UNITED CEMENT COMPANY and Mississippi Department of Natural Resources Permit Board
v.
SAFE AIR FOR THE ENVIRONMENT, INC.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*841 William L. Smith, Brunini Grantham Grower & Hewes, Mike C. Moore, Atty. Gen., Tim Waycaster, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellant.
Hal H.H. McClanahan, III, Rufus A. Ward, Jr., West Point, David A. Smith, Columbus, for appellee.
Before HAWKINS, P.J., and ANDERSON and BLASS, JJ.
BLASS, Justice, for the Court:
One of the appellants, United Cement Company, filed an application with the Mississippi Department of Natural Resources Permit Board, the other appellant, for a modification of its Air Emissions Permit so as to permit it to burn a waste-derived supplemental fuel in its cement kiln in its plant at Artesia, Mississippi. United Cement had a permit issued earlier but sought a modification allowing it to use these industrial waste fuels. The Permit Board granted the modified permit. Safe Air for the Environment, Inc., hereinafter called "SAFE," objected to the Permit, and, pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. § 49-17-29(4)(b) (Supp. 1989), requested and was afforded a full evidentiary administrative hearing before the Permit Board. This hearing was conducted before the full Board on the first of August, 1988, after a continuance of about two months granted to SAFE.
The Board designated Special Assistant Attorney General Helen Wetherbee to sit with the Board as hearing officer. The staff of the Mississippi Bureau of Pollution Control and United Cement offered voluminous data, exhibits, and expert testimony in support of its request for the modified permit. SAFE offered no testimony, nor other evidence not already in the file, to refute the contentions of United Cement and the action of the Bureau or to show that the modified permit as issued would not adequately protect human health and environment. On August 26, 1988, the Permit Board, by unanimous vote, reaffirmed its earlier decision to issue the modified Permit.
SAFE then appealed to the Chancery Court of Lowndes County, charging that it had been denied due process of law in that Ms. Wetherbee, the hearing officer, was a Special Assistant Attorney General assigned to the Environment Section, and that Mr. Prestage, the attorney representing the Mississippi Bureau of Pollution Control, was also a Special Assistant Attorney General. Neither SAFE nor the learned Chancellor set out any facts or law *842 showing how this arrangement denied SAFE due process of law.
Despite the fact that SAFE presented no evidence in opposition to the issuance of the permit, the Chancellor reversed and remanded the matter to the Permit Board for another full evidentiary hearing before an impartial officer. He stated, in part:
The principal issue to be resolved is whether or not the employment relationship of the hearing officer was such to violate the basic concept of fairness. The hearing officer and the attorney for the Permit Board are both Special Assistant Attorney Generals [sic] for the State of Mississippi and are assigned to the Environmental Section. There can be little question that the hearing by the Permit Board was in the nature of a quasi-judicial proceeding over which the hearing officer presided, ruled on objections, controlled evidence, was required to make a finding of fact, and to make recommendations to the Board. Obviously the hearing officer was not as had been argued, just the referee.
The hearing officer did not hear this matter alone, or as a judge. The entire Permit Board was present for the hearing and heard the testimony of all of the witnesses themselves and decided the issues. After the Board had made its decision following the evidentiary hearing, SAFE petitioned for a rehearing, and the Board by unanimous vote reaffirmed its position.
With deference to the learned Chancellor, it is clear that his decision must be reversed and the decision of the Permit Board affirmed. We see no suggestion of partiality or impropriety in the use of an assistant attorney general as a hearing officer. State v. Mississippi Public Service Comm'n.,
Administrative hearings of the character involved here are not trials and they are not governed by the same rules which apply in courts of law. New South Communications v. Answer Iowa, Inc.,
The appellee/cross-appellant SAFE admits having knowledge of the identity of the hearing officer as an Assistant Attorney General well before the hearing and in time to object if any legitimate objection existed. It made no objection before the Board and proceeded through the hearing without objection. We are of the opinion that it waived any real or supposed objection it might have had by this conduct[1].
Looking now to the cross-appeal by SAFE, challenging, in effect, the form of the application for the permit, we find that it is abundantly clear from the record that the permit application was the application of United Cement. The cross-appeal is dismissed.
REVERSED AND RENDERED AND THE PERMIT REINSTATED.
ROY NOBLE LEE, C.J., HAWKINS and DAN M. LEE, P.JJ., and PRATHER, ROBERTSON and ANDERSON, JJ., concur.
SULLIVAN, J., dissents without written opinion.
PITTMAN, J., not participating.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The particular section to which Assistant Attorney General Helen Wetherbee was assigned is of no consequence in this case since we found that no due process violation existed. The hearing officer acts in a representative capacity for the Permit Board. The hearing officer is not an adversary in the proceedings. Likewise, the Assistant Attorney General representing the Bureau of Pollution Control is not an adversary in the proceedings before the Permit Board. Miss. Code Ann. § 49-17-7 (Supp. 1989) provides:
(1) The Mississippi Commission on Natural Resources shall be the Mississippi Air and Water Pollution Control Commission, and shall exercise the duties and responsibilities of the Mississippi Air and Water Pollution Control Commission through the bureau of pollution control of the Mississippi Department of Natural Resources, insofar as practicable under the provisions of Chapter 2 of Title 49, Mississippi Code of 1972.
(2) The words "Mississippi Air and Water Pollution Control Commission" wherever they may appear in the laws of the State of Mississippi shall be construed to mean the Mississippi Commission of Natural Resources.
The Bureau of Pollution Control, the Permit Board, and the Permit Board's hearing officer are all a part of the same administrative agency, the Mississippi Department and Commission on Natural Resources. See also Miss. Code Ann. §§ 49-17-13, 49-17-28 (Supp. 1989).
