Pederson v. Village of Hoffman Estates

2014 IL App (1st) 123402
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 21, 2014
Docket1-12-3402
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 2014 IL App (1st) 123402 (Pederson v. Village of Hoffman Estates) 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
Pederson v. Village of Hoffman Estates, 2014 IL App (1st) 123402 (Ill. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Illinois Official Reports

Appellate Court

Pedersen v. Village of Hoffman Estates, 2014 IL App (1st) 123402

Appellate Court ALAN R. PEDERSEN and KAREN PEDERSEN, Plaintiffs- Caption Appellants, v. THE VILLAGE OF HOFFMAN ESTATES and JAMES H. NORRIS, Village Manager, Defendants-Appellees.

District & No. First District, Sixth Division Docket No. 1-12-3402

Filed March 31, 2014 Rehearing denied May 8, 2014

Held Subject to review by a common law writ of certiorari, defendant home (Note: This syllabus rule village had authority to establish administrative procedures for constitutes no part of the resolving claims under the Public Safety Employee Benefits Act, opinion of the court but including claims for continuing health coverage benefits when an has been prepared by the employee is injured “in response to what is reasonably believed to be Reporter of Decisions an emergency,” and in plaintiff firefighter’s case, the denial of for the convenience of benefits was clearly erroneous, since the injury plaintiff suffered, the reader.) while responding to a tanker truck fire on a toll road after the fire was extinguished and he was cleaning the scene when the siren on a nearby fire engine activated accidentally and injured plaintiff’s ears, was within the scope of a response to an emergency for purposes of the Act.

Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 08-CH-28609; the Review Hon. Kathleen G. Kennedy, Judge, presiding.

Judgment Circuit court affirmed in part and reversed in part; defendants’ decision set aside. Counsel on Thomas W. Duda, of Law Offices of Thomas W. Duda, of Arlington Appeal Heights, for appellants.

Arthur L. Janura, Hal R. Morris, Jenifer J. Caracciolo, and Elizabeth A. Thompson, all of Arnstein & Lehr LLP, of Chicago, for appellees.

Brian D. Day and Roger Huebner, both of Illinois Municipal League, of Springfield, amicus curiae.

Panel JUSTICE REYES delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Rochford and Justice Lampkin concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Plaintiff Alan R. Pedersen (Pedersen) was injured in the line of duty as a firefighter for defendant Village of Hoffman Estates (Village) and sought continuing health coverage benefits under section 10 of the Public Safety Employee Benefits Act (Act) (820 ILCS 320/10 (West 2006)). Defendant Village manager James H. Norris (Norris), after a hearing, denied the claim for benefits. ¶2 Pedersen and his wife, plaintiff Karen Pedersen (Karen) then filed suit in the circuit court of Cook County, challenging the denial of benefits under the Act. Plaintiffs’ first amended complaint contained three counts, seeking: (I) a declaratory judgment of their rights under the Act; (II) a declaration that the village ordinance creating a procedure for determining claims under the Act was contrary to the Act and unconstitutional; and (III) administrative review of the decision denying benefits under the Act. Plaintiffs now appeal orders of the circuit court granting partial summary judgment in favor of defendants on counts I and II and affirming the decision to deny benefits challenged by count III after recasting it as seeking a common law writ of certiorari. For the following reasons, we affirm the order of the circuit court granting partial summary judgment in favor of defendants on counts I and II, reverse the order of the circuit court affirming defendants’ decision denying plaintiffs’ claims on count III, and set aside defendants’ decision denying benefits under the Act.

¶3 BACKGROUND ¶4 The record of the hearing before the Village discloses the following facts. During an 18-month period in 1966-67, prior to his employment with the Village, Pedersen was employed by Continental Airlines, placing food aboard airplanes at O’Hare International

-2- Airport. Pedersen was required to wear protective hearing equipment when he worked at the airport. Pedersen was employed by the Village as a firefighter and emergency medical technician beginning in October 1976. Pedersen also was exposed to loud, industrial noise in the course of fulfilling his job responsibilities as a firefighter. ¶5 In the course of his duties, Pedersen had an annual physical examination by doctors associated with St. Alexius Occupational Health. In October 2002, Pedersen was alerted to a “threshold shift” in his hearing during his annual physical. 1 In May 2003, following examinations at the Bell Hearing Center and a physician for the Village, Pedersen was fitted with bilateral hearing aids. In June 2003, Pedersen was placed on light duty, but returned to full duty in September 2003, after obtaining a medical release. ¶6 On June 22, 2004, Pedersen and other firefighters at his station responded to a call regarding a tanker truck fire on an Illinois toll road. The firefighters proceeded to the location in a fire engine, with emergency lights and siren activated. Pedersen was wearing his full “turnout gear” for the call. 2 According to Pedersen, a toll road is a dangerous location to fight a fire. Thus, as a precautionary measure, the firefighters positioned the fire engine behind the scene, in order to protect the firefighters, turning the fire engine’s wheels toward the traffic to provide additional protection in the event traffic strikes the fire engine from the rear. ¶7 After the fire was extinguished, the firefighters commenced cleaning the scene and packing their equipment. As Pedersen was moving a reflective triangle from the tanker truck, a coworker entered the fire engine and accidentally activated the vehicle’s siren. Pedersen was approximately two feet from the front of the fire engine. According to Pedersen, he felt as though his ears were going to “blow up and were bleeding.” Pedersen ripped out a hearing aid, breaking it in the process. At the time the siren was activated, the fire engine continued to block traffic on the toll road and the vehicle’s emergency lights remained activated. ¶8 On the morning of June 23, 2004, Pedersen visited his audiologist because his ears were hurting, with “a lot of ringing.” According to Pedersen, the audiologist found swelling and hearing loss. When Pedersen returned to work, the fire battalion chief inquired whether Pedersen had obtained a release from duty. Pedersen responded he had not obtained a release because he did not think an audiologist could provide one. Pedersen’s battalion chief then sent Pedersen to a doctor, who found no swelling and cleared Pedersen to return to duty as a full-time firefighter. The record contains a letter dated January 20, 2005, from another audiologist indicating Pedersen was evaluated on October 13, 2004, and stating there appeared to be no change from a prior audiogram conducted on April 15, 2003. ¶9 Pedersen continued as a full-time firefighter through February 3, 2005, when Pedersen proceeded to the wrong location on a report of an automobile fire with people trapped inside because he misheard the information. Nevertheless, the firefighters were close enough to the

1 Pedersen does not explain the meaning of a “threshold shift” in his testimony, but he describes a “moderate loss” of hearing, such that he would occasionally not hear what his lieutenant was saying to him.

2 Pedersen did not define the term “turnout gear.” In at least one prior case, this court has referred to “turnout gear” as the coats and pants worn by firefighters at fire suppression. Lindemulder v. Board of Trustees of the Naperville Firefighters’ Pension Fund, 408 Ill. App. 3d 494, 496 (2011).

-3- location to arrive timely to the scene, where the issue was a problem with an automobile’s radiator, not a fire, and the people were outside the vehicle.

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2014 IL App (1st) 123402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pederson-v-village-of-hoffman-estates-illappct-2014.