2019 IL App (1st) 190117
FIRST DIVISION
February 8, 2019
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
FIRST DISTRICT
No. 1-19-0117
SEBASTIAN CALVIN GHILES, )
) Appeal from the
Petitioner-Appellant, ) Circuit Court of
) Cook County.
v. )
)
THE MUNICIPAL OFFICERS ELECTORAL BOARD ) No. 2018 COEL 000034
OF THE CITY OF CHICAGO HEIGHTS; WANDA )
ROGERS, in Her Official Capacity as Substitute )
Chairman of the Municipal Officers Electoral Board of ) Honorable
the City of Chicago Heights; LORI WILCOX, in Her ) Carol Kipperman,
Official Capacity as Member of the Municipal Officers ) Judge Presiding.
Electoral Board of the City of Chicago Heights; )
VINCENT ZARANTI, in His Official Capacity as )
Member of the Municipal Officers Electoral Board of the
City of Chicago Heights; MICHAEL A. STEBEL,
Objector; and RUBEN REYNOSO, Objector,
Respondents-Appellees.
PRESIDING JUSTICE MIKVA delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices Griffin and Walker concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Petitioner, Sebastian Calvin Ghiles, filed nomination papers to be a nonpartisan candidate
for the office of mayor of Chicago Heights, Illinois. Objections were filed to Mr. Ghiles’s
nomination papers. After a hearing, the Municipal Officers Electoral Board of the City of
Chicago Heights (Board) invalidated Mr. Ghiles’s nomination papers because he did not have the
required minimum number of signatures. The circuit court affirmed the Board’s determination.
No. 1-19-0117
Mr. Ghiles now challenges the Board’s decision, arguing that the Board’s chosen methodology
used to invalidate his papers was “not fair, reasonable, or rational.” For the following reasons,
we affirm the decision of the Board.
¶2 I. BACKGOUND
¶3 Mr. Ghiles filed his nomination papers on November 20, 2018. These papers consisted of
81 pages of signatures—with a maximum of 10 signatures per page—in support of placing Mr.
Ghiles on the ballot for the consolidated mayoral primary to be held on February 26, 2019.
¶4 On December 3, 2018, Michael A. Stebel and Ruben Reynoso (collectively, the
objectors) jointly filed objections to Mr. Ghiles’s nomination papers on several grounds. They
alleged that some of the entries contained forged or duplicative signatures, referenced
nonregistered voters, and contained incomplete or inaccurate voter information. They also
argued that the signature pages as a whole “demonstrate[d] a pattern of fraud and disregard of the
Election Code” such that “every sheet circulated *** [was] invalid.” The objectors maintained
that Mr. Ghiles could not be listed on the ballot because his papers “contain[ed] less than 139
validly collected signatures of qualified and duly registered legal voters of the City of Chicago
Heights.”
¶5 Section 10-9 of the Illinois Election Code (Election Code) (10 ILCS 5/10-9(3) (West
2016)) provides that a municipal officers electoral board shall convene to hear objections to
nomination papers for municipal office and that the board consists of the mayor, the city clerk,
and the member of the city council with the longest tenure. Because Mr. Ghiles was running for
mayor, the mayor did not participate in consideration of these objections, and that Board position
went to the next-highest tenured city council member. The Board gave Mr. Ghiles and the
objectors written notice on December 6, 2018, that a hearing would be convened beginning on
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December 11, 2018, to consider the objections to Mr. Ghiles’s signatures.
¶6 Pursuant to section 10-3 of the Election Code, Mr. Ghiles needed a minimum of 139
valid signatures (5% of the voters in the last applicable election) to be placed on the ballot, and
the Board was only to review a statutory maximum of 221 signatures (8% of voters in the last
election). Id. § 10-3. The statute provides in pertinent part as follows:
“Nominations *** may be made by nomination papers signed in the aggregate for
each candidate by qualified voters of such district, or political subdivision,
equaling not less than 5%, nor more than 8% (or 50 more than the minimum,
whichever is greater) of the number of persons, who voted at the next preceding
regular election in such district or political subdivision in which such district or
political subdivision voted as a unit for the election of officers to serve its
respective territorial area.” Id.
¶7 Section 10-10 of the Election Code (id. § 10-10) requires an electoral board, on the first
day of its convening, to “adopt rules of procedure for the introduction of evidence and the
presentation of arguments.” The Board proposed such draft rules of procedure in its notice to the
parties, including Rule 8, which establishes a procedure for considering a prospective candidate’s
papers when, as Mr. Ghiles did, the candidate has submitted more than the statutory maximum.
Rule 8 provides, in pertinent part:
“In case a candidate *** files a petition or petitions in excess of the maximum number of
signatures and an objection is filed pursuant to Section 10-8 of the Election Code, for
efficiency and administrative convenience, the Electoral Board shall disregard that
number of signatures presented as are in excess of the statutory maximum beginning by
counting from the first signature of the first page of the filing. Thus, if a candidate ***
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files petitions subject to a statutory maximum of 500 signatures but they present 700, the
first 200 signatures presented on their nomination papers shall be disregarded and the
Electoral Board shall examine the last 500 signatures presented.”
¶8 The Board met on December 11, 2018, with Mr. Ghiles present, and it acknowledged and
adopted the draft rules of procedure, including Rule 8. The Board then submitted Mr. Ghiles’s
nomination papers to a records examination by the Cook County Clerk, which issued its report
on December 18, 2018. The clerk’s report details the total signatures submitted by Mr. Ghiles,
the challenges to those signatures made by the objectors, which challenges were overruled and
which were sustained, and the number of remaining valid signatures. Mr. Ghiles submitted 81
pages containing 736 signatures, 434 of which remained valid after the clerk’s examination. The
valid signatures were spread throughout the pages; on some pages there were no valid signatures
and on others all 10 signatures were counted as valid.
¶9 The Board reconvened on December 21, 2018, for a hearing on the objections to Mr.
Ghiles’s petition. At that hearing, Mr. Ghiles first argued that the Board’s method under Rule
8—of removing signatures submitted in excess of the statutory maximum from consideration by
essentially taking those signatures off the top of the stack rather than from the bottom of the
stack—was “sua sponte,” “ultra vires,” and unreasonable.
¶ 10 On December 28, 2018, the Board issued its written decision invalidating Mr. Ghiles’s
nomination papers. The Board noted that under Rule 8, “the relevant 8% [of signatures] to be
reviewed by the Board would be the signatures from Sheet 52, Line 9, to the end of the
Candidate’s Petitions.” After “accounting for the factual findings of the Cook County Clerk as it
pertains to” those 221 signatures, the Board found that only 112 signatures were valid. The
Board rejected the objectors’ claim that the signatures revealed a “pattern of fraud” but
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nevertheless determined that, because Mr. Ghiles had failed to reach the statutory minimum of
139 valid signatures, his name should be stricken from the ballot for the February 26, 2019,
primary election.
¶ 11 II. JURISDICTION
¶ 12 Mr. Ghiles sought judicial review, and the circuit court affirmed the Board’s decision on
January 17, 2019. Mr. Ghiles timely filed his notice of appeal on the same day. We have
jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to section 3-112 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS
5/3-112 (West 2016)), making final orders in administrative review cases reviewable by appeal
as in other civil cases, and Illinois Supreme Court Rules 301 (eff. Feb. 1, 1994) and 303 (eff.
July 1, 2017), governing appeals from final judgments entered by the circuit court in civil cases.
¶ 13 III. ANALYSIS
¶ 14 The sole issue in this case is whether the Board’s method of removing from consideration
those signatures in excess of the statutory minimum was rationally related to its interest in
providing an orderly election procedure, when the Board disregarded the excess signatures at the
front on the petition and reviewed the maximum number of signatures it could review from the
back of the stack.
¶ 15 With respect to appeals in administrative cases, “we review the decision of the board, not
the [circuit] court” (Cinkus v. Village of Stickney Municipal Officers Electoral Board, 228 Ill. 2d
200, 212 (2008)) and “may affirm an electoral board’s decision on any basis that appears in the
record, even though the electoral board may have relied on another basis to support its decision”
(Cunningham v. Schaeflein, 2012 IL App (1st) 120529, ¶ 34). “An electoral board is viewed as
an administrative agency” and “[t]hus, the standard of review is determined by the type of
question on review.” Hossfeld v. Illinois State Board of Elections, 238 Ill. 2d 418, 423 (2010).
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Findings and conclusions on questions of fact are deemed prima facie true and correct and will
not be overturned unless they are against the manifest weight of the evidence, findings on mixed
questions of law and fact will not be disturbed unless clearly erroneous, and questions of law are
reviewed de novo. Wilson v. Municipal Officers Electoral Board, 2013 IL App (1st) 130957,
¶ 10.
¶ 16 “Administrative regulations, for purposes of determining their validity, are presumed to
be valid” and will not be set aside unless “clearly arbitrary, unreasonable or capricious.” Begg v.
Board of Fire & Police Commissioners of the City of Park Ridge, 99 Ill. 2d 324, 331-32 (1984).
“[T]he person questioning the validity of the administrative regulation bears the burden of
establishing its invalidity.” Id. at 332. We review the Board’s method of removing excess
signatures under this standard—whether it was arbitrary, unreasonable or capricious.
¶ 17 In any case involving the right to run for elected office, we must bear in mind certain
principles. “[V]oting is of the most fundamental significance under our constitutional structure.”
Illinois State Board of Elections v. Socialist Workers Party, 440 U.S. 173, 184 (1979).
“Restrictions on access to the ballot burden two distinct and fundamental rights, the right of
individuals to associate for the advancement of political beliefs, and the right of qualified voters,
regardless of their political persuasion, to cast their votes effectively.” (Internal quotation marks
omitted.) Id. In veneration of these intertwined rights, Illinois treats “access to a place on the
ballot [as] a substantial right not lightly to be denied.” Bettis v. Marsaglia, 2014 IL 117050, ¶ 28.
¶ 18 As noted above, section 10-3 of the Election Code requires that Mr. Ghiles present a
nominating petition that includes valid signatures from at least 5% of the people that voted in the
last election for the mayoral office he was seeking. That statute also limits, to 8% of those who
voted in that last election, the number of signatures Mr. Ghiles can submit to the Board in the
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effort to achieve this necessary quota of valid signatures.
¶ 19 Both parties in this case rely on the same two cases that have examined this limitation on
the number of signatures a candidate is allowed to submit to the Board: Richards v. Lavelle, 620
F.2d 144, 147 (7th Cir. 1980), and Wilson, 2013 IL App (1st) 130957.
¶ 20 In Richards, the Seventh Circuit recognized that an electoral board’s enforcement of a
statutory maximum limitation of signatures “imposes no significant burden on anyone” because
it simply requires the candidate offering nominating signatures to count. Richards, 620 F.2d at
147. However, that court held that the sanction of removing the candidate from the ballot
because he submitted more than the maximum number of signatures was an irrational, and
therefore unconstitutional, means of enforcing that limitation. Id. at 148.
¶ 21 In Wilson, this court also recognized that limiting the maximum number of signatures
was a limitation that “served a legitimate state interest.” Wilson, 2013 IL App (1st) 130957, ¶ 14.
In that case, we found that election board’s rule of considering signatures—starting at the top of
the nominating petitions and continuing only until it had examined the statutory maximum—was
“a rational means of enforcing the statutory maximum imposed.” Id.
¶ 22 Mr. Ghiles asks us to reverse the Board’s decision here and order his name be placed on
the ballot because “the Board’s action and method in this case [invalidating] his nomination
papers *** was not fair, reasonable, or rational.” He makes several arguments.
¶ 23 He first argues the Board acted beyond its authority by relying on paragraph 12 of the
objector’s petition, in which they stated that “[t]he Nomination Papers contain petition sheets
which contain signatures of voters well in excess of that number provided for by law” and were
therefore invalid. Mr. Ghiles correctly notes that, under Richards, 620 F.2d at 148, an electoral
board cannot invalidate a candidate’s nomination papers simply because they exceeded the
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maximum signature requirement. He insists that “[t]he inquiry and prosecution of this allegation
should have ended there” but that the Board “acted sua sponte, and ultra vires, by counting out
signatures” after the Cook County Clerk’s records examination to find that, of the 221 signatures
that the Board examined, only 112 were valid.
¶ 24 However, there was nothing sua sponte or ultra vires about the Board’s actions. Under
section 10-3 of the Election Code (10 ILCS 5/10-3 (West 2016)), the Board is empowered to
limit its review to 8% of persons “who voted at the next preceding regular election” for that
office, and under Richards and Wilson, it is vested with discretion to craft a rational way of
separating that 8% from the total number of signatures a candidate has submitted. That is what
the Board did here.
¶ 25 Mr. Ghiles also challenges the Board’s method of complying with the statute, arguing
both that Rule 8 is inherently contradictory and that, as interpreted by the Board, Rule 8 is
arbitrary and capricious.
¶ 26 Mr. Ghiles does not disagree that the hypothetical posed in Rule 8 clearly anticipates that
the Board will draw from the bottom of the candidate’s proffered stack of nominating petitions
until it has reached the maximum number. Mr. Ghiles argues that the portion of the rule
preceding the hypothetical—which states that “the Electoral Board shall disregard that number of
signatures presented as are in excess of the statutory maximum beginning by counting from the
first signature of the first page of the filing”—contradicts this reading.
¶ 27 We find no contradiction. The first statement provides that the Board will determine
whether signatures exceed the maximum “by counting from the first signature of the first page,”
and the hypothetical that follows separately provides the method for determining which of those
signatures the Board will consider. Preventing any ambiguity, Rule 8 offers a clarifying
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hypothetical that the signatures reviewed will be drawn from the bottom of the stack, meaning
that those signatures exceeding the maximum at the top of the stack—starting at page one, line
one—will be disregarded.
¶ 28 Mr. Ghiles also argues that, under this interpretation, the rule the Board promulgated and
applied defies reason, in that “[r]eason would *** suggest and posit that extracting 221
signatures from 736 signatures would mean counting out the 221 signatures starting from
signature #1 on sheet #1” and disregarding “the ‘excess’ of 221 *** once #221 is reached.” In
Mr. Ghiles’s reading, the word “excess” can only have one meaning, and any notion that an
excess could precede the signatures to be counted is an arbitrary scheme that improperly
deprives him of ballot access.
¶ 29 We certainly agree that Mr. Ghiles’s suggestion is a rational one, and it is the
methodology we approved in Wilson. But, in our view, there is more than one rational method
for adhering to the statutory limitation. It is rational to remove or disregard excess signatures
either from the top (as in this case) or from the bottom (as in Wilson) of the stack of signatures
provided where, as in this case, a candidate chooses to present the Board with more than the
maximum number of signatures allowed.
¶ 30 An evil that clearly must be avoided is the possibility that an election board will use the
process of identifying “excess” signatures as a ruse for eliminating “good” signatures so as to
hamper a candidate seeking a place on the ballot. Nothing in the record suggests Rule 8 was
promulgated to do that, and Mr. Ghiles does not dispute that the rule was promulgated and
provided to him before any records examination was performed. Indeed, Mr. Ghiles made no
objection to the rule when he was announced, likely because he also had no idea whether it
would help him or hurt him more than if the Board had disregarded signatures from the bottom.
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In fact, a careful review of the record shows that the invalid signatures were spread throughout
the 81 pages that Mr. Ghiles presented to the Board.
¶ 31 While Mr. Ghiles argues that if the Board had instead reviewed the first 221 signatures,
he would have been over the 5% minimum threshold, nothing in the record suggests that the
Board knew this. More importantly, this fact does not automatically render every other method
of review, including that in Rule 8, irrational or unrelated to the Board’s legitimate interest in
conducting an orderly election. See Wilson, 2013 IL App (1st) 130957, ¶ 14.
¶ 32 The objectors and the Board both raise arguments of laches and waiver, claiming
prejudice from Mr. Ghiles’s failure to raise his objection to the signature counting process in
Rule 8 until December 21, 2018. We need not address these arguments, however, as we find that
the method set out in Rule 8 is not arbitrary and capricious.
¶ 33 IV. CONCLUSION
¶ 34 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the Board.
¶ 35 Affirmed.
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