State of Vermont v. Bradford Oil Co., Inc.

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedOctober 25, 2012
Docket307
StatusPublished

This text of State of Vermont v. Bradford Oil Co., Inc. (State of Vermont v. Bradford Oil Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Vermont v. Bradford Oil Co., Inc., (Vt. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

State v. Bradford Oil Co., Inc., No. 307-5-06 Wncv (Teachout, J., Oct. 25, 2012)

[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.] STATE OF VERMONT

SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Washington Unit Docket No. 307-5-06 Wncv

State of Vermont Plaintiff

v.

Bradford Oil Co., Inc. Defendant

DECISION re: Bradford’s Motion for Summary Judgment (v. the State) (MPR #37) Bradford’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (v. Town of Springfield) (MPR #38) The State’s Motion for Summary Judgment (MPR #39) The Town of Springfield’s Motion to Strike (MPR #44) Bradford’s Motion for Permission to File a Supplemental Brief (MPR# 46)

In this case, the State (Agency of Natural Resources) seeks the abatement and cleanup (including related damages and penalties) of hazardous waste discovered on a site in the Town of Springfield currently owned by Defendant Bradford Oil Company, Inc. Bradford, the sole defendant to the State’s claim, filed third-party claims against 14 others for contribution or indemnity. Two contribution-defendants remain in the case: the Town of Springfield and the Springfield Regional Development Corporation. The principal dispute between Bradford and the State is over the proper interpretation of 10 V.S.A. § 6615, a purely legal matter. The dispute between Bradford and the Town is largely factual: whether the Town owns the fee to a portion of the site used for a town highway. The Springfield Regional Development Corporation is not the subject of any pending motions. A hearing was held on June 26, 2012.

The basic facts material to the summary judgment motions are not disputed. Most of the hazardous waste on the site (the pre-ownership or historical contamination) was deposited there during the site’s days as a coal gasification plant, from about 1905 to 1951.1 Coal gasification is a process of producing a combustible gas that was used in the area for heating and lighting. The site was owned and operated for coal gasification and other purposes by numerous entities during and since that time. In the 1960s, a relatively small portion of the site came (and remains) under the control of the Town of Springfield because it was needed to expand or straighten a pre- existing public highway. By the mid to late 1980s, the site was essentially abandoned. It remained so until 1996, when Mr. McGuinness purchased it from Synergy Gas Corp. as a potential location for the expansion of his business. After the purchase, Mr. McGuinness hired Bruno Associates to perform initial environmental testing. The testing revealed the existence of

1 Bradford alleges that nearly all of the contamination on its property has been cleaned up at this point. It states that most of the remaining contamination is on the property of the Town and of the Springfield Regional Development Corporation. That factual matter is not before the court. contamination. Bruno Associates recommended a Phase I Environmental Site Assessment. Rather than further study the site, Mr. McGuinness decided to sell it. In 1997, Bradford, with actual knowledge of Bruno Associates’ findings, purchased the site. Prior to the sale, neither Mr. McGuinness nor his agents undertook any activities on the site that might have exacerbated then- existing historical contamination or introduced new contaminants. In short, Mr. McGuinness sold the site to Bradford in the same state in which he found it.2

Bradford began demolition and construction activities related to the eventual development of a gas station and convenience store on the site. Those activities may have exacerbated the then-existing contamination, some of which was transported offsite. Bradford currently owns the site. It or a lessee currently operates the gas station and convenience store.

By 1998, the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) had ordered Bradford to clean up the solid waste and contaminated soil transported offsite and to begin assessing the contamination at the site. From 1998 to 2001, Bradford voluntarily performed the testing, monitoring, and/or cleanup activities requested of it by ANR. Though construction of the gas station revealed more concerns about the extent of contamination, in 2001, ANR evidently ceased communications with Bradford.3 In 2004, however, ANR ordered Bradford to resume monitoring and testing activities. Bradford initially acceded to ANR’s renewed requests, but then asserted that it would no longer take responsibility for any remediation or related activities on the site. Bradford’s position was and remains that all of the contamination now on the site is of historical origin, preexisted its ownership of the site, and it should not be liable for the cleanup of contamination that it did not cause.

In the pending motions, Bradford argues that it does not have full liability to the State for the historical contamination and, as a factual matter, that it has fully remediated any releases that it actually caused. It argues that it has no liability under the proportional liability defense of 10 V.S.A. § 6615(c) and that any interpretation of § 6615(c) that results in its liability for historical contamination that it did not cause violates the Common Benefits Clause of the Vermont Constitution, ch. I, art. 7. Separately, it argues that it is not liable to the State under the third- party liability provision of § 6615(d)(1)(C). With regard to the Town of Springfield, Bradford argues that the Town is liable as a current owner for the portion of the gasification property that it currently owns.

The State argues that Bradford has joint and several liability for the historical contamination. The Town argues that it does not own any portion of the site.

Overview of 10 V.S.A. § 6615

The central liability provision of Vermont’s Waste Management Act is 10 V.S.A. § 6615.

2 Bradford acknowledged the lack of any basis for third party liability against the McGuinnesses at the hearing on the current motions; summary judgment was entered in their favor on the record. 3 The long gap in communication between ANR and Bradford goes unexplained in the record but there is no indication it caused Bradford any prejudice.

2 Under § 6615(a), four classes of entities may be liable for abatement of a “release” and costs of investigation, removal, and remediation: (1) the owner or operator of the affected “facility” (the current owner or operator); (2) “any person who at the time of release . . . owned or operated any facility at which such hazardous materials were disposed of” (a former owner or operator); (3) anyone who owned and arranged for the disposal of hazardous waste at a facility owned or operated by another (an arranger); and (4) anyone who transported hazardous waste to a facility from which there was a release (a transporter). 10 V.S.A. § 6615(a)(1–4). No arrangers or transporters are involved in this case.

Current owners and operators and former owners and operators are different in kind under § 6615(a). Former owner liability is contingent on ownership “at the time of release.” A “release” is “any intentional or unintentional action or omission resulting in the spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying, dumping, or disposing of hazardous materials into the surface or groundwaters, or onto the lands in the state.” 10 V.S.A. § 6602(17). That is, “release” refers not to the fact of existing contamination but to the act that causes the contamination. State v. Howe Cleaners, Inc., No. 27-1-04 Wncv, slip op. at 7 (Toor, J., Mar.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State of Vermont v. Bradford Oil Co., Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-vermont-v-bradford-oil-co-inc-vtsuperct-2012.