Nabisco broke up a tract of industrial real estate in Chicago. Cavalea Continental Freight bought several parcels and Burns Philp Food the remainder. In 1986 real estate records were changed to reflect these transactions, but something went awry. Tax officials treated Burns Philp as the owner of two parcels that Cavalea had purchased, and Burns Philp paid without inquiry or protest. In mid-1993 Bums Philp finally noticed that since 1987 it had paid almost $125,000 in taxes on Cavalea’s land, and it sought reimbursement. Instead of resolving matters amicably, these neighbors have acted like the Hatfields and McCoys. Cavalea refused to pay a dime, leading Burns Philp to sue. Cavalea filed a counterclaim accusing Burns Philp of budding a fence that encroached onto its parcel. Bums Philp retaliated with an additional claim charging Cavalea with spilling diesel fuel that polluted Bums Philp’s land. Other claims were made but have washed out. The district judge held a bench trial on the three we have mentioned and entered a judgment from which, predictably, both sides have appealed.
By paying Cavalea’s taxes, Burns Philp mistakenly bestowed a benefit on Cavalea. The district court concluded that Cavalea must make restitution of the amount by which it was unjustly enriched. Cavalea no longer disputes this obligation, but it does contend that restitution should be limited to the taxes Burns Philp paid during the five years before it filed suit. Illinois law governs this diversity ease. (As amended in this court under 28 U.S.C. § 1653, the complaint establishes diversity of citizenship and therefore federal jurisdiction.) Cavalea relies on 735 ILCS 5/13-205, which creates a five-year statute of limitations for “actions on unwritten contracts, expressed or implied, ... and all civil actions not otherwise provided for”. As Cavalea sees things, unjust-enrichment claims in Illinois rest on unwritten contracts implied in law and therefore must be commenced within five years.
Partipilo v. Hallman,
I am going to depart from the holding of the Partipilo ease and apply my own previous understanding of the law, which is that statutes of limitation do not apply in equity cases, and I think of unjust enrichment as an equity claim.
The judge did not explain why he believes that unjust enrichment yields an “equity claim” even though the plaintiff seeks nothing but money, or what authority in Illinois supports that belief.
Although the decision of a state’s intermediate appellate court is not a conclusive interpretation of state law in the same sense as a decision of the state’s highest court, it illuminates the meaning of state law and should be followed “unless there are persuasive indications that the [state’s] Supreme Court would decide the issue differently.”
Allen v. Transamerica Insurance Co.,
Burns Philp tells us that, because it did not discover the error until 1993, time started to run only then. Yet in Illinois, as in most states, the period begins not with the injury’s actual discovery, but when the injury could have been discovered through the exercise of appropriate diligence. See
Vector-Springfield Properties, Ltd. v. Central Illinois Light Co.,
Now for Cavalea’s counterclaim. Burns Philp constructed a fence on what it thought was the border between its property and Cavalea’s. Whoever surveyed the land to fix the border for the fence did a lousy job. The border is 205 feet long. One end of the fence was located several feet inside Burns Philp’s lot and the other was 20 feet into Cavalea’s. Bums Philp thus occupied about 2,000 square feet of land that belonged to Cavalea. After Ameriteeh conducted a survey in 1995, Cavalea learned that some of its land was on the other side of the fence. It did not notify Burns Philp of the problem until November 1995, when it filed the counterclaim seeking damages for trespass and an injunction requiring Burns Philp to remove the fence. Burns Philp responded by denying liability; it did not verify the accuracy of Cavalea’s survey or move the fence back to the property line. In December 1996 Cavalea ripped out the fence and appurtenances without Bums Philp’s leave and placed a large container right at the property line, interfering with the use of Bums Philp’s loading dock. Bums Philp now concedes that Cavalea was entitled to do these things. But the district judge held that Cavalea is not entitled to damages, because it did not notify Bums Philp that the fence had been erected on its land. Trespass is a strict liability tort,
Dial v. O’Fallon,
That [notice requirement] may be difficult to rationalize in terms of the traditional law of trespass, but it’s not difficult for me to rationalize in terms of elemental justice, and that’s the way I come out.
In diversity litigation, however, state law prevails over notions of “elemental justice.” The only question for decision is whether Illinois conditions damages on the landowner’s notice to the trespasser. (Cavalea contends that the counterclaim filed in 1995 gave whatever notice state law requires, a possibility the district judge did not discuss, but we need not pursue that prospect.)
Bums Philp locates a notice-to-trespassers requirement in cases holding that a landowner who has consented to entry may not complain about trespass until the consent has been revoked. See
Hendle v. Stevens,
Cavalea offered evidence that it used the land along its border with Bums Philp to store trailers and freight containers, and that it could have stored 102 additional trailers or containers had the fence been located correctly. It charges shippers and trackers $25 per day to store loaded containers, 75c a day for empty track trailers, and 55c a day for empty containers. Proposing that all 102 places would have been used all of the time, Cavalea demanded nearly $1 million in dam
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ages, which would make this the most valuable twentieth of an acre in Chicago. Burns Philp responds that its employees consistently noticed empty places at Cavalea’s facility even before the fence was removed, and it argues that access to the extra land accordingly would not have added to Cavalea’s receipts. Because it concluded that Cavalea could not maintain an action for trespass, the district judge did not resolve this dispute. It is not our place to play factfinder, see
Icicle Seafoods, Inc. v. Worthington,
Last and least is Burns Philp’s claim for contamination of its land by diesel fuel. Cavalea has been careless (or worse) in creating risks of pollution. It uses a 1974 model tanker-trailer as its diesel refueling station, although the trailer was not designed for this purpose and has not installed a spill-containment system, although both municipal law and ordinary prudence require that step. Fuel has spilled from the tanker onto Cavalea’s property, which given environmental obligations will now be hard to resell (the cleanup bill must be paid eventually) and creates a specter of future liability to neighbors. Yet careless conduct is tortious only if it causes injury, and Cavalea denies that any of the spilled diesel fuel has reached Burns Philp’s land. Bums Philp’s theory is that the diesel fuel flowed on the surface (it has not had time to migrate underground). It tried to prove this by showing that the surface sloped from Cavalea’s property toward its own and that at least one location on its land has hydrocarbon residue. The district judge disbelieved the testimony Burns Philp offered, and such a decision is almost impossible to upset on appeal.
Anderson v. Bessemer City,
Burns Philp’s star witness was Russell Chadwick, an environmental consultant who supervised the collection of samples from one location on Burns Philp’s site. Chadwick found that the samples contain benzanthracene and other components of petroleum distillates substantially in excess of permissible amounts. Burns Philp asked the judge to infer that because these hydrocarbons could not have come from its own operations, they must have come from Cavalea’s. The judge thought that Chadwick’s work was unprofessional and the proposed inference unwarranted — in brief, that he had been fed junk science (though the judge did not use that term). The land did not spring into existence when Burns Philp acquired the tract; maybe the hydrocarbons came from operations of prior owners. It was essential to learn whether Cavalea’s tanker was the source. At trial the judge inquired why Chadwick had sampled only one location, rather than multiple places in and out of what Burns Philp believes is the runoff path from Cavalea’s land. Extra petroleum distillates in the runoff channels, and closer to Cavalea’s land, would support an inference about the source; if hydrocarbons are uniformly distributed, however, then they must have other sources. Confined testing is less useful; as both physical and social scientists like to say, an infinite number of lines or planes can be run through a single point. The district judge remarked:
It appeared to me that [Chadwick] avoided doing the kinds of tests that would have been more likely to identify the source of any contamination of [Burns Philp’s] property than were the minimal tests that he did do. His approach was crude and unreliable. ... One simple experiment that would have tended to strengthen [Burns Philp’s] case in this regard, and which was not done, would have been to test the soil south of the point at which the [samples] were actually taken_ My definite impression is that the reason [Chadwick] didn’t do that is, he didn’t want to run the risk of getting a result that he wouldn’t like and wouldn’t fit the conclusion he wanted to draw.
District judges have an obligation to ensure that purportedly scientific expert testimony is reliable.
General Electric Co. v. Joiner,
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— U.S.-,
The judgment is vacated and the case remanded for two purposes: to limit damages for unjust enrichment to the five-year period preceding suit, and to calculate and award the damages (if any) that Cavalea sustained from the trespass.
