MONTANA POLE & TREATING PLANT and Torger L. Oaas, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
I.F. LAUCKS AND COMPANY; Monsanto Chemical Company,
Reichhold Chemicals, Inc.; Dow Chemical Company,
Inc., Defendants-Appellees.
MONTANA POLE & TREATING PLANT and Torger L. Oaas, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
I.F. LAUCKS AND COMPANY; Monsanto Chemical Company, Defendants,
Reichhold Chemicals, Inc., Defendant-Appellant.
Nos. 91-36024, 91-36101.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted April 7, 1993.
Decided May 10, 1993.
Bruce A. Featherstone, and C. Erika Zimmer, Kirkland & Ellis, Denver, CO, Dolphy O. Pohlman, Corette, Pohlman, Allen, Black & Carlson, Butte, MT, Edward B. Fitzpatrick, III, Legal Dept., The Dow Chemical Co., Midland, MI, C. Michael Montgomery, Green, Jarvis, Kolodny & Markusson, Denver, CO, Peter D. Braun, Phillips, Lytle, Hitchcock, Blaine & Huber, Buffalo, NY, Steven S. Carey, Garlington, Lohn & Robinson, Missoula, MT, P. Keith Keller, Keller, Reynolds, Drake, Johnson & Gillespie, Helena, MT, for defendants-appellants.
Patti A. Goldman, Public Citizen Litigation Group, Washington, DC, Torger S. Oaas, Lewistown, MT, for plaintiff-appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Montana.
Before: WRIGHT, THOMPSON and KLEINFELD, Circuit Judges.
EUGENE A. WRIGHT, Circuit Judge:
A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. It may also prove costly. Montаna Pole & Treating Plant appeals the district court's summary judgment ruling that its property damage claims were time-barred. Montana Pole knew of chemical contamination of its property by 1983 but did not file suit until late 1986, after the statute of limitations had run. It simply waited too long. Wе affirm.
BACKGROUND:
Montana Pole operated a wood treatment plant in Butte, Montana from 1946 until May 1984. The facility made treated wood utility poles by using the chemical preservative pentachlorophenol, "penta," mixed with petroleum products. The process produced waste penta which, for several years, Montana Pole discharged, untreated, into an unlined, earthen ditch. In later years, it also allowed two open-air disposal pits to overflow periodically. The long-term, continued discharge of waste penta and oil contaminated real property on and near the treatment facility. The contamination also percolated through the sandy soil to nearby Silver Bow Creek.
Montana Pole did little on its own to remedy the penta contamination. In 1983, the state ordered it to clean up the property and submit a compliance plan. In May 1984, the state served a notice of violation and ordered Montana Pole to take corrective action. Wood treatment operations ceased еarly in 1984. The EPA seized Montana Pole's property under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. § 9601 et seq. ("CERCLA") in June 1985 and declared the facility a "Superfund" site. Montana Pole filed a state court complaint in November 1986 against defendаnt penta manufacturers seeking indemnity for CERCLA cleanup costs. It also sought compensatory damages for injury to its property, claiming negligence, products liability, breach of warranty and nuisance.
After removal to federal court and extensive discovery, the chemical companies moved for summary judgment on the basis that the statute of limitations had run. The district court granted the motion,
ANALYSIS:
We review de novo the district court's decision to grant summary judgment. Chemicаl Specialties Mfrs. Ass'n, Inc. v. Allenby,
The parties agree that Montana Pole's property damage claims are subject to the two year statute of limitations in Montana Code Annotated 27-2-207.1 Our task is to interpret Montana law to determine how the highest Montana court would decide this cаse. See Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Sheft,
The underlying purpose of statutes of limitations is fairness. Claims should be brought within a reasonable time to enable the opposing party to mount an effective defense. E.W. v. D.C.H.,
For example, Montana courts have applied the "discovery doctrine" to toll the statute of limitations in situations where the plaintiff did not know or could not have known of his injury. See Monroe v. Harper,
A. Discovery Rule
Montana Pole maintains that because it had the full use and enjoyment of its property, it did not have adequate knowledge of any compensable injury until the EPA seized the facility in June 1985. Mоntana statutes do not define the time when a tort action accrues.2 Generally, courts have held that it accrues upon injury. Buhl v. Biosearch Medical Products,
Therefore, the critical determination of when an action accrues is knowledge of the facts essential to the cause of action. See Thompson v. Nebraska Mobile Homes Corp.,
Montana Pole concedes that it knew no later than 1983 that penta contamination had damaged its property. It also knew that the contamination was permanent in that it would continue until cleaned up. It could have made a property damage claim before the complete loss of the use and enjoyment of its property. See Spackman v. Ralph M. Parsons Company,
At oral argument, Montana Pole asserted that the statute of limitations should be tolled because of the chemical companies' fraudulent misrеpresentations. It alleged that those manufacturers represented to it that the property was not damaged by the penta, that penta was biodegradable and that any contamination would go away on its own. We ordinarily need not consider an issue not timely raised in appellant's opening brief. United States v. Ullah,
B. Continuing Nuisance/Continuing Injury
Montana recognizes a continuing nuisance/continuing injury claim where the injurious conduct is temporary, recurring and abatable. The theory is that each new act gives risе to a separate cause of action. The statute of limitations is tolled until the source of the injury is abated. Graveley I,
Montana Pole argues that because the injury to its property continued over an extended time, the district court should have applied the continuing nuisance/continuing injury theory. It seeks damages for injuries to the property during the two years before it filed suit. So far, Montana courts have applied the continuing nuisance/continuing injury rationale only to nuisance cases. Montana Pole cites no brоader authority but asks that we extend the theory to cover its negligence and products liability causes of action.
It relies first on Lahman v. Rocky Mountain Phosphate Co.,
The nuisance in Lahman originated on property of the defendant phosphate plant, was temporary and recurring, and was abatable by the manufacturing plant. In contrast, none of the chemical companies in our case had any control over the release of waste penta. It did not emanate from their property nor could they abate the release.
Montana Pole next argues that its situation is like that of the plaintiffs in Nelson,
The situation here differs from Nelson in one striking respect: no waste was released during the statutory period because Montana Pole ceased operations early in 1984.
Finally, Montana Pole relies on Graveley I,
Yet in Graveley II, after learning that plaintiffs constructed a fence around the defendant's property more that two years before filing suit, the court found that the injury had been abated.
Similarly, when Montana Pole ceased wood treatment operations by May 1984, no penta products were used at the site. No defendant could have been responsible for any further damage to Montana Pole's property. The injury wаs effectively abated no later than May 1984. The argument that the injury continued into the statutory period because the penta contamination remained on the property is simply unpersuasive. In Graveley I, the court explained that "[t]he fact that the nuisance continues does not make the cause of action a recurring one."
C. Stabilization
Finally, Montana Pole argues that, even if its property damage was permanent, it did not stabilize until the EPA seizure in June 1985. Montana Pole relies upon Blasdel v. Montana Power Co.,
Montana Pole has not identified an analogous injury requiring stabilization. As the Graveley I court explained: "In contrast to a temporary, ongoing nuisance, а permanent nuisance is one where the situation has 'stabilized' and the permanent damage is 'reasonably certain.' "
Montana Pole knew thе source of the penta and that it had to clean the site when it ceased plant operations. The EPA seizure in 1985 is not relevant in determining the amount of damages. Because the damages were sufficiently stabilized and permanent in May 1984, the statute of limitations begаn to run no later than that.
CONCLUSION:
The district court correctly ruled that the statute of limitations bars Montana Pole's claims. It began to run either in 1983, when Montana Pole acknowledges damage to its property or by May 1984, when the penta contamination without question had abatеd and stabilized. In either case the November 1986 filing exceeded the statutory two-year limit.
Because we affirm the summary judgment that the property damage claims were time-barred, we do not reach the preemption issue raised on cross-appeal.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
MCA 27-2-207 reads: "Injuries involving property. Within 2 years is the period prescribed for the commencement of an action for: (1) injury to or waste or trespass on real or personal property; (2) taking, detaining, or injuring any goods or chattels, including actions for the specific recovery of personal property; (3) killing or injuring stock by a railroad corporation or company."
MCA 27-2-102 states that an action "accrues when all elements of the claim or cause exist or have occurred, the right to maintain an action on the claim or cause is complete, and a court or other agency is authorized to accept jurisdiction of the action[.]"
