L.B. Foster Co. v. State

106 S.W.3d 194, 2003 WL 1563989
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 13, 2003
Docket01-01-00299-CR, 01-01-00300-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 106 S.W.3d 194 (L.B. Foster Co. v. State) 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
L.B. Foster Co. v. State, 106 S.W.3d 194, 2003 WL 1563989 (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

LAURA CARTER HIGLEY, Justice.

In two separate indictments, appellant, L.B. Foster Company, was charged with the offenses of illegal disposal of used oil 1 and illegal disposal of a hazardous waste. 2 See Tex. Water Code Ann. §§ 7.162, 7.176 (Vernon 2000). A jury found L.B. Foster guilty as charged in both indictments and assessed punishment at $20,000 for the used oil offense and $150,000 for the hazardous waste offense.

In 11 issues, L.B. Foster contends that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support either conviction, challenges omissions from and inclusions in the jury charges, and complains that the indictment for the used oil charge was jurisdictionally defective.

We reverse and render a judgment of acquittal in the hazardous waste case and affirm the judgment in the used oil case.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On December 30, 1997, Houston Police Officer R.T. Hatcher and his partner, M.W. Sallee, conducted a follow-up investigation to determine whether the Burlington Northern Rahway had addressed previously identified municipal code violations along the railroad’s right-of-way, which *197 bordered a public Houston street. From the street, Officer Hatcher noticed a rail spur that ran to what he thought was a rail yard approximately 200 yards away. Officer Hatcher observed a pile of wood cross-ties and metal track rails in the yard. Believing that the pile of debris belonged to the railroad, which had been warned to clean-up the area, Officer Hatcher and his partner drove to the property he had observed from the street. Once on the property, Officer Hatcher noticed what he termed as “serious violations of the municipal code.” 3 Specifically, Officer Hatcher observed high grass, “jumbled piles of material,” derelict vehicles, and stagnant water, which provide breeding areas for rodents and mosquitos.

After observing the code violations, Officer Hatcher and his partner drove toward the office buildings on the property. Officer Hatcher discovered that the property was not a rail yard; rather, it was the property of L.B. Foster. As they were driving on the property, they met Bryan Causey, an employee of L.B. Foster. Cau-sey identified himself as “the man in charge of the property.” When Officer Hatcher asked him about the pile of cross-ties and rail lines, Causey explained that L.B. Foster cut rail for the railroads.

Located on L.B. Foster’s property were numerous metal buildings of various shapes and sizes. Officer Hatcher noticed what appeared to be oil on the ground under “hydraulic roller machines” located outside of the buildings. Officer Hatcher saw that the soil under the machines appeared blackened, and, that puddles of water, which had accumulated from a recent rain, appeared to contain oil. On the bottom of a few of the metal buildings, Officer Hatcher could see “oily material.” It appeared to Officer Hatcher that oil had run in or out of the buildings.

Officer Hatcher issued a warning notice to Causey listing six violations of municipal ordinances. Illegal dumping of oil was not fisted in the notice. Officer Hatcher also gave Causey a document entitled “Common Violations of City of Houston Municipal Ordinance.” The preprinted document fisted 57 possible municipal code violations. Of these possible violations, Officer Hatch-er circled 21 items, including the following: “Permit the deposit of offensive matter hazardous to public health, i.e., used motor oil.” Officer Hatcher also verbally mentioned the oil contamination to Causey. Officer Hatcher specifically pointed out the staining on the bottom of the buildings. Causey acknowledged that he was aware of the oil problem and told Officer Hatch-er, “I’ll take care of it.” Officer Hatcher indicated to Causey that he would return on February 5, 1998, to determine whether the noted violations had been corrected.

When he returned to L.B. Foster’s property on February 17,1998, Officer Hatcher found that none of the cited violations had been corrected. L.B. Foster had taken no action to clean-up the oil contamination that Officer Hatcher had cited on his previous visit. Officers Hatcher and Sallee took several photographs related to the oil contamination and informed Causey they would return the next day with other police officers.

At trial, in explaining various pictures, Officer Hatcher commented on the following: several buckets of black sludge tipped over on the ground near a fueling station; what appeared to be oil inside the sewer and stained soil with an oily substance flowing toward the storm drain, and dark *198 staining on the ground around a pick-up truck and an oil bucket of the type used to change oil. With regard to the oil bucket, Officer Hatcher testified that it “looked like somebody changed the oil on a vehicle, threw the oil here and here on the ground.”

The following day, on February 18,1998, Officer Hatcher and his partner returned to L.B. Foster’s property with Officer Stephen Dicker, who worked for the Houston Police Department’s environmental crimes unit. Also present were two fire marshal inspectors. The police officers discussed the violations with Causey and other L.B. Foster representatives. The police officers and company officials also toured the property. Officers Hatcher and Sallee issued 19 citations to Causey for municipal code violations. None of the citations were for improper disposal of used oil or hazardous waste.

The officers also took additional photographs of the oil contamination on February 18. Generally, the photographs show dark staining under hydraulicly-operated machines and pipe storage racks, black substance on the walls of the buildings, and oil-like stains on the ground, grass, and floors of the facility. Officer Dicker observed pistons and hydraulic hoses on the machinery actively leaking oil-like substances onto the ground in all operating areas of the property, and buckets of hydrocarbon fluids being stored without being sealed. He observed that the buckets had either leaked or spilled. He also observed “a lot of’ stained soil underneath the areas where hoses had been disconnected and a pool of standing hydrocarbon liquid in the area.

Officer Dicker discussed with L.B. Foster officials the cause of the oil contamination, namely, the cutting and threading of pipe on the property. In addition to leaking hoses and pistons, another possible source of the contamination discussed was hydrocarbon-based coatings and coolants that L.B. Foster applied to pipes during the threading and cutting processes, which were allowed to run off onto the ground.

The officers also photographed a large metal container located west of “Building 5” on the property. The top was off the container and it had a foul, chemical odor. The container was not actively leaking during the officers’ visits; but, from the tan-colored material present on its sides, it appeared that the container had overflowed or spilled at some earlier time. The ground near the container was a fighter color, further indicating that material from the container had spilled onto the ground.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 S.W.3d 194, 2003 WL 1563989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lb-foster-co-v-state-texapp-2003.