Legislation
SECTION 27-1323
Liability exemptions and defenses
Environmental Conservation (ENV) CHAPTER 43-B, ARTICLE 27, TITLE 13
§ 27-1323. Liability exemptions and defenses.
1. Lender exemption. (a) For purposes of this title no lender shall
incur any liability from any statutory claims of the state as an owner
or operator of a site, or a person responsible for the disposal of a
hazardous waste at such site, provided such lender, without
participating in the management of such site, holds indicia of ownership
primarily to protect the lender's security interest in the site or, if
such lender did not participate in the management of such site prior to
a foreclosure on such site, notwithstanding that such lender:
(1) forecloses on such site; and
(2) after foreclosure, sells, releases (in the case of a lease finance
transaction), or liquidates such site, maintains business activities,
winds up operations, or takes any other measure to preserve, protect or
prepare such site prior to sale or disposition; provided, however, that
such lender shall take actions to sell, release (in the case of a lease
finance transaction), or otherwise divest itself of such site at the
earliest practicable, commercially reasonable time, on commercially
reasonable terms, taking into account market conditions and legal and
regulatory requirements.
(b) This exemption shall not apply to any lender that has caused or
contributed to the release or threatened release of a hazardous waste
from or onto the site, or to any lender that generated, transported, or
disposed of, arranged for, or that caused the generation,
transportation, or disposal of hazardous waste from or onto such site.
(c) For purposes of this section:
(1) The term "participating in management" means actually
participating in the management or operational affairs of a site and
does not include merely having the capacity to influence, or the
unexercised right to control, site operations.
(i) A lender who holds indicia of ownership primarily to protect a
security interest in such site shall be considered to participate in
management only if, while the borrower is in possession of such site
encumbered by the security interest, the lender:
(A) exercises decision making control over the environmental
compliance related to such site, such that the lender has undertaken
responsibility for the hazardous waste handling or disposal practices
related to such site; or
(B) exercises control at a level comparable to that of a manager of
such site, such that the lender has assumed or manifested
responsibility:
(I) for the overall management of such site encompassing day-to-day
decision making with respect to environmental compliance; or
(II) over all or substantially all of the operational functions,
excluding financial or administrative functions, of such site other than
the function of environmental compliance.
(ii) The term "participate in management" does not include:
(A) Performing an act or failing to act prior to the time at which a
security interest is created in a site;
(B) Holding a security interest or abandoning or releasing a security
interest;
(C) Including in the terms of an extension of credit, or in a contract
or security agreement relating to such extension, a covenant, warranty,
or other term or condition that relates to environmental compliance;
(D) Monitoring or enforcing the terms and conditions of the extension
of credit or security interest;
(E) Monitoring or undertaking one or more inspections of such site;
(F) Requiring a response action or other lawful means of addressing
the release or threatened release of a hazardous waste in connection
with such site prior to, during, or on the expiration of the term of the
extension of credit;
(G) Providing financial or other advice or counseling in an effort to
mitigate, prevent, or cure default or diminution in the value of such
site;
(H) Restructuring, renegotiating, or otherwise agreeing to alter the
terms and conditions of the extension of credit or security interest,
exercising forbearance;
(I) Exercising other remedies that may be available under applicable
law for the breach of a term or condition of the extension of credit or
security agreement; or
(J) Conducting a response action under 42 U.S.C. Section 9607(d) or
under the direction of an on-scene coordinator appointed under the
national contingency plan if the actions do not rise to the level of
participating in management within the meaning of this subparagraph.
(2) The term "extension of credit" includes a lease finance
transaction:
(i) In which the lessor does not initially select the leased site and
does not during the lease term control the daily operations or
maintenance of such site; or
(ii) That conforms with regulations issued by the appropriate federal
banking agency or the appropriate state bank supervisor (as those terms
are defined in section 3 of the federal deposit insurance act (12 U.S.C.
1813)) or with regulations issued by the national credit union
administration board, as appropriate.
(3) The term "financial or administrative function" includes a
function such as that of a credit manager, accounts payable officer,
accounts receivable officer, personnel manager, comptroller, or chief
financial officer, or a similar function.
(4) The terms "foreclosure" and "foreclose" mean, respectively,
acquiring and to acquire, a site through:
(i) Purchase at sale under a judgment or decree, power of sale, or
nonjudicial foreclosure sale;
(ii) A deed in lieu of foreclosure or similar conveyance from a
trustee;
(iii) Repossession if such site was security for an extension of
credit previously contracted;
(iv) Conveyance pursuant to an extension of credit previously
contracted, including the termination of a lease agreement; or
(v) Any other formal or informal manner by which the lender acquires,
for subsequent disposition, title to or possession of a site in order to
protect the lender's security interest.
(5) The term "lender" means:
(i) An insured depository institution as defined in section 3 of the
federal deposit insurance act (12 U.S.C 1813);
(ii) An insured credit union as defined in section 101 of the federal
credit union act (12 U.S.C. 1752);
(iii) A bank or association chartered under the farm credit act of
1971 (12 U.S.C. 2001 et seq.);
(iv) A leasing or trust company that is an affiliate of an insured
depository institution;
(v) Any person, including a successor or assignee of any such person,
that makes a bona fide extension of credit to or takes or acquires a
security interest from a nonaffiliated person;
(vi) The federal national mortgage association, the federal home loan
mortgage corporation, the federal agricultural mortgage corporation, or
any other entity that in a bona fide manner buys or sells loans or
interests in loans;
(vii) A person that insures or guarantees against a default in the
repayment of an extension of credit, or acts as a surety with respect to
an extension of credit, to a nonaffiliated person; and
(viii) A person that provides title insurance and that acquires a site
as a result of assignment or conveyance in the course of underwriting
claims and claims settlement.
(6) The term "operational function" includes a function such as that
of a site or plant manager, operations manager, chief operating officer,
or chief executive officer.
(7) The term "security interest" includes a right under a mortgage,
deed of trust, assignment, judgment, lien, pledge, security agreement,
factoring agreement, or lease, and any other right accruing to a person
to secure the repayment of money, the performance of a duty, or any
other obligation by a nonaffiliated person.
2. Municipal exemption. (a) For the purposes of this title no public
corporation shall incur any liability from any statutory claims of the
state as an owner or operator of a site, or a person responsible for the
disposal of a hazardous waste at such site, if such public corporation
acquired such site involuntarily, and such public corporation retained
such site without participating in the development of such site.
(b) This exemption shall not apply to any public corporation that has
caused or contributed to the release or threatened release of a
hazardous waste from or onto the site, or to any public corporation that
generated, transported, or disposed of, arranged for, or that caused the
generation, transportation, or disposal of hazardous waste, from or onto
the site.
(c) When used in this section:
(1) "Public corporation" means a public corporation as defined in
section sixty-five of the general construction law, a local public
authority, supervisory district, improvement district within a county,
city, town, or village, or Indian nation or tribe recognized by the
state or the United States with a reservation wholly or partly within
the boundaries of New York state, or any combination thereof.
(2) "Involuntary acquisition of ownership or control" includes but is
not limited to the following:
(i) Acquisitions by a public corporation in its sovereign capacity,
including but not limited to acquisitions pursuant to abandonment
proceedings or bequest;
(ii) Acquisitions by a public corporation, or its agent, acting as a
conservator or receiver pursuant to a clear and direct statutory mandate
or regulatory authority;
(iii) Acquisitions of assets through foreclosure and its equivalents,
or otherwise, by a public corporation in the course of administering a
loan, loan guarantee, tax lien, or tax forbearance agreement, or loan
insurance program; or
(iv) Acquisitions by a public corporation pursuant to seizure,
injunction, condemnation, or forfeiture authority; provided that such
ownership or control is not retained primarily for investment purposes.
(d) For the purpose of this section, the terms "foreclosure" and
"foreclose" mean, respectively, acquiring or to acquire a brownfield
site through:
(1) purchase at sale under a judgment or decree, power of sale, or
non-judicial foreclosure sale;
(2) a deed in lieu of foreclosure, or similar conveyance, or
abandonment from a person or trustee;
(3) conveyance pursuant to an extension of credit or tax forbearance
previously contracted; or
(4) any other formal or informal manner by which a person acquires,
for subsequent disposition, title to or possession of a site in order to
protect the security interest of the public corporation or lender.
(e) "Participating in development" means the carrying out, or causing
or permitting the carrying out, of any above-grade improvements to the
site or any other environmental investigation or remediation, except for
those improvements which are part of a site remedial program pursuant to
this article or in furtherance of site safety, such as fencing or
lighting, but does not include licensing, regulatory oversight, or the
mere capacity to regulate or influence, or the unexercised right to
control the operation of the property. For purposes of this section,
participating in development does not include:
(1) having the capacity to influence management of a site;
(2) having the unexercised right to control or to regulate the site or
operations thereof;
(3) holding, abandoning, or releasing a security interest or tax lien
on such site;
(4) including a condition relating to environmental compliance in a
contract, permit, license, or security agreement;
(5) monitoring or enforcing the terms and conditions of an agreement
or tax forbearance agreement;
(6) monitoring or undertaking one or more inspections of a site
including, but not limited to, boring test wells;
(7) exercising other remedies available under applicable laws;
(8) licensing, permitting, or granting permits, certificates of
occupancy and variances as allowed by law and/or regulation;
(9) applying for or participating in federal or state statutory
programs or benefits; or
(10) declining to take any of the actions described in subparagraphs
one through nine of this paragraph.
(f) Any public corporation that has taken possession of a site shall
notify the department of any release of hazardous waste within ten days
of obtaining actual knowledge of such release, unless a shorter notice
period is required under any other provision of law, in which case the
shorter notice period controls. Failure to notify the department within
the ten day or shorter notification period shall result in the loss of
the exemption set forth in this section.
3. Fiduciary liability cap. For the purpose of this title, liability
on the part of a fiduciary shall not exceed the assets held in the
fiduciary capacity if such person is not liable independently of such
person's ownership as a fiduciary or actions taken in a fiduciary
capacity including, but not limited to, the fiduciary's negligently
causing or contributing to the release or threatened release of
hazardous waste at such site.
(a) For purposes of this subdivision:
(1) the term "fiduciary" means a person acting for the benefit of
another party as a bona fide trustee; executor; administrator;
custodian; guardian of estates or guardian ad litem; receiver;
conservator; committee of estates of incapacitated person; personal
representative; trustee (including a successor to a trustee) under an
indenture agreement, trust agreement, lease, or similar financing
agreement, for debt securities, certificates of interest or certificates
of participation in debt securities, or other forms of indebtedness as
to which the trustee is not, in the capacity of trustee, the lender; or
representative in any other capacity that the department, after
providing public notice, determines to be similar to the various
capacities previously described in this paragraph; and does not include
either a person that is acting as a fiduciary with respect to a trust or
other fiduciary estate that was organized for the primary purpose of, or
is engaged in, actively carrying on a trade or business for profit,
unless the trust or other fiduciary estate was created as part of, or to
facilitate, one or more estate plans or because of the incapacity of a
natural person or a person that acquires ownership or control of a
property with the objective purpose of avoiding liability of the person
or any other person.
(2) the term "fiduciary capacity" means the capacity of a person in
holding title to a property, or otherwise having control of or an
interest in a property, pursuant to the exercise of the responsibilities
of the person as a fiduciary.
(b) Nothing in this subdivision affects the rights or immunities or
other defenses that are available under law that are applicable to a
person subject to this section; or creates any liability for a person or
a private right of action against a fiduciary or any other person.
(c) Nothing in this subdivision applies to a person if that person
acts in a capacity other than that of a fiduciary or in a beneficiary
capacity and in that capacity, directly or indirectly, benefits from a
trust or fiduciary relationship; or is a beneficiary and a fiduciary
with respect to the same fiduciary estate and, as a fiduciary, receives
benefits that exceed customary or reasonable compensation, and
incidental benefits, permitted under other applicable law.
(d) This subdivision does not preclude a claim under this chapter
against the assets of the estate or trust administered by the fiduciary;
or a nonemployee agent or independent contractor retained by a
fiduciary.
4. Affirmative defenses. (a) There shall be no liability under this
title for a person otherwise liable who can establish by a preponderance
of the evidence that the significant threat to the environment
attributable to hazardous waste disposed at an inactive hazardous waste
disposal site was caused solely by: (1) an act of God; (2) an act of
war; or (3) an act or omission of a third party other than an employee
or agent of such person, or than one whose act or omission occurs in
connection with a contractual relationship existing directly or
indirectly with such person (except where the sole contractual
arrangement arises from a published tariff and acceptance for carriage
by a common carrier or rail), if such person establishes by a
preponderance of the evidence that: (i) such person exercised due care
with respect to the hazardous waste concerned, taking into consideration
the characteristics of such hazardous waste, in light of all relevant
facts and circumstances, and (ii) took precautions against foreseeable
acts or omissions of any such third party and the consequences that
could foreseeably result from such acts or omissions; or any combination
of them.
(b) For purposes of this section, (1) the term "act of God" means an
unanticipated grave natural disaster or other natural phenomenon of an
exceptional, inevitable, and irresistible character, the effects of
which could not have been prevented or avoided by the exercise of due
care or foresight, (2) the term "contractual relationship" includes, but
is not limited to, land contracts, deeds, or other instruments
transferring title or possession, unless the real property on which the
site concerned is located was acquired by such person after the disposal
or placement of the hazardous waste on, in, or at such site, and such
person establishes one or more of the circumstances described in clause
(i), (ii), or (iii) of this subparagraph by a preponderance of the
evidence:
(i) At the time such person acquired the site, such person did not
know and had no reason to know that any hazardous waste which is the
subject of the significant threat determination was disposed of on, in,
or at the site; or
(ii) Such person is a government entity which acquired the site by
escheat, or through any other involuntary transfer or acquisition or
through the exercise of eminent domain authority by purchase or
condemnation; or
(iii) Such person acquired the site by inheritance or bequest. In
addition to establishing the foregoing, the person must establish that
he or she has satisfied the requirements of clauses (i) and (ii) of
subparagraph three of paragraph (a) of this subdivision, provides full
cooperation, assistance, and site access to the persons that are
authorized to conduct remedial actions at the site (including the
cooperation and access necessary for the installation, integrity,
operation, and maintenance of any complete or partial remedial action at
the site), is in compliance with any land use restrictions established
or relied on in connection with the remedial action at a site, and does
not impede the effectiveness or integrity of any institutional and/or
engineering control employed at the site in connection with a remedial
action.
(c)(1) To establish that the person had no reason to know of the
matter described in clause (i) of subparagraph two of paragraph (b) of
this subdivision, the person must demonstrate to a court that:
(i) on or before the date on which the person acquired the site, the
person carried out all appropriate inquiries, as provided in
subparagraphs two and four of this paragraph, into the previous
ownership and uses of the site in accordance with generally accepted
good commercial and customary standards and practices; and
(ii) the person took reasonable steps to:
(A) stop any continuing release;
(B) prevent any threatened future release; and
(C) prevent or limit any human, environmental, or natural resource
exposure to any previously released hazardous waste.
(2) Not later than one year after the effective date of this section,
the commissioner shall by regulation establish standards and practices
for the purpose of satisfying the requirement to carry out all
appropriate inquiries under subparagraph one of this paragraph.
(3) In promulgating regulations that establish the standards and
practices referred to in subparagraph two of this paragraph, the
commissioner shall include each of the following:
(i) the results of an inquiry by an environmental professional;
(ii) interviews with past and present owners, operators, and occupants
of the site for the purpose of gathering information regarding the
potential for contamination at the site;
(iii) reviews of historical sources, such as chain of title documents,
aerial photographs, building department records, and land use records,
to determine previous uses and occupancies of the real property since
the property was first developed;
(iv) searches for recorded environmental cleanup liens against the
site that are filed under federal, state, or local law;
(v) reviews of federal, state, and local government records, waste
disposal records, underground storage tank records, and hazardous waste
handling, generation, treatment, disposal, and spill records, concerning
contamination at or near the site;
(vi) visual inspections of the site and of adjoining properties;
(vii) specialized knowledge or experience on the part of the person;
(viii) the relationship of the purchase price to the value of the
property, if the property was not contaminated;
(ix) commonly known or reasonably ascertainable information about the
property;
(x) the degree of obviousness of the presence or likely presence of
contamination at the property, and the ability to detect the
contamination by appropriate investigation.
(4)(i) With respect to property purchased before May thirty-first,
nineteen hundred ninety-seven, in making a determination with respect to
a person described in subparagraph one of this paragraph a court shall
take into account:
(A) any specialized knowledge or experience on the part of the person;
(B) the relationship of the purchase price to the value of the
property, if the property was not contaminated;
(C) commonly known or reasonably ascertainable information about the
property;
(D) the obviousness of the presence or likely presence of
contamination at the property; and
(E) the ability of the person to detect the contamination by
appropriate inspection.
(ii) With respect to property purchased on or after May thirty-first,
nineteen hundred ninety-seven, and until the commissioner promulgates
the regulations described in subparagraph two of this paragraph, the
procedures of the American Society for Testing and Materials, including
the document known as "Standard E1527-97", entitled 'Standard Practice
for Environmental Site Assessment: Phase 1 Environmental Site Assessment
Process', shall satisfy the requirements in subparagraph one of this
paragraph.
(5) In the case of property for residential use or other similar use
purchased by a nongovernmental or noncommercial entity, a site
inspection and title search that reveal no basis for further
investigation shall be considered to satisfy the requirements of this
subparagraph.
(d) Nothing in this subdivision shall diminish the liability of any
previous owner or operator of the site who would otherwise be liable
under this title. Notwithstanding this subdivision, if such person
obtained actual knowledge of the release or threatened release of a
hazardous waste at the site when such person owned the site and then
subsequently transferred ownership of the site to another person without
disclosing such knowledge, such person shall be treated as a person
responsible for the disposal of hazardous waste at the site, and no
defense under this subdivision shall be available to such person.
Nothing in this subdivision shall affect the liability under this
section of a person who, by any act or omission, caused or contributed
to the release or threatened release of a hazardous waste which is the
subject of such proceeding relating to such site.
1. Lender exemption. (a) For purposes of this title no lender shall
incur any liability from any statutory claims of the state as an owner
or operator of a site, or a person responsible for the disposal of a
hazardous waste at such site, provided such lender, without
participating in the management of such site, holds indicia of ownership
primarily to protect the lender's security interest in the site or, if
such lender did not participate in the management of such site prior to
a foreclosure on such site, notwithstanding that such lender:
(1) forecloses on such site; and
(2) after foreclosure, sells, releases (in the case of a lease finance
transaction), or liquidates such site, maintains business activities,
winds up operations, or takes any other measure to preserve, protect or
prepare such site prior to sale or disposition; provided, however, that
such lender shall take actions to sell, release (in the case of a lease
finance transaction), or otherwise divest itself of such site at the
earliest practicable, commercially reasonable time, on commercially
reasonable terms, taking into account market conditions and legal and
regulatory requirements.
(b) This exemption shall not apply to any lender that has caused or
contributed to the release or threatened release of a hazardous waste
from or onto the site, or to any lender that generated, transported, or
disposed of, arranged for, or that caused the generation,
transportation, or disposal of hazardous waste from or onto such site.
(c) For purposes of this section:
(1) The term "participating in management" means actually
participating in the management or operational affairs of a site and
does not include merely having the capacity to influence, or the
unexercised right to control, site operations.
(i) A lender who holds indicia of ownership primarily to protect a
security interest in such site shall be considered to participate in
management only if, while the borrower is in possession of such site
encumbered by the security interest, the lender:
(A) exercises decision making control over the environmental
compliance related to such site, such that the lender has undertaken
responsibility for the hazardous waste handling or disposal practices
related to such site; or
(B) exercises control at a level comparable to that of a manager of
such site, such that the lender has assumed or manifested
responsibility:
(I) for the overall management of such site encompassing day-to-day
decision making with respect to environmental compliance; or
(II) over all or substantially all of the operational functions,
excluding financial or administrative functions, of such site other than
the function of environmental compliance.
(ii) The term "participate in management" does not include:
(A) Performing an act or failing to act prior to the time at which a
security interest is created in a site;
(B) Holding a security interest or abandoning or releasing a security
interest;
(C) Including in the terms of an extension of credit, or in a contract
or security agreement relating to such extension, a covenant, warranty,
or other term or condition that relates to environmental compliance;
(D) Monitoring or enforcing the terms and conditions of the extension
of credit or security interest;
(E) Monitoring or undertaking one or more inspections of such site;
(F) Requiring a response action or other lawful means of addressing
the release or threatened release of a hazardous waste in connection
with such site prior to, during, or on the expiration of the term of the
extension of credit;
(G) Providing financial or other advice or counseling in an effort to
mitigate, prevent, or cure default or diminution in the value of such
site;
(H) Restructuring, renegotiating, or otherwise agreeing to alter the
terms and conditions of the extension of credit or security interest,
exercising forbearance;
(I) Exercising other remedies that may be available under applicable
law for the breach of a term or condition of the extension of credit or
security agreement; or
(J) Conducting a response action under 42 U.S.C. Section 9607(d) or
under the direction of an on-scene coordinator appointed under the
national contingency plan if the actions do not rise to the level of
participating in management within the meaning of this subparagraph.
(2) The term "extension of credit" includes a lease finance
transaction:
(i) In which the lessor does not initially select the leased site and
does not during the lease term control the daily operations or
maintenance of such site; or
(ii) That conforms with regulations issued by the appropriate federal
banking agency or the appropriate state bank supervisor (as those terms
are defined in section 3 of the federal deposit insurance act (12 U.S.C.
1813)) or with regulations issued by the national credit union
administration board, as appropriate.
(3) The term "financial or administrative function" includes a
function such as that of a credit manager, accounts payable officer,
accounts receivable officer, personnel manager, comptroller, or chief
financial officer, or a similar function.
(4) The terms "foreclosure" and "foreclose" mean, respectively,
acquiring and to acquire, a site through:
(i) Purchase at sale under a judgment or decree, power of sale, or
nonjudicial foreclosure sale;
(ii) A deed in lieu of foreclosure or similar conveyance from a
trustee;
(iii) Repossession if such site was security for an extension of
credit previously contracted;
(iv) Conveyance pursuant to an extension of credit previously
contracted, including the termination of a lease agreement; or
(v) Any other formal or informal manner by which the lender acquires,
for subsequent disposition, title to or possession of a site in order to
protect the lender's security interest.
(5) The term "lender" means:
(i) An insured depository institution as defined in section 3 of the
federal deposit insurance act (12 U.S.C 1813);
(ii) An insured credit union as defined in section 101 of the federal
credit union act (12 U.S.C. 1752);
(iii) A bank or association chartered under the farm credit act of
1971 (12 U.S.C. 2001 et seq.);
(iv) A leasing or trust company that is an affiliate of an insured
depository institution;
(v) Any person, including a successor or assignee of any such person,
that makes a bona fide extension of credit to or takes or acquires a
security interest from a nonaffiliated person;
(vi) The federal national mortgage association, the federal home loan
mortgage corporation, the federal agricultural mortgage corporation, or
any other entity that in a bona fide manner buys or sells loans or
interests in loans;
(vii) A person that insures or guarantees against a default in the
repayment of an extension of credit, or acts as a surety with respect to
an extension of credit, to a nonaffiliated person; and
(viii) A person that provides title insurance and that acquires a site
as a result of assignment or conveyance in the course of underwriting
claims and claims settlement.
(6) The term "operational function" includes a function such as that
of a site or plant manager, operations manager, chief operating officer,
or chief executive officer.
(7) The term "security interest" includes a right under a mortgage,
deed of trust, assignment, judgment, lien, pledge, security agreement,
factoring agreement, or lease, and any other right accruing to a person
to secure the repayment of money, the performance of a duty, or any
other obligation by a nonaffiliated person.
2. Municipal exemption. (a) For the purposes of this title no public
corporation shall incur any liability from any statutory claims of the
state as an owner or operator of a site, or a person responsible for the
disposal of a hazardous waste at such site, if such public corporation
acquired such site involuntarily, and such public corporation retained
such site without participating in the development of such site.
(b) This exemption shall not apply to any public corporation that has
caused or contributed to the release or threatened release of a
hazardous waste from or onto the site, or to any public corporation that
generated, transported, or disposed of, arranged for, or that caused the
generation, transportation, or disposal of hazardous waste, from or onto
the site.
(c) When used in this section:
(1) "Public corporation" means a public corporation as defined in
section sixty-five of the general construction law, a local public
authority, supervisory district, improvement district within a county,
city, town, or village, or Indian nation or tribe recognized by the
state or the United States with a reservation wholly or partly within
the boundaries of New York state, or any combination thereof.
(2) "Involuntary acquisition of ownership or control" includes but is
not limited to the following:
(i) Acquisitions by a public corporation in its sovereign capacity,
including but not limited to acquisitions pursuant to abandonment
proceedings or bequest;
(ii) Acquisitions by a public corporation, or its agent, acting as a
conservator or receiver pursuant to a clear and direct statutory mandate
or regulatory authority;
(iii) Acquisitions of assets through foreclosure and its equivalents,
or otherwise, by a public corporation in the course of administering a
loan, loan guarantee, tax lien, or tax forbearance agreement, or loan
insurance program; or
(iv) Acquisitions by a public corporation pursuant to seizure,
injunction, condemnation, or forfeiture authority; provided that such
ownership or control is not retained primarily for investment purposes.
(d) For the purpose of this section, the terms "foreclosure" and
"foreclose" mean, respectively, acquiring or to acquire a brownfield
site through:
(1) purchase at sale under a judgment or decree, power of sale, or
non-judicial foreclosure sale;
(2) a deed in lieu of foreclosure, or similar conveyance, or
abandonment from a person or trustee;
(3) conveyance pursuant to an extension of credit or tax forbearance
previously contracted; or
(4) any other formal or informal manner by which a person acquires,
for subsequent disposition, title to or possession of a site in order to
protect the security interest of the public corporation or lender.
(e) "Participating in development" means the carrying out, or causing
or permitting the carrying out, of any above-grade improvements to the
site or any other environmental investigation or remediation, except for
those improvements which are part of a site remedial program pursuant to
this article or in furtherance of site safety, such as fencing or
lighting, but does not include licensing, regulatory oversight, or the
mere capacity to regulate or influence, or the unexercised right to
control the operation of the property. For purposes of this section,
participating in development does not include:
(1) having the capacity to influence management of a site;
(2) having the unexercised right to control or to regulate the site or
operations thereof;
(3) holding, abandoning, or releasing a security interest or tax lien
on such site;
(4) including a condition relating to environmental compliance in a
contract, permit, license, or security agreement;
(5) monitoring or enforcing the terms and conditions of an agreement
or tax forbearance agreement;
(6) monitoring or undertaking one or more inspections of a site
including, but not limited to, boring test wells;
(7) exercising other remedies available under applicable laws;
(8) licensing, permitting, or granting permits, certificates of
occupancy and variances as allowed by law and/or regulation;
(9) applying for or participating in federal or state statutory
programs or benefits; or
(10) declining to take any of the actions described in subparagraphs
one through nine of this paragraph.
(f) Any public corporation that has taken possession of a site shall
notify the department of any release of hazardous waste within ten days
of obtaining actual knowledge of such release, unless a shorter notice
period is required under any other provision of law, in which case the
shorter notice period controls. Failure to notify the department within
the ten day or shorter notification period shall result in the loss of
the exemption set forth in this section.
3. Fiduciary liability cap. For the purpose of this title, liability
on the part of a fiduciary shall not exceed the assets held in the
fiduciary capacity if such person is not liable independently of such
person's ownership as a fiduciary or actions taken in a fiduciary
capacity including, but not limited to, the fiduciary's negligently
causing or contributing to the release or threatened release of
hazardous waste at such site.
(a) For purposes of this subdivision:
(1) the term "fiduciary" means a person acting for the benefit of
another party as a bona fide trustee; executor; administrator;
custodian; guardian of estates or guardian ad litem; receiver;
conservator; committee of estates of incapacitated person; personal
representative; trustee (including a successor to a trustee) under an
indenture agreement, trust agreement, lease, or similar financing
agreement, for debt securities, certificates of interest or certificates
of participation in debt securities, or other forms of indebtedness as
to which the trustee is not, in the capacity of trustee, the lender; or
representative in any other capacity that the department, after
providing public notice, determines to be similar to the various
capacities previously described in this paragraph; and does not include
either a person that is acting as a fiduciary with respect to a trust or
other fiduciary estate that was organized for the primary purpose of, or
is engaged in, actively carrying on a trade or business for profit,
unless the trust or other fiduciary estate was created as part of, or to
facilitate, one or more estate plans or because of the incapacity of a
natural person or a person that acquires ownership or control of a
property with the objective purpose of avoiding liability of the person
or any other person.
(2) the term "fiduciary capacity" means the capacity of a person in
holding title to a property, or otherwise having control of or an
interest in a property, pursuant to the exercise of the responsibilities
of the person as a fiduciary.
(b) Nothing in this subdivision affects the rights or immunities or
other defenses that are available under law that are applicable to a
person subject to this section; or creates any liability for a person or
a private right of action against a fiduciary or any other person.
(c) Nothing in this subdivision applies to a person if that person
acts in a capacity other than that of a fiduciary or in a beneficiary
capacity and in that capacity, directly or indirectly, benefits from a
trust or fiduciary relationship; or is a beneficiary and a fiduciary
with respect to the same fiduciary estate and, as a fiduciary, receives
benefits that exceed customary or reasonable compensation, and
incidental benefits, permitted under other applicable law.
(d) This subdivision does not preclude a claim under this chapter
against the assets of the estate or trust administered by the fiduciary;
or a nonemployee agent or independent contractor retained by a
fiduciary.
4. Affirmative defenses. (a) There shall be no liability under this
title for a person otherwise liable who can establish by a preponderance
of the evidence that the significant threat to the environment
attributable to hazardous waste disposed at an inactive hazardous waste
disposal site was caused solely by: (1) an act of God; (2) an act of
war; or (3) an act or omission of a third party other than an employee
or agent of such person, or than one whose act or omission occurs in
connection with a contractual relationship existing directly or
indirectly with such person (except where the sole contractual
arrangement arises from a published tariff and acceptance for carriage
by a common carrier or rail), if such person establishes by a
preponderance of the evidence that: (i) such person exercised due care
with respect to the hazardous waste concerned, taking into consideration
the characteristics of such hazardous waste, in light of all relevant
facts and circumstances, and (ii) took precautions against foreseeable
acts or omissions of any such third party and the consequences that
could foreseeably result from such acts or omissions; or any combination
of them.
(b) For purposes of this section, (1) the term "act of God" means an
unanticipated grave natural disaster or other natural phenomenon of an
exceptional, inevitable, and irresistible character, the effects of
which could not have been prevented or avoided by the exercise of due
care or foresight, (2) the term "contractual relationship" includes, but
is not limited to, land contracts, deeds, or other instruments
transferring title or possession, unless the real property on which the
site concerned is located was acquired by such person after the disposal
or placement of the hazardous waste on, in, or at such site, and such
person establishes one or more of the circumstances described in clause
(i), (ii), or (iii) of this subparagraph by a preponderance of the
evidence:
(i) At the time such person acquired the site, such person did not
know and had no reason to know that any hazardous waste which is the
subject of the significant threat determination was disposed of on, in,
or at the site; or
(ii) Such person is a government entity which acquired the site by
escheat, or through any other involuntary transfer or acquisition or
through the exercise of eminent domain authority by purchase or
condemnation; or
(iii) Such person acquired the site by inheritance or bequest. In
addition to establishing the foregoing, the person must establish that
he or she has satisfied the requirements of clauses (i) and (ii) of
subparagraph three of paragraph (a) of this subdivision, provides full
cooperation, assistance, and site access to the persons that are
authorized to conduct remedial actions at the site (including the
cooperation and access necessary for the installation, integrity,
operation, and maintenance of any complete or partial remedial action at
the site), is in compliance with any land use restrictions established
or relied on in connection with the remedial action at a site, and does
not impede the effectiveness or integrity of any institutional and/or
engineering control employed at the site in connection with a remedial
action.
(c)(1) To establish that the person had no reason to know of the
matter described in clause (i) of subparagraph two of paragraph (b) of
this subdivision, the person must demonstrate to a court that:
(i) on or before the date on which the person acquired the site, the
person carried out all appropriate inquiries, as provided in
subparagraphs two and four of this paragraph, into the previous
ownership and uses of the site in accordance with generally accepted
good commercial and customary standards and practices; and
(ii) the person took reasonable steps to:
(A) stop any continuing release;
(B) prevent any threatened future release; and
(C) prevent or limit any human, environmental, or natural resource
exposure to any previously released hazardous waste.
(2) Not later than one year after the effective date of this section,
the commissioner shall by regulation establish standards and practices
for the purpose of satisfying the requirement to carry out all
appropriate inquiries under subparagraph one of this paragraph.
(3) In promulgating regulations that establish the standards and
practices referred to in subparagraph two of this paragraph, the
commissioner shall include each of the following:
(i) the results of an inquiry by an environmental professional;
(ii) interviews with past and present owners, operators, and occupants
of the site for the purpose of gathering information regarding the
potential for contamination at the site;
(iii) reviews of historical sources, such as chain of title documents,
aerial photographs, building department records, and land use records,
to determine previous uses and occupancies of the real property since
the property was first developed;
(iv) searches for recorded environmental cleanup liens against the
site that are filed under federal, state, or local law;
(v) reviews of federal, state, and local government records, waste
disposal records, underground storage tank records, and hazardous waste
handling, generation, treatment, disposal, and spill records, concerning
contamination at or near the site;
(vi) visual inspections of the site and of adjoining properties;
(vii) specialized knowledge or experience on the part of the person;
(viii) the relationship of the purchase price to the value of the
property, if the property was not contaminated;
(ix) commonly known or reasonably ascertainable information about the
property;
(x) the degree of obviousness of the presence or likely presence of
contamination at the property, and the ability to detect the
contamination by appropriate investigation.
(4)(i) With respect to property purchased before May thirty-first,
nineteen hundred ninety-seven, in making a determination with respect to
a person described in subparagraph one of this paragraph a court shall
take into account:
(A) any specialized knowledge or experience on the part of the person;
(B) the relationship of the purchase price to the value of the
property, if the property was not contaminated;
(C) commonly known or reasonably ascertainable information about the
property;
(D) the obviousness of the presence or likely presence of
contamination at the property; and
(E) the ability of the person to detect the contamination by
appropriate inspection.
(ii) With respect to property purchased on or after May thirty-first,
nineteen hundred ninety-seven, and until the commissioner promulgates
the regulations described in subparagraph two of this paragraph, the
procedures of the American Society for Testing and Materials, including
the document known as "Standard E1527-97", entitled 'Standard Practice
for Environmental Site Assessment: Phase 1 Environmental Site Assessment
Process', shall satisfy the requirements in subparagraph one of this
paragraph.
(5) In the case of property for residential use or other similar use
purchased by a nongovernmental or noncommercial entity, a site
inspection and title search that reveal no basis for further
investigation shall be considered to satisfy the requirements of this
subparagraph.
(d) Nothing in this subdivision shall diminish the liability of any
previous owner or operator of the site who would otherwise be liable
under this title. Notwithstanding this subdivision, if such person
obtained actual knowledge of the release or threatened release of a
hazardous waste at the site when such person owned the site and then
subsequently transferred ownership of the site to another person without
disclosing such knowledge, such person shall be treated as a person
responsible for the disposal of hazardous waste at the site, and no
defense under this subdivision shall be available to such person.
Nothing in this subdivision shall affect the liability under this
section of a person who, by any act or omission, caused or contributed
to the release or threatened release of a hazardous waste which is the
subject of such proceeding relating to such site.