Memphis Publishing Co. v. TN. Petroleum Underground

CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 1998
Docket01S01-9710-CH-00232
StatusPublished

This text of Memphis Publishing Co. v. TN. Petroleum Underground (Memphis Publishing Co. v. TN. Petroleum Underground) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Memphis Publishing Co. v. TN. Petroleum Underground, (Tenn. 1998).

Opinion

FILED IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE 31, 1998 August AT NASHVILLE Cecil W. Crowson Appellate Court Clerk

FOR PUBLICATION MEMPHIS PUBLISHING COMPANY, ) ) Filed: August 31, 1998 Appellee, ) ) v. ) DAVIDSON CHANCERY ) TENNESSEE PETROLEUM ) Hon. Irvin H. Kilcrease, Jr., UNDERGROUND STORAGE TANK ) Chancellor BOARD, AND J.W. LUNA AS ) COMMISSIONER OF THE ) TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF ) ENVIRONMENT AND ) CONSERVATION, ) ) Appellants. ) ) ) No. 01S01-9710-CH-00232

For the Appellant: For the Appellee:

John Knox Walkup S. Russell Headrick Attorney General & Reporter Stephen P. Hale Memphis, Tennessee Michael E. Moore Solicitor General

Barry Turner Deputy Attorney General Nashville, Tennessee

OPINION AFFIRMED. DROWOTA, J.

-2- The issue in this appeal is whether the law of the case doctrine applies on

remand to issues implicitly decided by an intermediate appellate court if this Court

denied permission to appeal from that decision, but concurred in results only. For the

reasons that follow, we hold that the law of the case doctrine applies to all issues

decided either implicitly or explicitly by an intermediate appellate court. This Court’s

denial of permission to appeal with concurrence in results only does not alter this

longstanding rule. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the Chancellor and the

Court of Appeals.

BACKGROUND

This case is on appeal for the second time. The first appeal arose when the

plaintiff, Memphis Publishing Company, (hereinafter MPC), was denied

reimbursement for remediation expenses incurred as a result of an August 1987

release from its underground storage tank. The Underground Storage Tank Fund

from which MPC sought reimbursement was created by the Tennessee Petroleum

Underground Storage Tank Act of 1988.1 The Act became effective on July 1, 1988.

It is administered by the defendants, the Tennessee Petroleum Underground Storage

Tank Board and J.W. Luna, as Commissioner of the Tennessee Department of

Environment and Conservation.

Though MPC discovered and reported the release from its underground

storage tank prior to July 1, 1988, the majority of its assessment and remediation

efforts occurred after that date. MPC filed its application for reimbursement with the

1 The law is codified at Tenn. Code Ann. § 68-215-101 et seq.

-3- Board on September 1990. After a contested case hearing, the Board denied the

application by a final decision and order. The Board stated that MPC was not

eligible for reimbursement from the Fund because the release had occurred prior to

July 1, 1988, the effective date of the Act which created the Fund. The Board’s

finding was based upon an April 1990 amendment to the original Act which stated:

“[i]t is the intent of the general assembly that this chapter shall not apply retroactively

to releases or other events that occurred prior to July 1, 1998.” Tenn. Code Ann. §

68-215-102(c) (1996 Repl.).

MPC sought judicial review requesting that the Chancery Court declare the

1990 amendment unconstitutional retrospective legislation. The Chancellor affirmed

the decision of the Board stating:

[MPC] submits that it had a vested right to claim reimbursement from the fund established by the UST Act, and that the 1990 amendment impairs this right. The provisions of the Act establishing the UST Fund create new substantive rights, and cannot be retroactively applied. [citation omitted.] The provision added by the 1990 amendment simply confirmed and ratified the original intent of the General Assembly that the UST Act is not to be given retrospective application.

It is undisputed that MPC discovered and reported the release from its underground storage tank in August of 1987. The Department has consistently followed its policy of using the date of the discovery of the release as the applicable date under the UST Act. MPC’s actions took place well before the effective date of the UST Act on July 1, 1988. This Court concludes that MPC never had a vested right to claim reimbursement from the fund because the Act does not apply to releases, like MPC’s that occurred prior to the July 1, 1988 effective date of the Act.

MPC appealed from the Chancellor’s ruling. The Court of Appeals concluded

that at the time the Act passed, the General Assembly had intended to provide

-4- reimbursement from the Fund for “all releases regardless of date.” Specifically, the

Court of Appeals stated as follows:

MPC presents the following issue for our consideration: ‘Whether the trial court erred in holding that MPC had no right to reimbursement from the Fund under the Original Act,’ which became effective 1 July 1988....

****

We find nothing in the sweeping nature of the perceived problems addressed by the Original Act, the description of the comprehensive regulatory mechanism, nor the description of the broad purposes of the Fund, to suggest or imply any date limitation on the ‘releases’ covered under the Original Act.

Both the Board and the Chancellor, in determining that MPC was not entitled to recover, relied on the 1990 Amendment which set forth the general assembly’s ‘intent’ to restrict recovery to releases or other events which occurred after 1 July 1988.

While a later general assembly’s understanding of what an Act intended is not binding, it is entitled to deference. Legislative interpretation of a prior statute is entitled to respectful consideration, but is not controlling on the courts.

Following the fundamental rule of statutory construction, this court must ascertain and give effect to the intention or purpose of the legislature as expressed in the statute.

We are of the opinion that the legislature intended to cover all releases without regard to the date on which they may have occurred.

**** The Original Act was intended to cover, from a Fund reimbursement perspective, all releases regardless of date. . . . This issue is sustained.

Because of our holding regarding this issue, we pretermit all other issues raised by MPC. The judgment of the trial court in affirming the decision of the Board and Commissioner is reversed and the cause remanded to the trial court for further, necessary proceedings.

-5- (Internal citations omitted.)

Thereafter, the defendants filed an application for permission to appeal from

the judgment of the Court of Appeals. This Court denied the application, concurring

in results only. The mandate issued, and the case returned to the trial court for

further proceedings.

In the trial court, the defendants again contended that MPC had no right to

reimbursement from the Fund because of the 1990 amendment to the Act. In

contrast, MPC asserted that the Court of Appeals opinion established the law of the

case on remand. The Chancellor agreed, stating “[t]he decision of the Court of

Appeals makes it clear that the petitioner’s release is to be covered regardless of the

date on which the release occurred. The Supreme Court’s concurrence ‘in results

only’ does not change this fact.”

The defendants appealed, arguing that when this Court denies permission to

appeal with concurrence in results only, the law of the case doctrine applies on

remand only to issues which were explicitly addressed by the intermediate appellate

court decision. The Court of Appeals rejected this argument and affirmed the

Chancellor’s decision. Thereafter, we granted permission to appeal to consider

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