Friday, 31 January 2014

A Provision for Greater Clarification on the Contaminated Land Regime

The operation of the statutory regime built to impose liability for historic contamination and pollution has received a greater degree of clarification due to the rulings of a case in the UK High Court; the case is the first of its kind. In England, Part 2a of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 (EPA) provides provisions for a statutory scheme purposed with the goal of determining which party is liable to paying the costs incurred in the cleaning up of contaminated land. The Waste and Contaminated Land (NI) Order 1997 lays out a highly similar scheme for this issue in the Northern Irish legal cannon. The NI scheme has yet to come take effect because it demands retrospective liability for historic contamination. However its implications need to be rigorously assessed in anticipation of when it will do so.

The English case in question concerns a remediation notice the Environment Agency served with regard to an area situated in St Leonard’s Court, which lies close to Hatfield. The site in question is a residential estate in the present day, however it was formerly a chemical works facility and consequently it stands above a large area of ground water contamination. This ground water contamination resulted in the closure of a whole roster of public water facilities as well as the imposition of restrictions on the use of some others in an area twenty kilometres clear of the site. Redland Minerals Limited held possession of the site in the early 1980’s. It sold the site to Crest Nicholson Residential plc. who were responsible for developing the site. A Key fact to note is that Crest Nicholson was informed of the nature of contamination of the site prior to purchase. This knowledge was provided both by Redland itself and as a consequence of inquiries made to the local council in the same period. The contamination wrought on the site, caused by Bromate and Bromide, two toxic chemicals, was a fact that Crest was aware of; consequently the degree of contamination was heightened due to demolition of parts of the site, as this allowed rainwater to aid the substances permeation of ground water.
Under part 2a of the EPA a remediation notice was served in 2005 that determined that both Redland and Crest were liable for covering the significant remediation costs. This notice underwent appeal from both applicable parties which consequently saw the Secretary of State appoint an Inspector who dismissed the appeal once the major investigation into the issue reached its conclusion. Accordingly this dismissal by the Secretary of State was submitted for judicial review by Redland and Crest. Mr. Justice Sales decided to dismiss the application for judicial review in February 2010, in the process validating the primary decision of the inspector.

A key issue that both the Inspector and the High Court deliberated upon was Redlands scope for liability under the case. According to Part 2a, a statutory exclusion from liability is applicable in situations where the seller of a contaminated site has “sold with information”. In its most broad definition, this provision allows the seller of the site to be excluded from the provision of any future liability in situations where said seller provides the purchaser with information on the nature and scope of the site contamination or permits the purchaser to mount an investigation of its own into contamination of a site. In this instance complete liability then falls onto the purchaser of the site. Inserting “sold with information” clauses with the intention of transferring liability to purchasers or tenants on long lease of sites has evolved to become standard practice in the property transactions of contaminated or potentially contaminated land. The application of the “sold with information”  clause led all adjudicators to conclude that Redlands held partial liability in the case due to the fact that Crest were only made partially aware of  the extent of ground water contamination when the purchase was conducted. Both the information available and that ascertained from Crest’s own investigations only established the Bromide contamination. Additionally Crest was tasked to also take partial responsibility for the leakage of Bromide into the ground water due to their demolishing of the site in question. This facilitated the infiltration of Bromide via rain water.

These landmark rulings lead Tughans to the conclusion that the effectiveness of the “sold with information” clause needs to be reevaluated. The actuality of the exclusion may be circumstantial. It may depend upon factors such as the factual circumstances of the transaction in question, the breadth of knowledge and disclosure by the parties and what said parties may reasonably be expected to become aware of. Although the St Leonard’s Court case is one of extremity, it establishes legal principles which must be taken into evaluation both in future transactions and maybe in those where the “sold with information” exclusion has traditionally been relied upon.

Should you have any questions on the topics discussed in this article or more general questions on environmental issues facing your business, please contact Andrew Ryan at Tughans on 028 9082 0527 or email andrew.ryan@tughans.com