Vincent Rose sued the state of Illinois and the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners after the Board refused to put Rose’s name on the ballot for a local government election in 2015. The district court dismissed Rose’s amended complaint because an Illinois state court had already adjudicated an identical cause of action brought by Rose against the same defendants. Rose now appeals the district court’s dismissal of his federal action. We affirm.
I. Background
In 2015 Rose submitted nomination petitions for the office of alderman in Chicago’s 7th Ward. Pursuant to Illinois statute, candidates for the 2015 alderman elections were required to obtain 473 valid signatures on their petitions for nomination in order to be placed on the ballot. See 65 ILCS 20/21-28(a) (2013) (amended 2015).
Rose then filed petitions for judicial review of the Board’s decision in the Circuit Court of Cook County. Rose’s petitions for judicial review challenged the validity of the Illinois statute imposing the four-percent signature requirement for alder-manic elections, as well as the Board’s enforcement of the statute in excluding his name from the ballot for the general election to be held on February 24, 2015. In particular, Rose claimed that the statute and the Board’s conduct in reliance upon it violated the First Amendment, the Equal Protection Clause, and the Due Process Clause of the state and federal constitutions. He also filed an amended memorandum of law setting out additional theories of liability under the Illinois constitution and federal Voting Rights Act.
On February 3, 2015, the Circuit Court of Cook County issued a written decision denying Rose’s petitions for judicial review and affirming the Board of Elections’ January 15 decision not to place Rose’s name on the ballot. The court also rejected the additional arguments made by Rose in his amended memorandum of law. Rose did not appeal the Circuit Court’s decision, and he was not listed as a candidate on the official ballot for the February 24, 2015 alderman election.
Meanwhile, Rose filed a substantively identical action in federal district court, followed by an amended complaint submitted shortly after his state action was
The defendants moved to dismiss Rose’s amended complaint as barred by claim preclusion, arguing that Rose’s claims had already been adjudicated by the Circuit Court of Cook County in its final February 3 order dismissing Rose’s action on the merits. The district court agreed and dismissed Rose’s amended complaint with prejudice on March' 30, 2015. Rose filed this timely appeal.
II. Analysis
We review a dismissal on claim-preclusion grounds de novo. Harmon v. Gordon,
All three requirements of claim preclusion are satisfied in this case. The parties in Rose’s state and federal actions are the same, and the Circuit Court of Cook County’s February 2015 order dismissing Rose’s petitions for judicial review was unquestionably a final judgment on the merits. See Ill. S.Ct. R. 273 (“Unless ... otherwise specifie[d], an involuntary dismissal of an action, other than a dismissal for lack of jurisdiction, for improper venue, or for failure to join an indispensable party, operates as an adjudication upon the merits.”).
Finally, Rose’s state and federal actions are identical for claim-preelusion purposes. In Illinois as elsewhere, separate claims are considered the same cause of action if “ ‘they arise from a single group of operative facts, regardless of whether they assert different theories of relief.’ ” Chicago Title Land Trust Co. v. Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Sales,
Rose’s addition of a § 1983 claim in his federal action does not change the analysis; it is merely a different theory of recovery arising from the same facts and circumstances that gave rise to the state action. See Stillo v. State Ret. Sys.,
Rose argues that the two actions are different because Illinois later amended its statutory signature requirement after his state court proceedings were over. See 65 ILCS 20/21-28 (2015) (current version of the statute, eliminating the four-percent formula and requiring at least 473 signatures on nomination petitions for every ward). But the amendment in question did not take effect until June’ 2015, and so did not apply to Rose’s nomination petitions or the Board’s decision not to place his name on the ballot for the February 24, 2015 election. Indeed, the amendment did not take effect until months after the conclusion of Rose’s district court proceedings. And while Rose now tries to frame his federal action as a pre-enforcement challenge to the amendment’s validity, his federal pleadings — which do not even mention the amendment — tell a different story. Like his state court pleadings, Rose’s operative federal complaint is directed exclusively at the four-percent signature requirement of the statute in effect when the Board denied him access to the ballot in
Rose also argues that claim preclusion should not apply because he did not have an adequate opportunity to litigate his claims in state court. We accord pre-clusive effect to a state court judgment only if the plaintiff had a “full and fair opportunity” to litigate his claims in the prior action. Kremer v. Chem. Constr. Co.,
We have little trouble concluding that the state court proceedings to which Rose voluntarily submitted were constitutionally adequate. After a hearing, the Circuit Court of Cook County issued a thorough written decision carefully addressing each of Rose’s claims and supporting arguments, including those raised for the first time in his amended memorandum of law. There is no indication that the state court proceedings were insufficiently extensive or substantively unfair, and the mere fact that Rose was displeased with the outcome of those proceedings does not amount to a violation of due process.
Rose nonetheless complains that he did not have a fair opportunity to appeal the state court’s decision because his case became moot before the expiration of the statutory time to appeal.
III. Conclusion
At oral argument, Rose’s counsel insisted that, “beyond all the doctrines ... beyond all the claim preclusion ... the main issue is equity and fairness.” But what is fair and equitable is the consistent application of well-settled principles of claim preclusion under controlling law. The district
Affirmed.
Notes
. Under the statute in effect during the 2015 elections, the number of valid signatures (473) was reached by taking four percent of the total number of votes cast for city mayor at the last mayoral election, and dividing that number by fifty (the total number of wards in Chicago). See 65 ILCS 20/21-28(a) (2013) (amended 2015).
. Although Rose also named the State of Illinois as a defendant, this had no effect on the case. The state is not a “person” for purposes of 42 U.S.C. § 1983, see Will v. Mich. Dep’t of State Police,
. Rose first suggested that he was prospectively challenging the statute's June 2015 amendment in his responsive brief to the motions to dismiss in district court. But Rose did not raise this claim in his amended complaint, and his fleeting reference to the amended version of the statute in his response brief does not alter the factual basis of his federal action. See Pirelli Armstrong Tire Corp. Retiree Med. Benefits Trust v. Walgreen Co.,
. Rose says that his case was mooted on February 24, 2015, when the 7th Ward aider-man election was held without Rose’s name on the ballot. See Pl.’s Br. at 13 (“As a matter of law, Plaintiff's case was moot as of February 24th, 2015.”).
