Leflore County Board of Supervisors v. Meritor, Inc., ET AL

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedFebruary 4, 2026
Docket4:24-cv-00033
StatusUnknown

This text of Leflore County Board of Supervisors v. Meritor, Inc., ET AL (Leflore County Board of Supervisors v. Meritor, Inc., ET AL) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leflore County Board of Supervisors v. Meritor, Inc., ET AL, (N.D. Miss. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI GREENVILLE DIVISION

LEFLORE COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS PLAINTIFF

V. CIVIL CAUSE NO. 4:24-cv-33-DAS

MERITOR, INC., ET AL DEFENDANTS

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before the court is Defendant Meritor, Inc.’s Motion for Summary Judgment [131], which has been fully briefed and is ripe for review. For the reasons discussed below, the court concludes that Meritor is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on all claims brought by Plaintiff Leflore County Board of Supervisors. Background and Procedural History This action arises from Meritor’s 2006 remediation and disposal of approximately 7,243 tons of buff-compound soils and associated materials from the Moose Lodge Road Disposal Area (MLRDA) in Grenada, Mississippi. The disposal occurred pursuant to a Removal Work Plan prepared by Meritor’s consultant, SECOR, which was expressly reviewed and approved by the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ). Prior to disposal, MDEQ issued a written “Non-Hazardous Determination” concluding that the buff compound and contaminated soils did not contain listed hazardous waste and could be managed as nonhazardous “special waste,” provided they did not exhibit a hazardous characteristic. Meritor, relying on this agency determination and its own TCLP testing and process-knowledge analysis, disposed of the material at the Leflore County landfill operated by Waste Connections, Inc., which accepted the waste. Nearly two decades later, Plaintiff filed suit alleging that the waste was hazardous and that Meritor’s disposal caused the County to incur—or in the future might incur—investigative and remedial expenses. Plaintiff asserts claims of negligence, public nuisance, and trespass. Meritor seeks summary judgment on multiple grounds, including failure to exhaust

administrative remedies before MDEQ, absence of evidence establishing a hazardous disposal, and the speculative nature of Plaintiff’s damages. Analysis Summary judgment is appropriate where “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). I. Damages The threshold defect in Plaintiff’s case is the absence of proof of legally cognizable damages. Regardless of the theory asserted—negligence, nuisance, or trespass—Plaintiff must show an actual, present injury. Speculation that harm might exist or might arise in the future is insufficient to withstand summary judgment. See Blase Indus. Corp. v. Anorad Corp., 442 F.3d

235, 238 (5th Cir. 2006); Paz v. Bush Engineered Materials, Inc., 949 So. 2d 1, 5 (Miss. 2007). Plaintiff’s alleged injury is not contamination, property damage, regulatory liability, or public health impact. Instead, Plaintiff’s theory is that because Meritor disposed of material at the landfill in 2006 which could conceivably have contained hazardous constituents, the County may at some point need to undertake an investigation and possibly remediation. But the summary judgment record establishes that this asserted injury remains entirely hypothetical. First, Plaintiff has conducted no sampling, testing, or subsurface investigation at the landfill directed at the disposed material. Plaintiff cannot identify the location of the material within the landfill footprint. No analytical data show the presence of a hazardous constituent attributable to the MLRDA waste. There is no evidence of a release, no detection of contaminants above regulatory standards. In short, Plaintiff has no evidence that contamination exists. Second, Plaintiff identifies no regulatory consequence. MDEQ has issued no notice of

violation, directive, compliance order, or request for additional investigation related to the 2006 disposal. No agency has required corrective action. Plaintiff therefore does not face an existing legal obligation to spend money. Courts do not award damages based on the possibility that a regulator might someday require action. Third, Plaintiff presents no evidence of property damage or loss of use. The landfill continues to operate. Plaintiff does not claim that the landfill’s capacity has been reduced other than as agreed at intake, that any portion has been taken out of service, or that revenue has been lost. There is no evidence of diminution in value. No third-party claims have been asserted against Plaintiff. Thus, there is no present economic injury. Plaintiff’s damages theory instead rests on projected costs for a potential investigation

and potential removal of material. Those projections depend on a sequence of contingencies: that hazardous contamination exists; that it will be discovered; that it will be attributed to the MLRDA waste; that regulators will require action; and that the chosen remedy will involve excavation and removal rather than any number of less drastic alternatives. Mississippi law does not permit recovery of damages that depend on such layered contingencies. See Paz, 949 So. 2d at 3-5. A plaintiff must show that injury is actual or reasonably certain—not merely possible. The speculative nature of Plaintiff’s theory is underscored by the status of its expert proof. This Court has excluded Plaintiff’s expert opinions regarding investigation costs. Even if considered, the removal-cost estimates remain conditional upon assumptions for which Plaintiff provides no evidentiary support. Expert opinions that simply assume the existence of contamination cannot create a fact issue where the record contains no proof that contamination exists. At bottom, Plaintiff seeks to recover the cost of determining whether it has been injured.

But investigative expenses are not recoverable damages absent evidence of an underlying actionable injury. The law does not permit a plaintiff to shift the cost of exploratory inquiry to a defendant based solely on suspicion. Because Plaintiff has not shown contamination, regulatory liability, property damage, economic loss, or any other present injury, it cannot establish damages. That failure is fatal to every claim in the case and independently warrants summary judgment. II. Hazardousness Even if Plaintiff could establish damages, its claims would still fail because the record contains no evidence that the material Meritor disposed of in 2006 was hazardous waste or otherwise toxic, and it contains substantial contemporaneous evidence that it was not.

Plaintiff’s theory of liability depends on the premise that the MLRDA buff-compound soils may have contained hazardous constituents. But at summary judgment, a party must produce evidence, not suspicion. Plaintiff has offered no analytical data showing that the disposed material exhibited a characteristic of hazardous waste under RCRA criteria, no test result exceeding a regulatory threshold, and no agency finding that the material was mischaracterized. Plaintiff’s expert asserts only that additional investigation or testing would have been advisable. That opinion, even if credited, does not constitute evidence that the waste was in fact hazardous at the time of disposal. The evidentiary record runs in the opposite direction. Over a period of years preceding the 2006 removal, multiple environmental investigations were conducted at the site. These included soil borings, laboratory analyses, and TCLP testing directed at determining whether the material exhibited hazardous characteristics. Those data were submitted to MDEQ in connection

with Meritor’s request for regulatory guidance.

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Leflore County Board of Supervisors v. Meritor, Inc., ET AL, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leflore-county-board-of-supervisors-v-meritor-inc-et-al-msnd-2026.