Stone Street Partners, LLC v. City of Chicago Department of Administrative Hearings
2014 IL App (1st) 123654
Appellate Court of Illinois, First District, First Division
May 20, 2014
Illinois Official Reports
Appellate Court Caption: STONE STREET PARTNERS, LLC, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. THE CITY OF CHICAGO DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS, Defendant-Appellee.
District & No.: First District, First Division. Docket No. 1-12-3654
Filed: May 20, 2014
Held (Note: This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the court but has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.): In an action arising from a fine imposed on plaintiff by defendant city for building code violations, the plaintiff‘s complaint seeking administrative review of the dismissal of its motion to vacate the adjudication was properly dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, since plaintiff was never properly served and made a party to the proceedings and the city ordinances involved did not provide a mechanism by which such an unserved party could vacate void orders; however, the count of plaintiff‘s complaint seeking to quiet title by declaring the city‘s lien void was improperly dismissed because some relief had to be available to remedy the alleged wrong plaintiff suffered, although the remedy could not include damages for slander of title due to the immunity provided by the Tort Immunity Act.
Decision Under Review: Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 12-M1-450026; the Hon. Mark Ballard, Judge, presiding.
Judgment: Affirmed in part and reversed in part; cause remanded for further proceedings.
Counsel on Appeal: Richard
Stephen R. Patton, Corporation Counsel, of Chicago (Benna Ruth Solomon, Myriam Zreczny Kasper, and Jonathon D. Byrer, Assistant Corporation Counsel, of counsel), for appellee.
Panel: JUSTICE DELORT delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justice Hoffman concurred in the judgment and opinion. Presiding Justice Connors concurred in part and dissented in part, with opinion.
OPINION
¶ 1 This case involves a relatively small amount of money, but it provides an opportunity to explore deficiencies in the manner in which the City of Chicago (City) handles in-house adjudication of ordinance violations. Nearly 14 years ago, a City administrative hearing officer fined plaintiff Stone Street Partners, LLC (Stone Street), for building code violations. Stone Street never paid the fine and the City eventually recorded a lien against the subject property. Stone Street did not, however, challenge the fine until over 11 years after the City imposed it, allegedly because it had never been notified of the proceedings in the first place. After an unsuccessful attempt to vacate the fine at the administrative level, Stone Street filed a complaint in the circuit court for administrative review, equitable relief and monetary damages. The circuit court dismissed plaintiff‘s complaint in full. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
¶ 2 ¶ 3 In 1999, a City building inspector found several building code violations in one of plaintiff‘s buildings. Rather than mailing a notice of violation and a summons for the administrative hearing to plaintiff‘s registered agent or to its business address, as required by City ordinance, the City sent the notice to the property itself. Although the Chicago Municipal Code does provide for notice to be given to a property owner by posting the summons on the front door of the property, this method is authorized only if notice by mail to the owner‘s registered agent or primary business address fails. See
¶ 4 Despite the faulty notice, a person named Keith Johnson appeared at the hearing on Stone Street‘s behalf. The City has destroyed virtually all of the administrative record, but what remains indicates that Johnson filed a written appearance for Stone Street and presented some
¶ 5 Stone Street contends that it had no idea that the 1999 order existed until sometime in 2011. In September of that year, its attorney served a Freedom of Information Act (
¶ 6 Stone Street then filed a multicount complaint in the circuit court. One count sought administrative review of the DOAH‘s 2011 order. Other counts sought a declaratory judgment, quiet title and damages for slander of title.2 The City filed a motion to dismiss, which the circuit court granted with prejudice as to all counts. This appeal followed.
ANALYSIS
¶ 7 ¶ 8 Normally, vacating judgments after the passage of years is virtually impossible due to the presumptions of validity that apply to the judicial process. However, the City of Chicago made two critical errors
¶ 9 The court below dismissed all of Stone Street‘s claims on a motion to dismiss filed pursuant to section 2-619 of the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure (
¶ 10 Putting the pieces to this puzzle together requires us to review the background of municipal ordinance adjudications in some depth. Through a series of enactments over the last 20 years or so, our legislature has facilitated the removal of ordinance enforcement hearings from the judiciary to the local administrative level. See generally Matthew W. Beaudet, Adjudication of Ordinance Violations, in Municipal Law § 9.1 (Ill. Inst. for Cont. Legal Educ. 2012). The underlying statute establishing in-house administrative adjudication, and raising their judgments to the dignity of court judgments, was the result of Public Act 90-516, sponsored by then-state senator Barack Obama. Pub. Act 90-516 (eff. Jan. 1, 1998). When discussing the legislation, he declared that its purpose was to “give these administrative adjudication processes some teeth” and that litigating the cases through regular courts was “overburden[ing]” them. 90th Ill. Gen. Assem., Senate Proceedings, Mar. 19, 1997, at 114 (statements of Senator Obama). The process has been so successful that the City of Chicago has established a large central hearing facility that rivals Illinois county courthouses in its size and case volume. See City of Chicago Administrative Hearings, available at http://www.cityofchicago.org/city/en/depts/ah/supp_info/hearing_location.html (last visited Mar. 5, 2014).
¶ 11 Despite the fact that circuit court judges do not preside, and the rules of evidence may be relaxed, defendants in these hearings are still entitled to due process of law. It is well settled that “[a] fair hearing before an administrative agency includes the opportunity to be heard, the right to cross-examine adverse witnesses, and impartiality in ruling upon the evidence.” Abrahamson v. Illinois Department of Professional Regulation, 153 Ill. 2d 76, 95 (1992); see also Waicekauskas v. Burke, 336 Ill. App. 3d 436, 438 (2002) (invalidating municipal adjudication process on due process grounds).
¶ 12 Section 2-14-074(c) of the Chicago Municipal Code requires that notices to corporate defendants for administrative hearings against them must be sent to the address of the corporation‘s registered agent.
¶ 13 Although service of the notice of hearing must be sent to the registered agent, the City notes that no similar requirement applies to service of the order. Accordingly, the City claims, its transmission of the 1999 order to Stone Street‘s business address was sufficient. However, it is well established that a “defendant‘s actual knowledge that an action is pending or that service has been attempted is not the equivalent of service of summons and would not relieve the plaintiff of its burden or vest the court with jurisdiction.” Equity Residential Properties Management Corp. v. Nasolo, 364 Ill. App. 3d 26, 35 (2006).
¶ 14 We must therefore turn to the question of whether Stone Street waived any objection to service through Johnson‘s participation at the hearing. Johnson was a nonattorney who worked as a caretaker for a gravely ill corporate officer. He filed a written appearance on behalf of the corporation. We have little information about what else happened at the hearing other than that it ended with the imposition of a fine against the corporation. This dearth of information results from the City‘s own destruction of most of the records from the hearing, a destruction it undertook even though the fine had not been paid, and the City was pursuing collection of it–albeit at a glacial pace. Appearance and active participation in a judicial proceeding, of course, waives any objection regarding improper service.
¶ 15 Nonattorneys, including paralegals and claims negotiators, provide valuable professional services to corporations in the same manner as licensed attorneys do. Under the general principles of agency, a nonattorney can represent the corporation in negotiations with customers, sign contracts for the corporation, and the like. However, the City‘s administrative hearings, like judicial proceedings, involve the admission of evidence and examination and cross-examination of sworn witnesses–all of which clearly constitute the practice of law. The City argues strongly that these hearings are so inconsequential that corporations need not be represented by licensed attorneys, but to counter that point, we need look no further than Express Valet, Inc. v. City of Chicago, 373 Ill. App. 3d 838 (2007), where this court upheld the DOAH‘s imposition of a fine of $135,825 for multiple violations of a valet parking ordinance. The City also presents its administratively adjudicated traffic citations as an example of cases so simple that anyone can successfully handle them, but corporations do not drive motor vehicles. Administrative hearings, whether held by a municipality or state agency, necessarily
¶ 16 There is no bright-line test to distinguish what is, or is not, the practice of law. “It is immaterial whether the acts which constitute the practice of law are done in an office, before a court, or before an administrative body. The character of the act done, and not the place where it is committed, is the factor which is decisive of whether it constitutes the practice of law.” People ex rel. Chicago Bar Ass‘n v. Goodman, 366 Ill. 346, 357 (1937). A different panel of this court struggled with the question in Sudzus v. Department of Employment Security, 393 Ill. App. 3d 814, 823 (2009), finding, in a highly fact-based decision, that a lay representative of a corporation attending an unemployment compensation hearing did not engage in the unauthorized practice of law because “the character of the actions did not require legal knowledge or skill; and he supplied simple, fact-based answers.” Similarly, in Grafner v. Department of Employment Security, 393 Ill. App. 3d 791 (2009), a divided panel of this court found that the relatively innocuous actions that had already been taken in a particular hearing by a nonattorney representative of the employer did not rise to the level of the practice of law so as to cause the hearing to be a nullity. One justice specially concurred, noting “[t]his is the unauthorized practice of law.” Id. at 805 (O‘Brien, P.J., specially concurring). Even so, the Sudzus and Grafner analyses did not persuade the Board of Governors of the Illinois State Bar Association (ISBA), which, in May 2010, reviewed the newly adopted Illinois Rules of Professional Conduct of 2010 and reaffirmed its March 1994 advisory opinion holding that the pervasive practice of nonattorneys giving legal advice, preparing evidence for presentation and examining witnesses and otherwise participating at unemployment administrative hearings constituted the unauthorized practice of law. Ill. State Bar Ass‘n Op. No. 93-15 (Mar. 1994). We find neither Sudzus nor Grafner to be persuasive on the larger issue presented here, but instead find the ISBA‘s position to be well-taken, and so hold that representation of corporations at administrative hearings–particularly those which involve testimony from sworn witnesses, interpretation of laws and ordinances, and can result in the imposition of punitive fines–must be made by a licensed attorney at law.
¶ 17 Our supreme court quite recently reaffirmed a rule dating back to “as early
legal proceedings, this problem is mitigated. *** Courts in this country, including this court, unanimously agree that a corporation must be represented by counsel in legal proceedings.” (Emphases added.) Id. ¶¶ 17, 22. The Downtown Disposal court found that an administrative review complaint filed by a nonattorney was not a complete nullity, but could be validated by having a licensed attorney file an amended complaint, even after the normal administrative review period had elapsed. The three dissenting justices noted that even creating that narrow exception violated an “unbroken line of precedent dating back before the Civil War.” Id. ¶ 41 (Karmeier, J., dissenting, joined by Kilbride, C.J., and Thomas, J.). Despite the split on whether the exception should be created to the nullity rule, all seven justices agreed that nonattorneys cannot represent corporations in matters requiring the expertise of an attorney. Id. ¶¶ 22, 41.
¶ 18 The City presents several reasons why nonattorneys should be allowed to represent corporations at administrative hearings; none of them is meritorious. First, it cites a series of statutes and administrative regulations providing that nonattorneys can represent corporations at various types of administrative hearings. The City notes that it specifically allows nonattorneys to represent corporations at its administrative hearings. See
¶ 19 In its petition for rehearing, the City, joined by the Attorney General as amicus curiae, suggests that our holding regarding nonattorney representation of corporations at administrative hearings and our questioning of administrative regulations purporting to allow unlicensed persons to practice law would have deleterious consequences. We disagree. As we have noted, except in a small claims case, no judge sitting in a circuit court would
default, regardless of whether the corporation did not appear at all or appeared through a nonattorney.
¶ 20 Second, the City cites
¶ 21 Johnson‘s appearance at the hearing does not change the result. A defendant does not waive objection to jurisdiction if it participated through someone who was unauthorized to do so–even if the representative is a licensed attorney at law. When an attorney appears of record for a party, there is a rebuttable presumption that the party authorized the attorney to do so. Gray v. First National Bank of Chicago, 388 Ill. 124, 129 (1944). However, “when the facts show a lack of authorization, express or implied, and there is no proof of ratification, the acts of counsel are a nullity.” Id. Where affidavits establish that an attorney was not acting as the party‘s attorney, no general appearance is made. People v. Mickow, 58 Ill. App. 3d 780, 783 (1978).
¶ 22 That brings us to the question of the appropriate remedy and the various counts which Stone Street presented in its complaint. In count I, Stone Street sought administrative review of the DOAH‘s 2011 order. Neither a court nor a governmental body gains jurisdiction over a nonserved defendant merely by the passage of a long period of time. A judgment entered without jurisdiction—that is, because of lack of service—is void and can be vacated at any time, either directly or collaterally. Sarkissian v. Chicago Board of Education, 201 Ill. 2d 95, 103 (2002). In January 2012, Stone Street sought relief by filing a motion before the DOAH which, while not titled as such, was essentially a motion to quash service and void the 1999 order. However, the DOAH determined that it had no jurisdiction to consider such a motion because the City ordinances provided no mechanism for un-served defendants to vacate void orders. Stone Street disagrees, relying on a City ordinance which states in part:
“Petition to set aside default order.
(a) An administrative law officer may set aside any order entered by default and set a new hearing date, upon a petition filed within 21 days after the
issuance of the order of default, if the administrative law officer determines that the petitioner‘s failure to appear at the hearing was for good cause or, at any time, if the petitioner establishes that the petitioner was not provided with proper service of process. If the petition is granted, the administrative law officer shall proceed with a new hearing on the underlying matter as soon as practical.” Chicago Municipal Code § 2-14-108(a) (added Apr. 29, 1998).
¶ 23 A related code section provides that a “default” as entered only “[i]f at the time set for a hearing the recipient of a notice of violation or a notice of hearing, or his or her attorney of record, fails to appear.”
¶ 24 The City argues that section 2-14-108(a) only applies to default orders. We give substantial weight to the agency‘s opinion about an ambiguous statute or regulation, and we
also give deference when the agency‘s interpretation relates to its own jurisdiction. See Aurora Manor, Inc. v. Department of Public Health, 2012 IL App (1st) 112775, ¶ 9. Our supreme court has long held that because “an administrative agency is a creature of statute, any power or authority claimed by it must find its source within the provisions of the statute by which it is created.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) County of Knox ex rel. Masterson v. Highlands, L.L.C., 188 Ill. 2d 546, 554 (1999).
¶ 25 We agree with the City‘s interpretation of section 2-14-108(a), noting that the title of the section refers only to default orders, and further finding that the term “default” in the first clause modifies both the clause regarding good cause and the clause following the “or” dealing with service of process. Stone Street was not held in default at the 1999 hearing–perhaps it should have been, on the basis that Johnson‘s appearance was a nullity. Nonetheless, the 1999 order mentions nothing about default, and it was clearly entered after some sort of adjudication on the merits. Accordingly, the DOAH correctly determined it had no jurisdiction to consider Stone Street‘s motion to vacate, and the circuit court correctly confirmed that administrative decision on review. We therefore affirm the dismissal of count I of the complaint.
¶ 26 Count II of the complaint is labeled both as a claim to quiet title and for a declaratory judgment. Specifically, the forms of relief it requests are: (1) a declaration that the City‘s lien on Stone Street‘s property is void; (2) a declaration that the 1999 administrative judgment is null and void; and (3) a judgment against the City for slander of title and attorney fees. The City‘s failure to provide defendants with a procedure to quash service of process and vacate void orders leaves Stone Street without an in-house remedy. As we explained above, the complaint and affidavits set forth sufficient facts to support a valid claim based on voidness of the 1999 order. The City contends here that Stone Street is left without a remedy because it failed to seek administrative review of the 1999 order. Indeed, it is well settled that “[w]here the statute creating or conferring power on an administrative agency expressly adopts the Administrative Review Law, a circuit court has no authority to entertain an independent action.” Metzger v. DaRosa, 209 Ill. 2d 30, 42 (2004). However, a defendant cannot be expected to timely seek review of an order of which it was not properly notified.
¶ 27 In Sarkissian, 201 Ill. 2d at 104-05, our supreme court noted that the Code of Civil Procedure makes no “provision for the filing
postjudgment motion must be viewed as a section 2-1401 motion by the appellate court because it is the only vehicle that a party may use once the 30 days have expired“).
¶ 28 Using Sarkissian as our guide, we hold that cases such as Metzger do not bar us from providing a remedy. Because some sort of equitable relief must be available to remedy the alleged wrong suffered by Stone Street, the circuit court erred in dismissing count II. However, the relief available in count II on remand, should Stone Street prove the underlying facts, may not include damages for slander of title, as that claim is barred for the reasons set forth below. Additionally, we note that this remedy is only potentially available to Stone Street because of the unusual convergence of both of two qualifying factors: (1) the City‘s failure to properly serve defendant in the first instance, a situation normally addressed in courts by a motion to quash; and (2) the fact that Stone Street did not waive jurisdiction merely because a nonauthorized representative of it appeared at the hearing. Administrative judgments against corporations that were properly served must still be reviewed under the standards established in the governing ordinance with respect to motions to vacate default judgments. While we reverse the dismissal of the main portion of count II, we affirm the dismissal of the third portion of the prayer for relief of count II.
¶ 29 Our dissenting colleague suggests that the 1999 judgment was somehow subject to administrative review not merely for the usual 35 days, but for years and years until, at some point, Stone Street found out about it. Section 3-103 of the Administrative Review Law provides that a losing party may file for administrative review “within 35 days from the date that a copy of the decision sought to be reviewed was served upon the party affected by the decision.”
¶ 30 Further, the dissent suggests that a different remedy was created to assist a similarly situated administrative defendant by In re Abandonment of Wells Located in Illinois, 343 Ill. App. 3d 303 (2003). In that case, however, the court remanded the case back to the circuit court “to resolve the factual dispute and to determine whether the Department complied with the notice requirements and satisfied due process requirements.” Id. at 308. In so doing, the Abandonment of Wells court recognized that expired time limitations caused the administrative agency to lose jurisdiction, but placed the matter in the hands of the circuit court, which had plenary equitable jurisdiction to resolve the dispute. In short, that is precisely the remedy we provide here, albeit under the framework of declaratory relief.
¶ 31 Count III is a claim for slander of title based on the City‘s recording of the judgment lien against Stone Street‘s property. In that count, Stone Street claims that the City knew that the 1999 order was void at the time that the City recorded the order in 2009 and knowing it was void. The City moved to dismiss both because it was time-barred and because section 2-107 of the Local Governmental and Governmental Employees Tort Immunity Act immunizes it from liability for libel and slander. See
¶ 32 On rehearing, the City has asked us to grant a certificate of importance under
¶ 33 To summarize; as to count I, we affirm the circuit court‘s affirmance of the DOAH‘s administrative ruling; we reverse the circuit court‘s dismissal of count II, less the prayer for monetary damages, and
¶ 34 Affirmed in part and reversed in part; cause remanded for further proceedings.
¶ 35 JUSTICE CONNORS, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
¶ 36 Fundamentally, this case is about the procedural methods that are available, and those that are not, to litigants who claim that an administrative judgment is void. We all agree that the procedures surrounding the DOAH hearing in 1999 were, if plaintiff‘s allegations are true, woefully inadequate. What the majority and I disagree about is how that proceeding and the resulting administrative judgment can be reviewed by the courts. I agree with my colleagues that plaintiff‘s quiet-title and slander-of-title claims cannot stand and that DOAH‘s 2011 administrative decision should be confirmed, so I concur in the court‘s judgment and opinion on those points. But I must respectfully dissent from the majority‘s conclusion that the declaratory judgment claim should proceed.
¶ 37 The majority holds that an allegedly void administrative judgment may be challenged at any time via a declaratory judgment action. In my opinion, however, our constitution, statutes, and precedent preclude such a claim. This case is, to be blunt, a civil procedure disaster. But while the majority opinion amply documents the City‘s procedural failures, plaintiff is not blameless. In my opinion, regardless of the merits of plaintiff‘s arguments about the validity of the 1999 order, plaintiff made several procedural decisions that preclude the courts from granting any relief in this case.
¶ 38 At the heart of this case is the inescapable fact that the 1999 order is a final administrative judgment. While the circuit court has general subject matter jurisdiction over nearly every kind of claim, the Illinois Constitution of 1970 permits the courts to review administrative orders only as provided by statute. See
¶ 39 As an administrative judgment, review of the 1999 order can only be had pursuant to the Administrative Review Law, and it is undisputed that plaintiff failed to petition for review within 35 days after service of the judgment as required by the law. See
¶ 40 Based on Abandonment of Wells, it is debatable whether a motion to dismiss on timeliness grounds would have succeeded, since that would depend on whether the City could prove that DOAH had properly served plaintiff with notice of the 1999 order. See
¶ 41 Plaintiff also attempted several collateral attacks on the 1999 order via claims for quiet title, slander of title, and a declaratory judgment. In addition to the problems with the quiet-title and slander-of-title claims that the majority has already mentioned, the fundamental problem with these collateral attacks is that they are not viable methods of
seeking review of an administrative judgment. We considered this issue in detail in Stykel v. City of Freeport, 318 Ill. App. 3d 839 (2001), and we determined that the express terms of the Administrative Review Law preclude all common-law and equitable collateral challenges to an administrative decision. See id. at 845-47. Although the majority believes that there must be some equitable method of reviewing the 1999 order (see supra ¶ 28), Stykel rejected that very notion and held that declaratory judgments are not an available option for obtaining review of an administrative judgment. See Stykel, 318 Ill App. 3d at 847; see also id. at 845 (“[W]here the Review Law embraces administrative agencies subject to its terms, it becomes the sole means of securing judicial review of decisions of administrative agencies and eliminates the heretofore conflicting and inadequate common-law and statutory remedies.“);
¶ 42 This rule is known as the doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies, under which “a party may not seek judicial relief from an administrative action unless the party has exhausted all available administrative remedies.” Arvia v. Madigan, 209 Ill. 2d 520, 531 (2004). The supreme court explained the purpose and scope of the rule in Arvia:
“Importantly, the exhaustion doctrine extends to administrative review in the circuit court. [Citation.] That is, where the Administrative Review Law is applicable and the circuit court may grant the relief a party seeks within the context of reviewing the agency‘s decision, a circuit court has no authority to entertain independent causes of action regarding the agency‘s actions. [Citations.] Any other conclusion would enable a party to litigate separately every alleged error committed by an agency in the course of the administrative proceedings.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. at 532.
¶ 43 There are some exceptions to this doctrine, but they are extremely limited in number and are strictly construed. See Castaneda v. Illinois Human Rights Comm‘n, 132 Ill. 2d 304, 309 (1989); see also Stykel, 318 III. App. 3d at 848-50 (finding that a civil rights claim against an administrative agency is not preempted by the Administrative Review Law). Yet even if an exception might apply in this case, plaintiff has not raised one nor even acknowledged that the doctrine exists, so the issue is forfeit. See
¶ 44 In my opinion, the law is clear that plaintiff cannot attempt an end run around the Administrative Review Law by seeking relief from the 1999 order in the form of a declaratory judgment, much less a claim for quiet title or slander of title. Plaintiff‘s only option was a petition for administrative review of the 1999 order, and plaintiff has not done that. Not even plaintiff‘s petition for administrative review of the 2011 order can save the issue, given that plaintiff sought only review of DOAH‘s 2011 order denying the motion to vacate.
¶ 45 I agree with my colleagues that the City‘s actions in this case are troubling and that its system of adjudicating ordinance violations deserves to be reviewed. But this is not the case to do so. Plaintiff‘s procedural decisions have fatally compromised our ability to review the merits of its claims, and allowing plaintiff to mount a backdoor challenge to the 1999 order in the guise of a declaratory judgment is contrary to our precedent and the express terms of the Administrative Review Law. I would hold that plaintiff‘s only option for challenging the 1999 order as void was to file a petition for administrative review of that order. Even given the timeliness problem in this case, review would still have been possible if the City was unable to prove that it had properly served plaintiff with notice of the administrative judgment. But because plaintiff could have but did not seek review of the 1999 order as required by the Administrative Review Law, the courts have no power to review the merits of plaintiff‘s claims under any other mechanism.
¶ 47 The majority does not say so explicitly, but it has in effect invalidated not only DOAH Rule 5.1 but also every other administrative rule that allows for nonattorneys to appear on behalf of corporations at an administrative hearing. There are several problems with the majority‘s approach to this issue, in my view. The first, and perhaps the most important, is that this issue was not presented on appeal and in any event is not essential to the ultimate holding in the case. Plaintiff‘s argument on appeal was not that Keith Johnson‘s appearance at the 1999 hearing rendered the proceedings invalid because he was not an attorney but, rather, that the proceedings were invalid because Johnson was not authorized to represent plaintiff at all. In the affidavit of Brian Farley, which plaintiff filed as part of its motion to vacate the default before DOAH, Farley attests that Johnson “was not an employee of [plaintiff] and was not authorized to represent [plaintiff] in this matter.” While plaintiff initially also contended in the circuit court that the proceedings were invalid because Johnson was not an attorney, plaintiff failed to argue that issue on appeal. The facial validity of DOAH‘s practice of allowing nonattorney representation at its hearings was therefore neither properly briefed nor argued in this court.
¶ 48 The question of whether Johnson‘s status as a nonattorney invalidates the proceedings is thus a moot point, given not only that plaintiff abandoned that issue on appeal but that we can resolve the issue of whether the proceedings were invalid without examining the unauthorized practice of law issue. If the fact that Johnson was not authorized to represent plaintiff in any capacity renders the proceedings invalid, then it is irrelevant whether his status as a nonattorney would do so as well. We have no authority to issue advisory opinions, which are opinions that “resolve[ ] a question of law which is not presented by the facts of the case.” People ex rel. Partee v. Murphy, 133 III. 2d 402, 408 (1990); see also Duncan Publishing Co. v. City of Chicago, 304 Ill. App. 3d 778, 783 (1999) (“Illinois courts are foreclosed from issuing advisory opinions and cannot indulge in rendering opinions simply for the sake of creating precedents to govern future cases.“). The supreme court has not only
cautioned us repeatedly about issuing advisory opinions on issues not essential to the case but more importantly has warned us against invalidating statutes when it is not necessary to do so. See In re E.H., 224 Ill. 2d 172, 178-81 (2006). The admonition applies equally well to invalidating administrative rules, which “have the force and effect of law and, like statutes, are presumed valid.” People v. Selby, 298 Ill. App. 3d 605, 611 (1998). Yet not only has the majority chosen to invalidate DOAH‘s rules allowing for nonattorney representation when it was not necessary to do so in order to resolve this case, it has couched its holding in language that appears to invalidate all other similar rules used by other administrative agencies. I cannot join in such a broad and unnecessary holding, and I express no view on the
¶ 49 My second point of disagreement is the method that the majority uses to reach its conclusion that corporations cannot be represented in administrative proceedings by nonattorneys. The majority has chosen to reject our holdings in Sudzus and Grafner, which upheld administrative rules that allowed nonattorneys to appear on behalf of parties at administrative hearings. See supra ¶ 16. I do not express any opinion on whether Sudzus and Grafner were rightly or wrongly decided or even apply to this case, given that I do not think the issue should even be reached. But having reached the issue, the majority chooses to reject this court‘s own precedent in favor of an advisory opinion by the ISBA. While there is ample precedent for giving weight to the opinions of an administrative agency on legal questions that fall within its purview (see, e.g., Provena Covenant Medical Center v. Department of Revenue, 236 Ill. 2d 368, 387 n.9 (2010)), I am aware of no case that affords similar deference to the advisory opinions of a nongovernmental body such as the ISBA. Indeed, the ISBA, while venerable, is merely a voluntary professional association that has no authority over the regulation of the practice of law in this state. I fail to see how an unreviewable advisory opinion of such a body can have any persuasive effect when this court has issued not one but two opinions on the same subject.
¶ 50 I also disagree with the majority‘s reliance on Downtown Disposal, which the majority contends stands for the proposition that a nonattorney cannot represent a corporation in legal proceedings. See supra ¶ 17. Downtown Disposal does not, however, speak to the issue of nonattorney representation in administrative proceedings, but instead dealt with that issue in the context of judicial proceedings. In Downtown Disposal, the supreme court determined that the act of filing a complaint for administrative review in the circuit court constituted the unauthorized practice of law. See Downtown Disposal Services, 2012 IL 112040, ¶¶ 12-20. The supreme court did not consider whether a similar action by a nonattorney in administrative proceedings constituted the unauthorized practice of law, and so the case is inapposite here. Even so, the supreme court also noted that the effect of the unauthorized practice of law depends on the facts of each case, holding that there is no per se nullity rule. See id. ¶ 31. Yet the majority does not take this fact-specific approach here, instead considering the broad legal question of whether nonattorneys in general should ever be allowed to represent corporations in administrative hearings. In my view, even if it were necessary to reach the issue of the effect of nonattorney representation, Downtown Disposal Services requires that our analysis be limited to the specific facts of the case itself. Cf. id. ¶¶ 32-35 (examining the circumstances of the case and finding that the nonattorney representation did not render the complaint a nullity).
¶ 51 My final point of disagreement is about further review of this case. Along with its petition for rehearing, the City asked us to issue a certificate of importance to the supreme court under
