Slay v. TEX. COM'N ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY

351 S.W.3d 532
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2011
Docket03-10-00297-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 351 S.W.3d 532 (Slay v. TEX. COM'N ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slay v. TEX. COM'N ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY, 351 S.W.3d 532 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

351 S.W.3d 532 (2011)

Chester L. SLAY, Jr., Individually; Union Texas Limited Partnership; and Chester L. Slay, Jr., Trustee of Peckham Family Trust//Cross-Appellant, Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, Appellants,
v.
TEXAS COMMISSION ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY//Cross-Appellees, Chester L. Slay, Jr., Individually; Union Texas Limited Partnership; and Chester L. Slay, Jr., Trustee of Peckham Family Trust, Appellee.

No. 03-10-00297-CV.

Court of Appeals of Texas, Austin.

August 31, 2011.

*534 Keith A. Pardue, Law Office of Pardue & Associates, Austin, TX, for Appellant.

Priscilla M. Hubenak, Assistant Attorney General, Environmental Protection & Administrative Law, Kristofer S. Monson, Assistant Solicitor General, Office of the Attorney General, Austin, TX, for Appellee.

Before Justices PURYEAR, PEMBERTON and GOODWIN.

OPINION

BOB PEMBERTON, Justice.

These cross-appeals present two principal sets of issues: (1) whether a Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) order imposing administrative penalties withstands judicial review under the standard in section 2001.174 of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), see Tex. Gov't Code Ann. § 2001.174 (West 2008), and (2) whether the district court possessed subject-matter jurisdiction over declaratory claims under section 2001.038 of the APA that were asserted alongside the claimants' suit for judicial review, see id. § 2001.038 (West 2008).[1] We conclude that the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over the claims under APA section 2001.038 and that there is no basis under APA section 2001.174 for reversing the agency's order.

BACKGROUND

The Palmer Barge site

The underlying dispute concerns a seventeen-acre tract located on the shores of Sabine Lake in what has been described as an "industrial" area of Port Arthur. Between 1982 and 1997, the tract was the site of a barge and marine vessel servicing and maintenance business operated by Palmer Barge Line, Inc. The business's primary operations included cleaning the engines, boilers, and holds of vessels with steam or water. Palmer Barge eventually went into bankruptcy and, in July 1997, ceased its servicing and maintenance operations. The following September, the seventeen-acre property was conveyed in a non-judicial *535 foreclosure sale to one of the parties to these appeals, Union Texas Limited Partnership (Union Texas).

Remaining on the Palmer Barge site, in the wake of the business's demise, were a number of tanks and other structures containing substances that had been used or produced in the business's operations. As early as 1997, the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and TCEQ[2] had begun investigating the possible presence of hazardous wastes at several locations on the property, including both the man-made structures and some places where substances had ended up in the soil. As these investigations were continuing, on June 12, 1999, ownership of Union Texas—again, the owner of the Palmer Barge site since September 1997—was conveyed in its entirety to another party to these appeals, Chester L. Slay, Jr.[3]

Roughly two weeks thereafter, on June 24, 25, and 27, 1999, a TCEQ inspector, Raymond Marlow, conducted a compliance inspection at the Palmer Barge site. Marlow returned to the site on July 21. On that same day, Union Texas (again, now owned entirely by Slay) conveyed the Palmer Barge site, in varying portions, to Slay in his capacity as trustee for four different family trusts.[4] One of these trusts, the Peckham Family Trust, is a party to these appeals.

On July 23, 1999, a sampling operation was performed for TCEQ at the Palmer Barge site. The sampling detected benzene—a known carcinogen—in excess of 0.5 parts per million in the waters stored in fourteen on-site tanks and one roll-off container. Additional site visits by Marlow followed on August 4, October 20, and October 28, 1999. The October 20 visit was in conjunction with an EPA site visit. During the following month, the EPA would have the wastes removed from the *536 tanks and containers at the site. The EPA would later designate the Palmer Barge site as a "Superfund" site in July of the following year.[5]

Fallout

In January 2000, TCEQ entered into an agreed order with a former owner of the Palmer Barge business and property that recited eighteen sets of violations of state and federal environmental regulations. These violations included allowing the discharge of contaminated storm water, failing to complete hazardous waste determinations for wastes in various tanks and containers, failing to label hazardous waste storage tanks and containers, failing to notify TCEQ of on-site waste management units, and failing to obtain a permit for the storage of hazardous wastes for more than ninety days. For all of these violations, the agreed order imposed a total penalty of $25,000.

Later, in September 2002, the EPA also issued a consent order against four responsible parties (none of whom is a party to this appeal) who had arranged for disposal or treatment of hazardous substances at the Palmer Barge site or who had selected the facility as a disposal site and transported hazardous substances to the facility. The responsible parties also agreed to assess and remediate the site.

Although the environmental problems at the Palmer Barge site predated their ownership or involvement, and they had not themselves generated or contributed to the wastes found there,[6] Union Texas, the Peckham Family Trust, and Slay were nonetheless targets of a TCEQ enforcement action based on, in essence, their alleged inaction.[7] TCEQ issued a notice of enforcement letter to Union Texas and the Peckham Family Trust on April 3, 2000. In June 2003, TCEQ's executive director issued a preliminary report and petition alleging regulatory violations not only by Union Texas and the Peckham Family Trust, as successive owners of the site, but also by Slay individually, as an "operator" of the site.[8] The prosecution would ultimately proceed to a contested-case hearing *537 before an administrative law judge (ALJ) at the State Office of Administrative Hearings. At the hearing, Slay appeared pro se both on his own behalf and as representative of the two other respondents. Following the hearing, the ALJ determined that the respondents had committed five sets of regulatory violations:

(1) violating TCEQ rule 335.112(a)(9) and EPA rules 265.190-.202 by "failing to properly label, inspect, assess, certify, or provide secondary containment for 14 waste tanks";[9]
(2) violating water code section 26.121(a) and TCEQ rule 335.8(b) by "failing to conduct spill closure or remediation activities at 10 spill sites at the Facility";[10]
(3) violating TCEQ rule 335.62 and EPA rule 262.11 by "failing to perform hazardous waste determinations and waste classifications on 15 different wastes generated and stored in 15 different containers at the Facility";[11]
(4) violating TCEQ rule 335.6(c) by "failing to notify TCEQ concerning the storage of industrial waste at the Facility in the northwest slop oil tank, the northeast slop oil tank, a container at the dock and a fresh water tank";[12] and

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351 S.W.3d 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slay-v-tex-comn-on-environmental-quality-texapp-2011.