The New Jersey Spill Compensation and Control Act (Spill Act),
enacted in 1977 to respond to the problem of hazardous substance
release, imposes an excise tax upon major petroleum and chemical
facilities within the State to finance the prevention and cleanup
of oil spills and leaks of hazardous chemicals from disposal sites.
The tax revenue goes into a permanent fund (Spill Fund), which may
spend money not only to clean up releases of hazardous substances,
but also to compensate third parties for certain economic losses
sustained as a result of such releases, and to pay administrative
and research costs. The federal Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA), enacted
in response to similar concerns, imposes an excise tax on petroleum
and other specified chemicals and establishes a trust fund
(Superfund) that may be used to clean up hazardous substance
releases and for certain other purposes. CERCLA does not cover oil
spills; nor is Superfund money available to compensate private
parties for economic harms that result from hazardous substance
releases. Superfund money may be used to reimburse private parties
only for their cleanup activities that are expressly authorized by
the Federal Government; to finance Federal or State Government
expenses for short-term cleanup or for measures to achieve a
permanent remedy to a particular hazardous waste problem; and to
compensate those governments for damages to their natural
resources. Appellant corporations, having paid the Spill Act tax,
brought suit in the New Jersey Tax Court against appellees (the
State and certain of its officials), seeking a tax refund and a
declaratory judgment that the New Jersey tax was invalid in its
entirety as being preempted under § 114(c) of CERCLA, which
provides:
"Except as provided in this chapter, no person may be required
to contribute to any fund, the purpose of which is to pay
compensation for claims for any costs of response or damages or
claims which may be compensated under this subchapter."
Section 114(c) also contains a saving provision stating that
nothing in § 114(c) shall be interpreted to prevent a State
from using general revenues for such a fund or from imposing a
special tax to purchase or locate equipment or otherwise prepare
for a response to hazardous substance releases. The court entered
summary judgment for appellees, and the Appellate Division
Page 475 U. S. 356
of the New Jersey Superior Court affirmed. The New Jersey
Supreme Court also affirmed, holding that the Spill Fund tax was
not preempted by § 114(c) insofar as the Spill Fund
"is used to compensate hazardous waste cleanup costs and related
claims that are either not covered or not actually paid under
Superfund."
Held:
1. The words "costs of response or damages or claims" in §
114(c) are to be read as a unit, and the entire phrase is modified
by the phrase "which may be compensated under this subchapter,"
thus preempting any special state tax fund used to reimburse either
a State or a third party for cleanup expenses. An interpretation of
those terms so as to include only a private party's cleanup
expenses, and so as to permit state fund expenditures for all state
government cleanup efforts is not supported by CERCLA's history or
the wording of other provisions of CERCLA, particularly the saving
provision of § 114(c) which, in authorizing special state
taxes to pay for the State's preparations for responding to
hazardous substance releases, would be redundant if the preemption
provision did not cover direct governmental expenditures at all.
Pp.
475 U. S.
363-370.
2. Section 114(c)'s phrase "which may be compensated under this
subchapter" is to be interpreted as preempting any state fund that
is intended, in whole or in part, to pay for the same types of
expenses that may be paid by Superfund, and not as covering only
expenses that are actually paid by Superfund. Pp.
475 U. S.
370-371.
3. Neither the structure nor the legislative history of CERCLA
supports appellees' contention that, although § 114(c) is not
restricted to cases in which Superfund actually disburses money, it
applies only when Superfund pays a claim or would have paid the
claim had it not already been paid by a state fund. Remedying the
Nation's toxic waste problems as effectively as possible was not
the sole policy choice reflected in CERCLA. Congress' decision to
enact a preemption provision resulted in part from its concern
about the potentially adverse effects of overtaxation on the
competitiveness of the American petrochemical industry. That
consideration cautions against concluding that Congress would not
have wanted to hinder state attempts to clean up hazardous
substances in any way. Nor is there sufficient support in §
114(c)'s language or history to accept appellees' contention that,
in view of the limited availability of Superfund money, only
projects that have been actually approved, or are almost certain to
be approved, can be termed "eligible" for Superfund financing, and
then only to the extent of the approved funding. Pp.
475 U. S.
371-374.
4. The National Contingency Plan -- which CERCLA requires to be
revised annually to list sites most in need of federal efforts --
provides
Page 475 U. S. 357
the appropriate measure of whether a given expenditure
constitutes "costs of response or damages or claims which may be
compensated" by Superfund. Since CERCLA also provides that a State
must agree to pay at least 10% of the cost of any remedial action
for a hazardous site within the State, such state share is not
eligible for Superfund money, and thus is not a cost that "may be
compensated" for purposes of § 114(c). Under the above-stated
principles, use of the New Jersey Spill Fund to compensate third
parties for damage resulting from hazardous substance discharges,
to pay personnel and equipment costs, to administer the fund, and
to conduct research is beyond the scope of CERCLA, and therefore
not preempted by § 114(c). However, use of the Spill Fund to
finance state governmental cleanup (except the 10% state share of
remedial costs) and to reimburse third parties for cleanup costs is
preempted, so long as such efforts occur at sites that are eligible
for Superfund financing according to the terms of the National
Contingency Plan. Pp.
475 U. S.
374-376.
97 N.J. 526,
481
A.2d 271, affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
MARSHALL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and BRENNAN, WHITE, BLACKMUN, REHNQUIST, and
O'CONNOR, JJ., joined. STEVENS, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
475 U. S. 377.
POWELL, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of the
case.
Page 475 U. S. 358
JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question for our determination is whether § 114(c) of
the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA), 94 Stat. 2796, 42 U.S.C. §
9614(c), preempts the New Jersey Spill Compensation and Control
Act, N.J.Stat.Ann. §§ 58:10-23.11 to 58:10-23.11z (West
1982 and Supp.1985) (Spill Act). We conclude that the Spill Act is
preempted in part.
I
A
In 1977 the New Jersey Legislature enacted the Spill Act to
respond to the problem of hazardous substance release. Finding that
oil spills threatened the health and beauty of the State's natural
resources, and that leaks of hazardous chemicals from disposal
sites presented a great risk to the public, the legislature
intended the Spill Act to protect the citizens and environment of
New Jersey through prevention and cleanup of spills and other
releases. Those efforts are financed by an excise tax levied upon
major petroleum and chemical facilities within the State. The money
collected goes into a permanent fund known as the "Spill Fund." The
Spill Fund may spend money to clean up releases of hazardous
substances, to compensate third parties for certain economic losses
sustained as a result of such releases, and to pay administrative
and research costs. N.J.Stat.Ann. § 58:10-23.110 (West
Supp.1985). [
Footnote 1]
Page 475 U. S. 359
In 1980, Congress enacted CERCLA in response to similar
concerns. CERCLA imposes an excise tax on petroleum and other
specified chemicals. The Act establishes a trust fund, commonly
known as "Superfund," 87.5% of which is financed through the excise
tax, and the remainder through general revenues. Superfund money
may be used to clean up releases of hazardous substances and for
certain other purposes. [
Footnote
2] Unlike the Spill Act, CERCLA does not include oil spills
within its definition of hazardous substance releases, nor is
Superfund money available to compensate private parties for
economic harms that result from discharges of hazardous substances.
Rather, it seeks to facilitate government cleanup of hazardous
waste discharges and prevention
Page 475 U. S. 360
of future releases. There are two primary purposes for which the
Superfund money may be spent -- to finance "governmental response,"
and to pay "claims."
See § 111(a) of CERCLA, 42
U.S.C. § 9611(a). Governmental response consists of "removal,"
or short-term cleanup, § 9601(23), and "remedial action," or
measures to achieve a "permanent remedy" to a particular hazardous
waste problem, § 9601(24). [
Footnote 3] Claims are demands for reimbursement made upon
the Superfund, and also come in two types. One type of claim is a
demand by "any other person" for costs incurred pursuant to the
federal plan for cleanup of hazardous substances, known as the
"national contingency plan." § 9611(a)(2). [
Footnote 4] Thus, Superfund may reimburse
private parties only to the extent that their cleanup activities
are expressly authorized by the Federal Government. The second type
of claim is a demand by the Federal or a State Government for
compensation for damages to natural resources belonging to that
government. § 9611(a)(3). Superfund money may not be used to
pay for injury to persons or property caused by hazardous wastes,
except for payment to the Federal and State Governments for their
natural resource losses.
This litigation concerns § 114(c) of CERCLA, as set forth
in 42 U.S.C. § 9614(c), which provides:
"Except as provided in this chapter, no person may be required
to contribute to any fund, the purpose of which is to pay
compensation for claims for any costs of response or damages or
claims which may be compensated
Page 475 U. S. 361
under this subchapter. Nothing in this section shall preclude
any State from using general revenues for such a fund, or from
imposing a tax or fee upon any person or upon any substance in
order to finance the purchase or prepositioning of hazardous
substance response equipment or other preparations for the response
to a release of hazardous substances which affects such State."
Clearly, this provision is meant to forbid the States to impose
taxes to finance certain types of funds. The issue in this case is
whether the New Jersey Spill Fund is, in whole or in part, the type
of fund that § 114(c) preempts.
B
Appellants are corporations that have paid the Spill Act tax
since its inception. After unsuccessful attempts to litigate the
issue in the federal courts,
see Exxon Corp. v. Hunt, 683
F.2d 69 (CA3 1982),
cert. denied, 459 U.S. 1104 (1983);
cf. New Jersey v. United States, 16 ERC 1846 (DC 1981)
(dismissing suit brought by New Jersey seeking to have tax declared
valid), [
Footnote 5] appellants
brought suit in the New Jersey Tax Court against New Jersey and
certain of its officials (collectively New Jersey), seeking a
declaratory judgment and a refund of taxes paid pursuant to the
Spill Act. Appellants claimed that the New Jersey tax was invalid
in its entirety under § 114(c) and the Supremacy Clause. The
Tax Court entered summary judgment for New Jersey on two
alternative grounds. First, the court concluded that § 114(c)
does not preempt state funds that pay cleanup costs and
Page 475 U. S. 362
other claims that are not actually compensated by Superfund.
Second, even accepting appellants' argument that § 114(c)
precludes any state taxation of industry to pay for cleanup and
remedial activities, the court found that there were sufficient
nonpreempted purposes to the Spill Fund to make the Fund valid in
its entirety. 4 N.J. Tax 294 (1982).
The Appellate Division of the New Jersey Superior Court
affirmed, 190 N.J.Super. 131,
462 A.2d 193 (1983), as did the New Jersey Supreme Court, 97
N.J. 526,
481 A.2d
271 (1984). The latter court, like the Tax Court, concluded
that
"the Spill Fund tax . . . is not preempted by section 114(c) of
Superfund insofar as Spill Fund is used to compensate hazardous
waste cleanup costs and related claims that are either not covered
or not actually paid under Superfund."
Id. at 544, 481 A.2d at 281. We noted probable
jurisdiction, 472 U.S. 1015 (1985), and we now affirm in part and
reverse in part. [
Footnote
6]
II
This is an express preemption case; appellants claim that the
plain language of § 114(c) forbids state taxation of the type
the Spill Act imposes. When a federal statute unambiguously
precludes certain types of state legislation, we need go no further
than the statutory language to determine whether the state statute
is preempted.
Aloha Airlines, Inc. v. Director of
Taxation, 464 U. S. 7,
464 U. S. 12
(1983).
Page 475 U. S. 363
Section 114(c), unfortunately, is not a model of legislative
draftsmanship. The critical language,
"no person may be required to contribute to any fund, the
purpose of which is to pay compensation for claims for any costs of
response or damages or claims which may be compensated under this
subchapter,"
is at best inartful, and at worst redundant. As just one
example, it is not clear whether "which may be compensated under
this subchapter" modifies only the word "claims" which immediately
precedes it, or the entire phrase "any costs of response or damages
or claims." Because the terms "claims," "response," and "damages"
have specific, technical definitions under CERCLA, the way the
sentence is parsed may have a significant effect on its meaning.
Finally, § 114(c) by itself does not provide a method for
determining whether a particular expenditure "may be compensated"
by Superfund. That determination, therefore, necessitates reference
to the remainder of CERCLA.
III
Our task, then, must proceed in three parts. First, we must
determine what class of expenses is encompassed within the phrase
"costs of response or damages or claims." Then, because at least
some of those expenses are covered by § 114(c) only to the
extent that they "may be compensated" by Superfund, we must
determine the meaning of that phrase as well. Finally, if we find
an overlap between § 114(c)'s prohibitions and the Spill Act's
provisions, we must hold the latter preempted.
A
Both parties agree as to the first question. Each concludes that
the words "costs of response or damages or claims" are to be read
as a unit, and the entire phrase is modified by the phrase "which
may be compensated under this subchapter." However, the Solicitor
General, appearing on behalf of the United States as
amicus
curiae, adopts a contrary position. He contends that §
114(c) should be read to
Page 475 U. S. 364
prohibit funds whose purpose is to pay "compensation for [a]
claims for any costs of response or damages[,] or [b] claims which
may be compensated under this subchapter." Under the Solicitor
General's view, therefore, any expense that fits CERCLA's
definitions of a "claim" for "costs of response" or "damages" may
not be paid by a state fund supported by special taxes, whether or
not that expenditure "may" be paid by Superfund. [
Footnote 7] Because "costs of response"
covers essentially the entire spectrum of cleanup expenses,
see 42 U.S.C. § 9604, the Solicitor General's reading
of the preemptive scope of § 114(c) might seem very broad at
first reading.
The wide sweep of the Solicitor General's position, however, is
tempered considerably by his interpretation of the term "claim."
CERCLA defines a "claim" as "a demand in writing for a sum
certain." § 9601(4). Under the Solicitor General's view, only
a private party's demand upon a state fund or Superfund for
reimbursement for that party's own cleanup expenses constitutes a
"claim." Any State or Federal Government use of a special fund is
merely a governmental expenditure, and not the payment of a
"claim." Because each of the two clauses created by the Solicitor
General's parsing of § 114(c) begins with the word "claims,"
he argues, that section does not prohibit
any state fund
expenditures for a state government's own cleanup efforts. It
prohibits only expenditures to reimburse private parties. Were we
to accept the Solicitor General's reading of § 114(c),
therefore, New Jersey could freely tax appellants to pay for its
own cleanup costs, even if Superfund might otherwise pay
Page 475 U. S. 365
those costs. New Jersey could not, however, tax appellants to
pay for third-party cleanup costs, whether or not Superfund might
bear those costs. Similarly, New Jersey could not use the Spill
Fund to pay for any party's "damages," defined by CERCLA to mean
loss of natural resources, even though Superfund covers only
"damages" suffered by governments.
The United States is not a party, of course, and all parties
before us disagree with the Solicitor General's reading of the
statute. However, the Solicitor General's view has considerable
logical force, and assessing it will prove helpful in evaluating
the parties' positions on issues as to which they disagree.
Although we ultimately reject the Solicitor General's position,
therefore, we find it helpful to analyze it in some detail.
One problem with the Solicitor General's view is that the
distinction between a government's own cleanup costs, on the one
hand, and "claims," on the other, has not been so consistent
throughout CERCLA's history as the Solicitor General suggests. The
96th Congress fully considered three major hazardous substance
response bills -- H.R. 85, H.R. 7020, and S. 1480 -- in addition to
the Carter administration bill, S. 1341, which died in Committee.
See 1 The Environmental Law Institute, Superfund: A
Legislative History xiii (1983) (hereafter Leg.Hist.). [
Footnote 8] The earliest of these,
H.R.
Page 475 U. S. 366
85, had a preemption provision resembling § 114(c). Section
110 of the bill as passed by the House provided:
"no person may be required to contribute to any fund, the
purpose of which is to compensate for a loss which is a compensable
damage"
under that bill. [
Footnote
9]
Page 475 U. S. 367
The Solicitor General argues that § 110 had a purpose
similar to that which he finds in § 114(c). [
Footnote 10] The sort of loss contemplated
by the quoted language, he contends, is a loss suffered by
nongovernmental entities, and not a state expenditure. This
argument, however, misperceives the overall structure of H.R. 85.
That bill defined compensable damages broadly, to include cleanup
costs as well as injury to persons or property. Any "United States
claimant" could assert a claim for these compensable damages.
Significantly, a United States claimant was defined as
"any person residing in the United States, the Government of the
United States or an agency thereof, or the government of a State or
a political subdivision thereof, who asserts a claim."
§ 101(p). Thus, under H.R. 85, a state government would
clearly assert a "claim" for its own cleanup expenses. [
Footnote 11] Those expenses would
constitute "compensable damages," and § 110 would therefore
preempt the creation of a special state fund to pay such
"claims."
Page 475 U. S. 368
Nor do CERCLA's other predecessors support the Solicitor
General's interpretation. Bill S. 1341, like H.R. 85, provided for
claims by governments and had a preemption provision similar to
§ 110. [
Footnote 12]
Bill H.R. 7020, as first passed by the House, contained no
preemption provision. Bill S. 1480 was the most far-reaching of the
bills considered, and the first to contemplate a fund of the
magnitude of Superfund. As reported out of Committee, it contained
no preemption provision analogous to § 114(c).
After S. 1480 ran into opposition, the Senate considered two
compromise bills intended to be "a combination of the best of [H.R.
85, H.R. 7020, and S. 1480]." 126 Cong.Rec. 30935 (1980) (remarks
of Sen. Stafford). The second of these, introduced by Senators
Stafford and Randolph, eventually became CERCLA. Only with the
Stafford-Randolph substitute bill did the exact language of §
114(c) come into being. Given the remarkable similarity between a
debate between Senators Bradley and Randolph on the meaning of
§ 114(c) and a debate between Congressmen Florio and Biaggi on
the meaning of H.R. 85's preemption provision, [
Footnote 13] it is unlikely that the Senate
considered the two provisions to differ substantially. The
substitute bill was prepared and passed in considerable haste, and
we are reluctant to conclude that Congress intended to adopt a
wholly new approach
Page 475 U. S. 369
to preemption of state funds by the slight changes in language
between § 110 of H.R. 85 and § 114(c) of CERCLA.
A second reason for rejecting the Solicitor General's argument
proceeds from the wording of § 114(b). That section
provides:
"Any person who receives compensation for removal costs or
damages or claims pursuant to this chapter shall be precluded from
recovering compensation"
for the same expenses under any other state or federal law. We
consider the similarity between § 114(b)'s phrase "removal
costs or damages or claims" and § 114(c)'s phrase "costs of
response or damages or claims" to suggest that Congress intended
the three terms to be read as a unit. [
Footnote 14] When read in conjunction with §
111(a), which provides that Superfund money may be spent on payment
of governmental response costs, natural resource damages, and
third-party cleanup claims, it seems likely that Congress intended
the phrase "removal costs or damages or claims" to provide a
shorthand for the authorized uses of Superfund. This strongly
undercuts the Solicitor General's approach, because it suggests
that Congress envisioned state funds paying "claims" for all of the
authorized uses of Superfund, including state cleanup costs.
A final reason for so concluding derives from the saving
provision of § 114(c). The section provides that nothing in it
shall be interpreted to prevent a State from imposing a special tax
to purchase or preposition equipment or otherwise prepare for a
quick response to hazardous substance releases. If the preemption
provision does not cover direct governmental expenditures at all,
as the Solicitor General contends,
Page 475 U. S. 370
then that saving provision is redundant. On balance, then, we
conclude that the use of the term "compensation for claims" in
§ 114(c) represents an instance of inartful drafting, rather
than the intentional drawing of a subtle distinction.
B
Having adopted the parties' view of the interpretation of "costs
of response or damages or claims," we must now determine the proper
interpretation of the phrase "which may be compensated under this
subchapter." The New Jersey Supreme Court read that language very
narrowly, concluding that it covered only expenses that are
actually paid by Superfund. Appellants, adopting a broader
interpretation of "may be compensated," contend that § 114(c)
preempts any fund that is intended, in whole or in part, to pay for
the same types of expenses that may be paid by Superfund.
Appellants challenge the state court's holding on several
grounds. First, they contend, it is highly unlikely that a State
would choose to pay such double compensation, even in the absence
of an express prohibition. Second, § 114(b) provides that any
person who receives compensation under Superfund
"shall be precluded from recovering compensation for the same
removal costs or damages or claims pursuant to any other State or
Federal law."
The New Jersey Supreme Court's interpretation of § 114(c),
therefore, makes that section redundant. Appellants rely most
heavily, however, on the literal meaning of the phrase "may be
compensated." They contend that the New Jersey courts have violated
the plain meaning of the statute by reading the phrase to mean, in
effect, "is actually compensated."
We find these arguments persuasive. Congress has already banned
double compensation in § 114(b), and there is accordingly no
reason to read "may be compensated" to mean "is compensated." The
contrary view adopted by the New Jersey Supreme Court renders the
first sentence of § 114(c) surplusage. The language of §
114(c) permitting the States
Page 475 U. S. 371
to use general revenues for such a fund would also be
meaningless under such a narrow reading.
C
Nevertheless, New Jersey contends that the decision below, with
one minor modification, is correct. New Jersey concedes that §
114(c) is not restricted to cases in which Superfund actually
disburses money. New Jersey argues, however, that § 114(c)
applies only when Superfund pays a claim or
would have
paid the claim had it not already been paid by the state fund. It
contends that the structure and legislative history of CERCLA
support its argument. We will examine each in turn.
New Jersey emphasizes the limited scope of CERCLA. The federal
statute does not cover several broad areas -- for example, payment
for nongovernmental property losses and costs arising from oil
spills -- that are important aspects of hazardous substance
control, and are covered by New Jersey's Spill Act. Moreover,
Congress was well aware that the funding level of Superfund was and
is insufficient to clean up more than a few of the most dangerous
hazardous waste disposal sites. These facts, New Jersey claims,
suggest that Congress recognized that Superfund would not solve all
of the Nation's hazardous waste problems, and that the States would
have to continue their own efforts. It follows that Congress did
not intend to preempt state taxation to pay for cleanup efforts
that the Federal Government was unable to undertake because of
unavailability of funds, even though such efforts were of the type
that are eligible for Superfund money.
That Congress has not chosen the most comprehensive or efficient
method of attacking the problem of hazardous substance discharges,
however, is no reason to depart from the language of the statute.
Moreover, while we agree with New Jersey that the overall purpose
of a statute is a useful referent when trying to decipher ambiguous
statutory language,
Page 475 U. S. 372
remedying the Nation's toxic waste problems as effectively as
possible was not the sole policy choice reflected in CERCLA.
Previous attempts to enact a comprehensive hazardous substance
response bill were defeated in part because of opposition by the
affected industries. It seems clear that the decision to enact a
preemption provision resulted in part from Congress' concern about
the potentially adverse effects of overtaxation on the
competitiveness of the American petrochemical industry. [
Footnote 15] That consideration,
whether wise or not, cautions against our concluding that Congress
would not have wanted to hinder state attempts to clean up
hazardous substances in any way.
New Jersey contends, however, that its reading of § 114(c)
does no violence to the statutory language. It argues that we must
look not only to the provisions of CERCLA, but also to the amount
of money available in Superfund, before deciding whether a
particular expense "may be compensated" by Superfund. New Jersey
argues that the availability of Superfund money is sufficiently
low, as a practical matter, that only projects that have been
actually approved, or are almost certain to be approved, can be
termed "eligible" for Superfund financing, and then only to the
extent of the approved funding.
We cannot agree. To say that the only expenses that "may be
compensated" are those that are compensated twists both language
and logic further than we are willing to go.
Page 475 U. S. 373
Had that been Congress' intent, it surely would have said so in
plainer terms than those of § 114(c).
Comparisons with the prior bills reinforce our reading of the
statute. As previously discussed, § 114(c) is derived from the
preemption provision of H.R. 85. Section 110 of that bill preempted
state funds whose purpose was "to compensate for a loss which is a
compensable damage" under the bill. This language is not ambiguous;
it clearly covers any "compensable" loss, whether or not the
claimant actually receives compensation from the federal fund. Bill
S. 1341 was the only other bill to contain a preemption provision
covering state funds, prior to the 11th-hour Stafford-Randolph
substitute bill. That provision also unambiguously covers any
"compensable" loss.
We also fail to find sufficient support for New Jersey's
position in the sparse legislative history of the Stafford-Randolph
substitute bill that became CERCLA. New Jersey relies on a floor
debate between Senators Bradley and Randolph on § 114(c). New
Jersey is correct in arguing that some statements in that debate
imply that state fund money could be used for any expense not
actually paid by Superfund. [
Footnote 16] In view of the haste with which the bill was
considered, and the ambiguities and inaccuracies included in the
debate between Senators Bradley and Randolph, [
Footnote 17] we decline
Page 475 U. S. 374
to attach any great significance to those statements. Moreover,
as we have previously mentioned, the fact that this "debate" was
essentially a reenactment of the Florio-Biaggi debate over H.R.
85's preemption provision implies that the Senators involved did
not consider the two provisions to differ. We reject New Jersey's
reading of § 114(c).
IV
Having decided that "may be compensated" should be given its
ordinary meaning, we must define the category of expenses that may
be compensated by Superfund. Fortunately, CERCLA itself furnishes
an appropriate test. Section 105(8)(B) of CERCLA, 42 U.S.C. §
9605(8)(B), requires the President to revise the National
Contingency Plan (NCP) to reflect CERCLA's provisions. As part of
that revision, the President must create and revise annually a list
of sites most in need of federal efforts, now known as the National
Priorities List. [
Footnote
18] The NCP currently specifies that removal, or immediate
cleanup, will be financed by Superfund only in emergency
situations,
see 40 CFR § 300.65 (1985). Remedial
action will be financed only for sites on the National Priorities
List, § 300.68(a). Finally, the Environmental Protection
Agency, pursuant to the NCP, has proposed criteria for the use of
Superfund money for natural resource claims.
See 50
Fed.Reg. 9593 (1985). The NCP, therefore, provides criteria that
determine what expenses, at which sites,
Page 475 U. S. 375
will be eligible for Superfund money. We therefore conclude that
the NCP provides the appropriate measure of whether a given
expenditure constitutes "costs of response or damages or claims
which may be compensated" by Superfund.
CERCLA also provides that a State must agree to pay at least 10%
of the cost of any remedial action for a hazardous waste site
within the State. 42 U.S.C. § 9604(c)(3)(C). This state share
is, by definition, not eligible for Superfund money. We therefore
conclude that the 10% state share is not a cost that "may be
compensated" by Superfund.
To the extent that appellants argue that § 114(c) covers
any cleanup or remedial expenses, whether or not eligible for
Superfund compensation, we must reject their position. While we
have acknowledged Congress' desire to spare the involved industries
from excessive taxation, we must assume that Congress meant the
words "which may be compensated under this subchapter" to have some
meaning. The only plausible explanation for the use of that phrase
is that Congress intended to prohibit state funds that covered
Superfund-eligible expenses. Once again, we decline to second-guess
the methods Congress used to achieve its purposes.
Our remaining task is to determine whether the "purpose" of the
Spill Fund is to pay costs that we have found to fall within the
scope of preemption. As we have explained above, the Spill Fund may
be used for six purposes: (1) to finance governmental cleanup of
hazardous waste sites; (2) to reimburse third parties for cleanup
costs; (3) to compensate third parties for damage resulting from
hazardous substance discharges; (4) to pay personnel and equipment
costs; (5) to administer the fund itself; and (6) to conduct
research. Of these, the latter four are clearly beyond the scope of
CERCLA, and are therefore not covered by § 114(c). The first
two are within the scope of CERCLA, except to the extent
Page 475 U. S. 376
that they are intended to provide the 10% state share of
remedial costs. Those parts of the statute that permit Spill Fund
expenditures beyond this state share for remedial costs for sites
on the National Priorities List, or for removal costs that are
eligible for Superfund compensation under the terms of the NCP, are
preempted by § 114(c).
New Jersey argues, finally, that after the enactment of CERCLA,
or at least after the publication of the National Priorities List,
all Spill Fund expenditures for purposes (1) and (2) above have
been for non-Superfund eligible sites, and therefore are for
nonpreempted purposes. To the extent that the Spill Act permits
taxation to support preempted expenditures, however, it cannot
stand. State legislation is invalid "to the extent that it actually
conflicts with federal law,"
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v.
Energy Resources Comm'n, 461 U. S. 190,
460 U. S. 204
(1983), and such a conflict has been demonstrated in this case. We
leave to the New Jersey Supreme Court the state law question
whether, or to what extent, the nonpreempted provisions of the
statute are severable from the preempted provisions.
See Exxon
Corp. v. Eagerton, 462 U. S. 176,
462 U. S.
196-197 (1983). We decline the dissent's invitation to
hold that the Spill Act is valid in its entirety because a
substantial portion of its purposes are permissible. Such a holding
would be an open invitation to the States to flout federal law by
including valid provisions within clearly invalid statutes.
V
To the extent that the New Jersey Supreme Court held that the
Spill Act could constitutionally impose a tax to support
expenditures for purposes that we have identified above as
nonpreempted, that court's judgment is affirmed. To the extent it
held that the Spill Act could constitutionally impose a tax to
support expenditures for purposes that we have identified as
preempted, its judgment is reversed, and the case is
Page 475 U. S. 377
remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
JUSTICE POWELL took no part in the consideration or decision of
this case.
[
Footnote 1]
The compensation for third-party economic loss is broad. The
Spill Fund is strictly liable to any party that suffers direct or
indirect economic damage from releases of hazardous substances,
including (1) damage to any real or personal property, (2) damage
to natural resources, (3) loss of income or earning capacity, in
certain circumstances, (4) loss of property tax revenue by the
State or a local government for one year following the discharge,
and (5) interest incurred on loans to ameliorate the effects of a
discharge pending reimbursement by the Spill Fund. N.J.Stat.Ann.
§ 58.10-23.11g (West 1982).
[
Footnote 2]
Title 42 U.S.C. § 9611(a) provides:
"The President shall use the money in the Fund for the following
purposes:"
"(1) payment of governmental response costs incurred pursuant to
section 9604 of this title, including costs incurred pursuant to
the Intervention on the High Seas Act;"
"(2) payment of any claim for necessary response costs incurred
by any other person as a result of carrying out the national
contingency plan established under section 1321(c) of title 33 and
amended by section 9605 of this title:
Provided, however,
That such costs must be approved under said plan and certified by
the responsible Federal official;"
"(3) payment of any claim authorized by subsection (b) of this
section [providing for reimbursement to the Federal and State
Governments for damage to natural resources under their respective
control] and finally decided pursuant to section 9612 of this
title, including those costs set out in subsection 9612(c)(3) of
this title [providing for recovery by Fund of interest, costs, and
attorney's fees in action against any person liable to the claimant
or to the Fund]; and"
"(4) payment of costs specified under subsection (c) of this
section [providing for research, restoration or replacement of
natural resources, prevention of releases, equipment and overhead,
and administrative costs]."
"The President shall not pay for any administrative costs or
expenses out of the Fund unless such costs and expenses are
reasonably necessary for and incidental to the implementation of
this subchapter."
[
Footnote 3]
Section 104 of CERCLA, 42 U.S.C. § 9604, which sets out
procedures for governmental response to hazardous substance
releases, provides that state and local governments, as well as the
Federal Government, may be delegated by the President to undertake
appropriate measures and receive reimbursement from Superfund. It
appears, therefore, that the term "governmental response costs" in
§ 9611(a)(1),
see n 2,
supra, refers to Federal, State, and local
Government.
[
Footnote 4]
Because paragraph (1) of 42 U.S.C. § 9611(a) apparently
applies to any governmental entity,
see n 3,
supra, the phrase "any
other.person" in paragraph (2) of that subsection must denote any
nongovernmental entity.
[
Footnote 5]
A member of the New Jersey Legislature also brought suit against
the United States seeking to have the Spill Act declared valid. The
parties settled the litigation, stipulating that New Jersey could
spend Spill Fund money for seven enumerated purposes, including
compensation for response costs and damages that are eligible for
Superfund compensation but are not actually compensated.
See
Lesniak v. United States, 17 ERC 1456 (NJ 1982). Appellants,
of course, were not parties to that settlement.
[
Footnote 6]
CERCLA was a temporary experiment; by its terms, the Federal
Government's authority to collect the excise tax and to appropriate
general revenues for Superfund expired on September 30, 1985. 42
U.S.C. §§ 9653, 9631(b)(2). The Congress is currently
considering legislation that would extend CERCLA for another five
years.
See H.R. 2005, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. (1985), passed
by the Senate,
see 131 Cong.Rec. 25090-25091 (1985), and
H.R. 2817, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. (1985), inserted into H.R. 2005,
99th Cong., 1st Sess. (1985), passed by the House,
see 131
Cong.Rec. 35626 (1985). As passed, both the Senate and House bills
eliminate § 114(c).
See S. 51, § 135; H.R. 2005,
§ 147. Of course, appellants' claims for a refund of taxes
paid through September 30, 1985, are unaffected by the expiration
of CERCLA or by any changes in the law after that date.
[
Footnote 7]
An example of a "cost of response" that would not be eligible
for Superfund compensation would be the cost of a private party's
cleanup efforts if that party did not receive prior authorization
from the Federal Government or its agent,
see 42 U.S.C.
§ 9611(a)(2). Under the Solicitor General's reading of §
114(c), a state fund could not reimburse those costs even though it
is clear that they would not be eligible for Superfund money.
[
Footnote 8]
Bill H.R. 85, 96th Cong., 1st Sess., was introduced on January
15, 1979, by Representative Biaggi. After consideration in
Committee, the bill was reported to the full House,
see
H.R.Rep. No. 96-172 (1979), but it ran into opposition from the oil
and chemical industries. A substitute bill, introduced by
Representative Breaux as an amendment to H.R. 85, was considered
and passed by the full House. 126 Cong.Rec. 26391 (1980). The bill
as passed created two funds financed from taxes on petroleum and
chemical feedstocks. One fund was to provide compensation for oil
spills, and the other for hazardous chemical spills in navigable
waters; the bill did not cover hazardous substance releases on
land. The bill entitled governments and individuals to recover
damages for cleanup costs and certain economic losses, and imposed
strict liability on owners and operators of vessels and other
facilities.
Representative Florio introduced H.R. 7020, 96th Cong., 2d
Sess., on April 2, 1980. The bill was reported out of Committee,
see H.R.Rep. No. 96-1016 (1980), and enacted by the House,
126 Cong.Rec. 26799 (1980). The bill created a fund financed from a
tax on oil and chemicals and from general revenues. The fund was to
support government response to releases of hazardous substances,
including oil, from inactive hazardous waste sites; it did not
cover spills in navigable waters, nor did it provide for
compensation for economic losses.
The most ambitious of the bills, S. 1480, 96th Cong., 1st Sess.,
was introduced by Senators Culver, Muskie, Stafford, Chafee,
Randolph, and Moynihan on July 11, 1979. It was favorably reported,
see S.Rep. No. 96-848 (1980). As reported, the bill
provided for a $4 billion fund from general revenues and fees on
petroleum and chemicals, and for strict liability for a broad range
of persons responsible for releases of hazardous chemicals (not
including oil). The liability and compensation provisions covered
cleanup costs and a variety of private damages, including medical
expenses.
As all three bills reached the Senate, S. 1480 was attacked as
too comprehensive and H.R. 85 and H.R. 7020 as too weak. Eventually
the Senate passed a substitute bill,
see infra at
475 U. S. 368,
as an amendment to H.R. 7020. The new H.R. 7020 was enacted by both
Houses, and signed into law on December 11, 1980. Pub.L. 96-510, 94
Stat. 2767.
See 1 Leg.Hist. xiii-xxi;
see also
Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, A Legislative
History of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation,
and Liability Act of 1980 (Superfund), 97th Cong., 2d Sess. (Comm.
Print 1983); Grad, A Legislative History of the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability ("Superfund")
Act of 1980, 8 Colum.J.Env.L. 1 (1982).
[
Footnote 9]
As discussed in
n 8,
supra, H.R. 85, as passed by the House, provided for two
funds, one to cover oil spills and the other to cover hazardous
chemical spills. Section 110 applied to the oil spill fund only.
Section 302 of H.R. 85 applied to the chemical spill fund, and is
worded identically to § 110. We will hereafter use "§
110" to refer to both preemption provisions.
[
Footnote 10]
The Solicitor General relies on language in the House Report on
H.R. 85 and in the debates to the effect that the preemption
provision did not prevent a State from collecting taxes to pay for
costs that are not "compensable damages" as defined in that bill.
See Brief for United States as
Amicus Curiae
13-15. However, as the Solicitor General misperceives the broad
scope of the term "compensable damages" in H.R. 85, the use of that
term in the legislative history of §110 does not advance his
argument.
[
Footnote 11]
Bill H.R. 85, unlike CERCLA, did not provide that the President
would enter into contracts with a state government under which the
latter would undertake to respond to a release on behalf of the
President,
see 42 U.S.C. § 9604(d). Nor did it give
the President special authority to respond to releases, as does
CERCLA § 104. It therefore appears that H.R. 85 put both the
Federal Government and the affected state government in a position
closely analogous to that of a nongovernmental claimant, so far as
their ability to seek compensation from the fund for costs of
response to an oil spill was concerned. That fact provides further
support for the argument that state governments were intended to be
"claimants" under H.R. 85.
[
Footnote 12]
Section 607(b)(1) of S. 1341, 96th Cong., 1st Sess. (1979),
provided that a "claim" for removal costs could be asserted
"(A) by any agency of the United States Government, [and] (B) by
any State, with respect to reimbursements allowed under the system
established in the National Contingency Plan."
"United States claimant' was defined in exactly the same way as
it was in H.R. 85.
See S. 1341, § 601(mm). The
preemption provision, § 612(a), provided that no court action
could be maintained to recover for response costs or damages 'a
claim for which may be asserted under this title,' and that 'no
person may be required to contribute to any fund, the purpose of
which is to pay compensation for such a loss."
[
Footnote 13]
Compare 126 Cong.Rec. 30949 (1980) (remarks of Sens.
Bradley and Randolph),
with id. at 26197-26198 (remarks of
Reps. Florio and Biaggi).
[
Footnote 14]
Moreover, if the phrase is not to be read as a unit, but split,
as the Solicitor General contends, into "claims for any costs of
response or damages" and "claims which may be compensated under
this subchapter," the latter phrase becomes Surplusage. Under the
Solicitor General's view, the only two situations that can result
in a "claim" under CERCLA are first, when a third party seeks
reimbursement for its "costs of response," and second, when a
government seeks "damages."
See 42 U.S.C. §§
9611(a)(2), (3). Both situations, however, are already covered in
the first phrase, rendering the latter superfluous.
[
Footnote 15]
See, e.g., H.R.Rep. No. 96-172, p. 22 (1979)
(accompanying H.R. 85) ("The increasing distress over the
development of a multitude of State statutes related to liability
and compensation for damage from oil spills, felt by those engaged
in the national and international movement and storage of petroleum
and petroleum products, was again articulated. It was argued that,
if this continues, they will be severely hampered in their ability
to conduct their operations in a manner that is economically sound
and of reasonable cost to the consumer of oil");
see also
42 U.S.C. § 9651(a)(1)(F) (requiring President to report to
Congress on effect of Superfund tax on "the Nation's balance of
trade with other countries").
[
Footnote 16]
See, e.g., 126 Cong.Rec. 30949 (1980):
"Mr. RANDOLPH. . . . Any damage not reimbursed by this bill fund
may similarly be the proper subject of a State fund if a State so
chooses to construct its fund."
"
* * * *"
"Mr. BRADLEY. And am I also correct in noting that State funds
are preempted only for efforts which are in fact paid for by the
Federal fund, and that there would be no preemption for efforts
which are eligible for Federal funds but for which there is no
reimbursement? "
"Mr. RANDOLPH. That is correct."
[
Footnote 17]
Taken, in part, word for word from the Florio-Biaggi debate, the
Bradley-Randolph debate contains a number of statements that might
apply to H.R. 85, but could not apply to CERCLA. Senator Bradley
used the phrase "compensable damages" from H.R. 86, § 110,
which nowhere appears in CERCLA § 114(c). Senator Bradley also
referred to "the Secretary" in his questioning. While the hazardous
substance program of H.R. 85 was under the control of the Secretary
of Transportation,
see § 101(a) of that bill as
enacted, CERCLA's requirements are addressed to the Administrator
of the Environmental Protection Agency and to the President.
Finally, Senator Randolph stated that the preemption provision
would take effect 180 days after passage of the bill -- a provision
that does not appear in CERCLA.
[
Footnote 18]
The National Priorities List is set out at 40 CFR pt. 300, App.
B. (1985).
JUSTICE STEVENS, dissenting.
The purposes of the "Spill Fund" Act passed by the New Jersey
Legislature in 1977, [
Footnote 2/1]
and the "Superfund" legislation enacted by the Congress of the
United States in 1980 [
Footnote
2/2] overlap partially, but not entirely. In the area of
overlap, both statutes create funds to defray the costs of
responding to environmental damage caused by the disposal of
certain hazardous substances. Even in this area, however, the state
and federal funds are not identical, for § 114(c) of the
federal statute provides that no person may be required to
contribute to any state fund if "the purpose" of the fund is to pay
"compensation for claims for any costs of response or damages or
claims which may be compensated under" the federal fund. [
Footnote 2/3] The question presented by
this case is whether the words "the purpose" should be construed to
mean "one of the purposes."
Page 475 U. S. 378
I
Both parties agree that the New Jersey Spill Fund was created to
serve multiple purposes, and that at least some of these purposes
are not expressly described in § 114(c). [
Footnote 2/4] Moreover, even if the bulk of the
moneys in the Spill Fund has to date been expended in furtherance
of purposes served by the federal Superfund, there is no reason to
believe that the separate purposes are pretextual or illegitimate,
or that, in the future, New Jersey will not use its Spill Fund to
meet an ecological threat, such as an oil spill, for which
Superfund
Page 475 U. S. 379
makes no provision.
See Tr. in Nos. SC 319A-81 and SC
303A-81, p. 21 (N.J. Tax Court).
These concededly legitimate state purposes are, in my view,
sufficient to validate the tax supporting New Jersey's Spill Fund.
First, § 114(c) literally preempts only taxes to support state
funds for which "the purpose" is to compensate for claims
compensable under Superfund. In accordance with this language,
contributions to state funds would be preempted only if their sole
purpose -- or perhaps their only nontrivial purpose -- was to
compensate for claims covered by Superfund. Unless Congress
intended to forbid further contributions to state funds merely
because they have not expended "sufficient" moneys on legitimate
state objectives (whatever that threshold amount should be), New
Jersey's Spill Fund unquestionably escapes the preemptive sweep of
§ 114(c).
If this purely literal reading of § 114(c) resulted in
manifest injustice, or were plainly at war with the probable intent
of Congress, I would reject it. But such a reading is consistent
with the sparse legislative history that has been called to our
attention. [
Footnote 2/5] In the
debate on the Senate floor, New Jersey Senator Bradley pointed out
that his State had enacted a "Spill Compensation Fund" supported by
"a tax applied to transfers of petroleum and a tax on nonpetroleum
hazardous substances." 126 Cong.Rec. 30949 (1980), reprinted in
Senate
Page 475 U. S. 380
Committee on Environment and Public Works, A Legislative History
of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
Liability Act of 1980 (Superfund), 97th Cong., 2d Sess., 731
(Comm.Print 1983) (hereinafter 1 Leg.Hist.). Acknowledging
industry's fear that it might be forced to bear a "double tax,"
ibid., the Senator propounded a series of questions to
Senator Randolph of West Virginia, the bill's sponsor in the
Senate, to clarify the scope of § 114(c). This colloquy, as I
read it, is generally in keeping with preemption of nothing more
than state taxation to support funds for which "the purpose" is to
compensate for claims covered by Superfund:
"Mr. BRADLEY."
"
* * * *"
"Am I correct in understanding that it is the purpose of this
legislation [§ 114(c)] to prohibit States from requiring any
person to contribute to a fund
for the purpose of
reimbursing claims already provided for in this legislation?"
"Mr. RANDOLPH. Yes, that is the clear intent. The purpose is to
prohibit States from creating
duplicate funds to pay
damage compensable under this bill."
"Mr. BRADLEY. However, there is
no such preemption of a
State's ability to collect such taxes or fees for
other
costs associated with releases that are not compensable
damages as defined in this legislation."
"Mr. RANDOLPH. The Senator is correct."
"
* * * *"
"Nothing in the language or intent of this bill would prohibit a
State from using its fund for the purposes you have inquired about.
The purpose of this legislation is simply to preempt
double
taxation of the substances enumerated in the bill
for the
purposes of compensation of the covered damage. . . . "
Page 475 U. S. 381
"
Any damage not reimbursed by this bill fund may
similarly be the proper
subject of a State fund if a State
so chooses to construct its fund. . . ."
"
* * * *"
". . . What this bill does is prohibit a State from requiring
any person to contribute to any fund if
the purpose of
that fund is to compensate for a claim paid for under the
provisions of this bill. Thus the State cannot receive a fee or a
tax on a substance if that fee or tax is to go into a fund
and
the fund is for the purpose of paying [compensable]
claims."
"Putting it simply, this is a prohibition against
double
taxation for the same purposes. It [does] not . . . prohibit a
State from imposing fees or taxes for other purposes. . . .
"
"In summary, Mr. President, this preemption provision is narrow
in scope and limited to the particular purpose of preventing double
taxation."
126 Cong.Rec. at 30949 (emphasis added), reprinted in 1
Leg.Hist. 731-733. [
Footnote
2/6]
Page 475 U. S. 382
The legislation passed by the Senate was introduced in the House
of Representatives by Representative Florio of New Jersey, whose
brief remarks on the floor are likewise consistent with construing
§ 114(c) to preempt taxation to support state imitations of
Superfund:
"Regarding the preemption language contained in these
amendments, I would point out that some States, including my own
State of New Jersey, have successful spill funds, and that, while
States may not create
duplicate funds to pay damages
compensable under this bill, there is
no preemption of the
State's ability to collect taxes on fees for
other costs
associated with releases that are
not compensable damages
as defined in this legislation."
". . . Putting it simply, this is a prohibition against
double taxation for the same purposes."
126 Cong.Rec. 31965 (1980) (emphasis added), reprinted in part
in 1 Leg.Hist. 780.
As I see it, if Congress had intended to forbid any further
contributions to the New Jersey Spill Fund -- the existence of
which it was made acutely aware -- it surely could have expressed
that intent in less ambiguous language than is found in §
114(c). Indeed, if that had been its purpose, I would expect it to
be revealed either in a committee report or in some unequivocal
comment during the debates on the legislation. I have found no such
legislative history. In my opinion, we should not presume
preemption unless Congress clearly identifies its intent to curtail
the lawmaking power of a sovereign State, either by careful
draftsmanship of its preemptive command or by necessary implication
based on the scope of its entire regulatory program. [
Footnote 2/7] The language of § 114(c)
is
Page 475 U. S. 383
simply too opaque to support the broad prohibition that
appellants ask us to find in it.
II
For the foregoing reasons, the New Jersey Spill Fund tax is not
a "contribut[ion]" to a fund "the purpose of which is to pay
compensation for claims . . . which may be compensated under"
Superfund. Because there exist several legitimate purposes for
which New Jersey may expend funds, "the purpose" of the State Spill
Fund does not duplicate the purpose of Superfund, and the tax
levied to support it is to that extent unquestionably valid under
§ 114(c). Moreover, while the Spill Fund is by statute
available (and has been used) for the purpose described in §
114(c), the State Fund's compensation for claims covered by its
federal counterpart does not entitle appellants to a
pro
tanto refund of taxes on a theory that the Spill Fund is
"partially preempted." The unqualified language of § 114(c)
either forbids all contributions to the Fund or it forbids none; it
affords no basis for objecting to a tax for the concededly
legitimate state purposes identified earlier,
see
475
U.S. 355fn2/4|>n. 4,
supra.
But since the Court concludes that the Spill Act is "preempted
in part,"
ante at
475 U. S. 358;
accord, ante at
475 U. S. 376,
it must confront the difficult question of relief. In keeping with
its "partial preemption" analysis, the Court should advise the New
Jersey courts how they should calculate the partial refund of taxes
to which appellants are presumably entitled on remand. For example,
must appellants be refunded the percentage of Spill Act taxes
expended on Superfund-compensable claims in the tax years in
question, or may the State reduce their refund by imputing an
average annual cost for the cleanup of oil spills, which are one of
the contingencies against which the Spill Fund was intended to
accumulate reserves, but which has not yet occurred?
Page 475 U. S. 384
Rather than facing up to the difficult but essential remedial
choices to which its analysis inescapably gives rise, the Court
takes the entirely unresponsive course of resolving a lawsuit that
has not yet been filed. In the litigation it apparently
contemplates, a contributor to the Spill Fund has challenged a
particular expenditure of the Fund as being in conflict with §
114(c). In this situation, I might agree that the purpose of §
114(c)'s preemption of double
taxation prevents New Jersey
from
spending these moneys on activities compensable under
Superfund. Taxing and spending are obviously linked in §
114(c): taxes may not be levied to support funds indemnifying
claims compensable under Superfund. Given this linkage, the
hypothetical plaintiff might argue that § 114(c)'s prohibition
of "double taxation" preempts state expenditures of Spill Fund
moneys for Superfund-compensable claims generally, whether
collected in a separately identifiable fund or not, on the theory
that such expenditures would constitute the functional equivalent
of a distinct "fund" whose purpose is to pay claims compensable
under Superfund. [
Footnote 2/8]
Page 475 U. S. 385
But whatever the merits of the hypothesized challenge to
particular state expenditures, the case or controversy which would
raise it is not before this Court. Appellants challenge the Spill
Fund tax in its entirety; they make no claim for a partial refund.
App. to Brief on Behalf of Plaintiffs-Appellants in No. A-3913-81T1
(N.J.Super.Ct.), pp. 2a-7a (N.J. Tax Court Complaint
�� 3-4);
id. at 16a-23a (N.J. Chancery
Division Complaint �� 11-36); Tr. in Nos. SC 319A-81
& SC 303A-81, p. 34 (N.J. Tax Court). This litigation does not
concern any particular expenditure of Spill Fund assets for any
purpose, let alone the purpose described in § 114(c).
[
Footnote 2/9] As a consequence, it
is plainly inappropriate to let stand the Spill Fund tax challenged
by appellants, and instead order New Jersey to restrict Fund
expenditures not properly before us.
Of course, if the hypothesized challenge were successful, the
Court would be entirely correct that the next question would be
whether New Jersey would have set the same tax rate despite
circumscription of the purposes for which the Fund might be
expended, and that this state law question should be left for the
New Jersey courts. [
Footnote
2/10] The only question
Page 475 U. S. 386
before us today, however, is whether "the purpose" of the New
Jersey tax is to fund claims which may be compensated under
Superfund. For me, the universal agreement that the tax moneys
poured into New Jersey's Spill Fund may be spent in furtherance of
entirely valid purposes is sufficient to sustain the state tax.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of New Jersey should be
affirmed.
[
Footnote 2/1]
New Jersey Spill Compensation and Control Act (Spill Fund),
N.J.Stat.Ann. §§ 58:10-23.11 to 68:10-23.11z (West 1982
and Supp.1986).
[
Footnote 2/2]
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
Liability Act of 1980 (Superfund or CERCLA), 94 Stat. 2767, 42
U.S.C. § 9601
et seq.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Section 114(c) of Superfund states in full:
"Except as provided in this Act, no person may be required to
contribute to any fund,
the purpose of which is to pay
compensation for claims for any costs of response or damages or
claims which may be compensated under this title. Nothing in this
section shall preclude any State from using general revenues for
such a fund, or from imposing a tax or fee upon any person or upon
any substance in order to finance the purchase or prepositioning of
hazardous substance response equipment or other preparations for
the response to a release of hazardous substances which affects
such State."
94 Stat. 2796, 42 U.S.C. § 9614(c) (emphasis added).
[
Footnote 2/4]
As appellants concede, the New Jersey Spill Fund "has subsidiary
purposes that do not duplicate those of CERCLA." Brief for
Appellants 22, n. 24. For example, while Spill Fund moneys may be
used to pay for petroleum and crude oil spills, N.J.Stat.Ann.
§ 58:10-23.11b(k) (West Supp.1985), Superfund expressly
excludes such pollutants from its definition of "hazardous
substances," § 101(14), 94 Stat. 2769, 42 U.S.C. §
9601(14). In addition, New Jersey's Spill Fund authorizes payments
for income or property value losses caused by damage resulting from
a discharge of hazardous substances, and covers the cost of
restoration or replacement of natural resources damaged or
destroyed by a discharge. N.J.Stat.Ann. § 58:10-23.11g(a)
(West 1982). In contrast, the federal Superfund provides limited
damages coverage in relation to natural resources, and authorizes
such compensation only if the release occurred after December 11,
1980, and only if the claimants are the United States or a State.
§§ 107(a)(4)(A), 107(f), 111(c)(2), 111(d)(1), 94 Stat.
2781, 2783, 2789-2790, 42 U.S.C. §§ 9607(a)(4)(A),
9607(f), 9611(c)(2), 9611(d)(1). Additional expenditures authorized
by the State Spill Fund, but not by its federal counterpart,
include (1) the purchase and prepositioning of equipment to respond
to release of hazardous substances,
compare N.J.Stat.Ann.
58:10-23.11o(4) (West Supp.1986),
with § 114(c), 94
Stat. 2796, 42 U.S.C. § 9614(c); (2) expenses related to
administration of the State Spill Fund,
see N.J.Stat.Ann.
§ 58:10-23.11o(4); and (3) research concerning pollution and
cleanup techniques, including ocean pollution,
see
§§ 58:10-23.11o(3), (5). The Spill Fund statute is also
authorized to pay the 10% state share "of the costs of the remedial
action, including all future maintenance" required in order to
qualify for federal funding which is not compensated by Superfund,
§ 104(c)(3), 94 Stat. 2775-2776, 42 U.S.C. § 9604(c)(3).
See N.J.Stat.Ann. §§ 58:10-23.11o(1), (2) (West
Supp.1986). Appellants argued in state court that taxes for this
purpose contravene § 114(c).
[
Footnote 2/5]
The explanation for the absence of committee reports and for the
brief remarks on the floor lies in the fact that the compromise
legislation that became Superfund was introduced as a floor
amendment in the Senate in the waning days of the lame-duck session
of the 96th Congress. The lineal ancestor of Superfund, S. 1480,
was reported out of Committee on November 18, 1980 -- after the
national elections had changed the political complexion by assuring
the Republicans control of the Presidency and of the Senate in
1981. In the aftermath of the November elections, S. 1480, along
with three other bills, became the subject of an 11th-hour
compromise forged primarily in the Senate. The original provision
in S. 1480 for a $4.1 billion fund was dramatically reduced to $1.6
billion and, of importance to our inquiry, § 114(c) was
added.
[
Footnote 2/6]
I recognize that some language in this colloquy may be read to
imply that § 114(c) preempts only those state funds whose
purpose is to compensate for claims actually paid for by Superfund.
See 126 Cong.Rec. 30949 (1980) (remarks of Sen. Bradley
and Sen. Randolph), reprinted in 1 Leg.Hist. 731-732.
See
also 97 N.J. 526, 536-544,
481
A.2d 271, 276-281 (1984). I agree with the Court that this
interpretation conflicts with the "may be compensated" language of
§ 114(c), would trivialize it by rendering only actual
conflicts preempted, and would render superfluous the proviso to
§ 114(c) that States may use "general revenues for such a
fund" to pay "costs of response or damages . . . which may be
compensated" under Superfund.
See ante at
475 U. S.
370-371. Besides, it seems odd to suppose that States
would choose to compensate claims already redressed by federal
funds. In addition to these deficiencies, the colloquy inaccurately
refers to a 180-day grace period before preemption would take
effect and to compensation for damage caused by oil spills.
See
ante at
475 U. S.
373-374, n. 17. In light of the haste with which this
legislation was passed, and the consequent inaccuracies of some of
the remarks regarding the details of the legislation, I consider
the remarks on the floor only at a high level of generality.
[
Footnote 2/7]
See Chicago & N.W. Transp. Co. v. Kalo Brick & Tile
Co., 450 U. S. 311, 317
(1981) ("Preemption of state law by federal statute or regulation
is not favored
in the absence of persuasive reasons -- either
that the nature of the regulated subject matter permits no other
conclusion or that the Congress has unmistakably so ordained'"
(quoting Florida Lime & Avocado Growers, Inc. v. Paul,
373 U. S. 132,
373 U. S. 142
(1963))).
[
Footnote 2/8]
New Jersey recognizes an obligation to expend Spill Fund moneys
in furtherance of purposes not benefited by Superfund, and has
promulgated regulations intended to promote administration of the
State Spill Fund in conformity with Superfund by circumscribing
permissible expenditures.
See Regulations Governing New
Jersey Spill Compensation Fund Expenditures in Light of Federal
Superfund Law, N.J.Admin.Code 17:26-2.1 (Supp.1985). These
regulations limit Spill Fund expenditures to the following eight
purposes: (1) "[t]he cleanup and removal of a petroleum or
petroleum products discharge"; (2) certain third-party damages
payments; (3) "[t]he administrative costs of the fund"; (4) "[t]he
cost of purchasing or pre-positioning hazardous substance response
equipment or other preparations for the response"; (6) the 10%
state share of remedial costs; (6) the advancement of moneys for
the cleanup and removal of hazardous substances for which the State
has a prior commitment for reimbursement from Superfund; (7) for
the above purpose if the state fund administrator promptly applies
for federal reimbursement; and (8) any payments authorized by the
Act using tax revenues collected before the effective date of
Superfund. 14 N.J. Reg. 36(b) (1982). Appellants have contested
only purposes five through seven.
See App. to Brief on
Behalf of Plaintiffs-Appellants in No. A-3913-81T1 (N.J.Super.Ct.),
pp. 122a-126a.
See also 475
U.S. 355fn2/4|>n. 4,
supra. Appellants' challenge
to the validity of the fifth purpose is not pressed in this Court;
the sixth and seventh purposes provide for the advancement of
cleanup funds (in effect, loans) in anticipation of an award of
federal funds.
These regulations were held invalid by the New Jersey
intermediate appellate court for failure to satisfy a statutory
notice period, 190 N.J.Super. 131, 133-134,
462 A.2d 193, 195 (1983), and they are not before us. According
to the New Jersey Office of Administrative Law, the regulation,
although invalid, is still "on the books." Further action
presumably awaits the decision of this Court.
[
Footnote 2/9]
Indeed, the record on which the New Jersey Tax Court awarded
summary judgment was so lacking in information regarding Spill Fund
expenditures that appellants saw the need to supplement the record
in this Court.
[
Footnote 2/10]
If the New Jersey courts were to hold that the proscribed
purposes were severable from the permissible ones, appellants would
be entitled to no refund. If they were to find instead that the
legitimate purposes were inseparable from the purposes described in
§ 114(e), the Spill Fund would stand or fall in its
entirety.
It seems likely that the New Jersey courts would find the
invalid provisions severable. The New Jersey Tax Court found a
"legislative intent that every purpose of spill fund was to be
accomplished" and concluded that "the Legislature specifically
envisioned that the spill act would be enforced in conjunction with
any other applicable law."
Exxon Corp. v. Hunt, 4 N.J.Tax
294, 320 (1982). Accordingly, it held that
"even if § 114(c) of super fund could be construed to
preempt part of spill fund, the aforementioned nonpreempted areas
are more than sufficient to sustain its continued validity."
Ibid. The New Jersey Supreme Court acknowledged the Tax
Court's alternative holding, but relied on its primary holding that
§ 114(c) preempted only claims actually compensated to uphold
the Spill fund.
See 97 N.J., at 530, 481 A.2d. at 273.