Nisc v. Epa

885 N.E.2d 447, 38 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20070, 381 Ill. App. 3d 171, 319 Ill. Dec. 176, 2008 Ill. App. LEXIS 199
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 11, 2008
Docket2-07-0213
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 885 N.E.2d 447 (Nisc v. Epa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nisc v. Epa, 885 N.E.2d 447, 38 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20070, 381 Ill. App. 3d 171, 319 Ill. Dec. 176, 2008 Ill. App. LEXIS 199 (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

885 N.E.2d 447 (2008)

NORTHERN ILLINOIS SERVICE COMPANY, Petitioner,
v.
The ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY and The Pollution Control Board, Respondents.

No. 2-07-0213.

Appellate Court of Illinois, Second District.

March 11, 2008.

*448 Peter D. DeBruyne, Lewis B. Kaplan, Peter D. DeBruyne, P.C., Rockford, for Northern Illinois Service Company.

Lisa Madigan, Attorney General, State of Illinois, Gary S. Feinerman, Solicitor General, Rachel Hoover, Assistant Attorney General, Chicago, for Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, Illinois Pollution Control Board.

Justice CALLUM delivered the opinion of the court:

In November 2004, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (the Agency) filed an administrative citation against Northern Illinois Service Company (NISC), charging that NISC violated sections 21(p)(1) and 21(p)(7) of the Illinois Environmental Protection Act (the Act) (415 ILCS 5/21(p)(1), (p)(7) (West 2004)). NISC petitioned for administrative review before the Illinois Pollution Control Board (the Board). The Board found that NISC violated both sections of the Act and imposed a statutorily required penalty of $3,000 plus the hearing costs of the Agency and the Board. NISC seeks judicial review (415 ILCS 5/41 (West 2004)) of the Board's order with respect to the violation of section 21(p)(1). NISC argues that the Board erred in finding that it engaged in the open dumping of waste resulting in litter by piling uprooted, dead trees on its property. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

NISC is an excavation and demolition contractor that owns a piece of property commonly known as the Roscoe Quarry. In the course of business, NISC uses sand fill from the Roscoe Quarry to complete its projects, and it also hauls dirt and similar material back to the quarry from other excavations. On July 15 and October 4, 2004, Agency field inspector Kaare Jacobsen inspected the quarry in response to a complaint alleging that NISC had been openly dumping construction debris and landscape waste at the quarry. During the inspections, Jacobsen observed an estimated 9,700 cubic yards of uprooted, dead trees piled 10 to 13 feet high in the north section of the quarry. He also observed concrete debris with protruding rebar and pieces of steel conduit piled at the quarry.

On November 22, 2004, the Agency filed an administrative citation with the Board, charging that NISC violated sections 21(p)(1) and 21(p)(7) of the Act, which prohibit:

"the open dumping of any waste in a manner which results in any of the following occurrences at the dump site:
(1) litter;
* * *
(7) deposition of:
(i) general construction or demolition debris as defined in Section 3.160(a) of this Act; or
(ii) clean construction or demolition debris as defined in Section 3.160(b) of this Act." 415 ILCS 5/21(p)(1), (p)(7) (West 2004).

NISC filed an amended petition for review on February 7, 2005, contesting the finding with respect to section 21(p)(1) of the Act, on the grounds that dead trees are not litter. A hearing on the petition took place on April 20, 2006, at which the following facts were adduced. Jacobsen testified that during his inspections of the Roscoe Quarry on July 15 and October 4, *449 2004, he observed an estimated 9,700 cubic yards of "landscape debris." The pile of landscape debris was about "ten to 13 feet high," and it contained "uprooted trees, also trees that have been cut." The trees were laid in a central pile ringed by an access road, with another ring of dead trees circling the road. He stated that the pile looked like it had "been placed there for a lengthy period of time." When asked whether it occurred to him that the pile of dead trees had potential value as mulch, Jacobsen responded that it had not, because "the way it was on the property, it looked like it was open dump and it is going to be left there for a lengthy period of time." Jacobsen explained that "[t]here could have been a market value for it. But at the time of the inspection, it was considered open dump material." He determined that the landscape material was waste and not garden mulch, based on "[t]he way the trees were just laying [sic] there. They are just — the way they were positioned. They were not processed. They were just laid there to rot." He saw no evidence of any processing of the trees. He estimated that the trees had been there for "probably two to three years," and he saw no change in the position or condition of the tree pile from his first inspection to his second inspection.

NISC presented testimony from Ronald Foss and Wayne Klinger. Foss, the owner of a local landscaping business and retail garden center, testified that he worked for NISC for two to three years in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Foss had observed the tree pile at the Roscoe Quarry. He said that it "looked like they had been knocked over, piled up." In Foss's opinion, the trees at the Roscoe Quarry could be "ground up into mulch."

Klinger, the president of NISC, testified that he purchased the Roscoe Quarry about 10 years ago. At that time, there was a "pile of old trees" on the property. According to Klinger, the tree pile observed by Jacobsen derived from three sources. Twenty to twenty-five percent of the trees were present in the pile at the quarry when NISC purchased it. Fifty percent of the trees had been uprooted by NISC in the course of excavating for fill at the quarry. The remainder were "stragglers," i.e., single trees uprooted by NISC from other excavation sites. These stragglers were taken to the quarry because they were not disposable in the usual fashion. When NISC is hired to do an excavation job, NISC hires a tree service company to take the trees out, but "they can't come out for one tree." NISC no longer brings stragglers to the Roscoe Quarry.

On September 21, 2006, the Board entered an interim opinion and order, and on January 26, 2007, the Board issued its final opinion and order, finding that NISC violated sections 21(p)(1) and 21(p)(7) of the Act. The Board found that the trees constituted "landscape waste," explaining that "since the definition [of landscape waste] includes tree limbs, it should also be read as to generally include entire trees when they are uprooted and accumulated in the manner [NISC] has maintained them at the Roscoe Quarry." Citing an earlier decision of the Board (American Tree Service, Inc., v. Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, Ill. Pollution Control Bd. Op. Case No. 1994-043, slip op. at 16 (December 14, 1994)), the Board stated that "landscape waste" is a subset of "waste." The Board found that the trees also qualified as "other discarded materials" within the Act's definition of waste because the trees had been uprooted and piled at the site, as opposed to having accumulated by a natural process.

After concluding that NISC caused the open dumping of waste at the Roscoe Quarry, the Board next determined that *450 the waste resulted in litter, which is defined in the Litter Control Act as "any discarded, used or consumed substance or waste" or "anything else of an unsightly or unsanitary nature, which has been discarded, abandoned or otherwise disposed of improperly." 415 ILCS 105/3(a) (West 2004).

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Bluebook (online)
885 N.E.2d 447, 38 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20070, 381 Ill. App. 3d 171, 319 Ill. Dec. 176, 2008 Ill. App. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nisc-v-epa-illappct-2008.