Tag Archives: Illinois

Illinois Supreme Court Announces Two Civil Opinions to Be Filed Friday

This afternoon, the Illinois Supreme Court announced that it will file two new civil opinions on Friday morning: Poris v. Lake Holiday Property Owners Association, No. 113907 – (1) May a property association authorize private security officers to stop and detain persons on its property for speeding on association-owned roads? (2) May such an association place … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Announces Anticipated Filing Dates for January and February

The Illinois Supreme Court has announced its anticipated filing dates for January and February. Opinions are expected on Friday, January 25; Thursday, February 7; and Friday, February 22. Decisions on petitions for rehearing are expected on Monday, January 28th and decisions on petitions for leave to appeal are expected on Wednesday, January 30. The Court made substantial … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court to Consider If Mailbox Rule Applies to Administrative Appeal From Workers Comp Commission

Our preview of the civil cases to be heard by the Illinois Supreme Court during the upcoming January term concludes with Gruszeczka v. The Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission [pdf]. Gruszeczka poses an important question: does the mailbox rule apply to initiating judicial review of decisions of the Workers’ Compensation Commission? The claimant in Gruszeczka filed an … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court to Consider The Potential Perils of E-Filing a Notice of Appeal

We continue our previews of the civil cases scheduled for oral argument during the Illinois Supreme Court’s January term with VC&M, Ltd. v. Andrews. VC&M arises from a real estate dispute. The defendants were in the process of getting a divorce. They signed a contract with the plaintiff to list their residence. Plaintiff found a buyer, who put … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Will Hear Five Civil Cases During January Term

The Illinois Supreme Court has posted its docket for the impending January term, and the Court will hear argument in five civil cases. The civil portion of the Court’s docket begins during the 9:00 a.m. session on Wednesday, January 16 with McFatridge v. Madigan. McFatridge, which we previewed here,involves a dispute between a former State’s Attorney … Continue Reading

Marital Property Valued as of Date of Divorce, Not Date of Property Resolution, Holds Divided Illinois Supreme Court

Under Illinois law, courts may under certain circumstances enter a judgment of dissolution in a divorce case and wait until later, as part of a bifurcated proceeding, to enter a property distribution judgment. The problem with that is that sometimes the parties’ sense of urgency to get the proceeding over with dims once the marriage has … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Rejects Forum Shopping in Asbestos Case

May a lifelong resident of Mississippi who alleges that he was exposed to asbestos and assorted other allegedly toxic agents while working out of the defendant’s Jackson Mississippi facility nevertheless sue for his alleged injuries in Illinois, even though numerous potential witnesses lived in Mississippi and plaintiff alleged no exposure here? On Friday morning, the Illinois … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Holds Judgment of Foreclosure Not Immediately Appealable

Under Illinois law, a judgment of foreclosure does not end a mortgage foreclosure case; it remains modifiable by the trial court and is strictly interlocutory. After such a judgment is entered, the property is sold once periods for reinstatement and redemption have expired. The person who conducted the sale then reports to the court and, upon motion, … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Declines to Decide Absolute Immunity Issue in Cooney

Cooney v. Rossiter presented two questions: (1) was the plaintiffs’ individual action barred by the dismissal of an earlier putative class action; and (2) is a court-appointed psychological evaluator in a child custody proceeding entitled to absolute immunity from suit by one of the parents in the action. This morning, the Illinois Supreme Court affirmed the … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court to Issue Final Four Civil Opinions on Friday Morning

This morning, the Illinois Supreme Court announced that it will issue four more civil opinions on Friday morning to close out 2012. The upcoming decisions deal with issues as diverse as res judicata and absolute immunity, foreclosure judgments and appealability, domestic relations property settlements and forum non conveniens in tort actions. The four cases are: Cooney v. … Continue Reading

Can the Cook County Commission on Human Rights Award Punitive Damages?

Our previews of the new civil cases granted review at the end of the Illinois Supreme Court’s November term conclude with Crittenden v. Cook County Commission on Human Rights [pdf]. Crittenden involves a question of administrative law which, depending on the breadth of the Court’s ultimate decision, could have broad implications: when can an administrative board … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court to Tackle Public Employees’ Right to Strike

Our previews of the new civil cases granted review at the end of the Illinois Supreme Court’s November term continue with The Board of Education of Peoria School District No. 150 v. The Peoria Federation of Support Staff, Security/Policemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association No. 114 [pdf]. Board of Education poses two questions: the constitutionality of a … Continue Reading

Municipal Pensions II: Do Survivors’ Pensions Increase Whenever the Salary For the Position Does?

  Our previews of the new civil cases granted review at the end of the Illinois Supreme Court’s November term continue with Hooker v. Retirement Fund of the Firemen’s Annuity and Benefit Fund of Chicago, [pdf]. Hooker poses the question of whether the pensions for firefighter’s survivors should be set for all time pursuant to the … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Takes Broad View of Courts’ Power to Decertify a Class

Section 2-802(a) of the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure provides that an order certifying a class action “may be conditional and may be amended before a decision on the merits.” 735 ILCS 5/2-802(a). But what’s a “decision on the merits”? In its third unanimous decision of the day, the Illinois Supreme Court answered that question this morning, … Continue Reading

Res Judicata Part II: Always Read What the Order Says (and Doesn’t Say)

In its second opinion of the day on the doctrine of res judicata, a unanimous Illinois Supreme Court has affirmed the First District, Fifth Division’s decision in Hernandez v. Pritikin [pdf]. A detailed discussion of the underlying facts and the rulings of the Circuit Court and Appellate Court appears in our pre-argument preview here. Our argument report … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Clarifies “Theories” Versus “Claims” for Res Judicata Purposes

The basic rule of res judicata is easy enough to state: a final judgment on the merits by a court with jurisdiction bars any further actions by the parties or their privies on the same claim. But what judgments (or orders) are “final”? And what’s a “claim”? The Illinois Supreme Court delved into those important questions this morning, … Continue Reading

Disgorgement of an Advance Payment Retainer as Interim Fees in a Divorce Case?

In the closing days of the Illinois Supreme Court’s November term, the Court allowed petitions for leave to appeal in six civil cases. Our previews of the new grants begin with In re Marriage of Earlywine [pdf]. Although Earlywine arises from a divorce, it presents an interesting intersection of domestic relations law and attorney retainers. In conjunction … Continue Reading

Why A Fees Claim Can’t Wait: Rodriquez v. Department of Financial and Professional Regulation

As we wrote in our preview of Rodriquez v. Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, private attorney general statutes are not uncommon in the law. Such statutes provide that if a private plaintiff provides, by his or her suit, what the legislature regards as a public service, the plaintiff gets his or her attorney’s fees back. … Continue Reading

Illinois Supreme Court Denies Taxpayer Standing in Constitutional Challenge to School Funding Law

The Illinois state educational funding statute survived a constitutional challenge last week when the Illinois Supreme Court, in a unanimous opinion by Justice Robert R. Thomas, affirmed an Appellate Court decision dismissing Carr v. Koch for lack of standing. Our pre-argument preview of Carr, which includes a detailed description of the facts and lower court rulings, … Continue Reading

Argument Report: When May the Homeowners’ Association Security Stop and Detain?

Our reports on the civil oral arguments of the Illinois Supreme Court’s November term conclude with Poris v. Lake Holiday Property Owners Association.  Our pre-argument preview of Poris is here.  You can watch the oral argument here. The plaintiff owns property in the Lake Holiday Development, and is a member of the defendant Association. The defendant … Continue Reading
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