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With many commercial leases, it is common for L and T to draw a line at
the commencement of the term, so that L is responsible for the
contamination up to that point and T responsible for any liability arising
thereafter. This is particularly so if L may have contaminated the property
whilst permitting potentially polluting activities in the past.
But, T should
always be careful not to assume potential liabilities which are a result of
contamination that was already present prior to T’s occupation. This
could occur where T fails to prevent pre-existing contamination from
spreading to neighbouring land (so giving rise to a civil claim).
There is always a danger that the lease documentation does not accord
with what was agreed by the parties. Thus, T may agree to an agreement
on liabilities clause which makes L liable for the entire aggregated
liability of the parties should they become liable under the Contaminated
Land Regime, only to find that T’s repair covenant in the lease might
oblige it to remediate prior to a statutory notice being served, with the
service charge provisions then allowing L to recover its costs.
The key is to give a wide construction of all the lease provisions and to
think through how they might potentially affect T. Remember that T will
normally be deemed to accept the property in its actual condition, and it
will be for T to demonstrate that it was not intended that he should take
on these environmental liabilities. In particular:
demise: the definition of the scope of the demise is important. A
demise that excludes everything below the floor (eg foundations,
subsoil, substrata, etc) clearly reduces T’s potential exposure of preexisting
contamination. These are ‘pie-crust’ leases. But remember
that T will need additional access rights to carry out any repairs, etc.
Plus there are some difficulties with pie-crust leases. Firstly, carving
out the foundations of a building requires that appropriate rights of
support and use are granted in relation to service media and,
secondly, the effect of such leases has yet to be fully subjected to
judicial scrutiny;
repair: a covenant to keep in good repair may oblige T to clean up any
pre-existing contamination (unless that can be regarded as an
‘improvement’). So, if there is a danger of contamination do consider
whether the repair clause should be drafted to expressly exclude such
liability;
statutory compliance: any covenant to comply with applicable laws
and notices could extend to Environmental and Health and Safety
Regs. So, it could make T liable for remediation work even if a
remediation notice was served on L. So limit the compliance
obligation to statutory requirements arising out of T’s use of the
property;
nuisance: T might adopt L’s nuisance if he has the power to remove
the cause of the nuisance but fails to do so. This could extend to preexisting
contamination. Accordingly, a covenant not to cause or
permit any nuisance should expressly exclude any liability for
contamination and any other actionable nuisances which are present
at the commencement of the term. This will not preclude T from being
liable to a third party (civil) claim, so add in an indemnity from L
against any such claims;
T’s indemnity: if T provides L with the standard indemnity against loss
and damage arising from their acts or omissions, or breach of
covenants, there may be a potential to be liable for pre-existing
contamination or actionable nuisances. Accordingly consider
expressly excluding environmental liabilities which should be L’s
responsibility;
service charge: if it is a multi-tenanted building, T should be wary of
assuming liability through the service charge provisions. If that is a
potential danger, then seek to cap the service charge or specifically
exclude the recoverability of such costs (if possible).
This guidance comes from the stunningly good A Practical Guide to
Environmental Issues in Commercial Property Transactions by Helen Loose
and Nick Stalbow (Ashurst; £49.95). In our opinion, it is by far the best
book on this topic and is essential reading for any L&T practitioner.
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