2014 IL App (1st) 133450
No. 1-13-3450
Opinion filed October 29, 2014
Third Division
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
FIRST DISTRICT
)
JOHN MICHAEL WOODS,
)
)
Plaintiff-Appellant,
) Appeal from the Circuit Court of
) Cook County.
v.
)
)
THE CITY OF BERWYN, THE BOARD OF
) No. 2011 CH 32916
FIRE & POLICE COMMISSIONERS OF THE
)
CITY OF BERWYN, BERWYN FIRE
)
DEPARTMENT, FIRE CHIEF DENIS J.
) The Honorable
O'HALLORAN, RALPH REYNA, Commissioner,
) Neil H. Cohen,
ROGER MONTORO, Commissioner, and
) Judge, presiding.
RICHARD TOMAN, Commissioner,
)
)
Defendants-Appellees.
)
JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Presiding Justice Pucinski and Justice Lavin concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Plaintiff John Woods appeals the decision of defendant Board of Fire and Police
Commissioners of the City of Berwyn discharging him as a fire lieutenant. Woods' discharge
stems from certain threats he allegedly made against superiors. He argues that: (i) his due process
rights were denied when he was not allowed to arbitrate his grievance; and (ii) the decision to
terminate was against the manifest weight of the evidence. We disagree and affirm, finding that
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conditions precedent to arbitration were not satisfied, that the Board's findings were not against
the manifest weight of the evidence, and that its decision to terminate was reasonable.
¶2 BACKGROUND
¶3 Woods began working for the Berwyn fire department in 1988. He was promoted to fire
lieutenant in 2008. Woods had a clean disciplinary record until 2009, when he received a 24-
hour suspension without pay for a confrontation with a firefighter to whom Woods said, "You
stay out of my life." The firefighter asked Wood's three times, "Is that a threat?" Woods
answered, "Yeah, leave me alone."
¶4 In October 2010, Woods volunteered to become the department's training officer. But,
over time, he felt he received inadequate training for the job and that his superiors were overly
critical of his work. He described his supervisors' treatment as "harassment."
¶5 In mid-May 2011, Deputy Chief Sam Molinaro spoke to Woods at a pub. Woods told
Molinaro that he was extremely stressed about his job, and the stress was starting to affect his
family life. Molinaro advised Woods to speak to the fire chief and request a reassignment. He
also told him that, with 14 new firefighters in the department, it was important that Woods did
his job well. Woods responded he could handle the job, but insisted his superiors picked on him.
¶6 By month’s end, Woods, changed his mind. He met with with Assistant Chief Dick
Swade and Chief Denis O'Halloran. The chief asked Woods whether he wanted to remain in the
training officer position. Woods said, "No, I do not." Woods further stated that he was tired and
not sleeping, and would go home at night, sit in his chair, and have "bad thoughts." The chief
told Woods, "Okay, you're out."
¶7 As a result of the meeting, a 14-day notice was posted seeking a lieutenant to take over
the training officer vacancy, and if no lieutenant volunteered, the most junior lieutenant would be
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assigned the job. Lieutenant Ronald Hamilton was the most junior lieutenant in the department.
The chief discussed the prospect of becoming the training officer with Hamilton, and Hamilton
was not happy.
¶8 A few days later, Woods met with his supervisor, Deputy Chief Greg DiMenna, to turn in
lesson plans. The deputy chief complimented Woods on his work, and Woods responded saying
he wanted to continue as training officer. The deputy chief said he would ask his superiors if
Woods could stay on as training officer. The deputy chief asked the chief whether Woods could
remain in his position, and the chief said, "Absolutely not." The deputy chief did not tell Woods
the chief's response.
¶9 On June 3, 2011, Lieutenant Hamilton was on duty at the south end firehouse in Berwyn.
While returning from a call, Hamilton saw Woods on the firehouse driveway. Woods and
Hamilton were friends, having socialized a number of times outside of work. Woods asked
Hamilton to talk. According to Hamilton, Hamilton started the conversation, saying, "Mike
[Woods], you have a good heart. You have a heart of gold, but you never take responsibility for
your actions." Woods asked, "What do you mean?"
¶ 10 Hamilton responded, "Because of you not doing your job, it doesn't just affect you now.
If nobody signs the transfer sheet to go into the training office, it's going to be me going in there,
and I just want you to know that it does affect me and my family also." As a fire lieutenant,
Hamilton worked 24-hour shifts followed by 48 hours off. The training officer works from 7 a.m.
to 3 p.m., Monday through Friday.
¶ 11 Woods said he felt everyone was out to get him and nobody helped him in his job. He
mentioned an incident where the deputy chief's wife got his wife fired. Then he said, "I'd like to
kill them. Kill them all." Woods also said that his children wanted "addresses" so they could go
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"tune them up." Hamilton assumed "them" referred to the fire department management.
Hamilton said, "Mike, you know that sounds crazy, right? Your kids, there's no way they can get
away with that." Woods later said that he sometimes sat at home thinking of ways of hurting
himself, and he thought he needed psychiatric help.
¶ 12 Woods recollected the conversation differently. Hamilton started the conversation,
saying, "Mike, shut up. I want you to keep your mouth shut and let me talk." Hamilton said,
"Mike, you always got an excuse for everything." Woods asked for an example. Hamilton could
not provide one, but told Woods that he was going to ruin Hamilton's family life and financial
position. "You screwed up your life, now you're screwing up mine," Hamilton said, according to
Woods, "I won't be able to do my job. I won't be able to spend time with my family."
¶ 13 Woods told Hamilton that he had spoken with Deputy Chief DiMenna and was going to
try to stay in the training officer position. Woods did not know that the chief had already rejected
his request. Woods said, "Relax. Everything will work out." Woods also said that he might stay
in the training officer position until another lieutenant retires so that Hamilton would not be the
most junior candidate. Hamilton asked, "Did you tell [Chief] O'Halloran that?" Woods
responded, "No. That was [Deputy Chief] Greg DiMenna's job." Woods told Hamilton that
everything would be fine, shook his hand, and left. He denied that he threatened anyone or said
that he wanted to hurt himself.
¶ 14 Bothered by the conversation, Hamilton called the vice president of the union, and told
him about what Woods had said. The vice president advised him to call the union president, who
told Hamilton to tell Deputy Chief Molinaro. The deputy chief asked Hamilton to prepare a
written statement, which he did, and told the chief and assistant chief about Hamilton’s
conversation with Woods. The chief placed Woods on administrative leave. He also asked the
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Berwyn police to check on Woods. Woods told the police he did not threaten anyone and had no
intention of harming himself or others.
¶ 15 As part of the fire department’s investigation, the deputy chief questioned Woods on June 5.
Woods denied threatening anyone. A few days later, the chief ordered Woods to under go a
psychological evaluation. The psychologist reported that Woods "denied that he had made such
threats to any person *** we did judge him to be honest and forthcoming in the evaluation." The
psychologist found no evidence of a major psychiatric disorder and concluded Woods was
capable of returning to work.
¶ 16 In July 2011, the chief filed charges against Woods before the Board of Fire and Police
Commissioners of the City of Berwyn, which included: (i) conduct unbecoming of a firefighter;
(ii) fighting and verbal abuse; (iii) providing false information; and (iv) violation of the law.
Woods responded with a grievance and requested to proceed before a labor arbitrator. The Union
voted not to refer Woods' grievance to arbitration. Hamilton, a member of the union's executive
board, abstained from the vote.
¶ 17 Regarding disciplinary action, the collective bargaining agreement between the City and
union at section 9, provided that while the fire chief and the Board had various statutory
authority over employees, nevertheless Section 9 supplemented the Fire Chief and Board’s
authority "by providing non-probationary employees with the right to choose between having a
dispute as to disciplinary action resolved through a hearing before an arbitrator selected
according to the grievance/arbitration procedure of this agreement or by hearing conducted by
the Board." The section then sets out the grievance procedure, including, "If no grievance is filed
or the Union does not refer the grievance to arbitration, the charges shall proceed to hearing and
determination shall be made by the Board."
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¶ 18 In August 2011, the Board held a hearing on the fire chief's charges. At the hearing,
Woods' counsel raised the issue of his right to arbitrate under the collective bargaining
agreement. Counsel admitted that the union had disallowed Woods' grievance, but noted that "By
participating in the hearing against Lieutenant Woods' wishes, because he wants to arbitrate,
we're not waiving any rights to litigate federal claims or any other state law claims. We're only
litigating this issue of disciplinary charges brought by the department." Woods then participated
in the hearing.
¶ 19 The Board found that the chief met his burden of establishing, by a preponderance of the
evidence, that Woods was guilty of the charges and that there was cause for his termination.
Woods sought an administrative review of that ruling in the circuit court. The circuit court
remanded the case to the Board to make factual findings. The Board made factual findings,
crediting Hamilton's testimony and noting that Woods had a motive to be "less than truthful."
Woods again sought administrative review from the circuit court, and the circuit court upheld the
Board's decision. This appeal followed.
¶ 20 ANALYSIS
¶ 21 Woods argues: (i) the Board’s refusal to arbitrate violated his due process rights under the
Illinois Municipal Code (65 ILCS 5/1-1-1 et seq. (West 2010)) and the collective bargaining
agreement; (ii) the Board's findings were against the manifest weight of the evidence; and (iii)
the Board's decision to terminate Woods was not supported by the evidence.
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¶ 22 Woods' Right to Arbitration
¶ 23 Whether a party's procedural due process rights were violated presents a legal question,
which we review under the de novo standard. Lyon v. Department of Children & Family
Services, 209 Ill. 2d 264, 271 (2004).
¶ 24 The Illinois Municipal Code provides that a firefighter may not be discharged without
notice and a hearing, or impartial arbitration if so provided under a collective bargaining
agreement. 65 ILCS 5/10-2.1-17 (West 2010). A collective bargaining agreement is a contract,
and as such, we interpret it consistent with the plain meaning of its terms. Board of Education of
Du Page High School District No. 88 v. Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board, 246 Ill.
App. 3d 967, 975 (1992). The law creates a presumption in favor of arbitrating disputes under
collective bargaining agreements that contain arbitration clauses and, when in doubt, courts favor
arbitration. Champaign Police Benevolent & Protective Ass'n Unit No. 7 v. City of Champaign,
210 Ill. App. 3d 797, 802 (1991). But, where a collective bargaining agreement establishes a
grievance and arbitration procedure, those procedures are the exclusive mode of redress for
enforcing the employment contract unless the parties expressly agree otherwise. Meeks v. South
Bend Freight Lines, Inc., 85 Ill. App. 3d 755, 758 (1980).
¶ 25 The collective bargaining agreement applicable to Woods provides "non-probationary
employees with the right to choose between having a dispute as to disciplinary action resolved
through a hearing before an arbitrator selected according to the grievance/arbitration procedure
of this agreement or by hearing conducted by the Board." The agreement sets forth the following
procedure for arbitration: (i) when the fire chief files charges with the Board, he must give notice
to the effected employee and the union; (ii) the employee or the union may then "file a grievance
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contesting the just cause of the disciplinary action" within a certain period of time; and (iii) the
grievance "may be referred to arbitration."
¶ 26 The collective bargaining agreement further states, "[i]f the grievance is referred to
arbitration by the Union" certain conditions must be fulfilled, including a signed statement from
the accused waiving all rights to a hearing before the Board. (Emphasis added.) "If no grievance
is filed or the Union does not refer the grievance to arbitration, the charges shall proceed to
hearing and determination shall be made by the Board." (Emphasis added.)
¶ 27 These procedures create a condition precedent to arbitration— the union must refer a
grievance to arbitration. See Amalgamated Transit Union, Local 900 v. Suburban Bus Division of
the Regional Transportation Authority, 262 Ill. App. 3d 334, 338 (1994) ("A condition precedent
is one which must be performed either before a contract becomes effective or which is to be
performed by one party to an existing contract before the other party is obligated to perform.").
The collective bargaining agreement sets forth several steps before arbitration: the fire chief must
file charges with the Board, then the affected employee may file a grievance. The union must
then decide whether to refer the grievance to arbitration. Woods filed a grievance in response to
the fire chief's charges, but the union declined to refer his grievance to arbitration. Accordingly, a
condition precedent to arbitration was not met, and the Board did not err in proceeding to hear
the charges against Woods.
¶ 28 Woods argues that his right to arbitration is unconditional. He points to the language in
the collective bargaining agreement intending to give "non-probationary employees *** the right
to choose" between arbitration and a hearing before the Board. But the plain meaning of the
collective bargaining agreement belies Woods' reading. We must read the agreement as a whole.
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Speed District 802 v. Warning, 242 Ill. 2d 92, 136 (2011). And Woods' interpretation makes the
procedures set out in the agreement surplusage.
¶ 29 The agreement sets out two steps before arbitration: first, a grievance filed by the
employee, and second, a referral of the grievance to arbitration "by the Union." If the union
refers the grievance to arbitration, the union must give notice and include a waiver of the
employee's right to a Board hearing. The matter then goes to an impartial arbitrator. The
collective bargaining agreement does not provide for an employee to directly refer a grievance to
an arbitrator. If the union and the city wanted to allow an employee—without union approval—
to take a grievance to arbitration, the collective bargaining agreement would have said so. While
the collective bargaining agreement often uses the passive voice in the arbitration provisions ("If
the grievance is filed, it may be referred to arbitration"; "If the grievance is referred to arbitration
by the Union"), reading the provisions as a whole, it is clear the decision to arbitrate a grievance
belongs to the union alone.
¶ 30 Woods further argues that he may refer his grievance to arbitration under the clause
stating, "If no grievance is filed or the Union does not refer the grievance to arbitration," the
Board shall hear the charges. Woods is essentially turning the clause inside out so it in effect
reads, "If a grievance is filed or the Union refers the grievance to arbitration, then the Board shall
not hear the charges." Under the clause, contrary to Woods’ misreading, if either of the
conditions precedent to arbitration (grievance or union referral) is not present, then the Board
hears the charges.
¶ 31 Accordingly, Woods had no right to arbitration under the collective bargaining
agreement, and suffered no due process violation when the Board proceeded to hear the charges
against him.
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¶ 32 The Board's Factual Findings
¶ 33 Woods next argues that the Board's factual findings—that (i) Woods threatened his
supervisors and their families; and (ii) Hamilton testified consistently and credibly—are against
the manifest weight of the evidence. We disagree.
¶ 34 We review the findings of the Board under the manifest weight of the evidence standard,
and will reverse only if the opposite conclusion is clearly evident from the evidence as a whole.
Bowlin v. Murphysboro Firefighters Pension Board of Trustees, 368 Ill. App. 3d 205, 210
(2006); Blunier v. Board of Fire & Police Commissioners, 190 Ill. App. 3d 92, 102 (1989) ("A
review of the entire record is required in order to determine whether the manifest weight of the
evidence, as a whole, warrants a different conclusion ***."). Generally, if the record contains
evidence to support the findings and decision, we will affirm. Abrahamson v. Illinois Dept. of
Professional Regulation, 153 Ill. 2d 76, 88 (1992).
¶ 35 The Board's decision to terminate Woods turns on Hamilton's testimony. Hamilton
testified that Woods said he wanted to kill his superiors and that Woods' sons wanted to hurt the
their families. Woods denied saying anything of the sort. That the Board chose to believe
Hamilton and disbelieve Woods is not contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence. See
Taylor v. Police Board, 62 Ill. App. 3d 486, 492 (1978) (holding reliance on conflicting
testimony does not provide basis for reversal).
¶ 36 Woods points to numerous weaknesses in Hamilton's testimony, including: (i)
discrepancies between his testimony and his written statement made soon after the incident; (ii)
Hamilton's failure to immediately report Woods' threat to fire department management or police,
instead calling the union; and (iii) Hamilton's motive to lie and frame Woods so that Hamilton
would not have to become the department training officer. Woods also points to aspects of his
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own testimony that bolster his credibility and show he was not a threat, namely, (i) after
allegedly threatening fire department management, he went home to his family; (ii) the police
who visited Woods the night of the incident did not arrest him or even warn him; and (iii) a
psychologist believed that Woods was not a threat to himself or others.
¶ 37 Inconsistencies are bound to occur in testimony due to the passage of time, which affects
perceptions and memories. All the inconsistencies cited by Woods in Hamilton’s testimony are
minor and none indicate Hamilton fabricated his version of the conversation with Woods. See
Feliciano v. Illinois Racing Board, 110 Ill. App. 3d 997, 1004 (1982) (holding assessment of
credibility is for trier of fact who observed testimony and reviewing court will not reverse
assessment without something more than mere conflicting testimony); People v. Talach, 114 Ill.
App. 3d 813, 820 (1983) (minor inconsistencies in testimony do not destroy credibility and any
variations in testimony for trier of fact to weigh). Accordingly, the Board's decision to credit
Hamilton's testimony is not against the manifest weight of the evidence.
¶ 38 Woods also notes that Hamilton had motive to lie, namely, to frame Woods so that
Hamilton would not have to become the new training officer. Woods’s theory is one that the
Board heard and rejected. During closing arguments, Woods argued that Hamilton had a motive
to fabricate Woods' threat. While Hamilton's motive does cast a pall on his version of the facts
(see People v. Herman, 407 Ill. App. 3d 688, 705 (2011)), it was for the Board to determine how
his motive effected the weight of his testimony. See Hurst v. Department of Employment
Security (2009), 393 Ill. App. 3d 323, 329 ("It is the responsibility of the administrative agency
to weigh the evidence, determine the credibility of witnesses, and resolve conflicts in
testimony."); Gregory v. Bernardi, 125 Ill. App. 3d 376, 383 (1984) ("if the issue is merely one
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of conflicting testimony and credibility of a witness, the agency's determination should be
sustained").
¶ 39 Thus, the Board's factual findings are not against the manifest weight of the evidence.
¶ 40 The Board's Decision to Terminate
¶ 41 Woods next argues that defendants failed to demonstrate just cause for his discharge. We
disagree. We will not reverse the Board's decision to discharge an employee unless it is arbitrary,
unreasonable, or unrelated to the requirements of service. Krocka v. Police Board, 327 Ill. App.
3d 36, 46 (2001).
¶ 42 "Cause" refers to some substantial shortcoming that makes an employee's continued
employment detrimental to the discipline and efficiency of the service and something which the
law and a sound public opinion recognize as good cause for the employee no longer occupying
the office. Carrigan v. Board of Fire & Police Commissioners, 121 Ill. App. 3d 303, 311 (1984).
"[A] single instance of misconduct can constitute cause for discharge where the misconduct is
serious." Hermesdorf v. Wu, 372 Ill. App. 3d 842, 853 (2007).
¶ 43 Woods told Hamilton that he "would like to kill them," "[k]ill them all" and that his sons
wanted to "tune them up," referring to the fire department's managerial staff and their families.
The Board found that this statement constituted a threat against fire department personnel and
provided cause for Woods' termination. A reasonable conclusion. Not only do threats undermine
the public's confidence in a firefighter's good judgment and maturity (cf. Walsh v. Board of Fire
& Police Commissioners, 96 Ill. 2d 101, 106 (1983) (holding unnecessary display of firearm
reflected poorly on ability and good judgment of police officer)), but, also, allowing the
firefighter to remain on the job may erode the discipline and efficacy of the service, lowering
morale and fostering distrust among the ranks. The city need not wait until that threat manifests
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as serious violence before seeking a discharge. Cf. Williams v. Illinois Civil Service Comm'n,
2012 IL App (1st) 101344, ¶¶ 12-13 (upholding discharge for frustrated employee's minor act of
violence).
¶ 44 Woods further argues that evidence cannot sustain the four charges pressed against him.
A finding of guilt under any of the charges would provide sufficient basis for removal. See
Roman v. Cook County Sheriff's Merit Board, 2014 IL App (1st) 123308, ¶ 100 (noting guilty
finding on any minor charges provides basis for suspension).
¶ 45 As to the second charge, "fighting/verbal abuse," the rules bar a member of the
department from engaging "in fights or verbal disputes." There is no evidence that Woods and
Hamilton fought or engaged in a verbal dispute. As to the fourth charge, violation of the law, the
Board did not find that Woods violated any law. Accordingly the evidence did not support a
finding of guilt under that charge.
¶ 46 Nevertheless, Woods' guilt under the first and third charges is sufficient to uphold his
discharge. The department's rule and regulations define the first charge, "conduct unbecoming,"
as a breach of "the ordinary rules of good behavior observed by law-abiding citizens." Woods'
expression of a desire to kill his supervisors is conduct unbecoming of a fire lieutenant. Woods'
guilt under the third charge, making a false report about a matter related to the department, flows
from denials he made during the fire department's official investigation. The Board's finding that
Woods lied about his statements to Hamilton supports a guilty finding under the third charge.
¶ 47 The evidence well supports the Board's decision to remove Woods.
¶ 48 Affirmed.
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