Starlink Logistics, Inc. v. ACC, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedDecember 15, 2022
Docket1:18-cv-00029
StatusUnknown

This text of Starlink Logistics, Inc. v. ACC, LLC (Starlink Logistics, Inc. v. ACC, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Starlink Logistics, Inc. v. ACC, LLC, (M.D. Tenn. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE COLUMBIA DIVISION

STARLINK LOGISTICS INC., ) ) Plaintiff, ) NO. 1:18-cv-00029 ) v. ) JUDGE RICHARDSON ) ACC, LLC and SMELTER SERVICE ) CORP., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Pending before the Court is “Defendant Smelter Service Corporation’s Motion for Summary Judgment” (Doc. No. 104, “Motion”), which is supported by a memorandum in support thereof. Plaintiff filed a response in opposition to the Motion (Doc. No. 111, “Opposition”), to which Defendant Smelter Service Corp. (“SSC”) filed a reply (Doc. No. 124, “Reply”). FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY This case—at least when considered in tandem with the earlier-filed and related case, M.D. Tenn. Case No. 1:12-cv-00011 (“Prior Case”)1—has a somewhat complicated procedural history. For present purposes, it suffices to provide the following description of the two cases’ procedural history, preceded by three paragraphs of undisputed facts to put that history in context.

1 In some instances, citation to the record in the Prior Case is appropriate. Herein, where the identification of a “Doc. No.” (document number) is preceded by “Prior Case,” unsurprisingly the citation is to the docket in the Prior Case. Otherwise, such a citation (including, notably, all citations to Doc. No. 119) is to the docket in the instant case. Plaintiff and ACC, LLC f/k/a Associated Commodities Corporation (“ACC”), are neighboring landowners in Maury County, Tennessee. ACC was created to establish a landfill on its property (the “Landfill”) dedicated solely to receiving waste from SSC’s operations. (Prior Case, Doc. No. 266 at ¶ 1). ACC constructed and operated the Landfill pursuant to a “registration” or “permit” issued on July 1, 1981 by the Tennessee Department of Public Health, the predecessor

to the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation (“TDEC”). (Id. at ¶ 2; Prior Case, Doc. No. 271 at ¶ 8). ACC operated the Landfill between August 1981 and September 1, 1993. (Prior Case, Doc. No. 266 at ¶ 3; Doc. No. 119 at ¶ 17). During that time, the only waste disposed of in the Landfill consisted of byproducts from SSC’s aluminum recycling operations at its secondary aluminum smelting plant—specifically, byproducts known as aluminum “slag” (also called “salt cake”) and “baghouse dust.” (Prior Case, Doc. No. 266 at ¶¶ 5–7; Doc. No. 119 at ¶¶ 14–15). TDEC accepted the closure of the Landfill in 1996. (Prior Case, Doc. No. 271 at ¶ 9; Doc. No. 119 at ¶ 19). Plaintiff owns a 1,485-acre tract of land located at 786 Arrow Lake Road in Mount

Pleasant, Tennessee, which is directly adjacent to, and downstream from, ACC’s property. (Prior Case, Doc. No. 266 at ¶ 9; Doc. No. 119 at ¶¶ 1, 12). A stream, known as Sugar Creek, is impounded to form Arrow Lake on Plaintiff’s property. (Doc. No. 119 at ¶ 2). Soon after ACC began disposing of SSC’s salt cake and baghouse dust, waste in the Landfill came into contact with groundwater. (Prior Case, Doc. No. 266 at ¶ 11.) As groundwater infiltrated the waste, it formed something known as “leachate”—essentially, a substance consisting of dissolved chloride salts, ammonia and metals that have leached out of the waste and into the water. (Id. at ¶ 12).2 Plaintiff’s claims against ACC in this case are all based on leachate and sediment emanating from the Landfill and entering Sugar Creek and Arrow Lake. After very lengthy Tennessee state administrative and court proceedings,3 which involved inter alia not only attempts by ACC and the TDEC to remediate the problems at the Landfill but also Plaintiff’s intervention in chancery court proceedings to prevent court approval of a consent

order between Plaintiff and TDEC, Plaintiff filed a complaint on January 19, 2012, to initiate the Prior Case. (Prior Case, Doc. No. 1). That complaint named only ACC as a defendant, and it asserted ten claims (each styled as a “Claim for Relief”). The first six were based on federal environmental laws,4 and the last four were based on Tennessee common law. More specifically, the complaint asserted claims: under the Clean Water Act (“CWA”), 33 U.S.C. §§ 1251–1389 (the first and second claims); under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (“RCRA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 6901–6992k (the third, fourth and fifth claims); under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (“CERCLA”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601-

2 Tennessee Solid Waste Regulations define leachate as “a liquid that has passed through or emerged from solid waste and contains soluble, suspended, or miscible materials removed from such waste.” Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs. 0400-11-01-.02(2). See also Hudson River Fishermen’s Ass’n v. Westchester Cnty., 686 F. Supp 1044, 1046 n.2 (S.D.N.Y. 1988) (“As used in the context of a landfill, leachate refers to that substance which is created when, over a period of time, compression of the solid waste, and other refuse contained within the landfill, forces liquid from the refuse. Leachate can also be produced when storm water seeps into the landfill and mixes with the refuse. The resultant liquid, or leachate, takes on the properties of certain constituents of the refuse. Leachate typically is very concentrated, high in metal and organic constituents.”).

3 These proceedings need not be detailed here, but they are detailed in Prior Case, Doc. No. 283, at 4-5, which, in part, quotes StarLink Logistics Inc. v. ACC, LLC, 494 S.W.3d 659, 662–63 (Tenn. 2016).

4 All of Plaintiff’s claims brought, in the instant action and in the Prior Case, under federal environmental laws were brought under so-called “citizens’-suit” provisions, which authorize “interstitial” enforcement by private citizens, but only when the government has been properly offered the chance to bring its own enforcement action and has not done so. See Gwaltney of Smithfield, Ltd. v. Chesapeake Bay Found., Inc., 484 U.S. 49, 60–61 (1987). The nature and requirements of such citizens’-suit provisions proved significant in the Court’s resolution of the Prior Case, (Prior Case, Doc. No. 283), but they are not material here, so the Court will forego any discussion of them herein.

9628 (the sixth claim); for private nuisance (the seventh claim); for negligence (the eighth claim); for trespass (the ninth claim), and for punitive damages (the tenth claim).5 (Id. at 9–18). On January 9, 2013, Plaintiff filed an amended complaint in the Prior Case, this one naming both ACC and SSC as defendants. (Prior Case, Doc. No. 61). The amended complaint asserted a claim against ACC in each of its ten claims but expressly mentioned SSC only in the Sixth claim,

which as indicated above sought cost recovery under CERCLA. Nevertheless, it appears that Plaintiff asserts each of the ten claims against SSC as well as ACC, as Defendants explain in a case management order in the Prior Case: SSC was brought into this lawsuit by way of an amended complaint in which the plaintiff alleged that, SSC has exercised complete dominion over ACC and used ACC as an instrument through which SSC disposed of the aluminum smelting wastes without complying with state and federal laws, resulting in harm to SLLI. (Document 61 at 9.) The plaintiff has asserted that all of its allegations against ACC apply with equal force to SSC.

(Prior Case, Doc No.

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Starlink Logistics, Inc. v. ACC, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starlink-logistics-inc-v-acc-llc-tnmd-2022.