In Gould Electronics v Livingston County Road Commission, 2022 WL 1467650 (6th Cir. May 10, 2022), the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals addressed a claim between the responsible party at a Superfund Site (Gould) and a neighbor (Livingston). The main subject of the dispute was who was responsible for the contamination on the Livingston property. Each party blamed the other and after a trial, with “dueling experts,” the court found Gould to be the “sole cause” of the contamination. The court then apportioned cleanup costs: 95% to Gould and 5% to Livingston.
Livingston appealed arguing that if Gould was the “sole cause” of the contamination, Gould should pay 100 % of the costs. The court upheld the allocation of costs, reasoning that allocation of costs is based on equitable considerations, including the degree of care and the cooperation with officials. Livingston had not cooperated with the State’s attempt to investigate the cause of the contamination and the court found Livingston’s actions to be “sufficiently reprehensible and damaging that it should bear 5 percent of the liability.”
The message to property owners is: be a nice neighbor. Or, as the court explained it “A party cannot ignore hazardous waste on its property and refuse to cooperate with regulatory authorities because it claims it did not cause the spill.”
The post If You Own Property Near a Superfund Site, the 6th Circuit Just Sent You an Important Message: Be a Nice Neighbor or Else. appeared first on Forchelli Deegan Terrana Law.