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FOR PUBLICATION
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:
JEFFREY A. MODISETT KENNETH D. REED
Attorney General of Indiana Abrahamson, Reed & Adley
Hammond, Indiana
JON B. LARAMORE
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
INDIANA DEPARTMENT OF )
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, ET AL., )
)
Appellants-Defendants, )
)
vs. ) No. 56A05-9805-CV-243
)
MEDICAL DISPOSAL SERVICES, INC., )
)
Appellee-Plaintiff. )
APPEAL FROM THE NEWTON CIRCUIT COURT
The Honorable Robert Smart, Judge
Cause No. 56C01-9708-MI-6
October 1
6
, 1998
OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION
BAILEY, Judge
Case Summary
Appellant-Defendant Indiana Department of Environmental Management, et al.
(IDEM) appeals the summary judgment entered in favor of Appellee-Plaintiff Medical
Disposal Services, Inc. (MDSI) which prevents IDEM from imposing the penalties
authorized by law for the violation of the statutory/regulatory scheme which prohibits the
operation of a solid waste transfer station without a permit.
See footnote 1
1
We affirm.
Issue
The dispositive issue may be restated as whether, in the exercise of our judicial
authority to control the administrative process and temper an agency's power to assess
penalties, we should prohibit IDEM from imposing a penalty against MDSI for the operation
of its Hammond transfer station which 1) never posed a threat to the environment, and 2) is
now expressly permitted by law.
Facts
The largely undisputed facts, as found in 1994 by the Lake Superior Court in its order
granting MDSI's request for a preliminary injunction restraining IDEM from taking any
action to interrupt or interfere with the operation of MDSI's transfer station pending the
outcome of its declaratory judgment action
, reveal that, since 1989, MDSI had been engaged
in the business of collecting and transporting medical waste generated by approximately
7000 health care providers in Northwest Indiana to a fully permitted and regulated
incinerator facility in Michigan for disposal. (R. 188-89). In compliance with all pertinent
Indiana Public Health Statutes and Regulations, the health care provider customers of MDSI
would place medical waste in impermeable containers which were then sealed. (R. 189).
The containers were identified and recorded on a written manifest for collection,
transportation, and disposal. (R. 189, 191). MDSI would then collect the sealed,
impermeable containers from the customer's facility in small, closed trucks. (R. 189). The
small trucks would then be driven to MDSI's transfer facility located at a truck stop in
Hammond, Indiana. (R. 189, 191); See Medical Disposal Services, Inc. v. IDEM, 669
N.E.2d 1054, 1056 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996) (the earlier appeal taken in the present case), trans.
denied.
MDSI's transfer facility in Hammond was fully enclosed by an eight-foot fence and
was not open to the general public. (R. 190). Persons entering or leaving the premises were
subject to monitoring 24 hours per day
. (R. 190). MDSI's facility had no exposed waste,
no blowing material, no leachate, no odor, no vectors, and no putrescence exposed to the
atmosphere. (R. 190).
At the transfer facility, the small trucks would back up to the open rear doors of
larger, closed, semi-tractor trailer trucks
. (R. 189, 191). The driver of the small truck would
use a hand-cart to move the containers into the large truck,
which was of equal height
,
exposing the sealed, impermeable
containers to inclement weather, if any, for no more than
two seconds. (R. 189, 191). MDSI employees involved in these duties wore protective
clothing and had been trained in OSHA blood-borne pathogen standards. (R. 190).
The
employees would refuse to collect or transport containers in the event their integrity had
become compromised. (R. 190).
In 1994, IDEM notified MDSI that the operation of its Hammond facility was illegal
because it constituted the operation of a solid waste transfer station without a permit. See
MDSI, 669 N.E.2d at 1056. MDSI disagreed and filed an action for declaratory judgment
in which it obtained the temporary restraining order discussed above which prohibited IDEM
from interfering with the Hammond transfer station pending the resolution of the litigation.
Id. at 1056 n.1.
The trial court ultimately decided in favor of IDEM, determining that the Hammond
operation did constitute the operation of a solid waste transfer station without a permit in
violation of the existing statutes and regulations. Id. at 1056. Thus, the trial court ordered
MDSI to discontinue its transfer operation until it had obtained the required permits. (R.
232). MDSI complied with the trial court's order and closed down the Hammond facility.
(R. 666). MDSI appealed the trial court's decision, but we affirmed. MDSI, 669 N.E.2d at
1060.
After successfully defending the trial court's decision on appeal, IDEM requested that
the civil penalties authorized by law for the illegal operation of the solid waste transfer
station be enforced. (R. 649-50). IDEM asserted that MDSI had earned over $400,000.00
in net income during the two-year period the preliminary injunction was in effect; and that
MDSI would not have been profitable but for the operation of its illegal transfer station. (R.
649-63). IDEM requested that MDSI be ordered to pay all of its net income for those two
years as one component (among others) of an appropriate civil penalty. (R. 650).
Additionally, IDEM had threatened to invoke civil penalties against MDSI of up to
$25,000.00 per day. (R. 11); See Ind. Code §§ 13-30-4-1 (1996) (formerly Ind. Code §13-
7-13-1).
In 1997, the General Assembly amended the definition of transfer station to exclude
a facility where:
(A) infectious waste . . . is transferred directly between two (2) vehicles;
(B) infectious waste is packaged in compliance with [applicable regulations];
and
(C) packages of infectious waste are not opened at any time during the
transfer.
P.L.128-1997 § 2; Ind. Code § 13-11-2-235.
After a change of venue to the present trial court, MDSI moved for summary
judgment requesting that the trial court prohibit IDEM from imposing penalties during the
term of the preliminary injunction. (R. 619). In granting MDSI's motion, the trial court
found that penalties would not be imposed because 1) the law governing the legality of the
Hammond transfer station was not totally clear, and 2) a reasonable person could interpret
the preliminary injunction to the effect that there would be no fine levied for acts occurring
while the Order was in effect. (R. 679-80).
See footnote 2
2
Accordingly, the trial court ruled that IDEM
is foreclosed from assessing any type of civil penalty during the period wherein the
Preliminary Injunction was in effect. (R. 680).See footnote 3
3
This appeal ensued.
Discussion and Decision
Standard of Review
As stated in Stevenson v. Hamilton Mutual Insurance Company, 672 N.E.2d 467 (Ind.
Ct. App. 1996), trans. denied:
In reviewing a motion for summary judgment, this court applies the same
standard as the trial court. We must determine whether there is a genuine issue
of material fact and whether the law has been correctly applied by the trial
court. Summary judgment is appropriate only if no genuine issues of material
fact exist and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Neither the trial court, nor the reviewing court, may look beyond the evidence
specifically designated to the trial court. Once the movant for summary
judgment has established that no genuine issue of material fact exists by
submission of materials contemplated by T.R. 56, the nonmovant may not rest
on his pleadings but must set forth specific facts, using supporting materials
contemplated under the rule, which show the existence of a genuine issue for
trial. A trial court's grant of summary judgment is clothed with a presumption
of validity,' and the appellant bears the burden of demonstrating that the trial
court erred.
672 N.E.2d at 470-71 (citations omitted). The reviewing court may affirm the grant of
summary judgment on any legal basis supported by the designated materials. Wolfe v. Stork
RMS-Protecon, Inc., 683 N.E.2d 264, 267 (Ind. Ct. App. 1997).
Judicial Authority Over Administrative Process
The judiciary has authority to control the administrative process and temper an
agency's power to assess penalties. See Louis L. Jaffe, Judicial Control of
Administrative Action 318-19 (1965). In National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) v.
National Gas Co., 215 F.2d 160, 163 (8th Cir. 1954), the NLRB assumed jurisdiction over
a labor dispute and sought to obtain an order of enforcement from the court. Id. at 162.
During the pendency of the action, new regulations were implemented which limited the
scope of the NLRB's jurisdiction such that the National Gas labor dispute no longer would
have come within the NLRB's jurisdiction. Id. The court declined to grant the NLRB's
petition for enforcement holding that the NLRB's position was untenable because the
effectuation of an enforcement order under these circumstances would constitute arbitrary
and capricious discrimination against National Gas. Id. at 163; contra NLRB v. Red Rock
Co., 187 F.2d 76 (5th Cir. 1951), cert. denied, 341 U.S. 950.
Penal Statutes and the Doctrine of Amelioration
It is axiomatic that a statute which imposes a penalty is a penal statute. See
Storrjohann v. State, 651 N.E.2d 294 n.4 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995); Huff v. Biomet, Inc., 654
N.E.2d 830, 835 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995) (statute which imposes a penalty upon employers for
the failure to pay wages is a penal statute).
As noted earlier, the statutes involved in the present case authorize a civil penalty of
up to $25,000.00 per day for the operation of a solid waste transfer station without a permit.
Therefore, the statutes are penal in nature.
Under the doctrine of amelioration, when the penalty for the violation of a penal
statute is decreased by an ameliorative amendment enacted after the commission of the
offense but before sentence is imposed, the ameliorative amendment will be applied.
Rowold v. State, 629 N.E.2d 1285, 1288 (Ind. Ct. App. 1994). Indiana's doctrine of
amelioration is based upon Article I § 18 of the Indiana Constitution which provides that
penal statutes are to be founded on the principles of reformation, and not of vindictive
justice. Vicory v. State, 272 Ind. 683, 400 N.E.2d 1380, 1381 (1980). Where the legislature
has determined that a former penalty was too severe and that a lighter punishment is the
appropriate penalty for the proscribed act, then to enforce the more severe penalty would
serve no purpose other than to satisfy a constitutionally impermissible desire for vindictive
justice. Id. at 1381-82.
It is indisputable that the General Assembly's 1997 promulgation of Ind. Code § 13-
11-2-235 legalized the very operation in which MDSI had been engaged. We have no
hesitation in concluding that this distinctive statute was enacted specifically to remedy the
plight of MDSI. See Joe v. Lebow, 670 N.E.2d 9, 17-18 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996) (we may
assume that the legislature's amendment of a statute has been made in response to the
interpretation placed upon that statute by the appellate courts); Alvers v. State, 489 N.E.2d
83, 88 (Ind. Ct. App. 1986) (when the legislature amends a statute, it is presumed that the
legislature intended to change the law), trans. denied.
The premise upon which the doctrine of amelioration rests compels us to exercise our
judicial authority over the administrative process and prohibit IDEM from imposing penalties
against MDSI under the present circumstances
.See footnote 4
4
MDSI's operation of the Hammond transfer
station never posed a serious threat to the environment. After IDEM effectively shut MDSI
down, our General Assembly enacted legislation which expressly legalized the precise
process in which MDSI had been engaged; and thus divested IDEM of the authority to
prohibit or penalize MDSI's operation of its Hammond transfer station in the future. Under
these circumstances, we conclude that IDEM should also be prohibited from imposing any
type of penalty against MDSI for its past operation of the Hammond transfer facility.
As noted earlier, we may affirm the grant of summary judgment on any legal basis
supported by the designated materials. See
Wolfe, 683 N.E.2d at 267. Therefore,
based on
the above, we uphold the trial court's entry of summary judgment in favor of MDSI.
Affirmed.
BAKER, J., and DARDEN, J., concur.
Footnote: 1
1 In 1994, when the events underlying this litigation transpired, the statutes which prohibited and
imposed penalties for the operation of a solid waste transfer station without a permit were found in Ind. Code
§ 13-7. See Medical Disposal Services, Inc. v. IDEM, 669 N.E.2d 1054, 1056 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996) (the earlier
appeal taken in this case), trans. denied. Title 13 was recodified in 1996. P.L. 1-1996 § 99. Now, the
analogous statutory sections may be found in Ind. Code § 13-30.
Footnote: 2
2 Although trial court findings entered in summary judgment proceedings aid appellate review, they
are not binding upon this court. Althaus v. Evansville Courier Co., 615 N.E.2d 441, 444 (Ind. Ct. App. 1993).
Footnote: 3
3 Contrary to the trial court's apparent conclusion, the law would appear to be settled that the trial
court's entry of a preliminary injunction will not prevent a regulatory body from imposing penalties for the
violation of rule or regulation during the period of such injunction. Indiana High School Athletic Ass'n
(IHSAA) v. Carlberg, 694 N.E.2d 222, 227, 239, 242-43 (Ind. 1997).
Footnote: 4
4 We do not hold that the imposition of a penalty in the present case would be an unconstitutional
exercise of vindictive justice. See Weatherford v. State, 654 N.E.2d 899, 900-01 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995) (where
legislature employs a savings clause to preserve a former, more severe punishment and does not state that the
former punishment was too severe, the imposition of the former penalty does not constitute vindictive justice).
We hold only that the rationale behind the doctrine of amelioration has compelled us to exercise our judicial
authority to prohibit IDEM from imposing a penalty against MDSI under the present circumstances.
Converted by Andrew Scriven