Tosco Corp. v. Koch Industries, Inc.

216 F.3d 886, 2000 WL 702380
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMay 26, 2000
DocketNo. 98-6209
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 216 F.3d 886 (Tosco Corp. v. Koch Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tosco Corp. v. Koch Industries, Inc., 216 F.3d 886, 2000 WL 702380 (10th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

ORDER ON REHEARING

BRORBY, Circuit Judge.

Koch Industries, Inc. (“Koch”) has filed a petition for panel rehearing to clarify factual statements in Tosco Corp. v. Koch Indus., Inc., 2000 WL 525915 (10th Cir., May 2, 2000), concerning the district court’s allocation of fifteen percent of past and future response costs at the Duncan, Oklahoma refinery to Koch. Specifically, Koch seeks to clarify that the court did not allocate fifteen percent of the response costs to Koch based on the “relative Proportion of time Koch operated the Refinery,” Tosco, 2000 WL 525915 at *2, but rather, on the relative period during which the Refinery was operated while under Koch’s ownership.

Upon consideration, the court grants the limited petition for rehearing. An amended opinion is attached to this order.

OPINION

The United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma entered judgment in favor of Plaintiff, Tosco Corporation (“Tosco”), on its Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (“CERCLA”) and Oklahoma nuisance law claims against Defendant, Koch Industries, Inc. (“Koch”). In so doing, the district court declared Koch responsible for its fair share (fifteen percent) of all past and future response costs and damages Tosco incurred or will incur while investigating and remediating environmental contamination at the abandoned Duncan, Oklahoma oil refinery (“Refinery”). Koch appeals, claiming the district court (1) erred in determining Koch to be liable under CERCLA; (2) applied an incorrect and inequitable cost allocation method; (3) erred in ruling Koch liable under Oklahoma nuisance law; (4) abused its discretion by admitting late-filed, untimely evidence; and (5) erred by not taking into consideration the settlement between Sun and Tosco. We consider each issue in turn, and affirm.

[890]*890I. Factual Background

Ownership History

The Refinery sits on approximately four hundred acres five miles south of Duncan, Oklahoma. Rock Island Refining Company built the northern and eastern portions of the Refinery (approximately 160 acres) in the 1920s, and expanded and modified those portions during the 1920s and 1930s. Rock Island Oil & Refining Company, an unrelated entity and Koch’s predecessor company, purchased those portions of the Refinery as an ongoing refining business in September 1946. Koch operated the northern and eastern portions of the Refinery until December 1949, when it shut down operations.

In June 1951, Koch leased the northern and eastern portions of the Refinery to Sunray DX Oil Corporation (“Sunray”), predecessor-in-interest to Sun Company, Inc. (“Sun”). Sunray continued Koch’s operation under lease from June 1951 to September 1953. In September 1953, Sunray purchased the northern and eastern portions of the Refinery from Koch and combined those portions with the southern and western portions of the Refinery it purchased in 1947 from the United States, Defense Plant Corporation, which had utilized the southern and western portions to produce jet fuel during World War II. Sunray and its successors owned and operated the Refinery from 1947 until 1980. Tosco purchased the Refinery from Sun in November 1980, and operated it for three years until June 1983. The Refinery has not been in operation since that date.

Tosco sold the Refinery to Alpha Oil Company (“Alpha”) in April 1986. Alpha then sold certain waste areas of the Refinery to Resource Recovery Company (“Resource Recovery”) and the remaining areas to Energy Realty International (“Energy Realty”) in the summer of 1986. Resource Recovery Company and Energy Realty International are the current owners of the Refinery.

Refinery Operations

Koch, Sun and Tosco each conducted oil refining operations at the Refinery. Koch manufactured gasoline, kerosene, distillate, naphtha, range oil, fuel oils, and asphalt products at the Refinery. During Sun’s and Tosco’s ownership, the Refinery manufactured automotive gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, various grades of fuel oil, LP gas, petrochemical feedstock, and petroleum coke. Koch’s asphalt plant was shutdown after Sunray built the coker in 1954.

Refinery operations, including those during Koch’s ownership and operation, generated various hazardous substances and wastes, including slop oil emulsion solids, heat exchanger bundle cleaning sludge, API separator sludge, leaded tank bottoms, highly corrosive sludges, waste waters, and petroleum hydrocarbon byproducts. Koch operated numerous unlined waste ponds and pits, oil skimming ponds, sumps, settling ponds, cooling ponds, holding ponds, and drainage ditches, and an asphalt pit area and underground pipeline for waste disposal. These areas are probable sources of underground contamination. The pollution caused by the Refinery’s various owners and operators commingled and cannot be separated.

Site Investigation and Remediation

The Oklahoma Department of Environmental Quality (“Department”) completed an environmental investigation of the Refinery in 1994. The Department informed Tosco and Sun, as former owners of the Refinery, that further investigation and remedial action was necessary and requested that Tosco and Sun conduct such activity jointly. Only Tosco entered into a Consent Agreement and Final Order with the Department, under which Tosco agreed to complete a remedial investigation and feasibility study of the site, prepare a remedial design, and take certain interim remedial actions. Tosco has installed a cut-off wall and bank stabilization to remediate seeps of hydrocarbons and hazardous substances into Claridy Creek, and has oper[891]*891ated a system to recover hydrocarbons and other hazardous substances floating on the groundwater under the Refinery. At the time of trial, Tosco continued to work with the Department to investigate the need for further, future corrective actions. As of December 1, 1997, Tosco had incurred investigation and remediation costs of $755,-868.23. Total costs are likely to exceed $2,000,000.

Litigation History

In June 1997, Tosco filed suit against Sun, Koch, Alpha, Resource Recovery and Energy Realty seeking contribution for past and future investigation and remediation costs pursuant to CERCLA § 113, 42 U.S.C. § 9613, Oklahoma public nuisance law, and other statutes. Tosco also sought relief against Sun for breach of contract and contractual declaratory relief, stemming from the purchase agreement through which Tosco purchased the Refinery from Sun. Sun settled all claims with Tosco in January 1998 after a one-day bench trial on the contractual issues. The remaining CERCLA and nuisance claims against Koch, Alpha, Resource Recovery and Energy Realty were tried to the court in February 1998. Koch was the only defendant that appeared and defended these remaining claims, as Alpha, Resource Recovery, and Energy Realty either no longer exist or are insolvent.

In March 1998, the district court found Koch liable under CERCLA and Oklahoma public nuisance law and allocated nineteen percent of Tosco’s past and future response costs to Koch. In September 1998, the district court amended its judgment by reducing the allocation of costs to Koch to fifteen percent, reflecting the relative period during which the Refinery was operated while under Koch’s ownership. Koch appeals the amended judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
216 F.3d 886, 2000 WL 702380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tosco-corp-v-koch-industries-inc-ca10-2000.