delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff brought an action against defendants to recover damages for defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress and civil conspiracy. The action was based on statements defendants allegedly made to a panel of the Character and Fitness Committee of the Illinois Supreme Court when plaintiff applied for admission to the Illinois bar. Defendants moved to dismiss the amended complaint on the ground that the communication in question was absolutely privileged. The court granted defendants’ motion, from which order plaintiff has appealed.
Plaintiff, a former employee of the Illinois Education Association (IEA), an affiliate of the National Education Association (NEA), graduated from law school in January 1984 and took the February bar examination, which he passed. As part of the bar application process, plaintiff was required to execute an “AUTHORIZATION AND RELEASE” in which he consented to being investigated by the Character and Fitness Committee (the Committee) as to his “moral character, reputation and fitness for the practice of law.” The form authorized every company, corporation, association or institution “having control of any documents, records and other information pertaining to [him], to furnish *** to any Character and Fitness Committee, any such information *** or any other pertinent data.” A copy of that document was sent by the Committee to the IEA, which was requested to provide information about plaintiff’s employment and his reputation and character. IEA’s response has never been disclosed to plaintiff.
Plaintiff averred in his amended complaint that when he attended an interview before three members of the Committee, one member, “while reading from a document bearing the IEA letterhead,” asked him if he had ever committed a certain crime involving moral turpitude. Plaintiff, who had not been placed under oath, denied the accusation and demanded to know the basis and source of the charge. The Committee refused to elaborate or divulge the source, explaining that it was not engaged in a hearing of the matter but merely was gathering information. The Committee, however, asked plaintiff to undergo a psychiatric evaluation and plaintiff complied. The Committee subsequently recommended plaintiff for admission to the bar in July 1984 and he was admitted on July 25, 1984, approximately two months after the overwhelming majority of applicants who had passed the February 1984 bar examination had been admitted. No formal hearing was ever conducted regarding plaintiff’s admission to the bar.
The sole issue presented by this appeal is whether the Character and Fitness Committee is a quasi-judicial body, thereby entitling defendants to an absolute privilege for statements allegedly made in response to the Committee’s inquiry into plaintiff’s “moral character, reputation and fitness for the practice of law.”
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Whether a defamatory statement is protected by an absolute or a qualified privilege is a question of law for the court. Spencer v. Community Hospital of Evanston (1980),
The parties agree that statements made during quasi-judicial proceedings are absolutely privileged. (Richardson v. Dunbar (1981),
At the outset of our discussion, we note that “[t]he power to regulate and define the practice of law is a prerogative of the judicial department, an inherent adjunct of which is to prescribe regulations for the study of law and the admission of applicants for the practice of the profession.” (In re Latimer (1957),
The commissioners “are *** empowered and charged to receive and entertain complaints, to make inquiries and investigations, and to take proof from time to time as may be necessary, concerning applications for admission to the bar, *** and the good moral character and general fitness to practice law of applicants for admission.” (87 Ill. 2d R. 709(b); In re Latimer (1957),
Subject to the approval of the supreme court, the Character and Fitness Committee for each judicial district is given authority “to make, adopt, and alter rules not inconsistent with this rule, for the proper performance of [its] functions.” (87 Ill. 2d R. 709(a).) The Committee for the First District has adopted comprehensive rules of procedure.
Under Rule 2, the Committee requests employers of applicants to complete and return certain forms prescribed by the Board of Law Examiners, including a form which asks the employer to state what his records show as to the applicant’s general conduct and whether he has ever heard “of any fact or charge reflecting adversely upon the
The rules of the Committee provide for an interview of an applicant for admission to the bar by a section of the Committee determined by the Chairman. (Rules 4, 5.) “Upon his personal appearance before a section of the Committee, the applicant shall first be duly sworn and thereupon interrogated orally upon the subject matter covered by the verified questionnaire and the documents submitted therewith so as to bring out fully the facts sought to be discovered by said questionnaire.” (Rule 5.) Any member of the section may continue the matter for further investigation, until such investigation has been completed. (Rule 7.) A unanimous vote of the section is required for favorable action by the section. (Rule 6.) The matter then goes to the Committee, which may certify the applicant as being of good moral character under a detailed procedure set forth in Rule 8.
Supreme Court Rule 708(c) (87 Ill. 2d R. 708(c)) provides that “[i]f the [C]ommittee is of the opinion that the applicant is of good moral character and general fitness to practice law, it shall so certify to the Board of Law Examiners and the applicant shall thereafter be entitled to admission to the bar.” (87 Ill. 2d R. 708(c).) 2 If the Committee declines to so certify, the applicant may request a formal hearing. Rule 9.
The applicant is entitled to notice of the date, time and place of such hearing, the matters adverse to him which have been disclosed to the Committee, and, if such matters were based in whole or in part upon statements from other persons, the names of such persons. (Rule 10.) At the hearing, the applicant is entitled to be represented by counsel (appointed, if necessary), to examine and cross-examine witnesses, to present evidence bearing on the matters before the Committee and his moral character, and for such purpose to make reasonable use of the Committee’s subpoena powers. (Rule 10.) Hearings before the Committee are private unless the applicant concerned requests that they be made public. (87 Ill. 2d R. 709(b).) Information
If, after the formal hearing, the Committee declines to certify the applicant, “[i]t shall file with the Board of Law Examiners a statement that it cannot so certify, together with a report of its findings and conclusions.” (87 Ill. 2d R. 708(c).) An applicant who has availed himself of his full hearing rights before the Committee and who deems himself aggrieved by the determination of the Committee may petition the supreme court for relief. 87 Ill. 2d R. 708(d).
It is apparent from the foregoing review that the Character and Fitness Committee possesses most of the powers that distinguish a quasi-judicial body from one performing merely administrative functions. (Thomas v. Petrulis (1984),
Asserting that the Character and Fitness Committee merely recommends applicants for admission to the bar, plaintiff argues that the Committee lacks the power to affect directly their rights. Plaintiff admits, however, that “the Committee’s recommendation can indirectly and even profoundly [ajffect the personal and property rights of Bar applicants.” As noted below, the Committee’s decision to certify an applicant for admission to the bar is conclusive. Although its refusal
In concluding that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is a quasi-judicial body, the appellate court in Thomas found that the Commission possesses power to affect the rights of those who are subject to its investigation even though it does not have the power to resolve conclusively a claim of discrimination. (
With respect to the power to make binding orders and judgments, we recognize that the Character and Fitness Committee’s decision not to certify an applicant is reviewable by the Illinois Supreme Court. (87 Ill. 2d R. 708(d).) However, the scope of that review is narrow. The supreme court has repeatedly stated that “the exercise of discretion by a committee on character and fitness in its consideration of an applicant’s fitness for admission to practice law in this State will not be reversed by this court unless certification has been arbitrarily refused.” (In re Ascher (1980),
To summarize, the Character and Fitness Committee possesses five of the six powers that distinguish a quasi-judicial body from one performing merely administrative functions: to exercise judgment and discretion; to hear and determine or ascertain facts and decide; to make binding orders and judgments (where it certifies applicants for
Important public policy considerations support the granting of an absolute privilege to communications with the Character and Fitness Committee. An applicant for admission to the bar must establish to the satisfaction of the Committee that he possesses the good moral character and general fitness required of an attorney to practice law. (In re Ascher (1980),
In holding that complaints to the Judicial Inquiry Board are absolutely privileged, the court in Starnes v. International Harvester Co. (1986),
In Krumin v. Bruknes (1930),
“Good character is one of the chief qualifications of citizenship and upon the hearing [in naturalization proceedings] the possession of this attribute is perhaps the most important issue to be determined. Persons having relevant information should be encouraged to impart it and should be free to speak freely, unfettered by fear of being held to respond in damages. It is of vital importance to the perpetuity of our institutions that the gateway to citizenship be carefully guarded. This is the policy of the United States. This can be done only when communications touching applications for citizenship are protected as absolutely privileged. Any other rule would violate the spirit and purpose of our naturalization laws with deplorable results. Inevitably, in some cases this rule will produce hardships, if not wrong, to individuals. We apprehend the number of such instances, however, will be negligible ***. As against such infrequent and individual wrongs, the larger interests of the public must be paramount.”255 Ill. App. 503 , 512.
In our judgment, good character is no less important an attribute of applicants for admission to the bar than it is of applicants for citizenship, and we believe that “[p]ersons having relevant information should be encouraged to impart it and should be free to speak freely, unfettered by fear of being held to respond in damages.”
With plaintiff’s consent, the Character and Fitness Committee solicited information from his former employers regarding his reputation and character and his fitness for the practice of law. Although plaintiff argues that his consent was not voluntary, he never challenged the Committee’s authority to require him to sign the “AUTHORIZATION AND RELEASE” form.
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Moreover, plaintiff fails to articulate how the circumstances surrounding the execution of the
In Bufalino v. Teller (M.D. Pa. 1962),
Finally, plaintiff argues that the allégedly defamatory statements were not entitled to the absolute privilege accorded to communications with quasi-judicial bodies because the statements were not obtained in response to a subpoena, they were not made under oath at a formal hearing, they were not transcribed and they were not subject to cross-examination. Plaintiff cites no authority in support of this proposition and we are aware of none.
In Thomas v. Petrulis (1984),
The defamatory statements attributed to defendants were made
For the foregoing reasons, the order of the circuit court of Cook County dismissing with prejudice plaintiff’s amended complaint is affirmed.
Affirmed.
PINCHAM and MURRAY, JJ., concur.
Notes
“As a matter of public policy,' certain types of defamatory statements are deemed privileged so that the person making the statement will not be deterred from speaking by the threat of civil liability. When absolute privilege is granted, no cause of action for defamation lies against the person making the statement even if it is made with malice. [Citation.] When only qualified privilege is granted, the person making the statement is immune from liability unless some element such as malice is present.” Starnes v. International Harvester Co. (1986),
We note that by an amendment to Rule 708(c) made April 10, 1987, and effective August 1, 1987, upon certification by the Committee, an applicant “shall *** be admitted to the bar unless the court orders otherwise.” (116 Ill. 2d R. 708(c).) This amendment to the rule has no bearing in the disposition of this appeal.
“ProperIy constituted committees have the power to investigate, question and determine fitness.” In re Martin-Trigona (1973),
See, however, Footnote 2, supra.
We seriously question whether such a challenge would have succeeded. The practice of law is a privilege, not a right, and in granting that privilege the supreme court may impose any reasonable conditions within its control. (In re Anastaplo (1954),
