ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
March
22,
1990
THE GRIGOLEIT COMPANY,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 89—184
(Permit Appeal)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J.
Marlin):
Currently pending before the Board are Grigoleitts motion
for summary judgment, and the Illinois Environmental Protection
Agency’s (Agency) motion to reverse the Hearing Officer’s Order
of February
23, 1990 regarding discovery.
In summary,
this Order
1)
denies the motion for summary judgment
2)
affirms the Hearing
Officer’s Order
of February 23,
1990 and in so doing denies
the
Agency’s motion.
Grigoleit’s Motion For Summary Judgment
Grigoleit filed
its motion for
summary
judgment on March
2,
1990 and the Agency filed its
response on March
12,
1990.
The parties do not dispute the following factual sequence.
Grigoleit mailed its application for permit renewal by certified
mail on July 12,
1989.
The Agency received the application on
July 13,
1989.
The Agency issued
a permit denial on October
11,
1989.
October
11
is the 90th day after July
13,
1989,
but the
91st day after July
12,
1989.
The parties
further agree that Section 39(a)
of the
Environmental Protection Act
(Act)
requires the Agency
to
take
final action within
90 days
“of the filing”
of the application.
The parties’ dispute
centers around the date an application
is
“filed” for the purposes of Section
39.
Grigoleit contends that the
issue
is controlled by Ill.
Rev.
Stat.
1987,
ch.
1, par.
1026,
which in summary provides that
a
writing
is deemed filed when
it
is ma~i1ed, provided competent
evidence of
date of mailing
is produced.
(The competency of
evidence presented by Grigoleit
is not at
issue here.)
Grigoleit
goes on to argue that the
90 day time period of Section 39(a)
of
the Act must be computed pursuant to
Ill. Rev.
Stat.
ch.
1, par.
1012,
to begin the first day after mailing and including the last
day unless that day
is
a holiday which must
be excluded.
Grigoleit contends
then,
that the Agency’s permit denial on
11)9—555
October
11 occurred on the 91st day after
the application was
“filed”,
i.e. mailed.
The Agency first argues that the Board cannot entertain
motions for summary judgment pursuant to 35
Ill.
Adm. Code
101.244, which provides:
A motion for summary judgment prior to hearing may be
made by any party
to an enforcement proceeding pursuant
to Title
VIII
of the Act
or a permit appeal pursuant
to
Title X of
the Act.
Specific rules
for such motions
for
summary judgment are found
in 35
Ill. Adm. code 103
(enforcement proceedings) and 35
Ill.
Adm. Code 105
(permit appeals).
The Agency asserts,
correctly,
that the Board has not
adopted “specific rules”
in Part 105.
The Board has,
however,
proceeded to entertain summary judgment motions pursuant to the
general authority granted by Section
26 of the Act,
and
accordingly rejects the Agency’s argument.
As to Grigoleit’s
“mailed is filed” argument,
the Agency
submits that the Board should construe the time limits for Agency
action
in Sections 38,
39,
40,
40.1 and 41 of the Act
in the same
way as it has construed time limits
for Board
action.
In
Interstate Pollution Control
Inc.
v.
IEPA,
PCB 86—19, March
27,
1986,
the Board first adopted a limited version of
the mailbox
rule, which has since been adopted as
Section 101.102(d)
of its
own procedural rules.
(In The Matter Of:
Procedural Rules
Revision,
35
Ill. Adm. Code 101,
106.Subpart
F,
107, Opinion and
Order
of June 8,
1989,
pp.
6,
29—30).
The limited rule as
adopted by the Board provides that initial pleadings permitted by
the above—cited Sections are deemed timely filed when mailed, but
that decision deadlines should be calculated from the date
of
receipt.
The logic of the Board’s ruling was that a litigant’s
ability to proceed with an action should not
be frustrated by
delivery delays beyond the litigant’s control, while
at the same
time the Board’s ability
to timely comply with already
“uncomfortably snug”
decisions deadlines should not be frustrated
by delivery delays beyond
the Board’s control.
This logic
applies equally
to the responsibilities of the Agency.
The
purpose of the time deadlines of Section
39
(and other similar
provisions)
of the Act
is
to insure that applicants
receive
decisions from government within a reasonable time upon penalty
of
issuance of
a permit
by default, but not
to “reward”
applicants by unreasonable truncation of government’s ability to
make
a considered decision.
The Board
finds
the Agency’s denial was timely made
on the
90th day
cf
the filing
i.e. Agency receipt,
of Grigoleit’s
application.
The motion for summary judgement
is denied.
11)q—556
—3—
The Hearing Officer Order
of February 23,
1990
The Hearing Officer’s Order of February
23, 1990 disposes of
various Agency challenges
to discovery by Grigoleit.
By Order
off
March
8,
1990,
the Board agreed to review this order.
Relevant
pleadings include Grigoleits February 14 motion
to compel and
February
16 supporting memorandum;
the Agency’s February 23
response;
the Agency’s March
1 motion
to reverse the February
23
Order and March
3 supporting memorandum;
Grigoleit’s March 14
response and memorandum;
a letter from the Hearing Officer dated
March
7, and a transcript of hearing dated March
6.
The Board will not recite
the particulars
of the Hearing
Officer Order and the parties’ arguments in detail.
The Agency
has refused to allow certain deposition questions
to be answered,
and has refused
to provide certain documents,
on
the basis
off an
asserted “predecisional deliberation privilege.”
The conclusion
of
the Hearing Officer
was that:
“The claim of predecisional deliberative decisional
privilege
is not properly raised,
nor
is
it warranted.
To the extent
that such a privilege may be available at
the State level,
the Respondent
has not made the
requisite showing necessary to invoke the privilege.
no case cited by Respondent authorizes any such
predecisional deliberative privilege by
a State
agency.
The privilege claimed has
no basis
in Illinois
case law that the Hearing Officer has been able
to
find.
(Order,
P.
1—2).
No arguments have been
raised which convince the Board to disturb
the Hearing Officer’s Order.
In so ruling,
the Board takes
no
position on the admissibility at hearing of information obtained
through the discovery process.
The Agency’s motion
to reverse is denied.
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
Board Member
B. Forcade concurred.
I,
Dorothy
M. Gunn,
Clerk
of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board hereby certify that
the above Order
was adopted on the
~
day of
_______________
,
1990 by
a
vote of
7
—~)
~
~/2),
~1~j
Dorothy M. ,~/nn,Clerk
Illinois Po-flution Control Board
109—557