OPINION
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued an information request to William M. Gurley on February 6, 1992 pursuant to § 104(e) of the Comprehensive
The EPA filed a complaint on August 8, 1993, alleging that Gurley had failed to adequately respond to the agency’s request. Gurley answered that he had previously disclosed the requested information on January 4, 1989 in a deposition taken by the EPA in a companion case.
See United States v. Gurley Refining Co.,
Gurley appeals both the grant of summary judgment and the consequent imposition of approximately $1.9 million in civil penalties. He argues that (1) the information request was invalid, (2) he is exempt from compliance with the agency’s request, (3) the EPA’s action is barred by the doctrine of res judicata, and (4) the agency’s motivation remains a disputed issue of material fact. Gurley also challenges the imposition of the penalty against him on the grounds that (1) a portion of the fine was based upon a nonexistent cause of action, (2) the fine levied was in violation of the Excessive Fines and Due Process Clauses of the United States Constitution, and (3) the district court abused its discretion by imposing the penalty. Finally, Gurley argues that-the statutory scheme that provides for the issuance of information requests violates the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
The relevant facts are set forth in the district court’s two opinions, the first of which granted the EPA’s motion for summary judgment and the second of which granted the agency’s petition to impose a civil penalty. In its summary judgment order, the court summarized the factual background as follows:
This case arises from EPA investigative actions surrounding a former landfill near South Eighth Street in West Memphis, Arkansas. As early as 1982, the EPA detected various hazardous chemicals at the site. Later investigations led the EPA on October 14, 1992, to place the site on the CERCLA National Priorities list. The United States is presently engaged in several cases surrounding the attempt to clean up that site.
From 1962 until the present, the plaintiff was the president and majority stockholder in Gurley Refining Company (“GRC”). GRC bought used oil and treated it, thereby allowing it to resell that oil. The refining process created a by-product residue of oily waste. GRC disposed of this waste by dumping it at, among other locations, the South Eighth Street landfill.
On February 6, 1992, the EPA, pursuant to its authority under 42 U.S.C. § 9604(e)(2), issued a general notice letter and information request to the defendant. After several unsuccessful attempts to deliver that request, the United States Marshals Service served it on the defendant’s wife. The information request sought Gurley’s individual knowledge of, among other things, Gurley’s assets, generators of material that [was] disposed of at the site, site operations, and the structure of GRC.
On September 15, 1992, the defendant sent a letter to the EPA stating his position that GRC was the entity that the EPA should contact for information related to the site. The EPA responded on January 7, 1993, by indicating that the February 6, 1992 information request was addressed to the defendant individually and must be answered in that capacity. The EPA also posed six additional questions to Gurley. On January 18, 1993, the defendant again sent a letter refusing to respond individually and suggesting that any information requests be directed to GRC.
The United States then filed [its] action. Gurley subsequently provided the EPA with an individual response; however, he refused to answer the questions regarding his financial condition and he ignored the six additional questions added to the EPA’s original request for information. The United States also believes that Gurley’s responses to the other questions were incomplete.
A significant delay in the proceedings was caused by Gurley’s filing for personal bankruptcy in July of 1995. His bankruptcy petition was finally dismissed in August of 1997, allowing the district court to move forward on the EPA’s motion for summary judgment. The motion was granted on December 30, 1998, with the order providing that “the USA remains free to petition the court for the imposition of a civil penalty under 42 U.S.C. [ § ] 9604(e)(5)(B).” Such a petition was filed by the EPA in June of 1999. The petition was granted in November of 2002, with penalties imposed in the amount of $1,908,000 based upon the following calculation:
First, the Court fines Gurley $402,000 for the period from February 28, 1992 until September 15, 1992, the date Gur-ley finally responded ($2,000/day x 201 days = $402,000). Second, the Court fines Gurley $682,000 for the period from September 16, 1992, until July 29, 1994, the date Gurley provided deposition testimony regarding other PRPs [Potentially Responsible Parties] and Site operations ($l,000/day x 682 days = $682,000). Finally, the Court fines Gurley $824,000 for the period from July 30, 1994, until February 2, 1999, when Gurley answered the Section 104(e) request under Court order ($500/day x 1,648 days = $824,000). The Court bases this three-tiered penalty structure on the varying levels of egregiousness Gur-ley demonstrated in failing to comply fully with the EPA’s information requests.
This timely appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Whether Gurley is liable for failing to respond to the EPA’s information request
1. Standard of review
The district court’s grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo.
Therma-Scan, Inc. v. Thermoscan, Inc.,
2. Statutory framework
The EPA is authorized to issue information requests pursuant to § 104(e) of CERCLA, a provision that is codified at 42 U.S.C. § 9604(e)(2) and reads as follows:
Access to information
Any officer, employee, or representative described in paragraph (1) may require any person who has or may have information relevant to any of the following to furnish, upon reasonable notice, information or documents relating to such matter:
(A) The identification, nature, and quantity of materials which have been or are generated, treated, stored, or disposed of at a vessel or facility or transported to a vessel or facility.
(B) The nature or extent of a release or threatened release of a hazardous substance or pollutant or contaminant at or from a vessel or facility.
(C) Information relating to the ability of a person to pay for or to perform a cleanup.
In addition, upon reasonable notice, such person either (i) shall grant any such officer, employee, or representative access at all reasonable times to any vessel, facility, establishment, place, property, or location to inspect and copy all documents or records relating to such matters or (ii) shall copy and furnish to the officer, employee, or representative all such documents or records, at the option and expense of such person.
Liability for unreasonably failing to satisfy a properly issued request for information is set forth in 42 U.S.C. § 9604(e)(5)(B), which reads in pertinent part as follows:
In the case of information or document requests-or orders, the court shall enjoin interference with such information or document requests or orders or direct compliance with the requests or orders to provide such information or documents unless under the circumstances of the case the demand for information or documents is arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.
The court may assess a civil penalty not to exceed $25,000 for each day of noncompliance against any person who unreasonably fails to comply with th[is] provision[.]
3. Whether the EPA’s information request was valid
The validity of an administrative request for information generally turns on the reasonableness of the request.
See United States v. Morton Salt Co.,
The district court below observed that the three elements from
Pretty Products
were satisfied in this case because:
Gurley does not appear to dispute the first two elements. He argues, however, that because he gave his deposition testimony to the EPA on January 4, 1989, in which he allegedly provided all of the relevant information, the subsequent information request must not have been “truly for the purpose of determining a need for response or choosing a response action at the Site.” Gurley thus contends that “the EPA sought information ... (which it had already received from him) without having a statutorily justifiable purpose for making the information request.”
But the government points out in its brief that “the 1989 deposition concerned the Gurley Pit, not the South 8th Street, litigation. At the deposition, counsel for Gurley objected to any questions specifically related to the South 8th Street Site.” The government cites the following example from the deposition as illustrative of this point:
Q. [Counsel for the EPA] Why did you stop placing waste in the City of West Memphis dump in the 1960s?
Mr. Rieves [counsel for Gurley]: I would object to that question, Craig. I don’t see what relevance the City of West Memphis dump has to this lawsuit with regard to Gurley Pit at a separate location.
In addition, Gurley refused at his deposition to disclose personal financial data or to provide information about other PRPs.
Gurley also argues that even if the information request was valid at the time it was issued, he was no longer obligated to respond because the purposes that his disclosures would have served “had, for all intents and purposes, been accomplished prior to the time [when he] was required ... to respond to the information request.” But Gurley fails to cite any authority for the proposition that a party may escape liability for failure to respond to an information request by delaying until a response is no longer of use to the agency. Furthermore, the need for a response and the usefulness of the information, which was requested on February 6, 1992, continued until at least November of 1998, a time before which the cleanup at the site in question had not yet begun.. The information sought by the EPA in the request was also relevant to the agency’s ability to recover its incurred response costs, a valid purpose that would continue even after the completion of cleanup.
4. Whether Gurley was exempt from compliance
Gurley argues that he is simply a service station dealer under 42 U.S.C. § 9601(37)(A)(ii) (defining a “service station dealer”) and, as such, is exempt from compliance with the information request by virtue of 42 U.S.C. § 9614(c) (exempting service station dealers from certain abatement actions brought under 42 U.S.C. § § 9606 and 9607). But the service-station-dealer exception pertains to liability only under § § 9606 and 9607.
See
42 U.S.C. § ; 9614(c) (“No person ... may recover, under the authority of subsection (a)(3) or (a)(4) of section 9607 of this title, from a service station dealer for any response costs or damages resulting from a
The government’s alternative contention is that Gurley is not a sendee station dealer as defined in § 9601(37)(A)(ii) because, among other reasons, he allegedly did not comply with the Solid Waste Disposal Act. Because the obligation to respond to an EPA information request is not affected by one’s status as service station dealer, however, the question of whether Gurley would so qualify under § 9601(37)(A)(ii) is irrelevant and therefore need not be decided.
5. Whether the district court erred in upholding the EPA’s request for information
Gurley contends that the EPA abused its discretion and acted in an arbitrary and capricious manner by requesting information from Gurley that he had already provided in his 1989 deposition. Because the 1989 deposition testimony concerned only the Gurley Pit, however, it did not exhaust inquiry relevant to the cleanup and cost recovery relating to the South Eighth Street Site. The EPA’s subsequent issuance of an information request relating to the latter site was therefore not “a burdensome repetition” as Gurley protests.
6. Whether the EPA issued its information request with an improper motive or intent
Gurley alleges that the district court failed to comprehend that it was “granting a summary judgment on a matter that relied upon, among other matters, motivation and intent.” The government responds by pointing out that Gurley raises this argument for the first time on appeal. Indeed, the parties had previously agreed in their joint pretrial order that no issues of material fact remain. We will hold Gur-ley to his pretrial stipulation.
See United States v. Ninety-Three (93) Firearms,
7.Whether the doctrine of res judica-ta bars the EPA’s claim
Gurley argues that a criminal action brought under the 1970 Rivers and Harbors Act against GRC for allegedly dumping waste in the Mississippi River bars the EPA from bringing the current CERCLA § 104(e) action against him. The district court concluded that Gurley’s res judicata argument was without merit, reasoning as following:
Gurley’s original response.to summary judgment also argued that the United States’ CERCLA claim was barred by res judicata.... An almost identical, contention was subsequently rejected by the Eighth Circuit in United States v. Gurley,43 F.3d 1188 (8th Cir.1994). That case involved a separate CERCLA süperfund site, but as in this case, GRC had been previously prosecuted under the Clean Water Act. The Eighth Circuit held that because Gurley had not been a named party in the previous suit,he could be sued in his individual capacity in a subsequent action. This court adopts the Eighth Circuit’s reasoning. Regardless of this finding, it appears from his supplemental response to summary judgment that Gurley has abandoned his res judicata argument.
Gurley alleges that the district court committed reversible error when it “improperly assumed that the Eighth Circuit decision was law of the case as to Gurley and he could not rely upon the doctrine of res judicata.” We find no suggestion in the district court’s order, however, that it rejected the res judicata argument on the ground that the Eighth Circuit’s decision precluded the court below from considering the argument. Rather, the district court rejected the argument based upon the same reasoning as the Eighth Circuit had articulated. The district court further concluded that the res judicata argument had been abandoned by Gurley in his supplemental response to the motion for summary judgment. We find no error in the district court’s analysis of this issue.
B. Whether the district court erred by imposing civil penalties on Gurley
1.Standard of review
We will uphold the district court’s imposition of a civil penalty unless it has abused its discretion.
See Battling v. Fruehauf Corp.,
An abuse of discretion will be found where the reviewing court is “firmly convinced that a mistake has been made.”
Adcock-Ladd v. Sec’y of Treasury,
2. Statutory framework
“The court may assess a civil penalty not to exceed $25,000 for each day of noncompliance against any person who unreasonably fails to comply with th[is] provision[.]” 42 U.S.C. § 9604(e)(5)(B);
see also United States v. Ponderosa Fibres of America, Inc.,
3. Whether the district court imposed a fine based upon a nonexistent cause of action
Gurley contends that because the complaint sought penalties only for the period of time from September 11, 1992 forward, the district court erred by imposing a fine in the amount of $402,000 for the period of time from February 28, 1992 through September 15, 1992. The govern
In support of its “implied consent” theory, the government cites
Craft v. United States,
4. Whether the district court’s imposition of civil penalties violated the Excessive Fines and Due Process Clauses of the United States Constitution
With a statutory maximum of $25,000 per day in potential civil penalties, an imposition of tens of millions of dollars could have been assessed in this case, but only a fraction of that amount was ultimately levied: $1,908,000. Gurley nevertheless argues that the penalty imposed on him is unconstitutionally excessive, citing
United States v. Bajakajian,
Gurley’s assertion of a due process violation is likewise without merit because a rational basis exists for penalizing those who, like Gurley, purposefully ignore the EPA’s information requests over long periods' of time. Penalties such as those imposed here will encourage other PRPs to share information that might be helpful in the cleanup of Superfund sites.
5. Whether the district court abused its discretion by ordering Gurley to pay a $1,908,000 civil penalty
Gurley acknowledges that the “trial judge’s analysis of the factors to be considered in assessing the civil penalty was correct.” He nevertheless argues that the district court abused its discretion by imposing the penalty. We disagree. The district court • properly addressed each of the factors that district courts routinely consider before arriving at its penalty.
See United States v. Taylor,
The assessment of Gurley’s ability to pay a civil penalty has been complicated by Gurley’s bankruptcy proceedings over the past few years. Nevertheless, as of November 9, 2001, the record clearly indicates that Gurley’s estate has nearly $23,000,000 available for distribution .... After subtracting $16,500,000 for the United States’ response costs and $2,300,000 for the counsel for the bankruptcy trustee, $4,200,000 remain available to pay the bankruptcy trustee and any civil penalty against Gurley.... Gurley has the ability to pay the substantial penalty levied[.]
In sum, we find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s analysis and therefore uphold the civil penalty as imposed.
C. Whether CERCLA § 104(e) violates the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution
Gurley “invite[s] this Court to visit the question of whether the applicable portion of 104(e) (information requests), particularly as it was interpreted and enforced by the district court, violates the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment” in light of the Eleventh Circuit’s decision in
Tennessee Valley Authority v. Whitman,
III. CONCLUSION
For all of the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
