ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    February 19,
    1987
    RICK MOORE,
    LEONARD MORRIS
    )
    and EDITH SIMPSON,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    )
    PCB 86—197
    WAYNE COUNTY BOARD and
    DAUBS LANDFILL,
    INC.,
    )
    Respondents.
    DISSENTING OPINION
    (by J.D.
    Dunhelle and
    J. Theodore Meyer):
    While we agree with much of what is contained
    in the
    majority’s opinion, we cannot agree with the conclusion.
    We
    believe that the general rule regarding legal descriptions as set
    forth
    in Gard and cited
    by the majority should guide
    the
    decision:
    that is,
    in essence, that the Board should look to the
    purpose of the notice
    and whether that purpose was fulfilled.
    While we are mindful of the various cases cited by the
    majority which have strictly construed various aspects of the
    notice requirements,
    by and large
    those cases
    are based upon
    timing: either
    the notice was not timely published or did not
    contain accurate information regarding the time period
    for which
    some action was
    to take place.
    None of
    the cases
    cited deal with
    the adequacy of the description of the location of the proposed
    site.
    As the majority correctly notes,
    there
    is no requirement
    that a legal description of the location of the
    site even be
    included
    in
    the notice.
    The majority also acknowledges that the
    narrative description of the property which immediately followed
    the legal description was accurate, and would have been found
    to
    be sufficient
    if there
    had been no legal description at all.
    Furthermore,
    the legal description was correctly contained
    in the
    County’s public notice of hearings.
    Finally,
    the record
    is
    devoid
    of any evidence that anyone was misled or harmed by the
    inaccuracy of the legal description.
    The only notice defect at issue here
    is
    a typographical
    error
    in one number of the legal description; otherwise, the
    majority found that “Daubs caused notice
    to be published and
    to
    be
    served on
    all required
    individuals
    in
    a timely
    and proper
    manner.”
    Based upon the facts of this case we can
    find nothing
    to support
    a conclusion that the notice failed
    to accomplish its
    76-76

    —2—
    intended purpose
    or that there
    is any substantial possibility
    that anyone was misled,
    harmed or prejudiced by the typographical
    error.
    While we realize that sometimes such harm must be
    presumed
    since
    the inadequacy of the notice could
    serve
    to
    preclude awareness of the proceeding
    in which to raise
    objections,
    we cannot find that
    to be the case where,
    as here,
    a
    correct narrative description of the property was included
    in the
    original notice and the notice of hearing was fully accurate.
    For these
    reasons we cannot find that the typographical
    error
    in this case is of such import as
    to constitute
    a fatal
    defect
    in notice
    so
    as to render nugatory over
    14 months of legal
    proceedings.
    We would have found proper jurisdiction and gone on
    to consider the merits of the
    case.
    Therefore, we respectfully
    dissent.
    ~.
    !~heodor(eMeyer
    Board Member
    I,
    Dorothy
    M.
    Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify that the ~ove
    Dissenting Opinion was filed
    on the
    _____________
    day of
    _~-t~-~-t~
    1987.
    CL
    ~
    /
    /~
    Dorothy
    M. “Gunn,
    Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control
    Board
    acoL
    hairman
    76.77

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