ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
April
9,
1992
NORTH
OAK
CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH,
)
)
Complainant,
)
V.
)
PCB
91—214
(Enforcement)
AMOCO OIL
COMPANY,
)
)
Respondent.
DISSENTING OPINION
(by B.
Forcade):
I respectfully dissent from today’s decision.
The majority
essentially has granted dismissal for failure to state a cause of
action over which the Board has jurisdiction.
For two reasons,
I
would have denied both motions for summary judgment and set the
matter for hearing.
First, despite any ruling regarding the UST regulations,
I
believe North Oak Chrysler (North Oak) has filed a complaint
which states sufficient facts to support a cause of action over
which this Board has jurisdiction.
For purposes of ruling on a motion to dismiss, all well
pleaded facts contained in the complaint must be taken
as true and all inferences therefrom must be drawn, in
favor of the nonmovant.
citations
omitted).
A
complaint should not be dismissed for failure to state
a cause of action unless it clearly appears that no set
of facts could be proven under the pleadings which
would entitle plaintiff to relief.
citations
omitted)
Illinois requires fact rather than notice pleading.
citations
omitted)
...
Emphasis
Added)
Bruxaley v. Touche
Ross
& Co.
(1984),
123 Ill.
App.
3d
636,
463 N.E.2d 195.
North Oak’s Complaint states that:
(1) Amoco was the owner and
operator of underground gasoline storage tanks
(USTs)
at the site
from 1961 until 1986 when the USTs were removed so the property
could be sold to North Oak
(paragraphs 3-12),
(2) no one has used
the property for storage or handling of petroleum products since
that time (paragraph 6),
(3)
chemical analysis of soil and
groundwater from the immediate proximity of the UST’s
demonstrated contamination (including benzene, ethlybenzene,
toluene, xylene and total hydrocarbons in the groundwater) with
132—10
1
2
the heaviest concentrations of petroleum contamination at the
exact site of two of the removed USTs (paragraphs
4,
16), and
(4)
Amoco did not remove the soil and groundwater contamination which
had resulted from the TJSTs when it sold the property (paragraph
3).
These facts,
favorably construed, could support a finding of
violation under the Illinois Environmental Protection Act
(Act)
Ill.
Rev.
Stat. 1991,
ch.
111 1/2, para.
1001,
et. seq..
For
example, Section 12 of the Act states,
in part:
Section 12
No person shall:
a.
Cause or threaten or allow the
discharge of any contaminants into
the environment in any State so as
to cause or tend
to cause water
pollution in Illinois, either alone
or in combination with matter from
other sources, or so as to violate
regulations or standards adopted by
the Pollution Control Board under
this Act;
*
*
*
d.
Deposit any contaminants upon the
land in such place and manner so as
to create a water pollution hazard;
Since I believe the complaint states sufficient facts to
support a viable cause of action,
I would not have granted
dismissal.
I do not yet know whether North Oak can prove those
facts and their most favorable inferences.
Nor do I know if
Amoco might have a perfectly valid defense.
The question of what
relief is available,
if any,
is even more complicated.
Those
matters must be resolved later in the proceeding.
Since the majority focuses only on the regulatory provisions
involved, I assume the majority concludes that notice pleading
rather than fact pleading controls here.
I would disagree.
Illinois is a fact pleading state.
Ill. Rev.
Stat. 1989,
ch.
110,
para.
2-601.
This Board is an administrative agency rather than
a court of law.
Further, this proceeding is a citizen
enforcement action.
Under those conditions,
I believe the Board
should be as lenient as the law will allow in regard to the
particulars of formal pleading.
Second,
I disagree with the’majority pertaining to the
interpretation of the statutory amendments contained in P.A. 87-
323 and their impact on this case.
I agree that P.A. 87-323
requires this Board to repeal our UST regulations pertaining to,
132—102
3
“design, construction, installation, general operation, release
detection, release reporting,
release investigation, release
confirmation, out—of—service systems and their closure or
financial responsibility”
(hereinafter “the non—corrective action
regulations”).
This will constitute repeal of about 60 of the 75
typed pages of regulations in 35 Ill. Adm Code Part 731.
However,
I do not believe that P.A. 87-323 has a retroactive
application or that its makes tne Board’s prior regulatory
activity in this area void ab initio.
The Board’s identical in
substance regui~ttionsare generally intended to secure federal
approval’ for environmental regulatory programs.
Any
interpretation which can allow those regulations to be declared
void ab initio years after their adoption could threaten federal
approval of such Illinois programs.
To me, the non—corrective action regulations were validly
adopted under existing statutory authority.
They remain valid
Illinois regulatory law from the date of their adoption to the
date of their repeal.
Since the repeal was adopted by the Board
today in docket R 91-14,
UST Update. USEPA Regulations
(1/1-191
-
6/30/91),
I fail to understand how this action could vacate
regulations in effect upon the date of filing of this complaint.
The complaint alleges violations of both the non—corrective
action regulations and the corrective action regulations of 35
Ill.
Adm. Code.Part 731-from about August
3, 1990 until the
filing of the complaint in November,
1991.
To me, the
regulations were in full force and effect during that time frame.
In dicta,
the majority states without explanation that,
“the
Board’s regulations are inapplicable to liST’s that were removed
prior to the effective date of the regulations”.
According to
the majority, jurisdiction over such removed UST’s rests with the
Fire Marshall under 41 Iii. Adm. Code 170.650.
The regulatory
language of 41 Ill.
Adin. Code 170.650 is identical to the Board’s
regulation at 35 Ill. Adm Code 731.173.
Both regulations are
identical in substance to federal regulations at 40 CFR 280.73.
In fact, nearly all of the federal regulatory language of 40 CFR
Part 280 has been duplicated in both Fire Marshall regulations at
41 Ill. Adm. Code Part 170 and Pollution Control Board
regulations at 35 Ill.
Adm. Code Part 731.
All three regulatory
programs were adopted at least two years after Amoco’s tanks were
removed from the ground.
I cannot understand.how one set of
three identical regulatory programs would not be applicable to
tanks removed before regulatory adoption, but the remaining
2
sets of identical regulations would be applicable.
The relevant federal regulatory language setting forth the
general mandate to clean up permanently closed systems is 40 CFR
280.73, which states:
When directed by the implementing agency, the
owner and operator of an UST system
132—103
4
permanently closed before December 22,
1988,
must assess the excavation zone and close the
UST system in accordance with this Subpart if
releases from the UST system may,
in the
judgment of the implementing agency, pose a
current or potential threat to human health
or the environment.
I believe that this language (which was adopted by USEPA in
December,
1988, and by this Board in June,
1989)
is definitely
retroactive in that it only addresses conduct which occurred
prior to its adoption.
This is evidence of a clear federal
intent that this body of regulations should address the present
impact from any past activity.
This interpretation is not
violative of due process, and is consistent with interpretations
of other federal environmental laws.
U.S. v. Conservation
Chemical Company (1985, WD Missouri),
619
F. Supp.
162; Zands v.
Nelson
(1991, SD California),
779
F.
Supp.
1254.
In sum,
I believe the complaint states a viable claim, over
which this Board has jurisdiction,
for violations of Section 12
of the Act, and for past violations of 35 Ill.
Adm
Code Part 731.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereb
certify th t the above dissenting opinion was filed
on the
/
day of _________________,1992.
•1
Dorothy N. Gi~h,Clerk
Illinois Poli~tionControl Board
Board Member
132—104