The present action arises from the contamination of certain real property located in Oakville, Connecticut (the “site”). Plaintiff Sealy Connecticut, Inc. (“Sealy”) is the present owner of the property. Defendants are various entities who formerly operated industrial facilities on the site or who are alleged to stand as corporate successors to such entities. Plaintiff seeks to hold defendants liable under a variety of federal and state environmental statutes, as well as the common law of the state of Connecticut. Defendants Litton Industries, Inc. and Litton Systems, Inc. d/b/a Winchester Electronics (“Litton”); U.S. Baird Corporation f/k/a The Baird Machine Company (“Baird”); and Ekco Housewares, Inc. (“Ekco”) and American Home Products, Inc. (“AHP”) have offered separate motions to dismiss various of the counts applicable to them. 1 For the reasons set forth below, the motions are GRANTED in part and DENIED in part.
The Parties
According to Sealy’s Second Amended Complaint, Baird owned the site between 1894 and 1912, during which time Baird used the site for manufacturing machinery and other products. Thereafter, ownership passed to the Autotyre Company (“Auto-tyre”), which conducted manufacturing operations at the site until 1958. Sealy alleges that defendants Ekco and AHP are corporate successors of Autotyre, and, as such, are liable for contamination caused by Autotyre’s activities.
After Autotyre relinquished ownership of the site, an affiliate of defendant Litton used the property for electroplating operations between 1959 and 1991. Initially, Litton leased the site from entities who are not parties to the present action. In 1986, Sealy became owner of the site and Litton’s lessor for the final years of the lease. During that time, Sealy contends that Litton intentionally concealed the scope of the site’s contamination. Since Litton’s departure, Sealy has continued to hold title to the site, although it appears that no additional manufacturing operations have been conducted on the property. The complaint does not specify the scope of the site’s contamination, the extent of Sealy’s past investigation and remediation activities, and whether such activities are ongoing.
Discussion
Count I: CERCLA Liability as to All Defendants
Baird and Litton do not seek dismissal of Sealy’s CERCLA claims; however, Ekco and AHP contend that they may not be held liable under CERCLA because Sealy has not adequately alleged that they are successors to the corporate liabilities of Auto-tyre. Sealy rests on bare allegations that Ekco and AHP are “sueeessors-in-interest” to Autotyre. (Compl.. ¶¶8, 9.) Although Sealy’s pleadings are sparse in this regard, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure generally require only “a short and plain statement of the [plaintiffs] claim.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(a). Ekco and AHP do not contend that the heightened pleading requirements pertaining to fraud and mistake apply to Sealy’s claims.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b). Nor have Ekco and AHP identified any cases in which successor-liability claims were dismissed on the basis that the allegations were not factually specific. Indeed, Ekco and AHP rely principally on a ease in which a motion to dismiss was
denied,
although the complaint only set forth the “bare conclusion” that “the corporation ‘succeeded to and assumed’ the assets and liabilities of the [other] corporation.”
Soo Line R. Co. v. B.J. Carney & Co.,
Count II: RCRA Liability as to All Defendants
Count II sets forth a claim for liability under two “citizen suit” provisions of RCRA, 42 U.S.C. § 6972(a)(1)(A) & (B). Defendants contend that the first provision is inapplicable because their conduct is “wholly past.” They further contend that the second provision is inapplicable because it does not authorize a claim for money damages, but only injunctive relief. Sealy responds that, while defendants’ conduct is past, the contamination resulting from their conduct is ongoing, and that the § 6972(a)(1)(B) claim, contrary to defendants’ characterizations, actually does seek injunctive relief.
There is no dispute that Subsection (A), in contrast to Subsection (B), only provides a cause of action for “present violations” of regulatory requirements imposed pursuant to RCRA. Sealy relies on a number of district-court opinions holding that continuing decomposition and contamination by hazardous substances may satisfy the “present violation” requirement.
See, e.g., Gache v. Town of Harrison,
Sealy attempts to distinguish
Connecticut Coastal
by arguing that the “lead shot and clay at issue were not likely to dissolve and migrate, causing a continuous, ongoing violation.” (Pl.’s Mem. in Opp. to Litton Motion, at 18 n. 3.) However, the Second Circuit’s decision nowhere suggested that lead and clay fragments are unlikely to migrate; indeed, the court made note of an undisputed study concluding that lead was finding its way into the tissue of wildlife in the area of the shooting range.
Seafys claims under Subsection (B) stand on firmer ground. Under this citizen suit provision, Sealy may seek injunctive re-
The Court shares defendants’ concerns. It would surely be an anomalous result if the goals of CERCLA, which was designed to correct for the deficiencies of the RCRA regulatory scheme, could be defeated by a provision of RCRA. However, it appears that no other courts have addressed this issue squarely. Moreover, it is too early in the present litigation to determine what precise shape a mandatory injunction under Subsection (B) would take; the nature, extent, and allocation of CERCLA response costs; and the extent (if any) to which a RCRA injunction would undermine the goals of CERCLA with respect to cleanup of the Oakville site. Nothing in the language of Subsection (B) suggests that the injunctive relief it provides must be implemented inflexibly and without regard to other statutory schemes. Accordingly, the Court declines, at this time, to hold as a matter of law that a PRP may not seek relief via a RCRA citizen suit. Because defendants have not demonstrated the CERC-LA and RCRA provisions at issue to be incompatible for purposes of the present suit, defendants’ motions to dismiss the § 6972(a)(1)(B) claims are denied.
Statute of Limitations
Defendants argue that several of Sealy’s counts are barred by the tort statutes of limitations in Connecticut, including Sealy’s claims for absolute nuisance (Count III), negligent nuisance (Count IV), statutory nuisance (Count V), violation of C.G.S. § 22a-452 (Count VI), waste (Count VIII), trespass (Count IX), negligence (Count X), negligence per se (Count XI), failure to warn (Count XII), and violation of CUTPA (Count VIV). Defendants contend that all of these claims are governed by, at most, a three-year statute of limitations, and that the statutory time period began to run when Sealy discovered the contamination of the site in 1990. However, Sealy responds that it did not discover “the contamination of which it complains” until Litton vacated the site in July of 1991. (PL’s Mem. in Opp. to Litton Motion, at 30.) Clearly, the date of discovery is a matter in dispute, and one which the Court may not appropriately resolve in a motion to dismiss. 4 Accordingly, defendants’ motions to dismiss on the basis of statute of limitations are denied.
Counts III, TV, & V: Nuisance Claims as to All Defendants
Defendants contend that Sealy, as the owner rather than the neighbor of a eontami-
Sealy relies primarily on Judge Cabranes’s decision in
Arawana Mills,
which held that a lessor may have standing to bring a nuisance claim against a lessee.
Applying the lessons of Arawana Mills and Nielsen to the present case, the Court concludes that Litton’s motion to dismiss should be denied, because Litton has failed to show why doctrines concerning vendor liability should shield a lessee from nuisance suits. However, the vendor liability cases seem much more applicable to the situations of Baird, Ekco, and AHP. Sealy, like the plaintiff in Nielsen, has offered no allegations or authority suggesting that its claims against these defendants are not precluded by the doctrine of caveat emptor. Accordingly, the Baird and Ekco/AHP motions to dismiss are granted as to Sealy’s nuisance claims in Counts III, IV, and V. 6
Count V: Liability Under C.G.S. § 52-181 as to All Defendants
Defendants argue that Count V should be dismissed because C.G.S. § 52-481, which provides for the abatement of a manufacturing nuisance, applies only to ongoing manufacturing operations, and not to entities whose former operations have resulted in contamination. The statute specifically provides as follows:
(a) If any manufacturer carries on his business, or exposes the material used therein, or refuse produced thereby, so as to constitute a nuisance to the public or to individuals, any persons aggrieved thereby may unite in a complaint ... for the discontinuance or abatement , of the nuisance
(c) If, after hearing, the court is of the opinion that the plaintiffs are entitled torelief, it may make such order for the discontinuance or abatement of the nuisance, or for regulating the manner of conducting the business, as it finds to be necessary.
Defendants focus on the statute’s use of such terms as “discontinuance,” “carries on his business,” and “manner of conducting the business” as indications that the legislature only intended the statute to apply to ongoing operations. Sealy argues that the provision in the statute for “abatement” of a nuisance suggests otherwise. However, the concept of “abatement of a nuisance” seems no less directed to ongoing production than does “discontinuance.” See Black’s Law Dictionary 1066 (6th ed.1990) (defining “abatement of a nuisance” as “[t]he removal, stoppage, prostration, or destruction of that which causes a nuisance”). In short, the Court can discern no intent in the language of the statute to encompass contamination caused by manufacturing operations that have long since ceased.
Because Sealy’s expansive reading of § 52-481 finds no support in the plain language of the statute, and because Sealy has not cited a single case adopting its interpretation, the Court concludes that the statute only applies to ongoing manufacturing operations. Accordingly, defendants’ motions to dismiss Count V are granted.
Count IX: Liability for Trespass as to All Defendants
Baird, Ekco, and AHP, but not Litton, argue that Count IX should be dismissed as to them because the cause of action for trespass does not encompass substances left in the ground by the former owner of a property. The defendants rely on Wellesley Hills Realty Trust v. Mobil Oil Corp., in which the court held as follows:
Count III of the complaint asserts that Mobil’s releases of oil and hazardous materials at the site constitute a trespass. A trespass, however, requires an unprivileged, intentional intrusion on land in the possession of another. In this ease, Mobil owned and was in possession of the property when it allegedly released the oil causing the contamination. Thus, Mobil’s releases of oil were not unprivileged, and Mobil clearly was not intruding on land in the possession of another. Mobil’s releases of oil on its own land, therefore, cannot constitute a trespass.
Count XIII: Liability for Conducting Abnormally Dangerous Activity as to All Defendants
Sealy contends that defendants’ manufacturing processes and related practices in handling, storing, and disposing of hazardous wastes constitute an “abnormally dangerous” or “ultrahazardous” activity, triggering strict liability for damages arising therefrom. Defendants contend -that Sealy’s allegations do not state a claim for strict liability under Connecticut law. Connecticut’s Supreme Court has not addressed the question of if, or under what circumstances, the handling of hazardous wastes may give rise to strict liability. A variety of federal and state trial courts have reached different results as to this issue, although the greater weight of authority appears to be against extending strict liability to the hazardous waste context.
See, e.g., Arawana Mills,
Making use of the distinction described above, the Court concludes that defendants in the present case, whose handling, of hazardous wastes is only alleged to be incidental to their manufacturing activities, are not subject to strict liability for engaging in an unreasonably dangerous activity. Accordingly, Count XIII is dismissed as to all defendants.
Count XIV: Liability Under CUTPA as to All Defendants
Defendants move to dismiss Count XIV on the basis that their alleged environmental contamination was not committed “in the conduct of any trade or commerce,” as is required for liability under CUTPA. C.G.S. § 42-110b(a). Although the issue has not been addressed by the Connecticut Supreme Court, this Court’s view, and the clear weight of other authority, accepts defendants’ position that CUTPA doés not encompass the handling of hazardous waste incident to a defendant’s manufacturing operations.
See, e.g., Bernbach v. Timex Corp.,
Of course, Sealy’s claims against Litton encompass not just environmental contamination, but also Litton’s alleged concealment of the contamination from its lessor. However, this claim fails by similar logic. Sealy has not alleged that Litton’s activities as lessee of the site were anything but incidental to Litton’s manufacturing business. When a lessor seeks to impose CUTPA liability on a lessee, the key “question is whether leasing property is defendant’s ‘trade or commerce.’ ”
Arawana Mills,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, defendants’ motions to dismiss (Docs. 33, 68, & 75) are GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. Specifically, Litton’s motion , to dismiss (Doe. 33) is GRANTED as to Counts V, XIII, and XIV, GRANTED in part as to Count II, and DENIED as to the remaining counts. The motions to dismiss of Baird, Ekco and AHP (Docs. 68 & 75) are GRANTED as Counts III, IV, V, IX, XIII, and XIV; GRANTED in part as to Count II, and DENIED as to the remaining counts.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Sealy has filed no opposition to Baird's motion to dismiss and opposition as to only one issue (successor liability) raised in the Ekco/AHP motion. Sealy apparently wishes to incorporate its arguments against Litton’s motion as its opposition to the other two motions insofar as the motions are overlapping. (PL’s Mem. in Opp. to Ekco/AHP Motion, at 6 n. 5.) Sealy contends that the Ecko/AHP motion offers only one issue that was not raised in Litton's motion. (Id.) As noted below, however, the Court disagrees with this assessment.
. Although the Second Circuit discussed this allegation in the context of the plaintiff’s CWA claims, the court made clear that the analysis of "present violation” under CWA and RCRA was identical.
. CERCLA establishes that PRPs include not only those who handle or generate hazardous wastes, but also those who own or owned facilities at which hazardous substances were disposed and at which there is presently a release or threatened release of such substances. 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a). It is not clear whether Sealy concedes that it is a PRP; however, the Court need not resolve that issue for purposes of the present motion.
. Because the Court finds the date of discovery to be a matter in dispute, the Court need not address Sealy’s claims that the statute of limitations should be tolled because of Litton's acts of concealment, that Litton should be equitably es-topped from asserting a statute of limitations defense, and that the contamination amounts to a continuing violation to which the statute of limitations is not applicable. Nor need the Court address Sealy's argument that a tort statute of limitations is not applicable to violations of C.G.S. § 22a-452.
. Sealy also relies on the Connecticut Supreme Court’s decision in
Starr v. Commissioner of Environmental Protection,
. Because these counts are dismissed as to Baird, Ekco, and AHP on the basis of their standing arguments, the Court, need not address their additional arguments, which appear to be unopposed by Sealy, that Sealy has failed to allege that their use of the site was unlawful or unreasonable, which they assert to be a necessary element of a nuisance claim..
