ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
January 6,
1994
GRIGOLEIT
COMPANY,
)
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 89—184
)
(Permit Appeal)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
)
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by C.A. Manning):
On December 15,
1993, the Grigoleit Company (“Grigoleit”) by
and
through
one
of
its
attorneys,
A.
James
Shafter
of
KEHART,
SHAFTER,
HUGHES
&
WEBBER,
P.C.1,
filed
a
“Motion
for
Order
Assessing Sanctions and Reiuandment for Issuance of Air Operating
Permit without Special Conditions (“Motion for Order”). The Motion
for Order was filed pursuant to the Appellate Court of Illinois,
Fourth District’s final opinion and order remanding this matter to
the Board.
(Grigoleit CoTn~anyv. Illinois Pollution Control Board
and Illinois Environmental Protection Agency,
(4th Dist. 1993) 245
Ill. App.3d
337,
613 N.E.2d
371.)2
The Appellate Court mandated
that the Board direct the Agency to issue an air operating permit
without any special conditions for a decorative metal fabrication
plant operated by Grigoleit.
The Court also awarded Grigoleit
“sanctions”
from
the
date
of
our
second
remand
in
this
case
(Grigoleit
V.
IEPA,
(June
20,
1991),
PCB
89-194)
based
on the
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency’s
(“Agency”)
refusal to
follow the Board’s remand order that the Agency issue the permit.
On December 23, 1993, the Agency filed a “Motion for Extension
of
Time
to
File Response”
(“Notion
for
Extension”)
indicating
counsel for the Agency had not been served with a signed copy of
the Motion for Order and that on December 21,
1993, the Office of
1Grigoleit
is
represented
by
A.
James
Shafter
of
KEHART,
SHAFTER,
HUGHES
& WEBBER, P.C.
in PCB 89-184 and by Roy M. Harsch,
of GARDNER, CARTON
& DOUGLAS in PCB 92-23.
2The
Agency
filed
a
petition
for
leave
to
appeal
the
Appellate Court’s opinion and order of May 6, 1993.
On October
6,
1993,
the
Illinois
Supreme
Court
denied
the
petition
and
on
November 17,
1993,
the Supreme Court denied an Agency motion for
leave to file a motion for reconsideration of the Court’s denial.
The Supreme Court’s order of November 17,
1993,
precipitated the
instant motion.
2
the Attorney General forwarded the Agency its copy of
the
motion.3
The Agency requests an extension of time of an additional 21 days
in which to file a response.
The Agency cites Grigoleit’s failure
to properly and timely serve the Agency and the Agency’s need for
an adequate amount of time to review the attorneys’ billable hour
and expense sheets comprising the requested sanctions.
On December
29, 1993, the Board received a response to the Motion for Extension
from Grigoleit stating several objections. On January 3,
1994, the
Agency filed, without an accompanying motion for leave to file,
a
“Response to Objection to Motion for Extension of Time to File
Response”.
We hereby grant the Agency’s Motion for Extension and do so
based on Grigoleit’s failure to properly serve Agency counsel with
the
Motion
for
Order.
Grigoleit’s
main
argument
against
an
extension is its assertion the Agency was “constructively” served
on December 20, 1993 when the Agency’s counsel received Grigoleit’s
status report filed in related case, PCB 92—23.
An unsigned copy
of the Motion for Order was affixed as an attachment to that status
report. We find this argument unpersuasive.
It is clear from the
filings in both this case and in PCB 92-23, that the motion was not
only unsigned,
but the attorneys’
billable hour sheets were not
included with the Notion
for
Order when it was attached to the
status report.
(See Grigoleit
V.
IEPA,
PCB 92-23,
Petitioner’s
“Status
Report”
filed
December
15,
1993.)
These
attorneys’
billable hour and expense
sheets comprise Grigoleit’s requested
sanctions amount and the Agency would not have had an opportunity
to
review
the
figures
until
having
received
a
copy
from
the
Attorney General on December 23,
1993.
(Motion for Extension, at
2.)
The Agency may have had notice that Grigoleit intended to file
a motion,
but
its counsel would not have had knowledge of the
entirety
of
that
motion,
specifically,
the
billable
hour
and
expense sheets.
Moreover, service upon the Office of the Attorney
General solely, without also serving the Agency, does not satisfy
the Board’s service requirements found at 35 Ill. Adm. Code Subpart
C.
Sharon Davis
as counsel for the Agency
is unquestionably the
proper party
in this proceeding warranting service; the Attorney
General represented the Agency as the appellate counsel and he has
not filed an appearance on behalf of the Agency in this proceeding.
To date, there is no evidence in the record that Grigoleit has even
3me
Certificate
of
Service
signed
by
attorney
A.
James
Shafter, indicates that he served via Federal Express,
Ms. Dorothy
Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control Board,
Mr. Mark E.
Wilson, Assistant Attorney General and Ms. !4usette Vogel, Attorney
Assistant to the Chairman of the Illinois Pollution Control Board,
and that counsel for the Agency, Sharon Davis, was not served with
the Motion for Order.
3
attempted to perfect service upon the Agency.’
As
stated
above,
we
hereby
grant
the Agency’s Motion
for
Extension.
The Agency
is directed to file its response on or
before January 18,
1994.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I,
Dorothy M. Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
oard,
hereby certi
hat the above order was adopted on the
___
day of
,
1994, by a vote of
~
L~
Dorothy M. Gw~, Clerk’
Illinois Poflt~tionControl Board
4We note that in PCB 92-23, Grigoleit, by its attorney Roy N.
Harsch, properly served Sharon Davis, counsel for the Agency, with
a copy of the status report.