mine of valuable metals. The bidders were invited to tour the property. The tours were interrupted by serious flooding which occurred in March 1978 and resulted in considerable damage to the now unoccupied power plant and its disused equipment. The district judge found, however, not clearly erroneously, that Union Electric cleaned up the property completely and that it was in excellent condition when the tours resumed.’

The high bidder (at $1.6 million) did turn out to be a salvage and demolition contractor, by the name of G & S Motor Equipment. The purchase was actually a joint venture between G & S and Sarnelli Brothers, another salvage contractor. One of the losing bidders was G.J. Leasing, which after losing went to G & S and Sarnelli and made the following deal: G & S and Sarnelli would resell the property to G.J. Leasing for $1 million, but Sarnelli would retain the right to salvage valuable metals from the power equipment. G.J. Leasing had no interest in recovering valuable metals. It was in the transportation business and wanted to develop the property as an intermodal transportation facility.

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Bluebook (online)
54 F.3d 379, 25 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 21039, 40 ERC (BNA) 1705, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 10063, 1995 WL 257885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gj-leasing-company-incorporated-doing-business-as-cahokia-marine-ca7-1995.