Grady v. Illinois Department of Healthcare & Family Services
1-15-2402
Appellate Court of Illinois, First District, Third Division
November 2, 2016
2016 IL App (1st) 152402
JUSTICE COBBS
Appellate Court
Grady v. Illinois Department of Healthcare & Family Services,
2016 IL App (1st) 152402
Appellate Court Caption: LAURETTA GRADY, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. THE ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHCARE AND FAMILY SERVICES and JULIE HAMOS, Director, Defendants-Appellees.
District & No.: First District, Third Division, Docket No. 1-15-2402
Filed: November 2, 2016
Decision Under Review: Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 14-CH-20233; the Hon. Mary L. Mikva, Judge, presiding.
Judgment: Reversed and remanded with directions.
Counsel on Appeal: Legal Assistance Foundation, of Chicago (Miriam Hallbauer, of counsel), for appellant.
Lisa Madigan, Attorney General, of Chicago (Carolyn E. Shapiro, Solicitor General, and Paul Racette, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel), for appellees.
Panel: JUSTICE COBBS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Fitzgerald Smith and Justice Lavin concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶ 1 Plaintiff Lauretta Grady appeals from the dismissal with prejudice of her complaint seeking judicial review of an administrative decision nominally rendered by the Illinois Department of Human Services (DHS) regarding her eligibility for a Medicaid program. In her complaint, plaintiff named the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services (DHFS) and its director, Julie Hamos, as defendants but not DHS or that agency’s head. On appeal, plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in dismissing her complaint for failure to name required parties, arguing that DHFS has the statutory authority to determine questions of Medicaid eligibility and consequently was the proper defendant. Alternatively, she contends that if she failed to name the proper parties she was entitled to amend her complaint to correct the error, pursuant to subsection 3-107(a) of the Administrative Review Law (
¶ 2 BACKGROUND
¶ 3 Plaintiff participates in the Home Services Plan, a program intended to prevent unnecessary institutionalization of individuals, pursuant to the Traumatic Brain Injury Medicaid Waiver Program. As part of the plan, participants take part in regular reassessments to determine their continued eligibility and needs. Following a reassessment in June 2014, plaintiff was assigned a plan that granted her 155 hours of medical services per month.
¶ 4 Subsequently, plaintiff filed an administrative appeal of the plan, seeking additional hours for an assistant to aid with certain therapies prescribed by her doctor. An administrative hearing was held before an officer of DHS, and the officer recommended a new service plan with marginally increased hours. The caption atop the officer’s written decision stated “STATE OF ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES,” and the decision’s first paragraph indicated that the officer was a hearing officer for “the Department of Human Services *** Bureau of Hearings.” The officer later noted that “the Department of Human Services has jurisdiction” over the administrative appeal. The decision’s final page was signed by Michelle R.B. Saddler, the secretary of DHS at the time, and indicated that Saddler was adopting the findings and recommendations of the hearing officer. The decision was sent to plaintiff with a cover letter, signed by Saddler and indicating that the “Illinois Department of Human Services reviewed” her appeal.
¶ 5 Alleging that the increased hours were still insufficient, plaintiff appealed the administrative decision in a complaint filed in the Cook County circuit court on December 18, 2014. The complaint did not name DHS or Saddler as defendants; instead, it named DHFS and its then-director, Hamos. Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint without leave to amend, arguing that DHS was a necessary party because it had issued the decision to be reviewed. Plaintiff responded that DHFS was the agency responsible under the law for rendering the decision to be reviewed and thus was the correct party. She also argued alternatively that the court was required to grant her 35 days to serve the correct defendant and that any mistake should be excused as a “good faith” error.
¶ 6 Before the trial court made its ruling on the motion to dismiss, the Appellate Court, Fourth District, rendered its decision in Mannheim School District No. 83 v. Teachers’ Retirement
¶ 7 ANALYSIS
¶ 8 Plaintiff first contends that defendants were properly named in her suit because the Administrative Review Law (
¶ 9 Where the circuit court has granted a motion to dismiss filed pursuant to section 2-619 of the Code of Civil Procedure (
¶ 10 When construing a statute, our primary objective is to ascertain and give effect to the legislature’s intent through giving the statutory language its plain and ordinary meaning. People v. Lloyd, 2013 IL 113510, ¶ 25. If the language is clear and unambiguous, a court may not deviate from that language by inferring exceptions or conditions that the General Assembly did not set forth. Wilkins v. Williams, 2013 IL 114310, ¶ 22. However, statutory interpretation “cannot always be reduced to ‘the mechanical application of the dictionary definitions of the individual words and phrases involved.’ ” People v. Wood, 379 Ill. App. 3d 705, 708-09 (2008) (quoting Whelan v. County Officers’ Electoral Board, 256 Ill. App. 3d 555, 558 (1994)). A court should not read language in an excessively literal fashion such that it produces an absurd construction. See id. at 709.
¶ 11 The Administrative Review Law governs all proceedings in which a party seeks judicial review of an administrative eligibility decision under article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code (
¶ 12 Section 3-101 of the Administrative Review Law sets forth the applicable definitions.
¶ 13 The Administrative Review Law clearly requires that when an individual seeks review of an administrative agency decision, that agency must be named as a defendant. The only natural reading of subsection 3-107(a) indicates that the phrase “the administrative agency” that is the subject of the subsection’s requirement refers to the same entity as the phrase “an administrative agency,” which occurs in the prepositional phrase immediately preceding it. See
¶ 14 It is clear from the record that the decision plaintiff seeks to review was issued by DHS and not DHFS. The proceedings were held before a DHS hearing officer, and the decision itself clearly designated DHS as the issuing body. The decision was sent to plaintiff along with a letter indicating that her case had been reviewed by DHS. There is nothing in the record that suggests that DHFS took any part in the challenged decision. Accordingly, DHS was required to be named as defendant.
¶ 15 Plaintiff argues that the Administrative Review Law defines an administrative agency as an entity “having power under the law to make administrative decisions” and therefore the administrative agency referred to in subsection 3-107(a) must be an agency having power under the law to make the challenged administrative decisions. She then discusses at length the legislative history of DHFS in arguing that the agency has the power under the law to issue Medicaid eligibility decisions. In so arguing, plaintiff relies on our supreme court’s opinion in Gillmore.
¶ 16 In Gillmore, the plaintiff sought review of a DHS decision finding her eligible for Medicaid benefits but imposing a penalty based upon a rule promulgated by the Illinois Department of Public Aid (DPA), the state Medicaid agency at the time. Gillmore, 218 Ill. 2d at 304-06. The decision was signed by the DHS secretary and the DPA director and included a cover letter stating that it was the decision of DHS and DPA. Id. at 310. Before addressing the merits of plaintiff’s appeal, the supreme court briefly addressed DHS’s contention that the case must be dismissed because plaintiff had not served a copy of the complaint on DPA. Id. at 313-15. The supreme court reviewed the Illinois Public Aid Code (
¶ 17 We find Gillmore distinguishable from the current case. In that case, the plaintiff had named only one of two agencies indicated on an administrative decision, and thus our supreme court considered which of the two agencies was responsible for the decision that both had
¶ 18 Plaintiff also argues that her case should not have been dismissed because DHS was acting as an agent of DHFS based upon an interagency delegation of power. See
¶ 19 Plaintiff contends alternatively that the trial court erred in denying her request for leave to amend her complaint and add DHS as a defendant, arguing that the language of subsection 3-107(a) of the Administrative Review Law clearly mandates that plaintiff be allowed to amend her complaint to add unnamed parties. Acknowledging that this argument is contrary to the Fourth District’s recent opinion in Mannheim, plaintiff argues that this court should reject the opinion as wrongly decided. The State responds that Mannheim was correctly decided and that the complaint could only be amended to add an agency defendant if the head of that agency was originally named as a defendant.
¶ 20 Subsection 3-107(a) is comprised of three paragraphs. The first, previously discussed, sets forth the parties that must be made defendants in an action for judicial review of an administrative decision, as well as the method of service required.
“No action for administrative review shall be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction based upon the failure to name an employee, agent, or member, who acted in his or her official capacity, of an administrative agency, board, committee, or government entity, where the administrative agency, board, committee, or government entity, has been named as a defendant as provided in this Section. Naming the director or agency head, in his or her official capacity, shall be deemed to include as defendant the administrative agency, board, committee, or government entity that the named defendants direct or head. No action for administrative review shall be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction based upon the failure to name an administrative agency, board, committee, or government entity, where the director or agency head, in his or her official capacity, has been named as a defendant as provided in this Section.” Id.
Finally, the third paragraph, at issue in the case at bar, indicates:
“If, during the course of a review action, the court determines that an agency or a party of record to the administrative proceedings was not made a defendant as required by the preceding paragraph, then the court shall grant the plaintiff 35 days from the date of the determination in which to name and serve the unnamed agency or party as a
¶ 21 The Appellate Court, Fourth District, recently considered subsection 3-107(a)’s third paragraph in Mannheim under facts similar to the case at bar. In that case, the plaintiff sought judicial review of a decision by the Board of Trustees of the Teachers’ Retirement System of Illinois but failed to name the agency or its head as defendant. Mannheim, 2015 IL App (4th) 140531, ¶ 3. The trial court dismissed the complaint and denied the plaintiff’s motion to amend it to include the proper defendants. Id. ¶ 7. The Fourth District held that the plaintiff was not entitled to amend its complaint, finding that the “strict language” of subsection 3-107(a) specifies that a plaintiff is only allowed to amend in the circumstances laid out in the subsection’s second paragraph: “(1) the individual employee, agent, or member who acted in his or her official capacity can be added when the plaintiff has named the administrative agency, board, committee, or government entity ‘as provided in this section’; or (2) the administrative agency, board, committee, or government entity can be added when the plaintiff has named the director or agency head, in his or her official capacity, ‘as provided in this section.’ ” Id. ¶ 22 (quoting
¶ 22 Plaintiff did not name DHS or its secretary as defendant in her complaint; thus under the reasoning of Mannheim, she would not be entitled to add either entity as a defendant. However, we decline to follow Mannheim for the following reasons.
¶ 23 First, it is clear that the Fourth District found that the reference to “the preceding paragraph” in subsection 3-107(a)’s third paragraph was intended to direct the reader to the subsection’s second paragraph because the court limited the subsection’s mandate to allow amendment to the circumstances described in that paragraph. Although we acknowledge that the court’s understanding of the phrase is a plausible reading of the statute, we do not agree that it is the best or most natural reading. In statutory interpretation, a reviewing court must view each phrase or part of the legislation in the context of the statute as a whole. Ultsch v. Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund, 226 Ill. 2d 169, 184 (2007). The phrase “the preceding paragraph” by itself could be read to mean the immediately preceding paragraph; however, the statute indicates that the preceding paragraph in question requires that “an agency or a party of record to the administrative proceedings” be made a defendant.
¶ 24 This reading of “the preceding paragraph” is supported by an examination of the legislative history of the statute. In 1995, subsection 3-107(a) consisted of only two paragraphs, with the first paragraph being substantially similar to the current first paragraph’s description of required parties and the second paragraph being substantially similar to the current third paragraph.
¶ 25 Moreover, we note that appellate courts are not permitted to interpret statutory language in a manner that renders any part of the statute “redundant” or “superfluous.” Citizens Opposing Pollution v. ExxonMobil Coal U.S.A., 2012 IL 111286, ¶ 29. If the phrase “the preceding paragraph” is read to limit the ability to amend to the situations found in the second paragraph, then the third paragraph is rendered superfluous. The second paragraph of the subsection states that naming the head of an administrative agency as a defendant “shall be deemed to include as defendant the administrative agency.”
¶ 26 Subsection 3-107(a) mandates that if a court determines that a plaintiff has failed to name an agency or party of record as a defendant “then the court shall grant the plaintiff 35 days from the date of the determination in which to name and serve the unnamed agency or party as a defendant.” Id. As we find this mandate is not limited to the circumstances included in the subsection’s second paragraph, plaintiff was entitled to amend her complaint within 35 days from the date the trial court determined that DHS was a required party. We therefore reverse the judgment of the circuit court dismissing plaintiff’s complaint with prejudice and remand the case to the circuit court to allow plaintiff 35 days to amend her complaint to name the required defendants and serve them.
¶ 27 CONCLUSION
¶ 28 For the foregoing reasons, we find that plaintiff failed to name the correct parties as defendants in her complaint under the Administrative Review Law but was entitled to the opportunity to amend her complaint to name the proper parties pursuant to subsection 3-107(a).
¶ 29 Reversed and remanded with directions.
