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SITE HISTORY_CASE 2
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SITE HISTORY_CASE 2
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Last modified
5/12/2020 4:16:12 PM
Creation date
5/12/2020 2:59:02 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
EHD - Public
ProgramCode
3500 - Local Oversight Program
File Section
SITE HISTORY
FileName_PostFix
CASE 2
RECORD_ID
PR0545660
PE
3528
FACILITY_ID
FA0003909
FACILITY_NAME
PORT OF STOCKTON
STREET_NUMBER
2201
Direction
W
STREET_NAME
WASHINGTON
STREET_TYPE
ST
City
STOCKTON
Zip
95203
APN
14503001
CURRENT_STATUS
02
SITE_LOCATION
2201 W WASHINGTON ST
P_LOCATION
01
P_DISTRICT
001
QC Status
Approved
Scanner
LSauers
Tags
EHD - Public
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Lisa Brown, Esq. <br /> December 8,y 1988 <br /> Page 2 <br /> individual corporate shareholders, officers and employees for <br /> purposes of; determining liability. See Hea-ith and Safety Code <br /> § 25323 . 5 (defining liability with reference to CERCLA) ; e.g. , <br /> State of New York v. Shore Realty, 759 F. 2d: 1032 , 1052 (2d Cir. <br /> 1985) (interpreting CERCLA) . In this case, Pete Smith is a 50% <br /> shareholder of EP (with his wife owning the- other 50%) and is the <br /> main, if not the only, proprietor of the business. Mr. Smith then <br /> may properly be subject to an order to close the tanks as their <br /> owner and operator. <br /> While Mr. Henderson correctly analyzed the Port and EP's <br /> liability, he wrongly found the Bank of Stockton (the "Bank") had <br /> not become an owner of the tanks. First, ' hP grossly <br /> mischaracterized the Port's position by saying the Port did not � <br /> claim the Bank owned the tanks. Whether or not the Port used the ; <br /> word "owner" in its July 29, 1988 letter is irrelevant. The <br /> Port's analysis clearly focused on the Bank's ownership of the <br /> tanks, and the Port unquaii:fiedly takes the :position the Bank is i <br /> an owner of ' the- tanks. <br /> Mr. Henderson states in a conclusory manner. that the order from <br /> the Bankruptcy Court only authorized the Bank to perfect its <br /> security interest and not ,to foreclose on� its personal property <br /> collateral, " including the '.tanks. However; this analysis misses <br /> the point. The Bank stepped across the boundary between <br /> perfecting its security interest and foreclosing when it took <br /> possession of the property, paid rent and otherwise exercised <br /> dominion over or ownership of the tanks. Surely, if the Bank had <br /> completed the sale, its actions would have constituted a <br /> foreclosure ! on the collateral and not merely an act, in Mr. i <br /> Henderson's..words, "to liquidate assets of the bankruptcy estate <br /> and to distribute proceeds to a priority creditor. " Here, the <br /> beneficiary`.of the sale was the Bank, not simply another third- <br /> party creditor. The Bank',-s' acts of taking possession of the <br /> collateral and selling it for its own account meet any definition <br /> of a foreclosure, regardless of whether thecase is in bankruptcy. <br /> Although there is a continuum of actions between perfecting a <br /> security interest (not assuming ownership) and full foreclosure <br /> (unambiguously assuming ownership) , the Bank's actions fall on the <br /> ownership side of that scale. As discussed in our prior <br /> correspondence, the Bank's seizure of possession, rental payments <br /> and other actions with regard to the property had no relation to <br /> perfecting the Bank's security interest. On the contrary, these <br /> actions reveal that the Bank did everything , i.t could to foreclose <br /> on the property short of actually selling it. The Bank failed to <br /> sell the property only because it realized liability might attach <br /> to the tanks. But by that time, the Bank had "caught its foot" in <br /> the trap of ownership and could not escape. <br />
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