Lead Opinion
Amoco Oil Company owned and operated a gas station in Lake Forest, Illinois, from 1926 to 1970. Amoco sold the property to George and Margaret Herman, who in turn sold it to First National Bank of Lake Forest, which in turn sold it to Lake Forest Savings and Loan Association. Avondale Federal Savings Bank took title to the property in 1982 when it merged with Lake Forest Savings and Loan.
In late 1995 Avondale negotiated to sell the property to First Chicago Building Corporation — the first in a long line of parties to insist (wisely, in hindsight) on acquiring the property with a clean bill of health. To satisfy its obligations under the purchase agreement with First Chicago, Avondale had an environmental investigation done on the property, and the study revealed petroleum contamination in the soil. Avondale traced the contamination to Amoco and served Amoco and the appropriate governmental agencies with a 90-day notice letter as required by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act. Neither the government nor Amoco responded, and in May 1996, after the 90-day notice period expired, Avоndale sued Amoco seeking an injunction under § 6972(a)(1)(B) of RCRA requiring Amoco to clean up the property. Later that month, before the court ordered any relief, Avondale excavated and removed three underground storage tanks, associated piping, and a hydraulic oil reservoir from the property. By November 1996 Avondale had cleaned up the sоil and remediated the property to meet the Illinois EPA’s residential standards, so the IEPA issued a “No Further Remediation Letter” signifying that the property was clean and absolving Avondale of any further remediation responsibility. Avondale’s sale to First Chicago then proceeded without a hitch.
Back in court, Avondale changed its request for an injunction (which was no longer
On appeal Avondale makes two arguments. First, it argues Meghrig does not preclude the relief sought because it cleaned up the property after filing its citizen suit and Me-ghrig precludes relief only if the property is cleaned up before suit is filed. Second, Avon-dale argues the district court was wrong to conclude that offsite migration posed no imminent threat. The threat of harm was imminent, Avondale argues, though the effects of the harm might not be felt until later. We are not persuaded by either of these arguments.
In Meghrig the Supreme Court painstakingly anаlyzed the language of RCRA’s citizen suit provision and concluded that RCRA “is not directed at providing compensation for past cleanup efforts.”
But Avondale has latched onto the language in the last paragraph of Meghrig where the Court also said: “Without considering whether a private party could seek to obtain an injunction requiring another party to pay cleanup costs which arise after a RCRA citizen suit has been properly commenced, ... or otherwise recover cleanup costs paid out after the invocation of RCRA’s statutory process, we agree with the Meghrig that a private party cannot recover the cost, of a past cleanup effort under RCRA....” Id. at 488,
We think reading this sentence in isolation and to the exclusion of the rest of the opinion — which is what we have to do for Avon-dale to prevail — betrays the Supreme Court’s resounding message. The entire opinion, save this one sentence, emphasizes that in interpreting RCRA we need to take Congress at its word and that we must “be chary of reading” additional remedies into a statute that, like RCRÁ, expressly provides for a particular remedy. Id. at 488,
In short, although Meghrig may have left an opening for private remedies to redress cleanup costs that arise after a RCRA citizen suit is filed, Avondale cannot squeeze through in this instance. No matter how it categorizes its claim, Avondale wants to get back from Amoco the money it spent to clean up the contaminatiоn it thinks Amoco caused. While this certainly seems fair, it is simply not allowed under RCRA. Avondale may still get money from Amoco — but not in this court and not under RCRA. Avondale has a number of state law recovery theories available to it and, in the end, justice can be done.
Avondale’s claim for an injunction requiring Amoco to clean up off-site contamination also fails, though for а different reason. Here, Avondale sought the right relief — a mandatory injunction — but the claim was premature under RCRA. Avondale’s own expert testified that “if excavation is ever performed under the streets adjacent to the property, petroleum contamination will be found at levels requiring abatement to protect health and the environment.” (Emphasis addеd.) Thus off-site contamination may very well present an imminent and substantial danger at some point, but it does not present such a danger right now.
For these reasons, we affirm the district court’s entry of summary judgment in Amoco’s favor.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
No one would disagree that the result the majority feels constrained to reach today creates perverse incentives for landowners whose property has been contaminated by another party. Feeling bound by the language of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (“RCRA”), 42 U.S.C. § 6972(a)(1)(B), and the Supreme Court’s decision in Meghrig v. KFC Western, Inc.,
My first point of disagreement is a fundamental one. The majority sees no distinction between the situation presented in Meghrig, in which the property owner cleaned up its property before filing suit, and our case, in which Avondale waited to clean up the property until after it filed its RCRA action. I disagree. The pre-filing period has independent significance under the statutory scheme Congress created, and a person who tries to circumvent that scheme (like the Meghrig plaintiff) has nothing left but a suit for reimbursement of monies spent by the time litigation begins. The person who complies with the pre-filing requirements RCRA imposes gives the statutory system a chance to work. Furthermore, at the time the suit is filed, the latter person is seeking рrecisely the injunc-tive relief that § 6972(a)(1)(B) authorizes. Just because the person attempts to mitigate damages and clean up the property sooner rather than later changes neither of those facts. A look at the pre-filing requirements helps to show why the two cases should be treated differently under the statute.
RCRA imposes several detailed requiremеnts on potential plaintiffs who want to bring suit under its citizen suit provision. A citizen plaintiff must provide notice to the potential defendant and wait 60 days before actually filing suit, so that the defendant may act on its own initiative to clean up the site and thus avoid the costs of litigation to
Only then, after suit was filed and after it realized the gravity of the situation and the potential for further spreading of the hazardous material, did Avondale undertake cleanup measures. It did so (as it was required to do) in accordance with the Illinois Pre-No-tice Site Program, which is administered by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (“IEPA”). IEPA approved a level of remedial action that met state objectives for circumstances in which groundwater is contaminated and, significantly, off-site migration is likely. On November 20, 1996, IEPA issued a No Further Remediation Letter that released, Avondale (but not Amoco) from further responsibility under statе law. The letter did not address any action with respect to contaminants not mentioned in the plan or contaminants that had migrated to other sites. Amoco then moved for summary judgment, on the ground that Avondale had foolishly lost its RCRA right to relief by cleaning up the site and preventing any future migration.
While it agrees that the Supreme Court’s decision in Meghrig did not address the precise question before us, the majority has chosen to extend Meghrig to our situation. This is a step I would not take. In Meghrig, the question before the Supreme Court was, in its own words:
whether § 7002 of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (RCRA), 42 U.S.C. § 6972 (1988 ed.) authorizes a private cause of action to recover the prior cost of cleaning up toxic waste that does not, at the time of suit, continue to pose an endangerment to health or the environment.
At the end of its opinion, the Court emphasized that its ruling was not intended to address the distinct question bеfore us today. Again, it is best to let the Court speak for itself:
Without considering whether a private party could seek to obtain an injunction requiring another party to pay cleanup costs which arise after a RCRA citizen suit has been properly commenced, ... or otherwise recover cleanup costs paid out after the invocation of RCRA’s statutory process, we agree with the Meghrigs that a private party cannot recover the cost of a*697 past cleanup effort under RCRA, and that KFC’s complaint is defective for the reasons stated by the District Court.
Nothing in Meghrig answers another important question, which also pоints in the direction of allowing the present action. It provides no guidance about whether the category of “past cleanup efforts” for which private citizens cannot recover costs should be defined by reference to the time at which the suit is filed or the time judgment is entered. The choice of one approach over the other is not withоut consequence. By definition, the hazardous waste sites to which RCRA applies pose an “imminent and substantial endangerment to health or the environment,” and therefore the extra time that passes between the filing of a lawsuit and the issuing of a cleanup order may often serve to aggravate an already precarious situation. We should not be blind to the realities of litigation, and one of those realities is that with today’s crowded dockets it takes time even to demonstrate an entitlement to a preliminary injunction. Thus the court’s holding is particularly ironic because it essentially finds that a statute designed to remedy imminent and substantial environmental hazards must on occasion operate to exacerbate these hazards rather than to ameliorate them. Foot-dragging is hardly unknown in environmental litigation, whenever a defendant believes that it will be better off if it delays the progress of the case, where losing later simply means it will have to pay later. As the court envisions RCRA’s statutory scheme, defendants have an extra incentive to stall because the longer the lawsuit runs, the more likely it is that another party will as a practical matter be forced to take it upon itself to clean up the defendants’ messes. In the absence of a clear signal from Congress and the Supreme Court that we are forced to this pass, I cannot read the law this way.
Instead, in my view, if a citizen plaintiff has fulfilled all of the statutory requirements to bring suit under § 6972 and has filed such an action, RCRA permits the plaintiff to clean up the environmental hazard during the pendency of the lawsuit and, upon a finding of liability against the defendant, obtain an order from the court requiring the defendant to pay the plaintiff an amount equal to the cost the court would have imposed on the defendant for clean-up. I therefore respectfully dissent from this part of the judgment of the court.
