MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff Dixon Lumber ■ Company and defendant Austinville Limestone Company (ALC) own adjacent plots of land in Wythe County, Virginia. ' Dixon’s property is called “Austin" Meadows,”' and the court will refer to ALC’s as “the Austinville site.” Both companies bought their property from Gulf & Western Industries (G & W), which operated a zinc and lead mine on the Austinville site through a division called New Jersey Zinc Company (NJZ). Years before ALC and Dixon purchased their properties, NJZ dumped limestone tailings, a byproduct of its mining operations, on Austin Meadows. Dixon . now seeks to hold ALC responsible for environmental liabilities arising from those limestone tailings under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (“CERCLA”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601-9675.
Before the court are Dixon and ALC’s cross-motions for partial summary judgment on the issue of whether ALC is a corporate successor of'G & W. (Dkt. Nos. 49, 51.) Both motions' have been fully briefed and argued arid are now ripe for disposition. For the reasons stated below, the court finds that ALC is not G & Ws corporate - successor and will therefore grant ALC’s motion and deny Dixon’s.
I. BACKGROUND
The Austinville • site há's been mined, more or less continuously,, since the mid-eighteenth century. NJZ bought the mine in 1902 and, at some point, was acquired
Until 1981, NJZ extracted dolomitic limestone containing zinc and lead ore from an underground mine on the Austin-ville site. The mine was made up of a 1200-foot mine shaft with perpendicular levels every 100 to 200 feet. Miners would drill into the limestone on the various rock levels, use gun powder to blast the rock loose, and then use shovels, front end loaders, and electric-powered railcars to transport the rock to an underground “jaw crusher” at the base of the mine shaft. Once crushed by the jaw crusher, the rocks would be hoisted out of the mine to be processed and milled.
The limestone rocks that came out of the mine were of two kinds. Some rocks, called “deads,” contained no zinc or lead ore. Those rocks were crushed and sold as gravel or agricultural rock. The other rocks (those with lead and zinc in them) were sent through what the parties call a “w.et flotation process” to extract the ore. First, the rocks would be sent through a series of crushers, rod mills, and ball mills, until they were reduced to a fíne, powdery substance. That substance would be mixed with water and piped into flotation chambers. Chemicals would then be added to the resulting slurry that would cause the zinc and lead to float to the top, where it could be skimmed off. Once the- zinc and lead had been removed from the chemical slurry, the remaining limestone particles, called “fines” or “tailings,” were piped elsewhere on NJZ’s property. Tailings that were sufficiently coarse to be saleable, called “coarse” tailings or “new lime,” were sold as agricultural limestone, and NJZ stockpiled them near the plant where they could be loaded onto railcars and trucks. The remaining tailings — ie., those that were too fine to be sold — were a waste product for NJZ, and NJZ dumped them in hollows and valleys throughout- the property for storage. At some point, .NJZ disposed of these waste.fines on Austin Meadows, resulting in the tailings pile at issue in this, case.
During the course of its operations, NJZ acquired certain environmental obligations, reflected by an NPDES permit and a no-discharge certificate. The permit, NPDES Permit No. VA 0000272, authorized, and required NJZ to monitor, discharges from several outfalls on the Austinville site. No-Discharge Certificate Nó. TW-ND-1026 forbade' discharges to State waters' from Austin Meadows; and réquiréd NJZ to regrade and revegetate that location.
In fall 1981, G & W announced its intent to close NJZ’s naming operations oil the Austinville site; By the end of that year, G & W had -closed the underground mine,
Around the time that G & W announced its decision to close the Austinville mine, James River Limestone Company (JRLC), a well-established Virginia producer of limestone products, contacted G & W and informed it that JRLC might be interested in purchasing the property if agricultural limestone was available in the area. On October 23, 1981, after several meetings between JRLC and G & W representatives, and a visit by JRLC representatives to the Austinville site, JRLC offered to purchase some of G & W’s assets associated with NJZ’s Austinville mining operations. G & W and JRLC communicated periodically throughout the end of 1981 and the following year. In some of its letters to G & W, JRLC stated that it would have to consider possible reclamation costs and environmental liabilities in its asset purchase.
On October 25, 1982, JRLC and .G & W executed an Agreement for the Purchase of Assets (the Purchase Agreement) (Purchase Agreement ¶7, Dkt. No. 50-6), which JRLC promptly assigned to ALC, a subsidiary it created to operate the Austin-ville site.
The day the agreement was signed, NJZ and ALC sent a joint letter to the State Water Control Board to inform the Board that the property had been transferred and that ALC was assuming responsibility for compliance with NPDES Permit No. VA 0000272. Specifically, NJZ and ALC informed the Board that the transferred property encompassed four of six discharges covered by the existing NPDES permit and noted that three of the four had been eliminated as a result of the mine shutdown. The letter indicated that ALC would assume responsibility for the discharges on the transferred property starting October 25, 1982. Ultimately, the State Water Control Board issued ALC a new permit, No. VA 0058424, instead of transferring No. VA 0000272.
After ALC purchased the Austinville site, it began its operations by selling agricultural limestone from the existing stockpiles, which it blended with NJZ’s waste piles of fines on .the site. Planning to begin its own permanent mining operations before the stockpiles of agricultural limestone were depleted, ALC also began tearing out the equipment that NJZ used for
In November 1984, Dixon purchased 2,071 acres of land from G & W, which included Austin Meadows. Dixon paid $800,000 for that land. Dixon represents that it was unaware of the tailings pile on Austin Meadows at the time of the purchase and did not contractually assume any environmental permitting or compliance obligations with respect to the property. Dixon learned about the tailings pile in 1992 when it received a letter from the State Water Control Board informing it that the drainage system under Austin Meadows had begun to fail and that high amounts of zinc and lead had been found in the New River, supposedly emanating from the tailings pile. The same year, Dixon entered into a consent agreement with the Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) to remove the tailings pile from Austin Meadows and reclaim the property by 1999. That consent order authorized Dixon to contract with ALC to remove the limestone tailings. A series of amended consent orders extended the term of the order until 2015.
Pursuant to the consent orders, Dixon and ALC entered into a series of agreements regarding the removal of the limestone tailings. The original agreement, made in 1993, authorized ALC to remove the tailings pile on Austin Meadows and provided that its operations would be considered remedial actions on behalf of Dixon. Subsequent agreements in 2003 and 2008 extended the timeline for ALC’s tail-ings removal activities and provided that Dixon would receive a royalty for tailings removed, processed, and sold by ALC.
Following a heavy rainfall and discharge of pollutants in June 2013, DEQ and the Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy (DMME) entered into a letter of agreement with Dixon and ALC. Among other things, that letter required Dixon and ALC to develop a final plan for reclamation of Austin Meadows and. to submit it to DEQ/DMME. While developing that plan, Dixon and ALC hit an impasse on which party would be responsible for final reclamation costs on the Austin Meadows site. Dixon subsequently filed this suit, claiming that ALC, as NJZ’s corporate successor, is liable for at least some bf the costs of reclaiming Austin Meadows.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Summary Judgment Standard
Summary judgment is appropriate when “the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). “[W]hen a court considers a summary judgment motion, ‘[t]he evidence of the
B. Dixon’s Procedural Challenges
Before discussing the substance of Dixon and ALC’s motions for summary judgment, the court will address several procedural challenges that Dixon raised in opposition to-ALC’s motion. Dixon makes three procedural arguments: (1) that ALC’s motion should be denied because it did not include a separately-captioned statement of facts as required by Local Civil Rule 56(b); (2) that some of ALC’s arguments about NJZ’s and ALC’s histories and operations are improper becausé they contradict the testimony of ALC’s corporate designee; and (3) that the deposition testimony of three fact witnesses must be excluded because ALC did not disclose those witnesses as required by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26. The court will address these contentions in turn.
1. ALC’s failure to include a separately-captioned statement of facts
Under this court’s Local Civil Rule 56, a motion for summary judgment must include “a separately captioned section setting forth with specificity the material facts claimed to be undisputed together with specific record citations thereof.” W.D. Va. Civ. R. 56(b). Although ALC’s brief included a cited introduction section and citations for ALC’s factual claims throughout, it did not include a separate statement of facts. After Dixon noted this defect in its opposition brief, ALC promptly moved for leave to file a supplemental statement of facts that listed the factual statements of its brief in a properly-captioned section without changes to citation or wording.'(Dkt. No. 56.) The court granted that motion and gave Dixon the opportunity to respond. (Dkt. No. 61; Dkt. No. 65.) Dixon, in turn, filed specific objections to all 50 numbered paragraphs of ALC’s supplemental statement of facts. Nevertheless, Dixon argues that the court should deny ALC’s motion for summary judgment for failure to comply with Local Civil Rule 56.
Although ALC’s brief violated Local Rule 56(b), the court-will exercise its-discretion to overlook that violation here. See, e.g., Simmons v. Navajo Cty.,
2. Dixon’s claim that ALC’s motion contradicts the testimony of its corporate designee
Next, Dixon claims that ALC’s motion for summary judgment should be denied because portions of it contradict the testimony of Kevin Mann, ALC’s President and corporate designee. Specifically, Dixon claims that, in his Rule 30(b)(6) deposition, Maim denied knowledge of: (1) NJZ. and G & W’s corporate histories and operations on the Austinville site; (2) the corporate history of ALC I from 1910 to 1996; and (3) the equipment transferred from NJZ to JRLC. But ALC’s motion for summary judgment, and particularly its argument that ALC is not a continuation of G & W, compares the operations of NJZ and ALC I before and immediately after the 1982 purchase agreement. Since Mann denied that ALC had knowledge of those operations in his deposition, Dixon argues, ALC cannot assert that it has that knowledge now.
A Rule 30(b)(6) designee “speaks for the corporation,” Grottoes Pallet Co. v. Graham Packaging Plastic Prods., Inc., No. 5:15-cv-17,
However, Rule 30(b)(6) does not require the court to exclude evidence that contradicts a corporate designee’s deposition testimony in all situations. Mindful of the fact that it is “often impossible in any enterprise where employees have distinct
The court finds no basis in Rule 30 for excluding ALC’s evidence here. As an initial matter, it is not clear that Mann denied knowledge of ALC’s past operations to the extent that Dixon suggests. While Mann certainly denied personal knowledge of ALC I’s operations and employees from 1982, he stated that he could testify about those matters to the extent he had seen documents or had discussions with individuals who knew about them.
But in any event, there is simply no indication that ALC attempted to manipulate the discovery process or otherwise engaged in the kind of “bandying” that Rule 30(b)(6) prohibits. Importantly, Dixon does not claim that ALC submitted contradictory affidavits asserting knowledge of things Mann claimed not to know — it claims that ALC violated Rule 30(b)(6) by relying on other evidence of NJZ and ALC I’s operations to argue about those facts. Nothing in Rule 30(b)(6) suggests that a company that denies knowledge of a fact cannot produce evidence of that fact from another source. See, e.g., Banker Steel Co., LLC v. Hercules Bolt Co., No. 6:10-cv-5,
3. Dixon’s claim that ALC failed to disclose witnesses
Finally, Dixon argues that ALC cannot rely on the testimony of Roger Parnell, Robert Reynolds, and Douglas Akers — three former NJZ and ALC employees — because those "witnesses were not identified in ALC’s Rule 26 disclosure and because ALC never supplemented its disclosure in order to add them. Rule 26 requires a party to supplement its Rule 26(a) witness disclosure “in a timely manner if the party learns that in some material respect the disclosure ... is incomplete or incorrect, and if the additional or corrective information has not otherwise been made known to the other parties during the discovery process or in writing....” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(e)(1). If a party fails to supplement its disclosures as required by Rule 26(e), the court may exclude the undisclosed information for purposes of a motion for summary judgment “unless the failure was substantially justified or is harmless.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(c)(1).
Assuming that ALC’s identification of Parnell, Roberts, and Akers as ALC employees in its interrogatory responses and deposition notices was insufficient to “otherwise [make them] known” to Dixon as required by Rule 26, that failure was clearly harmless. Since Dixon identified Akers as a person likely to have knowledge of ALC’s operations in its own initial disclosures, it was obviously aware from the beginning that he had discoverable information. See Piburn v. Black Hawk-Grundy Mental Health Ctr., Inc., No. 15-cv-2045,
C. ALC’s Corporate Successor Liability
Having rejected Dixon’s procedural challenges to ALC’s motion for summary judgment, the court now turns to the substantive issue of this case: whether ALC is a successor of G & W for purposes of CERCLA liability. The Fourth Circuit has recognized that a corporate successor may be held liable for the actions of its predecessor under CERCLA. PCS Nitrogen Inc. v. Ashley II of Charleston LLC,
Dixon does not characterize ALC’s purchase of the Austinville site as a de facto merger or claim that the transaction was fraudulent, so the parties focus on the first and third théories of successor liability. Dixon and ALC disagree on three sub-issues: (1) whether ALC explicitly assumed NJZ’s environmental liabilities as to Austin Meadows under the Purchase Agreement; (2) whether ALC impliedly assumed those liabilities in a pre-purchase letter to G & W representatives from JRLC and in representations to the State Water Control Board around the time that the Purchase Agreement was executed; and (3) whether ALC is a continuation of G & W’s operations on the Austinville site. The court will next address these issues.
1. ALC did not expressly assume NJZ’s CERCLA liabilities
Whether ALC expressly assumed environmental liability for Austin Meadows under the 1982 Purchase Agreement is a question of contract interpretation. See PCS Nitrogen,
When interpreting a contract, the court seeks to determine the parties’ intent from the language used. Providence Square Assocs., L.L.C. v. G.D.F., Inc.,
Where the terms of a contract are “vague or ambiguous,” the court “may consider extrinsic evidence to interpret
Accordingly, the court must determine whether the scope of environmental liabilities transferred to ALC is clear from the plain language of the purchase agreement and, if so, whether those environmental liabilities include responsibility for Austin Meadows. See Babcock,
(5) Seller agrees to transfer to Buyer all operating, environmental, reclamation and like governmental permits, licenses, authorizations and bonds in effect as of October 25, 1982, and the parties hereto agree to cooperate with each other in effecting the transfer of all of said permits, licenses, authorizations and bonds. Buyer agrees , to comply with all applicable government rules and regulations affecting the purchased premises beginning October 25,1982....
(9) Buyer agrees to maintain the premises covered by this agreement and to conduct its activities thereon in such a manner that Seller shall not, by reason of any act or- omission of Buyer, violate any law, rule, regulation, ordinance, standard, license or permit applicable to any land of Seller adjacent to said premises, including, without limitation, the No-Discharge Certificate issued by the Commonwealth of Virginia to Seller in respect of its adjacent land known as Austin Meadows, of which a copy is attached hereto. and made a part hereof, marked “Exhibit C.”
(Purchase Agreement ¶¶ 5, 9.) Dixon -also relies on another provision of the agreement, which was added by a letter amendment dated November -15,1982:
(3) All'books, records, files, maps and other documents of Seller located on said premises shall remain the property of Seller. Upon removal of such property from said premises, Seller shall notify Buyer of the location of: all such records and maps relating to the said premises; all 1982 water-discharge records included therein; and all records of Sell-' er’s- hazardous-waste studies, .of limestone tailings included therein. Buyer shall.be afforded reasonable access to and opportunity to make copies of such records and maps relating to said premises.-'
(Am. Purchase Agreement ¶ 3; Dkt. No. 51-19.)
Of course, Dixon and ALC urge different interpretations of this language. Dixon argues that the agreement expressly transfers all of NJZ’s environmental liabilities to ALC, including NJZ’s obligations under No-Discharge Certificate No. IW-ND-1026 to monitor and prevent discharge from Austin Meadows-into Buddie Branch and the New River and to regrade and revegetate the tailings pile at that location. ALC, on the other hand, argues that the language of the agreement explicitly limits ALC’s assumption of environmental liabilities to those (1) affecting the Austinville site and (2) beginning on the date of transfer.
Paragraph nine confirms that conclusion. That paragraph requires ALC to operate and maintain the Austinville site in such a way that it would not cause NJZ to violate its own obligations as to adjacent land, including its obligations under the No-Discharge Certificate. The clear meaning of this paragraph is that ALC did not assume responsibility for the No-Discharge Certificate and its related obligations under the terms of the Purchase Agreement: if it did, NJZ could not violate that Certificate, and the language of paragraph nine would be meaningless. See, e.g., TravCo,
Dixon relies heavily on the first sentence of paragraph five which, when read in isolation, transfers “all” permits, authorizations, and like obligations to ALC. (Purchase Agreement ¶ 5.) Since the No-Discharge Certificate falls within the ambit of “all operating, environmental, reclamation and like governmental permits, licenses, authorizations and bonds in effect as of October 25, 1982” (id.), Dixon argues, paragraph five must transfer NJZ’s obligations under that Certificate to ALC. However, that sentence of paragraph five cannot be read in isolation. See Babcock,
Dixon’s reliance on paragraph three of the letter amendment to the Purchase Agreement is similarly misplaced. Dixon argues that because that paragraph obligated G & W to give ALC access to “all records relating to said premises,” including 1982 water-discharge records and studies of limestone tailings deposits, ALC must have taken on all environmental liabilities related to those records. (Dkt. No. 50-7.) Even assuming that ALC could expressly assume liabilities for Austin Meadows simply by gaining access to records about the tailings deposits on the site, the records to which that paragraph refers do not pertain to Austin Meadows. On its face, that amendment only entitles ALC to waste-discharge records and hazardous-waste studies within records “relating to said premises.” Read in conjunction with paragraph two, “said premises” refers to “the premises to be conveyed to the Buyer”: the Austinville site. (Am. Purchase Agreement ¶ 2.) So, even if ALC assumed responsibility for the environmental liabilities related to those records, it would not assume responsibility for Austin Meadows.
2. ALC did not impliedly assume NJZ’s CERCLA liabilities
Dixon also argues that ALC impliedly assumed NJZ’s environmental liabilities for Austin Meadows. Dixon relies on two documents for this claim: (1) a pre-purchase letter from JRLC to G & W discussing environmental liabilities; and (2) the joint letter that NJZ and ALC sent to the State Water Control Board the day that ALC purchased the Austinville site. In certain situations, a party may assume liabilities not mentioned in a contract where its actions nevertheless imply that it meant to assume such liabilities. See City of Richmond v. Madison Mgmt. Grp., Inc.,
First, Dixon points to a letter from C. E. Wells, the President of JRLC, to G & Ws CEO John Thompson, dated December 9, 1981. In that letter, Wells discussed his concerns about the value of the waste piles of limestone. In relevant part, Wells stated:
The “Bunker Hill” waste pile is reported to have three to four million tons of “fines.” We would like to sell this; however, no one for the past thirty years has found a way to stockpile and spread the high moisture fines.
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We have to consider the pending reclamation costs plus the potential liability of the 40-acre mass moving toward the river if the present dam is removed. Our company would hope that over a period of several years some of these “fines” may be moved. On this assumption, we will pay an additional twenty-five cents per ton for each ton sold from the “Bunker Hill” stockpile.
(Dkt. No. 51-15.)
Dixon asserts that the “40-acre mass” to which Wells refers must be Austin Meadows, since it is the only tailings pile that is described in terms of acreage and which abuts a dam, and that this letter therefore shows that ALC meant to assume liability for Austin Meadows. The court disagrees. First, it is not clear that the Austin Meadows tailings pile is the only one that could fit the description of a 40-acre mass of tailings near a dam. While Austin Meadows is occasionally described by its acreage in the record, the record also reflects that Austin Meadows was only 28.5 acres, and that Bunker Hill was bigger. (Def.’s Ex. A at 1061-62.) Furthermore, a former NJZ employee testified that NJZ never
But in any event, the .context of tljat phrase, makes clear that. Wells was refer: ring to. Bunker Hill, not Austin Meadows. The letter discusses the Bunker Hill waste pile throughout and does not mention Austin Meadows at all. Moreover, Wells’s concern about liabilities for the 40-acre mass leads him to a conclusion, in that same paragraph, about the proper purchase price for the Bunker Hill stockpile. That would be a strange non-sequitur if his concerns were, in fact, about Austin Meadows. Finally, the court notes that this letter was written during the course of negotiations about the purchase of the Austinville site, and that the Purchase Agreement makes clear that NJZ, not ALC, retained responsibility for the No-Discharge Certificate affecting Austin Meadows. Accordingly, the court rejects Dixon’s argument that this pre-purchase letter suggests that ALC impliedly assumed liability for Austin Meadows.
Next, Dixon argues that ALC and NJZ’s joint letter to the State Water Control Board, which transferred “all permit responsibility and coverage between the current and new permitees” (Dkt. No. 51-20), shows that ALC impliedly assumed liability for- Austin Meadows.- But read in context, that letter does not contemplate the transfer of environmental liabilities for Austin Meadows to ALC. The letter informed the State Water Control Board that ALC had purchased a property encompassing several discharges, that NJZ would retain ownership and continuing responsibility for one of them, and that ALC would assume responsibility for .the rest of them starting on October 26, 1982. The language on which Dixon relies indicates that ALC assumed responsibility for “said systems” — that is, the discharges located on the Austinville site. Accordingly, that letter does not indicate that ALC meant to assume liabilities as to Austin Meadows.
Since the communications on which Dixon relies do not support the conclusion that ALC intended to assume NJZ’s environmental liabilities associated with Austin Meadows, the court rejects its implied assumption argument,
3., ALC is not a “mere continuation” of G & W
The court now turns to whether ALC is a continuation of G & W/NJZ under common law principles of successor liability.
“(1) whether and to what extent there is an identity of ownership (the most important factor), (2) how the nature and scope of the two businesses compare, (3) whether there has been an asset transfer for less than adequate, consideration; (4) whether two separate entities stillremain after the transaction, (5) whether the new company continues in the same trappings as the old company, such as the same address,; the same physical space and the same phone numbers; and (6) how the two companies’ assets compare.”
Charles Schwab & Co. v. WS Wealth Mgmt., LLC, No. 1:16-cv-352,
The mere continuation theory requires a common-sense analysis “of corporate realities, not mechanical application of a multi-factor test,” N. Shore Gas Co. v. Salomon Inc.,
Applying these factors, the court finds that ALC is not a mere continuation of G & W/NJZ under the traditional theory. First, and most importantly, there was no overlap of ownership whatsoever between G & W/NJZ and JRLC, or between G & W/NJZ and ALC. Although, Dixon cites two cases for the proposition that absolute identity of ownership is not necessary for the mere continuation doctrine to apply, Charles Schwab, No. 1:16-cv-352,
Moreover, even if it were necessary to consider- them, the remaining factors do not support the conclusion that ALC was a mere continuation of G & W/NJZ’s operations. It is true that there were some
Although ALC cannot be a mere continuation of G & W/NJZ under the traditional test, the Fourth Circuit has also applied the broader “continuity of enterprise” or “substantial continuity” test to determine corporate successor liability under CERC-LA. Carolina Transformer,
Carolina Transformer, however, was decided before United States v. Bestfoods,
Although Bestfoods was decided in the context of subsidiary liability, a number of courts have interpreted it to cast doubt on the continued validity of the substantial continuity test as a mechanism for determining whether a corporation is a successor under CERCLA. For example, in New York v. Nat’l Servs. Indus., Inc.,
The Fourth Circuit has not had occasion to determine what effect Bestfoods had on the application of the substantial.continuity test in the CERCLA successor liability context. However, recent cases in other contexts suggest that the Fourth Circuit interprets Bestfoods to stand for the proposition articulated by the Second Circuit in National Services Industries. Recently, the Fourth Circuit declined to apply the substantial continuity test in a ease arising under the False Claims Act, a statute that, like CERCLA, is silent on successor liability. See Bunk,
Put simply, the FCA does not speak to successor corporation liability and thus has no impact on the traditional common law principles governing successor corporation liability. It follows that Carolina Transformer’s substantial continuity theory — a theory that alters the common law mere continuation rule — is not-a viable theory for Bunk to pursue. Accordingly, we are satisfied that the district court properly declined to apply the substantial continuity test here.
Bunk,
In light of the foregoing, this court finds that the Fourth Circuit would no longer apply the substantial continuity test to determine whether a corporation is a successor for purposes of CERCLA. Since CERCLA is silent as to successor liability, the court must apply common law rules to determine whether ALC is a successor of G & W.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the court will grant ALC’s motion for partial summary judgment and deny Dixon’s motion for partial summary judgment.
Notes
. Dixon asserts that NJZ merged with G & W in the 1960's, but provides no citation for this claim. (Pl.'s Mot. Summ. J. ¶ 9.)
. It is not clear exactly when NJZ dumped the tailings on Austin Meadows. Robert Reynolds, who held a variety of positions for NJZ between 1962 and 1981, stated in his deposition that NJZ dumped tailings on Austin Meadows while he worked there. (Reynolds Dep. 32, Dkt. No. 50-3.) Douglas Akers, who worked for NJZ from 1964 to 1981, stated that he did not know of any tailings being dumped on Austin Meadows while- he worked for NJZ and that the tailings on Austin Meadows were placed there before he began working for NJZ. (Akers Dep. 30-31, Dkt. No. 50-1.) Similarly, Roger Parnell, who worked for NJZ from 1973 to 1981, testified that fines were only sent to Bunker Hill while he worked there. (Parnell Dep. 13, Dkt. No. 50-2.) Finally, the preliminary engineering report sent to the DEQ on October 12, 1993, indicates that Austin Meadows had been inactive since the early 1970’s. (Def.’s Ex. A at 1061.)
. The defendant in this action is actually a successor to the original ALC. In 1996, several JRLC employees purchased ALC and continued its operations under the same name. There is no dispute that the current ALC is a continuation of the JRLC subsidiary, and the court will refer to the two companies interchangeably as ALC for convenience. Where necessary to distinguish between the two companies, the court will refer to the JRLC subsidiary as ALC I and the current company as ALC II.
. Mann did deny knowledge of NJZ and G & W's operations and corporate history on the Austinville site. But 70 years of corporate structure and history of a different company, which ceased most of its operations on the Austinville site nearly a year before JRLC purchased it and over fourteen years before ALC II began operations, is not the sort of information that would be ‘‘reasonably available” to ALC II. Fed. R. Civ. P. 30(b)(6).
. The parties do not discuss whether state or federal common law controls here, However, since Virginia law limits successor liability to the same situations as those articulated in PCS Nitrogen, see Harris v. T.I., Inc.,
. Again, the court need not determine whether to apply the federal common law or Virginia state law formulation of the "mere continuation test because those tests are functionally identical. Compare Carolina Transformer, 978 F.2d at 838 (applying the mere continuation test under federal common law) with Kaiser Found.,
. Again, since the Supreme Court of Virginia has rejected the substantial continuity test, the court need not determine whether this question is governed by federal or state common law. See, e.g., Urban Telcoms. Corp. v. Halsey, No. 95-cv-35,
