MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This matter comes before the court upon motions by the defendants to dismiss plaintiff’s third amended complaint for failure to state a cause of action. Defendants’ motions to dismiss are granted.
Plaintiff was fired as an employee of defendant, Clyde Federal Savings and Loan (Clyde) on April 24, 1987. As part of his duties for defendant, plaintiff was the officer in charge of Clyde’s compliance with the federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). 12 U.S.C.A. § 2901, et seq. (1989). Plaintiff alleged that Clyde was in violation of the CRA and plaintiff's attempts to inform defendant of its noncompliance with the CRA and his attempts to bring defendant into compliance with the CRA led to defendant's firing of plaintiff.
On October 1, 1987, plaintiff filed a three count complaint naming defendants Clyde Federal Savings and Loan Association, Sylvia Meidema, Robert Ropa, Valerian Musselman, Nicholas Lash, Ernest Melichar, Erwin Kucera, Steven Kuroski, and Lydia Franz. Count I of the complaint alleged that Clyde and Meidema fired plaintiff without cause in violation of an alleged employment contract. Count II of plaintiff’s complaint alleged that Clyde and Meidema fired him in retaliation for his complaints that Clyde’s advertising policy violated the CRA. Count III alleged that Meidema and the other board members Ropa, Musselman, Lash, Melichar, Kucera, Kuroski, and Franz, conspired to breach plaintiff’s alleged employment contract and that their actions amounted to tortious interference with the contract.
Defendants filed a motion to dismiss all three counts of the complaint. In a published opinion, Judge Bua granted defendants’ motion to dismiss all three counts except as to Count II which Judge Bua allowed to stand as against Clyde ruling that it sufficiently stated a cause of action for the tort of retaliatory discharge.
Hicks v. Clyde Federal Savings and Loan,
On May 8, 1989, plaintiff filed a second amended complaint which detailed the specific circumstances surrounding the alleged noncompliance with the CRA by defendant Clyde and plaintiff’s attempts to inform defendant of this noncompliance.
In November of 1989, this was one of the cases transferred to this court to create a civil docket.
Defendant Clyde filed a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s third amended complaint for failure to state a cause of action for retaliatory discharge. Defendant Meidema also filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a cause of action for retaliatory discharge. The other defendants: Ropa, Musselman, Lash, Melichar, Kuroski and Franz, filed a motion to dismiss plaintiff's third amended complaint for failure to state a cause of action for retaliatory discharge and for failure to name them as defendants within the statute of limitations. Defendant Kucera did not join the motion to dismiss. The court has received a suggestion that his death occurred on June 2, 1989.
The Resolution Trust Corporation, as receiver for Clyde, was substituted as defendant on February 26, 1990. (This defendant will continue to be referred to as Clyde throughout the opinion.)
Defendants’ motions to dismiss seek this court’s reconsideration of a prior ruling which denied similar motions to dismiss which raised the same arguments. While the doctrine of the law of the case suggests that the court should refrain from reconsidering a prior ruling in the same case, the law of the case is a discretionary doctrine and is not designed to perpetuate error.
Champaign-Urbana News Agency, Inc. v. J.L. Cummins News Co., Inc.,
The issue which the court in its discretion chooses to reconsider is whether plaintiff’s claim that he was fired for reporting defendant Clyde’s noncompliance with the CRA and for his attempts to bring defendant within compliance of the CRA, states a cause of action for retaliatory discharge in Illinois.
An employer commits the tort of retaliatory discharge in Illinois when the employee is discharged in retaliation for the employee’s activities and the discharge of the employee for such activities contravenes a clearly mandated public policy which affects the citizens of the State of Illinois collectively.
Palmateer v. International Harvester Co.,
The Illinois Supreme Court recognized the tort of retaliatory discharge for the first time in
Kelsay v. Motorola, Inc.,
“The foundation of the tort of retaliatory discharge lies in the protection of public policy.”
Palmateer v. International Harvester Co.,
There is no precise definition of the term. In general, it can be said that public policy concerns what is right and just and what affects the citizens of the State collectively. It is to be found in the State’s constitution and statutes and, when they are silent, in its judicial decisions. [Citation.] * * * [A] matter must strike at the heart of a citizen’s social rights, duties, and responsibilities before the tort will be allowed.
The cause of action is allowed where the public policy is clear, but is denied where it is equally clear that only private interests are at stake.
In
Palmateer,
the Illinois Supreme Court, relying on its prior decisions, recognized a clearly mandated public policy favoring “citizen crime-fighters”.
In
Wheeler v. Caterpillar Tractor Co.,
In
Barr v. Kelso-Burnett Co.,
In
Price v. Carmack Datsun, Inc.,
This court’s attempts to find a common thread or trend as to what the Illinois Supreme Court will recognize as a clearly mandated public policy of the State of Illinois is made difficult by the fact that the tort of retaliatory discharge is relatively new in Illinois and there are a limited number of cases in which the Illinois Supreme Court has addressed the issue. However, this fact does not prevent the court from arriving at the conclusion that the policy enunciated in the CRA would not be found by the Illinois Supreme Court to be a clearly mandated public policy of the State in contravention of which an employer who discharges an employee commits the tort of retaliatory discharge.
In the instant case, plaintiff alleges that he was fired for reporting his employer’s noncompliance with the CRA, and for his attempts to bring his employer into compliance with the CRA.
See
12 U.S.C.A. § 2901,
et seq.
(1989). Section 2901 enunci
(a) The Congress finds that—
(1) regulated financial institutions are required by law to demonstrate that their deposit facilities serve the convenience and needs of the communities in which they are chartered to do business.
(2) the convenience and needs of communities include the need for credit services as well as deposit services; and
(3) regulated financial institutions have a continuing and affirmative obligation to help meet the credit needs of the local communities in which they are chartered.
(b) It is the purpose of this chapter to require each appropriate Federal financial supervisory agency to use its authority when examining financial institutions, to encourage such institutions to help meet the credit needs of the local communities in which they are chartered consistent with the safe and sound operation of such institutions. (Emphasis added.)
12 U.S.C.A. § 2901 (1981).
Section 2903 provides:
In connection with its examination of a financial institution, the appropriate Federal financial supervisory agency shall—
(1) assess the institution’s record of meeting the credit needs of its entire community, including low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with the safe and sound operation of such institution; and
(2) take such record into account in its evaluation of an application for a deposit facility by such institution. (Emphasis added.)
12 U.S.C.A. § 2903 (1989).
Section 2906 provides for the appropriate federal supervisory agency to generate written evaluations detailing an institution’s record of meeting the credit needs of the entire community and the facts relied upon and conclusions reached by the agency. 12 U.S.C.A. § 2906 (1989). Section 2906 further provides that the agency shall assign a rating from “outstanding” to “substantial noncompliance”. 12 U.S.C.A. § 2906(b)(2) (1989). There are no provisions for civil sanctions for an institution’s noncompliance, let alone criminal sanctions.
See
12 U.S.C.A. §§ 2901-2906 (1989);
Corning Savings and Loan Association v. Federal Homes Loan Bank Board,
In
Kelsay v. Motorola, Inc.,
the clearly mandated public policy of Illinois was found in the Illinois legislature’s enactment of a comprehensive statutory scheme which did away with certain common law rights by regulating the relationship between employers and employees in connection with injuries to employees at work.
In
Palmateer,
the clearly mandated public policy was evidenced by the State’s criminal code and was the fundamental public policy of protecting Illinois citizens from crime.
In
Wheeler,
the Illinois Supreme Court did rely on a federal statute in holding that a public policy contained in the federal statute was also a clearly mandated public policy of Illinois.
In
Barr v. Kelso-Burnett Co.,
This court concludes that the prior determination that the public policy expressed by the CRA was a clearly mandated public policy of the State of Illinois for the purpose of stating a cause of action for the tort of retaliatory discharge was clearly erroneous. Therefore, this court having exercised its discretion to reconsider the order of the court entered October 7, 1988, which denied defendants' motions to dismiss the plaintiff’s retaliatory discharge count and having found that order to be clearly erroneous, grants defendants’ motions to dismiss plaintiff’s third amended complaint for retaliatory discharge.
ORDERED: Defendants’ motions to dismiss plaintiff’s third amended complaint are granted and Case No. 87 C 8593 is dismissed with prejudice as to all defendants.
