Waste Management of Central Louisiana v. Robert P. Beall

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 4, 2004
DocketCA-0003-1710
StatusUnknown

This text of Waste Management of Central Louisiana v. Robert P. Beall (Waste Management of Central Louisiana v. Robert P. Beall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waste Management of Central Louisiana v. Robert P. Beall, (La. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

03-1710

WASTE MANAGEMENT OF CENTRAL LOUISIANA, ET AL.

VERSUS

ROBERT P. BEALL, ET AL.

********** APPEAL FROM THE NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF RAPIDES, NO. 170,750 HONORABLE WILLIAM ROSS FOOTE, DISTRICT JUDGE

********** ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX CHIEF JUDGE **********

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, C.J., Glenn B. Gremillion, and John B. Scofield*, Judges.

REVERSED AND RENDERED; ACTION DISMISSED.

Henry B. Bruser, III Michael J. O’Shee G. Trippe Hawthorne Gold, Weems, Bruser, Sues & Rundell P. O. Box 6118 Alexandria, LA 71307-6118 Telephone: (318) 445-6471 COUNSEL FOR: Intervenors/Appellees - Lloyd O. Book, Jr., Michael Green, David Miller, Scott Perry, Jr., Sanitation Service, Inc., and J. Rax Garbage Disposal Service, Inc., Individually and as Class Representatives

Albin Alexandre Provosty John Dexter Ryland John Patrick Doggett Provosty, Sadler, deLaunay, Fiorenza & Sobel P. O. Drawer 1791 Alexandria, LA 71309-1791 Telephone: (318) 445-3631 COUNSEL FOR: Secondary Defendant/Appellant - City of Alexandria Allen J. Smith, Jr.

* Honorable John B. Scofield participated in this decision by appointment of the Louisiana Supreme Court as Judge Pro Tempore. Plauché, Smith & Nieset P. O. Box 1705 Lake Charles, LA 70602 Telephone: (337) 436-0522 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiffs/Appellants - Waste Management of Louisiana, L.L.C. and Waste Management Holdings, Inc.

Timothy Joseph Poche Taylor, Porter, Brooks, & Phillips, L.L.P. P. O. Box 2471 Baton Rouge, LA 70821 Telephone: (225) 387-3221 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiffs/Appellants - Waste Management of Louisiana, L.L.C. and Waste Management Holdings, Inc. THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge.

Waste Management of Louisiana, Inc.,1 the defendant in this class action,

appeals a judgment adverse to it on the merits. The judgment declared a 1986 public

contract between the City of Alexandria and Waste Management for the operation of

the Alexandria Landfill valid only for 60 days after its signing, and null and void

thereafter. The judgment awarded the class members $1,775,904.30, plus interest and

attorneys’ fees. The award was based on what the class claimants, as customers of

Waste Management, paid Waste Management while it operated the landfill under the

operating contract between 1986 and 1990, when the landfill closed. The amount of

the award was a calculation of the profit from these customer payments that the trial

court found Waste Management illegally obtained from a null public contract.

Procedurally, the class certification was ordered in 1998 and it arose out

of incidental actions. The litigation out of which the incidental actions and the class

action emerged, began in 1992 when Waste Management sued a former employer,

Robert P. Beall, and a waste disposal contractor, The Omega One Company, for

damages arising from the misuse of Waste Management’s commercial customer

information. Beall and Omega reconvened and filed a third party demand against the

City of Alexandria. The reconventional demand and third party demand sought return

of all money paid by Beall and Omega as customers of Waste Management during the

approximate four-and-one-half years that Waste Management operated the Alexandria

Landfill. Several more customers, including haulers of solid waste for hire, intervened

and asserted the same demand. The reconventional demands and interventions grew

1 At the start of this litigation, this party was Waste Management of Central Louisiana, a division of American Waste & Pollution Control Company. The parent corporation later changed its name to Waste Management of Louisiana, Inc. Another party, Waste Management, Inc., became a third party. Their interests are identical. In this opinion we refer to them collectively as Waste Management.

1 into a class action. The class was certified and defined as all customers of the

Alexandria Landfill charged by Waste Management to deposit solid waste in that

landfill from February 11, 1986 until its closure in September 1990. The original

demand by Waste Management against Beall and Omega is no longer an issue.

On appeal, Waste Management seeks reversal of the judgment in its

entirety. The class claimants answered the appeal, and ask that we find the landfill

operating contract was never valid, not even for 60 days. They also ask that we

increase the award to the total of Waste Management’s receipts, not limited to its

profit after expenses. For the following reasons, we find in favor of Waste

Management and reverse the judgment in its entirety.

I.

ISSUES

Our decision rests on our resolution of two issues. The first is the

efficacy of the 1986 Sanitary Landfill Operating and Maintenance Agreement

(hereinafter “operating contract”), a public contract between the City of Alexandria

and Waste Management effected under the emergency provisions of the city charter.

This includes the duration of the contract, i.e., whether the term was limited by

emergency ordinance to 60 days, or limited in duration only by the terms of the

contract itself. The second issue is whether, under state law, the operating contract

was subject to the requirement of the public bid laws.

2 II.

BACKGROUND

For many years, solid waste in Alexandria and its environs was dumped

in a landfill leased by the City known as the Alexandria Landfill. It was situated on

Esler Road outside the City. This landfill was operated by the City and received

garbage generated or collected by the City, as well as material delivered by private

citizens and local waste haulers from Rapides Parish and elsewhere.

In the early 1980's the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality

(DEQ) began the process of enforcing mandated new standards for sanitary landfill

operations across the state. The DEQ ordered the City to either upgrade its facility,

which was being operated as an open dump, or close it in accordance with the new

regulations. The deadline was January 20, 1986. City officials tried to get an

extension of the closure order, as they had done in the past, but this time they were

unsuccessful. There was no nearby alternate disposal site available. The City had

neither the equipment nor the resources to haul the solid waste the considerable

distance to another acceptable site. Nor did the City have the money to properly close

the landfill, as it would ultimately have had to do. The DEQ made it clear that the

only way the landfill would be allowed to continue in use past the deadline was if the

City contracted with an established waste management company with the resources

and expertise necessary to operate and close the landfill in accordance with regulatory

standards. If the Alexandria Landfill had been shut down, there would have been no

place for people to put their garbage.

Faced with this ultimatum, and unable to find anyone interested except

Waste Management, the City Council, by Emergency Ordinance No. 13-1986 at its

February 11, 1986 meeting, approved the operating contract with Waste Management.

Immediately after the emergency ordinance was passed authorizing the operating

3 contract, the DEQ, which had a representative present at the council meeting, granted

a closure extension. Under the operating contract’s provisions, the City paid Waste

Management a flat monthly fee of $18,750.00. In return, Waste Management

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