STATE OP ILLINOIS
POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
League of Women Voters
)
v.
)
P0—7
North Shore Sanitary District
October
8,
1970
OPINION ON MOTION TO DISMISS
Opinion of the Board
(by Mr. Currie):
The League of Women Voters has filed
a complaint charging the
North Shore Sanitary District with polluting Lake Michigan.
The
District moves to dismiss the complaint,
and we deny the motion.
Under section 31
(b)
of the Environmental Protection Act uany
person” may file
a complaint alleging a violation of the Act or
of the regulations,
and the Board is required to hold
a hearing
unless it determines
that such complaint
is
“duplicitous or fri-
volous.”
The District argues that the Board lacks jurisdiction
of the complaint;
that the League lacks standing to sue;
that the
i~eague has not been authorized by its members to sue; and that the
complaint
is duplicitous.
The first objection, that of lack of jurisdiction,
appears to be
based upon
the other three objections,
as no independent reasons
are suggested for this position and as none are apparent to us.
The second and third objections
are not worthy of serious con-
sideration.
The League is
a corporation,
and
its Board of Direc-
tors specifically authorized the filing of this complaint under
clear bylaws giving if the power to do
so.
A corporation,
like
any other legal entity,
is
a
“person’ under section 3(i)
of the
Act.
We reject the half—hearted attempt
to inject the defense
of
ultra vires;
that archaic principle
is not written
into the Environ-
mental Protection Act.
The words
and the purpose of the statute are
clear:
Anybody may file
a complaint.
The Attorney General joins the District in arguing that the com-
plaint is “duplicitous” because the Attorney General has filed
a
suit against the District in the Circuit Court of Lake County.
This position,
if accepted, would turn established principles of
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35
administrative
law squarely on their heads and subvert the
purpose of the Environmental Protection Act.
The reports are
replete with decisions invoking the familiar doctrines
of
primary jurisdiction and exhaustion of remedies, instructing
litigants
to seek relief from administrative tribunals before
proceeding in court.
The present statute plainly attempted
to centralize initial decision—making in pollution cases in
a single specialized
Board, specifically
combining authority
over air and water pollution,
solid waste disposal, and other
environmental problems in
a single tribunal in recognition of
the advantages of experience and continuity
in administering
the
law in
a field often requiring considerable
technical know-
ledge.
This policy of centralization is especially evident
in the case of private complaints,
for
the private litigant
is actually forbidden by statute to go to court until he has
sought and been denied relief by the Board
(section 45
(b)).
The
fact that the provision for dismissal of rrduplicitous~
cases does
not apply to complaints filed by the Environmental
Protection Agency is further proof that provision was not meant
to impair the primary jurisdiction of the Board.
The reason for
the ban on
~lduplicitous~!complaints was
the
fear that allowing private complaints might flood
the Doard
with
too many cases raising
the same issue and unduly harass
a respondent.
The fear was not of one complaint before
the
Board but of many.
The very purpose of permitting private
complaints was to allow
an alleged polluter
to he brought be-
fore
the Board.
In this case there is no other pending complaint against this
respondent before the Board.
Moreover,
the Attorney Peneral’s
court
suit does not allege
a violation of the same statute or
regulations;
it is based upon his independent statutory authority
to abate water pollution,
and it was institutec before the Act
under which the presont complaint was filed
even was adopted.
It
is no answer that in
a
sense both complaints
seek the same
relief,
namely,
an order forbidding water pollution by the Dis-
trict.
The
State has several
laws against pollution
,
and
a
complaint alleging violation of one of
ththn does not preclude
a complaint by another party alleging violation
of another law.
The motion to dismiss is denied.
Mr. Lawton
took no part
in
the
consideration
or decision of this motion.
//I
Con,~Ürf
~
~
______
I
Dissent
~/~1~b/
~L&,;~
1
—36
I,
Recrina
E.
Ryan,
Clerk of the Pollution Control Board,
hereby certify that
the Board adonted the above Oninion this
8th. day of October,
1970.
3~ecrmna P.
RVan
Clerk of the Board
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