Hutchinson v. Illinois State Board of Elections

                                 2022 IL App (1st) 220678

                                                                    SIXTH DIVISION
                                                                        June 7, 2022

                                       No. 1-22-0678


                                     IN THE
                           APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
                                 FIRST DISTRICT


SUSAN F. HUTCHINSON; MARK CURRAN; and                     )
NANCY RODKIN ROTERING,                                    )
                                                          )
        Petitioners-Appellees,                            )
                                                          )
v.                                                        )
                                                          )
THE ILLINOIS STATE BOARD OF ELECTIONS, in                 )
its Capacity as the State Officers Electoral Board; IAN   )
LINNABARY, CASSANDRA B. WATSON,                           )
WILLIAM J. CADIGAN, LAURA KENT DONAHUE, )
TONYA L. GENOVESE, CATHERINE S. McCRORY, )                    Appeal from the
WILLIAM M. McGUFFAGE, and RICK S. TERVEN,                 )   Circuit Court of
SR., in Their Official Capacities as Members of the State )   Cook County
Officers Electoral Board; ALAN SPELLBERG;                 )
CACILIA MASOVER; NANCY WAITES; JOE TIRIO, )                   No. 22 COEL 9
McHenry County Clerk, in His Capacity as the Local        )
Election Authority of McHenry County; JOHN A.             )   The Honorable
CUNNINGHAM, Kane County Clerk, in His Capacity as )           Maureen O. Hannon
the Local Election Authority of Kane County; DEBBIE       )   Judge Presiding.
GILLETTE, Kendall County Clerk, in Her Capacity as        )
Local Election Authority for Kendall County; ROBIN        )
M. O’CONNOR, Lake County Clerk, in Her Capacity as )
the Local Election Authority; and DOUGLAS J.              )
JOHNSON, DeKalb County Clerk, in His Capacity as          )
the Local Election Authority,                             )
                                                          )
        Respondents,                                      )
                                                          )
(Alan Spellberg, Cacilia Masover, and Nancy Waites,       )
Respondents-Appellants).                                  )
No. 1-22-0678


       JUSTICE MIKVA delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
       Justices Gordon and Oden Johnson concurred in the judgment and opinion

                                           OPINION

¶1     This appeal requires us to interpret subsection (h) of section 7-10 of the Election Code (10

ILCS 5/7-10(h) (West 2020)). That subsection sets the minimum number of signatures petitioners,

Susan F. Hutchinson, Mark Curran, and Nancy Rodkin Rotering (candidates), were required to

submit to appear on the ballots for their respective parties in the upcoming June 28, 2022, General

Primary Election. Candidates are seeking their respective parties’ nomination for the Second

Judicial District’s seat on the Illinois Supreme Court. Respondents, Alan Spellberg, Cacilia

Masover, and Nancy Waites (objectors), objected to the candidates’ nomination papers on the basis

that they contained too few signatures. A hearing officer recommended that the candidates’ names

appear on the primary ballots. The Illinois State Board of Elections (Board) rejected the hearing

officer’s recommendation, found that the candidates had not submitted enough signatures, and

ordered their names not to appear on the ballots. On judicial review, the circuit court of Cook

County reversed the Board’s decision. Objectors have filed an appeal to this court. For the

following reasons, we agree with the circuit court that the Board’s decision rests on an incorrect

interpretation of section 7-10(h). We find that the candidates have submitted sufficient signatures

and that their names should appear on the primary ballots. We therefore reverse the decision of the

Board and affirm the circuit court.

¶2                                     I. BACKGROUND

¶3                                    A. The Election Code

¶4     Section 7-10(h) of the Election Code provides, in relevant part,

       “Except as otherwise provided in this Code, if a candidate seeks to run for judicial office

       in a district, then the candidate’s petition for nomination must contain the number of



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       signatures equal to 0.4% of the number of votes cast in that district for the candidate for

       his or her political party for the office of Governor at the last general election at which a

       Governor was elected, but in no event less than 500 signatures.” 10 ILCS 5/7-10(h) (West

       2020).

¶5     Section 1-3(14) of the Election Code defines “district” as

       “any area which votes as a unit for the election of any officer, other than the State or a unit

       of local government or school district, and includes, but is not limited to, legislative,

       congressional and judicial districts, judicial circuits, county board districts, municipal and

       sanitary district wards, school board districts, and precincts.” 10 ILCS 5/1-3(14) (West

       2020).

¶6     In 2021, the General Assembly enacted the Illinois Judicial Districts Act of 2021 (Pub. Act

102-11, § 1 (eff. June 4, 2021) (adding 705 ILCS 23/1 et seq.)), which redistricted the Second

Judicial District to include only five counties: DeKalb, Kane, Kendall, Lake, and McHenry. Pub.

Act 102-11, § 15 (eff. June 4, 2021) (adding 705 ILCS 23/15). Prior to redistricting, the Second

Judicial District included those five counties and Boone, Carroll, DuPage, Jo Davies, Lee, Ogle,

Stephenson, and Winnebago counties.

¶7     Also in 2021, the General Assembly amended the Election Code to add section 2A-1.1b(b),

which provides that, for the 2022 General Primary Election, the signature requirement for an

established party candidate for specific offices, including the Illinois Supreme Court, would be

reduced by one-third. Pub. Act 102-15 § 5 (eff. June 17, 2021) (adding 10 ILCS 5/2A-1.1b). The

parties agree that that section 2A-1.1b(b) applies, and that, whatever the minimum signature

requirement is under section 7-10(h), that amount is reduced by one-third for the 2022 primary

election.




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¶8                                B. Proceedings Before the Board

¶9     The facts are not in dispute. Hutchinson and Curran filed nomination papers seeking the

Republican nomination in the Second Judicial District for the vacant seat on our supreme court.

Rotering filed nomination papers seeking the Democratic nomination for that seat. Hutchinson’s

and Curran’s nomination papers contained 702 signatures and 670 signatures, respectively.

Rotering’s nomination papers contained 669 signatures.

¶ 10   Objectors challenged the candidates’ nomination papers, asserting that under sections

7-10(h) and 2A-1.1b(b) of the Election Code, Hutchinson and Curran were required to submit 757

signatures and Rotering was required to submit 791 signatures. Objectors’ signature counts were

based on the votes cast for the Republican and Democratic candidates for governor at the 2018

general election in the five counties now comprising the Second Judicial District, multiplying that

number, by .004 (0.4%) and reducing by one-third. A hearing officer was assigned, and the parties

filed cross-motions for summary judgment. A hearing was held on April 9, 2022, and the hearing

officer heard oral argument.

¶ 11   On April 15, 2022, the hearing officer made written findings and recommendations. The

hearing officer reasoned that the redrawn Second Judicial District did not exist at the time of the

last gubernatorial election, so the redrawn Second Judicial District did not vote as a unit at that

election. Therefore, the catchall provision in section 7-10(h), requiring a minimum of 500

signatures and reduced by one-third for the 2022 primary to 334 signatures, applied. Each

candidate obtained more than 334 signatures. The Second District’s decision in Vestrup v. Du Page

County Election Commission, 335 Ill. App. 3d 156 (2002) (interpreting section 10-2 of the Election

Code) was on point and stood for the proposition that when a district is redrawn, the redrawn

district cannot be said to have voted as a district at a prior election because it did not exist at the




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last election. Here, the Election Code’s definition of “district” supported the candidates’ position

that the redrawn Second Judicial District had never voted as a unit. The hearing officer

recommended that the Board overrule the objectors’ petitions, grant the candidates’ motion for

summary judgment, deny the objectors’ cross-motion for summary judgment, deny all the

remaining arguments in both parties’ motions, and order the candidates’ names to appear on the

primary ballots.

¶ 12   For “completeness,” the hearing officer considered and rejected the candidates’ argument

that the Board should “give deference” to the Board’s 2022 Candidate Guide, which stated that the

signature minimum was 334 signatures, because the supreme court in Corbin v. Schroeder, 2021

IL 127052, rejected the notion that estoppel or reliance arguments can overcome the Election

Code’s signature requirements, which are mandatory and require strict and substantial compliance.

¶ 13   Both parties filed exceptions with the Board. On April 21, 2022, the Board issued its

decision and on April 22, 2022, issued an amended decision rejecting the hearing officer’s findings

and recommendations. The Board found that section 7-10(h) required that a Democratic candidate

in the Second Judicial District submit 791 signatures and a Republican candidate submit 757

signatures, which the Board found should be “calculated by combining 0.4% of the number of

votes cast in each county comprising the redrawn Second Judicial District, for the candidate for

his or her political party for the office of Governor at the 2018 General Election, reduced by one

third.” The three candidates each failed to submit enough signatures to appear on the primary

ballots, based on this calculation. The Board granted objectors’ motion for summary judgment,

denied the candidates’ motion for summary judgement, sustained the objections to the candidates’

nomination papers, and ordered the candidates’ names not to appear on the primary ballots.




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¶ 14                               C. Circuit Court Proceedings

¶ 15   On April 22, 2022, the candidates filed a petition for judicial review in the circuit court of

Cook County. Objectors filed a response on May 9, 2022. On May 12, 2022, the circuit court

entered a written order reversing the Board’s decision. The circuit court found that nothing in

section 7-10(h) “directs the candidates to calculate the minimum number of signatures by adding

the vote totals in the counties that make up the newly configured Second Judicial District.” Instead,

the Election Code requires the signature calculation

       “to be made based on the ‘number of signatures equal to 0.4% of the number of votes cast

       in that district for the candidate for his or her political party for the office of Governor at

       the last general election ***.’ *** The new Second District did not vote in the last

       election.” (Emphases in original.)

¶ 16   Further, the Board’s 2022 Candidate Guide used the catchall provision in section 7-10(h)—

requiring the signature requirement be no less than 500—as the signature minimum, reduced by

one-third to 334. See Illinois State Board of Elections, 2022 Candidate Guide, available at https://

www.elections.il.gov/DocDisplay.aspx?Doc=/Downloads/ElectionOperations/PDF/

2022CanGuide.pdf&MID=383 (last visited June 6, 2022). The Board was the administrative

agency that certified results for elections and “if the State Board thought that the signature

requirement post-districting would be calculated by tabulating the votes in each [c]ounty [in the

redrawn Second Judicial District], it had the exact numbers and could have made that calculation

in its Candidate’s Guide for 2022.” The Board’s interpretation of the Election Code in the

Candidate’s Guide was entitled to substantial weight and deference—as it is the administrative

agency charged with administering the Election Code—its interpretation was not unreasonable,

and its conclusion was “persuasive.” Finally, to the extent section 7-10(h) was ambiguous and the




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parties submitted competing, reasonable constructions of the statute, Illinois public policy favoring

ballot access supported the candidates. The circuit court reversed the Board’s decision and ordered

the candidates’ names to appear on the primary ballots. On May 16, 2022, the circuit court denied

objectors’ motion to stay enforcement of the circuit court’s judgment. Objectors filed a notice of

appeal on May 16, 2022. Objectors did not renew their motion to stay enforcement of the circuit

court’s judgment in this court.

¶ 17   We granted objectors’ motion for an accelerated docket and ordered the parties to brief this

appeal on an expedited basis.

¶ 18                                     II. JURISDICTION

¶ 19   The Board entered its final decision on April 22, 2022. The candidates filed their petition

for judicial review in the circuit court on April 22, 2022, which was timely under section 10-10.1

of the Election Code (10 ILCS 5/10-10.1(a) (West 2020)). The circuit court entered its final

judgment on May 12, 2022, and objectors filed their notice of appeal on May 16, 2022, which was

timely under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 303(a) (eff. July 1, 2017). We have jurisdiction pursuant

to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 301 (eff. Feb. 1, 1994) and Rule 303, governing appeals from final

judgments entered by the circuit court in civil cases.

¶ 20                                       III. ANALYSIS

¶ 21   On appeal, objectors assert the circuit court erred by reversing the Board’s decision. They

argue that, because judicial districts must “be compact and composed of contiguous counties” (Ill.

Const. 1970, art. VI, § 2), section 7-10(h)’s minimum signature requirement can be calculated by

looking at the voting data from the counties now comprising the redrawn Second Judicial District.

They contend section 7-10(h) is plain and unambiguous, and if the legislature intended for a

different signature calculation to apply in the first primary election following redistricting, it would




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have said so. They point to several other provisions of the Election Code, which provide for either

a specific signature requirement or a specific signature calculation in the first election following

redistricting, to argue the legislature never intended a different method of calculating the signature

requirement post-redistricting. They argue that nothing in the plain language or legislative history

of section 7-10(h) suggests the legislature intended that a judicial district must have previously

voted as a unit to apply the statutory calculation. They argue Vestrup is distinguishable and does

not control the outcome here. Objectors also contend the Board’s 2022 Candidate’s Guide is

entitled to no deference, as the supreme court in Corbin made it plain that statutory signature

requirements are mandatory and are not subject to reliance or estoppel arguments. They request

that we affirm the Board’s decision and order that the candidates’ names not appear on the primary

ballots.

¶ 22       “When an election board’s decision is challenged in the circuit court pursuant to section

10-10.1 of the Election Code ***, the proceeding is one of administrative review.” Jones v.

Municipal Officers Electoral Board for the City of Calumet City, 2021 IL 126974, ¶ 12. We review

the Board’s decision, not the judgment of the circuit court. Id.

¶ 23       Our standard of review of the Board’s decision depends on the question presented. Corbin,

2021 IL 127052, ¶ 32. Here, the Board was faced with a question of statutory interpretation: how

section 7-10(h) should be interpreted in the first primary election following redistricting of the

judicial districts to determine the requisite number of signatures a candidate must submit to appear

on the primary ballot. The proper interpretation of a statute is a question of law that we review

de novo. Cook v. Illinois State Board of Elections, 2021 IL 125386, ¶ 51.

¶ 24       When construing a statute, the “primary objective is to ascertain and give effect to the intent

of the legislature.” Jackson-Hicks v. East St. Louis Board of Election Commissioners, 2015 IL




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118929, ¶ 21. The best indicator of legislative intent is the plain language of the statute. Id. “When

statutory language is plain and unambiguous, the statute must be applied as written without resort

to aids of statutory construction, and the court will not read into it exceptions, conditions, or

limitations that the legislature did not express.” (Internal citations omitted.) Id.

¶ 25    We begin by looking at the plain language of the relevant statutory provisions. The first

clause of section 7-10(h) provides, “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in this Code, if a candidate

seeks to run for judicial office in a district ***.” (Emphases added.) 10 ILCS 5/7-10(h). The first

clause of subsection (h) is in the simple future tense: a candidate is going to run for judicial office

in a district. It follows—without controversy—that the district in which the candidate seeks to run

is the district as it is composed at the time of the primary election. The Election Code provides a

definition of “district,” which is “any area which votes as a unit for the election of any officer,”

including judicial districts. 10 ILCS 5/1-3(14). It is undisputed that the redrawn Second Judicial

District in which the candidates seek to run currently comprises 5 counties, whereas the previously

drawn Second Judicial District comprised 13 counties. The redrawn Second Judicial District has

never voted as a unit at any previous election because the redrawn Second Judicial District did not

exist until the legislature redistricted the judicial districts in 2021. The redrawn Second Judicial

District will vote as a unit—for the first time—at the 2022 primary election.

¶ 26    The second clause of subsection (h)—“then the candidate’s petition for nomination must

contain the number of signatures equal to 0.4% of the number of votes cast in that district for the

candidate for his or her political party for the office of Governor at the last general election at

which a Governor was elected” (emphases added)—must be read in connection with the first

clause. The phrase “that district” in the second clause refers directly to the “district” identified in

the first clause: the district in which the candidate will seek to run. The calculation in the second




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clause of subsection (h)—multiplying the number of votes cast in the district for an established

party’s candidate for Governor at the last election by 0.4%—is only possible where the district in

which the candidate is seeking to run voted as a district at the last general election involving a

gubernatorial election. That is not possible here.

¶ 27      Subsection (h) does not provide any alternative formula for calculating the signature

requirement in the first primary election following redistricting. It does, however, contain a

catchall provision requiring an absolute minimum of 500 signatures. Because the Second Judicial

District did not vote in the last election and the legislature made no specific alternative calculus

for the first primary election following redistricting, we look to the requirement that a petition be

supported by no fewer than 500 signatures, which would be reduced for this election by one-third

to 334.

¶ 28      We are not persuaded by any of objectors’ arguments to the contrary. Objectors contend

that we should calculate the number of signatures based on votes cast in the counties comprising

the redrawn Second Judicial District. But this ignores the statutory language that links the signature

requirement to the “district,” rather than to its component parts. A judicial district is of course

composed of counties, but a judicial district composed of one set of counties one year and another

set of counties in another year is simply not the same judicial “district.”

¶ 29      Objectors make the following assertion:

          “Even though the Second Judicial District now votes as a unit (present tense), its signature

          calculation formula does not depend on it having voted as a unit (past tense) in an election

          prior. Put another way, and adding the verbiage from [section] 1-3(14) [of the Election

          Code], the signature formula in [section] 1-3(14) asks: how many votes were cast in this

          ‘area which votes as a unit’ in the gubernatorial election. We know exactly how many




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       votes were cast in 2018 in the area that constitutes the Second Judicial District. Conversely,

       [section] 7-10(h) does not ask for the number of votes cast in an area that voted as a unit in

       the last gubernatorial election.” (Emphases in original.)

¶ 30   We disagree. The legislature’s use of the term “that district” in the phrase “votes cast in

that district” specifically refers to the district in which the candidate seeks to run. At bottom,

objectors’ argument is premised on the divisibility of a judicial district into its component counties

and the notion the “district” means two different things within section 7-10(h). We believe

objectors’ reading of the statute is at odds with its plain language.

¶ 31   This court’s decision in Vestrup supports our reading of the Election Code. There, Eric

Vestrup sought to run as the Libertarian Party (LP) candidate for state representative in

Representative District 47 in the 2002 general election. Vestrup, 335 Ill. App. 3d at 158. An

objector challenged Vestrup’s nomination papers, asserting that the LP was not an established

political party under section 10-2 of the Election Code, which provided:

       “A political party which, at the last election in any congressional district, legislative

       district, county, township, municipality or other political subdivision or district in the State,

       polled more than 5% of the entire vote cast within such territorial area or political

       subdivision, as the case may be, has voted as a unit for the election of officers to serve the

       respective territorial area of such district or political subdivision, is hereby declared to be

       an ‘established political party’ within the meaning of this Article as to such district or

       political subdivision.” 10 ILCS 5/10-2 (West 2002).

¶ 32   Vestrup argued that District 47 contained a portion of the former Representative District

39, and that the LP’s “performance in District 39 in the 2000 election made the LP an established

political party in District 47 for the 2002 election.” Vestrup, 335 Ill. App. 3d at 160. An electoral




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board rejected Vestrup’s argument and found the LP could not nominate Vestrup in District 47

because it was not an established political party in District 47. Id. at 159. The circuit court affirmed

on administrative review (id.), and the Second District likewise affirmed the electoral board’s

decision. In relevant part, the Vestrup court wrote:

        “The text [of section 10-2] is inescapable: if Vestrup would have us declare that the LP is

        an established political party in the current District 47 for purposes of the 2002 election,

        he must demonstrate that the LP garnered more than 5% of the votes in the last election

        when the current District 47 voted as a unit for the election of officers. The insurmountable

        difficulty for Vestrup is obvious: the current District 47 could not have voted as a unit in

        the last election because the current District 47 did not exist in the last election, or, to be

        more precise, District 47’s boundaries were different in the last election.” Id. at 163.

¶ 33    The court in Vestrup recognized, and we fully agree, that after redistricting, the district—

a voting unit—cannot be said to have previously voted. Where the statutory language tethers the

minimum signature requirement to the existence of the district, the district must have existed at

the time of the last election. Again, the district at issue here—the redrawn Second Judicial

District—did not exist at the last election, which means we must look to the statutory minimum in

section 7-10(h), unless the legislature provided an alternative calculation.

¶ 34    This leads us to objectors’ other main argument, which is that their reading of subsection

(h) of section 7-10 is necessary because that subsection is silent as to how to calculate signature

minimums following redistricting, although other subsections of section 7-10 expressly provide

specific formulas for calculating signature requirements in the first election following redistricting.

They point to, among others, subsection (b), which governs federal congressional offices or

delegates to a national nominating convention, and provides that a candidate needs signatures




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“equal to 0.5% of the qualified primary electors or his or her party in his or congressional district,”

but in the first primary following a redistricting of congressional districts, the candidate needs at

least 600 signatures of qualified primary electors of the candidate’s political party. 10 ILCS

5/7-10(b) (West 2020); see also 10 ILCS 5/7-10(c), (d)(2)-(3), (e), (g) (specifying minimum

signature requirements in the first primary election following redistricting of county board

districts, Cook County Board of Commissioner and Cook County Board of Review districts, ward

or trustee districts of municipalities, and sanitary districts, based either on a formula or a specific

number).

¶ 35   Objectors contend that, applying the expressio unius est exclusio alterius maxim of

statutory construction, “where the legislature has explicitly provided an exception following

redistricting for offices throughout [section] 7-10, but has not explicitly provided that same

exception for Judicial Districts, no exception exists.”

¶ 36   Objectors’ arguments miss the mark. The candidates do not assert that the Board should

use an “exception” for determining signature minimums because the Second Judicial District has

been redrawn. Rather, the candidates point to the fact that the calculation method in subsection (h)

would result in zero, since this “district” did not vote as a unit in the last election. Thus, the

provision in subsection (h), setting forth the minimum number of signatures required—500—

becomes applicable. The 500 would be reduced for this election by one-third to 334.

¶ 37   In our view, objectors’ argument regarding alternative calculations in other subsections of

section 7-10 only underscores the fact that, where the legislature intended to impose a specific

alternative formula following redistricting, it did so. The objectors’ alternative formulation, based

on component counties of the old and new Second Judicial District, is indeed a feasible way to

come up with a minimum number of signatures, but it is not one that the legislature has provided.




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¶ 38   Objectors point to the fact that subsection (h) was amended in 2005 to impose different

minimum signature requirements for candidates running in judicial districts than for those running

in judicial circuits and subcircuits. Pub Act. 94-645, § 5 (amending 10 ILCS 5/7-10) (eff. Aug. 22,

2005). Prior to the amendment, subsection (h) provided:

       “If a candidate seeks to run for judicial office in a district, circuit, or subcircuit, then the

       candidate’s petition for nomination must contain the number of signatures equal to 0.25%

       of the number of votes cast for the judicial candidate of his or her political party who

       received the highest number of votes at the last general election at which a judicial officer

       from the same district, circuit, or subcircuit was regularly scheduled to be elected, but in

       no event less than 500 signatures.” 10 ILCS 5/7-10(h) (West 2004).

¶ 39   The legislature amended subsection (h) to provide:

       “If a candidate seeks to run for judicial office in a district, then the candidate’s petition for

       nomination must contain the number of signatures equal to 0.4% of the number of votes

       cast in that district for the candidate for his or her political party for the office of Governor

       at the last general election at which a Governor was elected, but in no event less than 500

       signatures. If a candidate seeks to run for judicial office in a circuit or subcircuit, then the

       candidate’s petition for nomination must contain the number of signatures equal to 0.25%

       of the number of votes cast for the judicial candidate of his or her political party who

       received the highest number of votes at the last general election at which a judicial officer

       from the same circuit or subcircuit was regularly scheduled to be elected, but in no event

       less than 500 signatures.” (Emphasis added.) Pub. Act 94-645 § 5 (eff. Aug. 22, 2005)

       (amending 10 ILCS 5/7-10(h)).




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¶ 40    Objectors contend that, due to this amendment, “for the first time, judicial districts’ formula

[sic] was not tied to having voted as a unit previously,” and is thus an indication of the legislature’s

intent that a district need not have voted as a unit at the last election. But nothing about this

amendment suggests that it altered the definition of “district” in section 1-3 of the Election Code.

In the amended statute, the legislature simply tethered the minimum signature requirement for

judicial candidates running district wide to the votes cast for Governor by the candidate’s party,

rather than, as it did for judges running circuit or subcircuit wide, to votes cast for that judicial

office. This does not alter the definition of district as being an area that votes as a unit.

¶ 41    Objectors also contend that applying the Election Code’s general definition of a district as

being an area that votes “as a unit” in the context of section 7-10(h) would lead to absurd results

and render portions of the Election Code superfluous because “a myriad” of other provisions of

the Election Code refer to specific situations in which a district must have voted “as a unit.”

Objectors fail to describe any absurd result. Objectors also fail to explain why the fact that the

Election Code refers to specific situations in which a district or a city or a county voted “as a unit”

renders the definition of a “district” either superfluous or inapplicable in this case.

¶ 42    Finally, we briefly address the Board’s 2022 Candidate’s Guide. Before the Board, the

candidates argued, in addition to their statutory construction arguments, that the Board, as the

administrative agency tasked with administering the Election Code, should defer to its own

interpretation in the Candidate’s Guide that the signature minimum was 334 signatures. The

candidates carefully pointed out that they were not asserting any sort of estoppel or reliance

argument: they were not arguing that the Board was bound by any erroneous interpretation of the

minimum signature requirement, nor were they arguing that they justifiably relied on the

information in the Candidate’s Guide and should be given a pass if that information was wrong.




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They acknowledged that such arguments were foreclosed by our supreme court’s decision in

Corbin. Instead, the candidates took the position that the information in the Candidate’s Guide

amounted to an agency interpretation of the statute, which should be afforded deference. Objectors

point out that the Candidate’s Guide contains a clear warning that it is not to be relied on and that,

unlike the Board’s ruling in this case, it does not represent the considered view of the Board as a

whole. We need not decide whether the Board’s guidance in the Candidate’s Guide was an agency

interpretation entitled to any deference because our de novo review of the statutory provision leads

to the conclusion that the number of signatures required to satisfy section 7-10(h) is 334 signatures,

which is the 500 minimum in subsection (h), reduced by one-third for this election.

¶ 43                                    III. CONCLUSION

¶ 44   The candidates each submitted enough signatures to appear on the ballots seeking their

respective parties’ nomination for a seat on our supreme court. The circuit court’s judgment

reversing the Board’s decision and ordering the candidates’ names to appear on the ballots is

affirmed.

¶ 45   Circuit court judgment affirmed.

¶ 46   Board decision reversed.




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                                 No. 1-22-0678


Cite as:                 Hutchinson v. The Illinois State Board of Elections, 2022 IL
                         App (1st) 220678


Decision Under Review:   Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 2022
                         COEL 9, the Hon. Maureen O. Hannon, Judge Presiding.


Attorneys                John G. Fogarty, Jr. of the Law Office of John Fogarty, Jr. of
for                      Chicago, and Michael C. Dorf of The Law Offices of Michael
Appellant:               C. Dorf, LLC, of Chicago, for appellants.


Attorneys                Keri-Lyn J. Krafthefer and Daniel J. Bolin of Ancel Glink, PC,
for                      of Chicago, Mark C. Curran, Jr. of Libertyville, Michael
Appellee:                Kreloff of Northbrook, and Ed Mullen of the Westside Justice
                         Center of Chicago, for appellees.




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