Lockheed Martin Corporation v. United States

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedMay 13, 2013
DocketCivil Action No. 2008-1160
StatusPublished

This text of Lockheed Martin Corporation v. United States (Lockheed Martin Corporation v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lockheed Martin Corporation v. United States, (D.D.C. 2013).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA ____________________________________ LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORATION, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) ) Civil Action No. 08-1160 (ESH/AK) ) UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) ) Defendant. ) ____________________________________)

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Pending before the Court is Plaintiff Lockheed Martin Corporation’s Motion to Compel

Production of Rule 30(b) (6) Witnesses for Examination (“Motion”) [77]; the United States’

Memorandum in Opposition to Motion (“Opposition”) [79]; and Lockheed Martin Corporation’s

Reply Memorandum in support of Motion (“Reply”) [81]. 1 Plaintiff Lockheed Martin

Corporation (“LMC” or “Plaintiff”) moves to compel Defendant United States (the

“Government” or “Defendant”) “to designate and produce for examination one or more corporate

representatives on six of the Topics noted in Lockheed Martin’s Notice of Rule 30(b)(6)

Deposition.” (Motion at 1.)

I. Background

The underlying litigation involves a claim by LMC for recovery of response costs under

the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (“CERCLA”).

See Complaint [1]. These costs were incurred by LMC when it was ordered to implement a

remedial action plan to respond to chemical contamination in soil and groundwater at three 1 This matter was referred to the undersigned for resolution of discovery disputes by Minute Order dated October 31, 2012. The Court convened a telephone status conference on March 22, 2013, at which time counsel indicated no request for a hearing on this Motion. 1 Southern California facilities (collectively, “the Site”) where rocket systems were developed and

manufactured by Lockheed Propulsion Company. 2 See Memorandum Order [38] ruling on

Defendant’s motion for summary judgment at 1. Plaintiff seeks recovery of costs on grounds

that the Government effectively owned and operated the Site and arranged for the disposal of

chemical contaminants thereon. (Memorandum Order [38] at 1.) See also 42 U.S.C. §9607.

On August 21, 2012, Plaintiff served Defendant with a Notice of Rule 30(b) (6)

Deposition in this case. See Notice of Rule 30(b) (6) Deposition (‘Notice”) attached as Exhibit 2

to the Declaration of Michael K. Murphy. 3 On September 19, 2012, the Government responded

and objected to the Notice. See September 19, 2012 Letter from J. Sullivan to M. Murphy

attached as Exhibit 2 to the Murphy Declaration. More specifically, the Government objected

and refused to designate a witness on the following six topics at issue in this Motion:

Topic 1- The Department of Defense’s standard policies, procedures and practices, and any changes in those policies, practices, and/or procedures since 1986, with respect to the allowability of environmental costs.

Topic 3- The Department of Defense’s application of the Credit Cost Principle with regard to monetary recoveries under CERCLA by its contractors.

Topic 4- The Unites States’ position in litigation involving its contractors and their insurers with regard to recovery of environmental remediation costs and the application of the Credit Cost Principle.

Topic 6 – The Burbank Consent Decree, including, but not limited to, negotiation of its terms, operation of the decree, interpretation of its terms, and communications between the signatory parties.

Topic 7 – The United States’ policies, opinions, procedures and practices, and any changes in those policies, procedures, and/or practices since 1986, with regard to whether

2 Lockheed Propulsion Company was an operating division of Lockheed Aircraft Corporation, which subsequently became Lockheed Corporation and later merged with the Martin Marietta Corporation to form LMC. (Memorandum Order [38] at 1, n.1.) The Lockheed Propulsion Company was at the Site from 1961 through 1975. State and federal agencies discovered the chemical contamination during the 1990’s. (Memorandum Order [38] at 1.) 3 Michael K. Murphy is counsel of record for LMC. 2 the Department of Defense-appropriated funds may be used to satisfy the Government’s liability as a potentially responsible party under CERCLA.

Topic 29- The United States’ knowledge and understanding regarding vapor degreasers and solvent-water separators as a source of contamination at other United States military, civilian, or contractor facilities, including but not limited to, TCE contamination.

(Motion at 2.)

Plaintiff notes that the first five contested topics relate to the United States’ claim that “it

is inequitable for Lockheed Martin to recover its response costs under CERCLA because it has

recovered a portion of those costs already as payments to perform its government contracts.”

(Motion at 5.) 4 The sixth contested topic relates to the dispute between the parties as to the

source of trichloroethylene (“TCE”) groundwater and soil contamination at the Redlands Site.

Plaintiff filed the instant Motion after the parties “reached an impasse as to these six topics in the

Notice.” (Motion at 3.)

By way of background, the Government moved for summary judgment on its “double

recovery defense,” which was described by the Honorable James Robertson [the initial trial

court] 5 as a two-step argument:

(1) that collateral estoppel requires the Court, and Lockheed, to accept the determination in Procter v. Lockheed Corp., Case No. 731752 (Cal. Super. Ct. Oct. 22, 2003), that the government is in fact reimbursing Lockheed for the response costs it incurs at the Site through various government contracts; and (2) that, because Lockheed is already being reimbursed by the government, it cannot recover response costs again under CERCLA.

(Memorandum Order [38] at 2.) 6 Judge Robertson rejected the Government’s collateral estoppel

argument, finding that “[t]he issue decided in Procter concerned the meaning of the language of

insurance policies [and] did not define the term ‘actual reimbursement’ for all time or in all

4 LMG refers to this as the “double-recovery” defense. (Motion at 5.) 5 The case was reassigned to the Honorable Ellen Segal Huvelle, the current trial court, on June 3, 2010. 6 Judge Robertson noted that “[t]he question at this stage of the litigation is, How does Lockheed’s Billing Settlement with the government-as-client affect its potential CERCLA recovery from the government-as-PRP for response costs associated with the Site? (Memorandum Order [38] at 6.) 3 contexts, but only established its meaning within the context of a number of insurance contracts.”

(Id. at 9.)

The trial court next considered the Government’s claim [incorporated in their second and

sixteenth affirmative defenses] that “Lockheed cannot recover costs under CERCLA that it has

billed to the government as indirect costs.” (Id.) The trial court determined that “[t]he contract

payment framework and the requirements of the Billing Settlement ensure that Lockheed will not

realize a double recovery” because “any CERCLA recovery from the government would lead to

a commensurate reduction in the Settled Discontinued Operations Costs pool that Lockheed

could charge as indirect costs on its government contracts.” (Memorandum Order [38] at 12.)

The trial court further distinguished between “[t]he ‘government-as-PRP’ [potentially

responsible party], which would be responsible for paying for Lockheed’s CERCLA recovery

[and] . . . the ‘government-as-client,’ which would get that money back from Lockheed.”

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