Joe McHaney D/B/A Envirosol Environmental Services v. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 2015
Docket03-13-00280-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Joe McHaney D/B/A Envirosol Environmental Services v. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (Joe McHaney D/B/A Envirosol Environmental Services v. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joe McHaney D/B/A Envirosol Environmental Services v. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-13-00280-CV

Joe McHaney d/b/a Envirosol Environmental Services, Appellant

v.

Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 250TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. D-1-GN-09-003350, HONORABLE GISELA D. TRIANA, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality commissioners concluded that

Joe McHaney d/b/a Envirosol Environmental Services violated TCEQ regulations. TCEQ assessed

$29,903 in penalties, $22,500 of which were based on McHaney’s failure to make five hazardous-

waste determinations. McHaney appeals from the district court’s judgment affirming TCEQ’s order,

contending that the district court should have reversed the order because the commissioners

(1) violated his due process rights by penalizing him on a theory that he did not get a meaningful

chance to refute, (2) erred by modifying the administrative law judge’s findings without legal or

factual justification in the record, and (3) impermissibly tried to resolve the “paradox of no

documentation” through ad hoc rulemaking in an enforcement proceeding rather than formal

rulemaking. We will affirm the judgment. BACKGROUND

McHaney ran Envirosol, a waste management facility that handled wastes including

paint products and oily water. The facility caught TCEQ investigator Jim Kerlin’s attention when

he drove past and noticed several 55-gallon drums sitting outside. Kerlin photographed the facility,

then returned two weeks later. He said he saw rusting, bulging, and leaking containers—some

labeled, some not. He notified McHaney of possible regulatory violations from the failure to

properly characterize waste on the property. McHaney provided some documentation identifying

wastes received and sent elsewhere, but Kerlin was not satisfied that McHaney had made the waste

determinations and classifications required by regulations.

Kerlin filed an investigative report noting that wastes were stored at Envirosol in

about six hundred 55-gallon drums, nine “tote tanks,” and one 1,600-gallon tank. The investigative

report described six waste streams: (1) “universal waste”1 accumulated for less than a year,

(2) universal waste accumulated for more than one year and regulated as solid waste, (3) hazardous

1 “Universal waste” was defined by regulation in effect in 2005 to be

(i) batteries, as described in 40 CFR § 273.2;

(ii) pesticides, as described in 40 CFR § 273.3;

(iii) thermostats as described in 40 CFR § 273.4;

(iv) paint and paint-related waste as described in § 335.262(b) of this title (relating to Standards for Management of Paint and Paint-Related Waste); and

(v) lamps, as described in 40 CFR § 273.5.

30 Tex. Admin. Code § 335.261(b)(16)(F) (2005) (Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality, Universal Waste Rule). McHaney undisputedly collected paint and paint-related waste.

2 and nonhazardous wastes transported to and stored at the site for more than ten days, (4) industrial

and hazardous recyclable material transported to the site and stored for greater than twenty-four

hours, (5) hazardous and nonhazardous wastes generated from on-site activities, and (6) the contents

of the 1,600-gallon tank prior to shipping wastes to an unauthorized facility.

TCEQ’s executive director filed a notice of enforcement alleging that McHaney failed

to keep records of waste activities regarding the type, amounts, location, and disposition of wastes

generated and/or stored at the facility. He also alleged that hazardous waste determinations had

not been made on six waste streams stored in six hundred 55-gallon drums, nine tote tanks, and

one 1,600-gallon tank. TCEQ’s executive director recommended penalties of $52,628, including

a $27,000 fine for the failure to make the determinations.

At the hearing before an administrative law judge, McHaney and TCEQ’s Kerlin

agreed that the paperwork requirements for universal waste are not as stringent as those for other

wastes, but Kerlin asserted that McHaney had the burden to demonstrate through documentation,

testing, or some other methodology that he characterized the waste as required. Kerlin testified

that streamlined record-keeping requirements might allow universal waste facilities to maintain

compliant records that obscured noncompliance with categorization requirements, thereby making

enforcement essentially impossible—a situation described as the “paradox of no documentation.”

The ALJ who held the hearing recommended dismissing several allegations

but recommended $51,453 in penalties on the remaining violations, including $27,000 for the

failure to make necessary determinations. A second ALJ who addressed the parties’ exceptions to

that recommendation stated that documents showing that wastes from six streams were brought to

3 a facility did not prove that wastes from those six categories were still at the facility. The second

ALJ opined, however, that McHaney violated regulations by failing to make a hazardous-waste

determination regarding each of 410 containers—the 1,600-gallon tank, the nine tote tanks, and

four hundred 55-gallon drums—which, with adjustments, would result in a $2.05 million fine.

Because that amount far exceeded any fine sought previously, the second ALJ proposed a fine for six

failures, which would equal the $27,000 fine previously requested by the TCEQ executive director.

The TCEQ commissioners agreed with the finding that McHaney failed to make the

requisite determinations on at least the 410 containers described by the second ALJ, but took a

slightly different approach in calculating and assessing the penalty. They divided the containers into

five “discrete areas of observation,” including three groups of drums (outside along the southwest

to eastern portions of the site, in a stationary box trailer located on the eastern portion of the site, and

inside a building), nine tote tanks, and one 1,600-gallon tank. TCEQ fined McHaney $4,500 for one

violation in each group for a total of $22,500, and assessed various other penalties that resulted in

a grand total of $29,903 in fines. The district court affirmed TCEQ’s order.

REGULATORY FRAMEWORK

Generators of waste are required to determine if their waste generated is hazardous

under Texas law and federal regulations and must classify any solid waste deemed nonhazardous.

30 Tex. Admin. Code §§ 335.62, .503 (2005) (Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality, Hazardous Waste

Determination and Waste Classification, Waste Classification and Waste Coding Required). The

term “generator” includes any person who possesses municipal hazardous waste or industrial solid

4 waste to be shipped to any other person and any person whose act first causes the solid waste to

become subject to regulation under this chapter. See id. § 335.1(65).

Generators can determine whether a waste is hazardous by testing it or by applying

“process knowledge.” See id.; see also 40 C.F.R.

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