Titan Tire of Natchez v. MISSISSIPPI COM'N

891 So. 2d 195, 2004 Miss. LEXIS 1408, 2004 WL 2749171
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 2004
Docket2003-CC-01213-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 891 So. 2d 195 (Titan Tire of Natchez v. MISSISSIPPI COM'N) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Titan Tire of Natchez v. MISSISSIPPI COM'N, 891 So. 2d 195, 2004 Miss. LEXIS 1408, 2004 WL 2749171 (Mich. 2004).

Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 197

¶ 1. In December 2001, the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) issued a written complaint to Titan Tire of Natchez, Inc. asserting that between the years of 1999 and 2000, Titan violated its National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit sixteen times. After unsuccessful attempts to work with MDEQ personnel, Titan was granted an evidentiary hearing before the Mississippi Commission on Environmental Quality, and following a two-day hearing, the Commission found Titan in violation of the permit and fined it $5,000. Aggrieved, Titan appealed to the Hinds County Chancery Court, First Judicial District, which affirmed the Commission's order. We conclude that the chancellor's judgment was correct and affirm.

FACTS
¶ 2. In the early 1980s, Armstrong Tire and Rubber Company (Armstrong) received a permit allowing it to discharge storm water runoff and treated process water into state waters. In 1987, Fidelity Tire Manufacturing Company (Fidelity) purchased the facility and property from Armstrong and Armstrong's permit was reissued to Fidelity. Groundwater contamination identified on the site prompted the Mississippi Commission on Environmental Quality (Commission) to issue an order mandating that Fidelity remediate the contaminated soil and groundwater to levels protective of human health and the environment. Fidelity complied. Through the years, modifications were made to the permit, and in 1996, Fidelity sought an additional modification to the permit. This modification was granted on March 12, 1996, but soon thereafter, Fidelity filed for bankruptcy and never made the modifications provided for in the 1996 permit. Titan Tire of Natchez, Inc. (Titan) purchased the facility in 1998 and began operating under the existing permit.

¶ 3. The following time-line details the sequence of events leading up to the present appeal:

Early 1980s: Armstrong obtained NPDES (National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System) Permit No. MS0001287

*Page 198

March 1987: Fidelity purchased the Armstrong plant

August 9, 1988: NPDES Permit No. MS0001287 was reissued to Fidelity

1990: The Commission issued an order requiring Fidelity to remediate contaminated soil and groundwater

1991: NPDES Permit No. MS0001287 was modified

January 25, 1994: NPDES Permit No. MS001287 reissued to Fidelity for a 5 year period (to expire January 24, 1999)

1996: Fidelity requested a modification to the permit

March 12, 1996: Modification granted

September 1998: Titan purchased Fidelity's facility and applied for a renewal of NPDES Permit No. MS0001287

April, June 1999: TSS (total suspended solids) violations

Aug.-Dec. 1999 Arsenic violations

February 2000: Arsenic violations

June 2000: NPDES Permit No. MS0001287 reissued to Titan

December 2000: Arsenic violations

December 2001: MDEQ issued formal complaint

¶ 4. For many years, Armstrong used the location and facility for its tire manufacturing business. Because the manufacturing process involved a discharge of treated water into a local stream, a NPDES permit1 was required. In accordance with state law, Armstrong applied for and received NPDES Permit No. MS0001287 from the MDEQ permit board, which allowed discharge of stormwater runoff and treated process water.

¶ 5. When Armstrong sold the facility to Fidelity, the permit board reissued the permit to Fidelity. Groundwater contamination was discovered on Fidelity's site, prompting an investigation by MDEQ's Hazardous Waste/Uncontrolled Site Branch. The contaminate of concern was identified as naphtha and its associated compounds. This discovery prompted MDEQ's Hazardous Waste Branch and Fidelity to enter an agreed order requiring Fidelity to install a remediation system which would treat the contaminated groundwater and then discharge the treated water into state surface waters.

¶ 6. Although MDEQ's Hazardous Waste Branch possessed authority to issue the order mandating the installation of the remediation system, the necessary NPDES permit could only be issued by MDEQ's Environmental Permitting Branch. The discharge from Titan's remediation system did not easily conform to the NPDES permit regulations, because ordinarily industrial and municipal wastewater systems maintain a constant discharge volume, but the volume of discharge resulting from a remediation system such as the one installed by Fidelity generally was not a constant volume.

¶ 7. A facility experiencing problems with an industrial wastewater system ordinarily has the authority to cease operations or modify the manufacturing process while correcting the malfunction. Titan's situation, however, was unique in that the site must operate according to the agreed order which required Titan to continuously operate the remediation system to discharge the wastewater associated with the system. Thus Titan argued that MDEQ would not allow Titan to turn off the remediation system when problems arose. *Page 199

¶ 8. MDEQ provided Titan with several alternatives that could have eliminated the problem. MDEQ also informed Titan that the agency would consider making arrangements for Titan to close the pump and treat system, allowing the contaminated groundwater to naturally attenuate. However, Titan never demonstrated how natural attenuation would be effective at the site, so MDEQ never allowed the system to be shut down.

¶ 9. In 1996, a modified NPDES permit had been issued to Fidelity so that it could install additional groundwater monitoring wells to further determine the existing contamination. Once the wells were in place, the quantity of water treated and discharged by the system would have increased. Because the modified NPDES permit increased the amount of water discharged, the allowable concentration levels for contaminants wasdecreased. To put it another way, because the mass quantity of any regulated substance discharged must not exceed a certain limit, the discharge of higher quantities of water means that lower concentration levels of the substance must exist in the water.

¶ 10. Although the modified 1996 NPDES permit was issued to Fidelity, the anticipated groundwater wells were never installed, and Fidelity filed bankruptcy soon after the modified permit was granted. In 1998, Titan purchased the facility and began operations, and according to MDEQ, Titan became responsible for all environmental conditions of the property and facility, including adherence to the modified NPDES permit and the remediation system. Titan argued that MDEQ should not have enforced the permit against it since the additional groundwater wells were never installed.

¶ 11. MDEQ took the position that Titan conducted due diligence when purchasing the facility, and it was responsible for all environmental conditions of the facility including compliance with the NPDES permit. MDEQ additionally maintained that because Titan failed to request any modifications to the existing permit, Titan assumed responsibility for the conditions specified in the 1996 modified NPDES permit. When the modified permit expired and Titan subsequently applied for a new permit, Titan never requested a modification to the 1996 permit, and the permit levels in the renewed NPDES permit remained the same as established in the 1996 permit.

¶ 12.

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891 So. 2d 195, 2004 Miss. LEXIS 1408, 2004 WL 2749171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/titan-tire-of-natchez-v-mississippi-comn-miss-2004.