NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION
To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
Chicago, Illinois 60604
Submitted March 9, 2018 *
Decided March 12, 2018
Before
DIANE P. WOOD, Chief Judge
WILLIAM J. BAUER, Circuit Judge
DAVID F. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge
No. 17-1653
JOSE ANTONIO COSSIO, JR., Appeal from the United States District
Plaintiff-Appellant, Court for the Northern District of Illinois,
Eastern Division.
v.
No. 15 C 7746
JOHN D. TOURTELOT,
Defendant-Appellee. Edmond E. Chang,
Judge.
ORDER
Jose Cossio, Jr., a military veteran and former employee of Cook County, sued
the County along with a state court judge, the Cook County Sheriff’s Office, and several
county officials. He alleged that they committed various constitutional violations and
torts that led Cook County to terminate his employment for falsifying his military
record on his employment application and for not cooperating with the county’s
*
We have agreed to decide the case without oral argument because the briefs and
record adequately present the facts and legal arguments, and oral argument would not
significantly aid the court. FED. R. APP. P. 34(a)(2)(C).
No. 17-1653 Page 2
investigation into his military record. The defendants moved to dismiss the suit for
failure to state a claim. The district court granted the motion with respect to Cossio’s
claims under federal law and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over his
state-law claims. In particular the court ruled that Circuit Judge John Tourtelot has
judicial immunity from Cossio’s federal claims. Cossio appealed but voluntarily
dismissed his appeal against all of the defendants except the judge. Because we cannot
conclude based solely on the complaint that judicial immunity shields Judge Tourtelot
from Cossio’s federal claims, we vacate the judgment for Judge Tourtelot.
The details in Cossio’s amended complaint are relatively sparse. To understand
his allegations, we look to the documents he attached to his original complaint because
the parties do not dispute their contents and these details do not affect our analysis of
his appeal. We accept as true all factual allegations in Cossio’s amended complaint and
draw all permissible inferences in his favor. W. Bend Mut. Ins. Co. v. Schumacher, 844
F.3d 670, 675 (7th Cir. 2016).
Roughly five years ago Cossio applied for and received a fleet manager position
with the Cook County Bureau of Administration. In his application, he said that he was
a veteran who had been honorably discharged and that he had not been convicted of
any crimes. As part of his application, he also signed a form acknowledging that if were
hired, he could be terminated for falsely reporting his criminal history.
One year later he appeared in the Circuit Court of Cook County for a hearing on
a co-worker’s petition for an order of protection against him. During the proceedings,
Cossio’s military history was “disclosed” by the complainant’s lawyer. Ten years
earlier, he had been discharged from the Air Force after being convicted of larceny,
identity theft, and communicating a threat. According to Cossio, Judge Tourtelot, who
was presiding, had been told during the hearing that Cossio worked for the County,
and “warned [him] to be careful that ‘no one finds out about this’ and that it could
affect his career.” Cossio says that he “won” the case, but he does not specify when the
judge issued his decision denying an order of protection.
About ten days after the hearing, an employee of the Cook County Sheriff’s
Office called the county’s Department of Human Resources and “falsely stated that
Cossio called [Judge] Tourtelot.” Judge Tourtelot had reported to the Sheriff’s Office
that Cossio had called him on his personal phone; then, the Sheriff’s Office passed along
this information, in addition to its suspicion that Cossio improperly obtained the
No. 17-1653 Page 3
judge’s phone number through his county employment, to Human Resources. Cossio
does not say whether the judge told the Sheriff’s Office that Cossio’s call to him was
connected to a case before him. Cossio also charges Judge Tourtelot with reporting his
military convictions to the Sheriff’s Office, which shared the information with Human
Resources. Cossio is clear that he “never called [Judge] Tourtelot.”
The report from the Sheriff’s Office led the Office of the Independent Inspector
General to investigate. The investigation confirmed Cossio’s military convictions,
leading the Inspector General to recommend that the Bureau of Administration fire
him. The Bureau accepted the recommendation and terminated Cossio’s employment
for falsifying his employment records and not cooperating with the investigation.
Cossio appealed his termination to the Cook County Employee Appeals Board.
While his appeal was pending, he went to Judge Tourtelot’s home to confront him
about “the false allegations that he called [Judge] Tourtelot.” According to Cossio,
Judge Tourtelot told him “that the Sheriff’s Office made the complaint and shouted that
[he] should leave.” Two months after this incident, the Board upheld Cossio’s
termination.
Around the time that the Board issued its decision, Cossio sued Judge Tourtelot
and the other defendants in the Circuit Court of Cook County. Under 42 U.S.C. § 1983,
Cossio alleged various violations of his constitutional rights and pleaded that the
defendants committed several torts, including defamation. The defendants removed
this case to federal court, where Cossio amended his complaint. He added additional
constitutional and tort claims to his complaint, though for many of the counts he did
not specify the particular defendants implicated. But regarding Judge Tourtelot, Cossio
suggested that the judge reported Cossio’s military convictions to the Sheriff’s Office
and falsely reported that Cossio had called him. He further alleged that Judge Tourtelot
took this step as part of a conspiracy to violate Cossio’s civil rights and deprive him of
his property interest in his job:
Defendants, acting in concert, agreed among themselves to make false
allegations, disclose records without lawful authority, and harm
Plaintiff[’]s employment. . . . Defendants further agreed among
themselves to provide false allegations that Jose Cossio called [Judge] John
Tourtelot for the purpose of concealing their own wrongdoing and
causing Plaintiff to be deprived his employment.
No. 17-1653 Page 4
And he asserted that Judge Tourtelot conspired with the Sheriff’s Office to “affect [his]
employment by disclosing his military convictions by falsely stating that Cossio called
[Judge] Tourtelot.”
The defendants moved to dismiss the suit for failure to state a claim under
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) and asserted that judicial immunity prevented
Cossio from suing Judge Tourtelot. In his response brief, Cossio disputed Judge
Tourtelot’s immunity. He also added new allegations, consistent with those in his
amended complaint, that could be construed to raise a Fourth Amendment claim
against the judge (he had already accused the other defendants of an unreasonable
search). See Smith v. Dart, 803 F.3d 304, 311 (7th Cir. 2015) (“[F]acts alleged by a plaintiff
in a brief in opposition to a motion to dismiss may be considered when evaluating the
sufficiency of a complaint so long as they are consistent [with] the allegations in the
complaint.”). Cossio contended that Judge Tourtelot conspired with the Sheriff’s Office
to search unlawfully an electronic database for Cossio’s military history during the
protective-order case. Cossio also argued that Judge Tourtelot was not entitled to
judicial immunity because his (false) report to the Sheriff’s Office was not a judicial act,
but an administrative one.
The district court granted the defendants’ motion with respect to all of Cossio’s
federal claims and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Cossio’s state-
law claims. As to Cossio’s claims under federal law against Judge Tourtelot, the district
court ruled that the judge had judicial immunity that prevented him from being sued
for reporting a supposed communication with Cossio to the Sheriff’s Office. The court
reasoned that Cossio’s alleged call to the judge constituted an improper ex parte
communication and therefore the judge’s report of this call to the Sheriff’s Office “was
judicial in character.” Cossio then moved to alter the judgment under Federal Rule of
Civil Procedure 59(e), essentially arguing that the district court wrongly determined at
the pleading stage that he had called the judge. The court denied the motion,
emphasizing that it accepted as true his assertion that he never called the judge.
Cossio appealed, and we later granted his motion under Federal Rule of
Appellate Procedure 42(b) to dismiss the appeal against all defendants except Judge
Tourtelot.
No. 17-1653 Page 5
In this court, Cossio raises two arguments. He first contends that he did not bring
any claims under federal law against Judge Tourtelot and therefore the district court
should not have decided that federal judicial immunity insulates the judge. He
expresses concern that a state court will use the district court’s judicial-immunity
analysis to justify giving Judge Tourtelot immunity from his defamation claim.
Cossio is wrong on this point. The district court needed to evaluate whether
Judge Tourtelot had judicial immunity because Cossio accused Judge Tourtelot of acts
that he says violated his constitutional rights. The first count of his amended complaint
expressly purports to be brought under § 1983 and is against all “Defendants.” We
discern at least two theories of relief under federal law that apply to the allegations
against Judge Tourtelot: that he conspired to violate Cossio’s civil rights and deprived
him of his property interest in his job. And in Cossio’s response to the motion to
dismiss, he alleged facts that could be interpreted to raise another constitutional claim—
that the judge violated or conspired to violate his Fourth Amendment rights through
illegal searches. This is confirmed in his sur-reply to the motion to dismiss, in which he
labels his “constitutional injury” as “conspiracy” and argues “Defendants have
deprived him of his property interests in continued employment.” And in his response
he wrote that the defendants are “each liable jointly and severally [for] their actions.”
This, combined with the fact that all allegations in the amended complaint are
incorporated into every count, demonstrates that, whatever Cossio says now, he
accused Judge Tourtelot of violating and conspiring to violate his federal constitutional
rights.
Moreover, Cossio’s concern about the effect of the district court’s decision is
misplaced. This decision, applying the federal common law of absolute judicial
immunity, has no preclusive effect on his state-law defamation claim because only state
immunity law applies to this claim. See Payne for Hicks v. Churchich, 161 F.3d 1030, 1038
(7th Cir. 1998) (distinguishing between federal and state law of immunity and
explaining that only federal law of immunity applies to federal claims).
Cossio next argues that the judge’s call to the Sheriff’s Office reporting the
alleged lie that Cossio called him was not a judicial act and therefore is not covered by
judicial immunity. Judicial immunity insulates judges from being sued except when a
plaintiff sues a judge for (1) “nonjudicial actions, i.e., actions not taken in the judge’s
judicial capacity,” or (2) “actions, though judicial in nature, taken in the complete
absence of all jurisdiction.” Mireles v. Waco, 502 U.S. 9, 11–12 (1991). To evaluate
No. 17-1653 Page 6
whether judicial immunity applies, we consider “the nature and function of the act, not
the act itself” and thereby determine “the particular act’s relation to a general function
normally performed by a judge.” Id. at 13 (internal quotation marks omitted).
In analyzing judicial immunity here, it does not matter that Judge Tourtelot
allegedly fabricated the report of Cossio’s call because we do not consider the judge’s
action itself, but its nature and function. If the judge did report an improper ex parte
contact, then that would be, as the district court held, a judicial function. See Brookings v.
Clunk, 389 F.3d 614, 621 (6th Cir. 2004) (judicial immunity applies when judge reports
litigant misconduct). We would not look behind the nature and function of the act to
determine whether the judge’s report was true. See Mireles, 502 U.S. at 12–13. Cossio is
therefore incorrect to contend that the falsity of Judge Tourtelot’s statement precludes
the application of judicial immunity.
Nevertheless, taking the allegations in the complaint as true and drawing all
permissible inferences in Cossio’s favor, we cannot conclude that Judge Tourtelot has
judicial immunity. The judge might not have been acting in a judicial capacity when he
called the Sheriff’s Office to (allegedly) falsely report a call from Cossio. We do not
know, based on the complaint alone, what if anything Judge Tourtelot told the Sheriff’s
Office beyond that Cossio had called him, had been convicted of crimes in the past, and
had lied on his employment application. Not every reasonable inference from the
complaint would make a simple telephone call a judicial act. Cossio does not specify
whether his protective-order case before Judge Tourtelot was ongoing at the time the
judge says Cossio made the call. Nor does Cossio allege that the judge reported that
Cossio was or had been a litigant before him.
If the judge was reporting the misconduct of a county employee (falsifying his
employment application) to the Sheriff’s Office, and not reporting an ex parte contact
with a litigant, then the telephone call would have been an action taken by a judge, but
not a “judicial act.” See Forrester v. White, 484 U.S. 219, 229–30 (1988) (distinguishing
between administrative acts not covered by judicial immunity and judicial actions
shielded by judicial immunity). Actions taken by judges relating to employment are not
covered by judicial immunity because they are administrative in nature. See id. True,
Judge Tourtelot was not the hiring authority, but Cossio’s complaint plainly accuses
Judge Tourtelot and the other defendants of conspiring to deprive him of his property
interest in his employment.
No. 17-1653 Page 7
Further, with respect to Judge Tourtelot’s report of Cossio’s military convictions
to the Sheriff’s Office—something that Cossio does allege—a judge does not act in his or
her judicial capacity by telling law enforcement of a false statement that a litigant made
outside of court proceedings. Such a communication is “a ministerial act which might as
well have been committed to a private person as to a judge,” is not an act “normally
performed by a judge,” and is not a situation in which “the parties dealt with the judge
as judge.” Lowe v. Letsinger, 772 F.2d 308, 312 (7th Cir. 1985) (identifying factors that
“[c]ourts have considered . . . in determining whether an act is judicial”). And we have
not found support in the law for the proposition that the doctrine of judicial immunity
applies simply because the plaintiff’s relationship to the judge was, as the district court
said, “formed” in the context of a courtroom.
Because it is not clear from the face of the complaint that Judge Tourtelot has
judicial immunity from Cossio’s federal claims, we VACATE the district court’s
judgment for Judge Tourtelot and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with
this order.