SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-6446-92T5
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION,
Plaintiff-Respondent-
Cross-Appellant,
v.
STANDARD TANK CLEANING CORP.,
STANDARD MARINE SERVICES, INC.,
EVELYN BERMAN FRANK, and
PETER MALCOLM FRANK,
Defendants-Cross-Respondents,
and
JANE KRESCH and SUSAN FRANK,
Defendants-Appellants-
Cross-Respondents,
and
ESTATE OF NATHAN BERMAN
and ESTATE OF MORRIS BERMAN,
Defendants.
___________________________________________
Submitted June 14, 1995 - Decided September 29, 1995
Before Judges Skillman, Wallace and Kleiner.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Chancery Division, Hudson County.
Gelenitis & McGuire, attorneys for
appellants-cross-respondents Jane Kresch and
Susan Frank and for cross-respondent Peter
Malcolm Frank (Paul Gelenitis, on the brief).
Deborah T. Poritz, Attorney General of New
Jersey, attorney for respondent-cross-appellant (Mary C. Jacobson, Assistant
Attorney General, of counsel; Masha D.
Rozman, Deputy Attorney General, on the
brief).
No briefs have been filed on behalf of cross-respondents Standard Tank Cleaning Corp.,
Evelyn Berman Frank and Standard Marine
Services, Inc.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
SKILLMAN, J.A.D.
This appeal requires us to determine the circumstances under
which officers and directors of a corporation may be held
personally liable for violations of the Water Pollution Control
Act (WPCA), N.J.S.A. 58:10A-1 to -43, and the fairness of the
trial procedures pursuant to which the appellant corporate
officers were held liable for substantial monetary penalties.
The other significant issue presented by this appeal is whether
the WPCA authorizes the Department of Environmental Protection
(DEP) to obtain an award of counsel fees for the time expended by
Deputy Attorneys General in an enforcement action.
Defendant Standard Tank Cleaning Corporation (STCC) operated
a treatment facility which cleaned hazardous materials stored in
barges that were used to remediate oil spills on the Kill Van
Kull. STCC cleaned the hazardous residue remaining in the barges
by filtering the water in the barge, treating the residue,
filtering the material again, and then discharging into the
waterway.
On June 30, 1986, the DEP issued a New Jersey Pollution
Discharge Elimination System (NJPDES) permit to STCC, which
became effective on September 1, 1986.
On September 16, 1988, the DEP issued an administrative
order assessing a civil administrative penalty of $175,000 upon
STCC for violations of the permit. We affirmed this order in an
unreported opinion, In re Standard Tank Cleaning Corp., A-2334-88T3 (Oct. 3, 1989), and the Supreme Court denied STCC's petition
for certification.
121 N.J. 618 (1990).
The DEP filed this suit on May 9, 1990, alleging that STCC
had failed to pay the $175,000 administrative penalty and had
committed various additional violations of its NJPDES permit
between March 1988 and December 1989. The DEP sought to enjoin
STCC from operating its facility in violation of the 1988
administrative order and the permit. The complaint also sought
an order requiring STCC to pay the $175,000 penalty and the
imposition of additional penalties for continuing violations of
the administrative order and permit. The sole defendant named in
the original complaint was STCC.
The court conducted a bench trial over a five-day period
between June 14, 1990, and August 1, 1990. On the first trial
day, the court ordered STCC to pay the $175,000 administrative
penalty imposed in 1988, and STCC complied a few days later. The
DEP filed an amended complaint during trial that alleged
additional violations in the period from January 1990 through
April 1990. This amended complaint, like the original complaint,
named only STCC as a defendant.
At the conclusion of the trial, the court issued an oral
opinion in which it concluded that STCC had violated the effluent
limitations contained in its NJPDES permit on 137 occasions
between May 1988 and April 1990. The court also concluded that
STCC had violated the reporting requirements of its permit on 15
occasions between May 1988 and April 1990.
On September 14, 1990, the DEP moved for leave to file a
second amended complaint, alleging additional violations that had
occurred during the pendency of the action. This complaint also
sought to add as defendants STCC's parent company, Standard
Marine Services, Inc. (Standard Marine), and various officers and
directors of STCC, including Evelyn Frank, Jane Kresch, Peter
Frank and Susan Frank.
The court granted this motion, but by an order entered on
November 9, 1990, further provided that the newly added
"[d]efendants shall not be required to file an answer" and that
"all further action on the amended complaint [shall be] stayed
pending further order of [the] court." This order also stated
that "[t]he penalty phase of trial shall commence on December 13,
1990," and that after it is concluded, "the trial shall continue
on the liability issue of the original defendants." Due to these
provisions, the active involvement in the litigation of the newly
named defendants, including Susan Frank and Kresch, was delayed
for a substantial period of time.
The order entered on November 9, 1990, seemed to indicate
that the next phase of the case would involve solely the
determination of penalties for the previously adjudicated
violations. However, when the trial ultimately resumed on April
9, 1991, the DEP also presented evidence relating to the
additional violations alleged in the second amended complaint,
even though the only defendant then participating in the
proceedings was STCC. Although a trial on these alleged
additional violations was conducted over a two-day period, the
trial judge retired without making any findings of fact or
conclusions of law and without entering any further order.
The case was then transferred to another judge, but there
was a delay of nearly two years until the trial continued on June
1, 1993. It was at this stage of the litigation that the DEP
first proceeded against the other defendants who had been added
to the case by the order of November 9, 1990. Over these
defendants' objections, the DEP read into the record substantial
portions of the testimony it had presented in the prior trial
proceedings involving only STCC, including testimony by witnesses
who were not offered for cross-examination at this resumed trial.
At the close of the DEP's case, the court granted motions
for dismissal by Evelyn Frank, Peter Frank and Standard Marine,
but denied motions for dismissal by Susan Frank and Kresch.
Thereafter, the court concluded that STCC had violated its permit
20 times which, added to the 152 violations adjudicated on August
1, 1990, totalled 172 violations. The court also concluded that
Susan Frank and Kresch were liable for those 20 violations, but
not for the 152 violations adjudicated prior to their joinder in
the litigation. The court assessed STCC penalties of $3,925,000
for 157 permit violations ($25,000 for each one) and $41,825 for
15 reporting violations. Susan Frank and Kresch were each
assessed penalties of $500,000 ($25,000 for each of the 20 permit
violations). Finally, STCC, Kresch, and Frank were held jointly
and severally liable for a $266,000 penalty based on the late
payment of the 1988 administrative penalty. After a post-trial
hearing, the court denied the DEP's application for an award of
litigation costs.
Susan Frank and Kresch appeal from the part of the judgment
imposing substantial penalties upon them individually, arguing
that (1) the order permitting the DEP to file a second amended
complaint adding them as defendants after the completion of a
trial on liability against STCC violated the entire controversy
doctrine; (2) the late amendment of the complaint adding them as
defendants prejudiced their defense and consequently denied them
due process; (3) the trial court erred in concluding that their
participation in STCC's management provided a sufficient
foundation for the imposition of personal liability for the
corporation's violations of the WPCA; and (4) the court did not
properly weigh all relevant factors in assessing penalties upon
them individually. The DEP cross appeals, arguing that the trial
court erred in dismissing its claims against Evelyn Frank, Peter
Frank and Standard Marine and in denying its application for
various litigation expenses, including counsel fees. The DEP
also argues that the trial court erred in failing to find various
additional violations by the defendants.
We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its
discretion in permitting the DEP to amend its complaint to add
Susan Frank and Kresch as defendants. However, we also conclude
that the trial procedures under which Frank and Kresch were found
personally liable for STCC's violations violated the New Jersey
rules of evidence and were fundamentally unfair. Therefore, the
judgments against Frank and Kresch must be reversed and the case
remanded for a new trial against these defendants. On the
State's cross-appeal, we conclude that the trial court properly
dismissed the DEP's complaint against Standard Marine but that it
erred in dismissing Evelyn Frank and Peter Frank. Therefore, the
case also must be retried with respect to these defendants. We
affirm the trial court's order denying the DEP's application for
an award of counsel fees for time expended by Deputy Attorneys
General in handling this litigation. Finally, we agree with the
DEP that the trial court erred in refusing to impose additional
penalties for violations of the WPCA that also constituted
violations of administrative and/or court orders. Therefore, the
matter must be remanded for the imposition of additional
penalties upon STCC.
would be unfair to join additional defendants after substantial
portions of the case had already been tried, the court stated:
I am satisfied that substantial justice
dictates that the amendment be granted to
permit DEP to pursue its case against those
parties it feels are responsible for the
violations in issue. At the same time, I
will ensure as best I can that defendants
will not be prejudiced and will afford
defendants an opportunity to pursue the same
kind of discovery that was afforded the
original defendants to meet DEP's proof
against it in Court with a full opportunity
for direct and cross examination.
The applicability of the entire controversy doctrine turns
on whether "parties or persons will, after final judgment is
entered, be likely to have to engage in additional litigation to
conclusively dispose of their respective bundles of rights and
liabilities that derive from a single transaction or related
series of transactions." DiTrolio v. Antiles,
142 N.J. 253, 268
(1995) (emphasis added); accord Wm. Blanchard Co. v. Beach
Concrete Co.,
150 N.J. Super. 277, 293-94 (App. Div.), certif.
denied,
75 N.J. 528 (1977). Therefore, the entire controversy
doctrine only bars the maintenance of a subsequent lawsuit
arising out of the same overall controversy as an earlier
lawsuit, see DiTrolio v. Antiles, supra, 142 N.J. at 271, and has
no applicability to a motion for leave to file an amended
complaint prior to the entry of final judgment.
When the DEP moved for leave to file a second amended
complaint alleging additional violations and adding new parties,
a final judgment had not yet been entered. Although the trial
court had entered a series of injunctive orders against STCC, it
had not yet adjudicated any of the DEP's penalty claims against
STCC. Therefore, the entire controversy doctrine did not apply
to the court's consideration of the DEP's motion.See footnote 1
Instead, the DEP's motion was governed by Rule 4:9-1, which
provides that once a responsive pleading has been served, "a
party may amend a pleading only by written consent of the adverse
party or by leave of court which shall be freely given in the
interest of justice." The determination whether to grant such
relief is committed to the sound discretion of the trial court,
Du-Wel Prods. v. United States Fire Ins. Co.,
236 N.J. Super. 349, 364 (App. Div. 1989), certif. denied,
121 N.J. 617 (1990),
which must consider "what course of action will further the
interests of justice." Brower v. Gonnella,
222 N.J. Super. 75,
81 (App. Div. 1987). Consequently, if a claim does not arise
until after a complaint has been filed, leave to amend to add
that claim should be granted as of course so long as the moving
party has exercised due diligence and the amendment will not
cause the trial to be unduly delayed or complicated.
The DEP did not become aware of any of the additional
alleged violations asserted in its second amended complaint until
late June at the earliest, and even then the violations were not
brought directly to the attention of the DEP representatives and
Deputy Attorney General responsible for handling this litigation.
Consequently, the DEP's delay in moving for leave to amend its
complaint until after the conclusion of the first phase of the
trial on August 1, 1990, was not unreasonable. Moreover, since
further trial court proceedings had to be conducted in any event
in order to determine the amount of penalties to be assessed upon
STCC, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in allowing
the DEP to pursue its additional claims in this lawsuit rather
than by a separate action. See Brown v. Brown,
208 N.J. Super. 372, 381-82 (App. Div. 1986).
We turn next to the more difficult question of whether the
trial court abused its discretion in allowing the DEP to join
additional defendants, including Frank and Kresch, after the
trial of the first phase of the case had been completed. Frank
and Kresch argue on appeal that they were "severely prejudiced"
by their late joinder in the action:
Had they been named at the outset, they could
have settled, defended with their own
counsel, resigned from Standards' employ to
avoid personal liability, or engaged in other
efforts to avoid an adjudication of liability
and penalties. The actual prejudice is
emphasized by the fact that Frank and Kresch
were the only two Standard employees who
testified at the trial on liability in June
and July 1990, and they were the only two
employees found liable for statutory
penalties.
We note that the Supreme Court recently relied upon similar considerations in concluding that the entire controversy doctrine barred an action against four doctors who had not been named as
defendants in a prior action against a hospital with which they
were affiliated:
There is no doubt that defendants are
now disadvantaged because they were not
parties to the first litigation. Each of the
four defendant-doctors were deposed as
witnesses during the discovery period in
plaintiff's suit against the Hospital.
Although they were represented by counsel
during these depositions, had they been made
parties to the original action, they might
have approached the depositions and discovery
process differently. They would have been
able actively to participate in discovery by
objecting to interrogatories and requests for
documents.
[DiTrolio v. Antiles, supra, 142 N.J. at
273.]
However, we perceive a significant difference between a plaintiff seeking to avoid the sanction of dismissal for a violation of the entire controversy doctrine and seeking to amend a complaint to add previously omitted defendants. Once a final judgment has been entered, the entire controversy doctrine may create a reasonable expectation of finality on the part of parties who were not joined in the original action. See DiTrolio v. Antiles, supra, 142 N.J. 276. However, an unnamed party cannot reasonably rely upon his or her non-joinder prior to the entry of a final judgment signifying the conclusion of litigation, because a plaintiff, at least in the early stages of litigation, may "readily" amend a complaint to name additional defendants. Mystic Isle Dev. Corp. v. Perskie & Nehmad, 142 N.J. 310, 328 (1995). Moreover, the party joinder requirements of the entire controversy doctrine rest not only upon considerations of
fairness to unnamed parties with a material interest in the
litigation but also the avoidance of piecemeal decisions and the
promotion of judicial efficiency. DiTrolio v. Antiles, supra,
142 N.J. at 267. Although these policies also may be implicated
in a court's consideration of a motion to amend a complaint to
add new parties, especially if the motion is made on the eve of
trial or after a case has been partially tried, they have more
weight when a case has been concluded by entry of the final
judgment.
We are satisfied that the trial court did not abuse its
discretion in granting the DEP's motion to amend its complaint to
add Susan Frank and Kresch as defendants with respect to alleged
violations that had not yet been adjudicated. Since the court
granted the DEP's motion to join Frank and Kresch at the same
time as it permitted the complaint to be amended to assert
additional claims based on the alleged violations that occurred
from May through August of 1990, the DEP had not as of that time
presented any evidence or even conducted any discovery regarding
those newly alleged violations. Consequently, the DEP's joinder
of Frank and Kresch as to those violations did not require any
substantial duplication of pretrial or trial proceedings
previously conducted. In fact, the trial court could have denied
the DEP's motion to file a second amended complaint and instead
directed the DEP to pursue any claims that had arisen subsequent
to the filing of the complaint by means of a separate action.
See Brown v. Brown, supra, 208 N.J. Super. at 381-82. In that
event, there would have been no impediment to the DEP naming not
only STCC but also Susan Frank and Kresch as defendants.
Furthermore, STCC's filing of a bankruptcy petition on September
18, 1990, after the conclusion of the first phase of the trial on
August 1, 1990, raised a serious question whether the DEP would
be able to collect whatever penalties the court ultimately
imposed upon STCC. This circumstance provided a reasonable basis
for the DEP seeking to join other possibly liable parties who had
been omitted from the original complaint.
However, we are also satisfied that the trial court did not
abuse its discretion in allowing the DEP to proceed against Frank
and Kresch only with respect to violations that had not yet been
adjudicated. Although the joinder of Frank and Kresch was not
barred by the entire controversy doctrine, the same policies that
underlie that doctrine also support the trial court's decision
not to allow the DEP to proceed against these defendants for
violations that had already been adjudicated as to STCC. The
purposes of the entire controversy doctrine are threefold:
(1) the need for complete and final
disposition through the avoidance of
piecemeal decisions; (2) fairness to parties
to the action and those with a material
interest in the action; and (3) efficiency
and the avoidance of waste and the reduction
of delay.
[DiTrolio v. Antiles, supra, 142 N.J. at
267.]
If the DEP had been allowed to proceed against Susan Frank and Kresch for violations that had been previously adjudicated against STCC, the court would have been required to rehear much
of the same evidence it had already heard in the first phase of
the trial and to readjudicate issues it had already adjudicated
as to STCC. Such an adjudicatory process would have involved the
same kind of inefficiency, delay and piecemeal decision-making
process that the entire controversy doctrine seeks to avoid.
Moreover, the court's prior adjudication of liability against
STCC in a proceeding to which Frank and Kresch had not been
parties would have created a serious risk of prejudgment, or at
least the appearance of prejudgment, in the subsequent
proceedings against Frank and Kresch.
Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
permitting the joinder of Frank and Kresch as defendants after
the case had already been partially tried but limiting their
joinder to alleged violations that had not yet been adjudicated.
Frank and Kresch had not yet entered appearances. These
defendants' absence would have posed no problem if the
proceedings had been limited, as the court had indicated in the
November 9, 1990 order, to a determination of the appropriate
penalties to be assessed upon STCC for the previously adjudicated
violations. However, contrary to that order, the DEP proceeded
at the resumed trial to introduce evidence of the alleged
violations that had occurred from May through August 1990.
Moreover, when the trial continued in May 1993 after Frank and
Kresch had filed answers, the DEP, over these defendants'
vigorous objections, relied heavily upon evidence introduced
during the first eight days of trial to establish their personal
liability for STCC's violations. The trial court permitted this
evidence to be admitted against Frank and Kresch on the theory
that their interest in the litigation was coextensive with that
of STCC, which had defended the action in 1990 and 1991:
[T]he Court cannot see at this point any
diversity or conflict of interest between the
responsible corporate officials and the
company itself. If ... the corporation ...
is found liable for penalties, the
responsible corporate officials, in this
Court's view, can't have any argument
contrary to the argument that the corporation
has. The corporation is or is not
responsible. And the responsible corporate
officials rise or fall with the corporation.
Based upon this ruling, the DEP introduced approximately two
hundred pages of testimony from the prior trial proceedings in
which Frank and Kresch had not participated except as witnesses.
Under Evidence Rule 63(3)(a)(ii) (now N.J.R.E.
804(b)(1)(B)), effective at the time of trial, testimony adduced
in a prior civil proceeding offered in a subsequent proceeding
against a non-party to the prior proceedings is admissible only
if the declarant is "unavailable as a witness" and "the issue is
such that the adverse party on the former occasion had the right
and opportunity for cross-examination with an interest and motive
similar to that which the adverse party has in the action in
which the testimony is offered." The DEP failed to make any
showing that the witnesses whose testimony in the prior
proceedings was admitted against Frank and Kresch were
"unavailable." Furthermore, even though STCC had the same
interest as these individual defendants in defending against the
DEP's allegations of violations of the WPCA, STCC had no evident
interest in contesting evidence that would support the imposition
of personal liability upon Frank and Kresch (i.e., that they were
active participants in the operations of the corporation and
would have been a position to prevent the violations).
Therefore, the DEP failed to satisfy either of the basic
prerequisites for the admission of evidence pursuant to Evidence
Rule 63(3)(a)(ii).
Moreover, the testimony adduced in the prior proceedings was
so essential a part of the DEP's evidence against Frank and
Kresch that its erroneous admission deprived them of a fair
trial. The liability of Frank and Kresch was predicated upon
N.J.S.A. 58:10A-3(l), which defines the term "person" for the
purpose of an enforcement action under N.J.S.A. 58:10A-10 as
including "any responsible corporate official." The WPCA does
not define the term "responsible corporate official," and the
legislative history provides no illumination as to its meaning.
However, the Supreme Court of the United States has developed the
concept of the "responsible corporate officer" as a basis for the
imposition of individual liability upon corporate officers in
cases involving the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetics Act,
21 U.S.C.A.
§301 to §395. In United States v. Dotterweich,
320 U.S. 277, 284,
64 S. Ct. 134, 138,
88 L. Ed. 48, 53 (1943), the Court
stated:
The offense is committed ... by all who do
have such a responsible share in the
furtherance of the transaction which the
statute outlaws ....
In United States v. Park,
421 U.S. 658, 672-75,
95 S. Ct. 1903,
1911-13,
44 L. Ed.2d 489, 501-02 (1975), the Court further
explained this concept:
[I]n providing sanctions which reach and
touch the individuals who execute the
corporate mission ... the [Federal, Food,
Drug and Cosmetics] Act imposes not only a
positive duty to seek out and remedy
violations when they occur but also, and
primarily, a duty to implement measures that
will insure that violations will not occur.
. . . .
The concept of a "responsible relationship" to, or a "responsible share" in, a violation of the Act indeed imports some measure of blameworthiness; but it is equally clear that the Government establishes a prima facie case when it introduces evidence sufficient to warrant a finding by the trier of the facts that the defendant had, by reason of his
position in the corporation, responsibility
and authority either to prevent in the first
instance, or promptly to correct, the
violation complained of, and that he failed
to do so.
. . . .
[T]he main issue for determination [is] not
respondent's position in the corporate
hierarchy, but rather his accountability,
because of the responsibility and authority
of his position, for the conditions which
gave rise to the charges against him.
In United States v. Brittain,
931 F.2d 1413, 1419 (10th Cir.
1991), the court interpreted the term "responsible corporate
officer," as used in the Federal Clean Water Act,
33 U.S.C.A.
§1251 to §1387, to reflect the concept of corporate officer
responsibility developed in Dotterweich and Park:
Section 1319(c)(3) does not define a
"responsible corporate officer" and the
legislative history is silent regarding
Congress's intention in adding the term. The
Supreme Court, however, first recognized the
concept of "responsible corporate officer" in
1943. See United States v. Dotterweich,
320 U.S. 277,
64 S. Ct. 134,
88 L. Ed. 48 (1943).
The Dotterweich Court held that a
corporation's misdemeanor offense under the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938
(FDCA) was committed by all corporate
officers "who do have ... a responsible share
in the furtherance of the transaction which
the statute outlaws ... though consciousness
of wrongdoing be totally wanting." Id. at
284, 64 S. Ct. at 138. See also United
States v. Park,
421 U.S. 658, 670-73,
95 S.
Ct. 1903, 1910-12,
44 L. Ed.2d 489 (1975).
... Under this interpretation, a "responsible
corporate officer," to be held criminally
liable, would not have to "willfully or
negligently" cause a permit violation.
Instead, the willfulness or negligence of the
actor would be imputed to him by virtue of
his position of responsibility.
Since the WPCA was designed to establish a state system for
enforcement of the provisions of the Federal Clean Water Act, see
Pub. Serv. Elec. & Gas Co. v. New Jersey Dept. of Envtl.
Protection,
101 N.J. 95, 99-100 (1985); Lewis Goldshore, New
Directions in Water Pollution Control,
100 N.J.L.J. 797, 806
(Sept. 8, 1977), it is reasonable to construe the term
"responsible corporate official" as used in N.J.S.A. 58:10A-3(l)
in conformity with the concept of "responsible corporate officer"
developed in Dotterweich and Park and applied in Brittain. Under
this view, an individual may not be held liable for a
corporation's violation of the WPCA simply because he or she
occupies the position of corporate officer or director. Instead,
there must be a showing that a corporate officer had actual
responsibility for the condition resulting in the violation or
was in a position to prevent the occurrence of the violation but
failed to do so. Stated another way, we construe the WPCA to
impose liability only upon corporate officers who are in control
of the events that result in the violation. Absent such a
showing, a corporate officer cannot be said to be "responsible"
for the violation.
Consequently, the determination of whether Frank and Kresch
were "responsible corporate officials" with respect to STCC's
violations of the WPCA turns on whether they were actual
participants in the operations of STCC that resulted in the
violations or would have been in a position to prevent those
violations. Furthermore, even if it can be shown that Frank and
Kresch were "responsible corporate officials," the penalties that
may be properly assessed against each of them depends, among
other things, on "the economic benefits from the violation gained
by the violator, the degree of cooperation or recalcitrance of
the violator in remedying the violation, any measures taken by
the violator to avoid a repetition of the violation ..., and any
other pertinent factors ... [relating to the] conduct of the
violator." N.J.S.A. 58:10A-10(d)(1)(b). This determination must
be made separately for each individual violator. Thus, the DEP
had the burden of presenting evidence of Frank's and Kresch's
individual roles in STCC's operations both to establish the
required foundation for the imposition of personal liability and
to provide a basis for determining the amount of penalties to be
assessed against each defendant.
To discharge this evidential burden, the DEP relied
substantially upon evidence that had been presented before Frank
and Kresch had even entered appearances in the action. For
example, the DEP relied in part on the prior testimony of John
Domanski, STCC's chief boiler engineer and wastewater operator,
that Kresch was his supervisor and that he had discussed STCC's
permit violations with her on a regular basis. Domanski also
testified in the prior proceedings that Kresch was aware of all
of STCC's violations and had instructed him to discharge
wastewater into the Kill Van Kull during June, July and August
1990 without waiting for certain test results. Notwithstanding
the importance of this testimony in establishing Kresch's
personal liability, the DEP did not recall Domanski to the stand
after Kresch entered her appearance or offer any explanation for
his absence from the proceedings. As a result, Kresch was not
only unable to raise objections to Domanski's testimony but was
also deprived of any opportunity to conduct cross-examination of
this critical witness. In addition, the DEP read into the record
substantial other testimony presented in April 1991, before Frank
and Kresch had entered their appearances, to establish the
violations by STCC for which they were ultimately held personally
liable. Although STCC had the same interest as Frank and Kresch
in defending against this evidence, these individual defendants
very well could have adopted a different strategy in opposing the
DEP's claims. In any event, since the DEP made no showing that
any of its witnesses were "unavailable" when the trial resumed in
May 1993, the admission of this testimony against Frank and
Kresch violated Evidence Rule 63(3)(a)(ii). Therefore, we
reverse the judgments entered against Frank and Kresch.See footnote 3
violation or were in a position to prevent the occurrence of the
violations but failed to do so.
In granting these defendants' motions to dismiss, the trial
court stated:
There is no evidence before the Court that
Peter Frank was a day-to-day operator, even
part-time, if it was not day-to-day, of the
business of Standard Tank Cleaning
Corporation.
The same with Evelyn Berman Frank. She
may have been Chairman of the Board. ...
[B]ut she did not, according to the evidence
received by this Court, control or conduct
the day-to-day operation of the business.
Now the Court does find that the
business was controlled and operated day-to-day by Susan Frank, who was the comptroller
of the corporation and who signed the DMR's,
and by Jane Kresch. The DMR's were signed by
Jane Kresch, but Susan Frank was the
comptroller of [the] corporation. She did
testify, through deposition, that decisions
were made on a family basis.
The Court cannot accept the blanket
statement to that effect. Perhaps, it was an
idle statement to that effect, that the fact
that decisions were made on a family basis
means that Peter Frank and Evelyn Berman
Frank were responsible corporate officials.
This was just an isolated statement in her
deposition.
We conclude that, viewing the evidence most favorably to the DEP, the trial court should have denied Peter and Evelyn Frank's motions to dismiss. The record includes STCC's Business Concern Disclosure Statement, which certified that Peter and Evelyn Frank were "key employees" of STCC, which at the time of defendants' alleged violations was defined as "any person employed by the applicant or the licensee in a supervisory capacity or empowered
to make discretionary decisions with respect to the solid waste
or hazardous waste operations of the business concern." N.J.S.A.
13:1E-127.See footnote 5 The record also indicates that Evelyn Frank owned
75" of Standard Marine's stock, which in turn owned 100" of
STCC's stock, and that she was the chairman of STCC's board.
Moreover, Peter Frank certified that "I have been involved with
my family business all my life," and John Domanski, the licensed
operator for the wastewater treatment plant, testified that he
was supervised not only by Kresch but also by Peter Frank. The
record also includes the following colloquy between the trial
court and Kresch:
Q. In the years 1988-1989 and up to thus
far in 1990, who made the business decisions
in the company?
A. Well, it depends on what aspect. The
financial, my sister does, environmental
issues they rely on me, my brother does the -- basically the business, but we all confer
together and make a decision as a family.
Given the court's mechanical role in passing upon a motion to dismiss at the close of a plaintiff's case, the trial court should not have dismissed this testimony as simply "an idle statement." Therefore, the DEP presented sufficient evidence from which a trier of fact could find that even if Evelyn and Peter Frank were not directly responsible for the violations of the WPCA, they were at least in a position to have prevented the continuation of those violations but failed to do so. Such a
finding would be sufficient to support a conclusion that they
were "responsible corporate officials."
The DEP's claim against Standard Marine was predicated upon
the part of N.J.S.A. 58:10A-3(l) which defines "person" to
include an "operator of a treatment works." The DEP argued that
the evidence showed that Standard Marine and its subsidiary STCC
were jointly engaged in the operation of STCC's treatment
facility.
In granting Standard Marine's motion to dismiss, the trial
court stated:
There were a few instances, in certain
months, where the employees of Standard Tank
Cleaning submitted the reports under the name
of Standard Marine. The testing labs, after
making these analyses, submitted its [sic]
findings back to the corporation whose name
was on the submission. In other words,
Standard Marine.
The Court concludes that the submissions
on some occasions, in the name of Standard
Marine, were inadvertent and not intended to
be indicative of the fact that Standard
Marine was the operator of the treatment
works.
We agree with the trial court that the DEP failed to present
evidence that Standard Marine was jointly involved in the
operation of STCC's treatment facility. Although the officers
and directors of Standard Marine and STCC were the same persons,
that by itself is insufficient to establish that Standard Marine
operated the treatment facility.See footnote 6
In addition, even extending all favorable inferences to the
DEP, the two documents generated by third parties that suggested
Standard Marine involvement in the operation of STCC's treatment
facility were insufficient to support a finding that Standard
Marine entered into contracts relating to the operation of the
facility. The third parties who generated these documents very
well could have believed that they were dealing with Standard
Marine even though their actual contractual relationships were
with STCC. If the DEP thought those third parties had
information that Standard Marine was in fact a joint operator of
the facility, it should have deposed them or subpoenaed any
contract documents that could have directly proven Standard
Marine's involvement. In the absence of such evidence, there was
no competent foundation for a finding that Standard Marine was a
joint operator of the facility.
administrative order issued on September 16, 1988, and the
court's order of June 19, 1990.
N.J.S.A. 58:10A-10(e) provides that any person who violates:
this act or an administrative order issued
pursuant to subsection b. or a court order
issued pursuant to subsection c., ... shall
be subject upon order of a court to a civil
penalty not to exceed $50,000.00 per day of
such violation.
[Emphasis added.]
On September 16, 1988, the DEP issued an administrative
order to STCC pursuant to N.J.S.A. 58:10A-10(b) which provided in
part:
[STCC] shall not discharge any wastewater
from the facility except in conformance with
the final effluent limitations set forth in
NJPDES Permit No. NJ0003085 ....
On June 19, 1990, the trial court entered an order which provided
in pertinent part that:
[STCC] in accordance with the
Administrative Order issued by DEP on
September 16, 1988 shall not discharge any
wastewater from its facility into the Kill
Van Kull except in compliance with the
conditions of its NJPDES Permit No. NJ0003085
and in compliance with the New Jersey Water
Pollution Control Act and the regulations
promulgated thereunder.
At trial, the DEP submitted evidence demonstrating that STCC
violated the September 16, 1988, administrative order on eighty-six separate days, and violated the June 19, 1990, court order on
three days.
We agree with the DEP's contention that N.J.S.A. 58:10A-10(e) requires a trial court to impose separate penalties for
violations of the WPCA, an administrative order and a court
order, even though those violations are predicated on the same
conduct. A violation of court or administrative order
constitutes a more aggravated form of wrongdoing than a simple
violation of a permit and also requires vindication of the
authority of the court and agency that issued the order.
However, in determining the appropriate penalty to impose in such
circumstances, the trial court should take into consideration
that the same conduct has resulted in multiple violations.
Therefore, the part of the final judgment that fails to impose
penalties for the violations of the September 16, 1988,
administrative order and the June 19, 1990, court order is
reversed, and the matter is remanded for the imposition of
appropriate penalties for those violations.See footnote 7
The DEP also argues that the trial court erred in failing to
find twenty-three additional violations by STCC. Although the
DEP acknowledges that it failed to present any testimony
regarding these additional violations, it contends that they were
sufficiently proven by documentary evidence. Specifically, the
DEP relies upon a document prepared by the DEP staff, entitled
"Table of NJPDES Permit Violations, May 1988 through August
1990," which apparently is a summary of reports submitted by
STCC. We are satisfied that the trial court did not err in
concluding that this document was insufficient by itself to prove
the violations in question.
rather than treating counsel fees as simply a component of the
costs of litigation. See, e.g., Environmental Rights Act,
N.J.S.A. 2A:35A-10(a) ("the court may in appropriate cases award
to the prevailing party reasonable counsel and expert witness
fees"); Consumer Fraud Act, N.J.S.A. 56:8-19 ("[a] court shall
also award reasonable attorneys' fees, filing fees and reasonable
costs of suit"); Residential Tenants Security Deposit Return Act,
N.J.S.A. 46:8-21.1 ("the court ... shall award ... full costs of
any action and, in the court's discretion, reasonable attorney's
fees"); Law Against Discrimination, N.J.S.A. 10:5-27.1
("prevailing party may be awarded a reasonable attorney's fee as
part of the cost ...").
The essential policy underlying statutory provisions that
authorize counsel fee awards is to assure that private litigants
"with bona fide claims are able to find lawyers to represent
them." Coleman v. Fiore Bros., Inc.,
113 N.J. 594, 598 (1989).
This policy is particularly compelling where a private party is
authorized to bring suit for the enforcement of legislation that
serves a broad public interest. In fact, such a litigant is
sometimes referred to as a "private Attorney General." See,
e.g., Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society,
421 U.S. 240, 263,
95 S. Ct. 1612, 1624,
44 L. Ed.2d 141, 156
(1975). However, there is no comparable need for an award of
counsel fees when an enforcement action is brought by the
Attorney General or another public official. Hence, it is quite
uncommon for a regulatory statute to authorize an award of
counsel fees to a public prosecuting agency. Instead, it is
ordinarily assumed that the costs of prosecution will be defrayed
by the fines and penalties imposed upon violators. See Kimmelman
v. Henkels & McCoy, Inc.,
208 N.J. Super. 508, 516-17 (App. Div.
1986), rev'd on other grounds,
108 N.J. 123 (1987).
Consequently, we must assume that if the Legislature had intended
to authorize awards of counsel fees to the Attorney General or
the DEP, it would have expressly stated that the litigation costs
awardable under N.J.S.A. 58:10A-10(c)(2) include counsel fees.
In the absence of such an express statement, we construe the
authorization for an assessment of the "reasonable costs of
preparing and litigating the case" to refer solely to the fees of
outside experts and other general litigation expenses.
We are also satisfied that the trial court did not abuse its
discretion in denying the DEP's application for the reimbursement
of $129,990.50 for the accountants' fees allegedly incurred in
connection with this litigation. In refusing to make any award
for these expenses, the trial court stated:
The court believes that amount of accounting
fees in this case is outrageously excessive.
It is unbelievable to the court that an
accounting firm could have expended that
amount of hours in this type of case.
Parenthetically, the court observes that in
this type of case the liability issue is as
close to a motion for summary judgment as
anyone can get, because the reporting
requirements under the NJPDES permit require
the permittee to monitor the extent and
parameters of the effluent discharge. ...
Beyond that, the accounting reports were never, never utilized, to the court's knowledge, by the State in the prosecution of
the case. None of the reports were submitted
in evidence as necessary, this was just
something that counsel for the State thought
was necessary.
There was a Discovery Master. Whether
he was given 100 percent of the cooperation
that he should have been given is debatable.
But the expenses of the Discovery Master, his
fees, were already paid by Standard Tank.
Now it is sought to saddle Standard Tank with
accounting fees which the court considers
absolutely outrageous and unnecessary. There
will be no award for accounting fees.
We affirm the trial court's denial of any award for
accountants' fees because the DEP failed to show that there was
any need to incur this expense. Although the presentation of an
accountant's testimony at trial is not a prerequisite for an
award of some or all of the accountant's fees, the record before
us contains no evidence that the DEP had a need to retain an
accountant in order to prepare this case for trial. The record
also contains no evidence of the nature of the work performed by
the accountants.See footnote 8
Accordingly, we reverse the judgments entered against Susan
Frank and Jane Kresch. We also reverse the dismissal of the
DEP's complaint against Evelyn Frank and Peter Frank. The case
is remanded for a new trial against these defendants. In
addition, we reverse the judgment insofar as it fails to assess
additional penalties against STCC for permit violations that also constituted violations of administrative and/or court orders and remand for the imposition of additional penalties for those violations. The judgment on appeal is affirmed in all other respects.
Footnote: 1 Even after the entry of final judgment, a motion to reopen the judgment in order to assert an additional claim or add a new party would be governed by Rule 4:50 rather than the entire controversy doctrine. Cf. Johnson v. Cyklop Strapping Corp., 220 N.J. Super. 250, 257-64 (App. Div. 1987), certif. denied, 110 N.J. 196 (1988). Footnote: 2 Although Frank and Kresch have not presented any argument on appeal that directly relies upon the rules of evidence, they argue that their late joinder in the action prejudiced their defense and consequently denied them due process. We believe that this claim requires us to consider the evidence rules that governed the adjudication of their liability. Footnote: 3 If Frank and Kresch are again found liable in a trial conducted in conformity with this opinion, their individual liabilities for penalties should be separately determined under the criteria set forth in N.J.S.A. 58:10A-10(d)(1)(b). See State of N.J., Dept. of Envtl. Protection v. Lewis, 215 N.J. Super. 564, 574 (App. Div. 1987). Footnote: 4 Peter Frank's bankruptcy counsel sent a letter to the clerk of this court, dated June 13, 1995, which indicated that Peter Frank is a "debtor-in-possession" under chapter 11 of Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C.A. §§1101 to 1174, and asserted that under 11 U.S.C.A. §362, "any and all litigations against Mr. Frank are stayed." However, a petition under chapter 11 does not operate to stay the "continuation of an action or proceeding by a governmental unit to enforce such governmental unit's police or regulatory power." 11 U.S.C.A. §362(b)(4). This exception to the automatic stay provisions of the Bankruptcy Code clearly applies to an enforcement action brought by the DEP under the WPCA. United States v. Nicolet, Inc., 857 F.2d 202, 206-09 (3d Cir. 1988). Footnote: 5 In 1991, this provision was amended in respects not material to this appeal. L. 1991, c. 269, §1. Footnote: 6 Compare State, Dept. of Envtl. Protection v. Ventron, 94 N.J. 473, 499-503 (1983), where the parent and subsidiary corporations not only had the same officers, directors and
employees, but the parent also owned and controlled the property on which the subsidiary illegally dumped toxic wastes, and thus the Court concluded that the parent was "responsible" under the expansive strict liability provisions of the Spill Compensation and Control Act, N.J.S.A. 58:10-23.11g, for the subsidiary's discharge of hazardous substances. Footnote: 7 The record does not disclose whether the trial court, in determining the amount of penalties to impose upon STCC, considered that many of STCC's permit violations also constituted violations of administrative or court orders. If this circumstance was already taken into account in assessing the penalties for the permit violations, the court may assess purely nominal penalties for the violations of the administrative and court orders. Footnote: 8 The DEP's motion for litigation expenses was apparently supported by certifications and documentary evidence. However, none of this evidence has been included in any of the appendices submitted in connection with this appeal. Therefore, we must assume that the DEP has concluded that these materials would not support its argument regarding the denial its application for reimbursement of accountants' fees.