Mealey's Pollution Liability
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November 07, 2023
In Climate Change Dispute, Hawaii Supreme Court Affirms Denial Of Motions
HONOLULU — A trial court properly denied two motions to dismiss filed by a group of oil and gas companies that are alleged to have caused damage to Honolulu by knowingly concealing the effect their fossil fuel products would have on global climate change, the majority of the Hawaii Supreme Court held in affirming the trial court’s judgment.
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November 06, 2023
No Coverage For Underlying Suit Seeking Damages From Nitric Oxide Plume, Panel Says
DENVER — No coverage is owed to an insured for an underlying suit alleging damages caused by the release of a nitric oxide plume from an insured’s manufacturing plant because a pollution endorsement, which provides coverage for pollution-related bodily injury claims, applies only to claims that have a connection to Vermont, the 10th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals said in affirming a district court’s ruling in favor of the insurer.
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November 06, 2023
Insured Municipality Files Suit, Says Coverage Owed For Remediation Costs
TRENTON, N.J. — A premises pollution liability insurer breached its contract and acted in bad faith by denying coverage for environmental contamination remediation costs incurred by an insured municipality because the policy obligates the insurer to provide coverage for the remediation costs, the insured says in a complaint filed in New Jersey state court.
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November 06, 2023
La. Federal Judge Denies Summary Judgment Motion In Creosote Contamination Row
LAKE CHARLES, La. — A railroad company is not entitled to summary judgment on claims that it contributed to contamination of a property because there are genuine issues of fact regarding whether it was aware of the contamination and whether creosote-soaked wooden poles were loaded onto its rail cars, a Louisiana federal judge found on Nov. 3 in denying the company’s motion for summary judgment.
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November 03, 2023
Ohio High Court Majority Affirms Choice-Of-Law Analysis For Bad Faith Claim
COLUMBUS, Ohio — An Ohio appellate court applied the correct factors in a choice-of-law analysis for a bad faith claim in an environmental contamination coverage suit because the bad faith claim sounds in tort rather than contract, the majority of the Ohio Supreme Court said in affirming the appellate court’s ruling.
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November 03, 2023
Missouri Federal Judge Remands Claims Arising From Contaminated Drinking Supply
ST. LOUIS — An electrical company alleged to have contaminated a city’s drinking water by using hazardous chemicals to clean one of its substations failed to show that the state law claims arising from the contamination raised any issues of federal law, a Missouri federal judge found Nov. 2 in remanding the case to state court.
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November 02, 2023
Montana Federal Judge Says Environmental Group Lacks Standing On Nuisance Claims
BUTTE, Mont. — An environmental group that filed a second lawsuit against a Montana resort alleging that the resort violated the Clean Water Act (CWA) by discharging nitrogen into the Gallatin River without a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit failed to show that it has standing to bring its civil and criminal nuisance claims, a Montana federal judge ruled in partly granting the resort’s motion to dismiss.
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November 01, 2023
Creek’s Status Under CWA Doesn’t Affect Jurisdiction, California Federal Judge Says
SANTA ANA , Calif. — Whether the Temescal Creek, in which a recycling plant owner is alleged to have discharge contaminated stormwater, is a “water of the United States” for the purposes of the Clean Water Act (CWA) does not affect the court’s subject jurisdiction because that determination is an element of a claim under the law, not a threshold jurisdictional matter, a California federal judge found in denying the plant owner’s motion to dismiss.
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October 31, 2023
5th Circuit: Mix Of Oil And Hazardous Substances Is Exclusively Covered By CERCLA
NEW ORLEANS — A group of companies is not entitled to monetary damages under the Oil Pollution Act (OPA) for the release of a mixture of oil and hazardous substances, as defined by the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act, from a chemical storage facility because the OPA expressly excludes such mixtures from its definition of oil, a Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals panel found in affirming a trial court’s judgment.
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October 30, 2023
In Clash Over Alaska City’s Air Quality, Parties Seek Approval Of Consent Decree
SEATTLE — Three citizen groups and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency filed a joint motion to enter a proposed consent decree that would resolve a dispute over whether the agency violated the Clean Air Act (CAA) by failing to approve or disapprove a state implementation plan (SIP) to remediate air pollution in the Alaska borough of Fairbanks North Star.
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October 27, 2023
Wisconsin Federal Judge Grants Leave To File Third-Party Complaints In CERCLA Case
MILWAUKEE — A Wisconsin federal judge granted two former operators of a contaminated manufacturing site, which are being sued under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act, leave to filed third-party claims against the parent company of the plaintiff real estate developer because recent depositions and discovery documents show that the real estate developer has no employees and the parent company may be the real party in interest.
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October 27, 2023
Judge Partially Denies Motion To Compel Documents In PCB Case Against Monsanto
CHICAGO — A federal magistrate judge in Illinois has partially granted and partially denied a motion by the state seeking to compel Monsanto Co. to produce documents in a lawsuit over alleged statewide contamination of waterways by polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). With regard to a request for documents related to third-party consultants, the judge ruled that the request is “overbroad, unduly burdensome and likely requests irrelevant information.”
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October 24, 2023
California Federal Judge Dismisses Some Claims In Electronics Contamination Dispute
SANTA ANA, Calif. — In disposing of three motions to dismiss, a California federal judge found that claims brought under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) by a property owner and the property’s occupant against several companies that are alleged to have contributed to environmental contamination at the site through electronics manufacturing are sufficiently pleaded but claims under California’s Hazardous Substance Account Act (HSAA) are barred by the three-year statute of limitations.
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October 24, 2023
Mont. Federal Judge Awards Interlocutory Fees And Costs In Fire Retardant Dispute
MISSOULA, Mont. — A Montana federal judge on Oct. 23 partly granted an environmental group’s motion for attorney fees and costs because the group previously prevailed in showing that the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) violated the Clean Water Act (CWA) by aerially deploying fire retardant to fight wildfires without a National Pollution Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit.
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October 23, 2023
Pa. Federal Judge: CERCLA Allows Multiple Cost Recovery Cases For Same Incident
PITTSBURGH — The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act allows parties to file subsequent cases for cost recovery even though they arise from the same incident of environmental contamination if the plaintiff can show that it has incurred subsequent costs, a Pennsylvania federal judge found in partly granting a recycling company’s motion to dismiss CERCLA claims brought against it in a second case arising from an alleged mercury spill.
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October 16, 2023
Supreme Court Grants Certiorari In 2nd Challenge To Chevron Deference
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Supreme Court on Oct. 13 granted a petition for a writ of certiorari in a second case challenging the doctrine of Chevron deference and ordered that it be briefed on a schedule allowing argument “in tandem” with a pending case pertaining to the same issue, both of which involve challenges to regulations that require fishing vessels to pay federal monitors.
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October 16, 2023
Judge: Construction Waste With Asbestos, Other Materials, Covered By CERCLA
CONCORD, N.H. — Building and construction waste containing arsenic, lead, selenium, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and asbestos qualifies as a hazardous substance under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act because those materials are specifically listed as such in the statute, a New Hampshire federal judge found Oct. 13 in partly granting a motion to dismiss filed by a municipality and a housing authority that are alleged to have contributed to contamination at a former landfill by dumping waste there.
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October 16, 2023
W.Va. Mining Company Violated Clean Water Act By Operating Without Permits, Judge Says
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — A company violated the Clean Water Act (CWA) and the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act (SMRCA) by operating mining sites while its National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit modifications were pending, a West Virginia federal judge found in partly granting motions for summary judgment filed by both the company and four environmental groups that brought the citizen suit against it.
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October 13, 2023
Environmental Group Appeals Standing Determination In Idling Bus Emissions Dispute
BOSTON — An environmental group appealed to the First Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals a Massachusetts federal judge’s order that said the group failed to establish standing because it cannot show that the alleged injuries its members suffered are traceable to alleged state law violations carried out by three bus companies that allowed their buses to idle for too long.
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October 13, 2023
Magistrate Denies Companies’ Motion To Dismiss PFAS Case, Says Claims Valid
PORTLAND, Maine — A federal magistrate judge in Maine has denied a motion to dismiss a per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) lawsuit, ruling that a fact finder could “plausibly find” that the defendants, companies that supplied PFAS for use at paper mills, “participated to a substantial extent” in carrying on the nuisance at issue because they allegedly knew of the risks of unconfined discharges of PFAS into the environment and failed to provide any warnings.
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October 10, 2023
S.C. Federal Judge Abstains In Dispute Over State Agency’s Air Emissions Decision
ROCK HILL, S.C. — A South Carolina federal judge abstained from considering whether the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (DHEC) incorrectly issued a construction permit to the operators of an air-polluting paper mill because the state maintains its own adequate procedure for raising such a challenge.
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October 10, 2023
Insured Condo Association Appeals Pollution Exclusion Ruling To 11th Circuit
ATLANTA — An insured filed a notice of appeal to the 11th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, seeking review of a Georgia federal judge’s ruling that an insurer owes no coverage for underlying suits filed by residents of a condominium building who claim that they were injured as a result of fumes exhausted from a backup power generator because the policies’ pollution exclusions bar coverage.
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October 09, 2023
Diversity Of Citizenship Does Not Exist In Sewage Backup Coverage Suit
BROOKLYN, N.Y. — A premises environmental liability insurer’s suit seeking a declaration regarding its coverage obligation for an underlying bodily injury suit must be dismissed because complete diversity of citizenship does not exist as the premises environmental liability insurer and the commercial general liability insurer, named as a defendant, are both incorporated in Delaware, a New York federal judge said.
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October 04, 2023
N.Y. Federal Judge: Not Enough Evidence To Find Oil Spill Claims Are Time-Barred
BROOKLYN, N.Y. — There is not enough evidence at this stage to determine whether claims of property damage and personal injury raised by residents of a former industrial neighborhood who say they were harmed by an oil spill are time-barred, a New York federal judge found in denying a motion to dismiss filed by the company allegedly responsible for the spill.
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October 04, 2023
Colo. Federal Judge Adopts Recommendation In Hazardous Waste Contamination Case
DENVER — A Colorado federal judge wholly adopted the recommendation of a magistrate judge and ruled that the United States is not entitled to sovereign immunity for claims of environmental mismanagement of a hazardous waste treatment facility brought by a Colorado state agency.