R&K ASSOCIATES, LLC VS. NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION (DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION) ( 2019 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-1475-18T1
    R&K ASSOCIATES, LLC,
    Petitioner-Respondent,
    v.
    NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION,
    SITE REMEDIATION COMPLIANCE
    AND ENFORCEMENT,
    Respondent-Respondent,
    and
    DES CHAMPS LABORATORIES,
    INC.,
    Intervenor-Appellant.
    __________________________________
    Argued November 4, 2019 - Decided November 19, 2019
    Before Judges Sabatino, Geiger and Natali.
    On appeal from the New Jersey Department of
    Environmental Protection, Docket No. LSR12000-
    G000042626.
    Daniel L. Schmutter argued the cause for appellant
    (Hartman & Winnicki, PC and Greenbaum, Rowe,
    Smith & Davis, LLP, attorneys; Daniel L. Schmutter
    and Jack Fersko, of counsel and on the briefs; Irene
    Hsieh, on the briefs).
    John M. Scagnelli argued the cause for respondent
    R&K Associates, LLC (Scarinci & Hollenbeck, LLC,
    attorneys; John M. Scagnelli, of counsel and on the
    brief; William A. Baker, on the brief).
    Richard F. Engel, Deputy Attorney General, argued the
    cause for respondent New Jersey Department of
    Environmental Protection (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney
    General, attorney; Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant
    Attorney General, of counsel; Bethanne Sonne Prugh,
    Deputy Attorney General, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    This case has been before our court on three previous occasions. In each
    instance, we reversed a final agency decision of the New Jersey Department of
    Environmental Protection ("DEP") either granting or denying Des Champs
    Laboratories, Inc. ("Des Champs") what is known as a de minimis quantity
    exemption ("DQE") under the Industrial Site Recovery Act ("ISRA"), N.J.S.A.
    13:1K-9.7, and the associated ISRA regulations, N.J.A.C. 7:26B-5.9 to -8.1.
    Des Champs presently appeals the October 28, 2018 final agency decision
    of DEP Commissioner Catherine McCabe denying it a DQE, after the
    completion of the most recent remand directed by our court. Adopting the post-
    A-1475-18T1
    2
    remand findings of an Administrative Law Judge ("ALJ"), the Commissioner
    concluded that Des Champs failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence
    at the administrative hearings that it meets the criteria for a DQE. For the
    reasons that follow, we affirm.
    I.
    We incorporate by reference and assume the reader's familiarity with the
    facts and procedural history reached in our three previous opinions.        We
    summarize that lengthy background as follows.
    From 1982 to 1996 Des Champs occupied an industrial facility on Okner
    Parkway in Livingston where it assembled heat recovery ventilators. In early
    1990, Des Champs moved a majority of its manufacturing operations to a new
    facility in Virginia, but several employees remained at the Okner site. In 1996
    Des Champs decided to cease its operations at Okner altogether. Before
    terminating its operations on the site, Des Champs submitted to the DEP a
    preliminary assessment report, in which the company's owner certified that the
    only hazardous substances it used at the site were five gallons of gasoline and
    several tanks of propane gas.
    In January 1997, Des Champs submitted to the DEP what is known as a
    "negative declaration" certifying that there had been no discharge of hazardous
    A-1475-18T1
    3
    substances from the property. Based on that information, the DEP issued a no
    further action ("NFA") letter in January 1997 authorizing Des Champs to cease
    operations at the Okner location.
    In September 1997, R&K Associates, LLC ("R&K") bought the property
    from Des Champs. R&K remains the property's current owner.
    In 2005, the DEP began to investigate groundwater contamination in the
    Township of Livingston. The contamination was traced to the Okner property
    formerly occupied by Des Champs. As a result, in November 2008, the DEP
    rescinded its January 1997 NFA letter and directed Des Champs to investigate
    the groundwater contamination and submit a site investigation report in
    compliance with the ISRA.1
    In January 2009, Des Champs applied for a DQE pursuant to N.J.S.A.
    13:1K-9.7, seeking an exemption from the strict liability remediation
    requirements of ISRA.      To support that application, Des Champs's owner
    submitted an affidavit contending that the Okner site had, at maximum, only the
    following: five gallons of gasoline, ten gallons of hydraulic oil, five gallons of
    1
    According to the DEP's counsel at oral argument on the appeal, the site
    investigation has yet to be completed.
    A-1475-18T1
    4
    motor oil, fifteen spray cans of paint, three cartridges of copy machine toner ,
    and ten gallons of oil-based paints.
    On January 21, 2011, the DEP denied Des Champs' DQE application
    because the company had failed to certify that the property was free of
    contamination. The first appeal ensued.
    In our published decision, Des Champs Labs. Inc., v. Martin, 427 N.J.
    Super. 84 (App. Div. 2012), we vacated the DEP's denial of a DQE to Des
    Champs. We did so because we found that ISRA did not authorize the DEP to
    require a DQE applicant to certify that the property is free of contamination.
    We remanded the matter for further consideration by the DEP, this time without
    regard to the improper condition.
    On remand in August 2012, the DEP granted Des Champs the DQE. This
    time, R&K, which opposed Des Champs' receipt of a DQE, appealed.
    On May 16, 2013, in the second appeal, we reversed the grant of the DQE
    because R&K had not been provided with a chance to participate in the remand
    proceedings. R&K Assocs., LLC v. N.J. Dep't of Envtl. Prot., No. A-0413-12
    (App. Div. May 16, 2013) ("Des Champs II").
    By this point the DEP determined that the contested factual issues should
    be heard before an ALJ. Consequently, an ALJ held a three-day Office of
    A-1475-18T1
    5
    Administrative Law ("OAL") hearing in June and August 2014, at which seven
    witnesses testified. Because of the long passage of time, the witnesses had
    difficulty recalling the operative facts from eighteen years earlier. The ALJ
    recognized this impediment in her initial decision, finding that "99% of the
    testimony was not based on present day recollection of past events but rather
    was based on each witness' genuine belief that he would have most likely done
    x, y or z back then, or it was recollection refreshed through historic documents."
    Following the administrative hearings, the ALJ recommended the denial
    of the DQE. The ALJ determined that, as a matter of law, a DQE cannot be
    obtained by a former owner of the property such as Des Champs. However, the
    ALJ did note in her decision that, had this apparent legal requirement not
    existed, she would have recommended issuance of the DQE because she found
    that R&K had the burden of proof in the matter and had not sustained that
    burden.2
    DEP Commissioner Bob Martin adopted the ALJ's determination, with
    certain modifications, in a decision dated April 6, 2015. Among other things,
    2
    The ALJ's initial decision did contain a caveat with a factual finding that Des
    Champs had provided its consultant with "selective information" about its
    activities on site. The ALJ identified this non-disclosure as an "alternative
    basis" for denying Des Champs a DQE. We discus that caveat, infra, in Part II.
    A-1475-18T1
    6
    in the course of his decision Commissioner Martin criticized Des Champs for
    not retaining necessary records that would help substantiate what activities
    actually had occurred at the site.
    The third appeal then ensued, in which Des Champs successfully argued
    to this court that a former owner of a property such as itself can be eligible to
    obtain a DQE. R&K Assocs., LLC v. N.J. Dep't of Envtl. Prot., A-4177-14
    (App. Div. Apr. 10, 2017) ("Des Champs III"). Nonetheless, we found in our
    opinion that the burden of proof properly should not rest on the objector (here,
    R&K) but rather should rest on the applicant (here, Des Champs), by a
    preponderance of the evidence. 
    Id., slip op.
    at 22.
    Based on these determinations, we remanded the case yet another time
    back to the DEP.      In our unpublished opinion, we provided very detailed
    instructions to the DEP and the ALJ, explaining:
    Improvidently shifting the burden at the hearing
    to R&K, the ALJ concluded from the rather scant and
    stale proofs tendered by Des Champs' witnesses that the
    evidence was sufficient to justify the issuance of a
    DQE, but for the legal impediments we have already
    discussed. We do not know from the ALJ's decision
    whether, if the burden had appropriately remained with
    Des Champs, she would have reached the same
    conclusions about the strength of the record.
    In light of this fundamental error of burden
    allocation, we are constrained to remand the matter so
    A-1475-18T1
    7
    that the ALJ now can consider the proofs in a manner
    that appropriately requires Des Champs to show its
    entitlement to a DQE by a preponderance of the
    evidence. We accordingly remand the matter to the
    DEP to make such a referral to the ALJ. The ALJ shall
    have the discretion to reopen the record as she may see
    fit in order to address more fully the pertinent issues.
    Counsel promptly shall provide courtesy copies of their
    appellate briefs and appendices to assist her in that
    endeavor. Following the remand, any aggrieved
    party(ies) may seek further review by the
    Commissioner, and, beyond that, through an appeal in
    this court.
    [Des Champs III, slip op. at 23].
    The matter was then remanded back again to the ALJ.              All parties
    stipulated that the existing administrative record developed from 2014 did not
    need to be further amplified.
    Based on that record, the ALJ reconsidered her previous determination,
    and found that the evidence did not justify Des Champs receiving a DQE. The
    ALJ noted there were numerous discrepancies in Des Champs' various
    submissions to the DEP, that Des Champs failed to identify in its application at
    least two of the operations at the Okner facility, and that there was a troublesome
    lack of documentation regarding the company's actual usage of hazardous
    substances. As the ALJ summarized it:
    I must CONCLUDE that Des Champs has failed
    to prove that it is factually entitled to a DQE on the
    A-1475-18T1
    8
    Property because records have been lost; the agency has
    been handicapped in its review role; and there are
    simply too many open-ended questions about the
    operations' use of hazardous materials during its
    heyday.
    Commissioner McCabe adopted the ALJ's decision in a final agency
    decision in October 2018. The present appeal by De Champs, which is opposed
    by both the DEP and R&K, ensued.
    Des Champs contends that the ALJ should have adhered to her original
    assessment of the record and found the company is entitled to a DQE. Des
    Champs argues that the DEP and R&K have mischaracterized the record and
    that Des Champs did not mislead the Department concerning its actual on-site
    activities. The company maintains the record shows that it only used de minimis
    quantities of hazardous substances at the site and is therefore entitled to a DQE.
    Des Champs also contends the ALJ was obligated to adhere to her factual
    and credibility findings from her 2014 decision, and that she arbitrarily
    reconsidered her original assessment of the record without justification.
    II.
    Our scope of appellate review of Commissioner's McCabe's October 28,
    2018 final administrative agency decision is limited. As the Supreme Court has
    instructed:
    A-1475-18T1
    9
    The appellate court ordinarily should not disturb an
    administrative agency's determinations or findings
    unless there is a clear showing that (1) the agency did
    not follow the law; (2) the decision was arbitrary,
    capricious, or unreasonable; or (3) the decision was not
    supported by substantial evidence.
    [In re Virtua-West Jersey Hosp. Voorhees for a
    Certificate of Need, 
    194 N.J. 413
    , 422 (2008)].
    Des Champs has failed to demonstrate on the present appeal any of these three
    limited exceptions to overcome the general policy of judicial deference to the
    administrative agency's expertise. The Commissioner's decision: (1) followed
    the law; (2) is not demonstrably arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable; and (3) is
    adequately supported by substantial evidence in the administrative record.
    We acknowledge that this court overturned three previous administrative
    decisions of the DEP in this litigation. In each of those instances, however, the
    agency had made an unfortunate legal or procedural error. Those errors included
    misinterpreting the pertinent statute to require the property to be free of
    contamination; denying R&K its legal right as property owner to participate in
    the case as an intervenor; and in misconstruing the law to disallow a former
    property owner to receive a DQE. Notably for the present appeal, in Des
    Champs III we also corrected the agency's misapprehension about the legally
    appropriate allocation of the burden of proof. All of those legal issues were
    A-1475-18T1
    10
    suitable for this court's de novo review and intervention. Mayflower Sec. Co.
    v. Bureau of Sec. in Div. of Consumer Affairs of Dep't of Law & Public Safety,
    
    64 N.J. 85
    , 93 (1973) (noting that appellate courts are not bound by an
    administrative agency's disposition of a legal issue).
    The present appeal is markedly different from the three previous ones
    because it does not hinge upon a legal issue but instead concerns the strength of
    the factual evidence in the record. On remand, the ALJ duly reconsidered her
    original decision, and concluded that Des Champs had "failed to prove it is
    factually entitled to a DQE."     The DEP Commissioner upheld that factual
    determination, and so do we.
    Des Champs contends, in essence, that the ALJ was stuck with findings
    she made in her 2014 original decision, and that this court's remand did not
    permit her to change her mind after reflecting further upon the proofs. This
    argument misreads our 2017 remand too narrowly and rigidly, and also
    misconceives the decisional authority of a judicial officer such as an ALJ.
    As the Supreme Court reaffirmed in Lombardi v. Masso, 
    207 N.J. 517
    (2011), it is "well established" that a jurist "'has the inherent power to exercise
    in [his or her] sound discretion, to review, revise, reconsider and modify . . .
    interlocutory orders at any time prior to the entry of final judgment.'" 
    Id. at 534
    A-1475-18T1
    11
    (quoting Johnson v. Cyklop Strapping Corp., 
    220 N.J. Super. 250
    , 257 (App.
    Div. 1987)) (emphasis added). This power of a judge to reconsider is "rooted in
    the common law." 
    Ibid. It is a
    long-recognized power to grant relief from error
    which can be "'exercised in justice and good conscience.'" 
    Id. at 535
    (quoting
    United States v. Jerry, 
    487 F.2d 600
    , 604 (3rd Cir. 1973)). Administrative
    tribunals likewise have such "an inherent power, parallel to that of the courts, to
    reopen [their] own judgments on equitable grounds in the interests of justice."
    Lee v. W.S. Steel Warehousing, 
    205 N.J. Super. 153
    , 156 (App. Div. 1985).
    As the result of our 2017 opinion vacating the final agency decision on
    discrete grounds not at issue here, this administrative case, once again, became
    non-final. We made quite clear in our opinion that the ALJ should take a fresh
    look at the case, this time placing the burden of persuasion upon Des Champs,
    and decide whether "she would have reached the same conclusions about the
    strength of the record." Des Champs III, slip op. at 23. The ALJ was explicitly
    authorized to weigh the evidence anew. The ALJ did so, this time viewing the
    case through a different prism of burden allocation, and she reached a different
    outcome. It was not arbitrary or capricious for her to do so.
    Des Champs portrays the ALJ's original 2014 decision as if it had
    consistently credited the evidence as being in Des Champs' favor. That is not
    A-1475-18T1
    12
    so. Indeed, the ALJ in her original decision several times expressed misgivings
    and concerns about the relative paucity of evidence and about information that
    Des Champs omitted concerning its operations.
    Several paragraphs of the 2014 decision focused upon these informational
    shortcomings, with respect to what had not been conveyed to Des Champs'
    environmental consultant Joseph Pilewski concerning the company's so-called
    "paint spray booth" activities and the company's use of a fireproof storage
    cabinet. The ALJ also highlighted testimony from Livingston Township Fire
    Department witnesses, who described safety concerns regarding the spray booth
    and other aspects of the site.
    Significantly, in footnote 8 of her 2014 decision, the ALJ made these
    adverse factual findings concerning Des Champs' conduct in providing
    "selective information" to its consultant about its on-site operations:
    Separate and apart from the equitable argument
    on waiver of the DQE option, I would CONCLUDE that
    the testimony of Des Champs' environmental consultant
    is persuasive on the factual point that the company
    more likely than not was not eligible for a DQE
    exemption initially, and thus an NFA was sought. There
    is no reason to doubt the testimony of Pilewski that the
    normal decision-tree is to first explore ISRA
    exemptions. To the extent that Pilewski was not aware
    of potential areas of concerns such as the spray paint
    booth or hazardous storage cabinet, I must
    CONCLUDE that same was the result of selective
    A-1475-18T1
    13
    information produced by Des Champs, the party who
    was the only one that could have provided information
    not obvious to any third-party observer. Because of the
    legal conclusion reached below, I need not rely upon
    these conclusions to reach my Initial Decision, but they
    are set forth herein as alternative bases for my ruling.
    Although this finding is not completely dispositive of the issues, the ALJ saw
    fit to reiterate them in full in her post-remand 2018 decision. As the ALJ
    explained, her original concerns about "the failure of Des Champs to fully
    inform Pilewski of its past manufacturing operations and use of potentially
    hazardous materials" are failings that "fall at its [Des Champs'] feet," now that
    it bears the burden of proof. The ALJ's explanation is eminently reasonable.
    Moreover, Des Champs had an opportunity to attempt to expand the record
    and strengthen its proofs on remand. It elected – perhaps for strategic reasons
    – not to do so.   Accordingly, Des Champs bears responsibility for its lack of
    success in surmounting the preponderance standard of proof.
    Des Champs further argues that the ALJ was irrevocably bound in 2018
    by her 2014 determination that Des Camps' witnesses were credible. It is readily
    apparent from an objective reading of the ALJ's 2018 decision that she
    reconsidered her original pronouncement in this regard, and, on further
    reflection, implicitly found certain aspects of that testimony to be insufficiently
    credible to satisfy Des Champs' reallocated burden of proof. To be sure, it would
    A-1475-18T1
    14
    have been preferable if the ALJ had been more explicit and detailed about
    findings from her 2014 decision that she was now reconsidering. But the gist of
    the ALJ's ultimate assessment of the evidence is clear and transparent.
    Finally, it bears noting that the ALJ did not stray from her original "bottom
    line." The ALJ concluded in 2014 that Des Champs should be denied a DQE.
    She reached the same conclusion in 2018, albeit based upon different grounds.
    Commissioner McCabe's final agency decision is consequently affirmed.
    The matter is now concluded.
    Affirmed.
    A-1475-18T1
    15