In re Gossett

60 Pa. D. & C.2d 196
CourtPennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board
DecidedJuly 25, 1972
DocketNo. 71-125
StatusPublished

This text of 60 Pa. D. & C.2d 196 (In re Gossett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Gossett, 60 Pa. D. & C.2d 196 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1972).

Opinion

MALIN,

Chairman,

This is an appeal from an order of the Department of Environmental Resources dated November 15, 1971, directing appellants to allow the department or persons designated by the department to enter their property to remove gasoline products polluting the ground water. Hearings were held on January 20, February 3, and February 10, 1972, before M. Melvin Shralow, Esq., Hearing Examiner. Appellants’ request for supersedeas was granted pending final adjudication.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Joseph W. Gossett, Jr., and Lucinda C. Gossett, his wife, (“appellants”) are the owners of real estate known as 5130 East Trindle Road, Hampden Township, Cumberland County, Pa.

2. Appellants’ land is located in an area which also contains tank farms for the storage of refined petroleum products and pipelines for the transmission of those products. The tank farms are owned by Atlantic [198]*198Richfield Company (Arco), Gulf Oil Corporation, and American Oil Company. The pipelines are owned by Atlantic Pipeline Company and Laurel Pipeline Company. The products stored in the tanks and transmitted through the pipelines are gasoline, kerosene and fuel oil.

3. In about the first week of June 1969, it was discovered that there was gasoline in the ground in the general vicinity of appellants’ property. The Department of Environmental Resources (“department”) immediately began an investigation to determine the source of the gasoline and the extent of the contamination.

4. Representatives of the oil companies and pipeline companies met with representatives of the department and a joint task force was set up under the direction of Wesley Gilbertson, Deputy Secretary for Environmental Protection.

5. It has been determined that the gasoline pool extends over an area of approximately one-third square mile. The source of the gasoline has not been determined and was not the subject of testimony in this record.

6. There are indications that the pool is migrating slowly into other areas.

7. The gasoline poses a severe health and safety hazard. There have been explosions and fires in homes in the area. Gasoline has leaked into basements. It has appeared on the surface of the land. Its fumes have infiltrated homes and other buildings. Several fires have broken out as a result of it. It has made the ground water in the area unfit for use by humans, wildlife and other natural life in the soils. It has killed vegetation in the area.

8. Since August of 1969 the task force has attempted [199]*199to monitor the quantity of gasoline in the ground water and to remove the gasoline by pumping.

9. The coordinator of the task force has been Richard Rhindress, a ground water geologist employed by the department. The task force has used labor supplied either by the Atlantic Richfield Company or by the Atlantic Pipeline Company. The labor has been supplied without charge to the Commonwealth.

10. The situation in general and particular incidents of explosion and fire have been investigated by the State Fire Marshal. Tests were also conducted by the Public Utilities Commission.

11. The ground water, which carries the gasoline with it, moves along fracture zones beneath the surface of the soil. The method adopted for removal of the gasoline has been to drill wells at various locations throughout the area, to monitor the wells on a regular basis to determine when gasoline appears in them, and then to pump out the gasoline and water from the well.

12. There are approximately 46 wells in the area which are monitored and pumped. One of those wells is on the property of appellants.

13. From the inception of the program to the time of the hearing, the task force had pumped out approximately 217,000 gallons of gasoline. It is not known how much remains.

14. The well on appellants’ property has been one of the most productive wells. Approximately 221/2 percent of the total gasoline removed from all wells has been taken from the well on appellants’ property.

15. Damage to appellants’ property has occurred as a result of this process. Tank trucks and other vehicles have been driven across appellants’ property. [200]*200Private vehicles of the men engaged in the work also have been driven across the property.

16. Damage also has been caused by the manner in which the pumping was done. The technique had been to pump the gasoline and water mixture into the tank truck and then drain off the water onto the surface of the land. Appellants complained of this procedure and the task force then trucked away all of the liquid for drainage at another point.

17. Damage also was caused by the task force leaving the well on appellants’ property uncapped. The well then overflowed at times of high water table, leaving water and gasoline on the surface of the land. This procedure also has been changed.

18. Since October 1971, appellants have denied the department and members of the task force access to the well on their property. Since that time, monitoring and pumping from that well have ceased.

19.' Gasoline remains in the ground in the area and the extreme hazards to life, health and property continue. In fact, the removal of large quantities of liquid gasoline may result in increased gasoline fumes, which create an even greater hazard than the liquid.

20. The department seeks access to the well on appellants’ property for the purpose of continuing the monitoring and pumping of the well.

21. It is the intention of the department to continue monitoring and pumping the well until all traces of the gasoline have been removed. No time limit has been set or estimated for accomplishing this purpose.

DISCUSSION

It is agreed by all parties that a highly dangerous situation exists in the area in which appellants’ property is located. The incidents of fire and explosion have been numerous, and the threat of additional [201]*201occurrences of this type continues. In fact, several families in the area have left their residences, apparently as a result of the properties having been purchased by the oil companies involved.

It is clear from the record that appellants have done nothing to cause this problem. They are suffering not only from the physical damage caused by the presence of the gasoline and the psychological pressures from the threat it poses to life and property, but also from the physical damage caused by access to and pumping from the well on their property.

Appellants’ main contention is that the damage they have suffered is so extensive that, in effect, their property has been taken from them. They do not object to the remedial program undertaken by the Commonwealth and the oil companies, but assert that they should be paid for their property so that the program may continue. The order appealed from directs appellants to permit access to the well on their property but does not deal with the question of damages. The issues for us are whether the department has the power to issue such an order and, if so, whether the absence of a damage remedy in the order makes it invalid.

I. The Clean Streams Law

Section 316 of the Clean Streams Law of June 22, 1937, P. L. 1987, as amended, 35 PS §691.316, provides in pertinent part:

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Bluebook (online)
60 Pa. D. & C.2d 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gossett-paenvhrbd-1972.