ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
November
14,
1972
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
v.
)
*
72—155
ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD
Preliminary Opinion
&
Order of
the Board on Motion
to Dismiss
(by Mr.
Currie)
The complaint charges the railroad with open burning
of
railroad
ties and/or other refuse
in Decatur Township on
August
4,
1971.
The railroad responds that
it was called
to answer
for the same acts
in
a court proceeding
to show
cause why
it should not be held
in contempt of
a prior
court order
forbidding such burning,
and
that
a final judgment
in
its
favor was entered on that charge.
The central plea,
in addition
to familiar procedural
objections
and attacks on the constitutionality
of
the Act
which we have earlier rejected,
is res
judicata.
The issue
in the contempt proceeding,
however, was whether
or not
ties had been burned “knowingly,
intentionally
and willfully.”
An adverse finding on that charge does not mean the railroad
i~not responsible
for open burning
as
is charged
in
the
present complaint,
since the statute does
not require knowing,
intentional,
or willful burning.
See EPA v. Neal Auto Sal-
vage,
Inc.,
#70—5,
1 PCB
71
(Oct.
28,
1970).
To the extent,
however,
that the~urt’s action estab-
lished that no willful intentional,
or knowing burning took
place,
that decision
is binding on the
parties under
the
doctrine
of collateral
estoppel,
Before proceeding
to
hearing we will require statements
from the parties
as
to
whether
or not
the judgment did establish
this
fact,
and,
if
so, what the establishment
of this
fact leaves of
the Agency’s
case
on
the present complaint.
We shall allow
20
days
for
the submission
of such statements, which
in
the case of
the
Agency should include
a specification
of just what it will
seek
to prove
to establish the alleged violation.
The Railroad
urges
a broader doctrine of
res
judicata
or election
of remedies
that
it says precludes
the State from
litigating before us issues that were not asserted
in
the
court proceeding.
Much
the same issue was raised but not
decided in EPA
V.
Steelco Chemical Corp.,
#71-137,
2 PCB
453
(Sept.
16,
1971)
,
in which
a respondent asked us
to dismiss
6
—
215
—2—
a complaint because a complaint seeking temporary and
permanent relief for the same occurrence had been filed in
Circuit Court.
Because the State elected to proceed only in
court and withdrew its Board complaint, we did not decide
the question.
We did observe, however, that while “the same
case”
(on the merits)
“should not be tried on both” forums,
the fact that the Board lacked statutory power to grant
temporary relief should not oust the Board of jurisdiction
over the complaint for permanent remedies:
“we do not
think
that this statutory gap means the Board cannot try
on the merits cases in which preliminary court relief has
been sought.”
In light of the clear statutory design to the
Board as a primary forum for pollution en~~orcement,the
prosecutor should not have to forfeit his right to seek
ancillary preliminary relief the Board cannot give in order
to preserve his right to litigate the main case before us.
The same considerations are decisive here.
The statute
envisions that complaints for violating its provisions may
be brought before a specialized Board;
there
is no
suggestion
in the statute that this right must be forfeited in order
to vindicate the quite independent right of adherence to a
prior court order by
a petition seeking relief the Board
cannot give.
The statutory reference to “duplicitous” com-
plaints is designed to prevent repeated complaints on the
same basis by different people;
it does not apply to com-
plaints filed by the State at all, and the present complaint
is
filed on
a different basis.
See League of Women Voters
v.
North Shore Sanitary District, #70—7,
1 PCB 35
(Oct.
8,
1970)
We find no impermissible vagueness in the complaint,
which adequately apprises the railroad of the date and nature
of the violations alleged.
We
shall await the additional statements indicated above
before acting on the motion to dismiss.
It is
so ordered.
I, Christan Moffett, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board,
certify that the Board adopted the above Preliminary Opinion
&
Order
of the Board on Motion to Dismiss this
14th day
of November,
1972, by a vote of ~—C
‘2~
~
~
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216