State v. Parkway Cleaners

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 2018
Docket480-7-10 Wncv
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Parkway Cleaners (State v. Parkway Cleaners) 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 v. Parkway Cleaners, (Vt. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

State v. Parkway Cleaners, No. 480-7-10 Wncv (Teachout, J., Jan. 22, 2018).

[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 # 480-7-10 Wncv

STATE OF VERMONT AGENCY OF NATURAL RESOURCES

v.

PARKWAY CLEANERS, et al.

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, AND ORDER

The Vermont Agency of Natural Resources (ANR or the State) seeks remedies for environmental contamination related to a former dry cleaning business in the Town of Hartford. There were initially several Defendants in the case. The claims against the others have been resolved. Judgment issued by default on June 11, 2015 against the following former operators of the dry cleaning business: Paul D. Gendron, Parkway Cleaners, and Paul D. Gendron dba Parkway Cleaners. The Fournier Defendants, who also operated the dry cleaning business for a time after Gendron, settled with the State for $100,000 in March of 2014. Third party Defendant Town of Hartford has been dismissed from the case. The remaining Defendants are Richard S. Daniels and Hazen Street Holdings, Inc., a corporation organized and controlled by Mr. Daniels that is currently the title owner of the subject property. On August 5, 2014, summary judgment was granted to the State imposing liability on Mr. Daniels as owner of the property.1 A motion to reopen the issue of liability was denied on September 2, 2016. The 2014 ruling provided for a period of discovery on the issue of damages, and ordered a hearing on “the amount of past damages, prejudgment interest, the amount to be credited from the Fournier settlement, and the terms of injunctive relief.” That hearing took place on April 20 and 21 and June 29 and 30, 2017. The State was represented by Attorneys Kyle Landis-Marinello and Nicholas F. Persampieri. Richard S. Daniels and Hazen Street Holdings, Inc. were represented by Attorney R. Bradford Fawley and Merrit S. Schnipper. Post-trial memos and proposed findings have been filed by attorneys for both parties.

1 “Daniels, not HSH, is the current owner regardless of which time frame applies to that

determination. 10 V.S.A. § 6615 (a)(1).” 2014 Decision, page 10. “Daniels has current owner liability in this case under 10 V.S.A. § 6615 (a)(1).” Id. at page 11. Motions At the close of the State’s case, Defendants made oral motions, which are ruled upon as follows. Defendants renewed the Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings that was denied at the beginning of the hearing on April 20, 2017. The motion is again denied for the same reasons as stated on the record. Defendants moved for dismissal on several grounds: Failure to prove grounds for injunctive relief. Defendants argue that the State had a remedy at law, and therefore did not show a legal basis for injunctive relief. Since injunctive relief was authorized in the 2014 Decision, this is a request to reopen and revisit that Decision. Grounds to reopen have not been shown. Moreover, the specific statute providing for liability also provides that when liability is established and the defendant does not undertake performance of the necessary work, the State is entitled to an order requiring the Defendant to take specific actions. See 10 V.S.A. § 8221(b)(2) and the Conclusion of Law regarding injunctive relief set forth below. Therefore, the motion is denied on this ground. Statute of Limitations. This is also a request to revisit a prior legal ruling of the court, and is denied. The prior decision was supported by the evidence at the hearing, which showed that it was not until 2006, which is within the statute of limitations period, that testing provided reliable evidence that the property of the Defendants was the source of the contamination that is the subject of this case. Liability. Defendants again request review of prior rulings. Specifically, Defendants argue that as owner they should not have full liability both because they claim they were not responsible for a “release” and because they argue that their liability under the statute should be proportional. They raise no arguments that have not already been considered by the court, and the request to revisit the issue of liability is again denied. Damages. Defendants argue that the damages the State seeks are special damages that were not specifically identified in pleadings. The court denied Defendants’ pretrial motion on this argument at the outset of the trial on April 20, 2017 and affirms that ruling now. Sufficiency of evidence. In addition, Defendants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence, but as set forth below, some of the State’s evidence supported judgment, so that motion is also denied.

Findings of Fact History The subject parcel of property on which the dry cleaning business was operated, referred to in this decision as the “Parkway Lot,” is a small lot adjacent to a property on which is or was located a trucking business owned by Mr. Daniels, informally called RSD Trucking in this decision. There are a few other business properties nearby, but the Parkway Lot is on a corner

2 largely surrounded by a residential neighborhood with small lots and modest homes. The block in which the Parkway Lot is located is on Maple Street (Route 14) in the Town of Hartford. On the other side of Maple Street is the White River. See copies of Defendants’ Exhibits F and D, attached, for a layout and identification of the properties and local features.2 The State first became aware of contamination problems in this neighborhood in 1987. A spill occurred at Parkway Cleaners and the owner was asked to clean it up. In 1989, the State found the contaminant PERC on the adjacent St. Johnsbury Trucking (later RSD Trucking) property under a tank. PERC, or tetrachloroethene, is a chemical also known as PCE that is used in dry cleaning and for degreasing metal parts. It is a carcinogen. Although it attenuates over time, it takes a very long time to do so. At the request of the State, the owner installed a monitoring well. At that time, in 1989, there was no information that the PERC that was discovered was having an effect on human health. In 1989 or 1990, the dry cleaning business stopped operating on the neighboring Parkway Lot. By 1994, RSD Trucking owned the St. Johnsbury Trucking property, and the State asked it to conduct testing in the monitoring wells on its property, which it subsequently did. In 1995, the Parkway Lot went to a tax sale. Richard S. Daniels, principal owner of RSD Trucking, was the high bidder at the tax sale and purchased it for $2,278.38 in his individual capacity. In 1996, the State received information showing the presence of PERC on the Mowers News Service property located on the opposite side of the trucking property from the Parkway Lot. The Mowers News Service property is downgradient from the Parkway Lot, suggesting the possibility that the contaminant had migrated from the Parkway Lot, although Mowers operated its own fleet of vehicles and there was also the possibility that the PERC came from its own activities. In 1999, a Report from the RSD testing in 1995 and 1999 showed PERC in the trucking property monitoring well. This PERC could have come from the Parkway Lot. By 2002, RSD had done a Phase I Report on the RSD Trucking property that identified the Parkway Lot as a potential source of the PERC. (Phase I entails a historical assessment of the site and review of past uses.) In 2004, the State sent notice to RSD Trucking asking it to investigate contamination in the area (Phase II). Patricia Coppolino began work at ANR in 2004 and first became familiar with the Parkway Site in September of 2004. By 2005, she was the site manager for the Parkway Site.

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Related

State v. Howe Cleaners, Inc.
2010 VT 70 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2010)
State v. Irving Oil Corp.
2008 VT 42 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2008)
Remes v. Nordic Group, Inc.
726 A.2d 77 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1999)
State v. Nugent
195 Vt. 411 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2014)

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Parkway Cleaners, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-parkway-cleaners-vtsuperct-2018.