I. History
Jose Garcia, an Hispanic, was a police officer for the Village of Mount Prospect, Illinois from January 1984 until April 1998. During his tenure as a police officer, Garcia contributed to the Village’s pension fund. This fund had been established, along with the Mount Prospect Police Pension Board, 1 by the Village under article 3 of the Illinois Pension Code, 40 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/1-101 (1998). On April 13, 1998, Garcia suffered a heart attack, leaving him totally and permanently disabled, unable to perform his duties as a police officer. Consequently, on or about June 20, 1998, Garcia applied to the Board for duty-related disability benefits equal to sixty-five percent of his total salary. At the time of his application and during its pendency, Sergeant George Steiner was a member of the Board.
Prior to his heart attack and disability application, Garcia had been a deposition witness in the case of
Martinez v. Village of Mount Prospect,
Following Garcia’s June 20, 1998 duty-related disability pension application, the Board selected three physicians to examine Garcia to determine if he was disabled. *633 40 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/3-115 (1998). At an April 19, 1999 hearing, the Board reviewed the physicians’ initial reports and other evidence submitted by both parties (i.e., Garcia’s pension benefit application, the initial physical examination of Garcia). While clear that Garcia was disabled, whether the disability occurred in the line of duty remained uncertain. Thus, the Board awarded Garcia non-duty-related disability benefits equal to fifty percent of his total salary. The hearing was continued in order to later consider whether the duty-related benefits were warranted.
Hearings were held on May 12, 1999, and December 22, 1999, where additional evidence was submitted, including: Garcia’s own testimony, supplemental medical reports from the Board-selected physicians, medical records from three Garcia-selected physicians, depositions of the Board-selected physicians, and miscellaneous employment records. At no time during any of the three hearings were any claims of employment discrimination made to the Board. After the December 22 hearing concluded, the Board met in a closed session and voted to deny Garcia’s duty-related benefits, but to continue the non-duty-related benefits. A written Decision and Order to that effect was issued by the Board on February 14, 2000.
On March 15, 2000, Garcia filed a timely 3 complaint for administrative review in the Circuit Court of Cook County, seeking reversal of his denial of duty-related pension benefits. In his state-court complaint, Garcia alleged only that the decision “[was] against the manifest weight of the evidence and ... [was] arbitrary and capricious.” (R. 20-2 Ex. G — 1.) Both Garcia and the Village filed briefs addressing that issue. Nowhere in Garcia’s initial July 21, 2000 brief or September 15, 2000 reply brief was there any mention of illegal employment discrimination generally or as a factor in the Board’s decision. Nor did the Village make any reference to such claims in its response brief of August 22, 2000. On October 24, 2000, the state-court judge heard oral argument, set forth her reasoning on the record, and affirmed the Board’s decision by written order. 4
During the pendency of Garcia’s ultimately unsuccessful administrative appeal, on September 15, 2000, he filed Title VII charges with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”). (R. 20-1 Ex. A.) He alleged that when the Board denied him duty-related disability pension benefits, the Village and the Board engaged in unlawful retaliation for his
Martinez-related
testimony and unlawful employment discrimination based upon race and national origin. (R. 20-1 Ex. A.) The EEOC dismissed Garcia’s charge and issued a right-to-sue letter on January 11, 2001. Thus, on April 11, 2001, Garcia filed a complaint in the Northern District of
*634
Illinois against the Village, the Board, and George Steiner in his individual and official capacities. In the complaint, Garcia alleged violations of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e-2000e-17 (2001), 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1983, and sought declaratory and injunc-tive relief and damages. Motions for summary judgment based upon res judicata were filed by the Village and the Board under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(b). But on May 21, 2002, District Court Judge Elaine Bucklo
sua sponte
raised the issue of subject-matter jurisdiction and dismissed the action under the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine,
see Rooker v. Fid. Trust Co.,
II. Analysis
In
Kremer v. Chemical Construction Corp.,
In the instant ease, the Village, Board, and Steiner urge that the Illinois circuit court’s administrative review of the Board’s denial of duty-related benefits has a res judicata effect on Garcia’s federal civil-rights claims. Our analysis, based upon
Kremer,
A. Illinois res judicata law
Under Illinois law, in order for res judicata to apply to Garcia’s current civil-rights claims, the circuit court’s previous affirmance of the Board’s decision must: (1) have reached a final judgment on the merits; (2) involve the same parties or their privies as the current claims; and (3) constitute the same cause of action as the current claims.
Pirela v. Vill. of N. Aurora,
1. Same parties
Garcia was the plaintiff in both the circuit court administrative appeal and in this case. Therefore, the second element of res judicata is easily met with respect to Garcia. There are three defendants in this case: the Board, the Village, and Steiner, in his individual and official capacities. Only the Board was a named party in Garcia’s administrative appeal to the circuit court. Hence, the second element of res judicata is clearly met with respect to the Board. We must then consider whether the Village and Steiner are in privity with the Board.
Garcia offered no authority in his initial brief to this court for his assertion that neither the Village nor Steiner would be in privity with the Board. In his reply brief, Garcia cited but one case,
Rhoads v. Board of Trustees,
The
Rhoads
court held that a municipality’s police pension board was not in privity with the municipality itself.
Id.,
Rhoads appealed this denial to a circuit court. He argued that the board should have awarded him full “duty-related” benefits because the worker’s compensation settlement foreclosed any argument regarding whether his injuries were suffered in the line of duty.
Id.
The Illinois court held that because the defendant board was not in privity with the municipality, Rhoads could not avail himself of the benefits of issue preclusion stemming from the worker’s compensation settlement in the pension board litigation.
Id.,
Unlike Rhoads, where a plaintiff attempted to use collateral estoppel offensively, based upon a settlement agreement, to the detriment of a defendant not party to the original action, here it is the defendants who seek to invoke res judicata defensively, based upon a final adjudication, against a plaintiff who was party to the original action. Our finding of privity between the Village and the Board benefits the Village, the party who was not literally present in the original litigation. And there is nothing to suggest that the Village would have made any arguments significantly different than those offered by the Board during the circuit court’s consideration of Garcia’s appeal. Furthermore, Garcia was himself a party in the original action, and we presume that his interests were vigorously advanced before the circuit court. Consequently, the fairness concerns underlying the Rhoads court’s reasoning are not present here.
Furthermore, case law and common sense support a finding of privity between the Village and the Board. In effect, the Board is an agent of the Village, and the Village, therefore, is in privity with the Board.
See McKinney v. City of E. St. Louis,
Garcia argues that despite the agency relationship described above, because the Village was not a named party in his appeal to the circuit court, the Village is not in privity with the Board. “The law cannot tolerate such an absurdity.”
McKinney,
The correct rule is: when a judgment is rendered against an officer of a municipal corporation who sues or is sued in his official capacity, the judgment is binding upon the corporation, upon other officers of the same municipal corporation who represent the same interest, and upon all residents and taxpayers thereof.
Id.
(citing 38 Am. Jur.
Municipal Corporations
§ 729).
See also Davis v. City of Chicago,
Since Garcia raised no arguments regarding the privity of Steiner in his individual capacity with the Board,
7
we need not address that issue here. However, Garcia did dispute the privity of Steiner in his official capacity, albeit in a summary fashion. As a sergeant in the Village police and as a Board member, Steiner is an employee (or agent) of the Village and/or
*637
the Board. Hence, as a Village employee and agent, under the above analysis, his privity with the Board is established. Alternately, as a Board employee and agent, he is in privity with the Board.
See Davis,
2. Same cause of action
Having determined that the first two elements of res judicata are met, all that remains is to assess whether Garcia’s administrative appeal of the Board’s denial of his duty-related disability benefits comprises the same cause of action as his claims in this case. Until
River Park, Inc. v. City of Highland Park,
Therefore, Garcia’s federal causes of action, including Title VII, § 1981, and § 1983 claims, will constitute the same cause of action as his administrative appeal, if the claims “arise from the same group of operative facts ... even if there is not a substantial overlap of evidence ....”
Id.,
As Garcia argues, it is true that his administrative appeal of the Board’s decision looked only at whether the denial was against the manifest weight of the evidence,
see Koulegeorge v. State of Ill. Human Rights Comm’n,
Furthermore, the Appellant’s own EEOC filing and district court complaint reveal this to be the case. In his EEOC filing, two basic allegations were made: (1) “the denial of full pension benefits was based on my national origin, Hispanic;” and (2) “I was denied full pension benefits ... in retaliation for having testified favorably for the plaintiff in a national origin discrimination suit brought by another Hispanic officer against the Village of Mount Prospect.” (R. 20-1 Ex. A.) The Appellant’s allegations to the EEOC explicitly referenced national origin discrimination and retaliation only in the context of the Board’s denial of his full benefits. This court’s thorough review of the EEOC charge could not uncover any distinguishable allegation of workplace discrimination made without reference to the Board’s decision.
Similarly, the allegations leveled in Garcia’s district court complaint are framed solely in terms of the Board’s denial of his disability benefit application. His recitation of facts, (R. 20-1 Ex. A at 3-7), and every claim, (R. 20-1 Ex. A at 7-21), focus entirely on the Board’s denial. The complaint does not contain any factually supported allegations of workplace discrimination made outside of the context of the Board’s actions.
9
The administrative ap
*639
peal challenged the Board’s decision, the motives behind which are the basis for instant lawsuit. In sum, as the EEOC charge and district court complaint make plain, the administrative appeal and the cause of action in federal court arise from the same core of operative facts.
See, e.g., Pirela,
B. Full and fair opportunity to litigate
Having concluded that all three res judicata requirements under Illinois law are met, our remaining inquiry is whether Garcia had a full and fair opportunity to litigate his claims. As a corollary to the transactional rule, Illinois adopted the doctrine of merger and bar which precludes the sequential pursuit not only of claims actually litigated, but of those that could have been litigated.
Durgins,
At first blush, this inquiry appears to be the most trouble-some. This is due to conflicting Illinois case law regarding whether federal civil-rights claims may be joined as independent causes of action with administrative appeals heard by Illinois circuit courts prior to the exhaustion of Illinois’ administrative process for the civil-rights claims, established under the Illinois Civil Rights Act of 1979 (“ICRA,” “Illinois Human Rights Act,” “IHRA,” or “Act”), Pub. Act No. 81-1216, 1979; 775 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/1-101 — 5/10-101 (2003). Ultimately, how the Illinois courts resolve this issue is immaterial to our inquiry here. The administrative process through which a federal civil-rights claim must traverse before a court can exercise jurisdiction does not negate a court’s ability to eventually exercise that jurisdiction. Because Illinois circuit courts could have exercised jurisdiction over Garcia’s federal civil-rights claims (either directly or after Garcia exhausted available administrative remedies), Garcia could have joined those civil-rights claims with his administrative appeal of the Board’s decision. Consequently, he had a full and fair opportunity to litigate his civil-rights claims in the Illinois legal system.
We begin with the oft-acknowledged proposition that the states and the federal government share concurrent jurisdiction over Title VII, § 1981, and § 1983 claims.
Yellow Freight Sys., Inc. v. Donnelly,
In 1979 the Illinois legislature enacted the Illinois Civil Rights Act, supra. The Act seeks to “secure for all individuals within Illinois the freedom from discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, ancestry, age, marital status, physical or mental handicap, or unfavorable discharge from military service ....” 775 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/l-102(A) (1979). Furthermore, the Act established the Illinois Human Rights Commission (“IHRC”), an administrative body to adjudicate claims involving civil rights. 775 Ill. *640 Comp. Stat. 5/8-101, et seq. (1979). Judicial review of the IHRC’s final orders is also provided for in the Act, whereby either party to a dispute can exercise their right to review, so long as such requests are filed within thirty-five days of a final order. 775 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/8-lll(A)(l) (1979). Critically, the Act also limits the jurisdiction of Illinois courts, mandating that any party seeking to pursue a civil-rights claim in Illinois must first exhaust administrative remedies available under the Act (by filing a claim with the IHRC and proceeding with an IHRC investigation and adjudication), before appealing to an Illinois circuit court to hear the claim. 775 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/8-111(0 (1979) (“Except as otherwise provided by law, no court of this state shall have jurisdiction over the subject of an alleged civil rights violation other than as set forth in this Act.”).
A review of Illinois case law by this court reveals that since 1979, the application of 5/8-lll(C), particularly the phrase “[ejxcept as otherwise provided by law,” has been consistent for certain types of claims, but rather confusing for others.
10
Illinois courts, and hence, federal courts, consistently find that cases based upon state common-law claims “inextricably linked” to civil-rights violations are subject to the Act and thus, Illinois circuit courts do not have original jurisdiction over such claims. The administrative process under the Act must be completed before a circuit court can exercise jurisdiction over these types of claims.
See, e.g., Quantock v. Shared Mktg. Servs., Inc.,
Similarly, cases based upon the Illinois Constitution or other Illinois statutes which are “inextricably linked” to civil-rights violations are subject to the Act and its jurisdictional limits.
See, e.g., Damato v. Phelan Chevrolet Geo, Inc.,
Also, cases explicitly alleging civil-rights violations under Illinois law are subject to the Act.
See, e.g., Hicks v. Resolution Trust Corp.,
However, where allegations of civil rights violations are framed only in terms of
federal
laws, such as the claims involved in this case, the Illinois courts have been much less clear.
Compare Stykel v. City of Freeport,
Garcia argues that since the greater weight of Illinois authority, see supra, holds that a circuit court cannot exercise original jurisdiction over federal civil-rights claims, he could not have joined his Title VII, § 1983, and § 1981 claims with his complaint for administrative review of the Board’s denial of full duty-related benefits. But these cases stand for the proposition that Illinois circuit courts lack original jurisdiction over any claim involving civil rights. Once a claimant exhausts administrative remedies under the ICRA, Illinois circuit courts may indeed exercise jurisdiction over an appeal from an IHRC’s final order. Therefore, regarding whether or not Garcia had a full and fair opportunity to litigate his Title VII, *642 § 1983, and § 1981 claims, it makes no difference whether Garcia could have directly joined these civil-rights claims with his administrative appeal of the Board’s decision, or whether he would have had to initially file with the IHRC to exhaust all available state administrative remedies prior to the joinder. In either case, the Illinois circuit court would have had jurisdiction, sooner or later, to hear his civil-rights claims. Simply because federal civil-rights claims must be considered first by the IHRC (and the EEOC in the case of Title VII claims), does not mean that the circuit court cannot eventually exercise jurisdiction over those claims, once the administrative process is completed.
Our jurisprudence makes this clear. A potential civil-rights claimant has “a reasonable opportunity to bring ... equal protection claimfs] before the circuit court because Illinois allows a plaintiff to join constitutional claims under § 1983 with a request for administrative review [of a separate claim].” Manley,
The practical difficulties of exhaustion will not prevent res judicata from applying. These issues are largely inconsequential to the our analysis because no matter how such complexities are sorted out, Garcia nevertheless would still have been able to join his civil-rights claims with his complaint for administrative review. For example, there may indeed be an exhaustion requirement under the IHRA in order to bring any federal civil-rights claims in Illinois circuit courts. And if so, in the case of Title VII claims, in order to preserve access to both the federal and state legal systems, a claimant must file his complaint with the IHRA. 13 But again, a circuit court *643 would nonetheless eventually be able to exercise jurisdiction once the state administrative process — and ipso facto, the federal administrative process — -was completed.
We also note that Garcia was required to appeal the decision of the Board within thirty-five days of its decision. See 735 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/3-103 (1998). Clearly, if Garcia had sought to exhaust his state and federal administrative remedies for his civil-rights claims prior to the filing of his complaint for administrative review of the Board’s decision, he would have been pressed for time. In Herrmann, we addressed this timeliness problem.
Ordinarily ... the statutes of limitations governing the plaintiffs other claims will not be so short that he risks being barred from pursuing those claims by waiting to complete the Title VII administrative process. If [a plaintiffl does face a looming deadline for suing on his other claims, he can ask the EEOC or its state counterpart to accelerate the administrative process; he will have good cause for doing so.... [The plaintiff! can sue on his other claims, ask the court — and again he would have a very strong case for doing so — to stay the proceedings, until the Title VII administrative process is complete .... These possibilities make the danger that applying res judicata in Title VII suits will interfere with legislative design remote. Although it will mean additional delay in some cases, the plaintiff is protected, in part at least, against being harmed by delay by the fact that he will be accruing additional entitlements to back pay [or lost benefits] during this period, and will receive prejudgment interest on his award when and if he does prevail.
Id. at 225 (emphasis added). The IARL explicitly provides for a circuit court to stay the decision of the administrative agency for good cause. 14 735 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/3-111(a)(1) (1998). Consequently, Garcia could have petitioned the circuit court to stay the decision of the Board pending the conclusion of the civil-rights administrative proceedings. Had the circuit court denied his request, then res judicata would not now apply.
Garcia also incorrectly argues that because his federal civil-rights claims would have necessitated evidence outside of the administrative record (i.e., Garcia’s testimony in the
Martinez
case, Garcia’s conversations with Steiner), the limited scope of a circuit court’s administrative review which prevents the consideration of such “new” evidence, 735 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/3— 110 (1998), would have prevented him from fully and fairly litigating his civil-rights claims. This contention is premised on the idea that somehow his administrative appeal of the Board’s decision would subsume his. civil-rights claims. But Title VII and §§ 1981 and 1983 claims are original actions independent of the administrative review proceeding and are therefore plenary in scope.
See Stykel,
Moreover, Garcia chose to pursue an administrative appeal of the Board’s decision to the circuit court. He could have foregone that appeal (thereby avoiding the aforementioned procedural complexities) and simply pursued his federal civil-rights claims solely in federal court (of course, after exhausting his Title VII administrative remedies with the EEOC). As Judge Easterbrook pointed out in Davis, a plaintiff is free to pursue his claims strategically, but he must abide by the consequences of those choices.
[The plaintiff] split his claim for his own reasons: he wanted simple, streamlined litigation in the Circuit Court of Cook County so that he could get back pay as quickly as possible. His § 1983 claims against the [defendants] are more complicated and have lower stakes, so he wanted to postpone them.... That is an understandable strategy but not a good reason for foisting two suits on the judicial system and his adversary. Having made a tactical choice to expedite decision, [the plaintiff] must accept the consequences.
Davis,
Because Illinois circuit courts could have exercised jurisdiction over Garcia’s independent federal civil-rights claims either directly or after Garcia exhausted available administrative remedies, it was thus possible for Garcia to join those claims with his administrative appeal of the Board’s decision. He had a full and fair opportunity to litigate his civil-rights claims and consequently, res judicata applies.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s dismissal is AFFIRMED on res judicata grounds.
Notes
. The Board is comprised of five (5) people: two Village Board of Trustees presidential appointees; two elected from active Fund participants; and one elected by and from the Fund beneficiaries. 40 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/3— 128 (1998).
. On January 19, 2000, the district court entered judgment in that case after the jury returned a verdict in favor of Martinez in the amount of $1,179,000. Although Garcia was disclosed as a witness in the Final Pretrial Oi'der, nothing in the record indicates that Garcia himself or his deposition were actually used by Martinez at trial. The presiding judge, Ruben Castillo, was so disturbed by evidence of the Village Police Department's racial profiling policies presented during the trial, that, after the verdict was entered, he sent a letter to the Department of Justice urging an independent investigation of the Village. (R. 20.) Following the verdict and with the prospect of an appeal looming, the parties settled, with the approval of the district court.
. A complaint requesting review of a final administrative decision must be filed within thirty-five days of the service of such a decision upon the affected party. 735 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/3-103 (1998).
. Although no transcript of the October 24 hearing is included in the appellate record, it is safe to assume that because neither Garcia nor the Board briefed whether discriminatory animus based upon race or national origin infected the Board’s decision, Judge Bush did not consider the issue. Furthermore, the circuit court, sitting in an administrative review capacity, cannot consider any evidence outside the administrative record. 735 Ill.Comp. Stat. 5/3-110 (1998). Hence, any employment discrimination arguments requiring evidence outside the record (i.e., Garcia’s deposition testimony in the Martinez case) and offered exclusively to challenge the Board’s decision during an administrative review would necessarily fail. Regardless, whether Garcia made any such arguments to the circuit court has no impact on the outcome of this case. See infra Part II.B.
. Generally, we have held that for the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine to apply, the complained-of injury must have been caused by the state-court judgment itself.
See Rizzo v. Sheahan,
. In this opinion, we equate "res judicata” with "claim preclusion,” which refers to " 'the preclusive effect of a judgment in foreclosing litigation of matters that were or could have been raised in an earlier suit.’ "
Welch
v.
Johnson,
. Arguably, this issue was not addressed because following the district court’s ruling pursuant to the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, Garcia voluntarily dismissed all the counts (V, VI, VIII) leveled against Steiner. (R. 35.) Regardless, we easily find privity between Steiner, at least in his official capacity, and the Board.
. Garcia attempts to argue that the "core of operative facts” for the circuit court's review of the Board’s decision is primarily the circumstances surrounding the heart attack, whereas the "core of operative facts” underlying the instant claims is the Board’s decision-making process. (App. Br. at 26-27.) This is simply untrue. The "core of operative facts” underlying the Board's decision was indeed limited to the circumstances surrounding the heart attack. But, the adjudication which this court views as now having a preclusive effect is the circuit court's affirmance of the Board’s decision, and not the Board’s decision itself. And Garcia acknowledges, as our discussion of his EEOC and district court complaints demonstrates, see infra, that his instant claims relate directly (and solely) to the propriety of the Board’s decision. Thus, as we previously stated, the circuit court's decision and the instant claims are based upon the same core of operative facts: the propriety of the Board’s decision-making process.
. Perhaps recognizing that such an allegation would be the only persuasive basis for his argument that the instant cause of action did not arise from the same operative facts as the administrative appeal, Garcia asserted in his brief to this court that, "[my] claims of retaliation and discrimination ... [arose] ... from the treatment [I] received while employed by the Village,” (App. Br. at 27). Demonstrating the fallacy of this statement, Garcia conceded a mere three paragraphs later that "[i]t was only after all the hearings were over and after the Pension Board made its decision that [I] even became aware of [the discrimination and/or retaliation] claims.” (App. Br. at 28.) His claims arose not from the general treatment he received as a Village police officer, but rather directly from the Board’s decision.
. Neither Appellant nor the Appellees make any noticeable efforts to distinguish between these types of claims. Clearly, a case brought under Illinois law and involving civil rights will be subject to the Act and must be brought before the IHRC.
See Manley v. City of Chicago,
Appellant also attempts to discredit cases, (App. Rep. Br. at 16-18), decided by this court and cited by the Appellees by stating, without supporting authority, that § 8-111(C) was not in effect at the time the cases were decided. However, a simple review of the legislative history of the ICRA reveals that § 8-111(C) has been in effect since the inception of the ICRA in 1979 and every case referred to by the Appellant as “not applicable” or "not controlling” was decided well after 1979.
. Although the case does not specify, the trial court may have allowed the federal civil-rights claims to proceed because the party had exhausted all administrative remedies under applicable federal and state law.
. Appellant attempts to distinguish
Stratton
due to the basis for its administrative appeal, the writ of common law
certiorari,
(App. Rep. Br. 14-16), as opposed to the Illinois Administrative Review Law ("IARL”), 735 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/3-110 (1998), applicable in the instant case. It is a distinction without difference. As
Stratton
explicitly stated, "[w]here a final administrative decision has been rendered ... the circuit court may grant the relief which a party seeks [only]
within the context of reviewing that decision
. Under the dual filing system,
see
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e)(1); (R. 20-1 Ex. A);
see, e.g., Herrmann v. Cencom Cable Assocs., Inc.,
. Although this is not technically the same as the circuit court staying its own proceedings, it has the same effect.
See, e.g., Dubin v. Personnel Bd.,
