SECOND DIVISION
February 23, 2010
No. 1-08-3277
JACK L. GENIUS, ) Appeal from the
) Circuit Court of
Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Cook County.
)
v. )
)
THE COUNTY OF COOK, a Municipal Corporation; )
THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF THE )
COOK COUNTY FOREST PRESERVE DISTRICT, ) No. 05 CH 1085
a Municipal Corporation; STEVEN M. BYLINA, )
Superintendent of the Cook County Forest Preserve )
District; COOK COUNTY CIVIL SERVICE )
COMMISSION; COOK COUNTY EMPLOYEE )
APPEALS BOARD; LAWRENCE HOFFMAN; GARY )
WEINTRAUB; RITA REZKO; and RUBYE )
PATTERSON, ) Honorable
) Mary K. Rochford,
Defendants-Appellees. ) Judge Presiding.
JUSTICE THEIS delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, Jack L. Genius, appeals from the judgment of the circuit court confirming a
decision by defendant, the Cook County Employee Appeals Board (the Employee Appeals Board
or the Board), which terminated his employment as a police officer with the Forest Preserve
District of Cook County (the District), and denied his request for backpay during the period of his
suspension. On appeal, plaintiff contends that: (1) the Board erred in denying his motion to
dismiss the District’s written charges based on the doctrine of laches; (2) the Board’s decision to
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discharge him was against the manifest weight of the evidence; and (3) the Board erred in denying
his request for backpay because the District’s suspension without pay for more than 30 days and
without written charges violated the Cook County civil service rules. For the following reasons,
we find the Board lacked jurisdiction to render its decision and, therefore, reverse the judgment of
the circuit court and vacate the decision of the Board.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff was hired as a District police officer in 1988, after having completed the requisite
civil service examination. He was later promoted to sergeant in 1992. Thereafter, in 1996, he
was placed on paid administrative leave due to the pendency of an internal affairs investigation.
Based upon that investigation, the District chief of police informed plaintiff that he would be
recommending his discharge for his unauthorized purchases and sales of District police badges.
In June 1996, plaintiff was suspended without pay pending the resolution of felony
criminal charges filed against him in Vermillion County for the unlawful selling of law
enforcement badges. Although the record regarding those criminal proceedings was not before
the Board, the parties do not dispute that the criminal proceeding resulted in a mistrial. Plaintiff
then appealed, seeking a determination that a retrial should have been barred by prosecutorial
misconduct. According to plaintiff, the appellate court declined to find that a retrial would be
barred. Thereafter, in February 2001, the indictment against plaintiff was dismissed by the
Vermillion County State’s Attorney.
Three months later, on May 1, 2001, plaintiff sent a letter to the District demanding his
reinstatement and backpay. On May 25, 2001, the District served plaintiff with a “notice of intent
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to seek his discharge.” Therein, the District alleged that plaintiff engaged in forgery, fraudulent
behavior, and sexual misconduct unbecoming an officer in violation of certain rules and
regulations of the District police department and the District ethics ordinance. At that time, the
District advised him that the disciplinary proceedings would be governed by the Cook County
Bureau of Human Resources Ordinance. Cook Co. Municipal Code §44-41 et seq. (amended
April 5, 2000). Specifically, the District informed him that, pursuant to section 4A(13) of that
ordinance, (Cook Co. Municipal Code §44-47(13) (amended April 5, 2000), plaintiff had a right
to file a written response to the charges within 30 days and that the charges and response would
be reviewed by a District panel.
In an attempt to avail himself of the Bureau of Human Resources Ordinance, plaintiff filed
a written response to the charges. Additionally, on June 22, 2001, plaintiff filed a grievance with
the Employee Appeals Board and petitioned for appeal and review of his five-year suspension
without pay. On August 7, 2001, the Board refused to consider his petition after concluding that
it lacked jurisdiction to hear his appeal and that the proper forum for resolution of his claims as a
civil servant was the Cook County Civil Service Commission. However, the Civil Service
Commission had been abolished by ordinance in April 2000. Cook County Ordinance No. 00-O-
08, eff. April 5, 2000.
Thereafter, on August 29, 2001, a District hearing panel convened for a “predisciplinary
hearing” pursuant to a directive from District Superintendent Joseph Nevius. At that hearing,
counsel for plaintiff repeatedly requested that the panel identify the specific rules, regulations or
ordinances authorizing it to conduct such a hearing and to identify the authority under which it
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would be proceeding. The panel refused to respond to questions regarding its authority other
than to indicate that its authority was “part of the Civil Service process” and that the forum was
an informal hearing to determine whether or not “any other disciplinary action [was] appropriate.”
The panel read the charges and provided plaintiff with an opportunity to respond. Plaintiff denied
the charges. Thereafter, on September 13, 2001, the panel recommended that discharge
proceedings be initiated against plaintiff.
On September 26, 2001, the District purported to file the charges against plaintiff with the
Cook County Civil Service Commission seeking plaintiff’s discharge from employment based
upon the District panel’s recommendation. The referral of charges indicates that it was brought
pursuant to the Cook County civil service rules. The record reflects that in August 2002, the
Civil Service Commission held a status hearing and ruled upon various discovery issues and
procedural matters in the case, including motions in limine. The report of proceedings additionally
indicates that the Civil Service Commission presided over an evidentiary hearing with respect to
the District’s charges on several dates between October 2003 and August 2004.
However, on September 20, 2004, the Employee Appeals Board issued a written decision
in the matter. In a footnote to its decision, the Board indicated as follows:
“The Civil Service Commission has been abolished by County ordinance.
All matters pending before the Civil Service Commission were (by the same
ordinance) transferred and assigned to this Board for decision.”
The footnote contains no citation to the ordinance to which it refers, provides no citation to the
authority under which the matter was transferred, and provides no date on which the matter was
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transferred to the Employee Appeals Board.
The Board then rendered its decision, denying plaintiff’s motion to dismiss the charges as
barred by the doctrine of laches, sustaining several of the District’s charges, finding cause to
discharge plaintiff, and rejecting plaintiff’s request for an award of backpay for his suspension.
Subsequently, plaintiff filed a complaint in the circuit court seeking judicial review of the
Board’s decision. Following a hearing, the circuit court confirmed the decision of the Board to
discharge plaintiff as a District police officer. The court held that plaintiff’s claim of laches was
not substantiated by the record; that although the suspension violated the Cook County civil
service rules, the record supported the Board’s conclusion that plaintiff failed to timely appeal
from his unlawful suspension; and that the Board’s findings on the charges were not against the
manifest weight of the evidence. Plaintiff now appeals.
ANALYSIS
At the outset, although not initially raised by the parties1, this court has a sua sponte duty
to consider the jurisdiction of the Employee Appeals Board to render a decision in this case.
Delgado v. Board of Election Commissioners, 224 Ill. 2d 481, 486 (2007) (courts have an
independent duty to vacate void orders and may sua sponte declare an order void). The issue of
the Board’s authority is a question of law, which we review de novo. Alvarado v. Industrial
Comm’n, 216 Ill. 2d 547, 553 (2005).
This matter, which was ultimately transferred to the Employee Appeals Board for a
1
We subsequently asked the District to supplement its brief to address the Board’s
jurisdiction.
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decision, was originally initiated in September 2001, when the District filed written charges with
the Civil Service Commission, seeking to discharge plaintiff as an employee of the District. The
charges were purportedly brought pursuant to Rule IX, section 1, of the Cook County civil
service rules. Cook Co. Civ. Service R. IX, §1. Under those rules, an officer in the classified
service could not be discharged without, inter alia, written charges filed with the Civil Service
Commission and an investigation or hearing on the charges before the Commission. Cook Co.
Civ. Service R. IX, §1.
However, as a creature of statute, the Civil Service Commission possesses only those
powers conferred upon it by law. Delgado, 224 Ill. 2d at 485. Any authority it exercises must
find its source within the law pursuant to which it was created, and any action or decision taken
by it in excess of or contrary to its authority is void. Delgado, 224 Ill. 2d at 485. At the time the
charges were filed, the Civil Service Commission had been abolished by ordinance through the
Board of Commissioners of Cook County pursuant to its home rule powers. Cook Co. Municipal
Code §44-48(b) (eff. April 5, 2000). “A municipal ordinance has the force of law over the
community in which it is adopted and, within the corporate limits, operates as effectively as a law
passed by the legislature.” City of Chicago v. Roman, 184 Ill. 2d 504, 511 (1998); accord 5
McQuillin, Municipal Corporations §15.14, at 92 (3d rev. ed. 1996). Under the ordinance, only
those disciplinary matters that were pending before the Commission as of April 5, 2000, were to
be continued for disposition pursuant to the rules of the Commission and were to be heard and
decided by the Employee Appeals Board. Cook Co. Municipal Code §44-48(c), (eff. April 5,
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2000).2
The charges in this case were not brought before the Civil Service Commission until
September 2001 and, therefore, were not “pending” before the Commission in April 2000.
Furthermore, the ordinance abolishing the Civil Service Commission, which is codified in Article
II of the Cook County Municipal Code, provides in pertinent part:
“This article repeals, supplants and supersedes the rules,
regulations, directives and policies of the Civil Service Commission
of Cook County *** and, any policies, procedures or handbooks of
any department or agency under the direction and control of the
Office of the President to the extent they are inconsistent with the
provisions of this article and the rules promulgated hereunder. This
article and the rules adopted pursuant to this article shall be the sole
source of authority governing County human resources
2
Additionally, Cook County Ordinance No. 00-O-08 (effective April 5, 2000), provided:
“Upon the effective date of this Amendatory Ordinance, disciplinary
actions may be initiated pursuant to rules of the Civil Service Commission for a
period of sixty days, only where such actions pertain to events or other infractions
which took place prior to the effective date of these amendments. Thereafter, all
disciplinary actions shall be initiated pursuant to rules and regulations promulgated
in accordance with the Bureau of Human Resources Ordinance.” Cook Co.
Ordinance No. 00-O-08, §11(B)(3) (eff. April 5, 2000).
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management.” Cook Co. Municipal Code §44-42 (eff. April 5,
2000).
Moreover, the ordinance further provides, in pertinent part:
“The provisions of this article and the Human Resources
Management System thereby created shall be construed as the law
regulating the civil services of the County for all purposes including
70 ILCS 810/17 (Cook County Forest Preserve District Act -
application of human resource ordinance).” Cook Co. Municipal
Code §44-44 (eff. April 5, 2000).
Thus, when the District filed its written charges in September 2001 with the Civil Service
Commission pursuant to the Cook County civil service rules, the Commission and its rules no
longer existed. The Commission had no authority to exercise any jurisdiction over the charges
filed by the District. Consequently, any rulings rendered by the Civil Service Commission with
respect to those charges were void. Alvarado, 216 Ill. 2d at 553-54.
The Employee Appeals Board contended in a footnote to its decision, without citation to
any authority, that its jurisdiction was invoked by a “transfer” from the abolished Commission.
However, the Employee Appeals Board’s subject matter jurisdiction was never properly invoked
to render a decision in this matter. The Employee Appeals Board is also a creature of statute, and
any authority it possesses must also find its source in the law creating it. Delgado, 224 Ill. 2d at
485. All disciplinary actions under the Human Resource Management System were to be initiated
pursuant to the rules and regulations promulgated in accordance with the Bureau of Human
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Resources Ordinance. Cook Co. Municipal Code §44-47, §44-50 (amended April 5, 2000).
Those rules specifically provide a distinct procedural mechanism for a postdisciplinary
appeal to the Employee Appeals Board. Instead of a hearing on the employer’s charges before
the Civil Service Commission, as provided for under the repealed civil service rules (Cook Co.
Civ. Service R. IX, §1), the Bureau of Human Resources Ordinance, which created the Employee
Appeals Board, provides that after written notice of the disciplinary decision by the department
head or designee:
“The employee may appeal the department head’s or designee’s
decision to the Employee Appeals Board by making a written
request therefor within five calendar days of the effective date of
discipline.” Cook Co. Municipal Code §44-50(b)(1), amended
April 5, 2000.
Therefore, according to the Bureau of Human Resources Ordinance, the Employee Appeals
Board’s authority is limited to hearing appeals from disciplinary decisions rendered by the
employee’s department head or designee. The employee may then seek to appeal that decision by
making a written request to the Board. Cook Co. Municipal Code §44-50(b) (amended April 5,
2000).
Here, the Employee Appeals Board had no authority to hear or render a decision on the
District’s written charges pursuant to the repealed civil service rules. Moreover, the Board’s
authority to hear an appeal from an employer’s decision was never invoked as the District never
rendered a disciplinary decision from which plaintiff could have appealed. Cook Co. Municipal
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Code §44-50(b)(1) (amended April 5, 2000). Accordingly, the Employee Appeals Board’s
decision of September 20, 2004, is also void and a nullity. See Delgado, 224 Ill. 2d at 485.
By this decision, we only rule on the Board’s lack of jurisdiction to render a decision in
this matter. We make no ruling on the merits of the Board’s decision or plaintiff’s right to seek
backpay for his prior suspension. For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the
circuit court and vacate the decision of the Employee Appeals Board.
Circuit court judgment reversed; Cook County Employee Appeals Board decision
vacated.
HOFFMAN and KARNEZIS, JJ., concur.
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