Moncelle v. McDade ( 2018 )


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  •                                                                         Digitally signed by
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    Appellate Court                           Date: 2018.01.30
    14:32:03 -06'00'
    Moncelle v. McDade, 
    2017 IL App (3d) 160579
    Appellate Court   PATRICIA MONCELLE, Individually and as Special Administrator
    Caption           of the Estate of Michael Moncelle, Deceased, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.
    JUSTICE MARY McDADE, JUSTICE VICKI WRIGHT, and
    JUSTICE MARY K. O’BRIEN, Defendants-Appellees.
    District & No.    Third District
    Docket No. 3-16-0579
    Filed             October 30, 2017
    Decision Under    Appeal from the Circuit Court of Peoria County, No. 12-L-269; the
    Review            Hon. David A. Brown, Judge, presiding.
    Judgment          Affirmed.
    Counsel on        Adrian M. Vuckovich, of Collins, Bargione & Vuckovich, of Chicago,
    Appeal            for appellant.
    Lisa Madigan, Attorney General, of Chicago (David L. Franklin,
    Solicitor General, and Janon E. Fabiano, Assistant Attorney General,
    of counsel), for appellees.
    Panel                      JUSTICE SCHOSTOK delivered the judgment of the court, with
    opinion.
    Presiding Justice Hudson and Justice Zenoff concurred in the
    judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1         After the trial court dismissed her lawsuit against the persons and entities she believes
    caused her husband’s death, the plaintiff, Patricia Moncelle, appealed to the Third District
    Appellate Court. That court affirmed the dismissal. Moncelle v. C.A.P. Air Freight, 402 Ill.
    App. 3d 1204 (2010) (table) (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23). The plaintiff
    contends that, in issuing that decision, the panel of justices who decided the appeal—Mary
    McDade, Vicki Wright, and Mary K. O’Brien (collectively, the defendant
    justices)—deliberately misstated the contents of the record so as to provide support for their
    decision, which they had prejudged without regard to the facts of the case. The plaintiff made
    this argument repeatedly during her unsuccessful challenges to the original dismissal and in
    other contexts. Eventually, the plaintiff filed a lawsuit against the defendant justices. The trial
    court dismissed the lawsuit for failure to state a claim and on the basis of “judicial and/or
    sovereign immunity.” The plaintiff now appeals that dismissal.1 We affirm.
    ¶2                                            I. BACKGROUND
    ¶3         In late 2004, the plaintiff’s husband, Michael Moncelle, died when his vehicle was struck
    by a truck that belonged to AIR CAP LLC (AIR CAP) and was driven by Matthew F. Gross, an
    employee of C.A.P. Air Freight (CAP). In 2005, the plaintiff filed suit (the 2005 suit) against
    Gross, CAP, and AIR CAP (collectively, the trucking defendants), claiming wrongful death
    and property damage. She asserted that all of the trucking defendants engaged in willful and
    wanton misconduct, based upon allegations that Gross was under the influence of alcohol and
    drugs at the time of the collision and that the other trucking defendants had known of his drug
    addiction but nevertheless had hired him, retained him, and entrusted him with the truck. In her
    10-count second amended complaint, the plaintiff also alleged that the trucking defendants had
    violated federal trucking regulations. The plaintiff sought leave to add prayers for punitive
    damages to all of the counts, arguing that the inclusion of the allegations regarding federal
    trucking violations permitted this. The trial court denied leave to seek punitive damages with
    respect to all of the counts except one count directed toward Gross.
    ¶4         CAP and AIR CAP filed motions for partial summary judgment, seeking rulings that they
    were not liable for certain of the alleged violations of federal trucking regulations. The motions
    detailed the specific subparagraphs of the complaint as to which they believed they were
    1
    Although the appeal was filed in the Third District, all of the justices from that district recused
    themselves from hearing the appeal. The Illinois Supreme Court assigned the appeal to be heard and
    decided by the Second District Appellate Court. See People v. Ortiz, 
    196 Ill. 2d 236
    , 256 (2001)
    (“[T]his court [(the Illinois Supreme Court)] has the power to assign judges to the various divisions
    [(Ill. S. Ct. R. 22(b) (eff. Dec. 1, 2008))], a power which we can and do utilize when necessary to assign
    judges from one district to hear and decide cases originally brought in another.”).
    -2-
    entitled to summary judgment. On November 20, 2007, the trial court orally granted summary
    judgment as to certain subparagraphs in the counts against AIR CAP and some of the counts
    against CAP. On November 26, the trial court entered a written order, further granting
    summary judgment as to four other subparagraphs in some of the counts against CAP. The trial
    court did not grant summary judgment on the entirety of any of the 10 counts—at least some
    portion of each count remained for trial, which was scheduled for December 3.
    ¶5       On November 29, 2007, CAP filed an amended answer in which it admitted liability for
    Gross’s actions, under a theory of respondeat superior (the claim asserted in two counts).2
    That same day, the other trucking defendants obtained leave to file amended answers admitting
    their liability under the counts directed against them. As a result, damages was the only issue
    remaining for trial.
    ¶6       The plaintiff advised the trial court that she wished to file a motion to reconsider the court’s
    ruling limiting the availability of punitive damages because case law supported the wider
    availability of such damages now that the trucking defendants had admitted liability on claims
    of willful and wanton misconduct. Because the trial date was only four days away, the trial
    court set a highly expedited briefing schedule, giving the plaintiff only two days to serve a list
    of the case law on which she relied and requiring her written motion to be filed by 8 a.m. on the
    day of trial. Rather than engaging in the expedited briefing, on November 30, 2007, the
    plaintiff moved to voluntarily dismiss the 2005 case. The trial court dismissed the 2005 case
    without prejudice.
    ¶7       On January 16, 2008, less than two months later, the plaintiff filed a new case against the
    trucking defendants (the 2008 case). The trucking defendants moved to dismiss the 2008 case,
    arguing that it was barred by the doctrine of res judicata. The trial court granted the motion and
    dismissed the 2008 case with prejudice. The plaintiff moved for reconsideration.
    ¶8       The plaintiff also filed, in the 2005 case, a petition for relief from judgment pursuant to
    section 2-1401 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-1401 (West 2006)). The
    petition was based on newly discovered evidence suggesting that Gross had been drinking
    alcohol at the time of the accident, and it asserted that CAP had attempted to conceal the
    evidence. The plaintiff argued that, if any of the orders limiting punitive damages or granting
    partial summary judgment in the 2005 case were final judgments (as the trucking defendants
    contended in their motion to dismiss the 2008 case), those judgments should be vacated due to
    CAP’s misconduct in concealing the evidence. The trucking defendants moved to dismiss the
    petition.
    ¶9       In January 2009, the trial court issued a single written order bearing the docket numbers of
    both the 2005 case and the 2008 case. In that order, the trial court denied the section 2-1401
    petition filed in the 2005 case, on the ground that the newly discovered evidence would not
    have changed the outcome of any of its rulings in that case. It also denied the plaintiff’s motion
    to reconsider its dismissal of the 2008 case.
    2
    CAP simultaneously filed a motion to dismiss the remaining counts against it, arguing that,
    because it had admitted liability on the basis of respondeat superior, the trial court should dismiss the
    negligent hiring, retention, and entrustment claims. Before the motion was heard, CAP’s attorney stated
    that, if the trial court denied the motion, CAP would file an amended answer admitting liability under
    those counts as well. As events transpired, the motion was never decided.
    -3-
    ¶ 10        The plaintiff appealed the dismissal of both the 2008 case and the section 2-1401 petition
    filed in the 2005 case. On April 7, 2010, the defendant justices issued the decision that forms
    the basis for this suit (the 2010 Rule 23 Order). The decision affirmed the trial court’s rulings.
    ¶ 11        In explaining their decision, the defendant justices framed the question before them as
    whether CAP and AIR CAP were “entitled to raise res judicata as a bar to Plaintiff’s 2008
    complaint as to all or some of Plaintiff’s claims, based on the trial court’s order granting ***
    partial summary judgment on Plaintiff’s claims based on” the alleged violations of federal
    trucking regulations. In explaining their ruling, the defendant justices stated:
    “The trial court’s order dismissing the counts in plaintiff’s second-amended complaint
    *** premised on alleged violations of the [federal trucking regulations], was a final
    judgment on the merits of a separate branch of the controversy. When plaintiff
    voluntarily dismissed the remainder of her complaint, she triggered the res judicata bar
    to re-filing against those defendants. Accordingly, the trial court’s order granting the
    *** motions to dismiss plaintiff’s 2008 complaint is affirmed.” Moncelle, slip order at
    13.
    The plaintiff contends that all of the parties repeatedly advised the defendant justices, in briefs
    and at oral argument, that the entry of partial summary judgment and other rulings had not
    disposed of any entire counts or claims.
    ¶ 12        The plaintiff filed a petition for rehearing, which was denied, and an application for a
    certificate of importance, which was likewise denied. (Justice O’Brien dissented from the
    latter denial.) In both, the plaintiff argued that the defendant justices had known that there was
    no order in the record matching the description of the “order dismissing the counts” in the 2010
    Rule 23 Order and had deliberately fabricated the existence of such an order to conceal their
    unwarranted determination to affirm the trial court’s rulings. The plaintiff then petitioned the
    Illinois Supreme Court for leave to appeal, repeating her charge that the defendant justices had
    deliberately misstated the record by saying that “the circuit court had dismissed certain counts
    of Plaintiff’s Second Amended Complaint *** when, in fact, no count was dismissed as to any
    Defendant.” The supreme court denied the petition for leave to appeal.3
    ¶ 13        On September 7, 2012, the plaintiff filed the complaint at issue in this appeal. In it, she
    alleged that the defendant justices fabricated the “order dismissing the counts” referred to in
    the 2010 Rule 23 Order through intentional misrepresentations, i.e., statements in the 2010
    Rule 23 Order that such an order existed. She alleged that the defendant justices’ conduct was
    criminal—amounting to tampering with public records (720 ILCS 5/32-8 (West 2010)) and
    official misconduct (720 ILCS 5/33-3 (West 2010))—as well as a breach of their professional
    ethical obligations under the Rules of Professional Conduct and the Code of Judicial Conduct.
    3
    Between the supreme court’s September 2010 denial of the petition for leave to appeal and the
    September 2012 filing of the lawsuit before us now, the plaintiff attempted to file a new joint
    “complaint” in the 2005 and 2008 cases. The complaint named the defendant justices as well as the
    trucking defendants (although it included no allegations directed against the trucking defendants). The
    trial court dismissed this “complaint” as unpermitted by the Code inasmuch as final judgments had
    already been entered in both cases, and this court affirmed the dismissal. See Moncelle v. C.A.P. Air
    Freight, Inc., 
    2014 IL App (3d) 130121-U
    (Second District Appellate Court sitting by assignment from
    the Illinois Supreme Court). Because that proceeding has no bearing on the issues in this appeal, we do
    not discuss it further.
    -4-
    Alleging that their conduct caused her harm, i.e., the loss of her cause of action against the
    trucking defendants, the plaintiff sought compensatory and punitive damages and a finding
    that the defendant justices were “guilty beyond a reasonable doubt” of fabricating a trial court
    order.
    ¶ 14       The defendant justices filed a combined motion to dismiss the case pursuant to section
    2-619.1 of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2-619.1 (West 2012)), arguing that the complaint failed to
    state a claim and that the suit was barred by judicial and sovereign immunity. On July 9, 2014,
    the trial court granted the motion and dismissed the complaint with prejudice, finding that the
    defendant justices were entitled to “judicial and/or sovereign immunity.” The trial court also
    found that the complaint failed to state a claim and that it could not be amended to cure the
    pleading defect. After the trial court denied the plaintiff’s motion to reconsider, she filed this
    appeal.
    ¶ 15                                          II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 16        The trial court dismissed the complaint on two grounds: immunity and the insufficiency of
    the complaint’s allegations. Because we find the issue of judicial immunity dispositive, we
    confine our analysis to that basis.
    ¶ 17        Judicial immunity is a matter that can justify the dismissal of a complaint under section
    2-619(a)(9) of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2-619(a)(9) (West 2012)). See Grund v. Donegan, 
    298 Ill. App. 3d 1034
    , 1039 (1998). In considering whether a complaint was properly dismissed
    under section 2-619, we take as true all well-pleaded factual allegations of the complaint.
    Better Government Ass’n v. Illinois High School Ass’n, 
    2017 IL 121124
    , ¶ 21. However, we
    “cannot accept as true mere conclusions unsupported by specific facts.” 
    Id. ¶ 57.
    We review
    the dismissal of the complaint de novo. 
    Id. ¶ 21.
    ¶ 18        The common-law doctrine of judicial immunity was first laid down centuries ago as a
    means of protecting the independence of the judiciary and discouraging inappropriate
    collateral attacks on judgments. Forrester v. White, 
    484 U.S. 219
    , 225 (1988) (noting that the
    doctrine dates back to medieval times). “As early as 1872, the [United States Supreme] Court
    recognized that it was ‘a general principle of the highest importance to the proper
    administration of justice that a judicial officer, in exercising the authority vested in him,
    [should] be free to act upon his own convictions, without apprehension of personal
    consequences to himself.’ ” Stump v. Sparkman, 
    435 U.S. 349
    , 355 (1978) (quoting Bradley v.
    Fisher, 80 U.S. (13 Wall.) 335, 347 (1871)). Accordingly, judges are not liable for their
    judicial acts, “even when such acts are in excess of their jurisdiction, and are alleged to have
    been done maliciously or corruptly.” Bradley, 80 U.S. (13 Wall.) at 351.
    ¶ 19        There are only two exceptions to judicial immunity. Mireles v. Waco, 
    502 U.S. 9
    , 11
    (1991). “First, a judge is not immune from liability for nonjudicial actions, i.e., actions not
    taken in the judge’s judicial capacity.” 
    Id. This exception
    covers situations in which a judge
    acted in an administrative capacity, for example. See 
    Forrester, 484 U.S. at 228
    (no judicial
    immunity where judge was acting in administrative capacity when he fired the plaintiff
    probation officer). “Second, a judge is not immune for actions, though judicial in nature, taken
    in the complete absence of all jurisdiction.” 
    Mireles, 502 U.S. at 12
    . In the latter exception, the
    term “jurisdiction” refers not to a judge’s authority or power to act but to the subject-matter
    jurisdiction of the court upon which the judge sits. Bradley, 80 U.S. (13 Wall.) at 351-52.
    -5-
    ¶ 20        The plaintiff argues that the defendant justices’ alleged act of fabricating a trial court order
    was a nonjudicial action. Specifically, the plaintiff contends that the entry of the appellate
    court order—the 2010 Rule 23 Order—was outside of the defendant justices’ judicial authority
    because it had the effect of fabricating a trial court order, and appellate judges ordinarily do not
    enter trial court orders. Thus, she argues, their act was not within the defendants’ judicial
    capacity. However, an act is “judicial,” i.e., within a judge’s judicial capacity, whenever “it is a
    function normally performed by a judge” and the parties were dealing with the judge in her
    judicial role as the arbiter of a controversy. 
    Stump, 435 U.S. at 362
    . That was the case here,
    where the entry of the 2010 Rule 23 Order was undoubtedly the type of judicial act performed
    by appellate judges such as the defendants.
    ¶ 21        The plaintiff argues that, although the entry of an appellate court order may be a judicial
    act, the utter fabrication of a nonexistent trial court order, done intentionally and without
    justification (which is what the complaint alleges), cannot be considered a judicial act because
    judges have no power to take such liberties with the trial court record. We would have no
    qualms about condemning any such conduct by a judge. However, no lesser body than the
    United States Supreme Court has held that the plaintiff is wrong: if a court order was the means
    by which a falsehood was perpetrated, the judge who entered that order is entitled to judicial
    immunity even though the plaintiff alleges that the judge intentionally fabricated the “facts”
    contained in the order.
    ¶ 22        In the seminal case of Bradley, as in this case, the plaintiff alleged that a judge who entered
    an order intentionally misrepresented the facts so as to justify the entry of the order. There, a
    trial court judge entered an order barring an attorney from appearing in the judge’s court.
    Bradley, 80 U.S. (13 Wall.) at 344. As justification, the order stated that the attorney had
    approached the judge in a hostile manner after a trial, accusing the judge of insulting him from
    the bench during the trial and threatening the judge with “personal chastisement” (i.e., physical
    violence). 
    Id. The attorney,
    alleging that his professional livelihood had been damaged by the
    bar order, sued the judge. His complaint asserted that the statements in the bar order were
    utterly false and that the judge had “maliciously, corruptly, and unlawfully fabricated the said
    order to give color and pretence” to the bar order. (Emphasis omitted.) 
    Id. at 338.
    ¶ 23        The Supreme Court found that, regardless of the truth of the matter contained in the order,
    the judge was absolutely immune from suit. The entry of an order governing the ability of an
    attorney to appear before him was undoubtedly within the judge’s power to regulate his
    courtroom and was an act undertaken in the judge’s judicial capacity. 
    Id. at 346-47.
    That being
    so, the judge could not be liable in a civil action, “however erroneous the [judge’s] act may
    have been, and however injurious in its consequences it may have proved to the plaintiff.” 
    Id. at 347.
    This immunity applied even though the judicial act in question was “alleged to have
    been done maliciously or corruptly” and to contain deliberate falsehoods. 
    Id. at 351.
    This same
    rule applies with equal force here, where the plaintiff alleges that the 2010 Rule 23 Order
    contained intentionally false statements about the trial court record.
    ¶ 24        Further, a judge’s immunity from suit does not depend on the motives that the plaintiff
    ascribes to the judge. As the Bradley Court noted, litigation frequently arouses powerful
    emotions, especially in those parties against whom the judge rules, who might be inclined to
    believe that the ruling against them flowed not from some shortcoming in their arguments but
    from some improper motive on the part of the judge. “If civil actions could be maintained in
    such cases against the judge, because the losing party should see fit to allege in his complaint
    -6-
    that the acts of the judge were done with partiality, or maliciously, or corruptly, the protection
    essential to judicial independence would be entirely swept away.” 
    Id. at 348.
    Accordingly, the
    Court held, “[t]he purity of [a judge’s] motives cannot *** be the subject of judicial inquiry.”
    
    Id. at 347.
    ¶ 25       Here, the parties presented the defendant justices with a controversy to be decided in their
    judicial capacity, and the defendant justices resolved that controversy by entering an order.
    Under the Supreme Court’s guidance, we determine whether an act is “judicial” by considering
    whether “it is a function normally performed by a judge” and whether the parties were dealing
    with the judge in her judicial role. 
    Stump, 435 U.S. at 362
    . Even accepting as true the allegation
    that the 2010 Rule 23 Order was the means by which the defendant justices deliberately and
    maliciously fabricated a trial court order, that does not change the fact that the entry of the
    2010 Rule 23 Order was itself a judicial act.
    ¶ 26       In arguing against this conclusion, the plaintiff also points to the magnitude of the loss she
    has suffered: first she lost her husband in a terrible collision (liability for which all of the
    trucking defendants admitted), and then she lost her ability to bring her claim, a second
    deprivation that she argues was caused by the intentional actions of the defendant justices. She
    argues that it would be a travesty to apply the doctrine of judicial immunity in these
    circumstances. Once again, however, her argument has been foreclosed by the Supreme Court,
    which held that judicial immunity applies even where a judge’s actions are alleged to have
    deprived someone of a fundamental right without due process or even any legal authority.
    ¶ 27       In Stump, a mother petitioned a circuit court judge in Indiana to enter an order allowing her
    15-year-old daughter to be sterilized, contending that her daughter was “somewhat retarded.”
    
    Id. at 351.
    The judge entered the order ex parte, without appointing a guardian ad litem for the
    daughter or holding a hearing on the petition. 
    Id. at 352.
    The daughter was sterilized the next
    day without her knowledge, thinking that she was undergoing an appendectomy. When the
    daughter found out, years later after she was married, that she could not have children, she sued
    her mother, the mother’s attorney, the doctors and the hospital involved, and the judge who had
    entered the order permitting the sterilization. 
    Id. at 353.
    The trial court dismissed the
    daughter’s claim against the judge on the basis of judicial immunity. 
    Id. at 354.
    ¶ 28       The appellate court reversed on the ground that the judge’s actions in entering the order
    constituted such a serious violation of due process that they could not be said to be within the
    judge’s power or jurisdiction. Not only had the judge ignored the statutorily required
    procedure for hearing a sterilization petition, but his entry of the order was “an illegitimate
    exercise of his common law power because of his failure to comply with elementary principles
    of procedural due process.” Sparkman v. McFarlin, 
    552 F.2d 172
    , 176 (7th Cir. 1977).
    ¶ 29       The Supreme Court rejected the appellate court’s approach:
    “This misconceives the doctrine of judicial immunity. A judge is absolutely immune
    from liability for his judicial acts even if his exercise of authority is flawed by the
    commission of grave procedural errors. The Court made this point clear in 
    Bradley, 13 Wall., at 357
    , where it stated: ‘[T]his erroneous manner in which [the court’s]
    jurisdiction was exercised, however it may have affected the validity of the act, did not
    make the act any less a judicial act; nor did it render the defendant liable to answer in
    damages for it at the suit of the plaintiff ***.’ ” 
    Stump, 435 U.S. at 359
    .
    Thus, although the judge in Stump had acted far outside the bounds of his legal authority, he
    was entitled to judicial immunity. “[N]either the procedural errors he may have committed nor
    -7-
    the lack of a specific statute authorizing his approval of the petition in question rendered him
    liable in damages for the consequences of his actions.” 
    Id. at 359-60.
    As the judge had acted in
    his judicial capacity and the court on which he sat had subject-matter jurisdiction over the
    mother’s petition, he was absolutely immune from civil liability.
    ¶ 30       In this case, it is undisputed that the Third District Appellate Court had subject-matter
    jurisdiction over the plaintiff’s appeal. Further, the entry of the 2010 Rule 23 Order was a
    judicial act. The defendant justices thus are entitled to judicial immunity against any liability
    arising from the entry of the 2010 Rule 23 Order, regardless of its contents or their motives in
    entering it. 
    Mireles, 502 U.S. at 12
    ; 
    Stump, 435 U.S. at 359
    -60; see also Generes v. Foreman,
    
    277 Ill. App. 3d 353
    , 356 (1995) (Illinois circuit court judge was immune from suit arising
    from his entry of an order vacating a dismissal despite the fact that he had previously recused
    himself from the case). The plaintiff’s complaint was correctly dismissed on the basis of
    judicial immunity.
    ¶ 31       The application of judicial immunity can appear harsh. Nevertheless, “[d]espite the
    unfairness to litigants that sometimes results, the doctrine of judicial immunity is thought to be
    in the best interests” of the public 
    (Stump, 435 U.S. at 363
    ):
    “For it is a general principle of the highest importance to the proper administration of
    justice that a judicial officer, in exercising the authority vested in him, shall be free to
    act upon his own convictions, without apprehension of personal consequences to
    himself. Liability to answer to every one who might feel himself aggrieved by the
    action of the judge, would be inconsistent with the possession of this freedom, and
    would destroy that independence without which no judiciary can be either respectable
    or useful.” Bradley, 80 U.S. (13 Wall.) at 347.
    This judicial independence is essential to the functioning of our society.
    “If judges were personally liable for erroneous decisions, the resulting avalanche of
    suits, most of them frivolous but vexatious, would provide powerful incentives for
    judges to avoid rendering decisions likely to provoke such suits. [Citation.] The
    resulting timidity would be hard to detect or control, and it would manifestly detract
    from independent and impartial adjudication. Nor are suits against judges the only
    available means through which litigants can protect themselves from the consequences
    of judicial error. Most judicial mistakes or wrongs are open to correction through
    ordinary mechanisms of review, which are largely free of the harmful side-effects
    inevitably associated with exposing judges to personal liability.” 
    Forrester, 484 U.S. at 226-27
    .
    As tragic a loss as the plaintiff suffered, the plaintiff’s complaint was correctly dismissed on
    the basis of judicial immunity.
    ¶ 32                                      III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 33       The judgment of the circuit court of Peoria County is affirmed.
    ¶ 34       Affirmed.
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