ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
March 22, 1985
LANDFILL EMERGENCY ACTION
COMMITTEE,
)
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 85—9
MCHENRY COUNTY SANITARY LANDFILL
)
AND RECYCLING CENTER,
INC.,
)
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J. Anderson):
This complaint was filed by the Landfill Emergency Action
Committee (Committee)
on January 23,
1985.
The Mdflenry County
Sanitary Landfill and Recycling Center,
Inc.
(The Landfill) moved
to dismiss
the Complaint on February
4, 1985,
for reasons argued
in memoranda filed February
4 and February 11.
The Committee
filed a response
in opposition on February 26,
to which
the
Landfill filed a reply on March
6,
1985.
The Landfill’s first contention
is that the complaint has
not been brought
in good faith and is therefore frivolous within
the meaning
of Section 31(b)
of the Environmental Protection Act
and 35 Ill. Mm. Code 103.124(G).
The Landfill asserts that the
complaint has been brought for “political rather than
environmental reasons”, to “create a prosecution that can be
dragged before the Mcflenry County Board”
in an ongoing site
location suitability approval proceeding pursuant to the
Landfill’s expansion request
(Am. Memo,
of February 11,
1984,
p.
1—2).
In support of this proposition, the Landfill notes the
Agency’s failure to prosecute for past violations as documented
in inspection reports.
The Board agrees with the Committee that absence of Agency
prosecution
is no indicia of the merits of
a particular
complaint, given the Agency’s need to allocate its scarce
resources.
Any question of improper usage of this enforcement
proceeding
in an SB 172 proceeding
is more appropriately
addressed and argued
in the SB 172 proceeding.
The Board does
not find the allegations of this complaint
to be frivolous.
The Landfill next notes that the complaint contains claims
extending back to 1974.
It argues that the majority of these
claims are barred by the statute of limitations.
The Landfill
argues that the two—year statute of limitations
of Ill.
Rev.
Stat.
1983,
ch.
110
13—202
“Personal Injury—Penalty”
is
applicable here, since
the plaintiff
is
a non—governmental
entity.
It also suggests that the five—year limit of Paragraph
13—205 would apply to
a governmental entity.
83-241
—2—
The Board rejects this contention.
In Pielet Bros. Trading,
Inc.
v.
IEPA and IPCB,
110 Ill. App.
3d 752,
442 N.E.
2d 1374
(1982),
the Appellate Court agreed with the Board’s conclusion
that
the two—year limitation period
(since renumbered from Ill.
Rev. Stat.
1979,
ch.
83,
par.
15) did not apply to actions
brought by the Agency.
In the Board’s ruling
in Pielet Bros.
Trading,
Inc.
v.
IEPA and IPCB, PCB 80—185,
44 PCB 219,
223,
December 17,
1981,
the Board had found that “the Environmental
Protection
Act does not expressly limit any individual’s cause
of action
to enforce the right to a clean environment, and that
Section 15 does not expressly limit the right of
a state agency
to vindicate
a public right.”
On review,
the Court’s analysis was that:
“Unless the terms of a Statute of Limitations
expressly include
the State,
county, municipality
or
other governmental agencies,
the statute,
so far as
public
rights are concerned,
as distinguished from
private and local rights,
is inapplicable to
them.
(Clare
v. Bell
(1941), 378 Ill. 128, 130—31,
37 N.E. 2d
812,
814.)
The question is whether
the State
(or
its
agency or subdivision)
is asserting public rights on
behalf
of all the people of the State
or private rights
on behalf
of
a limited group.
(In re Bird’s Estate
(1951), 410
ill. 390,
394,
102 N.E. 2d 329,
331.)
Here,
the Agency argues, and we agree,
that what the
Agency seeks
is to protect the public’s right to
a
clean environment.
Moreover, not only does section
14
of
the Limitations Act fail to expressly include the
State
or the Agency, but section 14
is one of a group
of
sections designated by the legislature as pertaining
to “Personal Actions.”
See People
ex
rel. Stubblefiedl
v.
City of West Frankfort (4th Dist.
1950),
340 Ill.
App.
443, 447,
92 N.E. 2d 531, 533.
*
**
In conclusion, we hold that the Board did not err
in determining
that section
14 of the Limitations Act
did not apply to the
instant action.”
Although the Committee
is not a state
agency,
the Board
cannot find that
the two—year limitation applies to this
action.
The Board finds that the Committee,
acting
in the nature
of
a “private attorney general”,
is asserting the public’s right
to a clean environment on behalf of all of the people of
the
state,
rather than private rights on behalf of
a limited group.
Enforcement based on Agency inspection documents buttresses this
conclusion
in the case.
Finally,
the Board further does not find
the five—year limitation of Paragraph 13—205 applicable
to this
action,
since
a)
it too
is
a limitation on “personal actions”
as
is Paragraph 13—202
,
and b)
the Pielet court did not apply
(or
discuss)
the identical predecessor limitation section in that
action.
63-242
—3—
The Landfill’s final argument
is that all claims are stale,
since the most recent violation alleged
is some 18 months old and
no continuing violations
are alleged.
It also argues that the
plaintiff should be estopped from proceeding, on the grounds that
the Committee had previously failed to examine inspection reports
and
to file
a complaint.
As
a consequence, the Landfill asserts
that
it was entitled
to rely on the fact that
its performance was
satisfactory to the community.
The Board will not dismiss the complaint on the basis of
stale claims or estoppel.
The Board has found that estoppel,
waiver
or laches would not bar the Agency itself from taking
enforcement action concerning “stale” claims,
e.g.
IEPA v. City
of
Moline, PCB 82—154,
September 6, 1984,
p.
2—3; even if
estoppel were
to attach to the Agency, no convincing argument has
been presented concerning affirmative misconduct of the Committee
which would give rise to estoppel.
The motion
to dismiss
is denied.
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
I, Dorothy
M. Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board hereby certify that the above Order was adopted on
the
~Z~-~-
day of
________________,
1985 by a vote
of
_________________
Dorothy M. Gunn,
Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
63-243