Are Property Owners Liable for an Oil Release on Their Property Even if it Occurred Before They Owned the Property?

 

             

Rhode Island’s penchant for strict liability for releases of environmental contaminants appears to be getting even stricter.

A recent Superior Court decision just held that a property owner who owned property contaminated prior to its ownership was liable for remediation under the Oil Pollution Control Act, R.I. Gen. Laws 46-12.5-1 et seq. (the  "Act”), since continued leaching of oil beneath the surface constituted a discharge under the Act. Power Test Realty Company Limited Partnership v. Sullivan, 2011 R.I. Super. LEXIS 118.

The Act defines “discharge” as “any spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying, releasing, injecting, escaping, leaching, dumping or disposing into the environment”. R.I. Gen. Laws 46-12.5-1(i). All those words seem pretty active, like you have to do something, except that pesky work “leaching”. That was the word relied on by the Department of Environmental Management (DEM) hearing officer in finding the property owner liable for the clean-up, not to mention a hefty $50,000 penalty.

The hearing officer’s decision was upheld by the Superior Court.

But did the General Assembly, in passing the Act, and using all those active-sounding words, like spilling, pumping, pouring, emptying, etc., really mean by including the word “leaching” to turn the Act into a strict liability statute? Under that reading, a property owner is liable for remediation simply by virtue of owning property contaminated by someone else before they owned it.

Of course, we have one of those strict liability statutes in Rhode Island, the Industrial Property Remediation and Reuse Act, R.I. Gen. Laws 23-19.14-1 et seq., which applies strict liability to property contamination, meaning that if you purchase property later found to have been contaminated before your period of ownership, you nevertheless are still obligated to clean it up, with few and narrow exceptions, by virtue of your status as the property owner.

That statute, however, excludes petroleum, based as it is on the federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. 9601 et seq., which also has a petroleum exclusion.

Even the Oil Pollution Control Regulations, written by DEM, do not sound like they are targeting passive activity. Oil Pollution Control Regulation Rule 6(a) provides that “[n]o person shall place oil or pollutants into the waters or land of the State or in a location where they are likely to enter the waters of the State…”.

Conventional wisdom, I believe, was that oil contamination under the Oil Pollution Control Act did not carry with it the same strict liability as would be found under the Industrial Property Remediation and Reuse Act for non-petroleum contaminants.

As of this writing, the order has not issued in this case, so the appeal period has not begun to run and we do not know if this decision is going to be appealed.

But what we do know is that there is enough potential environmental risk in the ownership of real estate that you can’t afford to be too careful in doing due diligence before you buy property.

If you haven’t done so already, you may want to check out the two White Papers available on this website. One focuses on environmental due diligence in Rhode Island and the other addresses a comprehensive checklist for environmental and real estate issues in a real estate purchase transaction.

And let’s keep an eye on whether or not this particular decision is going to be appealed to the Rhode Island Supreme Court.

 

EPA'S ALL APPROPRIATE INQUIRIES RULE: WHY IT MAY BE INAPPROPRIATE FOR YOUR TRANSACTION

 

In preparing to give a seminar on environmental issues in real estate and business transactions at the upcoming Rhode Island Bar Association Annual Meeting, I decided I had to address EPA’s rule establishing what constitutes all appropriate inquiries (AAI) for property acquisitions, given its importance in claiming defenses to liability under the federal Superfund statute.

In doing so, I knew I would have to spend almost as much time discussing why simply following the rule may not result in adequate inquiries for many types of transactions.

Importance of the Rule

The final rule promulgated by the EPA became effective November 1, 2006, 40 CFR Part 312, and established standards for what constitutes a satisfactory investigation of real estate prior to its purchase for purposes of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA), 42 U.S.C 9601 et seq., also known as the Federal Superfund Law.

The importance of the All Appropriate Inquiries Rule (AAI Rule) is that it allows a property owner to qualify for certain defenses under CERCLA, such as the innocent landowner defense and the contiguous property owner defense, as well as to qualify to be a bona fide prospective purchaser (BFP). In the first two instances, if the investigation shows no contamination, the prospective purchaser can acquire the property and qualify to assert the defenses as to contaminants covered by CERCLA if subsequently discovered. Similarly, it allows a prospective purchaser to qualify as a BFP to acquire contaminated property under the statute.

Following the AAI Rule is also required if one seeks to use brownfields grant funds to address contamination on a site.

What the Rule Requires

The Rule establishes a number of requirements, including

  •      Qualifications (education and experience) for those conducting the investigation
  •       Requirements for federal, state, local and tribal records review
  •       Visual inspection of the property
  •       Interviews with owners, operators, and occupants
  •      Review historical sources of information
  •      Search for environmental clean-up liens
  •      Assessment of purchase price to fair market value if property not contaminated
  •      Identification of missing data gaps

 Under the AAI Rule the inquiries must be conducted within one year of acquisition, and certain information must be refreshed or updated after 180 days.

The standards for inquiry are met by two site assessment protocols adopted by the American Society of Testing and Materials, ASTM E1527-05 and E2247-08 (for forestland and rural property).

Limits of AAI

So should a purchaser simply rely on doing an approved AAI site assessment in acquiring property, secure in the knowledge that it is learning everything it needs for a thorough environmental due diligence inquiry.

The answer is “No”!

The reason is that the AAI requirements do not include a number of inquiries that a prudent purchaser may  want to make. These include but are not limited to matters pertaining to

  •      Asbestos
  •      Wetlands
  •      Lead
  •      PCBs
  •      Mold and indoor air quality
  •      Radon
  •      Health and Safety
  •      Indian artifacts and cultural resources

An environmental site assessment should be tailored to the specific transaction and the information a purchaser needs to discover about a property. This will take into consideration a number of factors, including whether an ongoing business operation is being purchased, whether the deal is a stock acquisition or an asset acquisition, whether the site is known to be environmentally-impacted, whether construction is anticipated on the site, etc.

The Bottom Line

Depending on your circumstances and your need for CERCLA defenses, you certainly may want to include the AAI considerations, but it may well not be the most APPROPRIATE inquiry nor ALL the inquiry you need to make.