STATE v. MCCLURE

2004 NCBC 8
CourtNorth Carolina Business Court
DecidedDecember 4, 2004
Docket03-CVS-005617
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2004 NCBC 8 (STATE v. MCCLURE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Business Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE v. MCCLURE, 2004 NCBC 8 (N.C. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

STATE V. MCCLURE, et al. 2004 NCBC 8

NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION WAKE COUNTY 03-CVS-005617

State of North Carolina, ex rel. Roy Cooper, Attorney General, and North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources,

Plaintiffs,

v.

Darin M. McClure, Thomas A. Proctor, ORDER AND OPINION Mid-Atlantic Associates, P.A., Catherine A. Ross, CBM Environmental Services, Inc., North Carolina Environmental Service Providers Association, d/b/a NCESPA, John A. Hill, and John Does 1 through 100,

Defendants.

{1} This case arises out of plaintiffs’ claim that defendants engaged in illegal business practices in their efforts to influence prices paid under state contracts for environmental services. Plaintiffs bring claims against defendants for price fixing, providing deceptive survey information, solicitation of a group boycott, solicitation of price fixing, conspiracy to restrain trade involving a state contract, facilitation of price fixing, providing false certificates of non-collusion and kickback schemes. {2} Defendant organizations named in the complaint are: North Carolina Environmental Service Providers Association (“NCESPA”); Mid-Atlantic Associates, P.A. (“Mid-Atlantic”); CBM Environmental Services, Inc. (“CBM”); Shield Engineering, Inc. (“Shield”); S&ME, Inc. (“S&ME”); SEI Environmental, Inc. (“SEI”); Environmental Conversation Laboratories (“ENCO”); South Atlantic Environmental Drilling and Construction Company (“SAEDACCO”); and Almes & Associates, Inc. (“Almes”). {3} Individual defendants named in the complaint are: Darin M. McClure (“McClure”), president and co-owner of Mid-Atlantic and president of NCESPA; Thomas A. Proctor (“Proctor), vice president and co-owner of Mid-Atlantic; Catherine A. Ross (“Ross”), CEO of CBM and vice president and director of NCESPA; Keith A. Anthony (“Anthony”), vice president of Shield and director of NCESPA; William A. Quarles (“Quarles”), assessment and remediation services manager at S&ME and director of NCESPA; Matthew R. Einsman (“Einsman”), environmental engineering manager at S&ME and director of NCESPA; Michael D. Shaw (“Shaw”), senior geologist at SEI and director of NCESPA; James H. Hays (“Hays”), employee of ENCO and treasurer and director of NCESPA; Peter I. Byer (“Byer”), president of SAEDACCO and director of NCESPA; and John A. Hill (“Hill”), employee of Almes and director of NCESPA. {4} NCESPA, Mid-Atlantic, S&ME, Shield, SEI, ENCO, SAEDACCO, Almes, McClure, Proctor, Anthony, Quarles, Shaw, Hays and Byer all later entered into consent judgments and dismissals with plaintiffs. Therefore, the remaining defendants that bring the motions to dismiss are: CBM, Ross and Hill. {5} Plaintiffs seek civil penalties of $5,000 from each remaining defendant, treble damages from defendants that engaged in the conspiracy, a permanent order enjoining defendants from engaging in the alleged unlawful conduct, and reimbursement of plaintiffs’ attorney fees by defendants. {6} Remaining defendants filed N.C. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) motions to dismiss on all claims and assert several doctrines that they claim immunize them from any liability in this matter.

Office of the Attorney General by K.D. Sturgis, Gary R. Govert and Kimberly W. Duffley for Plaintiffs State of North Carolina, ex rel. Roy Cooper, Attorney General, and North Carolina Department Environment and Natural Resources.

Smith Moore LLP by Jon A. Berkelhammer, Shannon R. Joseph and Marc Tucker for Defendant John A. Hill; Ellis & Winters, LLP by Matthew W. Sawchak, Julia Youngman, and Danielle Rose for Defendants Mid-Atlantic Associates, Inc., Darin M. McClure and Thomas A. Proctor; Hunton & Williams by Douglas W. Kenyon for Defendants Darin M. McClure, Thomas A. Proctor and Mid-Atlantic Associates, Inc.; Richard H. Tomberlin for Defendants CBM Environmental Services, Inc. and Catherine A. Ross; John F. Graybeal for Defendant North Carolina Environmental Service Providers Association.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND {7} This case centers on the bidding process between the State of North Carolina and contractors of environmental services. More specifically, the matter arises in the context of the statutory framework created by the North Carolina General Assembly to fund the cleanup of underground storage tanks (“USTs”). The framework requires that the North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources (“DENR”) reimburse tank owners or operators (“responsible parties”) for the reasonable and necessary costs incurred in cleaning up the aftermath from leaking USTs. Funds for paying the cleanup costs come from fees charged to all tank owners. The fund created by these fees seldom suffices to meet the needs of DENR for cleanup reimbursements.[1] {8} As a means of controlling its reimbursement expenses, DENR sets specific rates for environmental services. Those rates are published in its Reasonable Rate Document (“RRD”). DENR solicits the typical billing rates of engineers, geologists and other environmental consultants in order to calculate the reimbursement rates for these costs. DENR then issues the RRD providing the reimbursement rates for the services that the responsible parties employ in the cleanup processes. While private parties contract for services at different rates, the rates contained in the RRD have a significant influence on marketplace pricing. Thus, the rates set in the RRD affect both DENR reimbursement and nongovernmental marketplace pricing. {9} In addition to the reimbursement method, DENR also must contend with the cleanup of UST leaks on property whose owners cannot be located. DENR contracts with specific environmental consultants to carry out the cleanup of these contaminated properties. These environmental consultants obtain the contracts, referred to as “state lead work,” through a bidding process in which bidders respond to a request for proposals (“RFPs”). This process also affects marketplace pricing. DENR uses information obtained in connection with these RFPs in setting rates in the RRD. {10} In 2001 DENR published proposed revisions to the RRD that potentially would have affected environmental consultants, engineers and geologists by setting rates paid for environmental services at a level that was unsatisfactory to defendants. Shortly thereafter, the State requested RFPs for some state lead work. {11} In response to the potential changes, a group of environmental consultants, engineers and geologists created an informal association referred to in the briefs as the “Stakeholders Group.” In 2002 members of the Stakeholders Group formed a nonprofit corporation under North Carolina law officially named the North Carolina Environmental Service Providers Association. NCESPA accordingly elected a board of directors that included McClure and Hill. {12} Defendants are alleged to have taken two specific actions to cause DENR to raise the rates from those proposed in the 2001 revision. First, the State alleges that defendants provided a reasonable rate survey that contained false, inflated billing information. Second, the State alleges that the defendants sought to improperly influence the prices submitted in RFPs for the state lead work. The State alleges that defendants believed DENR would use the information gathered through the RFPs for the state lead work to set rates in the RRD, and that if inflated bids were submitted, the RRD rates would be higher. {13} Before the incorporation of NCESPA, the leader of the Stakeholders Group, McClure, requested that the persons and entities associated with the Stakeholder Group complete a “reasonable rate survey.” Plaintiffs allege that McClure engaged in an e-mail campaign to inflate the RRD by having the Stakeholders submit artificially inflated rate information.

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Related

STATE Ex Rel. COOPER v. McCLURE
2007 NCBC 24 (North Carolina Business Court, 2007)

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Bluebook (online)
2004 NCBC 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcclure-ncbizct-2004.