Rospatch Jessco Corp. v. Chrysler Corp.

962 F. Supp. 998, 1995 WL 916194
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedAugust 11, 1995
Docket1:93-cr-00047
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 962 F. Supp. 998 (Rospatch Jessco Corp. v. Chrysler Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rospatch Jessco Corp. v. Chrysler Corp., 962 F. Supp. 998, 1995 WL 916194 (W.D. Mich. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBERT HOLMES BELL, District Judge.

Plaintiff Rospatch Jessco Corporation (“Rospatch”) filed this action pursuant to Sections 107 and 113 of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (“CERCLA”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 9607 and 9613, seeking to recover costs which it incurred in responding to alleged releases of hazardous substances at its Dow-agiac, Michigan, manufacturing plant (“the Dowagiac plant”), and for a declaratory judgment that the defendants are liable for future costs that it may incur as a result of those releases. Defendant Chrysler Corporation (“Chrysler”) filed a cross-claim against the other defendants (collectively referred to herein as “the United States”) for contribution pursuant to Sections 107(a)(2), (3) and 113(f)(1) of CERCLA. 42 U.S.C. §§ 9607(a)(2), (3) and 9613(f)(1).

Rospatch seeks to hold the defendants liable for the United States’ and Kaiser-Frazer Corporation’s 1 aircraft engine production activities at the Dowagiac plant during the Korean Conflict. Before the Court at this time is Chrysler’s motion for partial summary judgment, joined in by Rospatch, against the United States on the issue whether the United States was an “owner or operator” of the Dowagiac plant within the meaning of CERCLA. The United States has filed a cross-motion for summary judgment concerning the same issue.

I

Rospatch is a furniture manufacturer in Dowagiac, Michigan. It has incurred costs in connection with a clean up of soil and groundwater contamination at the Dowagiac plant. Rospatch has owned the plant since February 29, 1972. The plant was first owned by the Round Oak Stove Company, *1000 which used the plant as a foundry from around the turn of the century until it sold the plant to the Kaiser-Frazer Corporation (K-F) on June 16, 1947. K-F, which was making a concentrated effort to establish itself as a major producer of automobiles following World War II, continued to use the plant as a foundry until late 1950 or early 1951. The plant then went unused for a period of time.

But K-F was vastly undercapitalized to compete with the major domestic automakers. By April 1949, K-F was in default of $16,000,000 in loans with the Mellon and Giannini banks and faced the threat of liquidation. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation (“RFC”), however, provided substantial loan assistance to K-F to prevent its failure. 2 In November 1949, the RFC loaned $34,400,000 to K-F and $10,000,000 to Kaiser-Frazer Sales Corporation (“K-F SC”), one of its wholly-owned subsidiaries. The purpose of these loans was to provide assistance to K-F with regal’d to its automobile production and sales, particularly with the development and production of new designs. As collateral for the loan to K-F, K-F gave the RFC a mortgage on all of K-F’s land, buildings, machinery and equipment located in Michigan, California, and Pennsylvania, and pledged, with voting rights, all of the capital stock of K-F’s wholly-owned subsidiaries, including K-F SC and Phoenix Iron Work. The loan agreements also permitted the RFC to designate its representative to K-F’s Board of Directors. 3

In December 1950, the RFC loaned an additional $25,000,000 to K-F SC for use in K-F’s automobile production and sales. The terms of this loan required K-F to reduce its level of production of automobiles to not more than fifty percent of its October 12, 1950 level, and to make “conscientious efforts to obtain defense work and give priority to any such work obtained over the production of automobiles.”

That very month, K-F entered into an agreement with the Air Force to produce C-119 aircraft. This contract, which was a “cost-plus-a-fixed-fee supply contract”, resulted from the Air Force’s perception that the Fairchild Corporation (“Fairchild”), the holder of the rights to produce the C-119 aircraft, would not be able to produce the aircraft at the rate desired by the Air Force. The contract originally called for delivery of the first aircraft by August 1951 with a delivery rate of twenty per month by December 1951, at a unit price of $839,955 per aircraft. In fact, the first aircraft was not delivered until May 1952 and the maximum delivered in any one month was eight; additionally, the actual average unit price swelled to $1,248,-586. For these reasons, the Air Force can-celled the remainder of its C-119 contract with K-F and Fairchild produced the remaining aircraft. 4

K-F entered into another defense contract in February 1951. K-F apparently submitted a bid concerning an Air Force contract for the production of 410 R-1300 aircraft engines in conjunction with Curtiss-Wright Corporation’s Wright Aeronautical Division (“Wright”). 5 The Air Force accepted K-F’s bid and, in February 1951, entered into a letter contract whereby K-F would produce the engines in accordance with specifications provided by Wright. This R-1300 contract was comprised of a “Facilities Contract” and a “Supply Contract” (collectively referred to as “the contract” or “the R-1300 contract”). K-F and the Air Force entered into defini *1001 tive facilities and supply contracts in the Spring of 1952. Pursuant to the Facilities Contract, the Ah’ Force agreed to supply KF with any equipment and machinery necessary to produce the engines which K-F did not already have. The Air Force would permit K-F to use equipment and machinery from government depots in which unused equipment and machinery was stored. When K-F was unable to locate equipment or machinery in these depots, it was permitted to purchase it new, for which the Air Force would reimburse it. The equipment and machinery provided by the government would remain government-owned throughout the performance of the contract and the severa-ble equipment and machinery would be returned to the government at the conclusion of the contract. This arrangement applied to non-severable items as well, provided that, at the expiration or termination of the contract, the Air Force could require K-F to purchase these non-severable items at cost minus depreciation. The Supply Contract, unlike the C-119 contract, was a standard fixed-price redeterminable supply contract.

During the Spring of 1951, K-F negotiated with Bank of America to obtain a loan to finance its performance of the C-119 and the R-1300 contracts. The $25,000,000 loan was guaranteed in part by the Air Force pursuant to the Defense Production Act of 1950 and Regulation V enacted pursuant to that Act. Bank of America, however, had two conditions for its loaning of this money: that K-F consolidate all of its defense contracts into a single entity which would perform only defense work, and that the General Services Administration and the RFC waive all principal payments due them during the term of the proposed “V-loan”. The United States consented to these conditions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
962 F. Supp. 998, 1995 WL 916194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rospatch-jessco-corp-v-chrysler-corp-miwd-1995.