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Crouzet v. First Baptist Church of Stonington

Conn. App. Ct.August 18, 2020No. AC42069Cited 1 time

Case Details

Judge(s)
Lavine; Prescott; Bright
Status
Published
Procedural Posture
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Excerpt

The plaintiff property owner sought to recover damages from the defendants, two churches, for alleged oil contamination of his property. Inspections by the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection revealed the presence of fuel oil in the soil and in the groundwater of the plaintiff's property. The department's report further indicated that the source of the fuel oil originated from an underground oil tank that had been removed from the defendants' property, but the report could not rule out a secondary source of oil contamination originating from the plaintiff's property. Although the defendants paid for some environmental remedia- tion of the plaintiff's property pursuant to a contract, they declined to pay for additional remediation, despite recommendations by the department and the plaintiff's consultant that such additional remediation was neces- sary. During a trial to the court, the plaintiff and the defendants offered competing expert testimony as to the cause of the oil contamination that existed on the plaintiff's property, including potential sources of the contamination other than the defendants' underground storage tank. The trial court expressly rejected the testimony of several expert wit- nesses as not credible. The trial court subsequently concluded that the defendants demonstrated that there was a secondary source of the oil contamination of the plaintiff's property and, therefore, the plaintiff failed to prove his allegations that the defendants caused the pollution beneath the plaintiff's residence. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of the defendants, and the plaintiff appealed to this court, claiming that the court's determination that there was a secondary source of oil contamination in his basement was clearly erroneous and that the court's decision was based on speculation and was legally unsound. Held that the trial court improperly rendered judgment in favor of the defendants, as there was no credible evidence to support th

What This Ruling Means

# Crouzet v. First Baptist Church of Stonington ## What Happened A property owner discovered fuel oil contamination in his soil and groundwater. Testing by environmental officials traced the pollution to an underground oil tank that had been removed from nearby church property. The property owner sued two churches, seeking money to cover the damage to his land. ## What the Court Decided The court ruled in favor of the churches. The defendant won the case, and no damages were awarded to the property owner. ## Why This Matters for Workers While this case primarily involves property damage rather than employment issues, it illustrates an important principle: organizations (including religious institutions) cannot be held financially responsible for environmental harm without clear proof they caused it. The court found insufficient evidence directly linking the churches to the contamination. For workers employed by these organizations, this decision means employers may face reduced liability in certain situations, which could affect workplace safety standards and environmental protections on employer property.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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