Village of Posen, Illinois v. Illinois Fraternal Order of Police Labor Council ( 2014 )


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  •                                Illinois Official Reports
    Appellate Court
    Village of Posen, Illinois v. Illinois Fraternal Order of Police Labor Council,
    
    2014 IL App (1st) 133329
    Appellate Court           THE VILLAGE OF POSEN, ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.
    Caption                   ILLINOIS FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE LABOR COUNCIL,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    District & No.            First District, First Division
    Docket No. 1-13-3329
    Filed                     August 11, 2014
    Rehearing denied          September 10, 2014
    Held                       The appellate court upheld the trial court’s confirmation of an
    (Note: This syllabus arbitration award entered for defendant union as the representative of
    constitutes no part of the a police officer in a grievance procedure arising from the officer’s
    opinion of the court but termination for failing to return the checks he received from plaintiff
    has been prepared by the village’s workers’ compensation insurer for the injuries he suffered in
    Reporter of Decisions a fall at the same time he was receiving his regular paychecks,
    for the convenience of notwithstanding the village’s contentions that the arbitrator
    the reader.)               improperly required the village to prove its allegations by clear and
    convincing evidence, rather than the preponderance of the evidence,
    that the award violated public policy, that a pretermination hearing
    should have been held and that a remand should have been ordered for
    the entry of a setoff, since the arbitrator’s decision stated that the
    evidence “preponderates” in favor of the policeman, the village failed
    to show how the officer’s reinstatement would violate any public
    policy, the absence of a pretermination hearing had no impact on the
    award, and the award did not include a setoff, especially when the
    village did not raise the issue before the arbitrator and no setoff was
    mentioned by the arbitrator.
    Decision Under            Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 12-CH-37545; the
    Review                    Hon. Moshe Jacobius, Judge, presiding.
    Judgment                Affirmed.
    Counsel on              Thomas F. McGuire, of Thomas F. McGuire & Associates, Ltd., of
    Appeal                  Long Grove, for appellant.
    Jeffery Burke, of Illinois Fraternal Order of Police Labor Council, of
    Western Springs, for appellee.
    Panel                   PRESIDING JUSTICE CONNORS delivered the judgment of the
    court, with opinion.
    Justice Cunningham concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    Justice Delort specially concurred, with opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1         Plaintiff, the Village of Posen (Village), appeals from an order of the circuit court that
    denied plaintiff’s motion to vacate an arbitration award and confirmed the award entered in
    favor of defendant, the Illinois Fraternal Order of Police Labor Council (Union), which had
    represented Kevin Hammond in a grievance procedure after Hammond was terminated from
    the Village police department. On appeal, the Village contends the circuit court improperly
    struck allegations in its complaint that alleged that Hammond was not covered by the
    collective bargaining agreement and therefore the arbitrator did not have jurisdiction. The
    Village also challenges the underlying arbitration award, contending that: (1) the arbitrator
    improperly required that the Village prove the allegations by clear and convincing evidence,
    rather than by a preponderance of the evidence; (2) the arbitration award violates public
    policy; and (3) the arbitrator improperly required the Village to hold a pretermination
    hearing. Lastly, the Village contends that if the award is upheld, the matter should be
    remanded to the arbitrator to determine a setoff. We affirm the judgment of the circuit court
    and decline to remand for a setoff.
    ¶2         The record reveals that the Union is the exclusive bargaining representative for police
    officers employed by the Village. Hammond began as a part-time Village police officer in
    July 2006 and became a full-time officer in May 2008. While returning to his squad car on
    February 11, 2011, Hammond slipped on some ice, causing him to fracture his knee and
    injure his arm. As a result of his injuries, Hammond was off work for an extended period and
    was eventually released to return to work in August 2011.
    ¶3         Pursuant to the Public Employee Disability Act (Act) (5 ILCS 345/1 (West 2010)),
    Hammond received 100% of his salary beginning on the date of his injury. Additionally,
    workers’ compensation provided a benefit of two-thirds of an employee’s regular income.
    The dispute between the Union and the Village arose because, for a period of time,
    Hammond received his salary and workers’ compensation checks simultaneously, contrary to
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    the Village’s general practice of the Village receiving and retaining the workers’
    compensation checks from the insurance carrier. The Village eventually learned of
    Hammond’s double payments, and on June 13, 2011, Hammond was terminated because he
    “accepted and endorsed checks from both the Village of Posen and [the] workers’
    compensation carrier for the same period of missed work” and failed to return those funds to
    the Village.1 The Village maintained that Hammond violated three of the Posen Police
    Department Rules of Conduct (Rules of Conduct). In part, the Village asserted that
    Hammond engaged in unbecoming conduct, defined as “any action or occurrence which
    discredits or brings the Department into disgrace, disrespect[,] or reflects badly upon an
    individual member(s) of the Department” and “any activity that impairs or disrupts the
    operation or efficiency of the Department or *** individual member.” Additionally,
    Hammond was alleged to have violated a rule concerning immoral conduct, which states that
    officers “will not participate in any incident or activity that involves questionable or immoral
    behavior that could impair their ability to perform as a law enforcement officer or causes the
    Department to be embarrassed, disgraced[,] or discredited.” The Rules of Conduct further
    provided that a violation of any of the rules “will be sufficient cause for counseling,
    reprimand, suspension[,] or dismissal” of any member of the police department.
    ¶4       After he was terminated, the Union filed a grievance on Hammond’s behalf pursuant to
    the collective bargaining agreement between the Village and the Union. In part, the
    agreement provided that “[n]o employee covered by the terms of this Agreement shall be
    suspended, relieved from duty[,] or disciplined in any manner without just cause.” In a
    section titled “Management Rights,” the agreement further provided:
    “Except as specifically limited by the express provisions of this Agreement, the
    Village retains all traditional rights to manage and direct the affairs of the Village in
    all of its various aspects and to manage and direct its employees, including but not
    limited to the following: *** discipline, suspend[,] and discharge employees for just
    cause (probationary employees without cause) ***.”
    ¶5       Submitting the grievance in writing to the chief of police was the first step in a three-step
    grievance procedure for resolving disputes between the Village and an employee or the
    Union “regarding the application, meaning[,] or interpretation of this Agreement.” The
    second step was to submit the grievance to the mayor. The third step of the procedure was
    arbitration, which would begin with the Village and Union selecting an arbitrator from a list
    of seven arbitrators from the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service. The agreement
    provided that the decision and award of the arbitrator “shall be final and binding on the
    parties involved” and that the arbitrator “shall have no power to amend, modify, nullify,
    ignore, add to[,] or subtract from the provisions of this Agreement.”
    ¶6       The Union’s grievance in this matter alleged that the Village terminated Hammond
    without just cause in violation of the collective bargaining agreement. The grievance further
    stated that the desired remedy was to “reinstate the grievant to full employment, remove the
    1
    Hammond received and deposited five or six workers’ compensation checks. There appears to be
    some discrepancy as to the actual amount involved. The Village claimed that Hammond received and
    deposited approximately $4,836. Exhibits submitted to the arbitrator suggest the total was
    approximately $4,146.
    -3-
    notice of termination from the [grievant’s] file, compensate the grievant for any lost wages
    and benefits, in part and in whole, make grievant whole.”
    ¶7         Arbitration proceedings were held on February 7 and March 12, 2012. At the start of the
    proceedings, the arbitrator, counsel for the Union, and counsel for the Village had the
    following exchange:
    “MR. ARBITRATOR: My assumption is that the issue before the Arbitrator is
    whether there was just cause for the termination of the grievant, Kevin Hammond,
    and if not, what is the appropriate remedy?
    MR. BURKE [Counsel for the Union]: Yeah, we’ll stipulate to that issue.
    MR. ARBITRATOR: Is that correct?
    MR. McGUIRE [Counsel for the Village]: Yes.
    MR. ARBITRATOR: All right. *** [A]m I also correct in believing there are no
    procedural problems, no question of arbitrability?
    MR. BURKE: We don’t have any.
    MR. McGUIRE: Same.”
    ¶8         Additionally, the Village and the arbitrator disagreed about the amount of evidence
    needed to find that Hammond was terminated for just cause. While the Village asserted that
    the correct quantum of proof was preponderance of the evidence, the arbitrator stated that he
    would require clear and convincing evidence based on the nature of the charges. The
    arbitrator also stated that “where the accusations are such that they raise questions of moral
    turpitude, I require more than a mere preponderance.”
    ¶9         In their opening statements, the Village contended that Hammond’s actions constituted
    felony theft, while the Union asserted that the Village had rushed to judgment and lacked just
    cause to terminate him.
    ¶ 10       Mary Jo Wisniewski, a secretary for the Village who also handled workers’
    compensation claims, testified that after Hammond’s injury, she initially believed his
    workers’ compensation checks were being sent to the Village. However, around April 2011,
    she learned the checks were actually being sent to Hammond’s home. She subsequently
    called the Village’s workers’ compensation insurance carrier, Berkley Risk Administrators
    Company (Berkley), and informed a claim manager that Hammond’s checks should be sent
    to the Village because Hammond was already being paid 100% of his salary through payroll.
    Berkley had recently become the Village’s workers’ compensation insurance carrier.
    Reflecting about how the checks ended up at Hammond’s home, Wisniewski stated “it could
    have been my fault. I don’t know. *** [T]hey should have been informed when we switched
    over the insurance that in case of injuries, that we do pay 100[%], and all checks should be
    coming to us *** on both ends it was just a misunderstanding or an error.”
    ¶ 11       On May 12, 2011, Mark Mendenhall, a Berkley claim manager, sent Hammond a letter
    that advised him that the Village had notified Berkley that it continued paying his salary
    while Berkley was paying workers’ compensation benefits. The letter continued that
    additional benefits would be mailed to the Village and “[a]ny benefits you have received
    should be forwarded to the employer directly.” Additionally, the letter stated that “[c]hecks
    that were mailed to you directly were stopped and resubmitted to your employer.”
    ¶ 12       Karen Milewski, who was assigned as Hammond’s case manager for his workers’
    compensation claim, testified that she was responsible for coordinating Hammond’s
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    treatment and updating the claims adjuster and his employer on his treatment and recovery.
    Milewski denied that, prior to his termination, Hammond had ever told her that he was
    receiving an additional check on top of his salary. Milewski further testified that if someone
    were to inform her of a double payment, she would tell that person to either call an attorney
    or his claims adjuster as she does not handle that kind of issue and is “not [supposed] to get
    involved in that.”
    ¶ 13       Sergeant Robert Quirk of the Village police department testified that he was asked to
    investigate after the Village learned of the double payments. During Sergeant Quirk’s
    investigation, Hammond came to the Village twice–once to discuss his recovery and once to
    attend an interest arbitration–but did not approach Sergeant Quirk on either occasion to
    discuss the double payment issue, even though he had been notified by letter that he should
    return the money. When the chief of police eventually asked Sergeant Quirk for his opinion
    as to what should be done, Sergeant Quirk replied that he believed Hammond should be
    terminated because Hammond had committed theft, “his credibility was down the tubes,” and
    he could not be trusted. When Sergeant Quirk and a detective served Hammond with
    termination papers on June 13, 2011, Hammond “said to [Sergeant Quirk] basically that his
    nurse was taking care of his problem.”
    ¶ 14       Sergeant Quirk additionally testified that during his investigation, he did not ask
    Hammond for his side of the story. Sergeant Quirk was also not aware of a time before
    Hammond’s termination when Hammond was notified of the allegations against him and
    provided an opportunity to respond. When asked why he never contacted Hammond about
    the double payments, Sergeant Quirk responded that he did not have to and was “waiting for
    him to man up and do the credible thing.”
    ¶ 15       Chief of Police Ralph Jungles testified that by not coming forward, Hammond sent a
    message that he “just didn’t care.” Chief Jungles additionally stated he had to be able to trust
    his officers and know that they are honest, but as a result of the incident, Hammond “would
    no longer be an asset to the department.”
    ¶ 16       Hammond testified that he started receiving checks from Berkley in late February or
    early March 2011. At first, Hammond put the checks aside, but eventually he and his wife
    deposited them because a memo on the checks indicated they would only be valid for a
    limited time. The checks were deposited into a special checking account that they used as
    savings. Sometime in mid to late March 2011, Hammond mentioned to Milewski that he was
    receiving the checks from Berkley. Hammond thought that perhaps the Berkley checks were
    to cover overtime that he normally worked but was not part of the deposits he was also
    receiving from the Village. According to Hammond, Milewski stated she would check and
    get back to him. Although Milewski did not ultimately follow up with him about the checks,
    the checks stopped within two or three weeks of their conversation. Hammond explained that
    he did not contact the Village about the checks because he thought he was supposed to
    contact Milewski, who had told him she was his point of contact for doctors’ visits or
    insurance.
    ¶ 17       Hammond further testified that he read the letter from Mendenhall, the Berkley claim
    manager, to mean that he might owe money to Berkley, and as a result, he did not contact
    anyone at the Village about the letter. He did not send any money to Berkley because he did
    not know how much he owed. Hammond further explained that he did not contact the Village
    because at the time, he was worried about his therapy and medical issues that had arisen with
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    his wife and son. After he was terminated, Hammond received a letter from the Village
    indicating he would no longer receive benefits under the Act, his workers’ compensation
    benefits would continue until the end of his treatment, and other benefits would be suspended
    until the $4,836.58 he took from the Village was repaid. This letter was the first calculation
    he received of how much the Village believed he was overpaid. Ultimately, the Village
    deducted the amount it believed it was owed from Hammond’s final compensation.
    ¶ 18       At one point during the arbitration hearing, counsel for the Village asked Hammond how
    he was “surviving,” which counsel explained as asking for “credibility.” After the arbitrator
    stated he did not know why counsel was asking such a question, counsel rephrased and asked
    Hammond whether he had worked anywhere “for any type of salary” since he was released
    back to work. Hammond responded that he was paid to help a friend move some items.
    ¶ 19       At the beginning of its posthearing brief, the Village stated “[h]opefully, it is clear from
    the [collective bargaining agreement] in the case at hand that the Arbitrator has the authority
    to determine whether or not ‘just cause’ was/is present to discipline Grievant.” The Village
    further contended that Hammond’s actions were extremely serious. According to the Village,
    after receiving the letter from Berkley, Hammond had ample time to contact Berkley or the
    Village and chose not to do so.
    ¶ 20       In its posthearing brief, the Union contended that once it learned of the overpayments, the
    Village should have immediately advised Hammond and did not do so because the Village
    was building a case for his termination. The Union further stated that Hammond did not deny
    receiving the checks or depositing them into his bank account. However, the remainder of the
    Village’s case “amounts to a request that the Arbitrator make a leap of faith” and accept the
    claim that Hammond violated Village rules by having checks mailed to his house and not
    knowing what to do with them, which was insufficient to meet the Village’s burden.
    ¶ 21       On August 27, 2012, the arbitrator issued an award, finding that Hammond was not
    discharged for just cause. Discussing the proper quantum of proof, the arbitrator noted a
    “widespread recognition” that arbitration of just cause vests the arbitrator with discretion to
    select the required quantum of proof. The arbitrator found it “difficult to believe that the
    sophisticated parties who negotiated this contract *** did not foresee the likelihood that any
    experienced arbitrator would probably require more than a mere preponderance of the
    evidence in a case involving allegations of criminal activity.” The arbitrator further stated
    that because a finding that an employee is a thief has particularly severe consequences, “a
    discharge for theft is distinguishable from other types of cases where a simple preponderance
    of the evidence will suffice.”
    ¶ 22       Citing Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. 532
     (1985), the arbitrator
    also found that the Village denied Hammond’s right to a pretermination hearing. However,
    based on American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees v. Department of
    Central Management Services, 
    173 Ill. 2d 299
     (1996) (AFSCME II), the arbitrator stated that
    it would be improper to reinstate Hammond for this violation without considering the merits.
    According to the arbitrator, the only issue was Hammond’s state of mind–whether he knew
    he was receiving sums he was not entitled to and whether he intended to keep those sums.
    The arbitrator described the letter from Mendenhall as “not a model of clarity” and “open to
    interpretation,” as it stated that benefits paid should be forwarded to the employer and that
    the checks mailed to him were stopped and resubmitted to the employer. Further, it was
    “more likely than not” that Hammond had a conversation “of some sort” with Milewski in
    -6-
    March 2011 about why he was receiving the workers’ compensation checks, which was
    inconsistent with an intent to commit theft.
    ¶ 23       Overall, the arbitrator found:
    “[Hammond] was not fired for being passive. He was not fired for being a fool.
    He was fired for being a thief. *** Because the offense underlying these charges turns
    on his state of mind, and because they made no effort to determine his state of mind,
    they left open an opportunity for him to offer an innocent explanation of his actions.
    He did so, and I believe the evidence preponderates in favor of his explanations.
    Given that, it necessarily follows that the Department cannot carry its burden–under
    any quantum of proof–of proving that [Hammond] intended to commit theft by
    depositing the checks from Berkley. In light of the outcome on the merits, there is no
    need to address the appropriate remedy for the due process violations.”
    ¶ 24       Having found that Hammond was not discharged for just cause, the arbitrator stated the
    appropriate remedy was to immediately reinstate him and “make him whole for his losses by
    reason of the discharge.” The arbitrator retained jurisdiction over the matter for 60 days “for
    the sole purpose of resolving disputes concerning the implementation of the remedy.” The
    arbitrator also provided that if either party invoked his retained jurisdiction during the 60-day
    period, jurisdiction would be extended “for a period of time necessary to resolve the dispute.”
    However, if neither party invoked his jurisdiction within 60 days, jurisdiction would lapse.
    ¶ 25       Subsequently, on October 5, 2012, the Village filed a two-count complaint to vacate the
    arbitration award, naming the Union and Hammond as defendants. Count I of the complaint
    alleged in part that at the time Hammond was laterally transferred from a part-time position
    to a full-time position, the Village had to follow the hiring procedures in the Illinois
    Municipal Code (Code) (65 ILCS 5/10-2.1-6 (West 2006)), which included an examination.
    The Village asserted that Hammond was not lawfully hired under the Code and therefore was
    not covered by the collective bargaining agreement. As a result, the arbitrator did not have
    jurisdiction to issue the award. Count II asserted in part that the arbitrator applied an
    incorrect quantum of proof and that the arbitrator exceeded his authority by requiring a
    predisciplinary hearing or meeting that was not part of the collective bargaining agreement.
    ¶ 26       In response, Hammond filed a motion to dismiss, contending that he must be dismissed
    from the action because he was not a party to the underlying grievance arbitration. Hammond
    asserted that the parties to a labor arbitration are the union and the employer. Additionally,
    the Union filed a motion to strike the portions of the Village’s complaint that asserted that the
    arbitrator did not have jurisdiction to issue the award. The Union asserted that a party waives
    an objection to an arbitrator’s jurisdiction if he fails to raise it at the arbitration, and the
    Village had agreed to the arbitrator’s authority to hear the grievance and to the issue that the
    arbitrator was to resolve.
    ¶ 27       As to the Union’s motion to strike, the Village responded that subject matter jurisdiction
    may be raised at any time. The Village further contended that its delay in objecting to the
    arbitrator’s jurisdiction was justified because it only learned that Hammond was not lawfully
    hired after posthearing briefs were submitted, when another officer was terminated for
    similar reasons and filed a complaint in federal court. Attached to the Village’s response was
    an affidavit from counsel for the Village in which he averred that during the summer of 2012,
    he received a copy of the federal complaint “for informational purposes” from either the
    attorney for the Village’s insurance carrier or the Village attorney. However, counsel’s
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    “reading of the *** [c]omplaint was not a priority” because the other officer’s arbitration was
    not scheduled until after Hammond’s arbitration. Counsel further stated that after an
    investigation, on September 7, 2012, counsel informed the Village that, in his opinion,
    Hammond had not been lawfully hired.
    ¶ 28        In its subsequent memorandum opinion and order, the circuit court granted Hammond’s
    motion to dismiss, having found that Hammond did not need to be joined in the action and
    that the Village would not be prejudiced by his dismissal as a party defendant. The court also
    granted the Union’s motion to strike, finding that the Village waived the argument that
    Hammond was not covered by the collective bargaining agreement and that the Village could
    have verified whether Hammond was lawfully hired before the arbitration.
    ¶ 29        After further briefing, the court entered a memorandum opinion and order that confirmed
    the award and entered judgment against the Village on its complaint to vacate the award.
    ¶ 30        On appeal, the Village first contends that the circuit court erroneously struck the
    references in its complaint to Hammond not being lawfully hired by the Village and therefore
    not covered by the collective bargaining agreement. The Village maintains that Hammond’s
    status deprived the arbitrator of jurisdiction, which may be raised at any time.
    ¶ 31        Although the Village claims to challenge the arbitrator’s jurisdiction, the substance of the
    Village’s argument is that the dispute could not be subject to arbitration, an entirely different
    matter. Subject matter jurisdiction is defined as a court’s power to hear and determine cases
    of the general class to which the proceeding in question belongs. Downtown Disposal
    Services, Inc. v. City of Chicago, 
    2012 IL 112040
    , ¶ 29 (citing In re Luis R., 
    239 Ill. 2d 295
    ,
    300 (2010)). As an example of an instance where a court did not have subject matter
    jurisdiction, the Village cites to Jones v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    335 Ill. App. 3d 340
     (2002).
    There, a statute precluded the cause of action that was before the Industrial Commission, thus
    depriving the Commission of subject matter jurisdiction. Jones, 335 Ill. App. 3d at 343. Here,
    the Village does not actually dispute the arbitrator’s authority to hear the kind of grievance
    before it–whether an employee was terminated for just cause. Indeed, the collective
    bargaining agreement provides that arbitration is the third step for resolving disputes over the
    application or interpretation of the agreement, which contains provisions that the Village may
    discharge employees for just cause and employees may not be disciplined without just cause.
    ¶ 32        Rather than jurisdiction, the Village is actually challenging arbitrability–whether
    Hammond’s grievance in particular could be subject to arbitration. Any issue regarding the
    nonarbitrability of a dispute is waived by participating in the arbitration proceedings. Craig v.
    United Automobile Insurance Co., 
    377 Ill. App. 3d 1
    , 3 (2007). To preserve for judicial
    review the issue of whether a claim was subject to arbitration, a party must object in a timely
    manner, which is described as “the earliest possible moment to save the time and expense of
    a possibly unwarranted arbitration.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) First Health Group
    Corp. v. Ruddick, 
    393 Ill. App. 3d 40
    , 48 (2009). Through the operation of waiver, a party
    may become bound by an award that otherwise would be open to attack. Id. at 49. Even if the
    Village was correct that Hammond was not lawfully hired and therefore not covered by the
    collective bargaining agreement, the Village has waived its objection to arbitrability because
    it failed to object at the proceeding. Moreover, beyond merely failing to object, the Village
    agreed to the arbitrator’s authority to resolve the dispute at the beginning of the proceeding
    and then repeated this position in its posthearing brief, stating “[h]opefully, it is clear from
    the [collective bargaining agreement] in the case at hand that the Arbitrator has the authority
    -8-
    to determine whether or not ‘just cause’ was/is present to discipline Grievant.” Having failed
    to object and having repeatedly agreed to the arbitrator’s authority, the Village waived the
    issue of arbitrability.
    ¶ 33       The Village unsuccessfully attempts to preserve the issue notwithstanding its previous
    position. To be sure, the issue of arbitrability can be preserved if a party can present a
    justification for the delay in objecting, such as an inability to discover pertinent facts. Id.
    Here, the Village asserts that it only became aware that Hammond was unlawfully hired
    when a federal complaint was filed by another officer on June 22, 2012, after posthearing
    briefs were filed. We are entirely unpersuaded by the Village’s attempt to justify its delay.
    Hammond was hired as a part-time officer in 2006 and made a full-time officer in 2008. He
    was terminated in June 2011, the arbitration hearing was held in February and March 2012,
    and the award was issued on August 27, 2012. Between the time Hammond was hired as a
    full-time officer and the beginning of arbitration–not to mention the time between the end of
    arbitration and when the award was issued–the Village had ample time to learn whether
    Hammond was lawfully hired. The federal complaint may have alerted the Village to the
    question of whether Hammond was lawfully hired, but the Village has not demonstrated that
    anything prevented it from investigating Hammond’s hiring well before the complaint was
    filed. See Craig, 377 Ill. App. 3d at 3-4 (where there was no reason why the insurance
    company could not have conducted a vehicle records search before arbitration, insurance
    company waived the issue of the plaintiff’s false statements of vehicle ownership by failing
    to raise it until more than one year after the arbitration award). We also note that in counsel’s
    affidavit in support of its response to the Union’s motion to strike, counsel stated that reading
    the federal complaint “was not a priority” because the other officer’s arbitration was not
    scheduled to occur until after Hammond’s arbitration. Because the Village agreed to the
    arbitrator’s authority to hear the dispute and failed to justify its delay in objecting, the issue is
    waived and the circuit court properly struck the relevant portions of the Village’s complaint.
    ¶ 34       Next, the Village seeks to vacate the arbitration award on three grounds: (1) the arbitrator
    required an incorrect quantum of proof; (2) the award violates public policy; and (3) the
    arbitrator improperly required the Village to hold a pretermination hearing.
    ¶ 35       A court’s review of an arbitrator’s award is extremely limited (Griggsville-Perry
    Community Unit School District No. 4 v. Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board, 
    2013 IL 113721
    , ¶ 18), which reflects the legislature’s intent in enacting the Illinois Uniform
    Arbitration Act (Arbitration Act) (710 ILCS 5/1 et seq. (West 2012))–to provide finality for
    labor disputes submitted to arbitration (AFSCME II, 
    173 Ill. 2d at 304
    ). Generally, the
    grounds for vacating an arbitration award are listed in section 12(a) of the Arbitration Act
    (710 ILCS 5/12(a) (West 2012)): (1) the award was procured by corruption, fraud, or other
    undue means; (2) there was evident partiality by an arbitrator appointed as a neutral or
    corruption in any one of the arbitrators or misconduct prejudicing the rights of any party; (3)
    the arbitrator exceeded his powers; (4) the arbitrator refused to postpone the hearing upon
    sufficient cause shown or refused to hear evidence material to the controversy or otherwise
    conducted the hearing as to substantially prejudice a party’s rights; or (5) there was no
    arbitration agreement and the issue was not adversely determined in proceedings under
    section 2 of the Act and the party objected at the arbitration hearing.
    ¶ 36       However, section 12(e) of the Arbitration Act states that for an award “entered as a result
    of an arbitration agreement which is part of or pursuant to a collective bargaining
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    agreement,” the grounds for vacating the award “shall be those which existed prior to the
    enactment of this Act.” 710 ILCS 5/12(e) (West 2012). Thus, in collective bargaining cases,
    courts have applied the standards which existed for vacating an arbitration agreement at
    common law: fraud, corruption, partiality, misconduct, mistake, or failure to submit the
    question to arbitration. Water Pipe Extension, Bureau of Engineering Laborers’ Local 1092 v.
    City of Chicago, 
    318 Ill. App. 3d 628
    , 636 (2000). Under this common law standard, a court
    must enforce the award if the arbitrator acts within the scope of his authority and the award
    draws its essence from the parties’ collective bargaining agreement. 
    Id.
    ¶ 37        Under the “essence of the agreement” standard, we inquire into the merits of the
    arbitrator’s interpretation to determine only if the arbitrator’s award drew its essence from
    the agreement so as to prevent a manifest disregard of the agreement between the parties. 
    Id.
    The award will be overturned as not drawing its essence from the collective bargaining
    agreement where the arbitrator based his award on a body of thought, feeling, policy, or law
    outside of the contract. Amalgamated Transit Union v. Chicago Transit Authority, 
    342 Ill. App. 3d 176
    , 180 (2003). Further, an award will be vacated if the arbitrator exceeds his
    authority, and that authority is ordinarily determined by the provisions of the arbitration
    agreement. Water Pipe Extension, 318 Ill. App. 3d at 634. Whenever possible, arbitration
    awards should be construed to uphold their validity. City of Northlake v. Illinois Fraternal
    Order of Police Labor Council, 
    333 Ill. App. 3d 329
    , 335 (2002).
    ¶ 38        As its first challenge to the award, the Village contends that the arbitrator violated public
    policy by requiring the Village to establish just cause by clear and convincing evidence,
    rather than by a preponderance of the evidence. According to the Village, the preponderance
    of the evidence standard applies to cases involving the termination of police officers, even
    when the allegations relate to criminal conduct. The Village further argues that the arbitrator
    did not have the power to adopt his own quantum of proof, and his choice of the clear and
    convincing evidence standard exceeded his authority.
    ¶ 39        We first clarify that selecting a quantum of proof is a legal issue, not a matter of public
    policy. While there is no precise definition of “public policy,” in general it can be said that
    public policy concerns what is right and just and what affects the citizens of the state
    collectively. Palmateer v. International Harvester Co., 
    85 Ill. 2d 124
    , 130 (1981). See also
    O’Hara v. Ahlgren, Blumenfeld & Kempster, 
    127 Ill. 2d 333
    , 341 (1989) (stating that while
    “public policy” lacks precise definition, “it may be stated generally as a legal principle which
    holds that no one may lawfully do that which has a tendency to injure the public welfare”).
    Determining the quantum of proof is not a matter that affects the public welfare, but is
    instead a question of law. In the context of arbitration awards, gross errors of judgment in
    law are not grounds for vacating an award unless the errors are apparent on the face of the
    award. Chicago Transit Authority v. Amalgamated Transit Union Local 308, 
    244 Ill. App. 3d 854
    , 863 (1993).
    ¶ 40        Here, the arbitrator properly selected a quantum of proof. As a general matter, in
    arbitration proceedings, the quantum of proof required to support a decision to discharge an
    employee is unsettled. Frank Elkouri & Edna Elkouri, How Arbitration Works 15-24 (7th ed.
    2012). Generally, it is up to the arbitrator to determine the required quantum of proof. See
    id. at 15-26. While most arbitrators apply the preponderance of the evidence standard to
    ordinary discipline and discharge cases, in cases involving criminal conduct or stigmatizing
    behavior, many arbitrators apply a higher burden of proof, typically a clear and convincing
    - 10 -
    evidence standard. Id. at 15-25. Here, the collective bargaining agreement is silent on the
    required quantum of proof. Because the parties contracted to have their disputes settled by an
    arbitrator, rather than a judge, it was the arbitrator’s view of the contract that the parties
    agreed to accept (AFSCME II, 
    173 Ill. 2d at 305
    ), including the required quantum of proof.
    ¶ 41       However, it is curious that the Village challenges the award on this basis because the
    arbitrator ultimately considered whether the allegations were proven by a preponderance of
    the evidence–the Village’s desired quantum of proof. In contrast to the arbitrator’s initial
    statement that he would apply a clear and convincing evidence standard, in his written
    decision, the arbitrator stated that he believed that the evidence “preponderates in favor of
    [Hammond’s] explanations” and that “the Department cannot carry its burden–under any
    quantum of proof–of proving that [Hammond] intended to commit theft by depositing the
    checks from Berkley.” We acknowledge that this approach is unusual. Nonetheless, the
    arbitrator’s finding eliminates any grounds for vacating the award based on the quantum of
    proof. Even if the arbitrator erred in his initial choice of clear and convincing evidence, any
    error had no effect because the arbitrator found that the Village failed to meet its burden by
    any standard. As such, the arbitrator’s chosen quantum of proof is not a basis for vacating the
    award.
    ¶ 42       The Village’s second challenge to the award is that it violates public policy. The Village
    argues that Hammond deserved to be terminated and that the arbitrator ignored natural
    inferences from the record. In addition to asserting that Hammond committed theft, the
    Village also argues that concealing the double payments and failing to immediately report the
    payments constitutes conduct unbecoming an officer. The Village contends that ordering
    Hammond to be reinstated violates the public policy that police officers shall not be thieves
    and that police officers must exercise a high degree of honesty, trustworthiness, and common
    sense because they occupy a unique position in society.
    ¶ 43       The Village presumes that Hammond intended to commit theft and therefore the Village
    had just cause to terminate him, contentions the arbitrator rejected. We may not disturb the
    arbitrator’s findings on these issues. Where the parties have contracted to have disputes
    settled by an arbitrator chosen by them rather than by a judge, it is the arbitrator’s view of the
    facts and the meaning of the contract that they have agreed to accept. Griggsville-Perry
    Community Unit School District No. 4, 
    2013 IL 113721
    , ¶ 18. Further, where, as here, “just
    cause” is not defined in the collective bargaining agreement, it is left up to the arbitrator to
    determine if the grievants were discharged for just cause. American Federation of State,
    County & Municipal Employees v. State, 
    124 Ill. 2d 246
    , 256 (1988) (AFSCME I).
    Additionally, a court may not reverse an arbitrator’s decision simply because it is contrary to
    the manifest weight of the evidence. City of Northlake, 333 Ill. App. 3d at 335. After
    weighing the evidence at the hearing, the arbitrator determined that Hammond did not intend
    to commit theft and was not terminated for just cause. We may not do what the Village
    essentially asks us to do–reweigh the evidence that was before the arbitrator. A court has no
    business weighing the merits of a grievance. Griggsville-Perry Community Unit School
    District No. 4, 
    2013 IL 113721
    , ¶ 18. We decline to disturb the arbitrator’s interpretation of
    the facts and his finding that Hammond was not terminated for just cause.
    ¶ 44       Because Hammond was not found to have committed theft, there is no cause for concern
    that his reinstatement would violate any supposed public policy that police officers should
    not be thieves. As to the Village’s other concerns about Hammond’s relative trustworthiness
    - 11 -
    and honesty, the Village has failed to identify a public policy at stake. Courts have crafted a
    public policy exception to vacate arbitration awards which otherwise derive their essence
    from a collective bargaining agreement. AFSCME II, 
    173 Ill. 2d at 306
    . To vacate an
    arbitration award on this basis, we must find that the contract as interpreted by the arbitrator
    violates some explicit public policy that is well-defined and dominant. AFSCME I, 
    124 Ill. 2d at 261
    . The public policy at issue is to be ascertained by reference to the laws and legal
    precedents and not from general considerations of supposed public interests. 
    Id.
     The public
    policy exception is a narrow one and is invoked only when a contravention of public policy is
    clearly shown. AFSCME II, 
    173 Ill. 2d at 307
    . The threshold question is whether a
    well-defined and dominant public policy can be identified. 
    Id.
     If so, the court must determine
    whether the award, as reflected in the arbitrator’s interpretation of the agreement, violated the
    public policy. 
    Id. at 307-08
    .
    ¶ 45       The Village cites a number of cases that supposedly establish a public policy “in favor of
    maintaining the public’s trust in law enforcement officials”: Remus v. Sheahan, 
    387 Ill. App. 3d 899
    , 904 (2009) (in reviewing action of Cook County Sheriff’s Merit Board’s dismissal of
    officer for misconduct, stating that a law enforcement officer is in a unique position of public
    trust and responsibility); Kvidera v. Board of Fire & Police Commissioners, 
    192 Ill. App. 3d 950
    , 965 (1989) (in reviewing decision of a board of fire and police commissioners to
    discipline an officer, agreeing with the board that the officer’s conduct had a tendency to
    destroy public respect and raised serious questions about the officer’s integrity and
    trustworthiness); Davenport v. Board of Fire & Police Commissioners, 
    2 Ill. App. 3d 864
    , 869
    (1972) (in reviewing decision of a board of fire and police commissioners to discharge an
    officer, stating that discipline is necessary for the proper functioning of the police department
    and to keep the respect of the public); and People ex rel. Horwich v. Powell, 
    127 Ill. App. 614
    , 619 (1906) (in reviewing decision of Civil Service Commission to remove officer,
    noting officer’s “lack of fidelity to that duty imposed upon him by law” and noting that he
    betrayed the trust of the municipality).
    ¶ 46       The Village’s cases merely discussed desired officer behavior in the context of reviewing
    a municipality’s decision to discipline an officer. None purported to establish a well-defined
    and explicit public policy that applies to even the Village’s theory of the events, which we
    again note the arbitrator rejected. See City of Highland Park v. Teamster Local Union No.
    714, 
    357 Ill. App. 3d 453
    , 464 (2005) (cases that discussed officer trustworthiness in the
    context of a municipality’s decision to discharge a misbehaving police officer did not
    establish an explicit public policy that required vacating an award that reinstated an officer
    who committed a misdemeanor). One additional case cited by the Village, State Police v.
    Fraternal Order of Police Troopers Lodge No. 41, 
    323 Ill. App. 3d 322
    , 329-30 (2001), found
    that a procedural rule limiting internal investigations violated the public policy of effective
    law enforcement, but that case concerned an entirely different matter than the conduct at
    issue here. Overall, we find that the Village’s assertions about the need for officers to be
    trustworthy and corresponding citations are “generalized considerations of supposed public
    interest,” which are insufficient to find a well-defined and dominant public policy. See
    AFSCME II, 
    173 Ill. 2d at 307
    .
    ¶ 47       In reaching this conclusion, we do not suggest that it is acceptable for police officers to
    be thieves or otherwise untrustworthy. We merely find that the Village has failed to show
    that its stated concerns–however important–rise to the level of an explicit and well-defined
    - 12 -
    public policy. Moreover, even if there were a public policy favoring trustworthy police
    officers, it is difficult to see how reinstatement would violate that policy where Hammond
    provided an “innocent explanation of his actions” and was not found to have intended to
    commit theft.
    ¶ 48       We are also not persuaded by the Village’s attempt to identify a second public policy at
    stake: the public policy against receiving both Act and workers’ compensation benefits. As
    support, the Village cites City of Jacksonville v. Coop, 
    176 Ill. App. 3d 527
    , 529 (1988),
    where the court found that an employee’s attempt to receive both Act and workers’
    compensation benefits “would permit the double recovery” the legislature sought to prevent.
    Putting aside the question of whether this statement in Coop is sufficient to find a
    well-defined and dominant public policy, we note that for the public policy exception to
    apply, it is not merely the commission of an alleged offense that must violate public policy,
    but the employee’s reinstatement. City of Highland Park, 357 Ill. App. 3d at 466. Again, the
    Village has failed to show how Hammond’s reinstatement–where Hammond was not found
    to have intended to commit the offense and the Village ultimately recouped the extra
    payments–violates this alleged public policy. We conclude that the public policy exception is
    not a basis for vacating the award.
    ¶ 49       In its third challenge to the award, the Village contends that the arbitrator exceeded his
    authority by mandating a pretermination hearing. Although the arbitrator found that the
    Village failed to provide an opportunity for Hammond to be heard prior to his termination,
    this was not a basis for the arbitrator’s award. In his decision, the arbitrator refused to order
    reinstatement without considering the merits, believing that “[AFSCME II] forecloses that
    option in a case such as this.” At the end of his decision, after concluding that Hammond did
    not intend to commit theft, the arbitrator explained that “[i]n light of the outcome on the
    merits, there is no need to address the appropriate remedy for the due process violations.”
    Because the absence of a pretermination hearing had no impact on the award, we decline to
    address this issue.
    ¶ 50       Finally, the Village contends that if the arbitration award is upheld, the matter should be
    remanded to the arbitrator to determine a setoff. The Village argues that it is entitled to
    deduct from the back wages owed to Hammond the amount that Hammond earned from
    outside employment while he was terminated. Accordingly, the Village asserts, the matter
    should be remanded to the arbitrator for further proceedings. In response, the Union contends
    that the request for remand to determine a setoff is not properly before this court and should
    be stricken.
    ¶ 51       It is unclear on what basis the Village believes it is entitled to a remand. The whole of the
    Village’s argument appears to be that because employers are entitled to a setoff in other
    contexts, the matter should be remanded to the arbitrator here. In general, an award can be
    remanded to the arbitrator so that the arbitrator can correct a mistake that is apparent on the
    face of the award, complete an arbitration that is not complete, or clarify an ambiguity in the
    award. Federal Signal Corp. v. SLC Technologies, Inc., 
    318 Ill. App. 3d 1101
    , 1111 (2001).
    The Village has not suggested that we remand for any of these reasons. In the Village’s
    complaint to vacate the award, the Village made no mention of a setoff or any other reason to
    remand the matter to the arbitrator. Issues and arguments that were not presented to or
    considered by the trial court cannot be raised for the first time on review. City of Chicago v.
    Latronica Asphalt & Grading, Inc., 
    346 Ill. App. 3d 264
    , 276 (2004). Further, it is unclear
    - 13 -
    why the Village is asking for a remand when, according to its reply brief, it asked the
    arbitrator to retain jurisdiction until the present appeal was exhausted.
    ¶ 52        Nonetheless, waiver is a limitation on the parties and not on this court and we may
    address an issue to carry out our responsibility to reach a just result. First National Bank of
    LaGrange v. Lowrey, 
    375 Ill. App. 3d 181
    , 202 (2007). We find that the arbitration award
    does not entitle the Village to a setoff. Our research has not revealed an Illinois case that
    considered a claim for a setoff that was not presented during a labor arbitration. However,
    because of the common origin of the federal and Uniform Arbitration Acts, and because the
    Illinois Uniform Arbitration Act is patterned after the Uniform Arbitration Act, we may look
    to the decisions of other state and federal courts for guidance. Federal Signal Corp., 318 Ill.
    App. 3d at 1111-12.
    ¶ 53        The Seventh Circuit has stated that arbitrators have discretion to decide whether lost
    earnings should be offset by interim earnings or a failure to mitigate and their silence on such
    issues means that no such offsets are to be made. Automobile Mechanics Local 701 v. Joe
    Mitchell Buick, Inc., 
    930 F.2d 576
    , 578 (7th Cir. 1991). We also find instructive International
    Union of Operating Engineers, Local No. 841 v. Murphy Co., 
    82 F.3d 185
     (7th Cir. 1996).
    There, at the arbitration hearing, the parties filed a fact sheet that stated that the remedy
    sought was “ ‘all Wages and Fringes’ ” and reinstatement. Murphy Co., 
    82 F.3d at 186
    . At
    the arbitration, the matter of damages never came up and the award stated that the employees
    “ ‘shall be reinstated *** and made whole.’ ” 
    Id.
     The court found that when the fact sheet
    was read with the arbitrator’s ruling, the award granted restoration of those wages and fringe
    benefits lost due to the inappropriate firings, and the arbitrator’s silence on the question of
    offsets for interim earnings meant that no such offsets were to be made. 
    Id. at 189
    . Similarly,
    here, the Union’s grievance stated that it sought to reinstate Hammond to full employment
    and compensate him “for any lost wages and benefits, in part and in whole, make grievant
    whole.” The Village never requested a setoff before the arbitrator, and the award stated that
    Hammond should be immediately reinstated and the Village should “make him whole for his
    losses by reason of the discharge.” Reading the requested remedy in the grievance with the
    arbitrator’s ruling, we find the award grants Hammond lost wages and benefits and
    reinstatement with no deduction for a setoff. This result is also consistent with cases from
    two other states: In re Arbitration Between Civil Service Employees Ass’n Inc., Local 1000,
    AFSCME & State of New York, 
    636 N.Y.S.2d 234
    , 236 (N.Y. App. Div. 1996) (absence of
    any reference to deduction, setoff, or mitigation in the arbitrator’s decision establishes that
    earnings and unemployment benefits received by the employee after termination should not
    be deducted from back pay); Wisconsin State Employees Union (WSEU), AFSCME v.
    Wisconsin Employment Relations Comm’n, 
    525 N.W.2d 783
    , 787 (Wis. Ct. App. 1994)
    (where the arbitrator never indicated that the award should be offset or prorated by any
    factor, it was clear that the arbitrator did not consider prorating the award and the employer
    was ordered to pay all wages and lost benefits).
    ¶ 54        Based on the Village’s failure to raise the setoff issue before the arbitrator and the
    arbitrator’s silence on the subject, we find that the award does not include a setoff.
    Accordingly, we decline to remand the matter to the arbitrator.
    ¶ 55        For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
    ¶ 56      Affirmed.
    - 14 -
    ¶ 57      JUSTICE DELORT, specially concurring.
    ¶ 58                          But in this Court, what Diff’rence does appear!
    For every one’s both Judge and Jury here;
    Nay, and what’s worse, an Executioner.2
    ¶ 59        This case illustrates that local governmental officials who throw out the rule book and
    appoint themselves to be judge, jury and executioner run the risk of ending up with a costly
    and unfavorable result. It also shows that binding arbitration of employee grievances can
    sometimes generate a different result than would be obtained in an administrative proceeding
    or a court of law, and how difficult it is to obtain judicial relief from an unfavorable arbitral
    ruling. American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees v. Department of
    Central Management Services, 
    173 Ill. 2d 299
    , 304 (1996) (hereinafter AFSCME II). The
    union’s brief describes the Village’s actions as “nothing but a series of blunders.” That’s an
    understatement. The ultimate result here hinged on any of a number of bad decisions made
    by the Village itself.
    ¶ 60        The arbitrator’s ruling rested on the fact that the Village decided to treat this as a criminal
    theft case. Viewing the evidence in that light, the arbitrator determined that there was no just
    cause to fire Hammond for theft even though the Village’s own staff mistakenly sent
    Hammond checks for replacement pay and other benefits in excessive amounts and
    Hammond had–to the Village’s astonishment–actually cashed them. To make matters worse,
    the Village apparently decided to recover the double payments by unilaterally deducting
    them without prior notice from the officer’s final paycheck–an action which would
    apparently violate the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act (820 ILCS 115/9 (West
    2012)). As the arbitrator noted, “Because the offense underlying these charges turns on his
    state of mind, and because [the Village] made no effort to determine his state of mind, [it]
    left open an opportunity for him to offer an innocent explanation of his actions.” Hammond
    had several past injury claims, and the checks were for odd amounts and not clearly
    described, so the arbitrator found Hammond’s explanation of confusion was sufficient to
    negate any presumption of criminal intent. Hammond may well have known what was going
    on all the time and hoped the Village staff would never notice the double payments.
    However, it was the arbitrator who heard the testimony and had the right to decide the matter.
    It is not within our province to overturn him.
    ¶ 61        The Village also complains that the arbitrator should not have found that Hammond was
    entitled to a pretermination hearing. The majority finds that “[b]ecause the absence of a
    pretermination hearing had no impact on the award, we decline to address this issue.”
    Supra ¶ 49. I disagree and believe the issue should be addressed. The Village defends its
    failure to provide a pretermination hearing by arguing that the Union simply collectively
    bargained away all of its members’ constitutional and statutory rights regarding employment
    termination, allowing the Village to fire them after investigating, charging, and trying them
    without any prior notice to them. This is absurd. No union in its right mind would have
    2
    Epilogue to William Congreve, The Double Dealer, in 28 Bell’s British Theatre 119 (George
    Cawthorn, British Library (Strand ed. 1797)).
    - 15 -
    signed such a contract, and the contract in the record contains no such provision. The
    contract contains a standard management rights clause allowing the Village to “discipline,
    suspend, and discharge employees for just cause,” but the contract does not provide that the
    Village can ignore statutory or constitutional protections when doing so. Here, the Village
    committed the rather astonishing act of firing a full-time sworn police officer by letter
    without providing any opportunity for the officer to respond before being fired. 3 The
    arbitrator and the trial judge both found that the officer was entitled to at least a
    Loudermill-type hearing4 before being fired, and I agree. See also Prato v. Vallas, 
    331 Ill. App. 3d 852
    , 867-68 (2002) (describing Loudermill’s applicability to pretermination hearings
    of Illinois tenured public employees).
    ¶ 62        After the arbitrator had ruled, the Village attempted to extricate itself from his ruling by
    filing this case. As the majority correctly notes, Illinois law provides very narrow avenues for
    courts to overturn arbitrators’ awards. One of them, “against public policy,” however, is a
    court-made loophole through which imaginative attorneys can drive the proverbial train. The
    Village argues that the arbitrator’s decision violated public policy because: (1) theft is against
    public policy in Illinois; and (2) the officer was never legally hired in the first place because
    he was somehow slipped onto the full-time payroll without being competitively tested by the
    Board of Fire and Police Commissioners as required by state law.
    ¶ 63        The majority resolves the first argument by stating that retaining untrustworthy police
    officers is not against “an explicit and well-defined” public policy in Illinois. 
    Supra ¶¶ 44-48
    .
    I do not join that part of the majority’s analysis. The Village raises “trustworthiness” here as
    an element of Hammond’s alleged crime. As a crime, theft is, by definition, against public
    policy. See, e.g., In re Estate of Feinberg, 
    235 Ill. 2d 256
    , 265 (2009) (contracts that violate
    statutes are void as against public policy). I would instead simply note that the arbitrator, as
    the ultimate fact finder, found there was no theft or lack of trustworthiness because of lack of
    intent and leave it at that. See, e.g., AFSCME II, 
    173 Ill. 2d at 307
     (holding that to vacate an
    arbitral award on public policy grounds, the contract, as interpreted by the arbitrator, must
    violate some explicit public policy).
    ¶ 64        The second point, that Hammond was never legally hired in the first instance, raises an
    entirely new issue that has nothing to do with the “just cause” issue which was before the
    arbitrator. I recognize that elected officials in small communities are often frustrated with the
    difficulty they have in hiring their choices as police officers and firefighters, and in
    implementing wholesale firings of those hired under previous regimes. For over a half
    century, Illinois law has prevented that practice and required that full-time police officers be
    hired on merit according to scores on a competitive public examination. See 65 ILCS
    3
    Normally, full-time Illinois police officers in municipalities as large as Posen cannot be fired
    except through notice, charges, and a hearing before the municipal board of fire and police
    commissioners. Posen is a home rule unit of government, however, and therefore can adopt hiring and
    firing procedures different from those set forth in the Illinois Municipal Code (65 ILCS 5/10-2.1-1
    et seq. (West 2012)), commonly known as the “Police and Fire Commissioners Law.” Nothing in the
    record suggests the Village has done so. The union contract here, like many police contracts, allows
    employees to take disciplinary matters out of the hands of local commissions submitting them to
    binding arbitration by an independent arbitrator.
    4
    See generally Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. 532
     (1985).
    - 16 -
    5/10-2.1-1 et seq. (West 2012). That has not stopped some municipalities from simply
    putting people on police payrolls, and the Village suggests that it illegally hired Hammond as
    a full-time officer in the first place. The Union disagrees and strongly asserts the facts would
    bear out that Hammond was legally hired. We cannot resolve that issue on this record. If, as
    it claims, the Village suddenly “discovered” years after the fact that the Village itself illegally
    slipped Hammond onto the full-time payroll without having him tested and appointed by the
    Board of Fire and Police Commissioners, this case was certainly not the right vehicle to
    rectify that error.
    ¶ 65        In sum, with the exceptions noted herein, I concur with the excellent analysis of the
    majority and the result it has determined.
    - 17 -