Lavery v. Department of Financial & Professional Regulation

2023 IL App (1st) 220900
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 25, 2023
Docket1-22-0900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 IL App (1st) 220900 (Lavery v. Department of Financial & Professional Regulation) 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
Lavery v. Department of Financial & Professional Regulation, 2023 IL App (1st) 220900 (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

2023 IL App (1st) 220990

SIXTH DIVISION August 25, 2023

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

No. 1-22-0990

TERRENCE LAVERY; ILLINOIS PROFESSIONALS ) HEALTH PROGRAM, LLC; and ANIL ) RAMACHANDRAN, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiffs, ) Cook County. ) v. ) ) No. 2020-CH-01202 THE DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL AND ) PROFESSIONAL REGULATION, ) ) Honorable Defendant-Appellant ) Caroline Kate Moreland, ) Judge Presiding. (Terrence Lavery and Illinois Professionals Health ) Program LLC, Plaintiffs-Appellees). )

PRESIDING JUSTICE MIKVA delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Oden Johnson and Tailor concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 The circuit court in this case concluded that the Department of Financial and Professional

Regulation (Department) wrongfully required Mr. Lavery, a therapist called as a witness in

proceedings for the reinstatement of his patient’s medical license, to produce personal notes

protected as confidential work product under the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities

Confidentiality Act (Confidentiality Act or Act) (740 ILCS 110/1 et seq. (West 2020)). The court

entered an award of attorney fees and costs, as provided for in the Act, in favor of Mr. Lavery and No. 1-22-0990

his employer, Illinois Professionals Health Program, LLC (IPHP) (collectively, plaintiffs) as the

prevailing parties in an action to redress a violation of the Act, and against the Department.

¶2 The Department does not challenge on appeal the court’s findings that Mr. Lavery was a

therapist as defined by the Act, that the documents in question were personal notes protected from

disclosure, that the Department violated the Act by insisting on the production of those notes, or

that the amount of fees and costs claimed was reasonable. Its sole contention, which it did not

argue below and is making for the first time as the basis for this appeal, is that the circuit court

lacked subject matter jurisdiction to enter an award of fees and costs against the Department

because of the protection that sovereign immunity affords the State of Illinois.

¶3 Plaintiffs maintain that sovereign immunity does not apply to this fee award because (1) an

exception to the doctrine applies where the primary relief sought is to enjoin a state actor from

engaging in prohibited conduct and this award is ancillary to such injunctive relief, and

(2) sovereign immunity only applies to claims made against the State and this order for fees and

costs grew out of an administrative proceeding initiated by the Department itself, not plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs’ third argument is that, even if sovereign immunity would otherwise apply, there is clear

language in the Confidentiality Act waiving sovereign immunity for violations of the Act by the

State.

¶4 For the following reasons, we agree with plaintiffs that sovereign immunity does not apply

here, based on the fact that the fees and costs are ancillary to injunctive relief, and do not reach the

two other arguments that plaintiffs make. We affirm the circuit court’s award of fees and costs.

¶5 I. BACKGROUND

¶6 A. The Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Confidentiality Act

¶7 This case grows out of Mr. Lavery’s assertion of the therapist’s work-product privilege to

2 No. 1-22-0990

withhold personal notes he took during his treatment of Dr. Anil Ramachandran in proceedings

before the Department in which Dr. Ramachandran sought reinstatement of his medical license.

Under the Act, a therapist—defined in part as “a psychiatrist, physician, psychologist, social

worker, or nurse providing mental health or developmental disabilities services” (id. § 2)—is not

required to but may keep personal notes regarding the recipient of such services (id. § 3(b)).

Personal notes include:

“(i) information disclosed to the therapist in confidence by other persons on

condition that such information would never be disclosed to the recipient or other persons;

(ii) information disclosed to the therapist by the recipient which would be injurious

to the recipient’s relationships to other persons, and

(iii) the therapist’s speculations, impressions, hunches, and reminders.” Id. § 2.

¶8 A therapist’s personal notes will not be considered “confidential communications” or

“records” of mental health or developmental disability services—which are separately defined and

for which the recipient of such services may waive privilege. Id. §§ 2, 4, 5(a). To qualify as

therapist’s notes, they must be “kept in the therapist’s sole possession for his [or her] own personal

use” and “not disclosed to any other person, except the therapist’s supervisor, consulting therapist

or attorney.” Id. § 2. Section 3(b) of the Act provides that such notes “are the work product and

personal property of the therapist” and “shall not be subject to discovery in any judicial,

administrative or legislative proceeding.” Id. § 3(b). Section 15 further provides that “[a]ny person

aggrieved by a violation of th[e] Act may sue for damages, an injunction, or other appropriate

relief” and that “[r]easonable attorney’s fees and costs may be awarded to [a] successful plaintiff

in any action under th[e] Act.” Id. § 15.

3 No. 1-22-0990

¶9 B. The Department’s Licensing Proceedings

¶ 10 The Department initiated licensing proceedings against Dr. Ramachandran in 2014, and in

2015 it suspended his medical and controlled substances licenses pursuant to a consent order.

When Dr. Ramachandran petitioned in 2018 to have his licenses restored, he called as a witness

Mr. Lavery, the case manager who, for over four years, had been responsible for monitoring his

compliance with a substance and alcohol abuse recovery plan.

¶ 11 This case arose out of that administrative action. Mr. Lavery alleged in his complaint that,

during his testimony in the licensing proceedings, he disclosed the existence of personal notes kept

by him in connection with his provision of mental health services to Dr. Ramachandran. When the

Department asked for a copy of the notes, Mr. Lavery explained that they “were not provided

because they were ‘work product.’ ” The administrative law judge (ALJ) presiding over the

hearing stated in his order that he then reviewed the relevant discovery requests and responses,

halted Mr. Lavery’s testimony, and ordered that the notes be produced.

¶ 12 Mr. Lavery moved for a protective order, asserting that the documents at issue were

protected from discovery under the Act as the personal notes of a therapist. Following briefing and

a hearing, the ALJ entered a written order denying the motion. The ALJ agreed that, as a licensed

clinical professional counselor, Mr. Lavery qualified as a therapist under the Act. He concluded,

however, that Mr. Lavery had failed to meet his burden of establishing that the withheld documents

fell within the statutory privilege. Despite the fact that Mr. Lavery had asserted the privilege while

testifying under oath and subject to cross-examination, the ALJ faulted him for not “attach[ing] an

affidavit concerning the records in question” to his motion. On December 12, 2019, the ALJ denied

Mr. Lavery’s motion for a protective order and ordered him to produce the withheld notes.

¶ 13 In response to Dr. Ramachandran’s argument that the Department lacked jurisdiction to

4 No. 1-22-0990

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