United States v. BASF Corp.

990 F. Supp. 907
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJanuary 7, 1998
DocketNo. 96-75279
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 990 F. Supp. 907 (United States v. BASF Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. BASF Corp., 990 F. Supp. 907 (E.D. Mich. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION and ORDER

FEIKENS, Senior District Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

United States of America (“plaintiff’) filed its complaint in this ease on November 18, 1996. The complaint was brought pursuant to Section 1071 of the Comprehensive Environment Response Compensation Liability Act (“CERCLA”), 42 U.S.C. § 9601 et seq., a statutory provision that provides plaintiff with the right to sue responsible parties for the reimbursement of costs expended to clean up so-called “Superfund Sites.”2 Contemporaneous with the filing of this suit, plaintiff lodged with this court, pursuant to Section 1223 of CERCLA, a proposed consent decree between it and a group of 35 potentially responsible parties (hereafter “settlors”). This opinion and order addresses whether that consent decree should be entered.

To decide this matter, I am not required “to determine the best method for measuring fault and apportioning liability.” United States v. Cannons Engineering Corp., 899 F.2d 79, 87 (C.A. 1 1990). See also, United States v. Akzo Coatings of America, Inc., 949 F.2d 1409 (C.A.6 1991). Rather, my duty is to “approve of the method proposed by the government unless it is ‘arbitrary, capricious and devoid of a rational basis’.” Id. To do this, I must decide whether the settlement is fair, reasonable and consistent with the purposes of CERCLA. Id at 85. Akzo at 1424. I do so conclude.

II. FACTS

The consent decree presently before me is not the first one entered into between plaintiff and settlors. In March 1993, Judge Stewart Newblatt approved a consent decree (“the 1993 consent decree”) that obligated settlors to, among other things, complete some of the work called for in the first phase or operable unit (“OU-1”) of the project and to undertake the remedial action called for in the second phase, operable unit two (“OU-2”). See, United States v. BASF-INMONT Corp., et al., 819 F.Supp. 601 (E.D.Mich.1993). This first consent decree left open, however, settlors’ liability for so-called “past response costs,” i.e., those costs that the United States Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) and Department of Justice (“DOJ”) incurred in connection with the site through May 15,1991, plus interest.

The consent decree under present scrutiny, the second one submitted by these parties, covers those pre-May 15, 1991 costs. It specifies that settlors forfeit any claims they may have against plaintiff related to the decree and that, within 45 days of its entry, the settlors will pay EPA $14,564 million plus interest from the date of the lodging of the decree. The consideration for settlors’ promise to pay has two important components. First, plaintiff promises not to sue settlors under Section 107(a) of CERCLA4 to recover past response costs. Second, the consent decree contains a contribution bar prohibiting actions against settlors pursuant to Section 113(f)(2) of CERCLA5 for matters with which the decree deals.

[911]*911Plaintiff and settlors maintain that the negotiating framework centered on two figures: 1) the total amount necessary to clean up the Metamora site; and 2) settlors’ “fair share” of that cost. The former component is easily calculated by taking the $30,790,000 EPA incurred at the site through May 15, 1991 plus the $5,340,000 in prejudgment interest on those costs through June 1994, and adding those two figures to the approximately $31,-265,0006 settlors would incur under the 1993 consent decree. The sum of these figures, $67,395,000 in present value, is the figure plaintiff estimates is the total site cost.

With regard to determining settlors’ “fair share,” different reports have placed different degrees of responsibility for the cleanup upon the settlors. One report estimated set-tlors should pay 38.352% of cleanup costs. By comparison, plaintiff calculated settlors’ allocation at 69.5% of the cleanup costs. Set-tlors sharply dispute plaintiff’s allocation primarily because that figure shifts a large portion of the so-called “orphan share” upon them.7 Nevertheless, combined with the approximately $31,265,000 the settlors have agreed to pay under the 1993 consent decree, the present consent decree before me, which requires settlors to pay an additional $14,564 million in past costs, will insure that settlors’ total share of site costs will approach 68% of the estimated $67,395,000 in present value needed to complete the project. In other words, the two consent decrees obligate set-tlors to pay at least $45,829,000.8

Plaintiff arrived at these numbers only after conducting extensive research that included, among other things, review of documentary evidence received from several hundred entities, review of documents and correspondence from potentially responsible parties, interviews of truck drivers and employees employed by the Metamora landfill and by the entities who transported waste there, documents found inside buried drums, and interviews with five executives of U.S. Chemical Co., a company that transported to the Metamora landfill close to 10 million gallons of hazardous waste.9

III. ANALYSIS

In spite of its attempts, plaintiff acknowledges that its calculations were not scientific, but rather represented its best effort to fairly apportion responsibility for the cleanup effort. However, my review of the consent decree need not focus on whether the allocations were perfect. See, United States v. Charles George Trucking, 34 F.3d 1081 (C.A.1 1994). Rather, my task is to determine whether the consent decree is fair, reasonable, and consistent with CERCLA’s objectives.

I look first to the settlement’s substantive fairness. See, United States v. Cannons Engineering Corp., 899 F.2d 79 (C.A.1 1990). My inquiry here is to determine whether the settlors aré paying a percentage of the total cleanup costs that roughly approximates the proportion of the environmental damage attributable to their wastes. Because I conclude that the settlement “falls along the broad spectrum of plausible approximations,” I hold that it is substantively fair. Id. at 88. The record amply demonstrates that settlors will be responsible for at least 68% of the total cleanup costs. This is an amount almost double that calculated by expert Charles Tisdale and accepted by settlors. It is a mere 1.5% away from the 69.5% figure initially demanded by plaintiff and fairly reflects the fact that settlors have saved plaintiff both time and resources in agreeing early on in the process to a previous consent decree that spared plaintiff the expense of fully litigating this matter.

[912]

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Related

United States v. BASF Corp.
990 F. Supp. 907 (E.D. Michigan, 1998)

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990 F. Supp. 907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-basf-corp-mied-1998.