Jones v. Ashland Chemical Company, Unpublished Decision (5-9-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 9, 2000
DocketNo. 99AP-764.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jones v. Ashland Chemical Company, Unpublished Decision (5-9-2000) (Jones v. Ashland Chemical Company, Unpublished Decision (5-9-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Ashland Chemical Company, Unpublished Decision (5-9-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

DECISION
Appellant, Christopher Jones, in his capacity as Director of the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency ("OEPA") appeals from a decision of the Environmental Review Appeals Commission ("ERAC") reversing a prior determination of the OEPA and finding that appellee, Ashland Chemical Company, was not subject to application of Ohio Adm. Code 3745-21-07(G)(2) as interpreted by the OEPA and applied to certain Ashland Chemical Company facilities.

The facts in the present matter are largely undisputed. Appellee Ashland Chemical Company ("Ashland") is a manufacturer and distributor of chemical products. As part of its network of distribution operations, Ashland operates a small distribution facility located at 200 Darrow Road, Akron, Ohio. Ashland uses the Darrow Road facility to store chemicals received in bulk quantities, and ultimately transfer various chemical products from large storage tanks and tank cars into smaller containers for shipping to Ashland's customers. The parties have stipulated that no manufacturing or chemical reactions occur at the Darrow Road facility. The three specific container-filling lines in question at the Darrow Road facility fill numerous containers every day for distribution. Each filling line is capable of blending chemicals and adding different chemicals to the same smaller container to meet customer specifications.

Most of the chemicals transferred into smaller containers for distribution at the Darrow Road facility are liquids. Many of the compounds fall into certain regulated categories and definitions as "organic compounds" (Ohio Adm. Code3745-21-01[B][4]), "organic materials" (Ohio Adm. Code3745-21-01[C][4]), and "liquid organic materials" (Ohio Adm. Code3745-21-01[C][3]). Some of the organic materials in question are comprised of "photochemically reactive materials" (Ohio Adm. Code3745-21-01[C][5]), and are particularly subject to close regulation because, in reaction with other atmospheric compounds, they can combine to create ozone, a principal component of smog.

Pursuant to Ohio Adm. Code 3745-35-02(A) and R.C.3704.05(A), an entity operating a potential source of air pollution must obtain a Permit to Operate ("PTO") through application to the OEPA. In the 1997 PTO's issued for Ashland's Darrow Road container-filling lines, among other pertinent regulations, the OEPA identified Ohio Adm. Code 3745-21-07(G)(2) as applicable to the Darrow Road facility. This rule imposes a cap on hourly and daily emissions of organic materials from each container-filling line, and a number of associated record keeping and reporting obligations.

Ashland filed an appeal to ERAC disputing the inclusion of Ohio Adm. Code 3745-21-07(G)(2) in the PTOs as applicable to the container-filling lines. Following a hearing de novo, ERAC issued its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and final order determining that OEPA had unlawfully interpreted the applicability of Ohio Adm. Code 3745-21-07(G)(2), and ordering that mention of this rule be removed from the Darrow Road PTOs. Appellant has timely appealed ERAC's determination and brings the following assignment of error:

The Environmental Review Appeals Commission's ruling that the Director unlawfully interpreted the applicability of Ohio Adm. Code Rule 3745-21-07(G)(2) is not in accordance with law and is not supported by reliable, probative and substantial evidence.

R.C. 3745.06 provides that, upon an appeal to this court from ERAC, "[t]he court shall affirm the order complained of in the appeal if it finds, upon consideration of the entire record and such additional evidence as the court has admitted, that the order is supported by reliable, probative, and substantial evidence and is in accordance with law." In applying this standard, this court has stated as follows:

[I]n reviewing a decision of Director, [ERAC] is limited to considering whether the director's action was unreasonable or unlawful, given the evidence presented at the de novo hearing. * * * In contrast, the appellate court is charged with determining whether [ERAC's] decision concerning the reasonableness and lawfulness of Director's decision is supported by reliable, probative and substantial evidence and is in accordance with law.

Red Hill Farm Trust v. Schregardus (1995), 102 Ohio App.3d 90, 95.

The present case is one of legal interpretation of the language of the applicable regulations, and the parties have largely stipulated to the material facts.1 Because the pertinent facts in the present matter are not disputed, the case turns upon interpretation and application of the regulation at issue, Ohio Adm. Code 3745-21-07(G)(2). This rule is in the context of Ohio Adm. Code 3745-21-07, which generally regulates the emission of organic materials from stationary sources, such as storage facilities and manufacturing plants. Within its broad goal of regulating emissions of organic materials, Ohio Adm. Code3745-21-07 has specific subsections addressing both various types of compounds and various operations requiring such compounds. Some subsections provide a general aspirational mandate: "Except as otherwise provided in this rule, all new stationary emission sources of photochemically reactive materials shall minimize such emissions by use of the latest available control techniques and operating practices in accordance with best current technology." Ohio Adm. Code 3745-21-07(B). Other subsections address specific applications for certain organic chemicals: Ohio Adm. Code3745-21-07(D), for example, which controls storage of volatile photochemically reactive materials, and Ohio Adm. Code3745-21-07(E), which addresses loading facilities for volatile photochemically reactive materials being transferred into tank trucks or railroad tank cars, and requires a vapor collection and disposal system. Ohio Adm. Code 3745-21-07(E)(1).

The subsection at issue in the present case, Ohio Adm. Code 3745-21-07(G), provides as follows:

(G) Operations using liquid organic material:

(1) A person shall not discharge more than fifteen pounds of organic materials into the atmosphere in any one day, nor more than three pounds in any one hour, from any article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance in which any liquid organic material or substance containing liquid organic material comes into contact with flame or is baked, heat-cured, or heat-polymerized, in the presence of oxygen, unless said discharge has been reduced by at least eighty-five per cent.

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Related

Red Hill Farm Trust v. Schregardus
656 N.E.2d 1010 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1995)
Pizza v. Sunset Fireworks Co.
494 N.E.2d 1115 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1986)
State v. Moaning
76 Ohio St. 3d 126 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1996)
Delli Bovi v. Pacific Indemnity Co.
708 N.E.2d 693 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
Jones v. Ashland Chemical Company, Unpublished Decision (5-9-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-ashland-chemical-company-unpublished-decision-5-9-2000-ohioctapp-2000.