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Date: 2018.01.22
Supreme Court 16:25:31 -06'00'
The Carle Foundation v. Cunningham Township, 2017 IL 120427
Caption in Supreme THE CARLE FOUNDATION et al., Appellants, v. CUNNINGHAM
Court: TOWNSHIP et al., Appellees.
Docket Nos. 120427, 120433 cons.
Filed March 23, 2017
Decision Under Appeal from the Appellate Court for the Fourth District; heard in that
Review court on appeal from the Circuit Court of Champaign County, the
Hon. Charles McRae Leonhard, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Appellate court judgment vacated.
Cause remanded.
Counsel on Steven F. Pflaum, of Neal Gerber & Eisenberg, LLP, and Amy G.
Appeal Doehring and Lisa Haidostian, of McDermott, Will & Emery, LLP,
both of Chicago, and William J. Brinkmann, of Thomas Mamer &
Haughey, LLP, of Champaign, for appellant The Carle Foundation.
Lisa Madigan, Attorney General, of Springfield (David L. Franklin
and Carolyn Shapiro, Solicitors General, and Carl J. Elitz, Assistant
Attorney General, of Chicago, of counsel), for other appellants.
Frederic M. Grosser, of Champaign, for appellees Cunningham
Township, Dan Stebbins, and City of Urbana.
Julia Rietz, State’s Attorney, of Urbana (Joel Fletcher, Assistant
State’s Attorney, of counsel), for other appellees.
Mark P. Rotatori and Nicole C. Henning, of Jones Day, of Chicago,
Catherine E. Livingston, of Jones Day, and Melinda Reid Hatton, both
of Washington, D.C., for amicus curiae American Hospital
Association.
Thomas M. Fahey, John J. Durso, Floyd D. Perkins, and Seth A.
Horvath, of Nixon Peabody LLP, of Chicago, and Mark Deaton, of
Naperville, for amicus curiae Illinois Health and Hospital
Association.
John M. Izzo and Eugene C. Edwards, of Hauser Izzo, LLC, of
Flossmoor, for amici curiae Illinois Association of School Boards
et al.
Justices JUSTICE THOMAS delivered the judgment of the court, with
opinion.
Chief Justice Karmeier and Justices Freeman, Kilbride, Garman,
Burke, and Theis concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Plaintiff, The Carle Foundation, filed a multicount action against numerous state and
local taxing authorities to establish that four of its properties were exempt from real estate
taxation during the assessment years 2004 through 2011. The circuit court of Champaign
County granted plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment on count II of the fourth amended
complaint, which sought a declaration that plaintiff’s exemption claims are governed by
section 15-86 of the Property Tax Code (Code) (35 ILCS 200/15-86 (West 2014)). In
addition, the circuit court entered a finding pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 304(a)
(eff. Feb. 26, 2010) that there was no just reason to delay enforcement of or appeal from its
decision. Defendants immediately appealed, and the appellate court addressed several issues
in the course of ultimately reversing the circuit court’s judgment on the grounds that section
15-86 facially violates article IX, section 6, of the Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970, art.
IX, § 6). 2016 IL App (4th) 140795. Both plaintiff and the State defendants filed petitions for
leave to appeal (Ill. S. Ct. R. 315 (eff. Jan. 1, 2015)), which we granted. For the reasons that
follow, we vacate the appellate court’s decision on the grounds that it lacked appellate
jurisdiction under Rule 304(a), and we remand the cause to the circuit court for further
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proceedings.
¶2 BACKGROUND
¶3 Plaintiff owns four parcels of land in Urbana that are used in connection with the
operation of plaintiff’s affiliate, Carle Foundation Hospital. Prior to 2004, the four parcels
were deemed exempt from taxation under section 15-65(a) of the Code (35 ILCS
200/15-65(a) (West 2002)) on the grounds that plaintiff’s use of them was for charitable
purposes. Beginning in 2004, however, the Cunningham Township assessor terminated
plaintiff’s charitable-use tax exemptions for the four parcels. This continued through 2011.
¶4 For tax years 2004 through 2008, plaintiff filed applications with the county board of
review to exempt the four parcels from taxation. Those applications were either withdrawn or
denied or both. Plaintiff filed no such applications for tax years 2009 through 2011.
¶5 In 2007, plaintiff filed an action in the circuit court to establish that, for the tax years in
question, the four parcels qualified for a charitable-use exemption under section 15-65(a).
The defendants in the case consist of the Illinois Department of Revenue and its director, the
Champaign County board of review and its members, the Champaign County supervisor of
assessments, Champaign County, Cunningham Township, the city of Urbana, and the
Cunningham Township assessor. Plaintiff brought the action pursuant to section 23-25(e) of
the Code (35 ILCS 200/23-25(e) (West 2010)).
¶6 In November 2011, plaintiff filed its third amended complaint. The third amended
complaint consisted of 26 counts. Taken together, counts I through XXIV sought a
declaration that, under the standards set forth in section 15-65(a), the four parcels were and
remained exempt from taxation for tax years 2004 through 2009. Count XXV sought the
same relief on the grounds that the exemption plaintiff received prior to 2004 was never
lawfully terminated. Count XXVI alleged breach of a 2002 settlement agreement entered into
between plaintiff and various local taxing authorities.
¶7 On June 14, 2012, Public Act 97-688 took effect. See Pub. Act 97-688 (eff. June 14,
2012). Among other things, Public Act 97-688 enacted for the first time section 15-86 of the
Code, which establishes a new charitable-use exemption specifically for hospitals. This
created an issue in this case, namely, whether the exemption claims set forth in counts I
through XXIV of the third amended complaint would continue to be governed by section
15-65(a) or whether those claims now would be governed by section 15-86. As a result, on
April 16, 2013, the circuit court invited the parties to consider this question. The result was
extensive briefing, followed by the filing of cross-motions for summary determination of
major issue. See 735 ILCS 5/2-1005(d) (West 2012). In their respective motions, plaintiff
argued that section 15-86 applies retroactively and therefore does govern its exemption
claims, whereas the several defendants argued that section 15-86 is not retroactive and
therefore does not govern plaintiff’s exemption claims. On October 1, 2013, the circuit court
issued a 29-page memorandum of opinion and order granting plaintiff’s motion and denying
defendants’ motions. The county defendants filed a motion to reconsider, and on January 9,
2014, the circuit court entered a modified memorandum of opinion and order upon the denial
of the county defendants’ motion.
¶8 The very next day, on January 10, 2014, plaintiff filed its fourth amended complaint. In
addition to bringing plaintiff’s existing exemption claims forward through tax year 2011, the
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fourth amended complaint contained new allegations relating to the recent enactment of
section 15-86. Thus, counts III through XXXIV of the fourth amended complaint sought
declarations that, for tax years 2004 through 2011, the four parcels qualified for an
exemption under section 15-86. In the alternative, these same counts sought a declaration that
the parcels likewise qualified for an exemption under section 15-65(a). In count II, plaintiff
sought a declaratory judgment that “[s]ection 15-86 applies to any determination of
[plaintiff’s] entitlement to exemptions for the Four Parcels for tax assessment years 2004
through 2011.” Rounding out the fourth amended complaint were counts I and XXXV, which
mirrored counts XXV and XXVI of the third amended complaint, respectively.
¶9 Five weeks later, on February 4, 2014, plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment on
count II of the fourth amended complaint. According to plaintiff, that motion was brought “to
facilitate interlocutory appellate review of the Court’s determination, in connection with the
parties’ cross-motions for summary determination of major issue, that [plaintiff’s] claims for
property tax exemption are governed by section 15-86 of the Property Tax Code.” The
problem, according to plaintiff’s motion, was that “[b]ecause the cross-motions for summary
judgment did not dispose of an entire cause of action, it is questionable whether the ruling on
those motions would have been immediately appealable without a petition for leave to appeal
pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 308.” Adding to this problem, plaintiff explained, was the
fact that defendants “did not wish to pursue a Rule 308 appeal thereby effectively block[ing]
immediate review of the Court’s ruling.” Accordingly, and “[b]elieving that a determination
by the Appellate Court that [plaintiff’s] exemption claims are governed by Section 15-86
would expedite and simplify the ultimate resolution of this litigation,” plaintiff added count II
to the fourth amended complaint for the purpose of obtaining a summary judgment on that
count and, with it, a Rule 304(a) finding that would make that judgment immediately
appealable as a matter of right. Indeed, according to plaintiff’s motion, “[t]he issue on which
[plaintiff] seeks summary judgment—i.e., the applicability of section 15-86 to its exemption
claims—is identical to the issue decided by the Court in connection with the parties’
cross-motions for summary determination of a major issue.” Plaintiff’s motion then
explained that, as a result, “[r]ather than submit additional briefs in support of its motion for
summary judgment, [plaintiff] relies on, and incorporates by reference, the briefs *** and
exhibits filed by [plaintiff] in connection with the cross-motions for summary determination
of major issue.”
¶ 10 On August 28, 2014, the circuit court entered its modified memorandum of opinion and
order granting plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment on count II. In that order, the circuit
court explained that “count II presents that very basic question[,] *** the question of what
law is to be applied to this case—and no other question.” According to the circuit court, “this
most basic question must always be resolved as a threshold matter” because “if the applicable
substantive law is not first ascertained then the very rights and obligations of the parties
cannot be determined.” Moreover, the circuit court noted that “not even the sufficiency of the
pleadings in a case can be determined without first identifying the substantive law to be
applied.” For these reasons, the circuit court stressed that it was “obvious that resolution of
the question of whether the standard established by section 15-86(c) applies to plaintiff’s
claims will not resolve the merits of those claims.” Rather, “[r]esolution of that pure question
of law will instead only mark an analytical point of departure for that ultimate inquiry.” The
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circuit court’s order concluded with a Rule 304(a) finding, and defendants immediately
appealed.
¶ 11 The appellate court reversed. 2016 IL App (4th) 140795. In the course of doing so, the
appellate court addressed several issues, including whether it had appellate jurisdiction
pursuant to Rule 304(a), whether a section 15-86 exemption can be sought in a section
23-25(e) judicial proceeding, and whether the General Assembly intended for section 15-86
to apply retroactively. The appellate court answered each of these questions in the
affirmative. In the end, however, the appellate court concluded that section 15-86 facially
violates article IX, section 6, of the Illinois Constitution, which in relevant part states that
“[t]he General Assembly by law may exempt from taxation *** property used exclusively for
*** charitable purposes.” (Ill. Const. 1970, art. IX, § 6). 2016 IL App (4th) 140795,
¶¶ 163-64. Accordingly, the appellate court reversed the circuit court’s granting of summary
judgment on count II and remanded the cause for further proceedings. Id. ¶ 166.
¶ 12 Both plaintiff and the State defendants filed petitions for leave to appeal (Ill. S. Ct. R. 315
(eff. Jan. 1, 2015)), which we granted.
¶ 13 DISCUSSION
¶ 14 Illinois Supreme Court Rule 304(a)
¶ 15 The first issue we must decide is whether appellate jurisdiction exists in this case. The
ruling at issue here was brought before the appellate court based on Rule 304(a), which in
relevant part provides:
“If multiple parties or multiple claims for relief are involved in an action, an appeal
may be taken from a final judgment as to one or more but fewer than all of the parties
or claims only if the trial court has made an express written finding that there is no
just reason for delaying either enforcement or appeal or both.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 304(a)
(eff. Feb. 26, 2010).
In construing and applying Rule 304(a), this court has drawn a clear distinction between
judgments that dispose of “separate, unrelated claims,” which are immediately appealable
under Rule 304(a), and orders that dispose only of “separate issues relating to the same
claim,” which are not immediately appealable under Rule 304(a). (Emphasis in original.)
In re Marriage of Leopando, 96 Ill. 2d 114, 119 (1983); see also In re Marriage of Best, 228
Ill. 2d 107, 114 (2008). The reason for this distinction is found in the policy considerations
that inform Rule 304(a), which include “discouraging piecemeal appeals in the absence of
some compelling reason and *** removing the uncertainty as to the appealability of a
judgment which was entered on less than all of the matters in controversy.” In re Marriage of
Lentz, 79 Ill. 2d 400, 407 (1980).
¶ 16 In Leopando, the trial court entered an order dissolving the parties’ marriage, followed by
a separate order awarding permanent custody to the husband. The custody order contained a
Rule 304(a) finding, and it also expressly stated that the issues of maintenance, property
division, and attorney fees were reserved. In holding that the custody order was not an
immediately appealable “final judgment” under Rule 304(a), this court explained:
“A petition for dissolution advances a single claim; that is, a request for an order
dissolving the parties’ marriage. The numerous other issues involved, such as
custody, property disposition, and support are merely questions which are ancillary to
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the cause of action. [Citation.] They do not represent separate, unrelated claims;
rather, they are separate issues relating to the same claim.” (Emphasis added and in
original.) Leopando, 96 Ill. 2d at 119.
The court then explained that “[t]his result is further compelled by the policy consideration
upon which Rule 304(a) is based,” which includes “discouraging piecemeal appeals.” Id.
According to the court, “[t]o interpret Rule 304(a) as plaintiff suggests would allow a party
*** to file separate appeals from adverse judgments as to each issue involved in a dissolution
proceeding. Our rule was not intended to promote such unnecessary piecemeal litigation
arising out of the same proceeding.” Id. at 119-20.
¶ 17 By contrast, in Best, the court held that the trial court’s Rule 304(a) finding was proper,
and in doing so the court drew important distinctions between that case and Leopando. In
Best, the husband filed (1) a petition for dissolution of marriage and (2) a motion for
declaratory judgment as to the validity and construction of the parties’ premarital agreement.
The trial court entered the requested declaratory judgment, finding that the premarital
agreement was valid and enforceable and construing certain sections of that agreement. The
trial court also entered a Rule 304(a) finding as to that judgment, and the husband
immediately appealed. In holding that the Rule 304(a) finding in Best was proper, this court
explained that, whereas the dissolution of the parties’ marriage was the only “claim” in
Leopando, Best involved two distinct claims: (1) a dissolution of marriage claim brought
under the Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act (Marriage Act) and (2) a declaratory
judgment claim brought under the declaratory judgment statute. Best, 228 Ill. 2d at 115.
These claims not only had “distinctly different statutory bases,” but just as importantly,
“[the] declaratory judgment could be entered even if the dissolution petition were not
granted.” Id. The same could not be said of the custody order in Leopando, as that order
involved an issue ancillary to—not independent from—the dissolution claim. Accordingly,
the court in Best concluded that “the request for dissolution of the parties’ marriage and the
request for declaratory judgment on the validity and interpretation of the premarital
agreement are not so closely related that they must be deemed part of a single claim for
relief.” Id.
¶ 18 The issue in this case is whether the circuit court’s order granting plaintiff’s motion for
summary judgment on count II disposed of a “claim” that was separate from and unrelated to
plaintiff’s exemption claims or whether it merely resolved one “issue” that is part of or
ancillary to those claims. We conclude that it resolved an “issue,” not a “claim.” Again,
“where an order disposes only of certain issues relating to the same basic claim, such a ruling
is not subject to review under Rule 304(a).” Blumenthal v. Brewer, 2016 IL 118781, ¶ 27.
Here, count II of the fourth amended complaint sought a declaration as to what law governs
counts III through XXXIV of the fourth amended complaint. What law governs a claim is not
itself a “claim,” as it resolves nothing other than the standard by which the underlying claim
will be adjudicated. On the contrary, this question is a textbook example of an “issue” that
exists only because of and ancillary to a “claim.” It goes without saying that the exemption
claims pled in counts III through XXXIV of the fourth amended complaint could not be
adjudicated without first determining the governing law. In the same way, but for the
pleading of the exemption claims in counts III through XXXIV of the fourth amended
complaint, there would be neither cause nor occasion to determine what law governs them. In
this way, the present case is very different from Best, which both plaintiff and the appellate
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court cite in support of count II being a “claim” rather than an “issue.” In Best, a declaration
as to the validity and enforceability of the parties’ premarital agreement could be sought not
only apart from the dissolution proceeding but also even absent the dissolution proceeding.
Indeed, whether a couple is bound by the terms of their premarital agreement is a question
that exists wholly apart from whether their marriage should be dissolved, and it is a question
the couple has every interest in knowing the answer to whether or not they are actively
seeking the dissolution of their marriage. The same cannot be said of what law governs a
legal claim, which is a question we ask only in service of that claim and would never ask
absent or apart from that claim.
¶ 19 Our conclusion on this point is confirmed at numerous points in the proceedings below.
To begin, there is the fact that the parties initially litigated the question raised in count II of
the fourth amended complaint—i.e., whether section 15-86 governs plaintiff’s exemption
claims—not through a stand-alone declaratory judgment claim but rather through
cross-motions for summary determination of major issue relating to plaintiff’s exemption
claims. While plaintiff’s third amended complaint was pending, the circuit court asked the
parties to brief whether section 15-86 would apply to plaintiff’s exemption claims. The
parties complied and, pursuant to section 2-1005(d) of the Code of Civil Procedure (735
ILCS 5/2-1005(d) (West 2010)), filed cross-motions for summary determination of that
question. The circuit court granted plaintiff’s motion and declared that section 15-86 does
apply to plaintiff’s exemption claims. Again, all of this occurred while plaintiff’s third
amended complaint was pending. This is significant because, while plaintiff’s third amended
complaint contained all of plaintiff’s exemption claims, it did not contain the declaratory
judgment claim later pled in count II of the fourth amended complaint. In other words, before
it was ever even pled as a stand-alone “claim,” the question of whether section 15-86 governs
plaintiff’s exemption claims was fully litigated and adjudicated as an “issue” relating to and
arising from those claims. This absolutely confirms that, rather than being a “claim” that is
separate and distinct from plaintiff’s exemption claims, the question posed in count II of the
fourth amended complaint is simply an “issue” that is ancillary to those claims.
¶ 20 Similar confirmation is found in plaintiff’s own motion for summary judgment on count
II of the fourth amended complaint. In that motion, plaintiff explains that it added count II to
the fourth amended complaint to “facilitate interlocutory appellate review of the Court’s
determination, in connection with the parties’ cross-motions for summary determination of
major issue, that [plaintiff’s] claims for property tax exemption are governed by section
15-86 of the Property Tax Code.” And this was necessary, plaintiff explained, “[b]ecause the
cross-motions for summary judgment did not dispose of an entire cause of action” and
therefore were not immediately appealable as a matter of right under Rule 304(a). (Emphasis
added.) In other words, plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment on count II admits that the
question of whether plaintiff’s exemption claims are governed by section 15-86 is a mere
“issue” whose resolution “did not dispose of an entire cause of action.” Under Leopando, that
is the very definition of decisions that are not appealable under Rule 304(a). Yet according to
plaintiff, the issue litigated in the cross-motions for summary determination “is identical to”
the issue raised in count II of the fourth amended complaint. Needless to say, if this issue
“did not dispose of an entire cause of action” before it was pled in the fourth amended
complaint, it “did not dispose of an entire cause of action” after it was pled in the fourth
amended complaint, as the issue itself never changed. The only thing that changed was the
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manner in which the issue was raised, but nothing about that changes either what the issue is
asking or the effect the answer has on this litigation.
¶ 21 Further confirmation of our conclusion is found in the circuit court’s order granting
plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment on count II of the fourth amended complaint.
Again, the question we are asking is whether that order disposed of a “claim” that was
separate from and unrelated to plaintiff’s exemption claims or whether it merely resolved an
“issue” that was ancillary to or part of plaintiff’s exemption claims. According to the order
itself, it is “obvious that resolution of the question of whether the standard established by
section 15-86(c) applies to plaintiff’s [exemption] claims will not resolve the merits of those
claims.” Rather, “[r]esolution of that pure question of law will instead only mark an
analytical point of departure for that ultimate inquiry.” And the reason for this, the order
explains, is that count II merely raises the same “basic question” that “must always be
resolved” as a “threshold matter” in every case, namely, “the question of what law is to be
applied.” In other words, according to the circuit court’s own order granting summary
judgment on count II, that order does nothing to resolve the substantive merits of any of
plaintiff’s claims. Instead, it resolves only a “basic question” that exists in every case and
that, absent a resolution of which, no legal claim can be adjudicated. Or, as the circuit court’s
order elsewhere puts it, “if the applicable substantive law is not first ascertained then the very
rights and obligations of the parties cannot be determined.” This is exactly correct, and it is
exactly why we are faced here not with an order disposing of a “claim” but rather with an
order disposing only of an “issue” relating to a claim.
¶ 22 Lastly, we find confirmation of our conclusion on this point in count II of the fourth
amended complaint itself. It will be remembered that, in count I of the fourth amended
complaint, plaintiff sought a declaration that it was entitled to a charitable-use exemption for
the tax years in question on the grounds that the exemption previously granted to it was never
lawfully terminated. In counts III through XXXIV of the fourth amended complaint, plaintiff
sought the identical relief on the grounds that, during the tax years in question, it qualified for
a charitable-use exemption under the applicable statutory criteria. Count II then sought a
declaration that the applicable statutory criteria in relation to counts III through XXXIV is
found in section 15-86 of the Code, rather than in section 15-65(a). The interesting thing for
our purposes is that, at the beginning of count II, plaintiff concedes that a judgment in
plaintiff’s favor on count I “would moot [plaintiff’s] claims, in Counts II through XXXIV,
relating to a de novo determination of [plaintiff’s] entitlement to exemptions on the Four
Parcels for those years.” Now, it makes perfect sense that a judgment in plaintiff’s favor on
count I would moot counts III through XXXIV, as those counts all seek identical
relief—namely, a declaration that plaintiff is entitled to a charitable-use exemption for the tax
years in question. But why would such a judgment moot count II if, as plaintiff insists, count
II represents a “claim” that is wholly “separate” and “distinct” from its exemption claims?
The answer is that it would not. Consider, for example, the situation in Best: no judgment on
the dissolution petition in that case could possibly have mooted the declaratory judgment
count, just as no judgment on the declaratory judgment count could possibly have mooted the
dissolution petition. See Best, 228 Ill. 2d at 115 (explaining that “[the] declaratory judgment
could be entered even if the dissolution petition were not granted”). This is because the two
claims in Best were in fact “separate” and “distinct,” such that the parties’ right to an
adjudication of one would remain irrespective of how the other was resolved. In this case, by
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contrast, plaintiff has it exactly right—a judgment in plaintiff’s favor on count I would
absolutely moot count II because, once plaintiff was granted the exemptions under count I,
there would be no need whatsoever to ascertain the law governing counts III through
XXXIV. In other words, and as plaintiff readily concedes in the fourth amended complaint, a
determination that plaintiff is entitled to the exemptions under count I moots the question of
what law governs the exemption claims pled in counts III through XXXIV. This is absolute
confirmation that, rather than being a “claim” that is “separate” and “distinct” from plaintiff’s
exemption claims, the question posed in count II is merely an “issue” that is ancillary to and
part of those claims.
¶ 23 Again, the question before us is whether the circuit court’s order granting plaintiff’s
motion for summary judgment on count II of the fourth amended complaint disposed of a
“claim” that is “distinct” and “separate” from plaintiff’s exemption claims or whether that
order disposed only of an “issue” that is ancillary or related to those claims. Or to put it
another way, are plaintiff’s exemption claims and plaintiff’s request for a declaration as to
what law governs those claims matters that are “so closely related that they must be deemed
part of a single claim for relief”? See id. The question answers itself. Indeed, to borrow a
phrase from Leopando, “it is difficult to conceive of a situation in which the issues are more
interrelated” than the pleading of a claim and the determination of what law governs that
claim. Leopando, 96 Ill. 2d at 119. The two matters are inextricably linked and simply cannot
exist without the other. For this reason, and for the reasons set forth above, we conclude that
the circuit court’s order granting plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment on count II of the
fourth amended complaint disposed not of a “claim,” but only of an “issue” relating to a
claim. Accordingly, that order was not appealable under Rule 304(a), and the appellate court
lacked jurisdiction to review it.
¶ 24 Declaratory Judgment
¶ 25 In reaching this result, we feel compelled to address an additional matter that, while
intimately linked to the Rule 304(a) question, is not exactly the same. Both plaintiff and the
appellate court insist that count II represents a “claim” rather than an “issue,” based largely
on the fact that count II is pled as a stand-alone declaratory judgment claim pursuant to the
declaratory judgment statute. On this point, both plaintiff and the appellate court are guided
by this court’s decision in Best, which attached particular significance to the fact that the
husband in that case “sought nondeclaratory relief under the Marriage Act, as well as
declaratory relief under the declaratory judgment statute.” Best, 228 Ill. 2d at 115. This meant
that, unlike Leopando, in which the only statute at issue was the Marriage Act, “the two
requests for relief [in Best] had distinctly different statutory bases.” Id. According to plaintiff
and the appellate court, the exact same situation exists here, where plaintiff’s exemption
claims are brought pursuant to section 23-25(e) of the Code, whereas count II is brought
pursuant to the declaratory judgment statute. Because of this, the argument goes, the same
conclusion should be reached here that was reached in Best, namely, that plaintiff’s
declaratory judgment claim and plaintiff’s exemption claims “are not so closely related that
they must be deemed part of a single claim for relief.”
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¶ 26 This argument assumes, of course, that count II is a proper declaratory judgment count.
In fact, it is not, and that is the matter we must now address. The Illinois declaratory
judgment statute provides in pertinent part:
“No action or proceeding is open to objection on the ground that a merely declaratory
judgment or order is sought thereby. The court may, in cases of actual controversy,
make binding declarations of rights, having the force of final judgments, whether or
not any consequential relief is or could be claimed, including the determination, at the
instance of anyone interested in the controversy, of the construction of any statute,
municipal ordinance, or other governmental regulation *** and a declaration of the
rights of the parties interested. *** The court shall refuse to enter a declaratory
judgment or order, if it appears that the judgment or order, would not terminate the
controversy or some part thereof, giving rise to the proceeding.” 735 ILCS 5/2-701(a)
(West 2010).
In construing this statute, this court has explained that “[t]he essential requirements of a
declaratory judgment action are: (1) a plaintiff with a legal tangible interest; (2) a defendant
having an opposing interest; and (3) an actual controversy between the parties concerning
such interests.” Beahringer v. Page, 204 Ill. 2d 363, 372 (2003). In this context, “actual
controversy” means “a concrete dispute admitting of an immediate and definitive
determination of the parties’ rights, the resolution of which will aid in the termination of the
controversy or some part thereof.” Underground Contractors Ass’n v. City of Chicago, 66 Ill.
2d 371, 375 (1977). As for the statute’s purpose, this court has explained that the declaratory
judgment procedure allows “ ‘ “the court to take hold of a controversy one step sooner than
normally—that is, after the dispute has arisen, but before steps are taken which give rise to
claims for damages or other relief. The parties to the dispute can then learn the consequences
of their action before acting.” ’ ” Kaske v. City of Rockford, 96 Ill. 2d 298, 306 (1983)
(quoting Buege v. Lee, 56 Ill. App. 3d 793, 798 (1978), quoting Ill. Ann. Stat., ch. 110,
¶ 57.1, Historical and Practice Notes, at 132 (Smith-Hurd 1968)). Or to put it another way,
“[t]he declaratory judgment procedure was designed to settle and fix rights before there has
been an irrevocable change in the position of the parties that will jeopardize their respective
claims of right. [Citation.] The remedy is used to afford security and relief against
uncertainty so as to avoid potential litigation.” First of America Bank, Rockford, N.A. v.
Netsch, 166 Ill. 2d 165, 174 (1995).
¶ 27 As to the statute’s requirement that “[t]he court shall refuse to enter a declaratory
judgment or order, if it appears that the judgment or order, would not terminate the
controversy or some part thereof, giving rise to the proceeding,” this court has never
construed the phrase “the controversy or some part thereof, giving rise to the proceeding.”
735 ILCS 5/2-701(a) (West 2010). However, this phrase is construed in the declaratory
judgment statute’s historical and practice notes (Notes), to which this court previously has
referred when construing the statute. See, e.g., Beahringer, 204 Ill. 2d at 373; Kaske, 96 Ill.
2d at 306. According to the Notes:
“The phrase, ‘or some part thereof,’ in the Illinois statute recognizes the fact that
litigation may be many-sided and the administration of justice is advanced if the
narrowing and limiting conception of singleness implied in the categorical use of such
terms as ‘controversy’ and ‘transaction’ is avoided. It is not intended by the phrase to
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permit piecemeal litigation. *** The phrase ‘or some part thereof’ is in harmony with
other provisions of the Civil Practice Law which encourage joinder of claims and the
disposition in one suit of as many existing disputes between the parties as is possible
commensurate with the due and proper administration of justice.” (Emphases added.)
Ill. Ann. Stat., ch. 110, ¶ 57.1, Historical and Practice Notes, at 11-12 (Smith-Hurd
1983).
Based on these Notes, our appellate court has concluded that “the phrase ‘some part’ of the
controversy, does not mean an element of a single claim, but, rather, it means an entire claim
which is part of more than one claim.” (Emphasis added.) Marlow v. American Suzuki Motor
Corp., 222 Ill. App. 3d 722, 730 (1991). This is undoubtedly correct, as to hold otherwise
would be to “permit piecemeal litigation,” which according to the Notes is something the
declaratory judgment statute was never intended to permit. Indeed, if impermissible
piecemeal litigation results from the appeal of “issues” as opposed to “claims” in the context
of Rule 304(a), it makes perfect sense that the same would be true in the context of
declaratory relief, which is exactly what the Notes are saying.
¶ 28 In light of these principles, let us consider the declaratory judgment action that plaintiff
endeavored to bring in count II of the fourth amended complaint. To begin with, on its face,
that action did not seek a declaration as to an “actual controversy.” Again, in this context,
“actual controversy” refers to “a concrete dispute admitting of an immediate and definitive
determination of the parties’ rights, the resolution of which will aid in the termination of the
controversy or some part thereof.” Underground Contractors Ass’n, 66 Ill. 2d at 375. Here,
count II of the fourth amended complaint sought a declaration as to whether section 15-86
applies to plaintiff’s exemption claims. However, such a declaration would do nothing “to
aid in the termination of the controversy or some part thereof,” as that question already had
been settled by the time plaintiff filed the fourth amended complaint. Indeed, whether section
15-86 applies to plaintiff’s exemption claims was the subject of the parties’ cross-motions for
summary determination of major issue, and it is the very “major issue” that the circuit court
determined in its order disposing of those motions. Thus, when plaintiff filed count II of the
fourth amended complaint, whether section 15-86 applies to plaintiff’s exemption claims was
no longer in question, as the circuit court already had declared that it does. Plaintiff concedes
as much in its motion for summary judgment on count II of the fourth amended complaint,
where plaintiff assures the circuit court that “[t]he issue on which [plaintiff] seeks summary
judgment—i.e., the applicability of section 15-86 to its exemption claims—is identical to the
issue decided by the Court in connection with the parties’ cross-motions for summary
determination of major issue.” (Emphasis added.)
¶ 29 Equally problematic is the fact that count II of the fourth amended complaint in no way
seeks “an immediate and definitive determination of the parties’ rights.” On the contrary, it
seeks only a declaration as to what law the circuit court will apply in the course of
determining those rights. The claimed right in this case is a right to a charitable-use tax
exemption for the tax years in question. The circuit court’s order granting plaintiff’s motion
for summary judgment on count II does nothing to determine whether such a right exists.
Indeed, whether plaintiff possesses such a right is as open a question today as it was in 2007,
when plaintiff first filed its complaint. And this is because, rather than asking the circuit
court to determine whether such a right exists, plaintiff asked only for a declaration “that
[s]ection 15-86 applies to the determination of [plaintiff’s] entitlement to exemptions for the
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Four Parcels for tax years 2004 through 2011.” Obviously, a declaration of what law applies
to the determination of a party’s rights is not itself a determination of that party’s rights. Yet
a determination of what law applies is the only determination that count II of the fourth
amended complaint seeks.
¶ 30 Count II of the fourth amended complaint also suffers from the fact that the circuit
court’s entry of summary judgment on that count did nothing to “terminate the controversy or
some part thereof.” In this context, “some part” of the controversy refers to a claim in its
entirety, not to a mere element of a claim. See Marlow, 222 Ill. App. 3d at 730. Yet as we
discussed at length above, the circuit court’s order granting summary judgment on count II
disposed not of a “claim” but only of an “issue” relating to a claim. Again, what law governs
a “claim” is not itself a claim, and no “claim” is terminated simply by announcing the
governing legal standard. On the contrary, such an announcement simply marks “an
analytical point of departure” for a claim’s adjudication, a point made explicitly in the
circuit’s order granting summary judgment on count II. Legally speaking, then, the parties
were in exactly the same place after the entry of summary judgment as they were before it.
The only difference was that the parties now knew what legal standard would govern
plaintiff’s assertion of the claimed legal right. Thus, far from terminating “the controversy or
some part thereof,” the circuit court’s entry of summary judgment on count II was both
sought and served to move the controversy forward.
¶ 31 Finally, informing and underlying all of the aforementioned problems is the very purpose
for which count II of the fourth amended complaint was brought. Indeed, the principal reason
that count II fails as a declaratory judgment action is that it was never meant to resolve an
actual controversy in the first place. Rather, as plaintiff candidly concedes in its motion for
summary judgment, count II of the fourth amended complaint was brought solely “to
facilitate interlocutory appellate review of the Court’s determination, in connection with the
parties’ cross-motions for summary determination of major issue, that [plaintiff’s] claims for
property tax exemption are governed by section 15-86 of the Property Tax Code.” Or, as
plaintiff more fully explains in its opening brief to this court:
“The Foundation’s declaratory judgment claim raised, as a stand-alone cause of
action in Count II of the Fourth Amended Complaint, the same basic issue regarding
the applicability of Section 15-86 on which the Foundation had prevailed on its
motion for summary determination. The Foundation’s plan was to file a motion for
summary judgment on Count II limited to that issue. By requesting a finding under
Rule 304(a) that there was no just reason for delaying enforcement or appeal of the
entry of summary judgment on that Count, the Foundation sought to require the
defendants to invoke the appellate court’s jurisdiction in accordance with Best. The
Foundation’s express goal was to obtain a definitive determination regarding the
applicability of Section 15-86 to the Foundation’s exemption claims so as to simplify
and streamline the ensuing trial.”
Thus, rather than bringing count II for the purpose of securing a declaration of unresolved
rights as to an open legal controversy, plaintiff brought count II solely as a means of securing
a Rule 304(a) finding as to the circuit court’s determination of the controlling legal standard,
a matter on which plaintiff already “had prevailed on its motion for summary determination.”
This is not what a declaratory judgment action is for, and the fact that this was plaintiff’s
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explicit purpose in bringing one goes a long way toward explaining many of that action’s
deficiencies.
¶ 32 Supervisory Authority
¶ 33 At this point, we are left with only one question, and that is whether to address the merits
of this appeal despite the lack of Rule 304(a) jurisdiction. Though the various parties to this
appeal disagree on whether Rule 304(a) jurisdiction exists in this case, they are of a single
mind when it comes to insisting that this court review the appellate court’s decision on the
merits. In support, the parties point out that the present litigation has been dragging on for
almost 10 years now and that an authoritative resolution as to section 15-86’s
constitutionality will help to move the case toward a final resolution. In addition, the parties
note that an authoritative resolution as to section 15-86’s constitutionality will provide
guidance both to the Department of Revenue and to other courts in proceedings involving
similar exemption claims brought by Illinois hospitals. For both of these reasons, the parties
ask that, should this court conclude that Rule 304(a) jurisdiction is lacking, we nevertheless
address the merits of the case under our supervisory authority. See, e.g., In re Estate of Funk,
221 Ill. 2d 30, 97 (2006) (this court’s supervisory authority is “unlimited in extent and
hampered by no specific rules or means for its exercise”).
¶ 34 For two independent reasons, we decline the parties’ request to address the merits of this
appeal. First, and most importantly, we have emphasized above that neither Rule 304(a) nor
the declaratory judgment statute was intended to facilitate piecemeal litigation. Yet
piecemeal litigation is precisely what the parties here intended, and it is precisely what a
decision addressing the merits would yield. Again, plaintiff sought a Rule 304(a) finding as
to an issue it admits “did not dispose of an entire cause of action,” and it did so solely to
“expedite and simplify the ultimate resolution of this litigation.” That is the very definition of
piecemeal litigation, and it is something this court is not inclined to accommodate. Second,
this court’s long-standing rule is that “cases should be decided on nonconstitutional grounds
whenever possible, reaching constitutional issues only as a last resort.” In re E.H., 224 Ill. 2d
172, 178 (2006). Consequently, “courts *** must avoid reaching constitutional issues when a
case can be decided on other, nonconstitutional grounds,” and such issues “should be
addressed only if necessary to decide a case.” People v. Hampton, 225 Ill. 2d 238, 244
(2007). Here, there are issues pending in this case that, depending upon how they are
resolved, may moot the question of section 15-86’s constitutionality. For example, there is
the claim pled in count I of the fourth amended complaint, which seeks exactly the same
relief as the claims pled in counts III through XXXIV, on grounds having nothing to do with
section 15-86. Indeed, in count II of the fourth amended complaint, plaintiff itself concedes
that a judgment in plaintiff’s favor on count I “would moot [plaintiff’s] claims, in Counts II
through XXXIV, relating to a de novo determination of [plaintiff’s] entitlement to
exemptions on the Four Parcels for those years.” As far as this court knows, the circuit court
has yet to enter judgment on count I. Until that happens, any pronouncement from this court
concerning section 15-86’s constitutionality would be decidedly premature. Likewise, there
has yet to be any determination in this case that plaintiff even qualifies for a section 15-86
exemption in the first place. If it turns out that plaintiff does not, then that too would
constitute “other, nonconstitutional grounds” for disposing of plaintiff’s exemption claims.
Suffice it to say, then, we have hardly reached a point of “last resort,” where a ruling from
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this court concerning section 15-86’s constitutionality is the only remaining way of deciding
this case. Accordingly, the exercise of this court’s supervisory authority to address that
question is unwarranted.
¶ 35 CONCLUSION
¶ 36 For all of the reasons set forth above, we conclude that the circuit court’s entry of a Rule
304(a) finding in this case was improper and that the appellate court therefore lacked
jurisdiction to review the circuit court’s order granting plaintiff’s motion for summary
judgment on count II of the fourth amended complaint. Accordingly, we vacate the appellate
court’s decision in its entirety and remand this cause to the circuit court for further
proceedings consistent with this decision.
¶ 37 Appellate court judgment vacated.
¶ 38 Cause remanded.
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