Trinity Industries Inc v. Greenlease Holding Co , 903 F.3d 333 ( 2018 )


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  •                             PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    Nos. 16-1994 & 16-2244
    _____________
    TRINITY INDUSTRIES, INC.;
    TRINITY INDUSTRIES RAILCAR CORPORATION
    Appellants in No. 16-2244
    v.
    GREENLEASE HOLDING COMPANY;
    AMPCO-PITTSBURGH CORPORATION
    Greenlease Holding Company,
    Appellant in No. 16-1994
    _______________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Pennsylvania
    (W.D. Pa. No. 2-08-cv-01498)
    District Judge: Hon. Joy Flowers Conti
    _______________
    Argued
    September 5, 2017
    Before: CHAGARES, JORDAN, and HARDIMAN, Circuit
    Judges.
    (Filed: September 11, 2018)
    _______________
    Steven F. Baicker-McKee [ARGUED]
    Mark K. Dausch
    Marc J. Felezzola
    Babst Calland
    603 Stanwix Street
    Two Gateway Center, 6th Floor
    Pittsburgh, PA 15222
    Counsel for Greenlease Holding Co.
    Frederick W. Addison, III
    Nolan C. Knight [ARGUED]
    Munsch Hardt Kopf Harr & Dinan
    3800 Lincoln Plaza
    500 North Akard Street
    Dallas, TX 75201
    Counsel for Trinity Industries, Inc. and Trinity
    Industries Railcar Corp.
    Paul D. Steinman [ARGUED]
    Jessica S. Thompson
    Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott
    600 Grant Street, 44th Floor
    Pittsburgh, PA 15219
    Counsel Ampco-Pittsburgh Corp.
    2
    _______________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    _______________
    JORDAN, Circuit Judge.
    This is a dispute about the proper allocation of costs to
    remediate a contaminated manufacturing site in Greenville,
    Pennsylvania. From 1910 until 1986, Greenlease Holding Co.
    (“Greenlease”),1 a subsidiary of the Ampco-Pittsburgh
    Corporation (“Ampco”), owned the site and operated railcar
    manufacturing facilities there. Trinity Industries, Inc. and its
    wholly-owned subsidiary, Trinity Industries Railcar Co.
    (together referred to as “Trinity”), acquired the site from
    Greenlease in 1986 and continued to manufacture railcars there
    until 2000. An investigation by the Commonwealth of
    Pennsylvania into Trinity’s waste disposal activities resulted in
    a criminal prosecution and eventual plea-bargained consent
    decree which required, in relevant part, that Trinity remediate
    the contaminated land. That effort cost Trinity nearly $9
    million.
    This appeal arises out of the District Court’s
    determination that, under the Comprehensive Environmental
    Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. § 9601
    et seq., (“CERCLA”), and Pennsylvania’s Hazardous Sites
    Cleanup Act, 35 Pa. Stat. § 6020.101 et seq., (“HSCA”),
    Trinity is entitled to contribution from Greenlease for
    1
    Greenlease was known first as the Greenville Metal
    Products Company and then as the Greenville Steel Car
    Company. For purposes of this opinion, we refer to all
    Greenlease and Greenville entities as “Greenlease.”
    3
    remediation costs. After eight years of litigation, and having
    sorted through a century of historical records, the District
    Court allocated 62% of the total cleanup costs to Greenlease
    and the remainder to Trinity. The parties filed cross-appeals
    challenging a number of the District Court’s rulings, including
    its ultimate allocation of cleanup costs. For the reasons that
    follow, we will affirm the District Court’s pre-trial rulings on
    dispositive motions; we will vacate its cost allocation
    determination; and we will remand for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    I.    FACTUAL BACKGROUND2
    The site in question, known by the parties as the “North
    Plant,” is a tract of land that was used as a manufacturing site
    by a succession of companies. Greenlease and Trinity also, at
    different times, operated facilities on a nearby tract of land
    called the “South Plant,” though that property does not figure
    prominently in this appeal. Over time, the footprint of the
    North Plant grew from eleven to thirty-four acres. That
    industrial development, as well as the many years of
    manufacturing activity that occurred there, resulted in multiple
    releases of hazardous materials – primarily lead – into the
    ground.
    A. The North Plant – 1898 to 1986
    From at least 1898 until sometime before Greenlease’s
    acquisition of the North Plant in 1910, Shelby Steel Tube
    2
    The facts recounted here are taken from the District
    Court’s post-trial findings of fact or from facts in the record
    that are undisputed.
    4
    Company owned and operated a steel tube factory on eleven
    acres of land that is now part of the North Plant. Over the
    course of its ownership, Shelby Steel deposited historic fill as
    it was constructing its manufacturing facilities. According to
    the District Court, “[h]istoric fill is ‘a soil mixed with various
    non-native materials, including construction demolition debris,
    concrete, asphalt, or it could be industrial materials such as slag
    or ash.’” (App. at 186.) Unfortunately, historic fill often
    contains lead and other contaminants.
    Greenlease began its manufacturing activities at the
    North Plant soon after acquiring the property. Between 1911
    and 1922, it significantly expanded the North Plant to support
    its growing business of building and repairing railcars. During
    that expansion, Greenlease used historic fill in the foundations
    supporting the new structures and rail lines. Operations at the
    North Plant included two shops to paint the railcars, and
    Greenlease used a variety of toxic chemicals and lead paint
    during the painting process, without doing anything
    meaningful to collect or contain the runoff.
    B. Relationship Between Greenlease and Ampco
    In 1983, Ampco acquired Greenlease,3 but their
    relationship predated that acquisition. They had had three
    overlapping board members since 1979 and continued to do so
    until 1986. Other than those three shared board members and
    3
    Greenlease’s stock was first acquired in 1937 by
    another company, the Pittsburgh Forging Co. Ampco then
    acquired all of the stock of the Pittsburgh Forging Co., and,
    through a series of transactions, became the sole shareholder
    of Greenlease.
    5
    one shared officer, no other persons were employees of both
    Ampco and Greenlease. Greenlease employees alone “were
    responsible for all day-to-day operations at the North Plant,
    including any waste disposal, waste handling, painting,
    abrasive blasting, welding, and fabrication operations.” (App.
    at 81-82.) Those employees coordinated disposal with outside
    contractors and communicated with the Pennsylvania
    Department of Environmental Protection (“PADEP”) on
    environmental matters. Indeed, Ampco “did not employ any
    engineers or persons with technical experience in
    manufacturing that could make decisions for [Greenlease] with
    respect to environmental compliance or waste management.”
    (App. at 82.) Instead, “Ampco employed only a professional
    staff, such as accountants, actuaries, and lawyers[.]” (App. at
    82.) Ampco did provide Greenlease with advice regarding the
    laws and regulations related to Greenlease’s waste generation,
    and Ampco monitored that waste generation.
    The cooperation between parent and subsidiary was
    complete enough that Greenlease adopted a resolution
    declaring that any action taken by Ampco that it “may think
    necessary and desirable to take on behalf of [Greenlease] shall
    be deemed to be the action of [Greenlease’s Board].” (App. at
    72 (citation omitted).) Ampco also asserted the right to
    approve Greenlease’s expenditures that exceeded a certain
    amount, though Greenlease was solely responsible for placing
    and paying any purchase orders. In addition, Ampco provided
    certain services to Greenlease to minimize costs, including
    overseeing a single retirement plan and providing centralized
    financial planning and master insurance policies.
    6
    C. Trinity’s Acquisition of the North Plant
    In 1986, Ampco authorized the Greenlease board of
    directors to sell the North Plant to Trinity. The Purchase and
    Sale Agreement between Trinity and Greenlease (the
    “Agreement”) included a clause declaring that Greenlease
    “makes no representation or warranty regarding compliance
    with the Environmental Protection Act, any other
    environmental laws or regulations or any hazardous waste laws
    or regulations (collectively, ‘Environmental Laws’).” (App. at
    199.)      Mutual indemnification provisions specific to
    environmental liabilities provided, in pertinent part:
    [Greenlease] agrees to indemnify and hold
    harmless [Trinity] against Damages arising out
    of or related to violations of Environmental
    Laws, which were caused by [Greenlease] or its
    predecessors in title to the assets at the [North
    Plant] on or prior to the date of Closing. [Trinity]
    agrees to indemnify and hold harmless
    [Greenlease] against Damages arising out of or
    related to violations of Environmental Laws,
    which are caused by [Trinity] or its successors in
    title to the assets at the [North Plant] after the
    date of the Closing. It is the intention of the
    parties that liability under this Section for any
    condition that is caused by the acts of
    [Greenlease] or its predecessors in title to the
    assets prior to the date of the Closing and by the
    acts of [Trinity] or its successors in title to the
    assets after the date of Closing shall be allocated
    between the parties in a just manner taking into
    7
    account degree of fault, period of violation and
    other relevant factors.
    (App. at 61 (some alterations in original).) Those indemnities
    were stated to be effective for only three years after the closing
    of the property sale. The Agreement further provided that
    Trinity “has not assumed, and expressly denies assumption
    hereby of, any other liability, obligation or commitment of
    [Greenlease] other than as set forth above or otherwise
    expressly set forth herein.” (App. at 60-61 (alteration in
    original).) Finally, a “[n]on-waiver of [r]emedies” clause in
    the Agreement provided that “[t]he rights and remedies herein
    provided are cumulative and are not exclusive of any rights or
    remedies which the parties hereto may otherwise have at law
    or in equity.” (App. at 62.)
    Following the 1986 sale of the North Plant to Trinity,
    Greenlease continued to exist only as a “shell holding company
    without any [employees,] business activities, for profit
    activities, or other commercial undertakings[.]” (App. at 89.)
    Its assets decreased at the end of each year following the sale
    of the North Plant, from about $51 million in 1987 to $658,594
    in 1990. In the third and fourth years following the sale of the
    North Plant to Trinity, Greenlease issued dividends to Ampco,
    leaving Greenlease with only a $250,000 reserve for liabilities.
    At that time, Greenlease had no known liabilities beyond the
    reserve. The executive vice president and chief administrative
    officer for Ampco, who was also an officer and director of
    Greenlease, stated that it was common for dividends to be
    made from a subsidiary to Ampco after an indemnification
    period ended. An environmental reserve was placed on
    8
    Greenlease’s books when Trinity sued Greenlease and
    Ampco.4
    D. The North Plant – 1987 to 2004
    After purchasing the North Plant, Trinity continued the
    manufacture of railcars there. In one of the paint shops, it
    installed concrete floors and used tar paper to capture paint
    drippage. Beginning in late 1987, it implemented a policy
    preventing the use of metal-containing paints at the North
    Plant. In 1994, Trinity removed the second paint shop,
    excavated the old dirt floors, and dumped the soil onto a field
    at the South Plant. Trinity then erected a new paint shop at the
    North Plant.
    Six years later, in 2000, Trinity ceased the North Plant
    operations. It sold the property in 2004 to a third-party (the
    “Buyer”). In connection with that sale, Trinity did not conduct
    an environmental assessment to determine whether the soil was
    contaminated, and it prohibited the Buyer from performing
    such testing without its consent. The Buyer demolished almost
    all of the existing buildings at the North Plant to sell the scrap
    steel for profit. Trinity maintains that, at some point, the Buyer
    dumped onto the North Plant property hazardous chemicals
    and waste that had been produced by the demolition of the
    North Plant buildings, exacerbating the pre-existing
    environmental harm.
    4
    In 2008, that reserve was $150,000, and in 2009, it
    was $282,500.
    9
    E. The Commonwealth’s Investigation and the
    Consent Decree
    In 2004, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and
    PADEP began an investigation into allegations that Trinity had
    improperly disposed of hazardous waste at the North Plant.
    The Commonwealth filed a criminal complaint against Trinity
    in 2006, raising three felony counts and eight misdemeanor
    counts related to the illegal handling and disposal of hazardous
    waste. Trinity entered into a plea agreement with the
    Commonwealth that required the repayment of investigative
    costs, payment of a fine, contribution to a nonprofit
    organization, and, pursuant to a consent decree authorized by
    PADEP (the “Consent Decree”), the remediation of
    environmental contamination.
    The Consent Decree stated that further investigation of
    the North Plant was “necessary to fully identify the nature and
    extent of the release of hazardous substances at and/or
    potentially migrating from the North Plant … and to determine
    the Response Actions necessary to remediate the hazardous
    substances at and/or potentially migrating from [the North]
    Plant.” (App. at 513.) The cleanup was governed by
    Pennsylvania’s Land Recycling and Environmental
    Remediation Standards Act, 35 Pa. Stat. § 6026.101 et seq.,
    commonly known as “Act 2,” and the associated investigation
    was not limited to the time during which Trinity owned and
    operated the North Plant.
    Trinity was on a short leash. It was ordered to get
    approval from PADEP before it took any “significant step”
    pertaining to the property, and it was required to submit to
    PADEP “an investigation work plan, a supplemental
    10
    investigation work plan, a notice of intent to remediate, a
    remedial investigation report, a proposed cleanup work plan, a
    supplemental cleanup work plan, and a final report.” (App. at
    213-14.) Those additional mandates increased the difficulty
    and expense of the remediation project. The remediation
    efforts were also affected by the fact that “[t]he North Plant
    was a ‘high profile, high visibility location’” and is bordered
    by residential communities on three sides. (App. at 218
    (citation omitted).)
    PADEP approved Trinity’s remedial investigation work
    plan in 2007. Trinity later sent Greenlease a pre-suit notice
    describing the contamination and its legal position that
    Greenlease had contributed to the pollution.
    F. Trinity’s Cleanup of the North Plant
    To perform the necessary cleanup, Trinity had to buy
    back the North Plant. It then selected Golder Associates, Inc.
    (“Golder”) to perform, direct, and supervise the cleanup
    operations. PADEP approved that selection. Trinity did not
    employ a competitive bidding process to select Golder because
    it had been impressed by Golder’s cleanup operations at
    several other sites and because the Consent Decree’s deadlines
    created an urgency to get a remediation consultant in place as
    soon as possible. Trinity and Golder agreed to an “open
    billing” process that provided Golder would be paid only for
    the work it ultimately needed to perform. (App. at 218-19.)
    Billing was on a “cost plus 10 percent” basis, which gave
    Golder a ten percent markup on the expenses it incurred. (App.
    at 219.)
    11
    Golder’s cleanup efforts required it to first identify
    areas of the property that were of concern. It analyzed
    available historical information concerning construction and
    manufacturing activities that had taken place at the North
    Plant. It then conducted soil sampling to further identify areas
    requiring remediation. Golder ultimately divided the North
    Plant into twenty impact areas that required remediation.
    Thirteen of the twenty impact areas were primarily
    contaminated by lead. The remaining impact areas were
    primarily contaminated by volatile and semi-volatile organic
    compounds and a variety of other hazardous substances. Major
    remediation activities included excavating contaminated soil,
    refilling excavated areas with clean material, chemically
    treating contaminated soil, transporting excavated soil to
    appropriate landfills, and placing asphalt caps over parts of the
    North Plant. In total, Golder disposed of approximately 39,000
    tons of soil off-site and capped about 15,000 tons of soil with
    asphalt.
    Those efforts cost nearly $9,000,000 and made the
    property usable again. Parts of the North Plant with asphalt
    caps are suitable for use as a parking lot. Other areas are
    suitable for industrial or commercial use. There is ongoing
    work at the North Plant to ensure that the safety mechanisms
    created as part of the environmental remediation continue to
    function.5
    5
    According to the District Court’s findings of fact, the
    work includes maintaining the asphalt caps and continued
    ground water monitoring.
    12
    II.    PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Invoking federal and state laws, Trinity filed a
    complaint against Greenlease and Ampco in 2008 to defray the
    North Plant remediation costs. More specifically, Trinity
    sought cost recovery under CERCLA pursuant to 42 U.S.C.
    § 9607, cost recovery under the Resource Conservation and
    Recovery Act (“RCRA”) pursuant to 42 U.S.C.
    § 6972(a)(1)(B), and contribution under CERCLA pursuant to
    42 U.S.C. §§ 9613(f)(1) and 9613(f)(3)(B). It also brought cost
    recovery and contribution claims under the HSCA, as well as
    state common law claims for contribution and negligence per
    se.
    A. Pre-Trial Motions and Rulings
    Trinity’s claims against Ampco were premised on
    Ampco’s alleged direct or derivative liability for Greenlease’s
    conduct at the North Plant. Upon cross motions for summary
    judgment on that issue, the District Court concluded that
    Ampco was not directly or derivatively liable for pollution at
    the North Plant.
    Greenlease also moved for judgment on the pleadings,
    arguing that Trinity’s claims were barred by the
    indemnification provisions of their Agreement. It claimed that
    once the mutual indemnities expired, neither party was entitled
    to seek compensation from the other. The District Court
    rejected that argument, ruling that the existence and expiration
    of the indemnification provisions did not prevent Trinity from
    seeking other remedies available at law or in equity.
    13
    Greenlease and Trinity later filed cross motions for
    summary judgment on Trinity’s CERCLA, RCRA, HSCA, and
    common law claims. The District Court granted partial
    summary judgment for Trinity, holding as a matter of law that
    Greenlease was a potentially responsible person under
    CERCLA and the HSCA. It also granted Greenlease’s cross-
    motion in part, granting it summary judgment on all of
    Trinity’s claims other than those for contribution under 42
    U.S.C. § 9613(f)(3)(B) and 35 Pa. Stat. § 6020.705(c)(2). The
    litigation proceeded to a bench trial to determine the equitable
    allocation of cleanup costs between the parties.
    Prior to trial, Trinity tried to recoup costs associated
    with its cleanup of the South Plant, but the District Court
    concluded that Trinity was not entitled to those costs because
    Greenlease had never owned or operated that property or
    disposed of any hazardous waste at the South Plant.
    B. The Parties’ Cost Allocation Proposals
    Trinity’s and Greenlease’s experts each provided the
    District Court with a proposal for the equitable allocation of
    cleanup costs between the parties. Trinity’s expert, Joseph B.
    Gormley, Jr., relied on available historical information to
    identify three sources of contamination at the North Plant:
    volatile chemicals used in manufacturing operations; general
    dispersions caused by painting; and historic fill used for
    construction.    He then employed that same historical
    information to assign each party a percentage of responsibility
    for the contamination found within each impact area. Next,
    Gormley analyzed the major remediation activities and
    associated costs required to clean up each impact area. To
    arrive at a total cost allocation for the major remediation
    14
    activities, he multiplied the percentage of responsibility for
    each specific impact area by the major remediation activity
    costs in that specific area and added those results together.
    That produced an overall percentage allocation. Gormley
    applied that same overall percentage to general project costs
    not tied to any specific impact area. Ultimately, he allocated
    99% of the costs to Greenlease and 1% to Trinity.
    Not surprisingly, Greenlease’s expert, Steven Gerritsen,
    proposed a very different cost allocation. He concluded that
    most of the lead present at the North Plant was caused by the
    use of historic fill rather than Greenlease’s operations at the
    facility. He calculated that Greenlease was responsible for
    depositing fill on only 2.8 acres of the thirty-four acre North
    Plant. He opined that the rest of the fill predated Greenlease’s
    purchase of the property and was thus not Greenlease’s
    responsibility. Gerristen also suggested that much of Golder’s
    work was unreasonable and unnecessary and thus that Trinity
    had spent more money than it should have to perform the
    cleanup. Gerristen ultimately concluded that Greenlease
    should be allocated only 12-13% of the cleanup costs.
    C. The District Court’s Cost Allocation Opinion
    In an admirably thorough opinion, the District Court
    endeavored to make sense of the extensive record, including
    the competing expert contentions. It first concluded that
    Greenlease was not responsible for any of the contamination
    attributable to Shelby Steel or any other non-party because
    Trinity had failed to show that those parties were “unknown,
    insolvent, or otherwise immune from suit.”6 (App. at 351.)
    6
    A court may equitably allocate among the parties
    15
    The Court, however, rejected Greenlease’s contention that
    Golder incurred unreasonable or excessive costs when
    performing its cleanup at the North Plant.
    To assign each party a percentage of responsibility for
    the contamination within each impact area, the District Court
    relied heavily on historic maps and schematics of the North
    Plant. For many impact areas, the Court agreed with
    Greenlease that the lead contamination could be attributed
    solely to Shelby Steel’s use of historic fill, and therefore should
    not be a source of liability for Greenlease. For other impact
    areas, the Court found that Greenlease was responsible for the
    deposit of historic fill, or was solely responsible for the use of
    volatile chemicals, and that Greenlease should thus bear full
    responsibility for the pollution. For the remaining impact
    areas, the District Court split responsibility between the parties
    based on the number of years that each had owned the property
    or on various other considerations such as known use of a
    specific chemical contaminant.
    After determining the percentages of responsibility
    within each impact area, the District Court considered the
    major remediation activities that took place in each impact area
    before it the share of hazardous waste contamination belonging
    to responsible third-party entities not before it (such allocated
    amounts being known as “orphan shares”). But it can typically
    only do so if such orphan shares belong to entities that are
    unknown, insolvent, or immune from suit. See Litgo N.J. Inc.
    v. Comm’r N.J. Dep’t of Envtl. Prot., 
    725 F.3d 369
    , 380 n.4 (3d
    Cir. 2013) (permitting equitable allocation of orphan shares
    among liable parties at the court’s discretion). As found by the
    District Court, that is not the case here.
    16
    to determine an overall allocation of cost. Though it purported
    to follow Gormley’s methodology, the Court departed from it
    in an important respect: Gormley’s methodology accounted for
    the fact that different remediation activities cost different
    amounts of money, whereas the District Court’s methodology
    did not. To arrive at its cost allocation, the Court multiplied
    the percentage of responsibility it attributed to Greenlease by
    the square footage or cubic yardage involved in each
    remediation activity. The District Court then added the results
    and divided by the total square footage and cubic yardage for
    all remediation activities at the North Plant to arrive at the
    overall cost allocation percentage. By those calculations, it
    concluded that Greenlease was responsible for 83% of the total
    costs, while Trinity was responsible for 17%.
    The District Court then considered a variety of equitable
    factors to ensure the fairness of the overall cost allocation. It
    ultimately reduced Greenlease’s percentage of responsibility,
    based on three equitable factors.
    First, it found that at least a portion of Trinity’s
    remediation costs were attributable to the actions of the third-
    party Buyer and, in particular, the Buyer’s decision to demolish
    buildings at the North Plant. The Court said that Trinity failed
    to “specify the amount of response costs it incurred to
    remediate the waste left at the North Plant by [the Buyer].”
    (App. at 380.) Therefore, “there [was] an equitable need to
    reduce Greenlease’s percentage of responsibility for response
    costs to reflect an amount attributable to [the Buyer].” (App.
    at 380.) Accordingly, the Court reduced Greenlease’s
    responsibility by 6%.
    17
    Second, it concluded that the existence of the
    indemnification provisions demonstrated the parties’ intent to
    shift liability, so it further reduced Greenlease’s share of
    responsibility by 5%.
    Third, it recognized that the property value of the North
    Plant had increased as a result of remediation since the land
    was now suitable for some commercial or industrial uses. The
    Court concluded that an additional 10% reduction in
    Greenlease’s responsibility was appropriate to account for that
    increased market value that would inhere to Trinity.
    After accounting for those equitable deductions, the
    District Court determined that Greenlease was responsible for
    62% of “all response costs incurred by … Trinity … for the
    cleanup at the North Plant[.]” (App. at 388-89.)
    III.   DISCUSSION7
    A. Statutory Background
    Congress enacted CERCLA in 1980 “to promote the
    timely cleanup of hazardous waste sites and to ensure that the
    costs of such cleanup efforts were borne by those responsible
    for the contamination.” Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. v.
    United States, 
    556 U.S. 599
    , 602 (2009) (internal quotation
    7
    The District Court had jurisdiction over Trinity’s
    federal law claims under 42 U.S.C. §§ 6972(a) and 9613(b) and
    28 U.S.C. § 1331. It had supplemental jurisdiction over
    Trinity’s state law claims under 28 U.S.C. § 1367. We have
    jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
    18
    marks and citation omitted). Under CERCLA, a party who has
    paid for environmental remediation may seek to hold other
    potentially responsible parties (“PRPs”) liable through the cost
    recovery mechanisms of § 107(a) or the contribution
    mechanisms of § 113(f) of that statute.8 Agere Sys., Inc. v.
    Advanced Envtl. Tech. Corp., 
    602 F.3d 204
    , 216-18 (3d Cir.
    2010). The remedies under those two provisions are distinct.
    
    Id. at 217
    (citing United States v. Atl. Research Corp., 
    551 U.S. 128
    , 138 (2007)). While § 107(a) authorizes complete cost
    recovery under a joint and several liability theory, § 113(f)
    permits a party to seek contribution from other PRPs following
    a CERCLA suit brought by a governmental authority against
    that first party, or after that party has resolved its “liability to
    the United States or an individual State through an
    administratively or judicially approved settlement.” 
    Id. Pennsylvania, meanwhile,
    enacted the HSCA in 1988 to
    provide additional statutory tools to deal with the improper
    disposal of hazardous waste within the Commonwealth. 35 Pa.
    Stat. § 6020.102; Gen. Elec. Envtl. Servs., Inc. v. Envirotech
    Corp., 
    763 F. Supp. 113
    , 115 (M.D. Pa. 1991).
    Although Trinity initially sought both cost recovery and
    contribution from Greenlease, the only claims remaining on
    appeal are claims for contribution pursuant to CERCLA
    subsection § 113(f)(3)(B), and the analogous section of the
    HSCA, 35 Pa. Stat. § 6020.705(c)(2). See also Trinity Indus.,
    Inc. v. Chi. Bridge & Iron Co., 
    735 F.3d 131
    , 136 (3d Cir.
    2013) (holding that a party who enters into a consent decree
    under state law is entitled to seek contribution under
    § 113(f)(3)(B)). Because a party’s “liability under the HSCA
    8
    As cited earlier, those sections of CERCLA are
    codified at 42 U.S.C. §§ 9607(a) and 9613(f), respectively.
    19
    mirrors liability under CERCLA” and “the cost recovery and
    contribution provisions in HSCA are virtually identical to
    those in CERCLA,” Agere Sys., 
    Inc., 602 F.3d at 236
    , our
    resolution of Trinity’s claim for contribution under CERCLA
    is determinative of its companion HSCA claim.
    B. Greenlease’s Appeal
    Greenlease raises three primary issues on appeal. First,
    it appeals the District Court’s determination that the
    indemnification provisions of the Agreement between it and
    Trinity do not preclude Trinity from seeking contribution. We
    will affirm because the language of the Agreement better
    supports the District Court’s conclusion. Second, Greenlease
    appeals the ruling that the costs Trinity and Golder incurred in
    cleaning up the North Plant were all necessary and reasonable
    under CERCLA. We will affirm because those costs have the
    requisite nexus to remedying environmental harm at the North
    Plant and because the record does not support Greenlease’s
    contention that Trinity incurred excessive costs. Third,
    Greenlease challenges the overall cost allocation ordered by
    the District Court. We agree with Greenlease that the Court’s
    cost allocation analysis was flawed, and we will therefore
    vacate the judgment and remand for further proceedings.
    1. The Agreement’s Indemnification Provisions
    Do Not Preclude Trinity from Seeking
    Contribution from Greenlease.
    Greenlease argues that, at the conclusion of the three-
    year mutual indemnification period stated in its Agreement
    with Trinity, the parties were released from any subsequent
    statutory or common law responsibility to one another.
    20
    Greenlease thus asserts that it was error to deny its motion for
    judgment on the pleadings. Our review of a motion for
    judgment on the pleadings is plenary. Caprio v. Healthcare
    Revenue Recovery Grp., LLC, 
    709 F.3d 142
    , 146 (3d Cir.
    2013). Such a motion should not be granted unless the moving
    party has established that there is no material issue of fact to
    resolve, and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    Rosenau v. Unifund Corp., 
    539 F.3d 218
    , 221 (3d Cir. 2008).
    We also exercise plenary review over questions of contract
    interpretation. Great Am. Ins. Co. v. Norwin Sch. Dist., 
    544 F.3d 229
    , 243 (3d Cir. 2008).
    CERCLA allows parties to utilize indemnification
    agreements “to shift the ultimate financial loss” for
    environmental cleanup costs. Hatco Corp. v. W.R. Grace &
    Co. Conn., 
    59 F.3d 400
    , 404 (3d Cir. 1995). The statute says
    plainly that it does not “bar any agreement to insure, hold
    harmless, or indemnify a party to such agreement for any
    liability under this section.” 42 U.S.C. § 9607(e)(1). Whether
    the expiration of the indemnification provisions at issue here
    effectively shifted all financial burden for CERCLA cleanup
    costs to Trinity thus turns on the proper interpretation of the
    Agreement.        “[A]greements among private parties …
    addressing the allocation of responsibility for CERCLA claims
    are to be interpreted by incorporating state … law.” 
    Hatco, 59 F.3d at 405
    . Here, that means Pennsylvania law.
    When a contract is clear and unambiguous,
    Pennsylvania binds the parties to the intent contained within
    the writing itself. Wert v. Manorcare of Carlisle PA, LLC, 
    124 A.3d 1248
    , 1259 (Pa. 2015). “The whole instrument must be
    taken together in arriving at contractual intent.” Great Am.
    
    Ins., 544 F.3d at 243
    (quoting Murphy v. Duquesne Univ. of the
    21
    Holy Ghost, 
    777 A.2d 418
    , 429 (Pa. 2001)). Courts are not to
    interpret one provision of the contract in a way that annuls a
    different provision of it, Capek v. Devito, 
    767 A.2d 1047
    , 1050
    (Pa. 2001), and “when specific or exact provisions seem to
    conflict with broader or more general terms, the specific
    provisions are more likely to reflect the intent of the parties[,]”
    Musko v. Musko, 
    697 A.2d 255
    , 256 (Pa. 1997). Those
    interpretive rules lead us to conclude that the Agreement at
    issue reserved Trinity’s right to seek contribution from
    Greenlease for environmental cleanup costs.
    The Agreement’s indemnification provisions stated, in
    relevant part, that each party indemnified the other for any
    “[d]amages arising out of or related to violations of
    Environmental Laws” and that liability for any such violations
    would be “allocated between the [parties] in a just manner
    taking into account degree of fault, period of violation and
    other relevant factors.” (App. at 599-600.) It is true that the
    mutual indemnification expired after three years. The
    Agreement did not, however, contain language expressing the
    parties’ intent that Trinity would assume all of Greenlease’s
    obligations and liabilities after that three-year period. Rather,
    the Agreement contained explicit “non-assumption of
    liabilities” and “non-waiver of remedies” clauses. The “non-
    assumption of liabilities” clause provided that Trinity “has not
    assumed, and expressly denies assumption hereby of, any other
    liability, obligation or commitment of [Greenlease] other than
    as set forth above or otherwise expressly set forth herein.”
    (App. at 567.) It is reading far too much into the words “any
    other liability” to think they meant that the prominent risk of
    environmental liability was the one thing the parties meant for
    Trinity to be stuck with. Moreover, the “non-waiver of
    remedies” clause plainly provided that “[t]he rights and
    22
    remedies herein provided are cumulative and are not exclusive
    of any rights or remedies which the parties hereto may
    otherwise have at law or in equity.” (App. at 612-13.) The
    express language of the contract, therefore, provides both that
    Trinity did not assume any of Greenlease’s liabilities or
    obligations following the three-year mutual indemnification
    period, and that Trinity did not waive its statutory rights under
    CERCLA and the HSCA to seek contribution from Greenlease.
    In short, while the contractual right to indemnification ended,
    all other rights remained.
    Greenlease’s three primary arguments to the contrary do
    not persuade us.          First, Greenlease argues that the
    indemnification provision should control our interpretation of
    the entire Agreement because it is more specific than the “non-
    waiver of remedies” clause. That reasoning, however, puts too
    high a premium on specificity. Yes, the contractual indemnity
    is specific. But the non-assumption of liabilities and non-
    waiver of remedies provisions are plain enough for us to
    discern the intent of the parties, and that intent was to preserve
    non-contractual rights. Besides, there is a sense in which the
    indemnification language is not more specific than the other
    relevant provisions: it does not address the parties’ liabilities
    after the first three years following the sale. The “non-
    assumption of liabilities” and “non-waiver of remedies”
    clauses do. They are not time limited and therefore can be
    understood as specifically addressing the time period after the
    expiration of the contractual indemnities. We will not construe
    the indemnification provision to cover time periods that, by the
    plain language of the contract, it does not cover. See Jacobs
    Constructors, Inc. v. NPS Energy Servs., Inc., 
    264 F.3d 365
    ,
    373 (3d Cir. 2001) (“[B]ecause the nature and purpose of any
    indemnity agreement involves the shifting and voluntary
    23
    assumption of legal obligations, they are to be narrowly
    construed.”).
    Second, Greenlease argues that allowing Trinity to seek
    contribution against it pursuant to the “non-waiver of
    remedies” clause “renders the environmental indemnity
    provision meaningless[.]” (Green. Opening Br. at 36.) But
    that argument again ignores the critical fact that the parties, by
    agreeing to the three-year mutual indemnification provision,
    granted to each other certain contractual rights separate and
    distinct from any statutory, legal, or equitable rights or
    remedies. The “non-waiver of remedies” clause is perfectly
    clear in that regard, reserving to both parties “any rights or
    remedies which the parties … may otherwise have at law or in
    equity.” (App. at 613.) As the District Court concluded, the
    contractual remedies created by the indemnification provision
    were, by the terms of the Agreement, “cumulative” and not
    “exclusive” of the remedies available at law or in equity. (App.
    at 66, 613.) Greenlease could have bargained for a provision
    in the Agreement whereby Trinity would have assumed all of
    Greenlease’s obligations and liabilities following the
    expiration of the three-year indemnification provision. But it
    did not.
    Third, Greenlease relies on Keywell Corporation v.
    Weinstein, 
    33 F.3d 159
    (2d Cir. 1994), a decision by the United
    States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, to argue that
    all CERCLA and HSCA liability automatically transferred to
    Trinity after the expiration of the three-year mutual
    indemnification provision. There are, though, important
    differences between the contract at issue in Keywell and the
    Agreement here that are sufficient to make that case inapposite.
    The corporate plaintiff in Keywell sought to recover CERCLA
    24
    cleanup costs from two individual defendants, who had been
    officers of the corporation that sold the relevant piece of land
    to the plaintiff. 
    Id. at 160.
    The purchase agreement for the
    land included a two-year indemnification provision
    guaranteeing to hold the plaintiff harmless for any damages
    arising out of “any breach of warranty or representation” by the
    selling entity “or its management stockholders” and for “any
    liabilities or obligations of [s]eller” not explicitly listed in the
    purchase agreement. 
    Id. at 162.
    The plaintiff then entered into
    a separate thirty-year indemnification agreement with the
    corporate seller that guaranteed to hold the plaintiff harmless
    for any damages that “arose or existed” prior to the purchase
    agreement. 
    Id. Importantly, that
    thirty-year indemnification
    agreement stated that only the corporate entity would be held
    to the longer indemnification period, not its individual officers.
    
    Id. Furthermore, prior
    to seeking to recover CERCLA cleanup
    costs from the individual defendants, the plaintiff had entered
    into yet another contract, this last one “unconditionally
    releas[ing]” the corporate entity’s former “Management
    Group,” which included the individual defendants, from any
    claims the plaintiff might have had under the purchase
    agreement. 
    Id. On that
    set of facts, the Second Circuit held
    that the plaintiff could not recover CERCLA cleanup costs
    from the individual defendants because the relevant contractual
    documents unequivocally expressed the parties’ intent to shift
    any and all liability away from the individual officers of the
    corporate entity after the initial two-year indemnification
    period. 
    Id. at 166.
    In contrast, the Agreement between Trinity and
    Greenlease does not demonstrate an unequivocal intent to shift
    liability away from Greenlease after the three-year contractual
    indemnification period expired. On the contrary, rather than
    25
    releasing Greenlease from liability, the Agreement states that
    Trinity did not assume any of Greenlease’s liabilities or
    obligations, unless otherwise expressly provided by the
    Agreement. Greenlease’s reliance on Keywell is therefore
    misplaced, and we will affirm the denial of its motion for
    judgment on the pleadings.
    2.       The Costs Trinity Incurred Were
    Necessary and Reasonable.
    Greenlease next argues that the District Court
    impermissibly allocated to it costs that Trinity unnecessarily
    incurred by failing to impose cost controls on the remediation
    work at the North Plant. We review the District Court’s factual
    findings for clear error, but review de novo its interpretation of
    CERCLA. Agere Sys., 
    Inc., 602 F.3d at 216
    .
    A plaintiff can obtain contribution from a PRP under
    § 113(f)(3)(B) of CERCLA only if it first demonstrates a prima
    facie case of liability under § 107(a). See N.J. Tpk. Auth. v.
    PPG Indus., Inc., 
    197 F.3d 96
    , 104 (3d Cir. 1999). Here, that
    requires Trinity to demonstrate the following: first, that the
    North Plant is a facility; second, that Greenlease is a PRP;
    third, that “the release or threatened release of a hazardous
    substance has occurred”; and fourth, that Trinity incurred
    “necessary response costs consistent with the [National
    Contingency Plan.]”9 Chevron Mining Inc. v. United States,
    9
    The National Contingency Plan provides a set of
    standards governing environmental cleanup activities,
    including “‘methods and criteria for determining the
    appropriate extent of removal, remedy, and other measures,’
    42 U.S.C. § 9605(a)(3), and ‘means of assuring that remedial
    26
    
    863 F.3d 1261
    , 1269 (10th Cir. 2017) (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted). Greenlease does not dispute the District
    Court’s conclusions on the first three points. It only argues that
    the District Court erred by determining, as a legal matter, that
    Trinity’s response costs were per se necessary because they
    were undertaken in compliance with the Consent Decree. That
    argument, however, even if it had merit, is irrelevant, since the
    record is clear that Trinity’s response costs were in fact
    necessary under CERCLA. We thus need not address whether
    response costs undertaken in compliance with a consent decree
    should be considered necessary per se.
    A cost is considered “necessary” and hence subject to
    shared liability if there is “some nexus between [it] and an
    actual effort to respond to environmental contamination.”10
    action measures are cost-effective.’ [42 U.S.C.] § 9605(a)(7).”
    United States v. E.I. Dupont De Nemours & Co. Inc., 
    432 F.3d 161
    , 168 (3d Cir. 2005) (en banc).
    10
    The case law that has developed around CERCLA
    has interpreted the term “necessary” to refer to a more elastic
    concept than how the word is typically understood. For
    example, CERCLA case law defines a “necessary” cost as one
    that has some “nexus” to the cleanup of environmental harm,
    not as a cost without which the cleanup would not have been
    possible. Compare Young v. United States, 
    394 F.3d 858
    , 863
    (10th Cir. 2005) (interpreting the term “necessary cost” in the
    CERCLA context to refer to a cost that has a “nexus” to an
    environmental cleanup), with NECESSARY, Black’s Law
    Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (defining “necessary” as something
    “[t]hat is needed for some purpose or reason; essential”). We
    have undertaken our analysis of what costs were or were not
    necessary in this case in light of CERCLA precedent. Our
    27
    Young v. United States, 
    394 F.3d 858
    , 863 (10th Cir. 2005); cf.
    Black Horse Lane Assoc., L.P. v. Dow Chem. Corp., 
    228 F.3d 275
    , 297 (3d Cir. 2000) (determining that a plaintiff did not
    meet its burden to demonstrate the necessity of a response
    action because it “did not relate to any remedial or response
    action at the” relevant site). It must be, in other words, a
    response cost, and CERCLA broadly defines a “response” to a
    hazardous release to include a wide variety of investigative,
    removal, and remedial actions. See 42 U.S.C. § 9601(23)-(25)
    (providing a non-exhaustive list of “response” actions); W.R.
    Grace & Co.-Conn. v. Zotos Int’l, Inc., 
    559 F.3d 85
    , 92 (2d Cir.
    2009) (noting that “response costs are liberally construed under
    CERCLA”). The District Court’s detailed factual findings
    make clear that there was a nexus between the costs Trinity
    incurred and its effort to investigate and remediate the
    contamination at the North Plant.
    The cleanup activities at the North Plant were guided by
    the Consent Decree’s requirement that those efforts be
    undertaken pursuant to the dictates of Pennsylvania’s Act 2.
    That statute requires that remediation activities meet one of
    three standards: a background standard comparing
    contaminated areas to unaffected areas; a uniform statewide
    health standard set by a state agency, which differs depending
    on whether the site is meant for residential or commercial use;
    or a site-specific standard “based on a site-specific risk
    assessment so that any substantial present or probable future
    risk to human health and the environment is eliminated or
    reduced” so that the site could be utilized in accordance with
    its “present or currently planned future use[.]” (App. at 212
    opinion does not address how the term “necessary” should be
    interpreted in contexts outside of CERCLA.
    28
    (citing 35 Pa. Stat. § 6026.301(a)).) Trinity used the statewide
    health standard to determine which areas required “some type
    of response action” and then used the site-specific standard to
    guide the actual “soil cleanup.”11 (App. at 223.) It did not use
    the background standard.
    During the investigation phase of Trinity’s cleanup
    activities, its consultant Golder used soil sampling to determine
    the areas of concern requiring remediation. That necessitated
    the establishment of a “standard action level,” which is the
    numerical threshold for determining when soil is contaminated
    to an extent requiring treatment. For example, to determine
    whether areas contaminated by lead – the primary contaminant
    of concern – required treatment, Golder originally selected a
    standard action level of 1000 milligrams of lead per kilogram
    of soil. That was not a random choice. It selected that standard
    because it had observed that, at a threshold level of 1500
    mg/kg, some soil samples passed toxicity testing, while others
    failed. At the more exacting 1000 mg/kg level, Golder was
    confident that it would catch all of the soil requiring
    remediation.
    But Golder was also cost conscious on that point. The
    selection of an accurate standard was important because failure
    to adequately remove all of the contaminated soil would
    require Golder to put in place more costly hazardous waste
    caps that could leave the land unusable. It initially chose the
    1000 mg/kg standard for the reasons just noted, but when,
    during the cleanup process, it discovered that a significant
    11
    The site-specific standard also required Trinity and
    Golder to engage the local community and to accept public
    comments about the cleanup efforts.
    29
    amount of soil exceeded the 1000 mg/kg standard yet could
    still safely remain in place because it was going to “be capped
    anyway as part of the approved remedy” (App. at 234), it
    conducted a “site characterization study” to determine whether
    there was a more appropriate standard action level (App. at
    234-35). Golder settled on a 2500 parts per million standard
    that was approved by PADEP. The record accordingly
    establishes an appropriate cost sensitivity and a nexus between
    Golder’s (and hence Trinity’s) investigative efforts and the
    purpose of remedying environmental harms.
    The same is true with regard to the activities Golder
    undertook to remediate the contaminated areas. It used three
    primary response actions: first, simply consolidating
    contaminated soil and placing an asphalt cap atop that soil;
    second, excavating and chemically treating contaminated soil
    to render it nonhazardous and then placing an asphalt cap over
    the remediated area; and third, transporting contaminated soil
    to an appropriate landfill.12 Golder’s soil excavation efforts
    allowed it to use simple asphalt caps to cover the excavated
    areas, as opposed to what are called Subtitle C caps. Subtitle
    C of RCRA regulates the precise manner in which a hazardous
    waste cap is put in place and maintained. Installing and
    maintaining a cap in compliance with Subtitle C is more
    12
    Certain contaminated soil was amenable to chemical
    treatment that rendered it nonhazardous; other soil was not
    amenable to such treatment and remained hazardous prior to
    disposal. The soil that was chemically treated could be
    transported to a nonhazardous waste landfill, which was two to
    four times cheaper than disposal at a hazardous waste landfill.
    The soil remaining hazardous had to be transported to a
    hazardous waste landfill.
    30
    difficult, complex, and expensive than installing and
    maintaining a simple asphalt cap. The District Court found that
    use of a Subtitle C cap would have made the North Plant site
    look like a “landfill,” would not have been “consistent with the
    residential character of Greenville,” (App. at 241), and would
    have rendered much of the North Plant unusable for any
    purpose. Those factual findings reinforce that Golder’s
    activities had the required nexus to the stated purpose of
    remedying environmental harms. The response costs Trinity
    incurred were therefore necessary under CERCLA.
    Although Greenlease is correct that “[t]he cleanup at the
    North Plant was more difficult, inclusive, and expensive
    because it was done pursuant to the consent order and with
    oversight by … PADEP,” (App. at 225), we do not agree that
    those extra costs were consequently unnecessary. The Consent
    Decree required compliance with state environmental
    standards. To ensure that those statutory requirements were
    met, Trinity and Golder had to get PADEP’s approval for each
    step of the cleanup. The costs incurred to comply with the
    Consent Decree were thus aimed directly at satisfying state
    environmental standards and are appropriately classified as
    “necessary to the containment and cleanup of hazardous
    releases.” Redland Soccer Club, Inc. v. Dep’t of Army of U.S.,
    
    55 F.3d 827
    , 850 (3d Cir. 1995) (citation omitted).
    A clearer way to understand Greenlease’s contentions is
    to see them as challenging the reasonableness of Trinity’s
    expenditures, not their necessity. Greenlease does not point to
    any specific activity that was not “necessary.” Rather, it
    complains that Trinity incurred excessive costs because the
    Consent Decree lacked meaningful cost control mechanisms,
    because Trinity hired Golder without competitive bidding, and
    31
    because Trinity agreed to a “cost-plus” billing arrangement
    with Golder. Those arguments fare poorly precisely because
    they do not address necessity, as that concept is applied in the
    context of CERCLA.
    Greenlease’s arguments fall flat in light of the District
    Court’s factual findings that we have already recounted in
    some detail. Greenlease does not point to any record evidence
    demonstrating how any of those facts resulted in unreasonably
    excessive spending. In contrast, as the Court found, Trinity
    and Golder worked together “to try to control costs or pay only
    reasonable costs,” (App. at 218), and worked with PADEP “to
    reduce the amount of work [Trinity] had to do to comply with
    the” Consent Decree (App. at 225). The District Court credited
    expert testimony that the billing methods used by Trinity
    “contributed to the cost efficiency of the response work at the
    North Plant” and “prevented Golder from up-charging
    [Trinity.]” (App. at 219-20.) Greenlease has given us no sound
    reason to disagree with that assessment.13
    13
    Even if Greenlease’s argument had merit, and the
    matter were in equipoise, we might yet be inclined to affirm
    the District Court’s finding that the costs Trinity incurred were
    reasonable. That is because Trinity incurred those costs in
    furtherance of the Consent Decree. Although we need not, and
    do not, decide here whether costs incurred by a private party in
    compliance with a state consent decree are presumed
    reasonable under CERCLA, we note that similar costs incurred
    by a government party are presumed reasonable. For example,
    it is black letter CERCLA law that when a government’s
    actions are not inconsistent with the National Contingency
    Plan, its costs are presumed reasonable, E.I. 
    Dupont, 432 F.3d at 178
    , and are recoverable against PRPs, 42 U.S.C.
    32
    We will therefore affirm the District Court’s
    determination that Trinity’s response costs were necessary and
    reasonable.
    3. The District Court Erred in Allocating Costs
    Between Trinity and Greenlease.
    Greenlease argues that the District Court used a purely
    speculative methodology, different from the methodology
    proposed by Trinity’s expert witness Gormley to allocate costs
    between the parties.14 In particular, the criticism is that the
    District Court relied on “volumes and surface areas … as a
    proxy for the costs Trinity incurred at each impact area[.]”
    (Green. Opening Br. at 22.) Greenlease contends that that
    methodology was arbitrary because it failed to account for the
    reality that different units of measure are not interchangeable
    and because volumetric data cannot reliably serve as a proxy
    for costs when some remediation activities cost more than
    § 9607(a)(4)(A). Since compliance with a consent decree
    entered pursuant to state law “establishe[s] … compliance with
    the National Contingency Plan,” Niagara Mohawk Power
    Corp. v. Chevron U.S.A., Inc., 
    596 F.3d 112
    , 137 (2d Cir.
    2010), costs incurred by a government party in compliance
    with such a decree should be presumed reasonable. There may
    be a related principle warranting a similar presumption in a
    context like this.
    14
    Greenlease’s expert incorporated Gormley’s cost
    allocation methodology into his own cost allocation analysis,
    so Gormley’s methodology was the only one presented to the
    District Court.
    33
    others. According to Greenlease, the District Court was forced
    to resort to a methodology based on volumetric data alone
    because Trinity failed to present sufficient evidence
    documenting how much it cost to undertake each of the major
    remediation activities within each impact area. Greenlease’s
    position is thus that the District Court’s cost allocation
    methodology cannot stand, given the Court’s failure to include
    actual costs in its analysis. We agree that the Court materially
    deviated from the methodology presented by Gormley and so
    arrived at a speculative cost allocation methodology that must
    be corrected.
    CERCLA provides PRPs with a right to contribution for
    remediation expenses. Atl. Research 
    Corp., 551 U.S. at 138
    .
    A district court “may allocate response costs among liable
    parties using such equitable factors as the court determines are
    appropriate.” 42 U.S.C. § 9613(f)(1). “[T]he law does not
    command mathematical preciseness from the evidence in
    finding damages. Instead, all that is required is that sufficient
    facts ... be introduced so that a court can arrive at an intelligent
    estimate without speculation or conjecture.” Scully v. US
    WATS, Inc., 
    238 F.3d 497
    , 515 (3d Cir. 2001) (alterations in
    original) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). We
    review an allocation of CERCLA damages for abuse of
    discretion. Agere Sys., 
    Inc., 602 F.3d at 216
    . A district court
    abuses its discretion when its decision depends “upon a clearly
    erroneous finding of fact, an errant conclusion of law or an
    improper application of law to fact.” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    The parties and their experts in this case placed the
    District Court in an unenviable position. Each of the parties
    staked out extreme positions on cost allocation, with Trinity’s
    expert Gormley opining that Greenlease should be held
    34
    responsible for 99% of all cleanup costs and Greenlease’s
    expert opining that, despite Greenlease’s 76 years of building
    and manufacturing activity at the North Plant, Trinity should
    be held responsible for nearly 90% of all cleanup costs. The
    record became even more difficult to sort out when, on direct
    examination, Gormley gave testimony that was unclear at best
    and departed from the methodology contained in his expert
    report. Although we commend the District Court’s painstaking
    effort to analyze nearly a century of building and
    manufacturing activity by multiple parties to allocate costs
    equitably between Greenlease and Trinity, the attempt to
    untangle the evidentiary knot presented by the parties fell
    short.
    Before addressing the District Court’s cost allocation
    methodology, we begin with the methodology that Gormley
    proposed in his expert report and explained somewhat at trial.
    Gormley’s report presented a six-step approach to allocating
    costs. First, using “historical information and investigation
    findings,” Gormley assigned a percentage of responsibility to
    each party for contamination in each area of concern, (D.I. 285-
    2 at 10), and he applied those percentages to the impact areas
    within each area of concern. He documented that step in
    Tables 4-1 and 6-2. Second, he calculated the quantity of
    material in each impact area that was subject to specific major
    remediation activities. That step was documented in Table 6-
    2. Third, he multiplied the estimated quantities of material
    used for (or remediated by) major remediation activities by
    each party’s percentage of responsibility for contaminating
    each impact area. Fourth, he summed results from step three
    to develop Trinity’s and Greenlease’s respective responsibility
    percentages “for each major remediation activity[.]” (Id.)
    Fifth, he multiplied the percentage of responsibility for each
    35
    major remediation activity by the cost of each such activity to
    determine how to allocate the costs for each. Finally, Gormley
    totaled how much in costs each party was responsible for
    across all major remediation activities “to calculate a total
    percent cost allocation for the major remediation activities.”
    (D.I. 285-2 at 10.) Steps five and six were documented in
    Table 7-1. The report opined that the final percentage
    calculated at step six could be used to allocate the “general
    construction costs” (i.e., costs that were incurred on a project-
    wide basis that were not tied to a specific impact area) between
    both parties.     Gormley’s expert report presented his
    methodology as a single analysis with multiple steps.15
    Gormley’s testimony at trial, however, muddied his
    otherwise straightforward methodology. At trial, he described
    his methodology as a “three-stage process.” (D.I. 340 at 108.)
    Stage 1, termed the “AOC-by-AOC percentage allocation,”
    involved creating a percentage allocation specific to each area
    of concern; stage 2, termed the “IA-by-IA percentage
    allocation,” involved creating a percentage allocation for each
    impact area; and stage 3, termed “major remediation
    allocation,” involved creating a specific allocation for each
    major remediation activity. (D.I. 340 at 108-11.) Trinity’s
    counsel, in a perhaps confusingly worded set of questions,
    asked if each stage was meant “to be mutually exclusive” of
    the other stages, (D.I. 340 at 111), by which he appears to have
    been asking if each “stage” was a separate and distinct
    methodology that could be used to allocate costs, as opposed
    to steps in a single methodology. In a truly confusing answer,
    15
    While the report did not break the methodology into
    the six discrete steps we describe here, it did have each of the
    steps, and identifying them separately is, we believe, helpful.
    36
    Gormley stated that the three stages “weren’t supposed to be
    mutually exclusive,” and he went on to testify that “[t]he first
    [stage] could be taken on its own,” but that the second and third
    stages built on the first stage. (D.I. 340 at 111.) He ultimately
    agreed with Trinity’s counsel, however, that each of his three
    stages “could be used by someone who was trying to develop
    their own logical or fair means to allocate responsibility for the
    contamination at the North Plant[.]” (D.I. 340 at 111.)
    Gormley’s testimony departed from his expert report in a
    crucial way – his report made clear that each step in the
    methodology built on those that came before it, and that they
    were not independent means to come up with a cost allocation.
    His testimony, however, was less than clear as to whether the
    “stages” of his methodology were each independent analytical
    means to allocate costs or steps that built on one another.
    Led by the unclear testimony, the District Court chose
    Gormley’s “stage 3” – divorced from the analytical
    foundations for that stage in the earlier steps of Gormley’s
    analysis – to guide its cost allocation analysis.16 That at least
    16
    The District Court interpreted Gormley’s trial
    testimony as establishing that “[e]ach of the three methods
    used by [him] could be used on its own—without considering
    the other two methods—to allocate responsibility for the
    contamination at the North Plant.” (App. at 249.) Although
    that conclusion was understandable based on Gormley’s
    testimony, it was mistaken. While Gormley agreed that
    “someone who was trying to develop their own logical or fair
    means to allocate responsibility” could incorporate any one of
    his stages into an allocation methodology, (D.I. 340 at 111), he
    never testified that someone could separate out one stage, and
    then use that stage’s allocation methodology alone to allocate
    37
    appears to have been the Court’s approach because it titled its
    allocation analysis, “Overall Allocation of Responsibility
    based upon Major Remediation Activity”; it stated that it
    “determined an overall allocation based upon the extent of each
    major remediation activity in each [impact area]”; it explicitly
    listed the major remediation activities it “considered … in its
    calculation”; and it cited Table 7-1 – the table corresponding
    to Gormley’s stage 3 – when reaching its allocation
    determination. (App. at 375-77.) The District Court, however,
    materially deviated from Gormley’s suggested major
    remediation activity allocation methodology by focusing only
    on the quantity of material involved in all major remediation
    activities, without distinguishing between activities and
    without regard to cost. That was despite Gormley’s testimony
    confirming “that a central feature of the analysis … reflected
    in [Table] 7-1 is [the] notion of the … costs[.]” (D.I. 341 at
    33.)
    The District Court’s allocation methodology proceeded
    in four steps. First, it made its own factual determinations
    regarding the percentage of responsibility each party bore for
    contamination in each specific impact area.17 Second, it
    totaled, for each impact area, the quantity of material used or
    remediated by major remediation activities. The Court’s
    analysis did not differentiate between remediation activities.
    For example, it treated placing asphalt caps and placing topsoil
    all cleanup costs for remediating contamination at the North
    Plant.
    17
    We find no error in the Court’s underlying factual
    findings with regard to the contamination in each specific
    impact area.
    38
    as functionally the same for its cost allocation analysis despite
    the fact that those two activities’ costs vary significantly.
    Third, it multiplied, on an impact area-specific basis, each
    party’s percentage of responsibility for contamination with the
    total quantity of material used or remediated. Fourth, it used
    the resulting numbers to determine the percentage of material,
    in total, for which each party was responsible. That calculation
    led the Court to attribute to Greenlease 83% of responsibility
    for the contamination of the North Plant and to Trinity 17%.
    The Court, citing Gormley’s testimony and expert report, used
    those percentages to allocate “all response costs …, including
    responsibility investigation, removal and remedial past costs
    incurred through February 2015, for general construction costs,
    … and future construction costs for ongoing operations and
    maintenance work.” (App. at 377 (emphasis omitted).) Those
    percentages, however, were too speculative for two reasons.
    First, the Court’s methodology failed to differentiate between
    different remediation activities and their varied costs, and,
    second, the methodology, as applied, treated data measured in
    square feet as equivalent to data measured in cubic yards.
    Although the District Court’s reliance on volumetric
    data as the key factor in allocating response costs is not without
    support in our case law, its use here was flawed.18 In Agere
    Systems, Inc. v. Advanced Environmental Technology
    Corporation, we endorsed a volumetric-centered approach to
    18
    Although we determine that the District Court erred
    in utilizing the cost allocation methodology that it did, the
    Court’s use of volumetric data and a focus on major
    remediation activity as a means to determine the allocation of
    response costs was reasonable and within the Court’s
    discretion.
    39
    allocating CERCLA costs because, in that case, “volume
    allocation likely reflect[ed] the dollar amounts” at 
    issue. 602 F.3d at 236
    . We clarify here that such a volumetric-centered
    approach is only appropriate where the evidence supports a
    finding that one standardized volumetric unit correlates with a
    standardized per unit measure of cost. That may often be the
    case when a CERCLA cleanup involves only one impact area,
    or when a cleanup involves one primary major remediation
    activity. But when, as here, an environmental cleanup involves
    many impact areas and remediation activities with varying
    costs, a volumetric-centered approach that fails to account for
    cost differences will very likely lead to an allocation that is
    inequitable because it is divorced from the record evidence and
    analytically unsound. When, as a hypothetical example, 100
    units of material that costs $1 per unit to remediate are treated
    the same as 100 units of material that costs $10 per unit to
    remediate, the analysis will be hard to justify.
    That kind of error occurred here and was compounded
    when the District Court treated conceptually distinct units of
    measurement as equal. It added together data measured in
    square feet – a unit of surface area – with data measured in
    cubic yards – a unit of volume. Performing such a calculation
    was, as Greenlease contends, like comparing “apples to
    oranges.”19 (Green. Opening Br. at 53.) Without pure
    19
    “Cubic measures and square measures represent
    fundamentally different things. A cubic measure is always a
    three-dimensional unit of volume: length times width times
    height. A square measure is always a two-dimensional unit of
    area: length times width.” Chris Magyar, Cubic Yards to
    Square Feet Conversion, SCIENCING (Mar. 13, 2018),
    40
    speculation as to the depths at issue for the square footage
    measurements, or record evidence establishing those depths, it
    would not have been possible for the District Court to equate
    cubic yards to square feet. The Court’s findings of fact and
    conclusions of law do not reflect any such analysis.
    Those problematic deviations from Gormley’s
    methodology compel us to conclude that there was an abuse of
    discretion and that we must vacate the District Court’s
    judgment as to the allocation of costs between Greenlease and
    Trinity. If the District Court was persuaded by Gormley’s
    analytical approach, then, on remand, it should adhere to the
    cost allocation methodology he set forth in his expert report –
    a methodology that both experts relied upon in coming to their
    respective cost allocation estimates. That methodology will
    require the Court to conduct a separate cost allocation analysis
    for each major remediation activity. Much of the information
    needed for that is readily available in the record, but additional
    fact-finding by the District Court may be needed.20
    https://sciencing.com/cubic-yards-square-feet-conversion-
    8641439.html (last visited Aug. 21, 2018).
    20
    We reiterate that any cost allocation methodology
    must differentiate between major remediation activities and
    account for the varying costs across those activities.
    Exactitude is not required. Indeed, at this late date it is
    probably not even possible. It is enough for the Court to make
    a reasonable estimate of costs based on an appropriate record.
    See 
    Scully, 238 F.3d at 515
    (explaining that the law only
    requires that district courts “arrive at an intelligent estimate” of
    CERCLA damages “without speculation or conjecture”; it does
    41
    To apply Gormley’s methodology properly, the District
    Court must use volumetric and cost data specific to the
    remediation activities. For every major remediation activity,
    then, the Court should calculate how much of that activity each
    party was responsible for. It can then apply that percentage
    breakdown to the total cost of that specific activity at the North
    Plant. Once it assigns each party a cost allocation for every
    major remediation activity, the Court will be able to add the
    parties’ respective shares of costs together. From those totals,
    the Court can calculate the overall percentages to use in
    determining an equitable allocation of costs between
    Greenlease and Trinity. The District Court remains free to
    exercise its discretion to adjust those percentages, subject to
    the guidance provided herein. It is also free to reopen the
    record, should it determine that it is necessary to do so to carry
    out the kind of analysis we have described.21
    C. Trinity’s Cross-Appeal
    Trinity raises three primary issues in its cross-appeal.
    First, it appeals the District Court’s factual determination of
    not require courts to arrive at a “mathematical[ly] precise[]”
    figure (citations omitted)).
    21
    Because we must remand this case, we do not address
    whether Trinity met its burden to prove damages. However, if
    the Court chooses to reopen the record on remand, we
    encourage it to permit the parties to address whether some
    South Plant costs were impermissibly included in the Court’s
    prior allocation of costs at the North Plant. It may also allow
    the parties to introduce evidence quantifying the costs incurred
    in remediating contamination caused by third parties.
    42
    responsibility for the lead contamination at the North Plant.
    We will affirm because we cannot say that the Court abused its
    discretion, given the evidentiary record before it. Second,
    Trinity challenges the District Court’s decision to grant
    Greenlease equitable deductions to account for the
    Agreement’s indemnification provisions and for the purported
    increase in value of the North Plant following the cleanup. We
    agree that the District Court erred in the manner in which it
    applied those equitable deductions. We emphasize, however,
    that the District Court is free on remand to apply equitable
    deductions in accordance with the principles discussed in this
    opinion.     Third, Trinity appeals the District Court’s
    determination that Ampco is not liable for the conduct of
    Greenlease. We will affirm on that point because Trinity
    cannot demonstrate that Ampco is either directly or
    derivatively liable for Greenlease’s conduct at the North Plant.
    1. The District Court’s Allocation of
    Responsibility for Lead Contamination was
    Not an Abuse of Discretion.
    Trinity challenges the District Court’s determination
    that Greenlease’s painting operations did not contribute to lead
    contamination requiring remediation. It contends that it is
    undisputed that Greenlease’s painting operations at the North
    Plant resulted in lead runoff seeping into the ground. We
    review an allocation of CERCLA damages for abuse of
    discretion. Agere Sys., 
    Inc., 602 F.3d at 216
    . Given the
    evidence and expert testimony in the record supporting the
    District Court’s determination, we do not agree that there was
    an abuse of discretion.
    43
    The District Court did not, as Trinity suggests,
    “disregard the co-contributing effects of Greenlease’s lead
    paint releases.” (Trinity Opening Br. at 64.) Rather, as the
    Court explained, it found that the historic fill utilized at the
    North Plant by various parties over the years was “the source
    of the lead contamination that required remediation[.]” (App.
    at 402.) In other words, the District Court found that any
    contamination by lead paint alone would not have resulted in
    contamination requiring remediation.        The Court then
    incorporated “the overall percentage of responsibility for the
    lead contamination that required remediation” in its equitable
    cost allocation analysis. (App. at 402.)
    The District Court’s finding that historic fill and not
    lead paint was the source of the contamination requiring
    remediation was adequately supported by Greenlease’s expert
    Gerritsen. He supported his conclusion by studying soil
    samples and observing no correlation between painting
    operations and lead contamination. In particular, Greenlease’s
    expert observed that lead exceeding PADEP standards was
    consistently present in historic fill rather than native soil. That
    Trinity’s expert reached a different conclusion – without
    conducting an analysis of soil samples – is of no import. The
    District Court was entitled to believe Greenlease’s expert
    analysis, as it had adequate support to be admissible. See
    United States v. Allegheny Ludlum Corp., 
    366 F.3d 164
    , 184
    (3d Cir. 2004) (“[W]hen presented with two sound but
    conflicting expert opinions, a district court has discretion to
    credit one over the other.”). Accordingly, we will affirm the
    conclusion that Greenlease’s paint operations did not result in
    lead contamination requiring remediation.
    44
    2. The District Court Abused Its Discretion
    When Granting Equitable Deductions
    Premised on the Indemnification Provisions
    and the Purported Increased Value of the
    North Plant.
    CERCLA grants trial courts broad discretion to
    “allocate response costs among liable parties using such
    equitable factors as the court determines are appropriate.” 42
    U.S.C. § 9613(f)(1). “Congress intended to grant the district
    courts significant flexibility in determining equitable
    allocations of response costs, without requiring the courts to
    prioritize, much less consider, any specific factor.” Beazer E.,
    Inc. v. Mead Corp., 
    412 F.3d 429
    , 446 (3d Cir. 2005).
    However, “[w]e do not simply ‘rubber-stamp’ a district court’s
    equitable allocation[.]” Lockheed Martin Corp. v. United
    States, 
    833 F.3d 225
    , 234 (D.C. Cir. 2016) (citation omitted).
    Rather, we review the equitable allocation of environmental
    cleanup costs for abuse of discretion. Agere Sys., 
    Inc., 602 F.3d at 216
    ; 
    Beazer, 412 F.3d at 445
    n.18.
    Trinity argues that the District Court’s 5% equitable
    deduction in favor of Greenlease due to the contractual
    indemnification provisions, and its 10% equitable deduction in
    favor of Greenlease due to the purported increased value of the
    North Plant, were improper. We agree, and so too does
    Greenlease, which acknowledges that the District Court’s
    “percentage reductions were completely arbitrary and
    speculative.” (Green. Opening Br. at 24.) The District Court
    abused its discretion when it applied the 5% equitable
    deduction because it erroneously interpreted our precedent. It
    also abused its discretion when it applied the 10% equitable
    45
    deduction because it failed to explain how it arrived at that
    figure, and we can discern no basis for the figure in the record.
    i.   The 5% Indemnification Provisions
    Deduction
    The District Court relied on our opinion in Beazer East,
    Inc. v. Mead Corporation when it took into consideration the
    Agreement’s indemnification provisions to reduce
    Greenlease’s percentage of responsibility by 5%. It concluded
    that “it would be error” to not incorporate the parties’ intent, as
    manifested by the three-year limit on the indemnification
    provisions, into its equitable allocation. (App. at 383.) It
    reached that conclusion because, in Beazer, we held that it was
    error for a district court to fail to incorporate the relevant
    parties’ mutual intent when entering a contract as part of its
    equitable 
    allocation. 412 F.3d at 448
    . In that case, the district
    court had failed to give “significant consideration” to the
    parties’ intent when equitably allocating CERCLA costs, 
    id., despite finding
    that both parties had intended that the
    defendant-seller “would not bear any environmental liability
    following the … sale,” 
    id. at 445.
    The district court had
    reasoned that, because the contract at issue did not
    “demonstrate[] a clear and unambiguous intent to transfer all
    CERCLA liability,” as required by the relevant state law, the
    parties’ intent to shift liability should be a subordinate factor to
    the “polluter pays” principle embedded in CERCLA. 
    Id. at 447-48.
    We said that the district court erred because the legal
    interpretation of the contract did not prevent the court from
    giving, as a matter of equity, significant consideration to “the
    intent of the parties, which [was] manifested by their actions
    and in the written agreement[.]” 
    Id. at 447.
    46
    Critical to our holding in Beazer was the fact that the
    district court had determined that both parties expressed a
    mutual intent to shift CERCLA liabilities following the
    relevant sale. It was only a nuanced application of state
    contract law that prevented the parties’ mutual intent from
    being enforced as a matter of law. Therefore, in that case,
    equity demanded that the district court give significant
    consideration to the parties’ shared intent. Here, in contrast,
    the District Court’s findings make clear that there was no
    mutual intent, as expressed by the written agreement or by the
    actions of both parties, to shift CERCLA liability following the
    sale of the North Plant. It was, at most, only Greenlease’s
    subjective intent to shed all CERCLA liability following the
    expiration of the three-year indemnification period. A party’s
    subjective intent to avoid liability, which contradicts the
    agreement at issue, should not be given significant
    consideration when equitably allocating environmental
    cleanup costs. Because it appears that the District Court here
    mistook Beazer to permit Greenlease’s subjective intent to be
    given substantial weight, its 5% equitable deduction in favor
    of Greenlease was an abuse of discretion.
    Nothing we have said here should be interpreted as
    altering the principle set out in Beazer that, as a matter of
    equity, trial courts can take into consideration “the intent of the
    parties … [as] manifested by their actions and in the written
    agreement[.]” 
    Id. at 447.
    But when the intent resulting in the
    equitable deduction is not shared by both parties and appears
    contrary to provisions of the contract, a district court must
    explain why, as a matter of equity, it is nevertheless appropriate
    to award an equitable deduction. Because we view the District
    Court as having misapplied Beazer, we remand for it to take a
    fresh look at whether it is appropriate, on the record before the
    47
    Court, to award Greenlease an equitable deduction premised
    on the contractual indemnification provisions.
    ii.   The 10% Property Value Increase
    Deduction
    The District Court concluded that a 10% equitable
    deduction in favor of Greenlease was appropriate because the
    North Plant’s value had increased since the remediation work
    transformed the site from being unsuitable for any productive
    purpose to being usable as a site for some commercial or
    industrial purposes. Although we agree with the District
    Court’s identification of the increased value of a remediated
    site as an appropriate equitable factor to consider when
    allocating cleanup costs, we cannot agree with its application
    of that principle here because the record did not contain any
    evidence concerning the fair market value of the North Plant,
    either before or after the remediation.
    If a landowner successfully seeks contribution from
    others for environmental cleanup costs, that owner should
    likely be required to share the benefits of any increase in value
    brought about by the cleanup. Courts have thus taken the
    increased market value of a remediated property into
    consideration when allocating response costs. See, e.g., Litgo
    N.J. Inc. v. Comm’r N.J. Dep’t of Envtl. Prot., 
    725 F.3d 369
    ,
    387 (3d Cir. 2013) (discussing the increased value of
    remediated land); Minyard Enters., Inc. v. Se. Chem. & Solvent
    Co., 
    184 F.3d 373
    , 387 (4th Cir. 1999) (directing a lower court
    to take into consideration “the fact that the [p]roperty may
    appreciate following its remediation”); Farmland Indus., Inc.
    v. Col. & E. R.R. Co., 
    944 F. Supp. 1492
    , 1500-01 (D. Colo.
    1996) (concluding that “it would be inequitable” not to take
    48
    into account the fact that the former owner “garner[s] no
    tangible benefit from the cleanup of land it no longer owns”).
    Limiting a party’s ability to benefit from an economic windfall
    comports with “CERCLA’s general policy against double
    recovery[.]” 
    Litgo, 725 F.3d at 391
    .
    The problem with the District Court’s 10% deduction,
    then, was not in the decision to consider the increased market
    value of the North Plant as an equitable factor but rather in the
    application of that factor without any record evidence
    concerning the North Plant’s value. It is only appropriate to
    take increased value into consideration when there is evidence
    concerning an actual increase, such as proof of the fair market
    value of the property before and after the cleanup. See N.Y.
    State Elec. & Gas Corp. v. FirstEnergy Corp., 
    766 F.3d 212
    ,
    239 (2d Cir. 2014) (refusing to take into consideration “the
    economic benefit of the cleanup” because the party seeking the
    equitable deduction “fail[ed] to offer evidence about any
    increase in the value of the land”). Because the District Court
    may reopen the record for purposes already discussed, 
    see supra
    subsection III.B.3, it may also receive additional
    evidence concerning the fair market value of the North Plant
    site, both before and after the remediation activities, to allow it
    to come to a reasoned percentage reduction premised on the
    increased fair market value, if any, of the North Plant site.
    3. The District Court Did Not Err in Deciding
    that Ampco Is Neither Directly Nor
    Derivatively Liable for the Contamination at
    the North Plant.
    Trinity argues that the District Court erred in
    determining that Ampco was not liable for Greenlease’s share
    49
    of environmental cleanup costs. As Trinity sees it, the
    evidence it presented demonstrated genuine issues of material
    fact that were sufficient to entitle it to a trial on the question of
    Ampco’s liability. It advances two closely related theories to
    support its position that Ampco is legally responsible for
    Greenlease’s conduct at the North Plant. First, Trinity
    contends that Ampco is directly liable because it qualifies
    under CERCLA as an “operator” of the North Plant. Second,
    it asserts that, under a veil-piercing theory, Ampco is
    derivatively liable for Greenlease’s operation of the North
    Plant. Direct and derivative liability are two analytically
    distinct bases for holding a parent company liable for
    environmental cleanup costs resulting from a subsidiary’s
    conduct. United States v. Bestfoods, 
    524 U.S. 51
    , 67-68
    (1998).
    We review the District Court’s grant of summary
    judgment de novo. Shelton v. Bledsoe, 
    775 F.3d 554
    , 559 (3d
    Cir. 2015). Summary judgment is appropriate only if, after
    drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-moving
    party, there exists “no genuine dispute as to any material fact.”
    Shuker v. Smith & Nephew, PLC, 
    885 F.3d 760
    , 770 (3d Cir.
    2018) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a)). After our own
    independent assessment of the record evidence, we agree with
    the District Court that Ampco is not liable for Greenlease’s
    conduct at the North Plant, and we will therefore affirm the
    grant of summary judgment in favor of Ampco.
    i.   Ampco Is Not Directly Liable for
    Greenlease’s Share of Responsibility
    for Contamination at the North Plant.
    50
    CERCLA holds an “operator” of a facility “directly
    liable for the costs of cleaning up the pollution.” 
    Bestfoods, 524 U.S. at 65
    . Direct liability attaches to a parent company
    whose subsidiary owns a facility only if the “act of operating a
    corporate subsidiary’s facility is done on behalf of a parent
    corporation[.]” 
    Id. The term
    “operate” is read according to its
    “ordinary or natural meaning” to refer to “someone who directs
    the workings of, manages, or conducts the affairs of a facility.”
    
    Id. at 66
    (citation omitted). To be directly liable, “an operator
    must manage, direct, or conduct operations specifically related
    to pollution, that is, operations having to do with the leakage
    or disposal of hazardous waste, or decisions about compliance
    with environmental regulations.” 
    Id. at 66
    -67. Whether
    Ampco is directly liable, therefore, must be based on its
    “participation in the activities of the” North Plant. 
    Id. at 68.
    Trinity cannot hold Ampco liable for the environmental
    cleanup costs merely by showing that “dual officers and
    directors made policy decisions and supervised activities at the
    facility.” 
    Id. at 69-70.
    Direct liability will only exist if there
    is evidence that Ampco managed the day-to-day activities of
    the North Plant in a manner that exceeds “the interference that
    stems from the normal relationship between parent and
    subsidiary.” 
    Id. at 71.
    As the Supreme Court instructed in
    United States v. Bestfoods, the relevant inquiry for direct
    liability focuses on the relationship between the parent entity
    and the polluting facility, not the parent’s relationship to its
    subsidiary. 
    Id. at 68.
    The District Court rightly determined that the record
    here would not permit a reasonable fact-finder to conclude that
    Ampco’s involvement in the day-to-day operations of the
    North Plant exceeded “the normal relationship between parent
    and subsidiary,” 
    id. at 71,
    in a manner that would support
    51
    holding Ampco directly liable for Greenlease’s conduct. The
    undisputed facts establish, rather, that “[Greenlease]
    employees were responsible for all day-to-day operations at the
    North Plant, including any waste disposal, waste handling,
    painting, abrasive blasting, welding, and fabrication
    operations.” (App. 81-82.) Greenlease employees, not Ampco
    employees, coordinated disposal with outside contractors and
    communicated with PADEP on environmental matters. In fact,
    Ampco “did not employ any engineers or persons with
    technical experience in manufacturing that could make
    decisions for [Greenlease] with respect to environmental
    compliance or waste management.” (App. at 82.) Instead,
    “Ampco employed only a professional staff, such as
    accountants, actuaries, and lawyers[.]” (App. at 82.) Helping
    with administrative work is consistent with a typical parent-
    subsidiary relationship, and certainly does not establish
    Ampco’s direct involvement with the North Plant, which
    Bestfoods demands to hold a parent directly liable for
    environmental cleanup costs.
    Trinity maintains that Ampco crossed the line into
    operating the North Plant. According to Trinity, Ampco did so
    through individuals who advised Greenlease with regard to
    environmental laws and regulations, monitored Greenlease’s
    activities, provided Greenlease with legal advice regarding
    compliance with environmental laws, and were involved with
    Greenlease’s plans to increase the North Plant’s production
    capacity and to modernize its operations. Trinity does not,
    however, explain how any of those activities, even if one
    accepts Trinity’s take on the evidence, turns Ampco’s
    supervision of Greenlease into anything other than a typical
    parent-subsidiary relationship. Bestfoods makes clear that
    “[a]ctivities that involve the facility but which are consistent
    52
    with the parent’s investor status, such as monitoring of the
    subsidiary’s performance, supervision of the subsidiary’s
    finance and capital budget decisions, and articulation of
    general policies and procedures, should not give rise to direct
    
    liability.”22 524 U.S. at 72
    (citation omitted). That the policies
    Ampco advised on may have included environmental issues
    does not, on this record, change the calculus.
    Accordingly, we agree with the District Court’s
    conclusion that Ampco’s actions with respect to the North
    Plant did not fall outside the bounds of typical “parental
    oversight of a subsidiary’s facility,” 
    id., and hence
    are not a
    basis for direct liability.
    22
    Trinity argues that “substantial factual similarities”
    between Bestfoods and the facts here support its argument that
    Ampco is directly liable for Greenlease’s operation of the
    North Plant. (Trinity Opening Br. at 78.) It contends that
    “[e]very fact referenced by the Supreme Court in Bestfoods has
    a parallel in this case.” (Trinity Reply Br. at 20.) We disagree.
    In Bestfoods, the Supreme Court vacated a judgment in favor
    of a parent corporation because one of its employees “played a
    conspicuous part in dealing with the toxic risks emanating from
    the operation of the [subsidiary’s] 
    plant.” 524 U.S. at 72
    .
    Here, by contrast, Trinity has not pointed to record evidence
    that any officer, director, or employee of Ampco played a
    significant, let alone conspicuous, role in the operation of the
    North Plant.
    53
    ii.   Ampco Is Not Derivatively Liable for
    Greenlease’s Share of Responsibility.
    A parent corporation can be held derivatively liable
    under CERCLA for its subsidiary’s actions “only when[] the
    corporate veil may be pierced[.]” 
    Id. at 63.
    And “the corporate
    veil may be pierced” only in extraordinary circumstances, such
    as when “the corporate form would otherwise be misused to
    accomplish certain wrongful purposes[.]” 
    Id. at 62;
    see also
    Wedner v. Unemp’t Comp. Bd. of Review, 
    296 A.2d 792
    , 794
    (Pa. 1972) (“The corporate entity or personality will be
    disregarded [o]nly when the entity is used to defeat public
    convenience, justify wrong, protect fraud or defend crime.”
    (citation omitted)). In such circumstances, the law permits a
    subsidiary to be deemed an “alter ego” of its parent so that the
    parent can be held liable for the actions of its subsidiary.
    Pearson v. Component Tech. Corp., 
    247 F.3d 471
    , 484 (3d Cir.
    2001). Piercing the corporate veil is a limited exception to the
    “general principle of corporate law deeply ingrained in our
    economic and legal systems that a parent corporation … is not
    liable for the acts of its subsidiaries.” 
    Bestfoods, 524 U.S. at 61
    (internal quotation marks and citations omitted); see also
    Lumax Indus., Inc. v. Aultman, 
    669 A.2d 893
    , 895 (Pa. 1995)
    (“[T]here is a strong presumption in Pennsylvania against
    piercing the corporate veil.”).
    Trinity seeks to use both federal law and state law to
    pierce the corporate veil. The federal law principles we have
    articulated for when a subsidiary is merely an alter ego of its
    parent are substantially similar to the principles set forth in
    Pennsylvania case law. Our analysis of both, therefore, can
    largely proceed in tandem, though we do specifically note
    Trinity’s state law-specific arguments. Under either theory,
    54
    Trinity has failed to adduce sufficient evidence to create a
    triable issue of fact.
    We have identified several factors helpful in
    determining whether, as a matter of federal common law, a
    subsidiary is merely an alter ego of its parent. Those factors
    include “gross undercapitalization, failure to observe corporate
    formalities, nonpayment of dividends, insolvency of
    [subsidiary] corporation, siphoning of funds from the
    [subsidiary] corporation by the dominant stockholder,
    nonfunctioning of officers and directors, absence of corporate
    records, and whether the corporation is merely a façade for the
    operations of the dominant stockholder.” 
    Pearson, 247 F.3d at 484-85
    .23 No single factor is dispositive, and we consider
    whether veil piercing is appropriate in light of the totality of
    the circumstances. Cf. Trs. of Nat’l Elevator Indus. Pension,
    Health Benefit & Educ. Funds v. Lutyk, 
    332 F.3d 188
    , 194 (3d
    Cir. 2003) (explaining that the alter ego test factors do not
    comprise “a rigid test”); Am. Bell Inc. v. Fed’n of Tel. Workers
    of Pa., 
    736 F.2d 879
    , 887 (3d Cir. 1984) (requiring “specific,
    unusual circumstances” before piercing the corporate veil
    (citation omitted)).24
    23
    Factors considered by Pennsylvania state courts
    include “undercapitalization, failure to adhere to corporate
    formalities, substantial intermingling of corporate and personal
    affairs and use of the corporate form to perpetrate a fraud.”
    
    Lumax, 669 A.2d at 895
    .
    24
    See also Advanced Tel. Sys., Inc. v. Com-Net Prof’l
    Mobile Radio, LLC, 
    846 A.2d 1264
    , 1281 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2004)
    (looking to the “totality of circumstances” when conducting
    corporate veil piercing analysis).
    55
    Proving that a corporation is merely an alter ego is a
    burden that “is notoriously difficult for plaintiffs to meet.”
    
    Pearson, 247 F.3d at 485
    . “[I]n order to succeed on
    an alter ego theory of liability, plaintiffs must essentially
    demonstrate that in all aspects of the business, the two
    corporations actually functioned as a single entity and should
    be treated as such.” Id.25 Under our precedent, the basis for
    piercing the corporate veil must be “shown by clear and
    convincing evidence.” 
    Lutyk, 332 F.3d at 192
    (quoting Kaplan
    v. First Options of Chi., Inc., 
    19 F.3d 1503
    , 1522 (3d Cir.
    1994)).26
    25
    See also E. Minerals & Chem. Co. v. Mahan, 
    225 F.3d 330
    , 333 n.6 (3d Cir. 2000) (explaining that Pennsylvania
    law “require[s] a threshold showing that the controlled
    corporation acted robot- or puppet-like in mechanical response
    to the controller’s tugs on its strings or pressure on its buttons”
    before allowing a plaintiff to pierce the corporate veil (citation
    omitted)); Culbreth v. Amosa (Pty) Ltd., 
    898 F.2d 13
    , 14 (3d
    Cir. 1990) (interpreting Pennsylvania law to require that “the
    party seeking to pierce the corporate veil on an alter-ego theory
    establish[] that the controlling corporation wholly ignored the
    separate status of the controlled corporation and so dominated
    and controlled its affairs that its separate existence was a mere
    sham”).
    26
    Trinity presents three arguments for why the District
    Court erred by applying the clear and convincing evidence
    standard to its alter-ego analysis: that it is always improper for
    a district court to apply that standard to a motion for summary
    judgment, that federal law does not incorporate the clear and
    56
    Trinity appears to agree that most of the traditional
    factors we look to when determining whether to pierce the
    corporate veil are either inapplicable to this case or favor
    Ampco. Its primary arguments for piercing the corporate veil
    are that “Greenlease became undercapitalized when Ampco
    convincing standard when the plaintiff does not allege fraud,
    and that Pennsylvania applies a preponderance of the evidence
    standard to its alter-ego analysis.
    First, Trinity is incorrect as a matter of law that “under
    no circumstances” is a clear and convincing standard
    “appropriate for summary judgment purposes.” (Trinity
    Opening Br. at 68.) “[T]he determination of whether a given
    factual dispute requires submission to a jury must be guided by
    the substantive evidentiary standards that apply to the case.”
    Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 255 (1986).
    “Consequently, where the clear and convincing evidence
    standard applies, the trial judge [at summary judgment] must
    inquire whether the evidence presented is such that a jury
    applying that evidentiary standard could find only for one
    side.” Justofin v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 
    372 F.3d 517
    , 522 (3d
    Cir. 2004). Second, our precedent is clear, as a matter of
    federal common law in this Circuit, that “[b]ecause alter ego is
    akin to and has elements of fraud theory, … it … must be
    shown by clear and convincing evidence.” 
    Lutyk, 332 F.3d at 192
    (citation omitted). Trinity has not presented any
    compelling argument to revisit that longstanding proposition.
    Third, we do not need to address the standard of proof we think
    Pennsylvania applies to its alter-ego analysis because, whether
    we apply a preponderance of the evidence standard or a clear
    and convincing evidence standard to the state law analysis, our
    ultimate conclusion is the same – no reasonable fact-finder
    could justify piercing the corporate veil on this record.
    57
    siphoned off Greenlease’s assets,” that “Ampco and
    Greenlease’s interactions exceeded norms that characterize
    parent/subsidiary relationships,” (Trinity Opening Br. at 74),
    that the equities tilt in its favor under Pennsylvania’s alter-ego
    test, and that public policy favors holding Ampco responsible.
    a. Greenlease      Was    Not
    Undercapitalized and Ampco
    Did Not Siphon Funds From
    Greenlease.
    Trinity argues that Greenlease’s issuing to Ampco some
    $50 million dollars in dividends in the years following the sale
    of the North Plant, leaving only $250,000 in reserve for
    liabilities, favors piercing the corporate veil. But “the inquiry
    into corporate capitalization is most relevant for the inference
    it provides into whether the corporation was established to
    defraud its creditors or [an]other improper purpose such as
    avoiding the risks known to be attendant to a type of business.”
    
    Lutyk, 332 F.3d at 197
    . There is no basis in the record to
    suggest that Greenlease was undercapitalized while operating
    the North Plant. Instead, Trinity suggests only that Greenlease
    lacked funds after Greenlease’s operations of the North Plant
    had effectively stopped. That is of “little relevancy to
    determining whether piercing the corporate veil [is] justified
    here.” 
    Id. There is
    also no evidence that Greenlease issued
    dividends to Ampco with awareness of its liability to Trinity or
    to escape subsequent liability. See Zubik v. Zubik, 
    384 F.2d 267
    , 273 (3d Cir. 1967) (“Unless done deliberately, with
    specific intent to escape liability for a specific tort or class of
    torts, the cause of justice does not require disregarding the
    58
    corporate entity.”). As the District Court noted, “it would be
    unreasonable for Ampco to leave Greenlease’s earnings from
    the sale of the North Plant in an account when at the time the
    dividends were issued Greenlease was a nonoperating
    company with no known liabilities.” (App. 91 (emphasis
    removed).)
    b. Greenlease and Ampco’s
    Relationship Was a Typical
    Parent-Subsidiary
    Relationship.
    Trinity emphasizes that there was significant overlap
    between the boards of Ampco and Greenlease and argues that
    Ampco dominated Greenlease to an unusual extent. But
    “duplication of some or all of the directors or executive
    officers” is not fatal to maintaining legally distinct corporate
    forms. 
    Bestfoods, 524 U.S. at 62
    (citation omitted); see also
    Am. 
    Bell, 736 F.2d at 887
    (noting that “there must be specific,
    unusual circumstances” to justify veil piercing, and mere
    control and participation in management is inadequate).
    Greenlease ran the North Plant and hired all of the employees
    on the ground. Although Ampco was required to approve large
    decisions, Greenlease generally functioned with autonomy on
    decisions     concerning      manufacturing,     environmental
    compliance, and disposal of waste. We have already said and
    now repeat that the District Court rightly determined that the
    record simply does not support Trinity’s position that
    Greenlease’s relationship with Ampco was materially different
    than a normal parent-subsidiary relationship.
    59
    c. Trinity Cannot Pierce the
    Corporate     Veil  Under
    Pennsylvania Law.
    Trinity argues that the District Court erred by
    disregarding the “equitable underpinnings” of Pennsylvania’s
    alter-ego framework. (Trinity Reply Br. at 6.) It maintains that
    Pennsylvania disregards the legal fiction of separate corporate
    entities “whenever justice or public policy demand[s]” it.
    (Trinity Reply Br. at 7 (quoting Ashley v. Ashley, 
    393 A.2d 637
    ,
    641 (Pa. 1978).) According to Trinity, permitting Ampco to
    reap the benefits of the over $50 million in dividends from
    Greenlease without being held accountable for Greenlease’s
    conduct is an injustice.         But Trinity overlooks that
    Pennsylvania requires a plaintiff seeking to pierce the
    corporate veil to make “a threshold showing that the controlled
    corporation acted robot- or puppet-like in mechanical
    response” to the controlling shareholder’s demands. E.
    Minerals & Chem. Co. v. Mahan, 
    225 F.3d 330
    , 333 n.6 (3d
    Cir. 2000) (citation omitted). Trinity has not made that
    showing here.
    Pennsylvania law is also clear that courts are not to
    disregard the legal fiction of separate corporate entities if it
    would render “the theory of the corporate entity … useless.”
    
    Ashley, 393 A.2d at 641
    ; see also 
    Wedner, 296 A.2d at 795
    (“Care should be taken on all occasions to avoid making the
    entire theory of the corporate entity … useless.” (internal
    quotation marks omitted) (quoting 
    Zubik, 384 F.2d at 273
    )).
    To permit Trinity to pierce the corporate veil in this instance,
    in the face of all the objective criteria favoring Ampco, would,
    in essence, result in rendering useless Ampco’s legitimate use
    of the corporate form when setting up Greenlease as a
    60
    subsidiary. The record is devoid of evidence that Ampco
    misused separate corporate entities for some nefarious
    purpose. To pierce the corporate veil would thus fly in the face
    of Pennsylvania’s “strong presumption … against piercing the
    corporate veil.” 
    Lumax, 669 A.2d at 895
    .
    d. Public Policy Considerations
    Do Not Favor Trinity.
    Finally, Trinity argues that the District Court failed to
    consider public policy justifications for piercing the corporate
    veil to ensure that the “polluter pays.” (Trinity Opening Br. at
    74.)     As discussed above, however, both federal and
    Pennsylvania law favor maintaining the legal fiction of
    separate corporate entities. Because the evidence does not
    suggest that there was fraud or an attempt to use a corporate
    façade as an alter ego, public policy first favors upholding the
    integrity of the corporate form. Trinity has not presented any
    public policy consideration sufficiently compelling to
    overcome the strong presumption against veil piercing.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm in part but will
    vacate the District Court’s cost allocation determination and
    remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    61
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 16-1994

Citation Numbers: 903 F.3d 333

Filed Date: 9/11/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

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