Subdivision 1. Liability. Except as otherwise provided in subdivisions 2 to 10, and notwithstanding any other provision or rule of law, any person who is responsible for the release of a hazardous substance from a facility is strictly liable for the following damages which result from the release or to which the release significantly contributes:
(1) all damages for actual economic loss including:
(i) any injury to, destruction of, or loss of any real or personal property, including relocation costs;
(ii) any loss of use of real or personal property;
(iii) any loss of past or future income or profits resulting from injury to, destruction of, or loss of real or personal property without regard to the ownership of the property; and
(2) all damages for death, personal injury, or disease including:
(i) any medical expenses, rehabilitation costs or burial expenses;
(ii) any loss of past or future income, or loss of earning capacity; and
(iii) damages for pain and suffering, including physical impairment.
Subd. 2. Liability for pollutant or contaminant excluded. There is no liability under this section for damages which result from the release of a pollutant or contaminant.
Subd. 3. Certain employee claims not covered. Except for a third party who is subject to liability under section 176.061, subdivision 5, there is no liability under this section for the death, personal injury or disease of an employee which is compensable under chapter 176 as an injury or disease arising out of and in the course of employment.
Subd. 4. Liability limitations. The liability of a political subdivision under this section is subject to the limits imposed under section 466.04, subdivision 1.
Subd. 5. Transporting household refuse. A person who accepts only household refuse for transport to a treatment or disposal facility is not liable under this section for the release or threatened release of any hazardous substance unless that person knew or reasonably should have known that the hazardous substance was present in the refuse. For the purpose of this subdivision, household refuse means garbage, trash, or septic tank sanitary wastes generated by single or multiple residences, hotels, motels, restaurants and other similar facilities.
Subd. 6. Defense for intervening acts. (a) It is a defense to liability under this section that the release or threatened release was caused solely by:
(1) an act of God;
(2) an act of war;
(3) an act of vandalism or sabotage; or
(4) an act or omission of a third party or the plaintiff.
(b) "Third party" for the purposes of paragraph (a), clause (4), does not include an employee or agent of the defendant, or a person in the chain of responsibility for the generation, transportation, storage, treatment, or disposal of the hazardous substance.
(c) The defenses provided in paragraph (a), clauses (3) and (4), apply only if the defendant establishes that the defendant exercised due care with respect to the hazardous substance concerned, taking into consideration the characteristics of the hazardous substance in light of all relevant facts and circumstances which the defendant knew or should have known, and that the defendant took precautions against foreseeable acts or omissions and the consequences that could foreseeably result from those acts or omissions.
Subd. 7. Intervening acts of public agencies. When the agency or the federal Environmental Protection Agency assumes control over any release or threatened release of a hazardous substance by taking removal actions at the site of the release, the persons responsible for the release are not liable under sections 115B.01 to 115B.15 for any subsequent release of the hazardous substance from another facility to which it has been removed.
Subd. 8. Releases subject to certain permits or standards; federal postclosure fund. It is a defense to liability under this section that:
(1) the release or threatened release was from a hazardous waste facility as defined under section 115A.03, for which a permit had been issued pursuant to section 116.07 or pursuant to subtitle C of the Solid Waste Disposal Act, United States Code, title 42, section 6921 et seq., the hazardous substance was specifically identified in the permit, and the release was within the limits allowed in the permit for release of that substance;
(2) the hazardous substance released was specifically identified in a federal or state permit and the release is within the limits allowed in the permit;
(3) the release resulted from circumstances identified and reviewed and made a part of the public record of a federal or state agency with respect to a permit issued or modified under federal or state law, and the release conformed with the permit;
(4) the release was any part of an emission or discharge into the air or water and the emission or discharge was subject to a federal or state permit and was in compliance with control rules or regulations adopted pursuant to state or federal law;
(5) the release was the introduction of any hazardous substance into a publicly owned treatment works and the substance was specified in, and is in compliance with, applicable pretreatment standards specified for that substance under state and federal law; or
(6) liability has been assumed by the federal postclosure liability fund under United States Code, title 42, section 9607(k).
Subd. 9. Rendering assistance in response actions. It is a defense to liability under this section that the damages resulted from acts taken or omitted in preparation for, or in the course of rendering care, assistance, or advice to the commissioner or agency pursuant to section 115B.17 or in accordance with the national hazardous substance response plan pursuant to the federal Superfund Act, under United States Code, title 42, section 9605, or at the direction of an on-scene coordinator appointed under that plan, with respect to any release or threatened release of a hazardous substance.
Subd. 10. Burden of proof for defenses. Any person claiming a defense provided in subdivisions 6 to 9 has the burden to prove all elements of the defense by a preponderance of the evidence.
1983 c 121 s 5; 1Sp1985 c 8 s 1; 1986 c 444; 1987 c 186 s 15
Structure Minnesota Statutes
Chapters 114C - 116I — Environmental Protection
Chapter 115B — Environmental Response And Liability
Section 115B.02 — Definitions.
Section 115B.03 — Responsible Person.
Section 115B.04 — Liability For Response Costs And Natural Resources; Limitations And Defenses.
Section 115B.055 — Effect Of Removing And Repealing Certain Provisions.
Section 115B.06 — Application To Past Actions.
Section 115B.08 — Apportionment And Contribution.
Section 115B.09 — Comparative Fault And Contribution.
Section 115B.10 — No Avoidance Of Liability; Insurance And Subrogation.
Section 115B.11 — Statute Of Limitations.
Section 115B.12 — Other Remedies Preserved.
Section 115B.13 — Double Recovery Prohibited.
Section 115B.14 — Awarding Costs.
Section 115B.15 — Applicability.
Section 115B.16 — Disposition Of Facilities.
Section 115B.17 — State Response To Releases.
Section 115B.171 — Testing For Private Wells; East Metropolitan Area.
Section 115B.172 — Natural Resources Damages Account.
Section 115B.175 — Voluntary Response Actions; Liability Protection; Procedures.
Section 115B.177 — Owner Of Real Property Affected By Off-site Release.
Section 115B.178 — Association With Release; Commissioner's Determination.
Section 115B.179 — Commissioner's Authority Not Limited.
Section 115B.19 — Purpose Of Remediation Fund.
Section 115B.20 — Actions Using Money From Remediation Fund.
Section 115B.25 — Definitions.
Section 115B.26 — Paying Claims.
Section 115B.28 — Powers And Duties Of Agency.
Section 115B.29 — Eligible Persons.
Section 115B.30 — Eligible Injury And Damage.
Section 115B.31 — Other Actions.
Section 115B.32 — Claim For Compensation.
Section 115B.33 — Claim Standards.
Section 115B.34 — Compensable Losses.
Section 115B.35 — Determining Claims.
Section 115B.36 — Amount And Form Of Payment.
Section 115B.37 — Attorney Fees.
Section 115B.39 — Landfill Cleanup Program; Establishment.
Section 115B.402 — Illegal Actions At Qualified Facilities.
Section 115B.405 — Excluded Facilities.
Section 115B.406 — Priority Qualified Facilities.
Section 115B.407 — Acquiring And Disposing Of Real Property At Priority Qualified Facilities.
Section 115B.408 — Depositing Proceeds.
Section 115B.41 — Allocating Costs; Failure To Comply.
Section 115B.412 — Program Operation.
Section 115B.414 — Third-party Claims; Mediation; Defense.
Section 115B.42 — Remediation Fund.
Section 115B.421 — Closed Landfill Investment Fund.
Section 115B.43 — Reimbursable Parties And Expenses.
Section 115B.431 — Closed Landfill Solar Redevelopment And Reuse Account.
Section 115B.441 — Insurance Claims Settlement And Recovery Process; Findings And Purpose.
Section 115B.442 — Settlement Process; Information Gathering.
Section 115B.443 — Settlement Process.
Section 115B.444 — State Action Against Insurers.
Section 115B.445 — Depositing Proceeds.
Section 115B.48 — Definitions.
Section 115B.49 — Dry Cleaner Environmental Response And Reimbursement Account.
Section 115B.491 — Dry Cleaning Facility Use Fee; Facilities To File Return.
Section 115B.492 — Allocating Payment.
Section 115B.50 — Response Actions.
Section 115B.51 — Illegal Actions.
Section 115B.52 — Water Quality And Sustainability Account.
Section 115B.53 — Water Quality And Sustainability Stakeholders.