ABC Money
Home

High Court to hear environmental case


Published :
Sat, 20 Jan 2007 00:56
By : Agencies
Print this Story


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

WASHINGTON (AFX) - The Supreme Court agreed Friday to tackle an environmental case that could clarify when companies which have incurred industrial cleanup costs can seek to force the government or other companies to share the costs.

Atlantic Research Corp., a privately held company, is asking the Supreme Court to rule that it can recover cleanup costs from the federal government -- potentially millions of dollars. If it prevails, other companies could recover millions of dollars in cleanup costs from the federal or state governments.

For example, chemical giant DuPont Co. and oil and gas producer ConocoPhillips have a suit pending before the Supreme Court, asking that the federal government share the costs of cleaning up 15 sites the companies own but that the government once owned or controlled.

At issue is whether companies can sue other potentially liable parties, including the government, to recover costs under the so-called 'Superfund' law before they are found liable under the terms of the law.

Atlantic Research retrofitted rocket motors under contract with the United States from 1981 to 1986 at an industrial park in Camden, Ark., according to court filings. The company sued the federal government in 2002, seeking to recover costs for the park's cleanup due to its rocket propellant contamination.

A district court sided with the government, but the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Atlantic could proceed with its suit even though it had not been found liable under Superfund law.

In a 2004 case, Cooper Industries v. Aviall Services, the court found that companies could only seek to recover costs from other parties if they had reached a settlement with federal or state authorities under Superfund.

But the court left open the question whether a company could seek to recover costs from other parties if it did a voluntary cleanup.

Three federal appeals courts have issued split decisions since the Supreme Court's Cooper ruling. The Bush administration urged the court to accept the DuPont and Atlantic Research cases in order to resolve the split.

While the justices agreed Friday to accept only the Atlantic Research case, that ruling will likely shape the outcome of the DuPont and ConocoPhillips suit.

In that case, DuPont and ConocoPhillips filed suit against the government in 1997 to recover a portion of the cost of cleaning up 15 polluted industrial sites that the government had once owned or controlled during World War II.

At one of those sites, DuPont spent $24 million in cleanup costs by July 2000. But the government argued that since the companies performed the cleanup under other state and federal environmental rules, rather than Superfund, the cleanups were 'voluntary' and the companies had no basis for recovering costs.

Unlike the 8th Circuit, the 3rd Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals sided with the federal government.

The Justice Department's Solicitor General, the federal government's lawyer, urged the Supreme Court to take the Atlantic case to resolve the lower court conflict.

The case is United States v. Atlantic Research Corp., 06-562.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.




Share on


 You Might Like
Brits can hang on to their BlackBerrys
Two celebrity divorce settlements come in for appeal at House of Lords
+
Grasso appeals to retain pay package
Court considers dumping bankruptcy rule

Comment on this Article
Comment:
Title:
Name:
Please Enter
 
Here
  

 Search News

 Look For
Business
Credit cards
Finance
Loans
Money
Mortgages

 
 Stock Quotes *
SYMBOL
LAST
CHANGE
DOW JONES
10340.69
-107.24 ( -1.03 %)
NASDAQ
2792.28
22.57 ( 0.81 %)
FTSE 100
5741.15
38.78 ( 0.68 %)

SYMBOL ( 2012-01-19 )
LAST
CHANGE
STANDARD CHARTERED ( 11:35am )
1559.00
70.00 ( 4.76 %)
WOLSELEY PLC ( 11:35am )
2250.00
70.00 ( 3.20 %)
CARNIVAL ( 11:35am )
2017.00
46.00 ( 2.42 %)
LAND SECURITIES GROUP ( 11:35am )
679.50
36.50 ( 5.63 %)
WHITBREAD ( 11:35am )
1662.99
33.99 ( 2.09 %)

SYMBOL ( 2012-01-19 )
LAST
CHANGE
3M COMPANY ( 12:34pm )
85.78
0.71 ( 0.83 %)
BOEING CO ( 12:34pm )
75.70
0.64 ( 0.85 %)
JP MORGAN CHASE CO ( 12:34pm )
37.03
0.49 ( 1.33 %)
WAL MART STORES ( 12:34pm )
60.44
0.43 ( 0.72 %)
IBM ( 12:34pm )
181.50
0.43 ( 0.24 %)

SYMBOL ( 2012-01-19 )
LAST
CHANGE
F5 NETWORKS INC ( 12:11pm )
122.38
13.92 ( 11.80 %)
ICO GLOBAL COMM CL A ( 8:01pm )
99999999.99
9.37 ( 366.02 %)
PRICELINECOM INC ( 12:23pm )
525.40
6.57 ( 1.26 %)
AMAZONCOM INC ( 12:04pm )
195.65
6.21 ( 3.25 %)
MILLICOM INTERNATIONAL CELLULAR SA ( 4:00pm )
110.18
4.82 ( 4.43 %)

Gainers & Losers
Dow Jones
Euro Stoxx 50
FTSE 100
FTSE 250
FTSE AIM
FTSE ALL
Nasdaq

 Portfolio Manager

You must log in to access this area of the site. If you are not a registered user click here to sign up for instant access!


 Finance Explained

Money making ideas

Save money

Money management
Savings accounts
Investing money
Share dealing
Stock broker
Forex currency trading
Pension plans
Functions of Money

(c) 2007 ABCmoney.co.uk, All Rights Reserved
*ABCMoney.co.uk does not guarantee the accuracy of any share prices or stock quotations displayed. These are not real time quotes; all are delayed by at least twenty minutes and are for information purposes only.