Lusher Site Remediation Group v. Sturgis Iron & Metal Co Inc

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedJune 3, 2024
Docket3:18-cv-00506
StatusUnknown

This text of Lusher Site Remediation Group v. Sturgis Iron & Metal Co Inc (Lusher Site Remediation Group v. Sturgis Iron & Metal Co Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lusher Site Remediation Group v. Sturgis Iron & Metal Co Inc, (N.D. Ind. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA SOUTH BEND DIVISION

LUSHER SITE REMEDIATION GROUP,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 3:18-CV-506 JD

STURGIS IRON & METAL OF INDIANA, et al.

Defendants.

OPINION AND ORDER Plaintiff Lusher Site Remediation Group brought an action for cost recovery and contribution under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA), 42 U.S.C. § 9601 et seq., as amended by the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986, Pub. L. No. 99-499, 100 Stat. 1613. The Lusher Group sued many current and previous owners of the Lusher Street Groundwater Site. At this point, the only defendants remaining in the case are Atlas Die LLC, Elkhart Industries Inc., Patrick Industries Inc., R Concepts Industries Inc d/b/a RC Industries, and Godfrey Conveyor Co. (“Secondary Defendants”). Plaintiff reached a settlement with ten non-party insurance companies1 and is now seeking an order from the Court barring any contribution claims related to them. The Secondary Defendants object to the motion on the grounds that the Court has no jurisdiction over the non- party insurers and that Plaintiff has not shown that the agreement is fair, adequate, or reasonable

1National Fire Insurance Company of Hartford as successor to Transcontinental Insurance Co.; Transportation Insurance Co.; Citizens Insurance Company of America; Travelers Indemnity Co. as successor to Gulf Insurance Co.; Employers Insurance Co. of Wausau; ACE Property & Casualty Insurance Co.; St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co.; Everest National Insurance Co.; Amerisure Mutual Insurance Co.; and Evanston Insurance Co. to justify barring contribution claims. The Court agrees with the Secondary Defendants and will deny Plaintiff’s motion.

A. Background

The Lusher Street Groundwater Site consists of several properties owned by different defendants that has a groundwater plume contaminated with various chemicals, including tetrachloroethene and trichloroethene, which were common as industrial solvents. In 1987, the EPA conducted a removal action at the Lusher site to reduce any immediate threats to human health and the environment posed by the groundwater contamination. In 2005, the Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) discovered additional contamination at the site and eventually the site was included on EPA’s high-priority cleanup site listing, the National Priorities List, in 2008. Because of the complexity of the groundwater contamination at the site, the EPA divided the site into distinct and separate phases using operable units (“OUs”). On March 29, 2016, the Court approved a consent decree, finalizing the interim remedy

(“OU1”) at the Lusher site, and it was entered into by the EPA, IDEM, and Plaintiff Lusher Group. This consent decree requires Lusher Group to perform certain remedial actions at the Site. The consent decree only applied to OU1 costs and the State of Indiana’s past costs, but did not apply to costs at the site related to OU2 and other future costs. Plaintiff’s Third Amended Complaint (DE 209)––the operating complaint––asserted six causes of action against sixteen defendants. Count I is for cost recovery under Section 107 of the federal Superfund statute (“CERCLA”). Count II is for contribution under CERCLA Section 113(f). Counts III through VI are Indiana state-law claims. While the non-party insurers were named as defendants in the original complaint, Plaintiff dismissed them when seeking to amend the complaint on January 14, 2019 (DE 92). As a result, these insurers were not named as defendants in either the First Amended Complaint (DE 94), the Second Amended Complaint (DE 106), or the operative Third Amended Complaint (DE 209). In August 2020, the Court dismissed most of Plaintiff’s claims. (See DE 252.) The Court

dismissed Counts I and III in their entirety, dismissed Count II except as to Defendants HMS Elkhart LLC and Heavy Metal Scrap Inc. (collectively “HMS Defendants”), declined to exercise jurisdiction over Counts IV through VI, and held that defendant Sturgis Iron & Metal Company, Inc. (“Sturgis”) lacks capacity to sue or be sued. (See DE 252 at 25.) In June 2021, the Court partly revised its August 2020 dismissal order. (See DE 279.) The Court distinguished between “Consent Decree costs” and “Non-Consent Decree costs,” explaining that “the procedural posture of each category of costs is different.” (DE 279 at 5–6.) For Consent Decree costs, the Court reiterated that Plaintiff is limited to a CERCLA contribution claim and that Plaintiff missed the deadline for filing such a claim. (Id. at 5–6, 14–15.) But for Non-Consent Decree costs, the Court held that Plaintiff could pursue claims under CERCLA

Section 107 and Indiana’s Environmental Legal Action statute. (Id. at 9–12, 14–15.) Thus, the Court reinstated Counts I and III of the Third Amended Complaint, but solely as to Non-Consent Decree costs. (Id. at 17.) The Court left its other August 2020 rulings in place. Subsequently, Plaintiff reached a settlement with the HMS Defendants, and the Court granted the HMS Defendants’ unopposed motion to dismiss. (See DE 307.) The Court also approved a claims bar for the HMS Defendants, but only as to Consent Decree costs. (See DE 302.) The Court emphasized that there was no risk of prejudice from that narrow bar because no other entity could be held liable for the Consent Decree costs. (Id. at 7–8.) The Court explained that because the statute of limitations had run on Plaintiff’s claims for Consent Decree costs, “no other party is going to have to contribute anything for the Lusher Group’s 2016 Consent Decree claims, regardless of what HMS pays.” (Id. at 8.) Plaintiff next reached a settlement agreement with the non-party insurers, who allegedly sold insurance policies to Defendant Sturgis or its affiliates. (DE 325 at 1.) The settlement arose

from a disagreement about whether the insurers “have any coverage obligations to the Sturgis Entities or the Lusher Group Entities under any [Sturgis-related] Policies.” (Settlement Agreement, DE 325-1 at 3.) The agreement was reached through months-long negotiation with each side compromising to arrive at a mutually acceptable, arm’s-length resolution that resolved all claims between them as it relates to the issues in this lawsuit. Neither Sturgis nor other defendants are signatories to the settlement agreement. The agreement specifies that Plaintiff must file with the Court a motion seeking a bar on contribution claims by any third-party against any of the Sturgis Entities or non-party insurers arising out of or in any way related to released claims. Under the settlement agreement, the non- party insurers are required to pay Plaintiff an aggregate sum of $500,000 within thirty days of

Plaintiff filing the motion. (DE 325-1 at 8 § 3.01.)

(B) Standard of Review CERCLA provides two provisions, Sections 107 and 113, by which private parties may recover expenses associated with cleaning up contaminated sites. 42 U.S.C. §§ 9607(a), 9613(f). Section 107(a) permits cost recovery by a private party that has incurred cleanup costs by itself, whereas Section 113(f) authorizes a contribution action to other potentially responsible parties (“PRPs”) “with common liability stemming from an action instituted under § 106 or § 107(a).” United States v. Atl. Rsch. Corp., 551 U.S. 128, 139 (2007).

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Lusher Site Remediation Group v. Sturgis Iron & Metal Co Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lusher-site-remediation-group-v-sturgis-iron-metal-co-inc-innd-2024.