ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    March
    14,
    1991
    A.K.A. LAND,
    INC.,
    Petitioner,
    PCB 90—177
    V.
    )
    (UST Reimbursement)
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
    )
    PROTECTION AGENCY,
    )
    Respondent.
    DISSENTING OPINION
    (by J.D. Dumelle and M. Nardulli):
    In today’s case,
    the Board was asked to interpret
    a statute
    which effectively defined the scope of the Illinois tJST
    program.
    That
    is, by virtue of the briefs submitted
    in this
    case,
    an issue presented itself as to who was an “owner” or
    “operator”
    under
    Ill.
    Rev.
    Stat.
    1989 chap. 111—1/2 section
    22.l8b.
    We disagree with the majority opinion because
    it
    ignores
    basic principles of statutory construction and creates
    a legal
    fiction which expands the class of “operators”
    under
    the Illinois
    statute.
    Because we believe that the
    reasoning is flawed and the
    that ramifications which might result from defining AKA as an
    operator are inconsistent with the Act, we dissent.
    FACTS
    With the exception of one general characterization,
    we agree
    with the facts
    as put forth by the majority.
    The majority
    opinion states that at hearing, Mr. Thomas Armstrong,
    president
    of AKA, testified that the company had been
    in the business of
    buying,
    selling and developing real estate for about two years.
    Yet many other facts were revealed at hearing which proved this
    characterization to be misleading.
    For example,
    Mr. Armstrong,
    the sole
    owner
    and president
    of AKA, had been previously employed
    by another corporation
    in a capacity where he oversaw the
    development of sites
    for future gasoline stations.
    Further,
    the
    purchase which
    is the subject
    of this litigation was the only
    site AKA ever bought and
    it
    did so with the express intent of
    leasing
    it
    as a gasoline station on
    a long—term basis
    to an oil
    company.
    It was only upon initial testing by the potential
    lessee
    that hydrocarbons were
    found to be present
    in the soil..
    We note this because
    inherent
    in the majority opinion lies the
    premise that AKA
    is somehow an “innocent purchaser” who acted in
    good faith upon discovery of the leaking USTs.
    The record does
    not support such a characterization.
    120—53

    —2—
    OWNER/OPERATOR AS AN ISSUE
    Both parties
    initially submitted that the only issue before
    the Board
    is whether the UST5 were “in use” on July
    28, 1989,
    thereby setting the applicable deductible of $100,000 pursuant
    to
    Section 22.18b(d)(3)(B)(i)
    of the Act.
    AKA asserted that its
    interpretation of
    “in use” was consistent with the statute as a
    whole.
    In supporting the proposition that “in use” refers
    to an
    affirmative action,
    petitioner put forth the statutory definition
    of “owner”.
    “Owner” means
    (A)
    in the case of an
    underground storage tank in use on November
    8,
    1984,
    or brought into use after
    that date, any
    person who owns an underground storage
    tank
    used for the storage,
    use, or dispensing of
    regulated substances, and
    (B)
    in the case of
    any underground storage tank in use before
    November
    8,
    1984, but no longer
    in use on
    November
    8, 1984, any person who owns such
    tank immediately before discontinuation of its
    use.
    42 U.S.C.
    §6991(3).
    By raising the definition of
    “owner”
    in support
    of its
    interpretation of
    the statute, AKA brought forth the question as
    to whether the company was even eligible for reimbursement under
    the Fund.
    In order
    to gain access
    to the Fund, an entity must
    either be an owner or an operator
    (Ill, Rev Stat. 1989 chap. 111-
    1/2, par.
    1022.18b(a).).
    The only way AKA could be an owner
    under subsection
    (A) would be
    if the USTs were “in use on
    November
    8, 1984 or brought into use after that date”.
    If that
    were the case,
    then AKA would automatically be subject to the
    $100,000 deductible under
    section 22.18b(d)(3)(B)(i) becauseAKA
    failed
    to register
    its tanks with the State Fire Marshal before
    July 28,
    1989.
    If prior
    to July 28,
    1989,
    the owner
    or
    operator had registered none of the
    underground storage tanks
    in use on that date
    at the site,
    the deductible amount.. .shall be
    $100,000
    rather than $10,000.
    Sec.
    22.l8b(d) (3) (B) (i)
    Thus the meaning of
    “in
    use”
    was
    essential
    for
    establishing
    whether AKA was an “owner”.
    The Agency and IPMA read this phrase
    to mean that
    if a storage tank
    in a UST system contains even a
    residual amount
    of a regulated substance on or before July 28,
    1989,
    then those tanks were “in use” and a $100,000 deductible
    would
    be
    appropriate
    if
    those
    tanks were
    not registered.
    In
    short,
    the Agency and
    IPMA
    contend that
    “in use” should be
    120—54

    —3—
    equated with “containing petroleum”. To do otherwise would,
    according
    to
    the IPMA, contravene the intent of the statute
    because such an interpretation would allow owners and operators
    of underground storage tanks which have long ceased dispensing
    fuel,
    regardless of whether or when such tanks were properly
    registered with the Office of the State Fire Marshal,
    to be
    eligible to seek reimbursement for the costs of corrective action
    resulting from releases of petroleum from the Underground Storage
    Tank Fund at the minimum $10,000 deductible amount.
    (Amicus
    Br.
    at
    5).
    Such a construction would inadvertently expand the scope
    of the program, deplete the fund and defeat the purpose and
    intent of this very important program and its implementing
    legislation.
    (Id. at
    5). The Agency joins
    in this argument and
    further asserts that the words
    “in use” are necessary to insure
    that USTs installed after July 28,
    1989 will not be assigned a
    $100,000 deductible
    (Resp.
    Br.
    at
    23).
    AKA maintained that
    “in use on that date at the site”
    denotes an affirmative connotation which relates to an intended
    purpose.
    An abandoned tank,
    for example,
    is not
    in use.
    AKA
    relies on the term “in use” as set forth
    in the definition of
    owner and asserts that “in use” refers
    to storing, pumping and
    dispensing.
    We agree.
    We find the meaning of “in use” espoused
    by AKA to be the most pursuasive indication of what the term
    refers to.
    The plain meaning of “in use” denotes that which is
    being employed for an intended purpose.
    The evidence establishes
    that Texaco was the last known functioning entity to employ the
    tanks,
    and
    it ceased operations
    in 1975.
    AKA did not store,
    dispense or pump any regulated substance
    in this UST system.
    In
    connection with these uncontested facts, we have reviewed the
    Federal Preamble as it pertains to “in use”.
    Indications that
    a tank
    is permanently out of
    use are:
    (a)If it
    is filled with inert solid
    material or otherwise rendered unusable,
    or
    (b)if there
    is reason
    to believe that
    it will
    not be used
    in the future
    (e.g.,
    the owner
    abandoned the tank,
    intakes and vents are
    paved over, access piping
    is disconnected or
    removed, or the tank was sold to a person who
    had no use for the tank,
    such as a residential
    real estate developer).
    Fed.
    Reg. Vol.
    50,
    No.
    27,
    pg.
    46605.
    (Emphasis added).
    Accordingly,
    we
    have concluded and agree with the Majority
    Opinion that the tanks at
    issue were no longer
    “in use” and thus
    AKA is not an “owner” under
    this definition.
    DISSENTING OPINION OF “OPERATOR”
    120—55

    —4—
    Both the majority and the dissent agree that the remaining
    inquiry
    is whether AKA is an “operator” und~rstate and federal
    regulations.
    Operator
    is defined consistent with the federal
    statutory definition as follows:
    “Operator” means any person
    in cor~trolof,
    or
    having responsibility for,
    the daily operation
    of the UST system.
    35 Ill. Adm. Code 731.112.
    (Emphasis added.)
    The Agency contended that AKA was not an operator because the gas
    station had not been operated
    (i.e.,
    in use)
    since Texaco closed
    the station in 1975
    (Resp.
    Br. at
    28).
    AKA on the other hand,
    viewed the Agency’s position as a
    red herring
    in that an
    “operator includes any person having control of an UST”
    (Reply
    Brief at
    3).
    Since AKA, by its own admission,
    never used the tanks prior
    to removal,
    there is a rebuttable presumption that AKA failed
    to
    have “control of the daily operation of the UST system”.
    AKA’s
    only participation in regards
    to
    the UST was
    to undertake
    corrective action.
    In our view,
    to hold,
    as the majority does,
    that corrective action equates with “daily~-operation of the UST
    system” would broaden the definition and,
    in the process, enlarge
    the scope of eligibility for certain parties
    in direct
    contravention of
    the plain language of
    the: Act.
    We read “daily
    operation”
    to be a limiting factor which denotes an ongoing
    activity with the UST system.
    The majority’s interpretation of
    AKA as an operator ignores the use of the term “daily”
    in the
    definition of “operator”.
    Furthermore, RCRA defines the term “non—operational storage
    tank”:
    The term “non—operational storage tank” means
    any underground storage tank
    in which
    regulated substances will not be deposited
    after
    the date of the enactment of the
    Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments of 1984
    (November
    8,
    1984).
    42 U.S.C.
    Section 9001(7).
    There
    is no question that AKA falls within the confines of this
    definition.
    Since we believe that the UST system which AKA had
    control of was a “non—operational storage tank”,
    it
    would be
    difficult,
    if not impossible to suggest that the petitioner had
    “control over the daily operation of the UST system”.
    Put
    another way, one cannot operate that which
    is non—operational.
    Having concluded that AKA is neither an “owner” nor an “operator”
    within the meaning of the Act, we would hold that AKA is
    ineligible
    to access the Fund under Section 22.l8b et.
    seq.
    120—56

    —5—
    MAJORITY OPINION OF “OPERATOR”
    Contrary to our interpretation,
    the majority finds that AKA
    satisfies the dictates of “operator”
    as defined by statute.
    The
    majority comes to this conclusion despite the following language:
    It
    is clear that AKA was not the current
    operator of
    a filling station, or used the
    tanks
    for that purpose.
    However,
    the Board
    has concluded that AKA became an operator of
    the UST system when
    it became subject
    to the
    UST closure regulations.
    We do not construe
    the definition of operator as applying only to
    those persons
    in daily operational control
    only of tanks
    in active service.
    (Emphasis added).
    (Maj.
    Op. at p.
    12)
    To summarize the majority’s reasoning in this case,
    it
    appears they are holding that once corrective action is
    initiated,
    an entity becomes an operator.
    Otherwise,
    a person
    who engaged in corrective action of abandoned tanks would not be
    subject
    to the jurisdiction of
    the Agency under section 22.18b
    et,
    seq.
    The majority has chosen to attack
    the problem backwards
    by focusing on who takes corrective action as determinative of
    who
    is an “operator”.
    What they fail to understand
    is that being
    an owner
    or an operator
    is a condition precedent
    to both
    eligibility and liability under section 22.18b.
    Merely removing
    tanks as a commercial necessity does not make a party an
    operator;
    the limitations inherent
    in the statutory definition
    prevail over incidental compliance of one aspect of the
    regulations
    for the UST procram.
    Indeed, under the majority’s
    ruling, one could deduce that if
    a person complied with any
    portion of
    the UST rules
    for any reason,
    they would become an
    owner or an operator.
    In support of
    this tenuous holding, the majority cites UST
    reimbursement forms,
    a landfill case, some ambiguous USEPA
    language from
    a rulemaking preamble and
    a distinguishable court
    decision.
    The majority fails
    to address, however,
    how an
    abandoned tank can be operated
    let alone on a daily basis.
    In
    an attempt
    to hold AKA liable under
    the UST provisions,
    thereby
    allowing access
    to the Fund,
    the majorfty has ignored the term
    “daily” and has strained the bounds of
    logical reasoning
    in orLder
    to fulfill
    its “environmental” agenda.
    The majority fails
    to understand that under
    the definitions
    at issue in this case,
    there
    is always an “owner” and therefore
    always a liable party
    under
    the existing statute.
    That party may
    also be the operator,
    but such
    is not necessarily the case.
    According to the testimony,
    Texaco would be the owner
    in
    the case
    120—57

    —6—
    at bar.
    Whether or not there
    is a franchisee or lessee who may
    be the “operator”
    is unclear on the information we have.
    Even
    so, the point
    that an identifiable “owner” exists
    the very
    party who caused this pollution
    is crucial.
    If anything can be
    gleaned from the plain meaning of the disputed definitions,
    it is
    that the intent is
    to hold those responsible for the pollution
    liable for clean—up costs.
    Today’s majority opinion accomplishes a completely contrary
    effect.
    A holding here that AKA is eligible for reimbursement
    leads to an inequitable result
    in that the taxpayers and gasoline
    consumers of
    Illinois wind up funding a clean—up of
    the site
    while the party who caused the pollution (i.e., Texaco)
    walks
    away from any prospect of liability.
    This
    is undisputable.
    The
    majority has chosen this
    route despite language in the Act which
    provides AKA with alternative remedies.
    Section 22.18(a)(A) of
    the Act states:
    Nothing
    in this Section shall affect or modify
    in anyway the obligations
    or liability of any
    person under any other provision of
    this Act
    or State or Federal law,
    including common law,
    for damages,
    injury or loss resulting from
    a
    release or substantial threat of
    a release of
    petroleum from an underground storage tank.
    (Emphasis added.)
    AKA is therefore not without recourse even
    if
    it
    is found
    to be
    ineligible
    to access the Fund.
    In addition
    to a wealth of
    common—law theories,
    the company could sue
    in state court under
    various other sections of the Act.
    On the other
    hand, AKA,
    by becoming an operator under
    the
    majority opinion,
    is now subject
    to all federal and state
    regulations pertaining
    to USTs.
    Violations of these
    requirements
    carries a maximum civil penalty of $10,000 for each tank,
    for
    each day, for each regulatory violation.
    RCRA,
    Section 9006(d);
    35 Ill. Adm.
    Code 731
    et,
    seq.
    Given the timeframe involved
    in
    the instant case
    in addition
    to the six tanks involved,
    the
    potential penalty AKA might
    receive could conceivably run into
    millions
    of dollars.
    Whereas the Illinois and federal EPA may
    choose
    to exercise prosecutorial discretion,
    both state and
    federal law permits citizens
    to file civil actions against
    regulatory violators.
    This Board, and the federal courts, cannot
    exercise discretion to avoid hearing such suits.
    While AKA can
    find comfort in the majority’s decision finding them eligible to
    access the Fund,
    this relief
    is short—lived when AKA’s potential
    liability as an operator
    is confronted.
    What
    is perhaps even more disconcerting is the inherent
    inconsistency within the majority opinion as evidencedby
    the
    fact that the majority finds AKA to be an operator after
    it
    120—58

    —7—
    denies the company “ownership” status.
    In interpreting “owner”,
    the majority,
    as pointed out earlier, holds that “in use” denotes
    something affirmative rather than the passive meaning put
    forth
    by the Agency.
    The majority correctly states that to equate
    “in
    use” with “contains”
    would effectively limit the “in use” phrase
    to mere surplusage.
    On the other hand,
    when analyzing the
    definitional scope of “operator”,
    the majority seems
    eager
    to
    embrace the reference to “daily operation” as
    irrelevant or
    somehow redundant.
    35
    Iii. Adm.
    Code 731.112 defines an
    “operator”
    as:
    ...any person
    in control of,
    or having
    responsibility for,
    the daily operation of the
    UST system.
    This
    is clearly a definition with two prongs.
    The first
    tier is satisfied once either control or responsibility is
    established.
    Under
    the limited definition which is present
    in
    both state and federal statutes,
    it is abundantly clear
    that to
    be an operator one must have control
    or responsibility of the
    daily operation of
    the UST system.
    Yet the majority readily
    dismisses “daily operation”;
    or perhaps more accurately,
    construes
    it as
    “identifying the non-owner person
    in daily
    responsible charge.”
    (Maj.
    Op.
    at
    15).
    In any event,
    the result
    is the same;
    “daily operation
    of the UST system “is completely
    disregarded by the majority.
    If “daily operation of the UST
    system” refers to the person
    in charge., why was
    it inserted given
    the fact that the first prong
    of the definition explicitly refers
    to responsible or controlling parties?
    To make this holding as
    the majority did
    is
    to ignore
    the plain meaning and render the
    second aspect o~the definition as mere surplusage, Niven
    v.
    Siqueria,
    109
    Iii.
    2d 357
    (1985),
    a method which was clearly
    rejected by the majority in its earlier analysis of “in use”.
    Other problems are associated with the majority’s
    analysis.
    After citing the federal preamble for
    regulations
    which apply only
    to owners and ooerators,
    the majority states
    that “anyone
    ;iho
    removes a closed or abandoned tank must be
    either an owner
    or an operator who must comply with the closure
    provisions
    if
    so directed by the Agency”
    (Op. at 14).
    We
    interpret th~.slanguage to mean that one becomes an owner or
    operator by virtue of Agency labeling.
    It
    is difficult for
    us
    to
    imagine a more arbitrary or capricious
    ruling;
    we do not believe
    the Act and regulations give
    the Agency the discretion to define
    who
    is
    an operator by virtue of a directive
    to comply with
    closure provisions.
    What the majority
    is stating
    is that
    regardless of the definitional limits,
    a person
    is an owner or
    operator
    ‘~if
    so directed by the Agency”.
    This statement
    disregards
    the plain language as well as the intent of
    the
    statute.
    120—59

    —8—
    Moreover, the majority also misrepresents the stance of the
    Agency. The majority states that:
    Compliance with the corrective action
    requirements involves repeated notifications
    to the Agency, and the filing and approval of
    a series
    of plans and studies.
    (35 Iii. Adm.
    Code 731.161, 731.162(b)
    and Section
    22.l8b(d)(4)).
    There is no indication that
    the Agency ever objected on the basis that AKA
    was not strictly speaking, an “operator”.
    (Maj.
    Op. at
    14)
    To the contrary, the Agency has steadfastly maintained that it
    is
    impossible for AKA to be an operator
    in that the company
    admittedly never operated the tanks.
    In this regard, AKA’s
    assertion that
    it
    is an operator
    is somewhat interesting.
    In its
    reply brief and its
    response to the Interim Order
    by this Board,
    AKA made this argument but failed to supply the Board with the
    entire definition of
    “operator”.
    We would suggest that this was
    not for purposes of saving space,
    but was rather an intentional
    omission given the fact that the company’s testimony at hearing
    made it impossible
    to fulfill the “daily operation of the UST
    system”
    requirement.
    Finally, the majority’s reliance upon Union Petroleum
    Company
    v.
    United States,
    651 F2d 734
    (Ct. Cl.l98l)
    is
    misplaced.
    In Union
    there was never any question that Union was
    an owner and operator
    of an oil terminal facility.
    There was
    also no question that Union was responsible for
    the leak which
    eventually found
    its way into a navigable waterway. The only
    issue
    in Union
    was
    whether the tank cars from where the spill
    originated was part of Union’s facility.
    Since the Federal Water
    Pollution Act defined facility as virtually anything,
    the court
    justifiably answered
    in the affirmative.
    The portion of Union
    quoted by the majority
    is contained in
    a footnote which
    references the Uniform Commercial Code and
    is wholly inapplicable
    to the case at
    bar.
    In conclusion,
    we disagree with the majority’s analysis
    of
    “operator”.
    Contrary
    to well—established
    law,
    the opinion
    disregards the plain meaning of the statute.
    See Heritage Bank
    and Trust Co.
    v. Harris,
    88
    Ill.
    Dec.
    87
    (1985);
    Doran v.
    Dept.
    of Labor,
    72
    Ill.
    Dec.
    186
    (1983); Chicago Health Clubs
    v.
    Picur,
    108 Ill. Dec.
    431
    (1987).
    Had the majority’s decisJon rendered a
    harmonious effect as
    it
    relates to the statute as a whole,
    we
    would feel differently as
    the authority exists for
    us
    to engage
    is such a process.
    People
    v.
    Jordan,
    103
    Ill.
    2d 192
    (1984).
    Yet the precedent espoused today
    is devoid of any environmental
    or legal benefits and,
    at
    the same time,
    further confuses a
    statute which, as drafted,
    is already less than a model of
    120—60

    —9—
    clarity.
    In short,
    the majority’s result—oriented approach
    ignores well—founded precepts of statutory construction.
    Because
    we find this approach unacceptable,
    we respectfully dissent.
    /Jacob D. Dumelle, P.E.
    BOard Member
    ~
    rlichael L.
    Nardulli
    Board Member
    I, Dorothy M.
    Gunn, Clerk
    of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board,
    hereby certify that the above Dissej~ingOpinion was
    submitted on the
    ____________
    day of
    _______________,
    1991.
    Dorothy M.~unn, Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    120—61

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