delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, Jerry Coleman, filed a complaint for administrative review of his termination as a deputy sheriff against the sheriff of Cook County, his director of inspections and internal affairs division (hereinafter collectively the Sheriff) and the Cook County Sheriff’s Merit Board (Merit Board). The original complaint was dismissed on the ground that, contrary to his allegation therein, plaintiff had not been terminated by the Merit Board. Thereafter, plaintiff filed a first amended complaint alleging that his termination by the Sheriff without a Merit Board hearing was wrongful under Illinois law and denied him procedural due process in violation of 42 U.S.C. §1983. The first amended complaint was dismissed with prejudice on the ground of laches. Plaintiff appeals.
Plaintiff was employed as a deputy sheriff beginning in 1978. His employment predated the establishment of the Merit Board. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 125, par. 52.) Plaintiff completed the deputy sheriff recruit training and probationary police officer’s programs in April 1985. The Merit
Opinion
On appeal, plaintiff first contends that his action was not barred by the doctrine of laches because, as in People ex rel. Casey v. Health & Hospitals Governing Comm’n (1977),
His delay was reasonable, plaintiff asserts, because after his termination and up to the filing of his original complaint, he was awaiting, first, the Merit Board hearing to which he knew he was entitled and, second, notification of the Merit Board’s termination of him without having first notified him. Plaintiff thus reasons that defendants should be barred from asserting laches bеcause his delay in bringing suit was caused by their wrongdoing, i.e., failing to give the Merit Board hearing to which he was entitled before he could be terminated.
We reject plaintiff’s analysis. Simply put, we find utterly illogical plaintiff’s argument, in essence, that, although he knew he was entitled to a Merit Board hearing before he could be properly terminated, after defendants purрorted to terminate him and he ceased working as a deputy sheriff, he did not bring suit to challenge that termination because he was awaiting the Merit Board hearing to which he was entitled. The unreasonableness of plaintiff’s justification for his delay in bringing suit is manifest, especially given the fact that plaintiff does not contend that he was misled or induced into believing that he would eventually be given a Merit Board hearing by anything the Sheriff or any of his agents said or did.
In arguing that his delay in bringing suit was reasonable, plaintiff notes that laches arises where there is, inter alia, a delay despite a plaintiff’s knowledge of the facts upon which his claim is based (Mitchell v. Simms (1979),
We also find plaintiff’s instant action barred on the ground of laches due to the prejudice to the Sheriff resulting from the plaintiff’s delay in bringing suit to challenge his termination.
In Kadon v. Board of Fire & Police Commissioners (1964),
“[I]n civil service cases, where prolonged delay may easily prejudice governmental bodies, impair orderly procedures and work to the disadvantage of third parties, time is an essential factor. The most stringent requirement timewise is in those cases brought by civil service employees to compel reinstatement and payment of back salaries after discharges alleged to be illegal. A rule has been established that if these actions are not brought within six months of the discharge they will be barred on the ground of laches, unless a reasonable explanation can be given for the delay.” Kadon,45 Ill. App. 2d at 430 .
In People ex rel. Sullivan v. Smith (1971),
“The instant case fits squarely within the rulе enunciated in the above cases. Plaintiff introduced no evidence to explain his delay. Third persons have necessarily performed the duties of plaintiff’s former position and have been compensated therefor. Plaintiff’s request for reinstatement and compensation for the 19 months since the expiration of his leave of absence — аt which time he could have brought this action — unquestionably prejudices defendant City of Chicago, which, if plaintiff were to succeed, would be required to pay for the same services twice over a substantial period of time. This is one of the reasons why delay alone is inherently prejudicial in cases of this type, and gave rise to the 6-month laches rule.” Sullivan,133 Ill. App. 2d at 220 .
In Casey, upon which plaintiff also relies for the second prong of his laches argument, the supreme court stated:
“The defendants contend that prejudice to an employer is inherent any time a public employee delays in seeking reinstatement because another person must be hired to replace the discharged employee. That is, if the employee succeeds in securing accrued back pay, the employer must pay him for services rendered by a third person and for which that third person had already been compensated. Thus, the longer the delay, the greater the burden on the employer. We recognize this risk and agree that the defense of laches should be availablе to an employer when sued by a discharged public employee.” Casey,69 Ill. 2d at 115 .
The foregoing cases conclusively reveal that it is prejudice in the sense of having to pay both a replacement worker’s salary during a former employee’s delay in challenging his termination and that employee’s back wages, if his challenge ultimately succeeds, which will justify application of laches to such a suit. It is not, as plaintiff asserts, prejudice in the sense of being induced to hire a replacement worker by the former employee’s delay in challenging his termination which must exist to apply the doctrine of laches. As such, the fact that plaintiff’s delay in challenging his termination did not induce the hiring of a replacemеnt is irrelevant to the determination of prejudice to the Sheriff from plaintiff’s
Although not cited by plaintiff, we must take issue with case law subsequent to Casey which seems to support plaintiff’s position in the instant case.
The first such cause is Chriswell v. Rosewell (1979),
We believe the Chriswell court erred in concluding that the Casey court rejected the six-month rule which the dissent therein relied upon and which was applied in Kadon and Sullivan for two reasons.
The first is the Casey court’s citation to the case of Schultheis v. City of Chicago (1909),
“In [Clark v. City of Chicago (1908),233 Ill. 113 ,84 N.E. 170 ,] we held that a member of the Chicago police force claiming to havе been wrongfully removed would be barred by laches from his right to have the record of the civil service commissioners reviewed by certiorari if he delayed more than six months in beginning his suit unless the delay was satisfactorily explained by the petition for the writ.” (Schultheis,240 Ill. at 170 .)
In light of the foregoing statement of the rule in Schultheis, we find it is manifest from the Casey court’s restatement of the rule thаt it equated a six-month delay in bringing suits of this type as unreasonable per se and sufficient to constitute laches unless “a valid excuse therefor” was given.
The second reason why we must disagree with the Chriswell court that Casey rejected the six-month rule for bringing suits of this type is found in the passage from Casey which we have previously quoted and which culminates in the court’s agreement with the defendants therein that laches should be available to a public employer sued by a discharged employee. We believe that that passage evinces a clear, albeit implicit, adoption of the rationale underlying the six-month rule (see Kadon,
The Chriswell court further erred when, based on its misreading of Casey, it reasoned that the trial court in the case before it erred in denying recovery solely on the basis of the plaintiff’s delay in bringing suit because defendants had not shown that they were prejudiced by the delay. Specifically, it held that the mere assignment of work to another employee after the plaintiff’s termination was insufficient to show prejudice to the employer unless it proved that it would have acted differently had the plaintiff sought prompt reinstatement. It also held that, in that case, the defendants would have been injured by their own wrongful conduct rather than the plaintiff’s delay. Chriswell,
This reasoning of the Chriswell court was error for several reasons. First, as we have already shown, the Casey court adopted, rather than rejected, the six-month рer se laches rule unless the delay was satisfactorily explained. Secondly, in so reasoning, the Chriswell court failed to realize that the Casey court found that rule inapplicable in the case before it for reasons which were not present in Chriswell and, indeed, are not present in the vast majority of cases of the instant type, including this case.
Spеcifically, the Casey court declined to apply the rule for the following reasons: (1) the discharge of the plaintiffs therein
It is clear frоm the foregoing that Casey is sui generis and of little value in cases, such as Chriswell and the instant one, where: (a) discharges of public employees are isolated incidents and not in furtherance of some general policy of the employer; and (b) the parties are not awaiting the outcome of prior litigation which would be controlling of a later suit against the same employer. It is of little value because, contrary to the Chriswell court’s understanding, it cannot categorically be said in such cases that the injury or prejudice to the public employer defendant therein results solely from his own wrongful conduct rather than the plaintiff’s delay. That being the case, the Chriswell court clearly erred in relying upon Casey to conclude: (a) that it is insufficient prejudice to a public employer that another employee had done what it would have to compensate the plaintiff for, if successful, without a showing that it would have acted differently had the plaintiff acted promptly; and (b) that, unless that showing is made, the defendant’s own wrongdoing would be the cause of its injury. In view of our analysis of Casey, we believe that Chriswell was wrongly decided and is of no support to plaintiff here.
In view of that analysis, we must also take issue with Fruhling v. County of Champaign (1981),
In view of the fact that the Sheriff hired a replacement for plaintiff two months after he was terminated, plaintiff’s 15-month delay in seeking reinstatement and back pay was inherently prejudicial to the Sheriff and that prejudice was sufficient to warrant application of laches against plaintiff.
Plaintiff lastly contends that laches is an equitable defense which, while applicable to his equitable claim for reinstatement to his former position, cannot be applied to the portion of his claim which is an action at law, i.e., his claim for back pay. (Mother Earth, Ltd. v. Strawberry Camel, Ltd. (1979),
We reject plaintiff’s analysis. Contrary to plaintiff’s assertion, it is not black letter law that laches is inapplicable to actions at law. Rather, it has been held that the doctrine is not strictly and unequivocally limited to suits in equity. (Bays v. Matthews (1982),
For all of the foregoing reasons, we affirm the order of the circuit court dismissing plaintiff’s first amended complaint with prejudice.
Affirmed.
CERDA, P.J., and WHITE, J., concur.
Notes
Justice Freeman authored this opinion prior to his election to the Illinois Supreme Court.
It was for these reasons that the court concluded that, if the plaintiffs recovered accrued back pay, the defendants would have been injured by their own wrongful conduct, which took the form of a wrongful retirement policy, not the plaintiffs’ delay.
In so holding, we believe the Casey court implicitly recognized that the prejudice to a public employer inherent in a wrongful termination suit brought later than six months thereafter was, alone, insufficient to bar the suit in the case before it.
