Weed v. Casie Enterprise

653 A.2d 603, 279 N.J. Super. 517
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedFebruary 22, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 653 A.2d 603 (Weed v. Casie Enterprise) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weed v. Casie Enterprise, 653 A.2d 603, 279 N.J. Super. 517 (N.J. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

279 N.J. Super. 517 (1995)
653 A.2d 603

SANFORD WEED AND NANCY WEED, INDIVIDUALLY AND T/A WEED'S TEXACO, PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS,
v.
CASIE ENTERPRISE, A DIVISION OF REZULTZ, INC., A CORPORATION OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY, OR LICENSED TO DO BUSINESS IN THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY, T/A PROTANK,[1] DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued January 3, 1995.
Decided February 22, 1995.

*520 Before Judges VILLANUEVA, WEFING and BRAITHWAITE.

Lewis J. Schweller argued the cause for appellant (Mr. Schweller and H. Robert Boney, Jr., attorneys; Mr. Schweller, of counsel and on the brief).

Mitchell H. Kizner argued the cause for respondent (Riesenburger & Kizner, attorneys; Mr. Kizner and Sharon Oras Morgan, of counsel and on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by VILLANUEVA, J.A.D.

Plaintiffs, Sanford Weed and Nancy Weed, appeal from a jury verdict of no cause of action in favor of defendant, and plaintiff Sanford Weed appeals from an award of $92,514.24 under N.J.S.A. 2A:15-59.1, the so-called frivolous litigation statute (Act), to defendant. In the latter appeal, the issue is whether a plaintiff who in bad faith fabricates a lawsuit can be assessed under the Act for attorney and expert fees incurred by the defendant successfully defending the lawsuit. We hold that he can so be assessed and affirm both judgments.

Plaintiffs, Sanford Weed and Nancy Weed, individually and t/a Weed's Texaco, sued defendant Casie Ecology Oil Salvage, Inc. (Casie or defendant) to recover damages for an environmental cleanup resulting from a spill of gasoline allegedly caused by defendant's negligent removal of a gasoline storage tank from plaintiffs' property. Plaintiffs sought recovery upon theories of breach of contract and negligence.

Sanford Weed (Weed or plaintiff) operated a gasoline business there from 1977 to 1987. The site in question had been used as a *521 gasoline filling station since 1954. The original fuel storage tanks and underground pipes were used until 1987.

Sanford Weed testified that while one of Casie's workmen was in the excavation hole striking the pipe leading from the tank to the pump island with a sledgehammer in order to disconnect it, a spill occurred which lasted approximately two to three minutes and caused an estimated 50 gallons of fuel to be released. He stated that, although he knew of the spill, neither he nor Casie did anything to try to stop the spill or contain the product. Indeed, he claimed that he did not even watch the spill while it was happening and was busy attending to various matters. He also testified that he never contacted the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)[2] to report the spill and did not tell anyone about it until the DEP contacted him, which is when he claims to have first learned that there was a problem. He further confirmed that he did not complain to Casie about the alleged spill and paid Casie in full on four separate occasions for its work. He conceded that the first time that Casie was informed that Weed believed Casie was responsible for the cleanup of his premises was a few months before he filed the complaint in September 1991 when his lawyer contacted Casie.

The main issue at the trial was whether an event that caused a spill had occurred prior to Casie's arrival on the premises on May 16, 1987. Indeed, a DEP document showed that on May 15, 1987, Patrolman Reindwalds of the Egg Harbor Township Police Department reported that on May 14, two days before Casie did its work, a spill of gasoline was noted during underground tank removal at the Weeds' premises. At trial, Weed testified that the day before Casie arrived, an excavator hired by Weed used a backhoe to expose the tank and later two of Weeds' employees then dug out soil around the tank. Weed insisted that neither his *522 men nor the excavator touched the tank or the pipes connected to the tank, and gave contradictory accounts as to whether the excavator was Michael Zyndorf or Brian Osborne.

An important issue at the trial was whether the gasoline that had been stored in the tank removed by Casie was leaded or unleaded. In a deposition taken in June 1992, Weed stated that the tank held unleaded fuel before he had stopped using it. However, after Casie's expert determined that most of the contamination on the site, including that in the area where the 3,000-gallon tank had been removed by Casie, was from leaded gasoline, Weed submitted an affidavit to the court signed June 14, 1993 which stated that he distinctly remembered testifying to the storage of leaded gasoline in the particular tank and the "Court Reporter apparently typed up my testimony as indicating unleaded gasoline in that tank. That is not correct.... [M]y specific recollection [is] that there was leaded and only leaded gasoline in the tank which was the subject of the excavation and which is the subject of this litigation."

Following the submission of Weed's affidavit, the defendant obtained a document that Weed had signed and submitted to the DEP in May 1986 in which he stated that the tank in question contained unleaded gasoline. The DEP document was an "underground storage tank registration questionnaire" which stated that Weed's Texaco had five tanks — two 3,000-gallon tanks, one 4,000-gallon tank, one 2,000-gallon tank, and one 1,000-gallon tank with diesel fuel. The questionnaire indicated that both 3,000-gallon tanks contained unleaded gasoline. Casie removed one of these 3,000-gallon tanks. At trial, Weed ultimately conceded that the tank had in fact contained unleaded gasoline before he stopped using it.

Weed also conceded that he observed a hole on the top of the tank after it was removed from the excavation, but insisted that the hole was only pinpoint in size. However, he admitted that the tank was rusty and that he did not look for any other holes in the tank. In a pretrial deposition Weed had testified that his decision *523 to have the storage tank removed by Casie was not prompted by a belief that the tank was leaking, rather he was preparing the property for sale. At trial, however, he testified that Casie's services were requested because of "the possibility" the tank was leaking. Weed's admission that inventory records had shown a loss of product from the tank and that he had it removed because of a belief that it might be leaking occurred after the defense took a deposition of Weed's former gas station manager, Charles "Butch" Giovinazzi. Contrary to Weed's deposition testimony, Mr. Giovinazzi testified that Weed knew prior to the removal of the tank that it was leaking. Likewise, Weed's inventory records for his other tanks revealed fuel shortages, but he nevertheless continued to use them.

Although Weed testified at trial that only he and Casie's employees witnessed the spill, the next day he produced a witness, Draper Ellis, a former employee and tenant, who claimed he witnessed the spill. Ellis testified that he observed the initial digging with the backhoe and the digging with the shovels. The men doing the digging, Ellis alleged, were Casie's employees who attempted to disconnect a pipe from the bottom of the tank with "enormously large pipe wrenches." The men then reportedly beat on the pipe with sledgehammers for about an hour.

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Bluebook (online)
653 A.2d 603, 279 N.J. Super. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weed-v-casie-enterprise-njsuperctappdiv-1995.