*943 MEMORANDUM OPINION
On this 31st dаy of January, 2002, COMES ON FOR CONSIDERATION Defendant BEI Defense Systems’ (“BEI”) Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on the Measure of Damages (doc. 51) and Plaintiff Highland Industrial Park’s (“Highland”) Countermotion for Partial Summary Judgment on the Measure of Damages (doc. 55). BEI requests that the Court find as a matter of law that the proper measure of damagеs in this action is the difference between the fair market value of the property before and after the alleged damage (diminution in value). Highland counters that the appropriate measure of damages is the cost of restoration plus any partial loss of value of the property after the restoration. The Court has reviewed these Motions and their Briefs as well as BEI’s Reply (doc. 63), Supplemental Memorandum in Support (doc. 77) and all other supporting documentation. The Court also held a pretrial conference on January 26, 2001 to hear furthеr arguments of counsel. The Court, being well and sufficiently advised by the excellent briefing and presentation of both parties, finds the issue is ripe and the Court is ready to rule. Because the Court finds that there is no genuine issue of fact material to the nature of the contamination or the potential for its remediation, Highland’s Motion will be granted in part and denied in part and BEI’s motion will be denied.
BACKGROUND
This is an industrial land contamination case between the plaintiff/former-lessor, Highland, and the defendant/former-lessee, BEI. Highland alleges that BEI, a military rocket manufacturer, systematically dumped аnd burned hazardous wastes (during the course of its lease) on a tract of land situated in Highland Industrial Park, Ouachita County, Arkansas. BEI admits that it disposed of hazardous waste on the subject property. The primary damage alleged by Highland in this present action is contamination of the groundwater with volаtile organic compounds (VOC’s). Highland argues that it is entitled to recovery for BEI’s injury under remaining theories of common law trespass, negligence, breach of contract, and the Arkansas Hazardous Waste Management Act (“AHWMA”), as codified at §§ 8-7-201 et seq.. However, the sole issue presented by BEI on motion for partial summary judgment and by Highland on cross-motion for partial summary judgment is whether the proper measure of damage is diminution in value or the cost of restoration.
*944 STANDARD FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
The procedure for prosecution and disposition of a motion for summary judgement is governed by Rule 56 of the Fedеral Rules of Civil Procedure. Courts order summary judgment where
“...
there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c). When the Court decides summary judgment on cross motions, the Court is not required to grant judgment for one side or the other if the Cоurt finds a dispute of material fact.
Board of Trustees of University of Arkansas v. Professional Therapy Services, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
Both parties request a Partial Summary Judgment on the sole issue of the appropriate measure of damages. At this juncture, Highland is proceeding under four theories of action: common law trespass, negligence, breach of contract, and the Arkansas Hazardous Waste Manаgement Act. Because this Court finds that counsel appear to have confined their arguments only to the issue of the proper measure of damages for claims rising in trespass or negligence, the Court will only address the proper measure of damages should Highland prevail on their claims sounding in trespass or based on negligence. However, the Court notes that its finding today (that the proper measure of damages is remediation of the property) is in harmony with and buttressed by the remedy of remediation mandated by the Arkansas Hazardous Waste Act as well as the Arkansas Supreme Court finding of an implied duty to restore the surface of the land upon the termination of production pursuant to an oil and gas lease.
Bonds v. Sanchez-O'Brien Oil and Gas Co.,
The law in Arkansas is clear that the proper measure of compensation for damage to property is either the cost of repair or restoration of the damaged property or the difference in the value of the property immediately before the damage and the value of the property immediately after the damage.
Bush v. Taylor,
BEI focuses its analysis, not on the reason for the remedy, but on the effect of the two measures, especially the potential disproportion of the cost of restoration to the cost of diminution in valuе. BEI argues that Highland “... should be limited to recovering the diminution in value of the allegedly contaminated parcel, effectively capping damages at the current fair market value of the property in a ‘clean’ condition. Plaintiff is not entitled to recover the ‘cost of repair’ because such cost would be unreasonable and grossly disproportionate to the fair market value of the real property in issue.” BEI’s Brief in Support p. 3 doc. 52. This Court has not found, nor has BEI provided any precedent where the Court determined that the damage was temporary and awarded restoration but capped that award at the diminution in value level. To the contrary, awards for rectification of hazardous waste contamination, often at costs ‘grossly disproportionate’ to land value, are regularly upheld and often statutorily mandated. BEI also bases it arguments on a proffered definition of ‘permanent damage’ gleaned from a tortured attempt to trace the development in Arkansas law of the concept that whether damage is permanent “depends upon its connection with the soil.”
Bush
at 531,
Highland’s analysis begins with the threshold question of whether the damage is permanent or temporary. Highland is correct that the designation of the damage as temporary or permanent is central to the analysis, however, this Court finds that any analysis of the proper measure of damages must begin with a just comprehension of the reason we qualify a measure of damage as proper or improper in the first place. From this vantage, the case law, which may seem disjointed and inconsistent, resolves itself into a manifest and clear intent by the Arkansas Court to craft that remedy which will best compensate the loss, redress the injury or restore the condition to the extent possible given the particular and insular facts of the case at hand. The Arkansas Supreme Court specifically addresses importance of a proper consideration of these principles in Bush v. Taylor:
The fundamental principle in all actions for damages is that jiist compensation be made to him who has suffered injury from another in his person or property, and, in order to give satisfaction, measured in money, such rules are formulated as are thought best adopted to accomplish this purpose.
[I]f the value of the property destroyed depends upon its connection with the soil, the measure of the damage is the differеnce in the value of the land before *946 and after the fire. But if the property-destroyed could be replaced in substantially the condition in which it existed before the fire, then the measure of the damages is the cost of so replacing it.
This characterization by the Court of temporary or permаnent provides the framework for the choice of remedy approved by the Court. The following cases are instructive. In
Bush
the Arkansas Court found that, where a fire destroyed a saw mill as well as equipment and inventory, an instruction of the measure of damages as diminution in value was improper because it did not properly compensate the plaintiff. The Court noted that because the lumber, saws, and buildings were capable of replacement, the proper measure of damages was the cost of replacement.
In addition to the cost of restoration, Arkansas Courts have allowed the recovery for the fair rental value for that time (if any) the owner loses use of the property at issue. See Brill § 30-1. However, the Court does not find that proper measure of temporаry damages contemplates, as argued by Highland, the recovery of any residual loss of fair market value of the land following restoration.
Armed with the direction of the Arkansas Court on determination of the most appropriate measure of damages in injury *947 to property, and standing in the posture of summary judgment, the Court now turns to the evidence before it on the nature of the damage alleged in the case at bar. The Court need not reach the question of the amount of damages but rules today only upon the factual characterization of the damage and the appropriate calculation or measure of damage that follows such characterization. There is ample evidence and no real dispute of the specific chemicals found in the groundwater on the site. There is ample evidence from reports and affidavits of the amenability of such contamination to removal from the groundwater by air-stripping and carbon-absorption. Reasonable estimations of cost and time required are present by affidavit from competent sources. The Court finds that, even construing the evidence and inferences in favor of BEI, there are sufficient facts in evidence so that no reasonable jury would not find the damage remediable and therefore temporary.
DECISION
Because there is no genuine dispute of the facts material to the nature of the damages alleged in this аction or the potential for effective remediation at a calculable cost and reasonably fixed period of time, the Court finds that no reasonable jury would not conclude that the damage was capable of remediation and therefore that the damagе is temporary. With no genuine dispute over the material fact of the temporary nature of the injury, this Court rules as a matter of law that the appropriate measure of damages for the alleged groundwater contamination is the cost of the remediation of the contamination plus loss of the fair rental value, if any, before the remediation renders the property fit for the use and enjoyment of the owner.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
