MEMORANDUM OPINION
I.
In its present posture, this case presents the question of whether time-barred state-law contract claims may be asserted as “recoupment” claims in response to a party’s contribution claim for cleanup costs under Section 113(f) of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (“CERCLA”), 42 U.S.C. § 9613(f). Before the Court is the Rule 12(b)(6) motion of defendant City of North Miami (“North Miami”) to dismiss recoupment claims raised by plaintiff Berger, as personal representative for the estate of Frank Kaufman (“the Estate”), and defendants ABC Demolition Company (“ABC”) in connection with its CERCLA counterclaim. For the reasons that follow, the motion is granted.
II.
The instant dispute arises from a failed attempt to develop a 350-acre tract of raw land in south Florida owned by the city of North Miami. In 1972, North Miami entered into a lease agreement with Munisport, Inc. (“Munisport”) to construct a golf course and recreational facility on this undeveloped land. Munisport, a development company owned and controlled by Frank Kaufman, Said Had-dad, and Marvin Sadur, agreed to develop the property in exchange for a thirty year lease on the property as improved. Under the terms of the lease agreement, Munisport would develop the raw land, fill it to usable grade, construct the golf course and other recreational facilities, and operate these facilities for thirty years to recoup its investment. While Munisport would operate the golf course and recreational facilities for a thirty year lease period, North Miami would receive rental fees and a portion of the profits during this period, as well as full control and ownership of the facilities following expiration of the thirty year lease term.
Munisport hired ABC, a construction company owned by Haddad and Kaufman, to provide personnel, equipment, and construction services to assist in development of the site. In addition, Munisport retained the services of an engineering and consulting firm, Post, Buckley, Shuh & Jernigan (“PBS & J”) to aid in the design and construction of the proposed recreational facilities. To facilitate development of the property, Munisport and ABC, from 1974 to 1980, operated a landfill to raise the contours of low-lying areas of the property. In 1980, however, the State of Florida commenced proceedings to revoke Munisport’s landfilling permit. Subsequently, the EPA took steps to remediate hazardous waste contamination caused by the landfilling operations. Shortly thereafter, EPA and North Miami entered into a consent decree, under which North Miami agreed to incur all response costs associated with cleanup of the site. Munisport abandoned the site and the lease in 1985.
North Miami subsequently initiated efforts to compel Kaufman, Haddad, Sadur, ABC, and PBS & J to bear part of the estimated $12 million in cleanup costs. To this end, following Kaufman’s death in 1989, North Miami asserted a claim at the probate proceedings in the Virginia circuit court to block dissolution of Kaufman’s assets. Thereafter, Berger, the personal representative for Kaufman’s estate, filed this action seeking a declaratory judgment, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2201 and 42 U.S.C. § 9613(g)(2), absolving Kaufman of any liability under CERCLA or, in the alternative, apportioning liability among the potentially responsible parties. *991 Named as defendants in this action are North Miami, Haddad, Sadur, and PBS & J.
Relying on § 113(f)(1) of CERCLA,'which permits persons liable for the remediation of a hazardous waste site to seek contribution from other potentially responsible parties for costs incurred in connection with cleanup efforts, 1 North Miami filed a counterclaim to compel the Estate, Haddad, ABC Demolition, Sadur, and PBS & J to shoulder their fair share of “response costs” — i.e., those costs associated with the remediation of the waste site. In essence, North Miami claims that these parties must contribute to the cleanup efforts because they were, under the terms of 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a), “owners” and “operators” of a hazardous waste facility and/or “generators” of hazardous wastes. 2
In response, the Estate, ABC, and Had-dad, by the way of so-called “recoupment” claims, asserted contract claims against North Miami that are the focus of the dismissal motion at bar. Specifically, these claims allege that North Miami breached the Munisport lease agreement by: (i) failing to obtain the necessary approvals for the Mun-isport project; (ii) failing to exchange releases with Munisport and return deposits upon denial of the right to continue the landfill; (iii) failing adequately to defend against third-party interference with the project; and (iv) failing to reimburse Munisport for certain development costs it incurred. In addition, the Estate has asserted a quantum meruit claim for the enhanced value of the property from its activities in developing the property, including, inter alia, Munisport’s operation of the landfill. 3 Presented for decision here is whether these “recoupment” claims may be properly asserted against North Miami’s CERCLA counterclaim. 4
III.
Recoupment is a common law, equitable doctrine that permits a defendant to assert a defensive claim against a plaintiff, arising from the same contract or transaction as plaintiffs claim, to reduce the amount of the damages recoverable by plaintiff. In the Fourth Circuit’s words:
Recoupment is the right of the defendant to have plaintiffs monetary claim [re *992 duced] by reason of some claim the defendant has against the plaintiff arising from the very contract giving rise to plaintiffs claim.
First National Bank v. Master Auto Service Corp.,
The contours- of the doctrine are well established. A properly asserted recoupment claim must: (i) arise from the same transaction or occurrence as the main claim; (ii) seek relief of the same kind and nature as that sought by the main claim; and (iii) be defensive in nature and seek no affirmative relief.
Frederick v. United States,
The parties here dispute whether the claims of the Estate, ABC, and Haddad are eligible for the benefits of the recoupment doctrine. Central to this dispute is the question of whether the state law contract claims meet the first element of the recoupment test — i.e., whether they arise from the “same transaction” that forms the basis for North Miami’s CERCLA counterclaim. Instructive in this regard is the test employed in the Rule 13(a), Fed.R.Civ.P., context to ascertain whether a counterclaim is compulsory,
i.e.,
whether it arises from the “same transaction or occurrence” as the main claim.
See United States v. Oumbey Enterprises, Inc.,
To begin with, North Miami’s CERCLA contribution claim clearly implicates different factual and legal issues from those raised by the contract “recoupment” claims. Apportionment of CERCLA liability for cleanup costs requires application of federal law and involves factual inquiries into (i) the identity of the parties responsible for the generation and placement of hazardous substances on the property, and (ii) the extent to which each party controlled the operation of the Munisport landfill. By contrast, the alleged “recoupment” claims raise questions of state law and markedly different factual inquiries. Central to the resolution of these state claims will be facts relating to, inter alia, the proper interpretation of the lease agreement, the nature and scope of North Miami’s obligations under this agreement, and any excuses or justifications for North Miami’s alleged failure to fulfill these obligations. 6 Additionally, resolution of the quantum meruit claim raises factual issues relating to the nature and quality of the work performed by Kaufman, Haddad, and ABC, and the manner in which this work enhanced the market value of the developed property, none of which are relevant to any CERCLA issue.
Because the CERCLA issues differ from the state contract claim issues, so too will the evidence required to prove the claims differ. Thus, to prove that other parties to this action also bear responsibility under CERC-LA, North Miami only needs to establish that they (i) owned, controlled or operated a hazardous waste facility or (ii) that they generated or transported hazardous wastes. 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a). As such, North Miami will need to introduce testimony and documents relating to the ownership, control, and day to day operation of the landfill. Especially relevant here will be evidence relating to which individuals and entities had responsibility for the disposal of hazardous wastes. By contrast, proof of the alleged contractual breaches will likely require more detailed testimony of the parties themselves relating to their contracting behavior, their understanding of their respective contractual obligations to explain possible ambiguities in the contract language, and the circumstances surrounding the alleged breaches of the lease agreement. In addition, evidence relating to the quantum meruit claim will center on establishing and documenting the actual work performed on the project site, including the construction of roads, drainage, and Other facilities. Although the lease agreement itself is relevant to resolution of both the CERCLA and contract claims, the nature of this relevance is markedly different for each claim. In connection with the CERCLA contribution claim, the lease agreement will be useful in establishing the control of the various parties over the project site and the landfill. By contrast, the lease agreement is relevant in the state law claims to prove the terms of the contract between the Munisport and North Miami in connection with the state law contract claims. The lease agreement obviously assumes far greater importance in the latter instance than in the former. And contrary to the arguments of the Estate, Haddad, and ABC, the provisions in the lease agreement concerning operation of a landfill does not mean that breaches of this agreement are inextricably intertwined with liability under CERCLA for the generation and disposal of hazardous wastes. Common sense dictates otherwise. Put another way, whether North Miami breached its contractual obligations relating to the success of the Munisport project has no necessary, logical relationship to any of the parties’ liability for contamination *994 of the project site or liability for the subsequent cleanup operations. Given the lack of such a direct, logical relationship, North Miami’s CERCLA counterclaim does not arise from the “same transaction” as the state law contract claims.
This conclusion is supported by the relevant, albeit sparse, authority. Courts have permitted the assertion of recoupment claims against a CERCLA cost recovery action only where a tight nexus exists between these claims and the CERCLA cost recovery or contribution claim. Specifically, courts have permitted parties in CERCLA actions to raise state law tort claims where these claims related directly to cleanup operations conducted by the government or to the actual release and generation of hazardous wastes. In
United States v. Moore,
The court in
United States v. Hardage,
This conclusion finds further support in the recent decision in
Reading Co. v. Philadelphia,
Distilled to its essence, the attempted assertion of contract-based “recoupment” claims in response to North Miami’s CERC-LA counterclaim represents nothing more than an imaginative, yet ultimately futile, effort to resurrect stale, time-barred claims that should have been raised long ago. Accordingly, pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), Fed. R.Civ.P., the Court grants North Miami’s motion to dismiss the contract claims miscast as “recoupment” claims for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
An appropriate order has issued.
Notes
. Specifically, § 113(f)(1) provides that:
Any person may seek contribution from any other person who is liable under section 9607(a) of this title, during or fqllowing any civil action under section 9696 of this title or 9607(a) of this title. Such claims shall be brought in accordance with this section and the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and shall be governed by Federal law. In resolving contribution claims, the court may allocate response costs among liable parties using such equitable factors as the court determines are appropriate. Nothing in this subsection shall diminish the right of any person to bring an action for contribution in absence of a civil action under section 9606 or section 9607 of this title.
42 U.S.C. § 9613(f)(1).
. CERCLA imposes strict liability on responsible parties.
See United States v. Monsanto Co.,
. Sadur and PBS & J have not asserted any recoupment claims.. In addition, while Haddad and ABC have not clearly set forth the basis of their recoupment claims, they are presumably predicated on allegations similar to those made by the Estate. Thus, for purposes of this motion, the Estate's claims will be viewed as representative of Haddad and ABC's claims as well.
. North Miami’s counterclaim also asserts several state law tort claims for nuisance, trespass, and violation of state environmental statutes. Yet, at its heart, this counterclaim is a CERCLA cost recovery/contribution action. As such, and given the dubious viability of these causes of action, the state -law claims will not be considered for purposes of this motion. In any event, as the discussion below makes readily apparent, these state law claims are not directly related to the contract claims raised by the Estate, Haddad, and ABC, and thus do not arise from the same transaction as these claims.
. The parties do not dispute that Florida's five year statute of limitations for contract actions bars these claims.
Fla.Stat.
§ 95.11 (five year limitation of "a legal or equitable action on a contract ... ”). Indeed, the well settled rule articulated in
Klaxon v. Stentor,
. More specifically, resolution of these contract claims will require factual inquiry into the following matters: (i) which party was responsible for obtaining the requisite permits and approvals; (ii) whether North Miami failed to obtain these permits; (iii) whether North Miami improperly retained certain lease deposits; and (iv) whether North Miami did, in fact, make concerted efforts to prevent third parties from interfering with the development of the Munisport project. None of these matters are relevant to the CERCLA issues.
. More recent decisions suggest that the
Moore
approach is preferable.
See United States v. Iron Mountain Mines, Inc.,
. Note here that the "recoupment” claims raised in Reading and in this case were raised in an attempt to assert claims otherwise barred by operation of the Bankruptcy Code. Similarly, in this case, the contract claims were asserted as "recoupment” claims because they would otherwise be barred by the statute of limitations.
