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Illinois Supreme Court Debates Jurisdictional Issues in Child Custody Case

A Circuit Court has subject matter jurisdiction to enter a child custody order pursuant to the Illinois Constitution. But the Court apparently lacks jurisdiction to proceed pursuant to the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (750 ILCS 36/201). If the Circuit Court proceeds anyway, is the resulting order void, voidable, or something else? In … Continue Reading

The Illinois Pension Plaintiffs’ Brief: The Cause of State Underfunding, and The Constitutional Convention Revisited

As we’ve written here, here and here, the plaintiffs in the Pension Reform Litigation pending before the Illinois Supreme Court needed to accomplish three things in their Appellees’ Briefs to put themselves in a position to prevail – answer the State’s construction of: (1) the history that led to the Pension Reform Act; (2) the … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Agrees to Decide Whether a Condo Foreclosure Extinguishes Association’s Lien

In the closing days of its January term, the Illinois Supreme Court agreed to decide an issue of considerable potential importance to the real estate bar – when does a foreclosure sale on a condominium unit extinguish the Association’s lien for assessments incurred before the sale closed?  In 1010 Lake Shore Association v. Deutsche Bank … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Agrees To Decide If School Districts are Subject to Local Zoning

In the closing days of its January term, the Illinois Supreme Court agreed to decide a question involving the potential collision of several different aspects of Illinois constitutional law: are school districts subject to local zoning?  The case is Gurba v. Community High School District No. 155, a decision from the Second District. Gurba began … Continue Reading

Pensions at the Constitutional Convention, Part III: The Opponents and the Vote

We conclude our discussion of the July 21, 1970 debate on the Pension Protection Clause at the Illinois Constitutional Convention.  Today, we’ll take a look at more statements by opponents of the measure, the summations by the co-sponsors, and the vote. After Delegate Kinney’s remarks, Delegate Lyons, the Vice-President of the Convention, spoke.  “I am … Continue Reading

Pensions at the Constitutional Convention, Part II: The Clause is Introduced

Although there were several reasons for the 1970 Illinois Constitutional Convention, public pensions became a major subject of discussion in the weeks before the delegates gathered.  Elmer Getz, the Chair of the Convention’s Bill of Rights Committee, wrote: “I began to receive an extraordinary number of communications on the pension and retirement rights of government … Continue Reading

Pensions at the Constitutional Convention, Part I: The New Jersey Spina Decision

One of the central issues in the ongoing battle, now pending before the Illinois Supreme Court, is about what the delegates to the Constitutional Convention of 1970 who adopted Illinois’ Pension Protection Clause understood the Clause to mean. The State argues in defense of the pension reform bill that the Clause was merely intended to … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Affirms Revenue Decoupling for Natural Gas Rates

In the closing days of its January term, the Illinois Supreme Court unanimously affirmed the Appellate Court’s decision in People ex rel. Madigan v. Illinois Commerce Commission, approving the use of the so-called volume-balancing-adjustment rider (or “Rider VBA”) on a natural gas utility’s bills.  Our detailed summary of the facts and Commission and court opinions … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Affirms Constitutionality of Nursing Home Bed Tax

In the closing days of its January term, a unanimous Illinois Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of a “bed tax” on Illinois nursing homes, reversing the Circuit Court’s judgment that the tax violates the state constitution’s Uniformity Clause.  The statute, 305 ILCS 5/5E-10, imposes a “fee” of “$1.50 for each licensed nursing bed day for … Continue Reading

State’s Defense of Pension Reform: Constitutional Convention Couldn’t Make Pension Protection Absolute (Even If It Wanted To)

Today we continue our discussion of the centerpiece of the Illinois Supreme Court’s civil docket – the public pension reform case – with a look at the State’s Opening Brief, which was filed January 12, 2015.  As we’ll see below, the State’s defense of the Pension Reform bill almost certainly sets up an all-out fight … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Affirms Circuit Court Jurisdiction Over Workers Comp Referral Fee Disputes

The Workers Compensation has broad jurisdiction to award or apportion attorneys’ fees in connection with counsel’s work before the Commission.  But what if one of the attorneys didn’t appear before the Commission, and the contract is largely for referral fees?  Unanimously affirming the Appellate Court in Ferris, Thompson & Zweig, Ltd. v. Esposito, the Illinois … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Denies All Ten Amici Requests in Support of State in Pension Appeal

Over four days in mid-January, no fewer than ten entities – public entities, charitable institutions and individuals – filed motions for leave to file amicus briefs in support of the State’s defense of the public pension reform statute.  All told, the amici amounted to 265 pages of briefing, on top of the State’s own fifty … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Dismisses Appeal on Interlocutory “Rules of Road” Custody Orders

What procedural and substantive rights are potentially impacted by “rules of the road” orders in child custody cases – interlocutory orders which regulate what the contending parents can and can’t do in interacting with their children while the divorce case is pending?  That’s the issue presented by In re Marriage of Eckersall.  Last week, the … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Debates Scope of Accountant-Client Privilege in Will Contests

Last week, the Illinois Supreme Court heard oral argument in Brunton v. Kruger.  Brunton involves the scope of the accountant-client privilege – specifically, what happens to that privilege after the client dies, and how the privilege can be waived.  Our detailed summary of the facts and lower court opinions in Bruton is here. An accounting … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Debates Scope of Tort Duty for Insurance Agents

Last week, the Illinois Supreme Court began hearing arguments from its civil docket with Skaperdas v. Country Casualty Insurance Company.  Skaperdas poses a major question for the insurance industry: does a “captive” insurance agent who only represents a single insurer owe customers a tort duty of care in obtaining insurance?  Our detailed summary of the … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Debates “Rules of the Road” Orders in Custody Disputes

  It’s become commonplace in domestic relations cases with custody issues, in Cook County and certain other jurisdictions, for the trial court, early in the proceedings, to enter a kind of “rules of the road” order specifying what the parents can and can’t do with the children. The centerpiece of these orders is usually that neither … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Debates Retroactive Application of Landfill Cleanup Statute

  In 2004, the Illinois legislature amended the Illinois Environmental Protection Act to authorize mandatory injunctions to require cleanups of landfills. But could the courts use the statute to order cleanups of older landfills in cases that were already pending at the time of the amendment? That’s the question the Illinois Supreme Court debated during its November … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Debates Whether Treasurer Needs Appellate Bond

  Although Illinois courts are generally presumed to have subject matter jurisdiction, that rule doesn’t apply when it comes time to review a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Commission. In order to initiate judicial review of a workers comp decision, strict compliance with the steps set forth in the Act are required. One of those steps is … Continue Reading
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