ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
November 17,
1988
CONTAINER CORPORATION OF AMERICA,
)
Petitioner,
)
V.
)
PCB 87—183
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
)
AGENCY,
)
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J. Anderson):
This matter comes before
the Board on the Motion
for
Sanctions filed
by
the Respondent,
Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency (Agency)
on November
2,
1988.
Petitioner,
Container Corporation of America
(CCA)
filed
its response on
November 14,
1988.
The Agency’s motion requests the Board essentially to debar
CCA from arguing,
introducing testimony,
or producing evidence
tending
to show that purchase,
installation, operation and
maintenance of Volatile Organic Material
(VOM) control equipment
at its facility
is economically unreasonable and/or would cause
an economic hardship for CCA or
its parent company.
It also asks
the Board
to debar CCA from using any expert witness not
previously identified to the Agency.
The requested sanctions
appear
to be germane to the discovery requests served upon CCA
by
the Agency.
The Agency’s motion and attachments,
including the Hearing
Officer’s discovery Order of October
19,
1988,
disclose that the
Agency attempted three times
to elicit responses from CCA to its
informal discovery requests prior
to filing with the Hearing
Officer
its October
17, 1988,
Motion
to Compel Answers
to First
Set
of Interrogatories
and
to Compel Production of Documents. The
first discovery
request was served
on CCA
on or about July 26,
1988,
and requested answers be provided within
28 days, pursuant
to Supreme Court Rule 213
(Ill.
Rev. Stat.
1987,
ch.
llOA,
par.
213) and 35
111. Mm.
Code 103.161.
The companion Request for
Production of Documents requested that the documents be provided
to the Agency at
its Maywood, Illinois,
offices on August
29,
1988.
No response was received
to either request.
The second
request was made by letter
of September 6,
1988,
from the Agency’s attorney
to counsel for CCA, repeating the
original request.
Noting that the hearings
in this matter had
been set for October
6
and
7,
1988,
the Agency sought
a response
by September 19,
1988,
to the First Set of Interrogatories and
93—415
—2—
production of documents by September 26,
1988.
Again no response
to either request was received by September
26.
On September
29,
however, Petitioner did provide at least
a partial response to
two
of the twenty—four interrogatories.
Shortly after providing the partial response of September
29,
counsel for CCA promised in
a telephone conversation with the
Agency’s attorney that the Agency would be provided answers to
the remainder
of the discovery requests by October 11,
1988.
This deadline also passed without a response to the discovery
requests.
On October
17,
1988,
the Agency filed with the Hearing
Officer
a Motion to Compel Answers
to First Set
of
Interrogatories and to Compel Production of Documents.
On
October
19,
after consulting with counsel for CCA, the Hearing
Officer issued the requested Order, calling for submission of the
requested materials by October
31,
1988.
In his Order,
the
Hearing Officer specifically noted
that Counsel for the
Petitioner had advised him that “there were no objections
to said
motion”.
Once again,
no response was received by the deadline.
The Board did finally receive the CCk response
to the discovery
order
on November 4,
1988,
although the CCA response to the
motion recites that the Agency’s counsel evidently did not
receive
a complete response until November
8,
1988.
In
its response to the motion, CCA states the issue before
the Board
as being
“whether the Board should
bar CCA from
presenting any of
its claims of economic hardship
in this
proceeding because CCA was four days late in responding
to
a
Hearing Officer’s discovery order”
(pg.
1).
Petitioner then
stated
that “since sanctions may only be imposed
for failure
to
obey orders of the Board or Hearing Officer, CCA will restrict
its response to the events surrounding CCA’s response to the
Hearing Officer’s October 19,
1988 order”
(pg.
1).
CCA thereupon
describes problems encountered by counsel
for CCA
in getting
compiled information
from key CCA personnel (noting the departure
of the former General Manager
of the facility
in question,
the
resulting extra workload on the Plant Superintendent, schedule
conflicts confronting
the Project Engineer, competing demands for
information from the USEPA
in another matter,
and the unexplained
unavailability of the Day Shift Supervisor).
This information
was evidently not provided
to counsel
for CCA until November
1,
1988,
the day after the deadline
imposed
by the Hearing Officer
Order.
CCA’s counsel then describes the various schedule
conflicts and coordination problems which prevented counsel
from
being able
to assemble the data into
a formal response until
November 4,
1988.
CCA concludes
(pg.5)
that “there
is
no factual support” for
the Agency’s assertion that
it had been prejudiced by
the delay,
which cc; characterized as
“the four day late response
to
its
discovery request”.
cc;
states that its counsel contacted Agency
counsel on November
10, 1988,
and offered
to agree
to yet another
93—416
—3—
continuance
if
the Agency wanted one
to avoid
any resulting
difficulty.
The Agency’s counsel declined
the offer,
leading CCA
to suggest that “it cannot
be said that the Agency has been
in
any way prejudiced by the extremely brief delay in receiving
CC;’s discovery responses”
(pg.
5).
It must be understood
from the outset that the Board does
not accept the Petitioner’s version of the facts
of this
matter.
The facts as revealed
by the Agency’s motion and
attachments
are not materially contested by Petitioner, which has
chosen instead to focus only on the time period following the
Hearing Officer’s Order
of October
19,
1988.
These
facts
disclose
a pattern of delay and unresponsiveness stretching
across
at least two months,
not merely four days.
It
is obvious
that CCA made
no substantial effort •to comply,
contest
or
communicate regarding
the Agency’s discovery requests until
the
Hearing Officer
issued
his Order
of October
19.
Hence,
to the
extent that Petitioner’s personnel problems and schedule
conflicts prevented
a timely response to the Order,
such
difficulties seem largely self—inflicted.
CCA does not explain
when, why,
or for what period
of time the several key personnel
were
not available,
nor does
it explain whether such
unavailability was known as
of the date its counsel advised the
Hearing Officer that
there was
no objection to the motion;
it
does not specify when the competing USEPA information request was
received, when it was due, when it was actually submitted or what
consequences would attend
a tardy submittal to USEPA.
CCA does
not describe efforts
to timely communicate with the Agency,
the
Hearing Officer,
the Board
or the USEPA regarding any time
pressures
or
to attempt
to seek relief
from such pressures.
The Board also rejects the implicit assumption by Petitioner
that,
since sanctions may only
issue
for failure to obey orders
of the Board or Hearing Officer,
the Board cannot or need not
consider
the circumstances leading up
to the issuance of
such an
order.
To do so would strike at the heart of the normal
discovery process,
rendering informal discovery requests
virtually worthless,
rewarding dilatory tactics and necessitating
increased and more immediate resort
to the Board and its Hearing
Officers.
As the Petitioner would have
it,
discovery requests
not embodied
in
a formal
discovery order can be simply ignored
without consideration for advancing the progress of the case or
for conserving
the resources of the Board.
Finally,
the Board rejects the Petitioner’s contention that
the record before
the Board does not support
a finding that the
Agency was prejudiced by the delay caused by Petitioner’s failure
to timely accomplish response to discovery requests.
Taken as
a
whole,
the record well illustrates
that the Agency has been
thwarted
for
almost two and one—half months
in preparing
for
hearings
in this proceeding.
Insofar
as further delay is not
sought by the Agency and can only
inure
to the benefit of the
Petitioner,
the Board
is
reluctant to say that the Agency’s
refusal of
a further continuance necessarily means
it has not
93—417
—4—
been prejudiced.
It may mean only that the prejudice in this
case
is not so great
as
to prevent
it from being able
to prepare
for the hearings now scheduled for December
14,
1988.
The Board construes the Agency’s
refusal of another
continuance as manifesting
its desire and ability to get on with
the hearings.
The Board shares that desire.
In this case,
grant
of
the Agency’s Motion For Sanctions merely invites more delay
in
a proceeding that has already taken more than
a year
to reach
the
hearing stage.
It would also appear
to
be unnecessary insofar as
the Agency now has the requested discovery responses and is
evidently prepared
to proceed.
Consequently,
the Board will deny
the Agency’s Motion For Sanctions;
however,
in keeping with
its
foregoing conclusions,
the Board will direct that further
delaying actions not
be allowed by the Hearing Officer.
For
the foregoing
reasons
the Agency’s Motion For Sanctions
is denied.
The Hearing Officer
is directed
to deny any request
for continuance
in this proceeding.
Hearings are to
he conducted
as currently scheduled,
except
as otherwise directed by order
of
the Board.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
J.
T. Meyer dissented.
I,
Dorothy
!1.
Gunn, Clerk
of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board,
hereby certify that ~he
above Order was adopted on
the
/7~~
day
of
/7~t-~A~-’
,
1988 by a vote
of
~
~/
Dorothy
M. ~inn, Clerk
Illinois P~lutionControl Board
93—418