State Ex Rel. Utah Air Quality Board v. Truman Mortensen Family Trust

2000 UT 67, 8 P.3d 266, 402 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 2000 Utah LEXIS 83, 2000 WL 1170087
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 18, 2000
Docket990088
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2000 UT 67 (State Ex Rel. Utah Air Quality Board v. Truman Mortensen Family Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Utah Air Quality Board v. Truman Mortensen Family Trust, 2000 UT 67, 8 P.3d 266, 402 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 2000 Utah LEXIS 83, 2000 WL 1170087 (Utah 2000).

Opinion

DURHAM, Justice:

T1 This is an appeal by the defendants, the Truman Mortensen Family Trust and Roxanne Jensen, alleging that the trial court erred in imposing a $23,000 fine against them for violating the state's asbestos regulations. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

T2 Roxanne Jensen, also known as Roxanne Jensen-Daley (Ms. Jensen), is the trustee, contact person, and party responsible for administering the Truman Mortensen Family Trust, which owns various properties located in Utah and Idaho. At the time of the events giving rise to this lawsuit, one such property managed by Ms. Jensen was the Truman apartment building, located at 290 East Truman Avenue, Salt Lake City, Utah. This building contains approximately nine units, all accessible via a central hallway and stairway. 1

T 3 On January 7, 1997, the Environmental Health Division of the Salt Lake County Health Department (Health Department) inspected the building and found various violations of Health Department standards. Before leaving, the health inspectors took a sample of the textured ceiling located over the building's central hallway for testing. Analysis showed that the ceiling contained 3% Chrysolite, a material containing carcinogenic asbestos, and the Health Department so informed Ms. Jensen.

[ 4 On January 16, 1997, Ms. Jensen hired two men to "repair" the ceiling of the central stairway and hallway. Later that day, Bowen Call (Inspector Call), an inspector for the Utah State Division of Air Quality (DAQ), arrived on the scene and found the workers removing 600 to 800 square feet of dry and brittle asbestos material from the central hallway ceiling. Dust from the ceiling was visible in the air and piled several inches deep on the floor. Inspector Call confronted the men and they responded that Ms. Jensen had instructed them to remove the ceiling. Although the workers were engaged in the removal of material containing asbestos, they had not been trained in proper asbestos handling techniques, used proper respiratory and safety equipment, taken precautions to control the asbestos dust or fibers, or evacuated the building.

T5 Five days later, Inspector Call returned to the site and again found that asbestos had been improperly handled. In particular, the asbestos had been partially scraped off the ceiling but had not been completely removed. Ms. Jensen was present this time, and Inspector Call questioned her about the disposal of the asbestos. She responded that she did not know where the majority of the asbestos had been taken or how it had been disposed of. Inspector Call gave her verbal instructions concerning the danger of asbestos and told her that it could not be cleaned up with a vacuum cleaner. He told her that a certified contractor using specialty equipment had to be hired to remove and dispose of the dangerous substance. Inspector Call then left the scene and returned to his office at DAQ, where he received a phone call from a tenant at the Truman apartment building stating that Ms. Jensen had begun to clean up the asbestos with her vacuum cleaner.

6 On February 18, 1997, the DAQ Board issued the Truman Mortensen Family Trust and Ms. Jensen a "Notice of Violation and Order to Comply or Cease and Desist" (Notice and Order) for violations of the asbestos regulations found in R307-1-10, R307-1-2.1, and R307-1-8.61 of the Utah Administrative Code. The Notice and Order was a five page document including a cover-page stating that it was being issued by DAQ. Specific asbestos violations were outlined in the document, including Ms. Jensen's failure to (1) submit written notification of asbestos removal, (2) use required work practices, (8) collect, *269 package, transport, and dispose of asbestos containing materials as required, (4) use required asbestos removal and disposal techniques, and (5) ensure site supervisors and workers had received asbestos training. Finally, the document detailed that it was to become effective immediately, that failure to comply could result in penalties, and that it would become final within thirty days of receipt unless a hearing was requested in writing.

17 DAQ attempted to inform Ms. Jensen of the Notice and Order by mailing her a copy via certified mail. Specifically, DAQ placed the Notice and Order in the mail on February 13, 1997, addressing it to the address Ms. Jensen had given Inspector Call. The Notice and Order was returned as undeliverable. DAQ continued its effort to notify Ms. Jensen by re-mailing the Notice and Order four or five times, and also made several attempts to deliver it personally to Ms. Jensen's house. Finally, Inspector Call found a new address for Ms. Jensen and re-mailed the Notice and Order to her via certified mail. Ms. Jensen acknowledged receipt on April 9, 1997.

8 On April 6, 1997, three days before she received the Notice and Order, Ms. Jensen had sent a letter to Sharleen Hansen of the Occupational Safety and Health Division of the State of Utah Health Department (OSHD) in response to a notification of penalty that she received from OSHD on March 10, 1997. In the letter, she requested instructions on how to dispose of the materials, apologized for having caused the problem, and expressed her wish that the penalty be reduced. Ms. Jensen did not mentfon or request a hearing in the letter. Ms. Jensen alleges that when she received the Notice and Order from DAQ on April 9, 1997, she mistakenly believed that DAQ was the same ageney as OSHD, and thus she was not required to take any further action regarding the Notice and Order because her previous letter served as an effective response.

19 In October, 1997, the State filed a complaint in the Third District Court seeking to enforce the Notice and Order, which the State alleged had become final because of Ms. Jensen's failure to respond. In March 1998, the State moved for summary judgment. Ms. Jensen opposed the motion on the grounds that (1) she had requested a hearing in her April 6, 1997, letter, sent to the wrong agency, (2) the notice given by DAQ was deficient because it did not adequately disclose the proper procedures for responding, and (8) she had subsequently complied with the Notice and Order and thereby was entitled to defend against the imposition of a fine under Utah Code Ann. § 63-46b-19(8)(c)-(d) (1997).

T 10 The trial court rejected Ms. Jensen's arguments and granted the State summary judgment, ruling that Ms. Jensen failed to respond to the Notice and Order properly delivered by the State. However, the trial court declined to grant the State's claim for $41,000 in penalties and fees as a matter of summary judgment, and chose instead to give the parties an opportunity to negotiate the amount of the penalty.

[ 11 The parties met to discuss the amount of the fine in October 1998. The State offered to lower the fine to $23,000, and stated that a further reduction based on Ms. Jensen's ability to pay might be available, provided she could document her lack of resources by producing tax returns for the previous three years. Ms. Jensen refused to produce such records, and responded with a counteroffer involving no monetary penalty, but rather a promise that she would not purchase or manage any more apartment buildings. Ultimately, because no compromise was reached, the trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing to determine the appropriate penalty.

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Bluebook (online)
2000 UT 67, 8 P.3d 266, 402 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 2000 Utah LEXIS 83, 2000 WL 1170087, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-utah-air-quality-board-v-truman-mortensen-family-trust-utah-2000.