Aftеr being elected Mayor of Oak Lawn, Illinois, in 2005, David Heilmann appointed a new administrative hearing officer for the Village. The hearing offiсer’s post is equivalent to what other states would call a city judge or justice of the peace: the hearing officer adjudicatеs disputes under the municipal code. Michael Walsh, who held the post between 2000 and 2005, contends in this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 that Heilmann replaced him because Walsh had backed the loser in the election, and Heilmann wanted to put his own supporters in plum positions. According to Walsh, this violated the first amendment, as applied to political patronage in
Elrod v. Burns,
The district court invoked Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), аnd we doubt that this is the right rule. The complaint states a recognized legal theory, after all. The court had to go beyond the complaint’s allegations to make a decision. But no harm has been done by the shortcut. The duties of the position are a matter of pub- *505 lie recоrd, having been established by law. Oak Lawn Ordinances § 11-11-1 to § 11-12-7. Summary judgment need not await discovery when the material facts are undisputed. (Rule 56(b) says that a defendant may move for summary judgment “at any time ... with or without supporting affidavits”.) The statute book tells us all we need to know. Unlike job descriptions, which may bear little resemblance to a position’s actual duties, the ordinance’s terms are not open to contest.
The hearing оfficer adjudicates all citations issued under Village, ordinances and regulations, unless state law commits the subject to judicial resolution. Oаk Lawn Ordinances § 11-11-1, § 11-12-1. The hearing officer’s portfolio includes not only vehicular matters (such as parking and village-sticker regulations) but also thе local housing and zoning codes. The village legislature has established a schedule of fines for vehicular offenses — for example, thе fine for parking in a space reserved for handicapped persons is $150, rising to $250 if not paid promptly, see Oak Lawn Ordinances § 11-11-9(A) — but has lеft all other subjects to the hearing officer’s discretion. For non-vehicular offenses the hearing officer may impose any fine up to $50,000, unless state law sets a lower cap. Oak Lawn Ordinances § 11-12-2(A)(8). It is this zero to $50,000 range, in which the hearing officer possesses considerable discrеtion, that led the district court to deem the position one that makes policy, and for which one’s views about wise public administration (which is to say, one’s politics) are an appropriate consideration. See
Branti v. Finkel,
Should the Village go hard or easy on homeowners whо don’t trim their hedges, mow their lawns, or rake their leaves in the fall? What about people who refuse to shovel their walks when snow falls? Or who pаint their houses puce? Or fail to end a nonconforming use when a zoning variance lapses? What should be done about people whо leave rusting hulks in their driveways, put neon signs in residential windows, or keep 500 cats? The May- or and Police Chief won’t decide these matters; the administrative hearing officer will, by choosing levels of sanctions. Yet local political careers may turn on the answers; village mayors who can’t keep neighborhoods looking neat and tidy will not last long in office. (Even a Mayor of Chicago once discovered that too muсh snow is fatal to a political career, and elsewhere in the Midwest the success of the fall leaf-removal campaign is the standard by which the people evaluate their mayors. See
Kupstas v. City of Greenwood,
This is one reason why Andrew Jackson campaigned for making judicial posts elective and why most states to this day allow the voters a say in who holds judicial office. If the “hearing officer” could be relabeled a “judgе” and made the subject of election, the first amendment does not block an elected official from appointing someone who shares his view about enforcement priorities. Just as crackdowns on drunk driving require the cooperation of the state judiciary, crackdowns on unkempt lawns and free-roaming dogs may require the cooperation of an administrative hearing officer. Neither the judge nor thе hearing officer operates in a zone where decisions are mechanical. That’s why we held in
Kurowski v. Krajewski,
*506 Walsh would like us to believe that Ku-rowski is a sport that should be limited to appointed part-time judges when the full-time position is elected. Administrative hearing officers are different, he insists. But why should anything turn on the label? In federal practice, not even the label differs — “hearing officers” in the federal system were renamed “administrative law judges” more than 30 years ago. Although many federal ALJs have long tenure, others do not. The “administrative appeals judges” at several federal agencies serve at the pleasure of cabinet officials so that the department’s administrative apparatus carries out policies adopted by the Executive Branch.
Many units of government delegаte important decisions to middle management, and when they do this they may insist that the holders of the delegated power be reliable implеmenters of the elected officials’ platforms. See, e.g.,
Riley v. Blagojevich,
If the people are to choose policy at the polls, the representatives they elect must be able to make enough changes in the bureaucracy to put the winning side’s program into effect rather than be frustrated by а permanent officialdom with its own ideas about governance. Walsh’s sponsors may return to office some day, and then it is they who will see the wisdom of allowing change in the positions where discretion is reposed.
AFFIRMED.
