Olin Corp. v. Insurance Co. of North America

743 F. Supp. 1044, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10004, 1990 WL 111491
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 2, 1990
Docket84 CIV 1968 (LBS)
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 743 F. Supp. 1044 (Olin Corp. v. Insurance Co. of North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olin Corp. v. Insurance Co. of North America, 743 F. Supp. 1044, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10004, 1990 WL 111491 (S.D.N.Y. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

SAND, District Judge.

Plaintiff Olin Corporation (“Olin”) seeks in this action, inter alia, a declaratory judgment that various defendant insurance companies have a duty to defend and indemnify Olin in connection with certain events involving mercury contamination allegedly caused by Olin’s former chlor-alkali plant in Saltville, Virginia. See First Amended Complaint, ITU 60-65, 82-85 (Counts IV and VII). We consider now the motions for partial summary judgment brought by Olin’s primary and excess insurance carriers on the grounds that Olin breached the notice provisions of the various insurance policies by providing late notice as a matter of law. We grant those motions.

Background 1

From 1954 to 1972, Olin and its predecessors operated a chlor-alkali plant in Salt-ville, Virginia that produced chlorine from salt using a mercury cell process. As part of that process, mercury-contaminated wastes were deposited into muck ponds and later seeped into the immediately adjoining North Fork of the Holston River.

In 1970, the Virginia State Water Control Board (“VSWCB”) and the Virginia State Health Department conducted fish and sediment sampling in the Holston River and discovered mercury contaminations in excess of the FDA-approved limit. As a result, Virginia placed a ban on fishing in the North Fork. Olin also received correspondence from environmental groups in 1970 expressing concern over mercury discharges.

In 1972, Olin closed its Saltville plant and donated most of the land, other than the settling ponds, to the State of Virginia and the Town of Saltville. As part of its deed of gift, Olin agreed to demolish the chlorine plant, to deed the settling ponds to the Town of Saltville at a later date, to “remove the soil along the river bank between the river and the building and [to] cover the area completely with fresh soil,” and to give the Town of Saltville $600,000 over the next four years for a “Planning, Salvage, Reclamation and Development Project” and the “Town Operating Budget.” Olin continued to monitor the mercury contamination in the river on a monthly basis and in 1975 recorded an unexplained increase in mercury levels. In June 1975, the VSWCB required Olin to obtain a permit imposing limitations and requirements on the continuing mercury “discharges” from the muck ponds.

At Olin’s request, Hunton & Williams, a Virginia law firm, prepared a 86-page memorandum dated October 6,1976 analyzing Olin’s “potential liability” for “past and continuing ‘discharges’ of mercury.” The memorandum concluded that notwithstanding Olin’s conveyance of the plant site to the Town of Saltville, “Olin could probably be held liable under common law nuisance theory, the Refuse Act, and the Virginia SWCL [State Water Control Law] for the mercury pollution in the North Fork of the Holston River and the ‘discharges’ from the chlor-alkali plant site.”

In March 1978, Hunton & Williams provided Olin with a supplemental memorandum “to enable Olin to assess its potential exposure and liability in the threatened proceedings by the State Water Control Board and in any other proceedings arising out of the [Saltville] situation.” (emphasis supplied). That analysis concluded:

Olin may be liable under several theories for the mercury and TDS discharges from the muck ponds. If the muck ponds are significantly contributing to the mercury or TDS pollution in the river, Olin is probably liable for a public and private nuisance under federal common law (depending on whether the pollutant discharges affect Tennessee waters). *1047 The fact that the FDA mercury standard for fish and the TDS water quality standard are being violated is probably sufficient interference with the use and enjoyment of the river to constitute a nuisance. And a court may apply a per se nuisance theory in which case the violations of the standards, without regard to actual effects on public uses, would be sufficient evidence to prove a nuisance (assuming that the muck ponds contributed to the violations)....
Olin appears to be liable under the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (FWPCA), the Refuse Act and the State Water Control Law (SWCL) for discharging from a point source (i.e., the outfalls) without a permit.
Olin’s potential liability for mercury discharges into the Holston River under the nuisance theory may have increased since 1976 as a result of (a) increased quantities of mercury which have entered the river and (b) more stringent regulatory standards which could make Olin’s discharges a nuisance per se.

The supplemental memorandum noted that “[t]here are several recent statutory developments which, while not yet effective, will increase Olin’s potential liability in the future,” pointing to the amendments to the FWPCA which “provide for the recovery of costs up to $50 million for cleanup and mitigation of discharges of hazardous substances.” The memorandum also stated: “Olin will likely be subject to requirements under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) once EPA promulgates regulations implementing the Act. The muck ponds probably constitute hazardous waste facilities which, under EPA’s draft regulations for ponds and lagoons, must meet stringent standards.” As to the size of Olin’s potential liability, the memorandum stated that the EPA draft standards require that “liners be used for hazardous waste ponds which prevent seepage of wastes from the facility” and that under a nuisance theory, “a court may be willing to impose such drastic measures as ordering Olin to seal the muck ponds to prevent seepage or, alternatively, allowing the state to carry out such measures and requiring Olin to reimburse the costs.”

Starting in 1978, an interagency task force, comprised of the VSWCB, the Virginia State Attorney General’s Office, the Virginia and Tennessee Departments of Public Health, the Tennessee Valley Authority, and the United States Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”), conducted several detailed studies to assess the existence and extent of mercury contamination of the North Fork. Initially, Olin was not cooperative, and “the State threatened legal action for damages and cleanup of the site.” See Affidavit of Paul R. Koepff dated January 9, 1990 (“Koepff Aff.”), Ex. 5 at 31. Then, starting in 1979, Olin, with the concurrence of the Task Force, instituted a multi-phase mercury abatement and monitoring program. In October 1979, Olin rip-rapped the bank at the old plant site to stop the continuing erosion; that project cost $400,000. See id. at 32. During the summer of 1982, Olin rip-rapped a portion of the river bank downstream, adjacent to muck pond 5; that project cost $240,000.

The undisputed facts indicate that Olin was aware of the potential high costs of remediation. In late 1980, Olin estimated that it would cost $25 to $30 million to remove the mercury from pond 5 and dispose of it in a secure landfill. See Koepff Aff., Ex. 5 at 15. In an October 1982 memorandum, the Task Force discussed several abatement alternatives, including “the total removal of all contaminated soils and muck with proper burial at an approved disposal site” at a cost of over $210 million. See Koepff Aff., Ex.

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Bluebook (online)
743 F. Supp. 1044, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10004, 1990 WL 111491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olin-corp-v-insurance-co-of-north-america-nysd-1990.