Bourdage v. Peila

2022 IL App (1st) 210057-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 29, 2022
Docket1-21-0057
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2022 IL App (1st) 210057-U (Bourdage v. Peila) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bourdage v. Peila, 2022 IL App (1st) 210057-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

2022 IL App (1st) 210057-U

THIRD DIVISION June 29, 2022

No. 1-21-0057

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

SHERRI BOURDAGE, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Petitioner-Appellant, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 2015 OP 76087 ) JOSEPH PEILA, ) Honorable ) Thomas V. Cushing, Respondent-Appellee. ) Judge Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Gordon and Justice McBride concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: Appeal dismissed. Appeal from denial of motion to vacate plenary stalking no- contact order is moot, as order has long expired, and unconstitutional restriction on petitioner’s speech could not be reimposed under statute now in effect, which was amended to remove language at issue on appeal.

¶2 Petitioner Sherri Bourdage appeals from the circuit court’s denial of her section 2-1401

petition seeking to vacate a plenary stalking no-contact order issued against her at the request of

respondent Joseph Peila. See 735 ILCS 5/2-1401 (West 2018). Among other restrictions, the

order prohibited Bourdage from “communicat[ing] to or about” Peila. Bourdage claims the order

is “void ab initio” because this speech restriction violates her first-amendment rights, for the No. 1-21-0057

reasons we explained in Flood v. Wilk, 2019 IL App (1st) 172792. After Peila failed to file a

response brief, we took the case on the appellant’s brief only. See First Capitol Mortgage Corp.

v. Talandis Construction Corp., 63 Ill. 2d 128, 133 (1976). We now dismiss the appeal as moot.

¶3 The events giving rise to this case began in 2010. Peila was the principal at Eliza

Chappell Elementary School, a Chicago Public Schools (CPS) facility, where Bourdage’s son

had just enrolled. Bourdage grew disgruntled with Peila’s management of the school and his

alleged misrepresentations to her. They developed a contentious relationship, to say the least.

Peila sought several emergency stalking no-contact orders against Bourdage, and eventually the

plenary order at issue here.

¶4 In his pleadings, Peila alleged myriad instances of harassment, threats, and otherwise

inappropriate conduct and speech by Bourdage over the years. These allegations included

physically assaulting teachers and school security guards, threatening to attack Peila with a taser,

filing false police reports, making sexual comments about children while present at the school,

attempting to enter school premises after CPS barred her from doing so, and making all manner

of allegedly false and defamatory statements about Peila to third parties.

¶5 The circuit court first entered the plenary order on November 15, 2016. The restrictions it

imposed on Bourdage were set out in four clauses. Clause (b)(1) prohibited her from engaging in

any “course of conduct” defined by statute as “stalking.” See 740 ILCS 21/10 (West 2018). As

the order set forth, that includes any acts through which Bourdage might “follow, monitor,

observe, surveil, threaten, or communicate to or about, [Peila],” including by means of electronic

communications. (Emphasis added.)

¶6 Clause (b)(2) prohibited Bourdage from “having any contact with” Peila. Clause (b)(3)

prohibited Bourdage from knowingly coming within 100 feet of Bourdage’s residence, the

2 No. 1-21-0057

school, or anywhere else Peila worked. Clause (b)(4) barred Bourdage from obtaining a FOID

card.

¶7 The plenary order expired on November 15, 2018. On December 6, 2018, the court

extended the plenary order to December 4, 2020. The restrictions in clauses (b)(1) through (b)(4)

remained in effect, and clause (b)(5) was added, specifying that Bourdage shall have “no contact

[with Peila] by any means including through third parties.”

¶8 In January 2020, apparently, Bourdage filed a motion for relief from judgment under

section 2-1401 of the Code of Civil Procedure, arguing that the no-contact order violated her first

amendment rights. See 735 ILCS 5/2-1401 (West 2018). We say “apparently” because the

section 2-1401 motion is not in the record on appeal.

¶9 The record does reflect, however, that the section 2-1401 motion was denied by the

circuit court on July 16, 2020. Bourdage moved for reconsideration, and the court denied

reconsideration on December 21, 2020. Bourdage then appealed both the denial of the section 2-

1401 motion and the denial of the motion to reconsider.

¶ 10 In any event, the plenary order itself expired, by its own terms, on December 4, 2020.

¶ 11 On appeal, as in the circuit court, Bourdage challenges only a small portion of the

language contained in clause (b)(1), specifically the language in the plenary order preventing her

from “communicat[ing] to or about” Peila. She says that restriction is an unconstitutionally broad

prior restraint on her speech. She relies principally on two decisions.

¶ 12 First, our supreme court found that identical language, insofar as it defined criminal

stalking, to be facially unconstitutional. See People v. Relerford, 2017 IL 121094, ¶ 63 (finding

portion of criminal stalking statute that made it unlawful to negligently “communicate[ ] to or

about” a person, where the speaker knows or should know the communication would cause a

3 No. 1-21-0057

reasonable person to suffer emotional distress, to be facially unconstitutional). Second, we

invalidated similar language in a civil no-contact order in Flood, 2019 IL App (1st) 172792, ¶¶

24, 45-46 (invalidating, as overbroad restriction on First Amendment rights, a no-contact order

restricting defendant from “communication in any form or any writing naming or regarding

[petitioner],” his employees or any members of his church congregation).

¶ 13 But we first consider whether this appeal is moot.

¶ 14 An appeal is moot if it no longer presents an actual, justiciable controversy, such that a

reviewing court can no longer grant effective relief to the complaining party. In re Benny M.,

2017 IL 120133, ¶ 17; Lance H., 2014 IL 114899, ¶ 12. A reviewing court does not typically

decide moot appeals. Lance H., 2014 IL 114899, ¶ 12; Peach v. McGovern, 2019 IL 123156, ¶

64. The court may raise the threshold question of mootness on its own motion (Tirio v. Dalton,

2019 IL App (2d) 181019, ¶ 21), including in a case taken on the appellant’s brief only. See

McHenry Twp v. County of McHenry, 2022 IL 127258, ¶¶ 47-49 (finding issue moot, though

exception applied, in case taken under Talandis); In re Custody of J.K., 2021 IL App (1st)

200062-U, ¶¶ 28-29 (same, minus the exception).

¶ 15 We find this appeal moot. For one thing, the plenary order Bourdage challenges expired

on December 4, 2020, before Bourdage even filed her notice of appeal. Bourdage’s brief on

appeal makes no claim that she is suffering any present harm from the expired order. There is no

claim, much less evidence in the record, that any subsequent stalking no-contact order with

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