[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *197
¶ 1. In December 2001, the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) issued a written complaint to Titan Tire of Natchez, Inc. asserting that between the years of 1999 and 2000, Titan violated its National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit sixteen times. After unsuccessful attempts to work with MDEQ personnel, Titan was granted an evidentiary hearing before the Mississippi Commission on Environmental Quality, and following a two-day hearing, the Commission found Titan in violation of the permit and fined it $5,000. Aggrieved, Titan appealed to the Hinds County Chancery Court, First Judicial District, which affirmed the Commission's order. We conclude that the chancellor's judgment was correct and affirm.
¶ 3. The following time-line details the sequence of events leading up to the present appeal:
*198Early 1980s: Armstrong obtained NPDES (National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System) Permit No. MS0001287
March 1987: Fidelity purchased the Armstrong plant
August 9, 1988: NPDES Permit No. MS0001287 was reissued to Fidelity
1990: The Commission issued an order requiring Fidelity to remediate contaminated soil and groundwater
1991: NPDES Permit No. MS0001287 was modified
January 25, 1994: NPDES Permit No. MS001287 reissued to Fidelity for a 5 year period (to expire January 24, 1999)
1996: Fidelity requested a modification to the permit
March 12, 1996: Modification granted
September 1998: Titan purchased Fidelity's facility and applied for a renewal of NPDES Permit No. MS0001287
April, June 1999: TSS (total suspended solids) violations
Aug.-Dec. 1999 Arsenic violations
February 2000: Arsenic violations
June 2000: NPDES Permit No. MS0001287 reissued to Titan
December 2000: Arsenic violations
December 2001: MDEQ issued formal complaint
¶ 4. For many years, Armstrong used the location and facility for its tire manufacturing business. Because the manufacturing process involved a discharge of treated water into a local stream, a NPDES permit1 was required. In accordance with state law, Armstrong applied for and received NPDES Permit No. MS0001287 from the MDEQ permit board, which allowed discharge of stormwater runoff and treated process water.
¶ 5. When Armstrong sold the facility to Fidelity, the permit board reissued the permit to Fidelity. Groundwater contamination was discovered on Fidelity's site, prompting an investigation by MDEQ's Hazardous Waste/Uncontrolled Site Branch. The contaminate of concern was identified as naphtha and its associated compounds. This discovery prompted MDEQ's Hazardous Waste Branch and Fidelity to enter an agreed order requiring Fidelity to install a remediation system which would treat the contaminated groundwater and then discharge the treated water into state surface waters.
¶ 6. Although MDEQ's Hazardous Waste Branch possessed authority to issue the order mandating the installation of the remediation system, the necessary NPDES permit could only be issued by MDEQ's Environmental Permitting Branch. The discharge from Titan's remediation system did not easily conform to the NPDES permit regulations, because ordinarily industrial and municipal wastewater systems maintain a constant discharge volume, but the volume of discharge resulting from a remediation system such as the one installed by Fidelity generally was not a constant volume.
¶ 7. A facility experiencing problems with an industrial wastewater system ordinarily has the authority to cease operations or modify the manufacturing process while correcting the malfunction. Titan's situation, however, was unique in that the site must operate according to the agreed order which required Titan to continuously operate the remediation system to discharge the wastewater associated with the system. Thus Titan argued that MDEQ would not allow Titan to turn off the remediation system when problems arose. *199
¶ 8. MDEQ provided Titan with several alternatives that could have eliminated the problem. MDEQ also informed Titan that the agency would consider making arrangements for Titan to close the pump and treat system, allowing the contaminated groundwater to naturally attenuate. However, Titan never demonstrated how natural attenuation would be effective at the site, so MDEQ never allowed the system to be shut down.
¶ 9. In 1996, a modified NPDES permit had been issued to Fidelity so that it could install additional groundwater monitoring wells to further determine the existing contamination. Once the wells were in place, the quantity of water treated and discharged by the system would have increased. Because the modified NPDES permit increased the amount of water discharged, the allowable concentration levels for contaminants wasdecreased. To put it another way, because the mass quantity of any regulated substance discharged must not exceed a certain limit, the discharge of higher quantities of water means that lower concentration levels of the substance must exist in the water.
¶ 10. Although the modified 1996 NPDES permit was issued to Fidelity, the anticipated groundwater wells were never installed, and Fidelity filed bankruptcy soon after the modified permit was granted. In 1998, Titan purchased the facility and began operations, and according to MDEQ, Titan became responsible for all environmental conditions of the property and facility, including adherence to the modified NPDES permit and the remediation system. Titan argued that MDEQ should not have enforced the permit against it since the additional groundwater wells were never installed.
¶ 11. MDEQ took the position that Titan conducted due diligence when purchasing the facility, and it was responsible for all environmental conditions of the facility including compliance with the NPDES permit. MDEQ additionally maintained that because Titan failed to request any modifications to the existing permit, Titan assumed responsibility for the conditions specified in the 1996 modified NPDES permit. When the modified permit expired and Titan subsequently applied for a new permit, Titan never requested a modification to the 1996 permit, and the permit levels in the renewed NPDES permit remained the same as established in the 1996 permit.
¶ 12. Titan retained some of Fidelity's employees during Titan's purchase of the facility, and one of these employees was Ken Young, Fidelity's environmental manager (who later held the same position with Titan). MDEQ claimed that as a result of this position with both companies, Young was familiar with the conditions of Fidelity's, and later Titan's, permits. Titan, however, responded to this accusation that Young was an employee of Fidelity during the relevant time period and was therefore not acting on behalf of Titan.
¶ 13. Titan also asserted that MDEQ applied a flawed method for the calculation of the concentration of regulated substances. Although Titan argued that the permit should be based on mass limits, the NPDES permits are based on concentration limits. Titan explained the practical differences between the two limits as follows: when a facility reduces its water flow or has a volume of discharge below that set forth in its NPDES permit, it might exceed its concentration permit limit despite having reduced the total mass of the regulated substances in the discharge. Conversely, if a facility was allowed to comply with mass based limits that recognized the total pollutant load allowed in the flow, then a reduction in the flow would not cause a violation even with an increase *200 in the concentration levels. Titan referred to MDEQ's adherence to the concentration limit permit as a flaw which has been recognized by the EPA.
¶ 15. Rather than reviewing an administrative agency decision de novo, this Court has set forth the following factors to be taken into account when determining whether a reviewing court should uphold an agency's order:
Weems,Administrative agencies must perform the functions required of them by law. When an administrative agency has performed its function, and has made the determination and entered the order required of it, the parties may then appeal to the judicial tribunal designed to hear the appeal. The appeal is a limited one . . . since the courts cannot enter the field of the administrative agency. The court will entertain the appeal to determine whether or not the order of the administrative agency (1) was supported by substantial evidence, (2) was arbitrary or capricious, (3) was beyond the power of the administrative agency to make, or (4) violated some statutory or constitutional right of the complaining party.
(1) Substantial Evidence
¶ 16. In considering this first factor, this Court has held that "[s]ubstantial evidence is not such a malleable term of art that it may escape definition. Indeed, we have defined substantial evidence as evidence that a reasonable person would accept as adequate to support a conclusion." Tucker v. Prisock,
¶ 17. The Commission was presented with discharge monitoring reports submitted by Titan indicating that Titan had exceeded the limits contained in the NPDES permit. A permit has been violated when maximum limitations contained in the permit have been exceeded. Substantial evidence regarding the actions of both Titan and MDEQ was presented to the Commission during the two-day evidentiary hearing.
(2) Arbitrary or capricious
¶ 18. A second factor to be considered when determining whether an agency's order was appropriate is whether the order was "arbitrary or capricious." Weems,
Elec. Data Sys. Corp. v. Miss. Div. of Medicaid,[a]n act is arbitrary when it is done without adequately determining principle; not done according to reason or judgment, but depending upon the will alone, — absolute in power, tyrannical, despotic, non-rational, — implying either a lack of understanding of or a disregard for the fundamental nature of things . . . An act is capricious when it is done without reason, in a whimsical manner, implying either a lack of understanding of or a disregard for the surrounding facts and settled controlling principles.
¶ 19. This Court has held "[w]hether a decision is arbitrary and capricious seems to have melted somewhat into the substantial evidence standard. . . . `a holding which is supported by substantial evidence cannot be arbitrary and capricious.'" FalcoLime,
(3) The power of the administrative agency
¶ 20. The third factor to be considered is whether the administrative agency has the power to make the decision which is being challenged. The Commission is authorized under Miss. Code Ann. §§
¶ 21. Miss. Code Ann. §
¶ 22. Titan argues that the methodology used to determine the permit's concentration limits was flawed. Titan offered evidence that the Environmental Protection Agency allows for companies to use mass limits. On being questioned by Commissioner Billy Van Devender, Titan's expert witness Dr. Gazi George testified that had the limits been "properly done, represented by mass balance, we would not be anywhere close to those limits [concentration limits contained in the NPDES permit]." Although Titan offered evidence in support of mass limits, Titan's permit was based on concentration limits and the permit was violated. In addition, the EPA allows for both limits to be used.
¶ 23. This Court "give[s] great deference to the administrative agency in interpreting its own regulations." Weems,
(4) Violation of statutory or constitutional rights
¶ 24. The fourth and final factor to be considered is whether the order violated Titan's statutory or constitutional rights. Titan argues that MDEQ enforced penalties against only Titan, while the agency failed to take any action against an adjacent facility that "is the likely source of the contamination at issue here." Titan considers this as "selective enforcement" and therefore inadmissible. (citing Everwood Treatment Co. v. EPA,
¶ 25. In agreement with the chancery court, we hold that Titan's constitutional rights of equal protection have not been violated. We conclude, as did the chancery court, that Titan has not proved either prong of the test. Titan has not demonstrated that it was singled out, nor that it was selected for prosecution based upon protected classifications.
¶ 27. AFFIRMED.
SMITH, C.J., WALLER, P.J., EASLEY, CARLSON, GRAVES, DICKINSON AND RANDOLPH, JJ., CONCUR. DIAZ, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
