DECISION AND ORDER
Plaintiff, a Wisconsin municipality, brought this action under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Reclamation, and Recovery Act of 1980 (“CERC-LA”) alleging that defendant’s property was contaminated by hazardous materials from an adjacent closed landfill. Plaintiff asserted several claims, including a claim under CERCLA’s “citizen suit” provision, 42 U.S.C. § 9659(f), asking me to order defendant to execute a deed restriction and access agreement. The citizen suit provision authorizes courts to award fees under certain circumstances. After considerable back and forth, the parties resolved most of their differences but could not agree on whether defendant would partially reimburse plaintiff for attorney and expert witness fees. That issue is before me now.
I. BACKGROUND
Between 1965 and 1972, plaintiff operated a landfill adjacent to defendant’s property and since then has, pursuant to state supervision, undertaken clean-up efforts. The State required plaintiff to obtain a deed restriction and access agreement from each abutting property owner barring the placement of a well, requiring maintenance of an imporous surface such as a parking lot, and permitting government officials to enter the property for the purpose of environmental testing and cleaning. Defendant conducted tests on its property and concluded that only a portion of it was contaminated and offered to enter into a deed restriction and access agreement for that portion of the property. However, the State was not satisfied with defendant’s data, and as a result, plaintiff declined defendant’s offer. Defendant conducted additional tests, which confirmed its original conclusion. The State accepted the results of these tests, and the parties entered into the agreement that defendant had originally proposed.
II. JURISDICTION
Defendant argues that I may not award fees because I have never had jurisdiction over plaintiffs citizen suit claim. Under § 9659, a citizen may sue an entity that has violated a “standard, regulation, condition, requirement or order” promulgated pursuant to CERCLA. In order to invoke § 9659, a plaintiff must notify the violator, the United States and, where relevant, the state government, of the CERCLA violation sixty days prior to filing suit. § 9659(d). This requirement is jurisdictional. Alfred R. Light, CERCLA Law and Procedure 177 (1991). The EPA has implemented CERCLA’s notice requirement with a rule requiring that a notice:
include sufficient information to allow the recipient to identify the specific standard, regulation, condition, requirement, or order ... which has allegedly been violated; the activity or failure to act alleged to constitute a violation; the name and address of the site and facility alleged to be in violation, if known; the person or persons responsible for the alleged violation; the date or dates of the violation; and the full name, address, and telephone number of the person giving notice.
40 C.F.R. § 374.3.
Most courts have held that a timely notice which provides actual notice of the alleged violation to the appropriate enti
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ties, satisfies the EPA rule. Robin Kundis Craig,
Notice Letters and Notice Pleading: The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Sufficiency of Environmental Citizen Suit Notice,
78 Or. L.Rev. 105, 150 (1999); Light,
supra,
at 177;
Lutz v. Chromatex, Inc.,
In the present case, plaintiff provided a timely notice to the appropriate parties. The document labeled “notice of intent to sue” was itself insufficient to alert the recipients of plaintiffs citizen suit claim. However, with the notice sent to defendant, plaintiff included a letter outlining the basis for its citizen suit claim— that the State required defendant to execute a deed restriction and access agreement as part of its remedial plan promulgated pursuant to CERCLA. Further, as to the governmental authorities, plaintiff timely supplemented the notice with a letter stating that it would bring a citizen suit against defendant to obtain a deed restriction and access agreement. Taken together, plaintiffs notice and letters timely provided the proper parties with the information required by the EPA rule. Thus, I had jurisdiction over plaintiffs citizen suit claim and I have jurisdiction over its present application for fees.
III. DISCUSSION
Citing
Buckhannon v. West Virginia Department of Health & Human Resources,
Although
Buckhannon’s
holding applies only to the fee-shifting provisions of the FHAA and the ADA, the Seventh Circuit has indicated that district courts should presume that
Buckhannon
applies to all fee-shifting statutes unless the “text, structure or legislative history” of a particular statute calls for a different definition.
T.D. v. LaGrange Sch. Dist. No. 102,
Even assuming that plaintiff could recover under the catalyst theory, plaintiff has not presented evidence sufficient to convince me that it would be entitled to do so. Under the catalyst theory, a plaintiff prevails if “(1) the claim was at least colorable, and not groundless; (2) the lawsuit was a substantial rather than insubstantial cause of the defendant’s change in conduct; and (3) the defendant’s change in conduct was motivated by the plaintiffs threat of victory rather than the threat of expense.”
Palmetto Props., Inc. v. County of DuPage,
IV. CONCLUSION
I understand that plaintiff does not intend to further prosecute this action. However, plaintiff has not moved to dismiss. Thus, I will dismiss the case with prejudice in twenty days unless plaintiff advises me why I should not do so.
Therefore,
IT IS ORDERED that plaintiffs motion for summary judgment is DENIED.
