Holbrook v. Cadle Prop. of Connecticut, No. Cv97-0567429 (Dec. 4, 2000)

2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 16344, 29 Conn. L. Rptr. 167
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 4, 2000
DocketNo. CV97-0567429
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 16344 (Holbrook v. Cadle Prop. of Connecticut, No. Cv97-0567429 (Dec. 4, 2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holbrook v. Cadle Prop. of Connecticut, No. Cv97-0567429 (Dec. 4, 2000), 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 16344, 29 Conn. L. Rptr. 167 (Colo. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AFTER HEARING IN DAMAGES
This action, filed on January 15, 1997, seeks enforcement of Department of Environmental Protection pollution abatement Order No. SRD-071 ("the order"). Pursuant to General Statutes § 22a-432, that order was imposed upon to the defendant Cadle Properties of Connecticut, Inc. (Cadle Properties) on June 14, 1996 regarding its property located at 51 Albany Turnpike in Canton, Connecticut ("the site"). The soil and groundwater at this site have been contaminated with industrial solvents. The Commissioner of Environmental Protection seeks the assessment of civil penalties against the defendant, whom it alleges to have violated both the order and General Statutes § 22a-134 et seq., known as the Transfer Act in connection with this property. The Commissioner also seeks injunctive relief requiring the defendant to comply with the order. The defendant contests its liability for civil penalties or equitable relief. For the reasons set forth below, the court finds this matter in favor of the plaintiff Commissioner.

The history of this file reflects that on February 17, 2000, a finding of default was entered against Cadle Properties after the court granted the defendant's third counsel permission to withdraw from the case on January 24, 2000. At the subsequently scheduled hearing in damages, the defendant's fourth counsel filed an appearance in this matter. The defendant did not file a Motion to Set Aside the Default pursuant to Practice Book § 17-42.1 Furthermore, the defendant did not file a CT Page 16345 Notice of Defenses within the time period allowed in Practice Book §§17-342 and 17-35.3 Absent such a notice, the defendant is not entitled to have the trier of fact consider evidence for the purpose of contradicting any of the allegations in the plaintiff's complaint, except such as relating to the amount of damages. In this case, the issue of damages related to the requested assignment of civil penalties and equitable obligations. Practice Book § 17-34.

The hearing in damages commenced on April 12, 2000, and proceeded through eight days of both lay and expert testimony, and the presentation of voluminous documentary exhibits. Counsel for both parties submitted lengthy and detailed post-trial briefs, addressing multiple issues of law and fact. Oral argument was delivered on July 24, 2000.

I. FACTUAL BASIS FOR DECISION
Based upon the evidence received at trial, the court makes the following findings of fact:

The defendant Cadle Properties is an Ohio corporation, registered to do business in the State of Connecticut, but maintaining a principal place of business at 4363 LaFrance Street, Newton Falls, Ohio. Daniel Cadle (D. Cadle) holds the office of president of Cadle Properties. In the fall of 1994, through procedures described below, Cadle Properties acquired ownership of a 1.7 acre parcel of commercial property at 51 Albany Turnpike, Canton, Connecticut. The site is zoned for commercial use, and has been leased to a retail car dealership in recent years.

Between approximately 1951 and 1972, the J. Swift Chemical Company, Inc. ("Swift"), who then owned the site, engaged in the business of recycling spent industrial solvents for resale and/or reuse. Swift's owners are all deceased. In 1969 or 1970, Swift caused the contamination of the real property at the site by dumping spent industrial solvents in this location. Those solvents, which constituted hazardous waste materials, contained the compounds Tetrachloroethylene, Trichloroethylene and Xylene. The DEP's first record of the discharge of solvents at the site was in 1978. J. Swift Chemical Company discontinued this business by 1972.

On November 28, 1978, the Department of Environmental Protection ("DEP") issued a pollution abatement order to Auto World Realty, Ltd., who owned and utilized the site after Swift, operating a retail operation for the sale of automobiles.4 In due course, this order was recorded on the land records in the Town of Canton. Subsequently, on September 23, 1986, Auto World conveyed the site to Gianfranco Galluzzo. Thereafter, on January 26, 1989, as the result of the continued CT Page 16346 contaminated condition of the site, the DEP issued Order No. HM-568 to Galluzzo. This order also was recorded on the land records for the Town of Canton. Galluzzo did not comply with the order. Thereafter, the DEP nominated the site for inclusion upon Connecticut's superfund priority list for environmentally hazardous properties, because the site was deemed to have significant contamination and to represent an unacceptable risk to the public health and welfare.

In 1990, in the face of Galluzzo's noncompliance, the DEP had expended state finds and arranged for engineering consultants to conduct a remedial investigation and feasibility study concerning the status of the real property at this site. Final reports related to this work were submitted to the DEP in December 1993. To explicate the results of this investigation and study at trial, and to opine concerning the effects of the nature and extent of the unremediated contamination at the site, the plaintiff produced the testimony of Paul Jameson, an environmental analyst with an extensive background in physical geography and geology who had been employed by the DEP for approximately eleven years, and Elsie Patton, an expert hydrologist, who has been employed by the DEP for approximately nineteen years.5

Through the cogent and credible testimony of Patton and Jameson, the plaintiff established that the primary contaminants remaining in the soil and groundwater at the site were found to be the industrial solvents known as Tetrachloroethylene, also known as Perchloroethylene, Trichloroethylene and Xylene. In the early 1990's, tests performed at the site yielded reliable data concerning the presence of these toxic chemical compounds in both the groundwater and the soil at that location. The groundwater at the site registered concentrations of Tetrachioroethylene at levels up to 80,000 parts per billion: the drinking water standard for that compound is a maximum level of 5 parts per billion. The soil at the site registered concentrations of Tetrachioroethylene at levels up to 1,000 parts per million: the residential direct exposure criterion, which is the applicable soil standard for that compound, is 12 parts per million. Tetrachloroethylene and Trichloroethylene are both cancer-causing compounds that pose a risk to persons using the property and coming into direct or indirect contact with the soil containing these contaminants or with the water that has been exposed to the contaminants.

Patton's credible and consistent expert testimony established that every time it rains, water dissolves a portion of the contaminants that have aggregated and remain in the soil at the site, causing these cancer-causing compounds to seep into the water table, where the additional contaminants migrate to other properties.6 The "plume," or flow of groundwater at this site, has not reached equilibrium during the CT Page 16347 passage of time since the late 1970's.

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

Related

Boardwalk Realty Associates, LLC v. M & S Gateway Associates, LLC
340 Conn. 115 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2021)
Canton v. Cadle Properties of Connecticut, Inc.
204 A.3d 62 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 16344, 29 Conn. L. Rptr. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holbrook-v-cadle-prop-of-connecticut-no-cv97-0567429-dec-4-2000-connsuperct-2000.