Hanscom’s Truck Stop v. Portsmouth

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 10, 1998
DocketCV-98-488-B
StatusPublished

This text of Hanscom’s Truck Stop v. Portsmouth (Hanscom’s Truck Stop v. Portsmouth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanscom’s Truck Stop v. Portsmouth, (D.N.H. 1998).

Opinion

Hanscom’s Truck Stop v . Portsmouth CV-98-488-B 11/10/98 P

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Hanscom’s Truck Stop, Inc.

v. Civil N o . 98-488-B

City of Portsmouth

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION

The motion for a preliminary injunction (document n o . 2 )

filed by plaintiff, Hanscom’s Truck Stop, Inc. (“Hanscom’s”), has

been referred to me for a report and recommendation, in

accordance with 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(B). For the reasons stated

below, I recommend that defendant, the City of Portsmouth

(“City”), be preliminarily enjoined from enforcing City Ordinance

7.706 (“Ordinance”), with respect to certain truck engines and

refrigeration units at Hanscom’s, as specified below. Background

Hanscom’s filed this action for declaratory and injunctive

relief, based on an argument that the Surface Transportation

Assistance Act of 1982 (“Act”), as amended, 49 U.S.C. § 31114,

pre-empts the Ordinance. Hanscom’s has moved for a preliminary

injunction to prevent the City from enforcing the Ordinance.

An evidentiary hearing, with both parties present, was held on October 2 8 , 1998. Samuel “Buzzy” Hanscom, president of Hanscom’s, appeared as the only witness, and exhibits were admitted into evidence. The following facts were established: Route 1 Bypass (“Bypass”) is a four-lane, divided highway, running for approximately one mile through Portsmouth, New Hampshire from the Portsmouth Traffic Circle to the Sarah Mildred Long Bridge, linking Portsmouth to Kittery, Maine. The City has designated the Bypass as a through truck route within its boundaries.

Hanscom’s has operated truck stops on the north- and south- bound sides of the Bypass for more than thirty years. The truck stops are within one mile of Interstate 95 and the Spaulding Turnpike, which intersect at the Portsmouth Traffic Circle. Hanscom’s is one of only three service stations on the Bypass that offer diesel fuel. Hanscom’s north-bound and south-bound operations, together, provide a takeout restaurant, showers, tire repairs, truck-related supplies, eighteen diesel pumps, and parking for at least eleven trucks. Hanscom’s is virtually ringed by residences on the east side of the Bypass.

The average trucker refueling at Hanscom’s stays approximately twenty to thirty minutes. Truckers using the showers or the take-out counter typically stay an hour or more, and drivers often park overnight, especially during bad weather.

2 Hanscom’s tire repair facility operates twenty-four hours per day, 365 days per year. It is the only repair facility offering such hours along Interstate 95 from Fairfield, Maine (approximately 140 miles to the north) to Massachusetts or Connecticut to the south. As a result, a large part of Hanscom’s business is repairing or replacing blown truck tires, a process that usually takes one hour.

The majority of drivers using Hanscom’s are transporting food products between Canada or Maine and points South. Typically, south-bound trucks carry frozen foods (e.g., seafood and potato products) or fresh foods (including lobsters, fish, potatoes, and blueberries). Northbound loads are typically fresh fruits or vegetables. Tractor-trailers with refrigeration units comprise the majority of Hanscom’s business.

Drivers use refrigeration units to maintain the quality of frozen or fresh foods. During the winter, drivers transporting fresh foods use their refrigeration units to prevent freezing. During the summer, frozen foods, in particular, must be kept at temperatures (such a s , for frozen scallops, 0B to -10B Fahrenheit) that require operation of the refrigeration units. Newer units operate by cycling up and down, but many older units operate continuously to maintain the proper temperature. Truckers very seldom turn off their refrigeration units.

3 Cold winter weather also presents a problem for diesel engines. In cold weather, diesel fuel starts to congeal and will be harder to ignite. Thus, drivers who stop their trucks during cold weather often run their engines to warm the engine block.1 In January 1991, the City adopted Ordinance 7.706, which

prevents the continuous operation of trucks and refrigeration units at service stations and truck stops on the Bypass. The

Ordinance was designed to address citizen complaints regarding

fumes and noise from trucks stopped near the neighborhoods by the

Bypass. The Ordinance provides, in pertinent part: Section 7.706: Limited Operation of Truck Diesel Engines and/or Refrigeration Units A. It shall be unlawful for the type of trucks designated in Section 7.702 to operate their

1 The temperature at which diesel begins to congeal, the cloud point, is affected by the presence of certain additives: During winter months, diesel fuel is typically blended with jet-A, kerosene, or number one fuel oil to lower the cloud point in cold climate regions. Undiluted number two diesel fuel typically has a cloud point (the temperature at which a cloud of wax crystals first appears) of around 12 degrees F. Since the consequences of such solids plugging fuel lines or other engine parts are catastrophic, operators and fuel suppliers take the precaution of blending number two diesel fuel with lighter fuels to ensure that the mixture will not reach its cloud point.

Preamble, Regulation of Fuels and Fuel Additives: Fuel Quality Regulations for Highway Diesel Fuel Sold in 1993 and Later Calendar Years, 55 Fed. Reg. 34120, 34129 (Aug. 2 1 , 1990).

4 diesel engines or refrigeration units for more than fifteen (15) minutes while resting or refueling at any service station, truck stop, or truck rest or repair area located on the Route 1 By-Pass within the City of Portsmouth. . . . B. Any person who violates any provision of Section 7.706-A shall be fined not more than $50.00 for each offense.2 M r . Hanscom testified that the Ordinance was not enforced for the first five to six years after it was adopted. Beginning in November 1997, the Portsmouth police often parked a cruiser at Hanscom’s, apparently to observe parked trucks. According to Mr. Hanscom, such intensive surveillance ended in January 1998. I found this testimony to be very credible, in light of my observations of Mr. Hanscom’s demeanor and the other evidence.

Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2 is a notice dated December 1997 directing Portsmouth police cruisers to observe Hanscom’s lots and the roadways around them to enforce State laws and City ordinances, including Ordinance 7.706, “pertaining to parking, noise, etc.”

Only two summonses have been issued under the Ordinance, the

2 The Ordinance expressly limits truck and refrigeration unit operation while “refueling” or “resting,” without reference to trucks obtaining repairs. The precise construction of the Ordinance with respect to its coverage of repairs is beyond the scope of my report and recommendation, since the statute at issue, 49 U.S.C. § 31114(a), refers to resting and refueling, as well. Moreover, the parties presented no evidence as to whether the Ordinance is enforced against trucks obtaining repairs.

5 first in June 1998 and the second in August 1998. Both were for

tractor-trailers with refrigeration units, observed to be

operating for more than fifteen minutes at Hanscom’s. According

to counsel, these two enforcement proceedings have been continued

pending the outcome of this action.

Discussion

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