Commercial Investment Real Estate July/August 2016 | Page 21
“no further action” determination as the
cleanup endpoint.
In order to receive a no further action rul-
ing, buyers and sellers fi rst need to be more
specifi c as to the property’s use. Even setting
a site-use parameter, such as industrial or
residential, may not be suffi ciently specifi c
under current risk-based cleanup rules. You
likely need to specify whether the party con-
ducting the cleanup can implement institu-
tional prohibitions, such as groundwater well
installation, or engineering controls, such as
paved surfaces, in order to attain the requi-
site degree of risk avoidance under the state
cleanup statute.
4. Making environmental liabilities “at
purchaser’s sole cost and expense” may
inadvertently extinguish the buyer’s con-
tribution rights against third parties.
When contract language states the buyer
assumes site cleanup costs at its sole cost and
expense, I assume no environmental lawyer
has reviewed the language. Such sole-cost lan-
guage may inadvertently eliminate the buyer’s
rights to recover the cleanup costs from third
parties, such as the facility next door. Even in
cases where the transaction agreement also
contains a clause eliminating any third-party
benefi ciaries, a court may interpret such sole-
cost language to extinguish statutory contri-
bution rights. Th at may not have been the
parties’ intent. Th e seller may have no objec-
tion to the buyer’s bringing an environmental
contribution action against the owner of the
property next door for contamination that
migrated onto the buyer’s property.
5. “Survival” clauses that purport to
endure for the length of the correspond-
ing statute of limitations for the indemni-
fi ed environmental liability might endure
indefi nitely.
Acquisition agreements sometimes set
the survival period for indemnity claims for
breaches of the environmental representations
at “the expiration of the statute of limitations
applicable to” the representation, including
the representation that there had been “no
release of hazardous materials.” Th ere could
be many bases for asserting claims based on
breach of the “no release” representation: a
couple federal statutes, one or more state stat-
utes, and several common law theories. Under
one federal statute, causes of action would be
evergreen as long as the plaintiff could show
that there was the threat of a release of hazard-
ous materials. So it is possible that the survival
period could endure indefi nitely.
Where environmental liability is a mate-
rial risk, and the parties intend to apportion
it between themselves, they need to take care
in draft ing the contract provisions to give
eff ect to their intent.
Tom Mounteer is a partner in global law fi rm
Paul Hastings Washington offi ce. Contact him
at [email protected].
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