NY ST. ENERGY R. & D. AUTH. v. Nuclear Fuel Serv.

561 F. Supp. 954
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedApril 8, 1983
DocketCiv-82-426
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 561 F. Supp. 954 (NY ST. ENERGY R. & D. AUTH. v. Nuclear Fuel Serv.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NY ST. ENERGY R. & D. AUTH. v. Nuclear Fuel Serv., 561 F. Supp. 954 (W.D.N.Y. 1983).

Opinion

561 F.Supp. 954 (1983)

NEW YORK STATE ENERGY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY, Plaintiff,
v.
NUCLEAR FUEL SERVICES, INC., Getty Oil Company, Commonwealth Edison Company, General Public Utilities Corp., General Public Utilities Service Corporation, Jersey Central Power & Light Co. and Wisconsin Electric Power Company, Defendants.

No. Civ-82-426.

United States District Court, W.D. New York.

April 8, 1983.

*955 *956 *957 *958 *959 Philip Gitlen, Albany, N.Y., F. James Kane, Buffalo, N.Y., Carmine J. Clemente, Gen. Counsel, NYSERDA, Albany, N.Y., for plaintiff.

Clarence T. Kipps, Washington, D.C., for NFS.

William I. Shapiro, Buffalo, N.Y., for Getty.

Jack McKay, Washington, D.C., for Com. Edison & Wisc. Elec.

Debevoise & Liberman, New York City, for GPUSC, GPU, Jersey Central.

MEMORANDUM and ORDER

ELFVIN, District Judge.

This action constitutes another effort by plaintiff New York State Energy Research and Development Authority ("NYSERDA") in this court to facilitate and bring about the correction of conditions hazardous to the public at the nuclear fuels disposal and reprocessing center at West Valley, N.Y. ("the Center"), which NYSERDA owns. Earlier, in an action bearing docket number CIV-81-18 in this Court, NYSERDA sued its tenant and former operator of the Center, Nuclear Fuel Services, Inc. ("NFS"), and NFS's parent, Getty Oil Co. ("Getty"), defendants here also, to bring about the transfer of the Center from NFS to the United States Department of Energy ("the DOE") in order to enable the DOE to implement the West Valley Demonstration Project Act of 1980, Pub.L. 96-368, 94 Stat. 1347. This Act, hereafter referred to as "the federal Project Act," authorized the DOE to carry out a high-level liquid nuclear waste management demonstration project at the Center. After a legal battle re partial summary judgment and injunctive relief requiring NFS to surrender the Center to the DOE, that action and the related suit by NFS against NYSERDA, CIV-81-683, became subject to a settlement agreement dated February 18, 1982, providing inter alia for transfer of the Center to the DOE and apportioning liability for allegedly deficient or improper conditions at the Center. That settlement agreement became final with NYSERDA's exercise September 16, 1982 of its option to finalize and an Order of dismissal, based on a November 15, 1982 stipulation requesting the dismissal of both actions. This finalization effectively negated a clause of the Settlement Agreement which otherwise would have imperiled a final settlement if responsibility for all of the spent fuel at the Center would not have been finally determined, by agreement or by litigation, within a certain period of time.

In this action NYSERDA seeks among other things to obtain declaratory, injunctive and monetary relief against NFS, Getty and five public utility companies — GPU Service Corporation ("GPUSC"), Jersey Central Power and Light Company ("Jersey") (sometimes collectively referred to hereafter as "the GPU defendants"), their parent, General Public Utilities Corporation, Commonwealth Edison Company ("Comm. Ed."), and Wisconsin Electric Power Company ("Wisconsin") — alleging their liability for removal of spent nuclear fuel stored at the Center and for pecuniary compensation for storage of such fuel. Relief is sought upon theories of trespass, breach of contract and unjust enrichment.

NYSERDA has moved for partial summary judgment declaring Jersey, Comm. Ed. and Wisconsin the owners of numbers of spent nuclear fuel assemblies and rods containing an aggregate of some 107.4 metric tons of uranium, and declaring the GPU defendants, Comm. Ed. and Wisconsin responsible to NYSERDA for the prompt removal of such spent fuel, on the trespass *960 and breach of contract theories, and liable to plaintiff under an implied contract for their unjust enrichment from the assertedly improper storage.

The defendants against whom partial summary judgment is sought will hereafter sometimes be referred to collectively as "the utility defendants." NFS and Getty have joined in support of NYSERDA's motion for partial summary judgment.

The utility defendants have cross-moved to strike all or a large part of the affidavit of Carmine J. Clemente, NYSERDA's General Counsel, in support of plaintiff's motion for summary judgment, and the exhibits attached to said affidavit, on the grounds that the affidavit is not, as is required by Fed.R.Civ.P. rule 56(e), based on personal knowledge and that it impermissibly contains inadmissible hearsay and legal argument intertwined with asserted facts. The exhibits are attacked as not having been sworn to or certified as required by the rule and as containing such hearsay. The GPU defendants have also cross-moved for a continuance of NYSERDA's motion in order to permit them to conduct discovery of additional facts with which to oppose NYSERDA's motion.

The cross-motion to strike the Clemente affidavit can be quickly disposed of. The deficiencies of the affidavit in regards to Clemente's statement of his personal knowledge of facts set forth and as to the authenticity of the attached documents has been cured by his supplemental affidavit in opposition to the cross-motion, detailing his years of involvement with the events and dealings at and pertaining to the Center. The cross-movants in reply have enumerated those paragraphs and portions of Clemente's original affidavit which were not in their view made acceptable by the supplemental affidavit. To the extent that the basis for their continued exception is that certain paragraphs contain "legal argument or interpretation," the movants' point is well taken. To remedy this defect it will suffice that I shall endeavor not to mistake such legal advocacy for assertions of fact within the affiant's personal knowledge.[1]See United States v. Alessi, 599 F.2d 513, 514-515 (2d Cir.1979); Perma Research and Development Company v. Singer Company, 410 F.2d 572, 578-579 (2d Cir. 1969). Other matters as to which Clemente is quite obviously unable to assert personal knowledge — mainly regarding dealings between NFS and the public utility defendants — will be disregarded. However, much or all of such matter is set forth upon personal knowledge in the affidavit of Henry W. Brook, NFS's General Counsel from December 1971 to May 1981, submitted in support of NYSERDA's motion for summary judgment.

In 1963 NYSERDA, which owns the Center in the name of the State of New York, entered into several agreements with NFS pursuant to which NFS constructed facilities for and undertook the enterprise of there reprocessing nuclear fuel wastes. The agreements — a Lease, a Waste Storage Agreement and a Facilities Contract (hereafter referred to collectively as "the West Valley Agreements") — contemplated an initial term ending December 31, 1980.

Pursuant to the Facilities Contract NFS constructed among other facilities a Fuel Receiving Facility, at which spent fuel was received and temporarily stored pending reprocessing. NYSERDA paid NFS for the construction of this facility and was vested with the title thereof upon its completion. The spent fuel in dispute in this action is located in the Fuel Receiving Facility's "storage pool."

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