delivered the opinion of the court:
The State appeals the dismissal of its second amended complaint in which it charged Cyrus Tang, individually and as chairman and chief executive officer of Pielet Brothers Scrap Iron and Metal L.P (P Brothers LP), with violations of the Illinois Environmental Protection Act (415 ILCS 5/1 et seq. (West 2000)) (the Act). We affirm dismissal of the complaint.
The State filed its original complaint against Tang on June 19, 2001. It charged him, under the Act, with open dumping, improper waste disposal, developing a waste disposal site without a permit, operation of a waste disposal site without an operating permit, water pollution, water pollution hazard, and failure to post a landfill bond. It also charged common law public nuisancе. The complaint alleged that Tang was chairman and chief executive officer of and had a controlling ownership in P Brothers LE A nonparty was the chief operating officer. The complaint alleged that “Defendant Tang conducted an automobile shredding operation at the site through the business entities.” It accused him of causing and allowing auto shredder residue and auto fluff to be piled outside for more than one year, both from on-site operations and other off-site automobile shredding operations. It further alleged that the decision to spend money to clean up the wastes could not have been made without Tang’s approval. It claimed that “[d]efendаnt Tang had taken no action, nor had caused any action to be taken, to institute measure(s) to prevent this material including auto fluff waste from entering the environment via different pathways, including but not limited to, storm water runoff from the site.” The complaint sought declaratory and mandatory injunctive relief and assessment of fines.
Tang moved to dismiss the complaint under section 2 — 619.1 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2 — 619.1 (West 2000)), claiming that the State failed to “allege any personal involvement in any wrongful act by Mr. Tang, and thus fail[ed] to state a claim under Illinois law.” Tang further claimed that the court could not grant the requested mandatory injunctive relief because Tang did not own or have control over the site. Although the order is not included in the record on appeal, the parties inform us that the State’s original complaint was dismissed on December 7, 2001, without prejudice.
The State subsequently filed its first amended complaint. The complaint was nearly identical to the original complaint, except that it added counts for failure to file an initial report on location and disposal practices, violation of the annual reporting requirement, violation of the groundwater reporting requirement, violation of the record-keeping requirements, and accumulation of waste on site for over one year. It also contained an allegation that Tang “caused or allowed” the violations
“as a part of his performance of, and as a direct result of, his duties as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of P Brothers LP, and because of his controlling ownership interest in both a limited partner and the general partner of P Brothers LP These duties included, and his controlling ownership interest meant, that Defendant Tang was a person, if not the only one, who could decide to make the expenditure in such an amount to be sufficient to dispose of the auto shredder residue and/or auto fluff waste at the site.”
It further alleged:
“Defendant Tang failed to make the decision to properly dispose of, or direct or authorize sufficient funding reasonably necessary for the disposal of, the auto shredder residue and/or auto fluff waste at the site. In this fashion, Defendant Tang caused or allowed the consolidation of the auto shredder residue and/or auto fluff waste at the site.”
Tang moved to dismiss the first amended complaint under section 2 — 619.1 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2 — 619.1 (West 2000)). The court granted the motion and dismissed the first amended complaint in part with prejudice and in part without prejudice on April 12, 2002. The portions dismissed with prejudice were the requests for mandatory injunctive relief, which the court dismissed because it found that the portion of the Act under which the State sought a mandatory injunction did not permit mandatory injunctive relief, and the counts charging Tang with failing to comply with the reporting requirements because the court found that those sections of the Act impose duties on facilities, not on individuals. After its first amended complaint was dismissed, the State filed motions to reconsider or alternatively to enter a Rule 304(a) (155 Ill. 2d R. 304(a)) finding, allowing immediate appeal. The court denied the motions.
The State sought leave to file its second amended complaint. The State included those claims that were dismissed with prejudice from the first amended complaint. According to the State, the claims were included only “to preserve the issue for appeal.” Tang objected to inclusion of the previously dismissed claims, and the court disallowed them.
As filed, the second amended complaint charged open dumping, improper waste disposal, developing a waste disposal site without a permit, operation of a waste disposal site without an operating permit, water pollution, water pollution hazard, common law public nuisance, failure to post landfill bond, and accumulation of waste on site for over one year. Its allegations were very similar to the allegations made in the original and first amended complaints. With regard to the first six counts, it alleged that Tang “conduct[ed] an automobile shredding operation at the site” and “caused and allowed” (1) the resultant “auto shredder residue and auto fluff to be piled outside, uncontainerized and uncovered”; (2) “auto shredder residue and/or auto fluff waste from off-site automobile shredding operations to be accepted at the site in addition to that generated on-site”; and (3) “auto shredder residue and/or auto fluff waste to be consolidated.” Further, it alleged that Tang “fail[e]d to take any action to remove the wastes *** to a licensed disposal facility” and “fail[ed] to authorize the expenditure necessary for proper removal of the [wastes].” The complaint again sought mandatory injunctive relief and, this time, alleged:
“On information and belief, Midwest Metafiles LP [the now bankrupt entity that was formerly P Brothers LP] will raise no objection to Defendant Cyrus Tang entering the site and taking such actions necessary to cease the violations of the Act he is committing at the site if ordered to do so by this Court after trial.”
Tang moved under section 2 — 619.1 (735 ILCS 5/2 — 619.1 (West 2000)) to dismiss the second amended complaint, claiming that the allegations were insufficient to state a claim against him personally, that mandatory relief was not allowed under the Act, and that he had no legal interest in the property, which prevented the court from ordering him to enter the property for remediation.
The trial court agreed with Tang on all three grounds. First, it found that the allegations were insufficient to state a claim against Tang personally. It found that Tang’s “involvement and participation as alleged [were] not because he was operating the facility *** but because he was chairman and chief executive officer and because of his controlling and ownership interest.” At most, the court found that the complaint
“allege[d] that [Tang’s] personal involvement and active participation [was] due to his activities as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and controlling interest and his failure in that capacity to dispose of the residue or to authorize sufficient funding to dispose of the residue or to authorize sufficient funding to dispose of the residue and ‘in this fashion’ caused or allowed the residue on the site.”
With regard to the additional issues, the court recognized that “Illinois law is clear that a mandatory injunction may not issue to a non-owner or non-controller of the property [citation] which is the subject matter of the injunction.” It also held that the portion of the Act relied upon by the State “allows only Restraining orders and not positive mandatory injunctions.” Thus, the court dismissed the second amended complaint with prejudice.
The State appeals on three grounds. First, it claims that its first and second amended complaints adequately state multiple causes of action against Tang. Second, it maintains that mandatory injunctive relief is appropriate. Third, the State claims that the trial court erred in finding that it lacked authority to grant the requested relief beсause Tang has no legal interest in the property at issue. The State urges us to “reverse the dismissal of its first and second amended complaints and to remand all of the counts and remedies sought therein for further proceedings in the circuit court.”
Tang contends that our review should be restricted to the State’s second amended complaint because the State failed to “include in its Second Amended Complaint by restatement or incorporation by reference each theory of recovery argued in the First Amended Complaint” and, consequently, waived those claims on appeal. Regardless, Tang argues, even if the first amended complaint is considered, the trial cоurt’s dismissal was proper for the same reasons it was proper to dismiss the second amended complaint. In reply, the State argues that it did not waive its right to appeal the dismissal of its first amended complaint by failing to incorporate the dismissed claims in its second amended complaint because the State attempted to incorporate those claims, solely for the purpose of preserving them for appeal, but was prevented from doing so upon Tang’s objection. The State failed to include the order dismissing its first amended complaint in its appendix in violation of Rule 342(a) (155 Ill. 2d R. 342(a) (“The appellant’s brief shall include as an appendix, *** a copy of the judgment appealed from ***”)), and we need not consider the State’s arguments with regard to that order. Regardless, the claims dismissed in the first amended complaint would be subject to dismissal for the same reasons as the claims in the second amended complaint as discussed below. 1 Thus, even if the claims were not waived, we would hold that they were properly dismissed.
As to the merits, we first note that our review is de novo. Safeway Insurance Co. v. Daddono,
In this case, we are not asked to determine whether, as a general proposition, a corporate officer may ever be held hable for corporate wrongs under the Act; both parties concede that, under certain circumstances, a corporate officer may be individually liable. Instead, we must determine whether the pleadings in this case are sufficient to state a claim for Tang’s individual liability. Apparently, only one Illinois case has specifically addressed the issue of a corporate officer’s potential individual liability under the Act. The trial court rehed on this case in rendering its decision, and both parties claim the case supports their contentions on appeal.
In People ex rel. Burris v. C.J.R. Processing, Inc.,
The State argues that under C.J.R., it has adequately stated claims against Tang individually. Tang also relies on C.J.R., but claims that the complaint does not state a cause of action. No Illinois court has interpreted or applied those portions of C.J.R. dealing with a corporate officer’s potential individual liability under the Act. Accordingly, both parties have referred us to cases from other jurisdictions in support of their positions.
Before analyzing those cases, we outline some of the principles underlying corporation law in Illinois. “One of the purposes of a corporate entity is to immunize the corporate officer from individual liability on contracts entered into in the corporatiоn’s behalf.” National Acceptance Co. of America v. Pintura Corp.,
We have reviewed the out-of-jurisdiction cases cited by the parties in support of their contrary claims regarding the sufficiency of the allegations in this case. Most of these cases deal with liability under the “owned or operated” standard for liability under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA) (42 U.S.C. § 9601 et seq. (2000)) rather than the Act’s “cаused or allowed” standard, which is at issue here (415 ILCS 5/12(a) (West 2000)). Regardless, the cases are useful to our analysis because they are premised on the same general principles of corporation law that we discussed above and because the CERCLA provision is in many ways analogous to the Act’s provision.
Both CERCLA and the Act impose liability on “persons” who violate their provisions, and “person” is broadly defined in both statutes to include individuals, partnerships, firms, associations, corporations, and governmental subdivisions and agencies. Compare 42 U.S.C. § 9601(21) (2000) and 415 ILCS 5/3.26 (West 2000). Under CERCLA, however, liability attaches to those who “owned or operated any facility at which such hazardous substances were disрosed of’ at the time of disposal. 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a)(2) (2000). Under the Act, on the other hand, liability attaches to those who “[c]ause or allow the open dumping of any waste” (415 ILCS 5/21(a) (West 2000)) and those who “[clause or threaten or allow the discharge” of contaminants that cause or tend to cause water pollution within the state (415 ILCS 5/12(a) (West 2000)). In determining a corporate officer’s liability under the Act, this distinction is minimal. The difference is that instead of having to have been an owner or active operator of the facility where the violations occurred to be hable under CERCLA, the officer must have caused or allowed the violations in order to be liable under the Act. 2
In United States v. Bestfoods,
The facts of the out-of-jurisdiction cases cited by the parties confirm that more than a corporate title is required in order for an officer to be held liable for corporate violations of environmental prоtection laws. There is, however, no precise definition as to what must be alleged to state a claim for personal liability. As we review the cases, we note that the federal courts impose a notice-pleading standard whereas we impose a fact-pleading standard. Compare Redfield v. Continental Casualty Corp.,
The рrimary difficulty in cases like this one lies in identifying the officer’s actions and determining whether they were personal acts or acts of the corporation. As one court has explained:
“The line between a personal act and an act that is purely an act of the corporation (or of some other employee) and so not imputed to the president or to other corporate officers is sometimes a fine one, but often it is clear on which side of the line a particular act falls. If an individual is hit by a negligently operated train, the railroad is liable in tort to him but the president of the railroad is not. Or rather, not usually; had the president been driving the train when it hit the plaintiff, or had been sitting beside the driver and ordered him to exceed the speed limit, he would be jointly liable with the railroad.” Browning-Ferris Industries of Illinois, Inc. v. Ter Maat,195 F.3d 953 , 956 (7th Cir. 1999).
In these examples the determination of personal liability is obvious, but the situations are not always so clear-cut, especially in the environmental protection arena.
In Sydney S. Arst Co. v. Pipefitters Welfare Educ. Fund,
“To survive a motion to dismiss a plaintiff must allege that persons associated with the corporation directly and personally engaged in conduct that led to the specific environmental damage at issue in the case. Without such direct, personal involvement, the corporation and not the associated individuals must be regarded as owning or operating the hazardous waste site in question. It would certainly be unreasonаble to infer simply from general allegations of corporate ownership or operation of a waste site that individuals acting on the corporation’s behalf are themselves liable. Thus, a plaintiff does not state a claim for owner or operator liability if she merely alleges that certain individuals had general corporate authority or served generally in a supervisory capacity. Active participation in, or exercise of specific control of, the activities in question must be shown.” Pipefitters,25 F.3d at 421-22 .
Courts that have upheld liability have similarly required more than a showing of general corporate authority. In Carter-Jones Lumber Co. v. Dixie Distributing Co.,
In State ex rel. Webster v. Missouri Resource Recovery, Inc.,
“was a ‘hands-on’ operator. He individually participated in and directed all the activities of the corporation. *** [H]e had responsibility for the day-to-day operation of the business. [His] decisions and his actions [were] the source of plaintiffs’ charges against [the corporation]. He had the ability to control the activities of [the corporation] which gave rise to this lawsuit and he did control those activities.’'’
Likewise, in State v. Shore Realty Corp.,
In United States v. Carolina Transformer Co.,
One case, perhaps more than any other, exemplifies that it is not a person’s title as a corporate officer that creates liability. In United States v. Gurley,
Applying rules similar to those applied, in the above cases, some courts have found insufficient evidence to hold corporate officers liable. In Riverside Market Development Corp. v. International Building Products, Inc.,
From our analysis of C.J.R., the other cases cited by the parties, and the Act itself, we conclude that in order to state a claim for personal liability against a corporate officer under the Act, a plaintiff must do more than allege corporate wrongdoing. Similarly, the plaintiff must allege more than that the corporate officer held a manаgement position, had general corporate authority, or served in a supervisory capacity in order to establish individual liability under the Act. The plaintiff must allege facts establishing that the corporate officer had personal involvement or active participation in the acts resulting in liability, not just that he had personal involvement or active participation in the management of the corporation. Application of these principles in this case shows that the State has not pled a cause of action against Tang for individual liability.
The State has made conclusory allegations that Tang “caused or allowed” certain actions to occur in violation of the Act. The State, however, offers no explanation as to how Tang “caused or allowed” these violations to occur, except that he did so “as a part of his performance of, and as a direct result of, his duties as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of E Brothers LR and because of his controlling ownership interest in both a limited partner and the general partner of F Brothers LE” In other words, the State is saying that because he was an officer and shareholder of the corporation, Tang is accountable for the corporation’s actions. As noted above, this flies in the face of the purpose of creating corporate entitiеs. To state a claim, the allegations must show that Tang was personally, as opposed to only in his corporate capacity, involved in the alleged violations. They fail to do so, despite the State’s multiple opportunities to state its claims. Significantly, the State does not even allege that Tang had knowledge of the wastes or the violations. The allegations merely state in conclusory fashion that Tang “conducted an automobile shredding operation at the site through the business entities” and inexplicably “caused or allowed” the violations to occur. These allegations are significantly deficient as compared to the allegations in C.J.R. and other cases finding individual liability. As pointed out above in C.J.R., the corporate officer defendant actually “operated” the facility in question. In this case, for whatever reason, the chief operating officer of P Brothers LP was not made a party to this action. The allegations are conclusory and insufficient to state a claim for personal liability.
The State urges us to ignore the deficiencies in its pleadings because “the evidence to support [the] allegation [s] is principally within the defendant’s knowledge and can be further developed through discovery.” The State cites John Burns Construction Co. v. City of Chicago,
In this case, the State never petitioned the court to begin discovery. Instead, it continued to replead nearly identical conclusions without indicating to the trial court that its complaint might have benefitted from discovery. Further, the State has not, in its pleadings or in its appellate briefs, described any of the evidence that it believes is in Tang’s possession. Nor is there any indication that Tang has any evidence that would be useful in answering the complaint. As they stand, the State’s allegations are insufficient to apprise Tang of what acts he is being asked to defend. Under these circumstances, we cannot accept the State’s claim. Dismissal was proper.
The State altеrnatively maintains that Tang is liable as a corporate officer because “the law imposes responsibility upon corporate agents who do not proactively work to prevent violations of statutes that [a]ffect the public’s health and safety from occurring.” In some jurisdictions this is known as the “responsible corporate officer doctrine.” See, e.g., BEC Corp. v. Department of Environmental Protection,
The State also argues that the trial court erred in holding that the Act does not authorize mandatory injunctive relief and that the court lacked authority to order Tang to remediate the property even though he has no legal interest in it. Because of our disposition on the liability issues, we need not address these relief issues.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s dismissal with prejudice of the State’s second amended complaint.
Affirmed.
O’MALLEY, P.J., and McNULTY, J., concur.
Notes
Section 21(d) of the Act, under which the claims for failure to properly file reports were brought, requires that such reports be filed by a person who “[c]onduct[s] any waste-storage, waste-treatment, or waste-disposal operation.” 415 ILCS 5/21(d) (West 2000).
We note that this reasoning applies equally with the common law public nuisance claim because “[a] common law public nuisance has been defined as an act or failure to act which injures the safety, health or morals of the public; or which causes substantial public annoyance, inconvenience or injury.” C.J.R.,
