Bergmann v. MI State Transp. Comm’n

by
In 1979, plaintiff bought land from the Michigan State Transportation Commission. A decade later, he sued the Department of Transportation under the federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. 9601, claimed that there was contamination on the site. After discovery, the parties settled. The district court entered a consent decree in 1991 that required the Department to remediate the property by March 31, 1995. If by then the Department failed to make a good-faith effort to remediate, the decree required payment of $2,000 per month until remediation was complete. The Department failed to remediate or to pay the liquidated damages. On a 2009 motion to enforce the decree, the court held that the Department had waived its sovereign immunity and that a 10-year statute of limitations barred enforcement of the remediation obligation, but that each of the missed $2,000 payments triggered its own 10-year limitations period. The Sixth Circuit vacated, holding that the court should have relied on the doctrine of laches rather than the limitations period because the consent decree amounted to a remedy in equity. The waiver of immunity remained effective. View "Bergmann v. MI State Transp. Comm'n" on Justia Law