Titanium Industries v. S.E.A., Inc.

691 N.E.2d 1087, 118 Ohio App. 3d 39, 1997 Ohio App. LEXIS 339
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 29, 1997
DocketNo. 94 C.A. 130.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 691 N.E.2d 1087 (Titanium Industries v. S.E.A., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Titanium Industries v. S.E.A., Inc., 691 N.E.2d 1087, 118 Ohio App. 3d 39, 1997 Ohio App. LEXIS 339 (Ohio Ct. App. 1997).

Opinions

Gene Donofrio, Judge.

Defendant-appellant, S.E.A., Inc. (“SEA”), appeals from a judgment of the Mahoning County Common Pleas Court in favor of plaintiff-appellee, Titanium Industries (“Titanium”), following a jury verdict in favor of Titanium.

*42 Titanium is involved in the business of fabricating and distributing titanium products. SEA is a firm engaged in the business of providing scientific and engineering consulting services.

On April 2, 1993, Titanium filed a complaint against SEA alleging negligent misrepresentation, breach of contract, and violations of Ohio’s Deceptive Trade Practices Act (R.C. 4165.01 et seq.). The allegations in the complaint centered around the performance by SEA of a Phase I environmental assessment on property in Austintovm, Ohio owned by Youngstown Welding, which company Titanium had previously entered into negotiations to purchase. The complaint alleged that SEA had breached its duty to Titanium by not revealing the presence of environmental contamination on Youngstown Welding’s property.

Trial to a jury began on May 5, 1994. At trial, testimony established that on June 16,1989, Titanium and SEA entered into a contract for the performance of a Phase I environmental assessment. Stephen Gauntner, contracting officer for SEA, testified that he was contacted on June 13,1989 by Attorney Robert Fulton, on behalf of an unnamed client, and asked to perform an environmental assessment on the subject property. Gauntner testified that when Fulton told him that Youngstown Welding was a manufacturer of steel products and special alloy pipes, he suggested to Fulton that a Phase II assessment, which would have included soil testing, be done on the property. Gauntner testified that Fulton declined this offer.

Gauntner testified that the parties then agreed that a Phase I assessment would be conducted. In a proposal approved by Fulton on June 16, 1989, the parties agreed that the Phase I assessment would embody document examination (which would include a review of “Ohio EPA documents that are available as public record to examine any permits, agency site investigations, or notices of violations that may have been issued and that may give notice to any existing risks on the subject property * * * ” and a site inspection using a hnu photoioni-zation monitor [“PID”]). Gauntner testified that a PID is used to measure volatile organics and that it does not detect metals. The parties agreed that the assessment would be completed and SEA’s report submitted by the time for the closing of the sale on June 29,1989.

SEA assigned Sharon Roney to conduct the assessment of the Youngstown Welding property. Roney testified that she made an inspection of the site on June 22, 1989. At that time, she met with Paul Agler, an engineer employed by Youngstown Welding since 1953, using SEA’s environmental questionnaire.

Roney testified that Agler furnished her with incomplete information. She testified that Agler told her that there was no on-site disposal of any hazardous waste and that the hazardous waste generated on the site was shipped to Envirite Corporation for disposal. Roney further testified that Agler indicated that the *43 company had no notices of violation for hazardous waste. Roney testified that Agler did not tell her about a lagoon on the property used to collect pickling acid that the company had filled in years before. Roney also testified that Agler did not tell her that underground storage tanks existed on the property. Finally, Roney testified that when she asked if there were any aerial photographs available for the facility, Agler gave her a photocopy of a photograph rather than the photograph itself. During trial, Titanium presented the photograph itself as evidence, which photograph Roney testified she had never seen. Titanium’s expert later testified that disturbed areas and discolorations in the soil could be seen on Plaintiffs Exhibit 19. These disturbed areas could not be seen on Defendant’s Exhibit 27.

Contrary to Roney’s testimony, Agler testified that he did not recall being asked the questions set forth on Roney’s questionnaire.

In connection with her assessment, Roney contacted by telephone certain offices and divisions of the Ohio E.P.A. to locate any documents relating to the property. Roney testified that she was told that the agency had no files for the property.

Roney testified that, prior to June of 1989, she had experience in obtaining documents from the Northeast District Office of the Ohio E.P.A. She testified that, during that time frame, she generally called the information officer and asked whether they had any files on a particular company and asked to review them. Roney testified that she did this in the instant case. Roney further testified that she had previously been employed by Ohio E.P.A.

Roney further testified that Ohio E.P.A.’s information officer, Ms. Toumazos, indicated that they did not have any files to review. Roney testified that she asked Toumazos who the R.C.R.A. (Resource Conservation and Recovery Act) inspectors were for the county to double check with them as to whether they would have something that they may not have written down. Roney testified that Toumazos told her that Dennis Busch and Dave Goulish were the R.C.R.A. inspectors in the hazardous waste program.

Roney further testified that she called the hazardous waste division as opposed to some other division of the Ohio E.P.A. since the primary concern at this time would have been Youngstown Welding’s handling of hazardous waste. Roney testified that she contacted these two gentlemen by telephone and that they indicated to her that they had no files for the facility and that they had not inspected it. Roney testified that, while she was familiar with the Ohio Freedom of Information Act, she did not make a written request for the documents because the time frame for her report was very limited and there would not have been enough time to write a letter and get a response from Ohio E.P.A. within the time allotted for her report.

*44 In connection with its cross-examination of Roney, Titanium introduced Plaintiffs Exhibit 8, which consists of a certificate of David Lee, Group Leader of the Division of Surface Water, Ohio E.P.A., and attached documents which were allegedly produced by or for the Ohio Department of Health in 1970 and 1971. The documents identify the presence of an acid lagoon on the Youngstown Welding site. Lee’s certificate states that the documents attached to his certificate “ * * * are documents maintained in the public record of the Ohio EPA, Northeast District Office.”

Lee’s certificate authenticated the attached documents alleged to be public records. Titanium also used the affidavit, over the objection of SEA, in arguing that the documents found in Exhibit 8 were located in the files of the Ohio E.P.A. in 1989 when Roney telephoned the agency, seeking documents pertaining to Youngstown Welding.' Titanium inferred that, had Roney submitted a written request for records, the documents found in Exhibit 8 would have been provided to her, disclosing the existence of the lagoon, and thus indicating that soil sampling should be done.

Evidence at trial established that Roney issued a status letter dated June 27, 1989 to Fulton.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
691 N.E.2d 1087, 118 Ohio App. 3d 39, 1997 Ohio App. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/titanium-industries-v-sea-inc-ohioctapp-1997.