Quick v. Shell Oil Company ( 2010 )


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  •                                    No. 3–09–0987
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    Filed September 22, 2010
    IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    THIRD DISTRICT
    A.D., 2010
    EDITH QUICK, LISA QUICK JEFFREY            ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
    QUICK, CATHY QUICK, CHARLES QUICK, )         for the 21st Judicial Circuit,
    JR., LISA KIBBONS, CARL KIBBONS,           ) Kankakee County, Illinois
    EVAN KIBBONS, EDITH BUCKLEY,               )
    GREGORY BUCKLEY, ELLEN BUCKLEY, )
    JOHN PANOZZO, guardian of MARGUERITE )
    PANOZZO, ANGELA BURGE,                     )
    CHRISTOPHER BURGE, and KENNETH             )
    CLARK,                                     )
    )
    Plaintiffs,                         )
    )
    v.                                  )
    )
    SHELL OIL COMPANY; SHELL                   )
    PIPELINE CORPORATION; and                  )   No. 01–L–147
    EQUILON PIPELINE COMPANY, LLC,             )
    )
    Defendants                          )
    )
    (Kyle L. Danhausen and Grant B. Danhausen, )
    Independent Co-executors of the Will of   )
    Martha J. Danhausen, deceased,             )
    )
    Class Members and                   )
    Claimants-Appellants;              )
    )
    THOMAS M. EWERT, Settlement                )
    Administrator,                             )  Honorable
    )  Gordon L. Lustfeldt,
    Appellee.)                          )  Judge, Presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE CARTER delivered the opinion of the court:
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    The Danhausen estate appeals from a decision of the trial court approving the distribution
    of funds from the settlement of a class action suit against Shell Oil Company and other defendants
    (collectively Shell). Thomas M. Ewert, the settlement administrator (Settlement Administrator),
    recommended that the Danhausen estate be awarded a total of $120,489. The Danhausen estate,
    however, claims it is entitled to $4,689,200. Class counsel has responded to the Danhausen
    estate’s arguments on appeal and contends that the trial court’s decision should be affirmed. We
    agree with class counsel and affirm the award approved by the trial court.
    FACTS
    The instant case arises out of a release of thousands of gallons of gasoline in November
    1988 from a Shell pipeline onto the Danhausen farm in Limestone Township, Kankakee County,
    Illinois. In 2001, suit was filed against Shell seeking damages for property damage and personal
    injuries allegedly caused by the gasoline release. In 2005, the case was removed to federal court,
    and two property damage subclasses were certified in January 2007. In re Methyl Tertiary Butyl
    Ether (“MTBE”) Products Liability Litigation, 
    241 F.R.D. 435
     (S.D.N.Y. 2007). In December
    2007, the federal court remanded the action to the Kankakee County circuit court after it was
    determined that the case had been improperly removed.
    On December 12, 2007, the parties filed a joint motion for preliminary approval of class
    settlement, which was granted. Notice was sent to the class members. The court held a hearing
    on final approval of the settlement on February 28, 2008. On March 26, 2008, the court entered
    an order certifying the class for purposes of settlement and granting final approval of the proposed
    settlement. The settlement agreement defined the class as “all current owners of real property in
    the Outer Area and Core Area, as defined on the map attached [to the settlement agreement], and
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    all people who resided or owned property within the Core Area from November 1, 1988, to the
    date of Final Approval.” The court found that the settlement was fair and reasonable. The
    settlement agreement provided a fund of $26 million to be distributed by a settlement
    administrator. Specifically, the fund was provided to:
    “reimburse Class Members within the Core Area for any and all damages
    they have claimed or may have claimed for any and all damages as a result of the
    release of MTBE and/or gasoline *** (including, but not limited to, claims for
    diminished property value, unreimbursed past and future costs of obtaining
    alternative water such as water bills or payment for bottled water, past and future
    lost rent, nuisance, past easements and access, costs for connections to water
    mains, investments in private wells and interference with quiet enjoyment of
    property), except for claims for personal injury, which are excluded from this
    Settlement.”
    In addition, the fund was to be distributed to provide class members in the Outer Area with an
    amount sufficient to test well water for methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE) contamination and to
    provide potable water if MTBE was detected in those wells. The settlement agreement also
    provided to connect residences in the Core Area to a public water system.
    The court appointed former Judge Thomas M. Ewert to administer the settlement. Under
    the settlement agreement, the Settlement Administrator shall decide whether a claimant submitted
    adequate proof to establish that he or she was a class member, the amount of each claim to be
    allowed, the time when payment of a claim shall be made, and, subject to court approval, the
    amount of the initial distribution and any reserve. There was no appeal of the court’s order
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    granting final approval of the settlement.
    On November 26, 2008, the Settlement Administrator filed a report of his findings and
    recommendations regarding the distribution of settlement funds and requested that the court order
    distribution accordingly. Regarding claims for diminished property values, the Settlement
    Administrator consulted a licensed real estate appraiser, Jay M. Heap. Heap concluded that the
    diminution in value of property in the Core Area linked to the 1988 gasoline spill was less than
    5%. The Settlement Administrator used the assessed valuation of improved property, using
    figures provided by the Kankakee County assessor’s office, to approximate the current market
    values of that property. For agricultural property, the Settlement Administrator determined that
    the assessed valuation of that property was not related to its market value. Heap concluded that
    the average value of agricultural property in Limestone Township was approximately $5,000 per
    acre, and the Settlement Administrator used that amount when determining the current market
    value for such property. The Settlement Administrator also concluded that the claimants who
    lived in the Core Area should be awarded $150 per year for each year they lived at a property in
    the Core Area since 1988 as recompense for nuisance and interference with quiet enjoyment.
    Those who lived in closest proximity to the spill, along 4000 W. Road, should be awarded an
    additional $250 per year for each year that they lived at that location.
    The Danhausen estate submitted a claim dated March 25, 2008. The Danhausen estate
    revoked its previous election to opt out of the settlement dated February 14, 2008. The claim
    listed eight different parcel numbers, broken into six tracts.
    Included in the record are copies of the Settlement Administrator’s calculation sheets on
    the claim submitted by the Danhausen estate for eight parcels of property. Five of the Danhausen
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    estate parcels were for agricultural land in the Core Area. The Settlement Administrator applied
    the $5,000-per-acre value to these parcels and calculated a total distribution for diminution in
    value of these parcels at $78,250.
    One claim was for a parcel that included a home in the Core Area that was also in close
    proximity to the spill. The distribution amount for that parcel included an award for diminution in
    value, the cost of bottled water, the future increased cost of water, and the cost of a lost well. In
    addition, the recommended distribution for this parcel included an award for nuisance calculated
    at $150 per year and at $250 per year. The total value of this claim was calculated at $28,382.
    The seventh claim by the Danhausen estate was for rental property. The value of this
    claim included diminution in value of the property, a lost well and nuisance calculated at $150 per
    year. The total value of this claim was $13,857. The eighth claim was denied because the
    property was in the Outer Area and did not have a well on it. The total value of the Danhausen
    estate’s claims was $120,489.
    On December 5, 2008, the Danhausen estate filed an objection to the recommendation of
    the Settlement Administrator. The Danhausen estate objected to the Settlement Administrator’s
    valuation of the farmland parcels at $5,000 per acre, claiming the Settlement Administrator did
    not apply the highest and best use when valuing these parcels because they were zoned residential
    rather than agricultural. The Danhausen estate also argued that it was inequitable to apply the
    same formula when valuing its claim as applied to other claimants because the spill occurred on
    the Danhausen estate’s property. The Danhausen estate claimed that the diminution in value of its
    property totaled $1,172,300 and claimed entitlement to an award of $3,516,900 for nuisance and
    interference with quiet enjoyment of its property. In total, the Danhausen estate claimed it was
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    entitled to $4,689,200. The Danhausen estate based its claim for diminution in value upon an
    appraisal conducted by real estate broker Richard F. Hansen.
    On December 16, 2008, the court entered an order establishing procedures for public
    hearings on objections by claimants to the recommendations of the Settlement Administrator. The
    court stated that any hearing would be conducted in accordance with the Administrative Review
    Law (735 ILCS 5/3–111 (West 2008)) and that it reserved the right to consider any equitable
    matters that were useful or required. The court further stated that there would be no discovery,
    no additional evidence would be presented at a hearing, and the burden of proof would be on the
    objector.
    Following a hearing on the objection filed by the Danhausen estate, on July 8, 2009, the
    court approved the recommended distribution by the Settlement Administrator. The court found
    that Shell had occupied a 40-acre tract of the Danhausen estate’s property since 1988 and had
    paid an undisclosed amount of rent to Ms. Danhausen and later to her estate. The court further
    found that a portion of that rent compensated the Danhausen estate for nuisance and interference
    with quiet enjoyment caused by Shell’s activities on that property. In addition, the court found
    that there was no evidence that Ms. Danhausen had ever made an attempt to subdivide the
    property for residential development or that it would have been economically feasible to do so.
    On August 6, 2009, the Danhausen estate filed a motion to reconsider, which was denied. The
    Danhausen estate then filed the instant appeal.
    ANALYSIS
    Before reaching the merits of this appeal, we must consider the proper standard of review.
    The Danhausen estate claims that we should treat this appeal as an administrative review of the
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    Settlement Administrator’s recommendation and utilize the manifest weight of the evidence
    standard. Class counsel, who has responded to this appeal, contends that we should treat this
    matter as an equity case and apply an abuse of discretion standard. We reject both of these
    arguments. Regardless of any statement by the trial court that it would employ a procedure like
    that of an administrative review, the recommendation of the Settlement Administrator was not a
    decision by an administrative agency. Article III of the Code of Civil Procedure does not apply
    here. See 735 ILCS 5/3–102 (West 2008). Additionally, distribution of the class settlement was
    not an equity proceeding.
    Rather, this was a settlement of a class action, and a class action is a statutory creature.
    735 ILCS 5/2–801 et seq. (West 2008). A court order approving the distribution of funds in a
    class action settlement is an outgrowth of the final approval of the settlement agreement. See 735
    ILCS 5/2–807(b) (West 2008). Indeed, it appears that a distribution plan is often included in a
    settlement agreement and approved as a part of it. See 735 ILCS 5/2–807(b) (West 2008); see,
    e.g., In re Ikon Office Solutions, Inc. Securities Litigation, 
    194 F.R.D. 166
     (E.D. Penn. 2000).
    We conclude, therefore, that the appropriate standard of review in this case is the standard applied
    to appeals of court orders approving a class action settlement. See In re “Agent Orange” Product
    Liability Litigation MDL No. 381, 
    818 F.2d 179
    , 181 (2d Cir. 1987) (allocation of class
    settlement reviewed for an abuse of discretion); Ikon Office Solutions, Inc., 194 F.R.D. at 184 (“
    ‘Approval of a plan of allocation of a settlement fund in a class action is “governed by the same
    standards of review applicable to approval of the settlement as a whole: the distribution plan must
    be fair, reasonable and adequate” ’ [Citations.] ”). In Illinois, decisions concerning final approval
    of class action settlements are reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Gowdey v. Commonwealth
    7
    Edison Co., 
    37 Ill. App. 3d 140
    , 149, 
    345 N.E.2d 785
    , 793 (1976); People ex rel. Wilcox v.
    Equity Funding Life Insurance Co., 
    61 Ill. 2d 303
    , 316, 
    335 N.E.2d 448
    , 455 (1975).
    On the merits, the Danhausen estate claims that the Settlement Administrator’s
    recommended award failed to include adequate compensation for the diminution in value of its
    property and for nuisance and interference with quiet enjoyment of the property. The Danhausen
    estate requests that the award approved by the trial court be set aside and that this court enter an
    award of $1,172,300 for diminution in value and $3,516,900 for nuisance and interference with
    quiet enjoyment. Class counsel maintains that the court order approving the Settlement
    Administrator’s recommended distribution should be affirmed.
    Generally, a decision of the trial court is an abuse of its discretion when the ruling is
    arbitrary, fanciful or unreasonable or when no reasonable person would take the same view.
    Ramirez v. Midway Moving & Storage, Inc., 
    378 Ill. App. 3d 51
    , 53, 
    880 N.E.2d 653
    , 656
    (2007). When evaluating the settlement of a class action, the court must determine whether the
    settlement agreement is fair, reasonable and adequate. Steinberg v. System Software Associates,
    Inc., 
    306 Ill. App. 3d 157
    , 169, 
    713 N.E.2d 709
    , 717 (1999). “A trial court’s approval of a
    settlement should not be overturned on appeal unless, taken as a whole, the settlement appears on
    its face so unfair as to preclude judicial approval.” City of Chicago v. Korshak, 
    206 Ill. App. 3d 968
    , 972, 
    565 N.E.2d 68
    , 70 (1990).
    In this case, the court approved the Settlement Administrator’s recommendation to
    distribute $120,489 of the settlement fund to the Danhausen estate. Regarding the award for
    diminution in value of the Danhausen estate property, the court found Heap’s appraisal to be
    worthy of greater weight than that of Hansen, due to Heap’s credentials and experience. We have
    8
    reviewed both Heap’s and Hansen’s appraisals and cannot find that the trial court’s decision in
    this regard was arbitrary, fanciful or unreasonable. In addition, considering the large number of
    claimants and the lengthy time period that has elapsed since the gasoline spill, we cannot find that
    the trial court’s decision to approve the Settlement Administrator’s use of a formulaic approach to
    approximate agricultural property values and the diminution in value of those pieces of property
    was unfair, unreasonable, or inadequate. Thus, the trial court’s decision to approve the
    Settlement Administrator’s award to the Danhausen estate for diminution in value was not an
    abuse of discretion.
    We also conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by approving the
    recommended distribution to the Danhausen estate for nuisance and interference with quiet
    enjoyment of its property. The Danhausen estate maintains it is entitled to more than $3 million
    for this claim. However, it does not provide any legal or factual support for its claim. On the
    other hand, the Settlement Administrator’s formula for compensating Core Area property owners
    for nuisance and interference with quiet enjoyment of their property, taken as a whole, was fair,
    reasonable and adequate. While it is undisputed that the gasoline spill occurred on the Danhausen
    estate’s property, it did not present adequate evidence that it was entitled to a larger distribution
    of the settlement fund for these damages.
    CONCLUSION
    We conclude that the proper standard of review in this matter is to determine whether the
    trial court abused its discretion by approving the recommended distribution from the settlement
    fund to the Danhausen estate. Utilizing this standard of review, we determine that the trial court
    did not abuse its discretion by approving the award as recommended by the Settlement
    9
    Administrator. Accordingly, the judgment of the Kankakee County circuit court is affirmed.
    Affirmed.
    SCHMIDT and MCDADE J. J. concurring.
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