Sec. 12-63e. Valuation of property on which a polluted or environmentally hazardous condition exists.
Sec. 12-63e. Valuation of property on which a polluted or environmentally
hazardous condition exists. (a) Notwithstanding the provisions of this chapter, and
except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, when determining the value of any
property, except residential property, for purpose of the assessment for property taxes,
the assessors of a municipality shall not reduce the value of any property due to any
polluted or environmentally hazardous condition existing on such property if such condition was caused by the owner of such property or if a successor in title to such owner
acquired such property after any notice of the existence of any such condition was filed
on the land records in the town where the property is located. For purposes of this section,
an owner shall be deemed to have caused the polluted or environmentally hazardous
condition if the Department of Environmental Protection, the United States Environmental Protection Agency or a court of competent jurisdiction has determined that such
owner caused such condition or a portion of it.
(b) If any owner of such property or if any successor in title to such owner who
acquired such property after any notice of the existence of any such condition was filed
on the land records in the town where the property is located (1) enters into an agreement
with the department to voluntarily remediate such property, (2) files such agreement on
the land records of the town where such property is located, and (3) has developed an
approved remedial action plan for the property, the provisions of subsection (a) of this
section shall not apply. In any such cases, the assessors of a municipality may reduce
the value of any property due to any polluted or environmentally hazardous condition
existing on such property. The assessors of a municipality may also raise the value of
any property after remediation is completed to take into account the removal of such
pollution or environmentally hazardous condition.
(P.A. 90-270, S. 36, 38; P.A. 07-233, S. 11.)
History: P.A. 90-270, S. 36 effective June 8, 1990, and applicable to assessment years of municipalities commencing
on or after October 1, 1990; P.A. 07-233 designated existing provisions as Subsec. (a), inserted exception re Subsec. (b)
therein and added Subsec. (b) re voluntary remediation, effective July 1, 2007 (Revisor's note: In Subsec. (b), a reference to
"polluted of environmentally hazardous condition" was changed editorially by the Revisors to "polluted or environmentally
hazardous condition", for consistency).
Plaintiff could not prevail in its claim that trial court should have reduced value of subject property because of its
contamination; although statute contains no reference to actual knowledge of contamination as a ground on which to deny
reduction in property value, statute plainly indicates that constructive notice of existence of contamination is sufficient
basis on which to deny reduction in property value, and because actual knowledge is superior to constructive notice and
plaintiff here had actual knowledge of contamination, court would not apply statute rigidly to permit lack of constructive
notice from town land records to trump plaintiff's actual knowledge of contamination when it acquired subject property.
98 CA 556.