2022 IL 127239
IN THE
SUPREME COURT
OF
THE STATE OF ILLINOIS
(Docket No. 127239)
MICHAEL NOLAND et al., Appellees and Cross-Appellants, v.
SUSANA A. MENDOZA, in Her Official Capacity as Comptroller
of the State of Illinois, Appellant and Cross-Appellee.
Opinion filed September 22, 2022.
JUSTICE NEVILLE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Chief Justice Anne M. Burke and Justices Theis, Michael J. Burke, Overstreet,
and Carter concurred in the judgment and opinion.
Justice Holder White took no part in the decision.
OPINION
¶1 Michael Noland and James Clayborne (collectively, plaintiffs) are former
members of the General Assembly who voted for a series of laws that reduced
legislators’ salaries (Salary Reduction Laws). After leaving office, plaintiffs filed
an action alleging that the reductions violated article IV, section 11, of the Illinois
Constitution (Legislative Salary Clause) (Ill. Const. 1970, art. IV, § 11). Plaintiffs
were seeking a writ of mandamus compelling defendant, Susan A. Mendoza, the
Comptroller of the State of Illinois, to pay them and all affected legislators their
disputed salaries. Defendant asserted the affirmative defenses of waiver, laches,
and violation of the statute of limitations. The parties filed cross-motions for
summary judgment, and the Cook County circuit court found that the affirmative
defenses of laches and waiver failed as a matter of law and that the statute of
limitations defense lacked merit. The court also found that, although plaintiffs were
entitled to relief for themselves, they could not obtain relief on behalf of nonparty
legislators. The court found that the laws at issue were facially unconstitutional and
entered partial summary judgment for plaintiffs, ruling that they were entitled to
mandamus relief against defendant on their claims seeking payment of their
disputed salaries. The court then made findings under Illinois Supreme Court Rule
18 (eff. Sept. 1, 2006), and defendant appealed. Because the circuit court’s
judgment invalidated a statute of the State of Illinois, the appeal was taken directly
to this court pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 302 (eff. Oct. 4, 2011). For
the reasons that follow, we reverse the judgment of the circuit court.
¶2 I. BACKGROUND
¶3 The following facts are undisputed. Under the Compensation Review Act
(Compensation Act) (25 ILCS 120/1 et seq. (West 2008)), the Compensation
Review Board recommends salaries for various state officials, including members
of the General Assembly. In 1990, the board recommended that the salaries of
various state officials, including members of the General Assembly, be subject to
annual cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs). And the General Assembly approved
that recommendation.
¶4 Following the severe recession that began in 2007, the General Assembly
passed a series of laws that reduced its members’ salaries by eliminating the COLAs
and requiring all legislators to take unpaid furlough days. The initial Salary
Reduction Laws were enacted into law in 2009, after being passed by the vote of at
least three-fifths of the members elected to each house of the General Assembly.
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¶5 A. Salary Reduction Laws
¶6 The General Assembly enacted Public Act 96-800 (eff. Oct. 30, 2009), which
eliminated the COLAs that legislators were entitled to for the fiscal year running
from July 1, 2009, to June 30, 2010. The COLA-elimination law provided, in
relevant part, that members of the General Assembly were prohibited from
receiving
“any increase in compensation that would otherwise apply based on a cost of
living adjustment, as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th
General Assembly, for or during the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2009.” 25
ILCS 120/5.6 (West 2010) (added by Pub. Act 96-800, § 35 (eff. Oct. 30,
2009)).
In each of the following years through 2019, the General Assembly passed similar
laws, eliminating COLA increases for its members. 1
¶7 In addition to the suspension of the COLAs, the General Assembly enacted
Public Act 96-45 (eff. July 15, 2009), which mandated that members of the General
Assembly were required to forfeit 12 days of compensation for the fiscal year July
1, 2009, to June 30, 2010. The law mandating that legislators take furlough days
provided in relevant part:
“During the fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2009, every member of the General
Assembly is required to forfeit 12 days of compensation. The State Comptroller
shall deduct the equivalent of 1/261 of the annual compensation of each
member from the compensation of that member in each month of the fiscal
1
The Public Acts suspending COLAs and the corresponding amendments to the Compensation
Act are as follows: Pub. Act 96-958, § 35-5 (eff. July 1, 2010); Pub. Act 97-71, § 10 (eff. June 30,
2011); Pub. Act 97-718, § 10 (eff. June 29, 2012); Pub. Act 98-30, § 10 (eff. June 24, 2013); Pub.
Act 98-682, § 60 (eff. June 30, 2014); Pub. Act 99-355, § 10 (eff. Aug. 13, 2015); Pub. Act 99-523,
art. 5, § 5-8 (eff. June 30, 2016); Pub. Act 100-25, § 10 (eff. July 26, 2017); Pub. Act 100-587, § 70-
10 (eff. June 4, 2018).
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year.” 25 ILCS 115/1.5 (West 2010) (added by Pub. Act 96-45, § 5-26 (eff. July
15, 2009)).
In each of the following years through 2014, the General Assembly passed similar
laws, mandating furlough days for its members. 2
¶8 Noland, who served in the Illinois Senate from January 2007 until January
2017, was a cosponsor of the laws and routinely voted for them. Declaring his
support for the laws, Noland publicly stated that “most working families in Illinois
are not seeing raises” and “the least we can do is cut our own pay.”
¶9 B. Complaint and Other Court Filings
¶ 10 Several months after leaving office in 2017, Noland filed this action alleging
that the Salary Reduction Laws violated the Legislative Salary Clause of the Illinois
Constitution. Article IV, section 11, of the Illinois Constitution provides:
“A member shall receive a salary and allowances as provided by law, but
changes in the salary of a member shall not take effect during the term for which
he has been elected.” Ill. Const. 1970, art. IV, § 11.
¶ 11 Noland sued in his “official capacity as a former member of the Illinois Senate”
and requested similar relief for other members of the General Assembly who had
not joined the suit as plaintiffs. He named Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza as
defendant.
¶ 12 Defendant moved to dismiss the action, asserting that Noland lacked standing
to seek relief in his “official capacity” as a former senator. The circuit court agreed,
stating: “plaintiff, in our case, cannot bring this case in his official capacity. He no
longer is a member of the Illinois Senate. And as such, he cannot sue as a public
official or represent the Senate.”
2
The Public Acts imposing furlough days and the corresponding amendments to the General
Assembly Compensation Act are as follows: Pub. Act 96-958, § 5-10 (eff. July 1, 2010); Pub. Act
97-71, § 5 (eff. June 30, 2011); Pub. Act 97-718, § 5 (eff. June 29, 2012); Pub. Act 98-30, § 5 (eff.
June 24, 2013).
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¶ 13 With leave of court, Noland filed an amended complaint in which he sued in
his individual capacity and added as a plaintiff James Clayborne—who was still
serving in the Senate but had announced that he would not seek reelection—both
in his individual capacity and in his official capacity as a member of the Illinois
Senate. Counts I to IV of the amended complaint sought a declaratory judgment
that the Salary Reduction Laws suspending COLAs mid-term and imposing unpaid
furlough days for Noland and Clayborne violated the Legislative Salary Clause,
were facially unconstitutional, and were void ab initio. Counts V and VI sought
mandamus relief requiring defendant to pay their disputed salaries and an order
requiring defendant to make these payments to plaintiffs and all other members of
the General Assembly affected by the Salary Reduction Laws.
¶ 14 Defendant moved to dismiss the action, arguing that the Legislative Salary
Clause only prohibited increases, ss reductions, in legislators’ salaries. The circuit
court denied the motion and ordered defendant to file an answer. Defendant
answered, denying plaintiffs were entitled to a declaratory judgment or mandamus
relief. She further alleged as an affirmative defense that Clayborne—who was not
running for reelection and whose term of office would soon expire—lacked
standing to sue in his official capacity.
¶ 15 Plaintiffs moved for partial summary judgment on their claims for declaratory
relief (counts I to IV). Defendant filed a cross-motion for summary judgment on all
claims.
¶ 16 C. Circuit Court Proceedings
¶ 17 After briefing, the circuit court granted defendant’s motion to the extent that it
challenged Clayborne’s standing to sue in his official capacity. The court also
granted plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment on Counts I to IV, holding
that the Legislative Salary Clause prohibits mid-term changes, whether decreases
or increases, in legislators’ salaries during their terms in office.
¶ 18 The court held that plaintiffs’ constitutional challenge to the Salary Reduction
Laws could not be an as-applied challenge because the court had “not held an
evidentiary hearing” and, therefore, found the laws were “facially
unconstitutional.” Counts V and VI were still unresolved.
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¶ 19 Following the ruling, defendant moved for leave to file an amended pleading
asserting the affirmative defenses of laches, waiver, and violation of the statute of
limitations. Plaintiffs opposed the motion, arguing inter alia that such an
amendment would be “futile” because none of these defenses were legally “viable.”
¶ 20 The circuit court permitted defendant to file an amended answer and ruled that
she could assert the defense that plaintiffs’ claims were barred by the statute of
limitations, but waiver and laches could not be asserted. The court determined that
the defenses of laches and waiver were legally insufficient.
¶ 21 Thereafter, defendant filed an amended affirmative defense raising violation of
the statute of limitations. To avoid any forfeiture, the pleading noted that the
defenses of laches and waiver were omitted only because the court disallowed
them.
¶ 22 The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment on plaintiffs’ mandamus
claims, counts V and VI. First, the court found that the Salary Reduction Laws were
“facially unconstitutional” and therefore “void ab initio.” Second, the court found
that defendant’s statute of limitations defense lacked merit because plaintiffs’
mandamus counts did not become “ripe” until the court first declared the Salary
Reduction Laws unconstitutional. Third, the court found that plaintiffs were entitled
to relief for themselves because they were seeking redress in their individual
capacities, but they could not obtain relief on behalf of nonparty legislators.
Therefore, the court granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, in part,
finding that they were entitled to a judgment against defendant on their mandamus
counts seeking payment of their salaries, and the court ordered defendant to pay
plaintiffs’ salaries that were withheld under the Salary Reduction Laws in the
amounts of $71,507.43 for Noland and $104,412.93 for Clayborne. Finally, the
court incorporated its orders in a final judgment that included a finding under
Illinois Supreme Court Rule 18 (eff. Sept. 1, 2006).
¶ 23 Defendant filed a timely notice of direct appeal to this Court. Ill. S. Ct. R. 302
(eff. Oct. 4, 2011). Plaintiffs timely filed a cross-appeal regarding the circuit court’s
judgment denying relief for nonparty legislators. Ill. S. Ct. R. 303 (eff. July 1,
2017).
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¶ 24 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 25 Defendant argues that the Salary Reduction Laws validly apply to legislative
terms beginning after any of the laws took effect; thus, they were constitutional as
applied. Defendant also contends that the circuit court erred in denying the
application of her affirmative defenses of laches, waiver, and violation of the statute
of limitations. Defendant specifically maintains that plaintiffs’ claims under the
Legislative Salary Clause for payments of public funds to them are not claims to
enforce public rights but rather private rights subject to affirmative defenses. In
addressing plaintiffs’ claim for cross-relief, defendant maintains that the circuit
court correctly held that plaintiffs may not obtain a judgment that grants relief in
favor of nonparty legislators.
¶ 26 Plaintiffs respond that the circuit court correctly held that the Salary Reduction
Laws were unconstitutional because they violated the Legislative Salary Clause of
the Illinois Constitution. Ill. Const. 1970, art. IV, § 11. Plaintiffs contend that there
is no set of circumstances where defendant could comply with the Salary Reduction
Laws, agreeing with the circuit court that they are facially unconstitutional.
Plaintiffs maintain that the circuit court correctly held that the defenses of laches
and waiver were unavailable to defendant against plaintiffs’ public right to their
salaries as set by law. Plaintiffs also maintain that the circuit court did not err when
it granted partial summary judgment because they did not violate the statute of
limitations, as their mandamus claim accrued after the circuit court found the Salary
Reduction Laws unconstitutional. In requesting cross-relief, plaintiffs contend that
the circuit court erred in holding that they could not obtain relief on behalf of
nonparty legislators. Finally, plaintiffs argue that, because they are seeking to
enforce a public right that protects the right of the people of Illinois to a legislature
free from improper influence, they have standing to seek as an element of relief that
defendant comply with the Illinois Constitution and pay all affected members of
the General Assembly their disputed salaries. See id.
¶ 27 A. Constitutional Claim
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¶ 28 Here, the parties urge us to address the merits of plaintiffs’ constitutional claim.
We acknowledge this court’s long-standing rule that cases should be decided on
nonconstitutional grounds whenever possible and that we reach constitutional
issues only as a last resort. In re E.H., 224 Ill. 2d 172, 178 (2006). Courts must
avoid reaching constitutional issues unless necessary to decide a case. Id.; People
v. Hampton, 225 Ill. 2d 238, 244 (2007); Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Authority,
297 U.S. 288, 347 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concurring, joined by Stone, Roberts, and
Cardozo, JJ.) (“if a case can be decided on either of two grounds, one involving a
constitutional question, the other a question of statutory construction or general
law,” a court must “decide only the latter”). Consequently, because we find that the
affirmative defense of laches applies and bars plaintiffs’ claims, we find it
unnecessary to address the question regarding the constitutionality of the Salary
Reduction Laws.
¶ 29 B. Standard of Review
¶ 30 The circuit court’s decision that defendant’s affirmative defense of laches was
insufficient as a matter of law is reviewed de novo. In re S.L., 2014 IL 115424, ¶ 16
(when an issue is raised about the sufficiency of a defense incorporated in a
pleading, it presents a question of law which we review de novo).
¶ 31 C. Laches
¶ 32 Laches is an equitable doctrine that precludes the assertion of a claim by a
litigant whose unreasonable delay in raising that claim has prejudiced the opposing
party. Tully v. State, 143 Ill. 2d 425, 432 (1991). Laches is an affirmative defense
asserted against a party “ ‘who has knowingly slept upon his rights and acquiesced
for a great length of time, [citation] and its existence depends on whether, under all
circumstances of a particular case, a plaintiff is chargeable with want of due
diligence in failing to institute proceedings before he did.’ ” Tillman v. Pritzker,
2021 IL 126387, ¶ 25 (quoting Pyle v. Ferrell, 12 Ill. 2d 547, 552 (1958)). Laches
turns on “ ‘the inequity of permitting the claim to be enforced, an inequity founded
upon some change in the condition or relation of the property and parties.’ ” Id.
(quoting Pyle, 12 Ill. 2d at 552). “ ‘The doctrine is grounded in the equitable notion
that courts are reluctant to come to the aid of a party who has knowingly slept on
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his rights to the detriment of the opposing party.’ ” Id. (quoting Tully, 143 Ill. 2d at
432).
¶ 33 Two elements are necessary for the application of laches: (1) “ ‘lack of due
diligence by the party asserting the claim’ ” and (2) “ ‘prejudice to the opposing
party.’ ” Id. (quoting Van Milligan v. Board of Fire & Police Commissioners, 158
Ill. 2d 85, 89 (1994)). Whether laches applies depends on the facts of each case. Id.
¶ 34 1. Plaintiffs’ Lack of Due Diligence
¶ 35 a. Plaintiffs Assert a Private Right
¶ 36 Plaintiffs argue that they are suing to establish a public right and that this court
should compel defendant to comply with the Legislative Salary Clause of the
Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970, art. IV, § 11) and pay them their disputed
salaries. Plaintiffs assert that a public officer’s right to his salary is not an individual
right but rather a public right that attaches to the office and belongs to the citizens
of Illinois. Plaintiffs contend that a public officeholder’s right to compensation is
not based on any personal or contractual rights but rather a constitutional right and
that they as individuals cannot forfeit, waive, or gift this right by affirmative action
or by delay in seeking to enforce it. We disagree.
¶ 37 Plaintiffs rely on People ex rel. Northrup v. City Council of Chicago, 308 Ill.
App. 284 (1941), for the proposition that their disputed salary is a public right
protected by law, to which they are entitled. We find their reliance on Northrup
misplaced.
¶ 38 In Northrup, plaintiffs, who were serving as aldermen, sought the issuance of a
writ of mandamus to compel the City of Chicago (City) to pay salary amounts that
were withheld between 1932 and 1935 because of salary reduction ordinances
enacted by the city council. Id. at 285. The plaintiffs argued that, as elected officers,
the ordinances resulted in mid-term salary reductions that violated the public right
to their salary as set by law and the public policy of the State. Id. Numerous
plaintiffs had voted in favor of the ordinances, and each of the plaintiffs accepted
the reduced salary payments in monthly installments during the entire period from
1932 to 1935. Id. at 286-87. The plaintiffs waited several years after the first
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ordinance was passed to file suit. Id. The City asserted the following as defenses:
laches, the statute of limitations, and that the withheld salaries were a gift by the
plaintiffs to the City. Id. at 287. The court rejected the City’s defenses as
unavailable, as they were contrary to the constitution, and issued the writ of
mandamus. Id. at 287-88.
¶ 39 First, in the case at bar, the flaw in plaintiffs’ argument is that they are suing in
their individual capacity and not in an official capacity as former members of the
Illinois Senate. A claim by a former public official seeking payment of
compensation from public funds is the assertion of a private right to protect a
personal entitlement, not a public right on behalf of the people or for the benefit of
the people collectively. Murphy v. City of Park Ridge, 298 Ill. 66, 72 (1921)
(finding that the petitioner, who filed in his individual name and not in the name of
the people, sought to enforce a private right); 4 William Blackstone, Commentaries
*7 (defining public rights as those rights held collectively by the community).
Plaintiffs filed in their individual names and not in the name of the people of
Illinois, and they sued for the payment of public funds to themselves. Thus, the
public has no interest in the collection of plaintiffs’ private claims. See Spokeo, Inc.
v. Robins, 578 U.S. 330, 347 (2016) (holding that public rights are not implicated
when private individuals sue to redress violations of their own private rights);
Schenck v. Pro-Choice Network of Western New York, 519 U.S. 357, 376 (1997)
(finding that an individual typically vindicates violations of private rights). Here,
we agree with the circuit court that, because plaintiffs are suing in their individual
capacity, they are asserting a private right.
¶ 40 Second, courts have determined that claims involving public funds, which are
subject to stringent rules governing public budgets, present a compelling case for
applying the equitable defense of laches. In Tillman, this court determined that lack
of diligence encompassed the petitioner’s 2-year and 16-year delays in bringing his
taxpayer actions to restrain the disbursement of public funds, while having notice
and knowledge of defendants’ conduct and the opportunity to file suit. 2021 IL
126387, ¶¶ 26-27. In Monson v. County of Grundy, 394 Ill. App. 3d 1091, 1094
(2009), the appellate court explained that, when the plaintiff files a complaint
challenging budget decisions for a fiscal year that has ended, laches applies. The
appellate court found that the plaintiff’s mandamus action seeking repayment of
public funds was barred by laches because he filed suit after the defendant county
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approved the budget and the fiscal year at issue had ended. Id. at 1095. The court
observed that the plaintiff was requesting funds that were no longer available. Id.;
see also Solomon v. North Shore Sanitary District, 48 Ill. 2d 309, 322 (1971)
(holding that a delay of over two years before bringing suit, coupled with the
expenditure of the funds, required that the plaintiffs’ claim be barred by laches);
People ex rel. Mulvey v. City of Chicago, 292 Ill. App. 589, 595-96 (1937) (holding
that laches applies where there has been years of inaction in asserting a right for
public funds which justified the denial of relief); Maynard v. Board of Education,
357 S.E.2d 246, 255 (W. Va. 1987) (finding that a party must exercise due diligence
when seeking to challenge the legality of a matter involving expenditure of public
funds).
¶ 41 Third, we observe that courts have found that a constitutional claim can become
time-barred, just as any other claim. Block v. North Dakota ex rel. Board of
University & School Lands, 461 U.S. 273, 292 (1983) (holding that constitutional
claims are subject to becoming time-barred and nothing in the constitution requires
otherwise); Langendorf v. City of Urbana, 197 Ill. 2d 100, 110-11 (2001) (holding
that the need to encourage claimants to investigate and pursue causes of action in
order to discourage delay, in time, outweighs the right to litigate a constitutional
claim). In addition, courts have found that laches can operate as a bar to relief based
on a claim that a statute is unconstitutional. Tillman, 2021 IL 126387, ¶ 27 (delay
in challenging the constitutional claim resulted in the application of laches); Tully,
143 Ill. 2d at 433-34, (delay in asserting a constitutional challenge for over a year
barred by laches); Tolbert v. Godinez, 2020 IL App (4th) 180587, ¶ 27 (determining
that constitutional claims are not precluded from a laches defense); Southside Fair
Housing Committee v. City of New York, 928 F.2d 1336, 1356 (2d Cir. 1991)
(holding that the doctrine of laches can bar a constitutional claim); Fundamental
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints v. Horne, 2012 UT 66, ¶ 45, 289 P.3d
502 (finding that a constitutional claim is subject to laches, which indicates that a
particular litigant has forfeited a right to complain).
¶ 42 Here, plaintiffs, who are suing in their individual and not in their official
capacity, have slept on their rights, and we will not come to the aid of such
complainants. See Tillman, 2021 IL 126387, ¶ 25; Tully, 143 Ill. 2d at 432.
Plaintiffs’ lack of due diligence in bringing their private claims supports application
of laches. Consequently, we find that plaintiffs are estopped from bringing their
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claims seeking payment of their salaries excluded by the Salary Reduction Laws
because of their unreasonable delay in pursuing the action. Finally, to the extent
that Northrup suggests that laches cannot be a viable defense regarding a
constitutional claim for a public official’s salary, it is now overruled.
¶ 43 b. Plaintiffs’ Acceptance of a Reduced Salary Is
Not Against Public Policy and Precludes Recovery
¶ 44 Plaintiffs, relying on Galpin v. City of Chicago, 269 Ill. 27 (1915), and Pitsch
v. Continental & Commercial National Bank of Chicago, 305 Ill. 265 (1922),
contend that this court has determined that the reduction of a public official’s salary
mid-term is against public policy and void. We do not believe these cases support
plaintiffs’ position.
¶ 45 In Galpin, 269 Ill. at 41, the state’s attorney of Cook County made a campaign
promise, which he kept after his election, to pay certain money due him back to the
county. After he died, his estate sued to recover the amount ceded to the county. Id.
The court rejected an estoppel defense, finding that it was “contrary to public policy
for candidates to attempt to attain such office by promises made to the electors to
perform the duties of the office for any other or different compensation than that
fixed by law.” (Emphasis added.) Id. The court determined that such promises,
being illegal, cannot be enforced. Id.
¶ 46 In Pitsch, 305 Ill. at 270-71, a notary public agreed to accept for his official
services something different from that provided by statute. The amount to which
the notary public was entitled was received by the bank, and the amount belonged
to the notary, yet the bank retained the greater part of the money received. Id. at
270. The court observed that every person for whom such services are rendered is
entitled to receive them at the same price. Id. at 271. The court determined that a
private contract whereby a public officer whose compensation is fixed by statute
agrees to accept for his official services something different from that provided by
statute is contrary to public policy and void. Id. at 272.
¶ 47 We find plaintiffs’ reliance on Galpin and Pitsch misplaced. Galpin and Pitsch
involved two litigants who were public officers who made promises to accept less
money than they were entitled to receive by statute. The courts found the promises
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made by the public officials to accept less salary than they were entitled to receive
by statute to be contrary to public policy and, therefore, illegal and unenforceable.
In this case, two legislators brought lawsuits, in their individual capacity, to recover
their salaries that were reduced by two public laws, one that suspended the
legislators’ COLAs and one that mandated that the legislators take furlough days.
The public laws reducing the legislators’ salaries were never found to be
unconstitutional and remain in effect. Therefore, the legislators’ lawsuit was not
barred because they attempted to enforce an illegal and unenforceable promise but
by laches because of their delay in bringing their lawsuit.
¶ 48 Further, laches is a recognized defense against claims alleging underpayment
of public salaries established by law. In Deasey v. City of Chicago, 412 Ill. 151,
152 (1952), numerous fire and police officers filed a complaint in 1950 to recover
portions of salaries allegedly due them for the years 1931 to 1939 from the City of
Chicago. This court determined that lack of due diligence in pursuing their claim
appeared on the face of the complaint. Id. at 155. The officers were aware, because
of nine annual appropriation bills passed during the period, that their salaries had
been lowered and that they were being consistently paid at a reduced rate, yet they
did not act. Id. The court noted that, because the officers had year-to-year
knowledge of the salary reductions, they should have sought earlier adjudication of
their rights and were guilty of laches because they waited 11 years to file suit. Id.
at 156; Lashever v. Zion-Benton Township High School, 2014 IL App (2d) 130947,
¶ 7 (determining that the defense of laches was available where the plaintiff, a
former public-sector employee charged with violations of the Whistleblower Act
(740 ILCS 174/1 et seq. (West 2012)) that caused her to resign, was seeking back
pay after a delay of seven months from when she resigned until filing suit); Lee v.
City of Decatur, 256 Ill. App. 3d 192, 196 (1994) (finding that laches applies to
proceedings requesting monetary claims for back pay).
¶ 49 In Ziemer v. City of New Orleans, 197 So. 754, 759-60 (La. 1940), the court
found that the doctrine of estoppel by laches was applicable to the plaintiffs’ claims
for back pay. For several years, from 1935 to 1939, the plaintiffs accepted the
reduced pay as fixed by the board of commissioners without protest. Id. at 759. The
court reasoned that the plaintiffs permitted the city to spend the funds for other
purposes while neglecting to timely file their claims for a year or more. Id. The
court held that to permit the plaintiffs to now recover would impose a hardship on
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the city and its affairs, as the plaintiffs had not proceeded with due diligence and
had permitted an unreasonable delay to elapse before asserting their claims. Id.
¶ 50 In Pratts v. City of Duluth, 289 N.W. 788, 789 (Minn. 1939), the officers and
employees of a municipal corporation who knew of the city’s financial straits had
acquiesced in contributions from their salary to the city. The court quoted Eugene
McQuillin in his work on the Law of Municipal Corporations that
“ ‘it has frequently been held that the agreement of an officer or employee, in
time of economic depression or other emergency, to accept a deduction, or to
donate or contribute part of his salary to the city, is valid, and is not against
public policy, and precludes any recovery of the amount so deducted or
contributed. This has been said to be true notwithstanding a statute prohibiting
reduction of salaries during the term of office.’ ” Id. at 790 (quoting 2 Eugene
McQuillin, The Law of Municipal Corporations § 542, at 332 (2d rev. ed.
1939)).
The court concluded that an agreement to receive a reduction in salary upon the
suggestion of the council is not an agreement contrary to public policy and
constituted an estoppel. Id.; Glaser v. City of Burlington, 1 N.W. 709, 713 (Iowa
1942) (finding that, pursuant to a voluntary request, for employees who accepted
the reduced pay without protest for the year in question, it would be unjust and
inequitable to permit them to repudiate their agreement for the first time nearly five
years after it was entered).
¶ 51 Here, plaintiffs, with the power to set their own salaries, introduced, sponsored,
endorsed, voted for, publicly touted their sponsorship of, and acquiesced to the
reduction in their statutory salaries. Indeed, they may have benefitted in their
reelection endeavors in part, based on their championing of this position of a
decrease in salary for the benefit of the public good of the State of Illinois in a time
of monetary need. The public was misled by these plaintiffs when, soon after
retiring from office or indicating an intention not to run for retention, plaintiffs filed
this lawsuit claiming that defendant was not allowed to implement a change in their
salary and that defendant must pay them the amounts of the reductions in their
salaries that occurred over an eight-year period of time. See Deasey, 412 Ill. at 156
(finding that officers were estopped from seeking to recover back pay after entering
knowingly into a reduction in salary in a time of financial depression and waiting
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several years to file suit); 4 McQuillin, The Law of Municipal Corporations
§ 12:212 (July 2022 Update) (reasoning that an agreement, in time of economic
depression, to accept a deduction in statutory salary is valid and not against public
policy). Consequently, where plaintiffs are members of the body that set their own
salaries and affirmatively voted to accept a reduction in those salaries, public policy
does not preclude the defense of laches.
¶ 52 In addition, the lack of due diligence in plaintiffs’ assertion of their claim is
readily apparent from the record, in that it is undisputed that plaintiffs waited to file
their action until eight years elapsed following enactment of the fiscal 2010 Salary
Reduction Laws and all subsequent enactments. See Tillman, 2021 IL 126387, ¶ 26
(finding that a 16-year delay in filing a claim is unreasonable); People ex rel. Hollie
v. Chicago Park District, 296 Ill. App. 365, 381 (1938) (determining that laches
applies because the cause of action arose in January 1932 and suit was not
commenced until four years later, and if the defendants were liable, suit could have
been brought and the amounts could have been appropriated for and paid during the
years of 1932, 1933, 1934, 1935, and 1936). Here, similarly, plaintiffs have by their
silence for a number of years acquiesced in the reduction of their salaries. We find
that plaintiffs are barred by their own conduct from asserting any rights to
additional salary. Consequently, we conclude that the unreasonable delay
substantiates plaintiffs’ lack of due diligence, and the first element of laches has
been met in this case.
¶ 53 2. Defendant Was Prejudiced by Plaintiffs’ Unreasonable Delay
¶ 54 The second element of laches is whether defendant suffered prejudice because
of plaintiffs’ delay in filing the action. Tillman, 2021 IL 126387, ¶ 25; Holland v.
Richards, 4 Ill. 2d 570, 577-78 (1955). When plaintiffs file a complaint challenging
budget decisions for a fiscal year that has ended, laches applies because the
unreasonable delay prejudices the budgeting authority. Monson, 394 Ill. App. 3d at
1094-95 (determining that, when the complaint was filed, the budget years had
concluded and presumably the funds at issue were no longer available and that it
would be highly prejudicial to require the defendant to pay these amounts long after
these funds have become a part of the defendant’s budget history (citing Pace v.
Regional Transportation Authority, 346 Ill. App. 3d 125, 144 (2003))).
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¶ 55 Plaintiffs’ claims are for past years for which defendant had made budget
decisions that included the monies saved by the Salary Reduction Laws. Defendant
expended money from the legislators’ salaries to pay State obligations for previous
years, for the public good, while plaintiffs sat idle and did nothing. Defendant is
prejudiced because she, in her official capacity as Comptroller of the State of
Illinois, would be required to transfer funds already assigned elsewhere to pay
salaries allegedly owed for legislators’ services performed in previous years.
Defendant will also suffer prejudice if relief is granted several years after the
salaries became due because it will be impossible to restore the monies that existed
in the budgets for those years. See Tully, 143 Ill. 2d at 432 (finding that courts are
reluctant to come to the aid of a party who knowingly slept on rights to the detriment
of the opposing party); People ex rel. Casey v. Health & Hospitals Governing
Comm’n, 69 Ill. 2d 108, 115, (1977) (finding that it must appear that the plaintiff’s
unreasonable delay in asserting his rights has prejudiced and misled the defendant
or caused him to pursue a course different from what he would have otherwise taken
(citing People ex rel. Griffin v. City of Chicago, 382 Ill. 500, 504 (1943))); Mulvey,
292 Ill. App. at 611 (holding that an unreasonable delay and neglect of the plaintiffs
in asserting what they call their unquestionable right, taken in connection with the
fact that the municipality would be seriously prejudiced by such delay and neglect
if their claim were sustained, make them guilty of laches of the grossest kind); Lee,
256 Ill. App. 3d at 197 (holding that prejudice to the defendant is inherent in civil
service cases “ ‘where a detriment or inconvenience to the public will result’ ”
(quoting City of Chicago v. Condell, 224 Ill. 595, 598 (1906))). Because
defendant’s prejudice is brought on by the fact that her budgets for legislators’
salaries in previous years no longer exist and by plaintiffs’ delay in filing this
lawsuit, granting relief at this late stage would be detrimental to the State’s
budgeting authority. Accordingly, because defendant has been prejudiced by
plaintiffs’ unreasonable delay, the second element of laches has been met in this
case.
¶ 56 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 57 We conclude that under the facts here, where plaintiffs, former legislators,
agreed to, acquiesced in, and voted for the Salary Reduction Laws, plaintiffs cannot
now be allowed to challenge the reductions in their salaries during their previous
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terms in office. We find that the defense of laches bars plaintiffs’ mandamus counts
for their disputed salaries. Because laches bars plaintiffs’ mandamus counts, we do
not need to reach the circuit court’s findings that the affirmative defenses of waiver
and statute of limitations lacked merit or that plaintiffs’ request for cross-relief on
behalf of the nonparty legislators lacked merit. Further, we vacate the circuit court’s
orders finding that the Legislative Salary Clause prohibits mid-term changes in
legislators’ salaries during their terms in office, finding the Salary Reduction Laws
unconstitutional, and granting plaintiffs’ mandamus relief in the amounts of
$71,507.43 for Noland and $104,412.93 for Clayborne. Judgment is entered for the
defendant.
¶ 58 Circuit court judgment reversed in part and vacated in part.
¶ 59 JUSTICE HOLDER WHITE took no part in the consideration or decision of
this case.
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