ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTRCL BOARD
    December
    18, 1986
    BRAVO-ERNST DEVELOPERS,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 86—10
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
    )
    PROTECTION AGENCY and COUNTY
    )
    OF DUPAGE,
    Respondents.
    ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by
    B.
    Forcade):
    On December
    4,
    1986,
    Bravo—Ernst Developers
    (“Bravo—Ernst”)
    filed
    a motion
    to withdraw petition for variance.
    In its
    December
    5, 1986, Order, the Board
    stated:
    “...
    as
    the
    Board
    has already
    issued
    a
    final
    opinion
    and
    order
    in
    this
    case,
    withdrawal
    of
    the
    petition
    for
    variance
    is
    inappropriate.
    The
    Board
    construes Bravo—Ernst’s motion
    as
    a
    motion
    to
    withdraw
    the
    September
    18,
    1986,
    motion
    for
    reconsideration
    of
    the August
    14,
    1986,
    Opinion
    and Order.
    The motion
    to with-
    draw is granted.”
    The Board allowed until December
    15,
    1986,
    for appropriate
    motions,
    if the intentions of any party were misconstrued.
    On
    December
    12,
    1986,
    Bravo—Ernst
    filed
    a response reasserting
    that
    the entire petition for variance should be withdrawn,
    not the
    motion
    for reconsideration.
    Bravo—Ernst requests the Board
    “clarify” its December
    5, 1986, order
    to grant withdrawal of the
    petition
    for variance.
    Bravo—Ernst’s December
    12,
    1986,
    filing asserts that “no
    party opposed the grant of
    ...“
    the motion
    to withdraw
    petition.
    That
    is not totally correct.
    On December
    5,
    1986,
    the
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (“Agency”)
    filed
    a
    motion for reconsideration urging
    the
    Board
    to:
    1)
    cancel
    the
    December
    19, 1986, hearing;
    2) reaffirm the August 14,
    1986,
    Order denying variance; and
    3)
    enter
    an Order
    barring Bravo—Ernst
    from filing any future variance petitions
    to obtain the same
    relief.
    The Agency reasserted
    its position
    in
    its December
    15,
    1986,
    filing.
    After reviewing the filings, the
    Board reaffirms
    its December
    5,
    1986, Order dismissing
    the motion
    for
    reconsideration.
    In Illinois,
    a plaintiff,
    in
    a civil proceeding, has an
    unqualified right
    to dismiss an action without prejudice
    up
    until
    hearing
    or trial
    on the matter unless
    a counter claim has been
    74.286

    —2—
    pleaded by
    a defendant.
    110 Ill. Rev.
    Stat. 2—1009(a).
    In
    Village of South Elgin
    v. ?~asteManagement,
    et a?.,
    64
    Ill. App.
    3d 570, 381 N.E.2d 782
    (2nd Dist.,
    1978), the court held that
    while
    the Civil Practice Act was not directly applicable
    to
    proceedings before
    an administrative body, the rules guiding the
    courts of Illinois do provide the “outer bounds”
    of what an
    administrative agency can do regarding motions for voluntary
    dismissal.
    381 N.E.2c3 at 782—3.
    Under
    Illinois law,
    a motion
    for voluntary dismissal
    of
    a plaintiff’s suit after
    trial has
    begun
    is addressed to
    the discretion of the court and
    is
    reversible only for abuse of discretion.
    Newlin v.
    Forseman, 103
    Ill. App.
    3d 1038,
    432 N.E.2d 319
    (1982).
    Under Bauman v.
    Advance Aluminum Casting Corporation,
    27
    Ill. App.
    2d
    178,
    169 N.E.2d
    382
    (1960), once trial
    or hearing
    has begun, plaintiff cannot dismiss the suit except by consent or
    on motion, specifying grounds
    for
    the dismissal, supported by
    affidavit and then only
    on terms
    to be fixed by the court.
    Even
    if compliance with the Civil
    Practice Act
    is achieved, the
    voluntary dismissal by plaintiff is discretionary with the trial
    court.
    In Bauman, the court denied
    a motion for voluntary
    dismissal after
    trial
    as
    it would constitute an abandonment of
    the proceeding
    that would
    leave the court without the power
    to
    enter judgment.
    The court
    found this result “untenable.”
    69
    N.E.2d
    at
    385.
    Bauman
    can certainly be applied
    to the circumstances
    here.
    Bravo—Ernst filed
    a petition for variance
    and specifically
    waived hearing.
    The Board proceeded
    to enter
    its “judgment,”
    a
    final
    Opinion
    and
    Order.
    Bravo—Ernst’s
    right
    to
    a
    voluntary
    dismissal
    ended
    when
    the
    matter
    proceeded
    to
    judgment.
    This
    issue
    is now within the discretion of the Board.
    To grant Bravo—
    Ernst’s motion
    to withdraw after
    judgment would render
    the
    Board’s judgment
    in this matter meaningless.
    The Board denied
    the motion
    to withdraw as inappropriate, since
    a final action had
    already been taken.
    That action
    is reaffirmed
    today.
    Since
    all parties are
    in agreement that the December
    19,
    1986, hearing should be cancelled,
    the hearing
    is cancelled.
    Bravo—Ernst asserts this matter
    should remain open with the
    possibility of
    a hearing
    in April,
    1987.
    The Agency argues the
    December
    5,
    1986, Order dismissing reconsideration should
    be
    affirmed and Bravo—Ernst should be barred from filing future
    variance petitions for the same relief.
    As Bravo—Ernst
    is not
    presently prepared
    to go
    to hearing,
    the Board believes the
    appropriate action
    is to dismiss the motion
    for reconsideration
    and close the docket.
    The Board will
    not address
    in this
    proceeding any future variance petitions that Bravo—Ernst might
    file.
    A second matter of concern
    in today’s order
    is Bravo—Ernst’s
    assertion that “by grant of reconsideration,
    the acceptance of
    additional comments and
    the scheduling
    of
    a
    further
    hearing, the
    Board
    has implicitly recognized that its order of August 14,
    1986
    74-287

    —3—
    may lack support
    in the record or
    at least should be based
    on
    a
    record developed by hearing.”
    This
    is simply not true.
    Bravo—
    Ernst
    filed this variance request and was free
    to include all the
    factual
    information
    it wanted.
    On January
    23,
    1986, the Board
    ordered additional
    information
    to be
    filed.
    Bravo—Ernst was also
    free in its original filings
    to request
    a hearing, at which
    it
    could present additional
    factual
    information.
    Bravo—Ernst
    specifically waived hearing.
    If Bravo—Ernst now feels that there
    should have been
    more facts
    in
    the record,
    or that the record
    should have been developed
    at hearing,
    it cannot place the blame
    on this Board.
    Further, the Board disputes the assertion that
    the August
    14,
    1986,
    Opinion and Order
    lacks support
    in the
    record.
    In the August 14,
    1986, Opinion and Order
    the Board made
    the following findings:
    In
    summary,
    the
    record
    discloses
    and
    the
    Board
    finds that basement back—ups and manhole
    surcharging
    in
    the
    Meadows
    Subdivision
    are
    pervasive
    and
    severe,
    that
    these
    problems
    continued
    as recently as two months before the
    present
    petition
    for
    variance
    was
    filed,
    and
    that Bravo—Ernst’s proposed
    development
    would
    be directly tributary
    to
    the problem area and
    would
    exacerbate
    the
    problem.
    Further,
    the
    Board
    finds
    that
    the
    back—ups
    and
    surcharge
    problems
    are
    certain
    to
    continue
    as
    long
    as
    DUC fails
    to
    identify
    and correct the
    illegal
    sewer
    connections
    (sump
    pumps
    and
    drains)
    which
    cause
    the
    problem.
    The
    Board
    is
    aware
    that raw sewage back—up
    in
    a basement presents
    problems
    of
    the
    spread
    of
    disease
    and
    electrocution,
    as
    well
    as
    property
    damage.
    Regardless
    of
    the
    economic
    hardship
    suffered
    by
    Bravo—Ernst,
    the
    Board
    finds
    that
    its
    hardship
    is
    not sufficient
    to be arbitrary or
    unreasonable
    in
    light
    of
    the
    increase
    in
    the
    health
    and
    safety
    risk
    to
    the
    people
    in
    the
    Meadows
    Subdivision.
    Consequently, the Board,
    on balance, denies the petition for variance.”
    There
    is
    a substantial quantity of information
    in the record
    to support the conclusion that additional
    flows from Bravo—
    Ernst’s proposed development would exacerbate
    the already severe
    basement back—ups
    in the Meadows subdivision.
    Bravo—Ernst has
    never
    introduced facts or argument to dispute that conclusion.
    It was
    an appropriate conclusion as the record existed August 14,
    1986,
    and
    it
    is
    an
    appropriate conclusion
    as the
    record exists
    today.
    IT
    IS
    SC ORDERED.
    74.288

    —4—
    I,
    Dorothy
    M.
    Gunn,
    Clerk of the
    Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certi,y that the above Order was adopted on
    the
    /,~c~~’day
    of
    L~~i_i
    ,
    1986, by
    a vote of
    __________
    ~
    Dorothy
    N. ~inn, Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    74.289

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