DONN H. WRAY, EQUITY SHAREHOLDER, ANNOUNCES THE INDIANA SUPREME COURT MADE CLEAR IN A RULING LAST WEEK THAT VICTIMS OF OLD POLLUTION WHO HAVE EXPENDED FUNDS FOR CLEAN-UP CAN SEEK CONTRIBUTION FROM POLLUTERS
DONN H. WRAY, EQUITY SHAREHOLDER, ANNOUNCES THE INDIANA SUPREME COURT MADE CLEAR IN A RULING LAST WEEK THAT VICTIMS OF OLD POLLUTION WHO HAVE EXPENDED FUNDS FOR CLEAN-UP CAN SEEK CONTRIBUTION FROM POLLUTERS
In the case of Pflanz v. Foster, et al., a complaint was filed seeking, among other relief, contribution for cleanup costs pursuant to Indiana’s Underground Storage Tank Act, post-clean-up damages for stigma to real estate, and declaratory relief for future anticipated cleanup costs. The trial court dismissed under the theory that because the Pflanzes, who had owned the property since the mid-1980s, “knew or should have known” of the contamination on their property for over ten years, the statute of limitations barred their claim. The Indiana Supreme Court reversed the trial court’s order of dismissal and remanded the case for further proceedings.
According to Donn H. Wray, attorney for the Pflanzes: “This significant ruling will help businesses of all sizes that clean up old pollution left behind by others. Many small business owners have former service stations, dry cleaners, machine shops, or other types of property where pollutants were released in the past. This ruling gives them a chance to recover clean up expenditures.” Wray added: “The ruling holds that irrespective of how long ago the pollution occurred, well-settled law on contribution provides that only after payment has been made to clean up pollution does the ten year statute of limitations begin to run.”
Even after a clean up is complete, the value of a property that has been polluted may be reduced due to concerns that pollutants may remain. The Court held that the statute of limitations for claiming such “stigma damages” does not begin to run until the clean up process is sufficiently far along to make such damages ascertainable. Wray observed: “Common sense suggests that the shot clock for filing a claim should not begin to run until after the claim is no longer speculative in nature. That’s exactly what the Court held.”
The twenty-first century Hoosiers who undertake the expense of remediating pollution left behind from Indiana’s industrial and commercial past are all winners under this decision. If they still exist and can be located, those responsible for leaving the mess will have to contribute to the cost of cleaning it up.
Pflanz v. Foster, et al. (June 19, 2008) 36S01-0710-CV-425.
For more information, please contact Donn Wray at Stewart & Irwin, P.C., 251 East Ohio Street, Suite 1100, Indianapolis, IN 46204, 317-639-5454 or dwray@silegal.com.
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Brenda S. Jackson
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bjackson@silegal.com