In re Mount Royal Associates

66 Pa. D. & C.2d 426
CourtPennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board
DecidedJanuary 25, 1974
Docketdocket no. 72-392-W
StatusPublished

This text of 66 Pa. D. & C.2d 426 (In re Mount Royal Associates) 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 Mount Royal Associates, 66 Pa. D. & C.2d 426 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1974).

Opinion

WATERS, Member,

This is a matter that comes before the board as a complaint for the imposition of civil penalty under the Clean Streams Law of June 22, 1937, JP. L. 1987, as amended, 35 PS §69í.l et seq. ~

Defendant, Mt. Royal Associates (hereinafter “Mt. Royal”), is alleged to have improperly hooked up its newly constructed 100-unit apartment building, Mt. Royal Towers, to a storm sewer in the City of Pittsburgh, rather than to the sewer line some distance away. The Department of Environmental Resources (hereinafter “department”), contended that raw sewage was, therefore, being discharged to a stream known as Nine Mile Run, which is a tributary to the Monongahela River. The improper connection and the discharge were corrected some 11 months after its discovery, but it is argued that this delay was inordinate and intentional, calling for substantial penalties.

[427]*427FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiff herein is the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Environmental Resources, on petition for civil penalties.

2. Defendant is Mt. Royal Associates, a limited partnership.

3. Mt. Royal owns a 100-unit apartment complex located on Forward Avenue in the City of Pittsburgh.

4. On January 3, 1972, signs of a raw sewage discharge into Nine Mile Run were observed by John Hulsberg, an employe at the Allegheny County Health Department.

5. John Hulsberg made a dye test at Mt. Royal on January 5, 1972; the result showed that raw sewage from the building was being discharged into Nine Mile Run.

6. A violation notice was sent to defendant on January 7, 1972, notifying them that they were violating the law and requesting that they limit further occupancy of the building until the sewage discharge could be abated.

7. The discharge of raw sewage from Mt. Royal into Nine Mile Run created a potential health hazard.

8. Repeated observations of Nine Mile Run below the point of discharge by County Health Department personnel revealed fecal matter, toilet paper, and other general signs of raw sewage discharge these signs were also observed from the point of discharge to the stream mouth, a distance of approximately 800 to 900 yards.

9. It was agreed at a March 7, 1972, meeting attended by Mt. Royal, the City, County and department that:

A. The city would recommend to the parties alternative means by which Mt. Royal’s sewage discharge [428]*428could be abated by tapping the apartment’s sewer line into a city sanitary sewer.

B. Mt. Royal was to notify the parties of its legal position with regard to the entire matter.

10. The city communicated its recommendations to the parties pursuant to the March 7, 1972, agree-

•ment, but Mt. Royal did not fulfill its promise to apprise the parties of its legal position.

11. The city in a letter of March 17, 1972, made the following recommendations for abating Mt. Royal’s discharge into Nine Mile Run.

“Our recommendations, not necessarily in order of preference are:

“A. Connect the sanitary sewage plumbing of the apartments into the existing manhole of the 15" city sewer from Mt. Royal Boulevard which is about 100 feet from the apartment building. However, this sewer will only be able to serve the upper nine floors of the apartment by gravity flow and will necessitate the installation of a pump to serve the remaining lower floors.
“B. Construct a new sanitary sewer from a point on the present apartment sewer on the south edge of Forward Avenue westwardly to the existing 24" city sewer at the east portal of the Squirrel Hill Tunnels. This would permit the entire apartment sanitary sewage flow to be served by gravity and would involve the installation of approximately 700 feet of sanitary sewer over city and privately owned property. An easement and ordinance permitting this installation would be necessary.
“C. Construct a new sanitary sewer from a point on the present apartment sewer directly ahead of its entry into the Penn DOT storm sewer manhole off the north berm of the Parkway to the existing 54" city sewer along the east bank of Nine Mile Run beneath [429]*429the Parkway bridge. This would permit the entire apartment sanitary sewage flow to be served by gravity and would involve the installation of approximately 550 feet of sanitary sewer over privately owned property. It would also involve the crossing of Nine Mile Run for which a Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources stream crossing permit would be required. An easement and an ordinance permitting this installation would be necessary.”

12. The Commonwealth and county filed an equity action in the latter part of May 1972, seeking to enjoin Mt. Royal from violating the Clean Streams Law.

13. Donald Bierwerth, consulting engineer for Mt. Royal, testified that as an expert and as a disinterested engineer, the city’s alternative (a), a force main pump station, and the method ultimately selected, was the best available means to abate the sewage discharge, rather than alternative (c), which was selected by Mt. Royal.

14. By the end of August 1972, the county and the Commonwealth noted Mt. Royal’s violation of the preliminary consent decree which had been entered on June 28, 1972, and sought to further review the matter before the Court of Common Pleas.

15. On August 31, 1972, the parties to the preliminary consent order entered into a second consent agreement referred to as the interim consent order.

16. Mt. Royal failed to comply with the major portions of the provisions of the interim consent order in that:

A. Mt. Royal again failed to provide the court, the Commonwealth and the county with the tenant list.

B. Mt. Royal failed to apply to the county and Commonwealth by September 1, 1972, for the permits to connect its existing sewer discharge pipe to the city’s 54-inch sanitary sewer. Such connection was an integral part of alternative (c) which had been chosen [430]*430by Mt. Royal from the three alternatives advanced by the city.

C. Mt. Royal failed to submit by September 1, 1972, all necessary engineering plans and diagrams to the Commonwealth’s Department of Environmental Resources for obtaining a stream crossing permit for the encroachment into Nine Mile Run necessary under alternative (c).

D. Mt. Royal failed to submit a written report to the city and county on the status of the right-of-way negotiations it had allegedly been engaged in with the Irish Center of Pittsburgh and Duquesne Slag Products Company.

17. By the middle of September 1972, the Commonwealth noted that most of the provisions of the interim consent order which were to have been completed by September 1, 1972, had not been complied with.

18. The. attorney for Mt. Royal stated for the purposes of the several consent orders that 91 apartments were rented and/or occupied on June 22, 1972; and nine apartments were not rented or occupied.

19. The leases subpoenaed by plaintiff, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and entered into the record as department Exhibit K, reveal that the rental price of an apartment at Mt. Royal Towers is anywhere from $200 to $225 for one bedroom apartments and from $250 to $325 for two bedroom apartments.

20.

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