Paris Utility District v. A.C. Lawrence Leather Co.

665 F. Supp. 944, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6675
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJuly 15, 1987
DocketCiv. 86-0111 P, 86-0234 P
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 665 F. Supp. 944 (Paris Utility District v. A.C. Lawrence Leather Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paris Utility District v. A.C. Lawrence Leather Co., 665 F. Supp. 944, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6675 (D. Me. 1987).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, AND ORDER

GENE CARTER, District Judge.

These consolidated diversity cases grow out of a contractual arrangement whereby Plaintiff Paris Utility District (“the District”) treated the industrial wastes generated by Defendant A.C. Lawrence Leather Co., Inc. (“Lawrence”) at its tannery plant in South Paris, Maine. The District seeks to recover from Lawrence (1) a portion of the costs of expanding the laboratory at its treatment facility and (2) certain waste *946 treatment costs incurred by the District in 1986, after Lawrence had ceased discharging waste to the District’s facility. Lawrence seeks a declaration that it is entitled to contractual indemnification from the District for all costs incurred or to be incurred as a result of the District’s activities at a landfill on Lawrence’s property. Lawrence also alleges that the District has overcharged for its waste treatment services; Lawrence seeks an accounting to determine its entitlement to a reimbursement. After a three-day bench trial, the Court now enters its findings of fact and conclusions of law as required by Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a).

I. Findings of Fact

Plaintiff Paris Utility District is a quasi-municipal entity providing water and sewer services in South Paris, Maine. Defendant A.C. Lawrence Leather Co., Inc. is incorporated in and maintains its principal place of business in Massachusetts. In 1976 the District and Lawrence’s predecessor, Es-tech, Inc., entered an agreement (“the 1976 Agreement”) under which the District would construct a treatment facility and thereafter treat the industrial wastes from Lawrence’s tannery in South Paris. The parties stipulate that the 1976 Agreement is binding on Lawrence and the District.

Under Paragraph 5 of the 1976 Agreement, the District agreed to seek partial state and federal funding for the costs of constructing the facility, and Lawrence agreed to contribute its fair share of the local costs of construction, i.e., those costs not covered by state or federal funding and thus borne by the facility’s users. Paragraph 9 of the 1976 Agreement required Lawrence to pay “its proportional share of the operation and maintenance costs to the District of its Water Pollution Control Facility, computed in accordance with the formula set forth on pages 11-A, 12-A and 13-A” of a 1975 Report prepared by the Whitman & Howard engineering firm (hereinafter “the Whitman & Howard Report”). Under Paragraph 13 of the 1976 Agreement, “[s]hould [Lawrence] cease operation after the Treatment Facility is constructed, [Lawrence] shall pay its assessment for the operation and maintenance expense for the full quarter year in which discharge of the [Lawrence] waste to the Treatment Facility last occurred and shall not again be assessed so long as there continues to be no waste discharged to the Treatment Facility.” Under Paragraph 21 of the 1976 Agreement, Lawrence agreed to “permit the District to use without cost to the District, [Lawrence’s] premises ... for the deposit thereon of waste sludge generated by the Treatment Facility____ In consideration of this permit, the District shall conduct on such premises a sanitary landfill operation in accordance with all applicable Federal, State and local statutes, ordinances and regulations, and, further, the District shall indemnify, save and hold [Lawrence] harmless from and against any and all liabilities and claims arising out of the activities conducted by the District on such premises.”

The facility was constructed as planned and Lawrence contributed 64.64 percent of the local costs of construction. Lawrence began discharging to the plant and paid bills, as rendered by the District, on a monthly basis for its share of the facility’s operation and maintenance costs. Lawrence also paid bills for certain capital improvements to the facility that were unrelated to the original construction; these bills were for varying percentages of the total cost of the improvements (from 84.2 percent to 100 percent), apparently depending upon the extent to which each'improvement benefited Lawrence as compared with the District’s other customers.

As contemplated by the 1976 Agreement, the District deposited sludge in the landfill on Lawrence’s premises. (Lawrence itself had been depositing waste at the site since 1955.) In 1973 the District had applied to Maine’s Board of Environmental Protection (BEP) for permission to operate a landfill at the Lawrence site. The BEP denied the application because the soil on the site was too permeable to be suitable for sludge disposal; Lawrence knew of the BEP denial as early as 1975. The BEP ordered the District to find another site, but in the interim granted the District a series of temporary, conditional permits to operate *947 the landfill. The last of these permits expired on October 1, 1979, and the District’s application for a further , extension was denied.

The BEP ordered the District to submit a site closure plan and a ground water quality monitoring plan by December 12, 1979. Despite an exchange of letters between the District and BEP over the following years, the District never submitted a site closure plan and did not submit the monitoring plan until 1985, when it did so in conjunction with Lawrence. Lawrence received copies of several of the District-BEP letters during this period and thus was repeatedly reminded that BEP had found the site unsuitable for permanent use and that the District was not operating the site in accordance with applicable law. Much of the sludge that the District deposited at the site was the by-product of the District’s treatment of wastes from Lawrence’s own operations, and Paul Finnegan, Lawrence’s Director of Environmental Affairs, told the District that finding an appropriate landfill site elsewhere would have been very expensive for Lawrence.

In 1984 the District received a letter from the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) indicating that the District was discharging insufficiently-treated effluent into the Little Androscoggin River and that unless the District and Maine’s BEP could resolve the matter themselves, EPA was prepared to take action to force the District into compliance. Subsequently, in September of 1984, the District and Maine’s BEP negotiated an administrative consent agreement and order requiring the District to improve its operations. At the suggestion of Richard Micklon, the District’s chief operator, this agreement incorporated a requirement that the District expand its laboratory facilities to permit improved process control and effluent quality testing.

In December of 1984, the District wrote to Robert Abate, Lawrence’s Vice President of Finances, stating that “[a]s you are aware, A.C. Lawrence has a contractual obligation to pay it’s [sic] fair share of the costs involved with capital improvements” and asking for Abate’s “thoughts on a mutually agreeable repayment plan” for Lawrence’s share of the lab expansion costs, which at that time were estimated to total $150,000. In an internal Lawrence memo dated December 7, 1984, Finnegan stated:

A negotiated agreement with the [District] would be more favorable to [Lawrence] if it could be arranged. Otherwise we may end up paying more than we have to, since we pay ninety percent of the operating costs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Parker v. Souki
D. Colorado, 2025
United States v. Conagra Grocery Products Co.
4 F. Supp. 3d 243 (D. Maine, 2014)
Packgen v. BP Exploration & Production, Inc.
957 F. Supp. 2d 58 (D. Maine, 2013)
Thomsen v. Ward
Maine Superior, 2012
Morin v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co.
453 F. Supp. 2d 177 (D. Maine, 2006)
Fitzpatrick v. Rowell
Maine Superior, 2004
Strong v. Option One Mortgage Corp.
356 B.R. 121 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2004)
Lush v. TERRI AND RUTH F/V, IN REM.
324 F. Supp. 2d 90 (D. Maine, 2004)
Sutton v. Culver
204 F. Supp. 2d 20 (D. Maine, 2002)
Mercier v. Town of Fairfield
628 A.2d 1053 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
665 F. Supp. 944, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paris-utility-district-v-ac-lawrence-leather-co-med-1987.