OPINION OF THE COURT
This action was initiated by the State to abate a nuisance allegedly occasioned by the contamination of a presently inactive waste disposal site, owned by one Dewey Loeffel, on Mead Road in the Town of Nassau in Rensselaer County (hereinafter the Loeffel site). From the 1950’s through the mid 1960’s defendant, a manufacturer of various chemical products, contracted with Loeffel for disposal of a variety of chemical waste by-products (see State of New York v Schenectady Chems.,
The amended complaint sets forth eight specific causes of action, including three statutory causes of action for violation of the Environmental Conservation Law, four causes of action sounding in public nuisance and a cause of action for restitution of expenses incurred in the investigation of the subject site. Responding to defendant’s CPLR 3211 motion to dismiss the complaint, Special Term, in a comprehensive opinion (
In its first two causes of action, the State essentially alleged that the continued gradual migration of chemical wastes through the soil and into the surface and ground waters in the nearby environs constitutes a violation of ECL 17-0501, which reads as follows: “1. It shall be unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly, to throw, drain, run or otherwise discharge into such waters organic or inorganic matter that shall cause or contribute to a condition in contravention of the standards adopted by the department pursuant to section 17-0301” (emphasis added). Special Term rejected this contention on a finding that the term “discharge” did not “encompass the gradual migration of pollutants through permeable soil and ground and surface water from the original dump site into the surrounding environs” (State of New York v Schenectady Chems., supra, p 964). Plaintiff argues that Special Term misconstrued the purpose of the statute in assuming it was designed merely to prevent ongoing unlicensed disposal activities. Instead, plaintiff urges that the statute is result oriented and prohibits the contamination of State water, not simply certain types of present activities from which contamination might result, and thus applies to continued migration of pollutants. In our view, Special Term properly limited application of the statute. The general term “discharge” should be read to embrace activities similar to the specific terms before it (see McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY,
We find support for this conclusion in the legislative history of ECL 17-0501, the substance of which has been on the books since at least 1949 (L 1949, ch 666, § 1; see, also, Matter of Town of Waterford v Water Pollution Control Bd.,
We further agree with Special Term’s refusal to dismiss the causes of action sounding in nuisance. In reviewing a CPLR 3211 motion to dismiss, we deem the allegations of the complaint to be true and accord them every favorable inference (MacDonald v Howard,
The issue of whether Loeffel acted as defendant’s agent or as an independent contractor in disposing of the wastes presents a question of fact not to be resolved at this stage of the proceedings. Even the assumption that Loeffel acted as an independent contractor does not insulate defendant from liability, for an employer may be responsible for the actions of an independent contractor in creating a public nuisance (Restatement, Torts 2d, § 427 B; 3 NY Jur 2d, Agency and Independent Contractors, § 353, p 181). Particularly is this so where the work involved is inherently dangerous, as may reasonably be deemed the case where the disposal of hazardous wastes are involved (see State, Dept. of Environmental Protection v Ventron Corp., 94 NJ 473) and the employer has failed to take proper precautions in selecting a competent party with whom to contract (3 NY Jur 2d, Agency and Independent Contractors, §§ 343, 350, 351). Defendant’s contention that common-law nuisance actions have been preempted by recent environmental statutory procedures for abating waste pollution is without merit (State of New York v Monarch Chems.,
Finally, we find that the complaint sets forth a viable cause of action for restitution, notwithstanding the Department of Environmental Conservation’s duty under
Except as indicated above, we find the order in all other respects proper.
Mahoney, P. J., Kane, Casey and Mikoll, JJ., concur.
Order modified, on the law, without costs, by reversing so much thereof as granted defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s cause of action for restitution, motion to dismiss denied insofar as the cause of action requests restitution for past expenditures, and, as so modified, affirmed.
Notes
. The State has not appealed from so much of the order as dismissed its third cause of action which alleged a violation of ECL 17-1701 (expired Sept. 1,1973, see L 1973, ch 801, § 17), 17-0803 and 17-0807 for the discharge of wastes without a proper permit.
. To be distinguished is the recent decision in United States v Waste Inds. (734 F2d 159, revg
