Arlington Heights Police Pension Fund v. Pritzker , 2023 IL App (2d) 220198 ( 2023 )


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    2023 IL App (2d) 220198
    No. 2-22-0198
    Opinion filed February 7, 2023
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    SECOND DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE ARLINGTON HEIGHTS POLICE      )      Appeal from the Circuit Court
    PENSION FUND, THE AURORA POLICE )        of Kane County.
    PENSION FUND, THE CHAMPAIGN       )
    POLICE PENSION FUND, THE CHICAGO )
    HEIGHTS POLICE PENSION FUND, THE )
    CHICAGO RIDGE POLICE PENSION      )
    FUND, THE CICERO POLICE PENSION   )
    FUND, THE De KALB POLICE PENSION  )
    FUND, THE ELGIN POLICE PENSION    )
    FUND, THE ELMHURST POLICE PENSION )
    FUND, THE EVANSTON POLICE PENSION )
    FUND, THE MOKENA POLICE PENSION )
    FUND, THE PALOS HEIGHTS POLICE    )
    PENSION FUND, THE RANTOUL POLICE )
    PENSION FUND, THE VILLA PARK      )
    POLICE PENSION FUND, THE WOOD     )
    DALE POLICE PENSION FUND, THE     )
    WOODRIDGE POLICE PENSION FUND,    )
    THE MAYWOOD FIREFIGHTERS’PENSION)
    FUND, THE PLEASANTVIEW            )
    FIREFIGHTERS’ PENSION FUND, THOMAS)
    HENDERSON,SCOTT MAY, LAWRENCE )
    SUTTLE, DANIEL HOFFMAN, PATRICK )
    SIMONS, PATRICK KELLY, GENE       )
    KEELER, STEVEN ANKARLO, LEE       )
    MORRIS, DEAN MANN,PAUL MOTT, JIM )
    KAYES, JAMES ROSCHER, THOMAS      )
    QUIGLEY, VICTOR VALDEZ, THOMAS    )
    TUREK, WILLIAM CZAJKOWSKI, DAVID )
    DELANEY, RICHARD WEIKAL, DAVID    )
    FLOWERS SR., ROBERT MILLER, DAN   )
    RANKOVICH, AARON WERNICK,         )
    TIMOTHY SCHOOLMASTER, DAVE        )
    LOEHMAN, MIKE HERBERT, MATTHEW )
    
    2023 IL App (2d) 220198
    BROSS, MICHAEL TITTLE, SCOTT                   )
    SHROEDER, BENJAMIN DEFILIPPIS,                 )
    JORDAN ANDERSON, DENNIS KOLETSOS,)
    WILLIAM BODNAR, and FRED                       )
    MALAYTER,                                      )
    )
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,                )
    )
    v.                                             ) No. 21-CH-55
    )
    JAY ROBERT “J.B.” PRITZKER, in His             )
    Official Capacity as Governor of the State of )
    Illinois; CHRISTOPHER B. MEISTER, in His )
    Official Capacity as Executive Director of the )
    Illinois Finance Authority; DANA POPISH        )
    SEVERINGHAUS, in Her Official Capacity as )
    Acting Director of Insurance;                  )
    THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES                          )
    FOR THE POLICE OFFICERS’ PENSION               )
    INVESTMENT FUND; and THE BOARD                 )
    OF TRUSTEES FOR THE FIREFIGHTERS’ )
    PENSION INVESTMENT FUND,                       ) Honorable
    ) Robert K. Villa,
    Defendants-Appellees.                 ) Judge, Presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    PRESIDING JUSTICE McLAREN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justices Hutchinson and Jorgensen concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     The plaintiffs who are individual active- and retired-beneficiary representatives from
    multiple suburban and downstate police and firefighter pension funds appeal from the trial court’s
    order granting summary judgment in favor of defendants. We affirm.
    ¶2                                     I. BACKGROUND
    ¶3     In 2019, defendant Governor Jay Robert “J.B.” Pritzker signed into law Public Act 101-
    610 (eff. Jan. 1, 2020) (Act) that, inter alia, amended portions of the Illinois Pension Code (40
    ILCS 5/1-101 et seq. (West 2018)). Prior to the Act, there were approximately 650 local police
    and firefighter pension funds for municipalities with populations between 5000 and 500,000.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220198
    These funds were governed by five-member boards comprised of two appointed members, two
    members elected by active members, and one member elected by other beneficiaries (i.e., retirees).
    
    Id.
     §§ 3-128, 4-121. Each board was responsible for determining the retirement, disability, and
    death benefits payable to fund members and other beneficiaries. Id. §§3-148, 4-139. Member and
    employer contribution requirements were set in the Pension Code. See id. §§ 3-125, 3-125.1, 4-
    118, 4-118.1. Employers were required to make contributions that, added to the employee
    contributions, were sufficient to cover the fund’s “normal cost” (the amount necessary to pay the
    additional benefits earned by current services) and to fund 90% of its actuarial liabilities by 2040,
    paying down unfunded liabilities by a specified amount each year. Id. §§ 3-125, 4-118.
    ¶4     Among other things, the Act consolidated all existing relevant police and firefighter
    pension fund assets into two statewide police and firefighter pension investment funds, one for
    police and one for firefighters. The local funds were to transfer custody of and investment
    responsibility for their assets to the appropriate investment fund, which was to invest and
    administer the pooled assets of the funds collectively. However, each local fund retained a separate
    “account” such that the “operations and financial condition of each participating pension fund
    account shall not affect the account balance of any other participating pension fund.” 40 ILCS
    5/22B-118(c), 22C-118(c) (West 2020). The returns on the investments were to be “allocated and
    distributed pro rata among each participating pension fund account in accordance with the value
    of the pension fund assets attributable to each fund.” Id. The statewide investment fund boards
    were to be comprised of nine members: three officers or executives from participating
    municipalities, three active participants of the local funds (who were elected by active
    participants), two beneficiaries from the local funds (elected by beneficiaries), and one member
    recommended by the Illinois Municipal League (appointed by the governor and confirmed by the
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220198
    Senate). 
    Id.
     §§ 22B-115(b)(1)-(4), 22C-115(b)(1)-(4). The Act provided that the local funds
    retained “exclusive authority to adjudicate and award” retirement and other benefits, and the
    investment funds “shall not have the authority to control, alter, or modify, or the ability to review
    or intervene in, the proceedings or decisions” of the local funds. Id. §§ 3-124.3, 4-117.2. In
    addition, the Act authorized the Illinois Finance Authority to lend up to $7.5 million to each
    investment fund that, if borrowed, would be repaid with interest. Id. §§ 22B-120(h), 22C-120(h).
    ¶5     Plaintiffs filed a three-count complaint seeking declaratory, injunctive, and other relief and
    a finding that the Act violated article XIII, section 5, of the Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970,
    art. XIII, § 5), commonly known as the pension protection clause (count I), and/or article I, section
    16 of the Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 16), commonly known as the contracts
    clause (count II), and/or article I, section 15 of the Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970, art. I,
    § 15), commonly known as the takings clause (count III). The trial court granted certain of
    defendants’ motions to dismiss; all of the named funds were dismissed as plaintiffs for lack of
    standing, and count II was dismissed against the remaining plaintiffs for failing to state a cause of
    action under the contracts clause. These rulings are not challenged on appeal. The trial court later
    entered summary judgment on counts I and III in favor of defendants. It is from this grant of
    summary judgment that this appeal arises.
    ¶6                                         II. ANALYSIS
    ¶7     Plaintiffs contend that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of
    defendants. Summary judgment is appropriate only when “the pleadings, depositions, and
    admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to
    any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” 735 ILCS
    5/2-1005(c) (West 2020). A triable issue that will preclude the entry of summary judgment exists
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220198
    where the material facts are disputed or where reasonable persons might draw different inferences
    from undisputed facts. G.I.S. Venture v. Novak, 
    2014 IL App (2d) 130244
    , ¶ 8. In determining
    whether a genuine issue of material fact exists, we must construe the materials of record strictly
    against the movant and liberally in favor of the nonmoving party. Harlin v. Sears Roebuck & Co.,
    
    369 Ill. App. 3d 27
    , 31 (2006). While the use of summary judgment is to be encouraged as an aid
    in the expeditious disposition of a lawsuit, it is a drastic means of disposing of litigation and should
    be allowed only when the right of the moving party is clear and free from doubt. G.I.S. Venture,
    
    2014 IL App (2d) 130244
    , ¶ 8. A grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo. Harlin, 369 Ill.
    App. 3d at 31.
    ¶8      Plaintiffs first argue that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on count I,
    where the court found that the Act did not violate the pension protection clause, which states:
    “Membership in any pension or retirement system of the State, any unit of local government or
    school district, or any agency or instrumentality thereof, shall be an enforceable contractual
    relationship, the benefits of which shall not be diminished or impaired.” Ill. Const. 1970, art. XIII,
    § 5. Our supreme court has held that “the clause means precisely what it says: ‘if something
    qualifies as a benefit of the enforceable contractual relationship resulting from membership in one
    of the State’s pension or retirement systems, it cannot be diminished or impaired.’ ” In re Pension
    Reform Litigation, 
    2015 IL 118585
    , ¶ 45 (quoting Kanerva v. Weems, 
    2014 IL 115811
    , ¶ 38). Once
    someone begins work and becomes a member of a public retirement system, “any subsequent
    changes to the Pension Code that would diminish the benefits conferred by membership in the
    retirement system cannot be applied to that individual.” Id. ¶ 46. The protection of the pension
    protection clause “is broad because it ‘protects all of the benefits that flow from the contractual
    relationship arising from membership in a public retirement system.’ ” (Emphasis added.)
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220198
    Williamson County Board of Commissioners v. Board of Trustees of the Illinois Municipal
    Retirement Fund, 
    2020 IL 125330
    , ¶ 32 (quoting Matthews v. Chicago Transit Authority, 
    2016 IL 117638
    , ¶ 54).
    ¶9      Plaintiffs first assert that the Act violates the pension protection clause because it impairs
    the members’ rights to vote in the election of local pension board members “and to have that local
    board control and invest local pension funds.” According to plaintiffs, voting rights are a benefit
    that flows from the contractual relationship and, therefore, cannot be changed.
    ¶ 10    Plaintiffs are correct that the clause’s protections extend beyond the pension payment itself.
    For example, in Williamson County, the plaintiffs, all elected members of the Williamson County
    Board of Commissioners, had satisfied the requirements of the Pension Code to participate in the
    Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund (IMRF). The legislature subsequently amended the Pension
    Code to add a requirement that altered the IMRF eligibility for elected county board members,
    requiring county board adoption of an IMRF participation resolution within 90 days of each
    election when a member of the county board is elected or reelected. Williamson County, 
    2020 IL 125330
    , ¶ 9. The plaintiffs’ participation in IMRF was terminated when Williamson County failed
    to adopt such a resolution in a timely manner.
    ¶ 11    In finding the amendment to the Pension Code unconstitutional, our supreme court noted
    that “immediate and direct diminishments to public pension benefits *** is not the only category
    of unilateral legislative change prohibited by article XIII, section 5, of the Illinois Constitution.”
    Id. ¶ 40. To “illustrate this distinct protection of article XIII, section 5, of the Illinois Constitution
    that prohibits the legislature from unilaterally imposing new limitations or requirements on public
    pension benefits that did not exist when the public employee was hired” (id. ¶ 42), the court
    reviewed two cases in which the court had previously found improper new requirements placed on
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220198
    pension benefits: (1) Buddell v. Board of Trustees, 
    118 Ill. 2d 99
     (1987) (involving changes to
    employees’ right to purchase service credit for time spent in military service, without limitations),
    and (2) Carmichael v. Laborers’ & Retirement Board Employees’ Annuity & Benefit Fund, 
    2018 IL 122793
     (involving amendments to the Pension Code that eliminated the ability of the plaintiffs
    to purchase service credit during a leave of absence to work for a local union). Noting that “the
    calculation of retirement annuity benefit is based on a formula that considers the number of service
    credits of the employee and the employee’s final earnings on the date of retirement,” the court
    concluded that the termination of the plaintiffs’ continued participation in IMRF, predicated on
    the new statutory requirements, “decreased their service credits and negatively impacted their
    annuity benefit calculation.” Williamson County, 
    2020 IL 125330
    , ¶ 48. Thus, the amendment
    constituted a new requirement for the plaintiffs’ continued IMRF participation and it “diminished
    or impaired their protected public pension benefits.” Id. ¶ 50.
    ¶ 12   The benefits at issue in Williamson County, Buddell, and Carmichael were benefits that
    affected the participants’ ability to continue participation (Williamson County) or their ability to
    increase their service credits (Buddell and Carmichael), thereby negatively affecting the
    calculation of their eventual benefit payments. These are the types of benefits “that flow from the
    contractual relationship arising from membership in a public retirement system.” (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Id. ¶ 32. These benefits directly impacted the participants’ eventual
    pension benefit.
    ¶ 13   As our supreme court has said:
    “The benefits protected by the pension protection clause include those benefits attendant
    to membership in the State’s retirement system, such as subsidized health care, disability
    and life insurance coverage, and eligibility to receive a retirement annuity and survivor
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220198
    benefits (see Jones v. Municipal Employees’ Annuity & Benefit Fund, 
    2016 IL 119618
    ,
    ¶ 36; Kanerva, 
    2014 IL 115811
    , ¶¶ 39, 41), along with the right to purchase optional
    service credit in the state pension system for past military service (see Buddell v. Board of
    Trustees, 
    118 Ill. 2d 99
    , 105-06 (1987)).” Carmichael, 
    2018 IL 122793
    , ¶ 25.
    ¶ 14   We determine that the ability to vote in the election of local pension board members and
    to have that local board control and invest local pension funds is not of the same nature and
    essentiality as the ability to participate in the fund, accumulate credited time, or receive health
    care, disability, and life insurance coverage. Voting for the local board is, at best, ancillary to a
    participant’s receipt of the pension payment and other assets. The local boards were entrusted with
    investing the contributions so that payments could be made to participants. However, choosing
    who invests funds does not guarantee a particular outcome for benefit payments. The local boards
    also did not have any say in the actual method of funding; contribution requirements were set in
    the Pension Code. See 40 ILCS 5/3-125, 3-125.1, 4-118, 4-118.1 (West 2018). Our supreme court
    has held that the pension protection clause does not control the manner in which state and local
    governments fund their pension obligations. See Jones v. Municipal Employees’ Annuity and
    Benefit Fund of Chicago, 
    2016 IL 119618
    , ¶ 38. Voting for the board members who deal with the
    funding of the pension fund is no more than a procedure that may have some impact on the funding;
    it is not a direct impact on the payment of benefits. Where the methods of funding a retirement
    system are not governed by the pension protection clause, we cannot say that the right to choose
    who invests the funds of the system is more of a protected benefit. Thus, we conclude that the trial
    court did not err in granting summary judgment on this basis.
    ¶ 15   Plaintiffs next argue that the trial court failed to consider their argument that the Act
    diminishes and impairs their pension benefits because it “requires the local funds to pay for the
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220198
    newly-created and consolidated funds’ startup costs, administration, and operation, as well as
    transition costs of up to $15,000,000 plus interest.” Plaintiffs make no argument as to how the
    requirement to pay for the administration of the funds would in any way impair or diminish the
    payment of their pension benefits. The local funds are already required to pay the costs of
    administration of the local funds, and plaintiffs do not cite any evidence to show that the costs of
    administration of the new funds, even including startup costs, would be any greater. The quotation
    referencing $15 million plus interest is misleading, at best. Section 22B-120(h) of the Act does not
    require the borrowing, let alone spending, of $15 million for such expenses. It merely authorizes
    the Illinois Finance Authority to lend up to $7.5 million to each investment fund that, if borrowed,
    would be repaid with interest. See 40 ILCS 5/22B-120(h), 22C-120(h) (West 2020). We further
    note that the level of benefit payments is not determined by the level of funding in the fund.
    Member and employer contribution requirements are set in the Pension Code; if more money were
    to be required to pay the already-established benefits, future contribution requirements could be
    amended. Plaintiffs present no evidence that the Act actually reduced the funding available for the
    payment of benefits.
    ¶ 16    We find no error in the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in defendants’ favor as to
    count I and grant plaintiffs no relief.
    ¶ 17    Plaintiffs next contend that the Act violates the takings clause of the Illinois Constitution.
    Article I, section 15 of the Illinois Constitution states: “Private property shall not be taken or
    damaged for public use without just compensation as provided by law. Such compensation shall
    be determined by a jury as provided by law.” Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 15.
    ¶ 18    Plaintiffs spend a great deal of their argument attacking the trial court’s conclusion, based
    on the case of Empress Casino Joliet Corp. v. Giannoulias, 
    231 Ill. 2d 62
     (2008), that a takings
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220198
    clause claim must be tied to real property. However, we are not bound by the reasoning of the trial
    court and may affirm on any basis presented in the record. See People ex rel. Alvarez v. $59,914
    United States Currency, 
    2022 IL 126927
    , ¶ 24. We need not address the issue of real property, as
    plaintiffs failed to establish the existence of an elemental requirement—that of “private property.”
    As we stated in our pension protection clause analysis (supra ¶ 14), while plaintiffs have a
    constitutional right to receive pension benefits, they do not have a property right in any particular
    assets or level of funding. Plaintiffs are individual active and retiree/beneficiaries of the local
    funds: they have no right to the investments held by the funds; rather, they are entitled only to
    present or future payments from the funds. No plaintiff has any right to direct the investment of
    the monies held by the funds or direct that they receive any different course of payments (either in
    amount or frequency) beyond that established by statute and the funds. Simply put, plaintiffs do
    not own the funds that the Act requires to be transferred to the new statewide police and firefighter
    pension investment funds. The Act does nothing more than require one type of government-created
    pension fund to transfer assets to another type of government-created pension fund. Plaintiffs’
    rights to receive benefit payments are not impacted by these transfers. As the “property” at issue
    here is not the private property of the plaintiffs, the takings clause is neither relevant nor applicable
    here. Thus, we find no error in the trial court’s grant of summary judgment on count III.
    ¶ 19                                     III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 20    For these reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Kane County is affirmed.
    ¶ 21    Affirmed.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220198
    Arlington Heights Police Pension Fund v. Pritzker, 
    2023 IL App (2d) 220198
    Decision Under Review:      Appeal from the Circuit Court of Kane County, No. 21-CH-55; the
    Hon. Robert K. Villa, Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                   Daniel F. Konicek, and Amanda J. Hamilton, of Konicek & Dillon,
    for                         P.C., of Geneva, for appellants.
    Appellant:
    Attorneys                   Kwame Raoul, Attorney General (Jane Elinor Notz, Solicitor
    for                         General, and Richard S. Huszagh, Assistant Attorney General, of
    Appellee:                   counsel), Richard F. Friedman and Langdon D. Neal, of Neal &
    Leroy, LLC, Michael A. Scodro and Brett E. Legner, of Mayer
    Brown LLP, and Joseph M. Burns, Taylor E. Muzzy, and David
    Huffman-Gottschling, of Jacobs, Burns, Orlove, and Hernandez
    LLP, all of Chicago, for appellees.
    Paul Denham and Jill D. Leka, of Clark Baird Smith LLP, of
    Rosemont, for amicus curiae Illinois Municipal League.
    Joseph Weishampel, Margaret Angelucci, and Jerry Marzullo, of
    Asher, Gittler & D’Alba, Ltd., of Chicago, for amicus curiae
    Associated Firefighters of Illinois.
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