People v. Dobbins

2024 IL App (1st) 230566, 253 N.E.3d 506
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 30, 2024
Docket1-23-0566
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2024 IL App (1st) 230566 (People v. Dobbins) 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
People v. Dobbins, 2024 IL App (1st) 230566, 253 N.E.3d 506 (Ill. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 IL App (1st) 230566

SECOND DIVISION September 30, 2024

No. 1-23-0566 ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

) THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of ) Cook County, Criminal Division. v. ) ) No. 08 CR 11379(01) GREGORY DOBBINS, ) ) Hon. Erica L. Reddick, Defendant ) Judge Presiding. ) (Katrina Dobbins, as Administrator of the ) Estate of Gregory Dobbins, Appellant). ) ___________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Van Tine and Justice McBride concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Gregory Dobbins was convicted of possession of a controlled substance in 2009. His

conviction was vacated after it was discovered, years later, that the police officers involved had

framed him (along with hundreds of others) for a crime he did not commit. Gregory filed a

petition for a Certificate of Innocence (COI) but died before a ruling on the petition. Katrina

Crawford, Gregory’s life partner and mother of his child, was appointed administrator of his

estate. The estate moved to substitute into the COI proceedings.

¶2 The circuit court denied the motion and dismissed the COI petition. The estate appeals,

arguing that the COI action survived Gregory’s death under the Illinois Survival Act. No. 1-23-0566

¶3 As much as we would prefer to rule otherwise, we agree with the State that the COI

action does not survive Gregory’s death under the Survival Act’s plain language We thus affirm

the circuit court’s judgment.

¶4 BACKGROUND

¶5 In 2009, Gregory Dobbins was incarcerated for 30 months after he pleaded guilty to

unlawful possession of a controlled substance. Two officers involved in the arrest, former

Chicago Police Sergeant Ronald Watts and former Chicago Police Officer Kallett Mohammed,

were arrested in 2012 for their involvement in a criminal conspiracy involving drug trafficking in

the Ida B. Wells Homes. Among other things, Sergeant Watts and his tactical team framed

numerous innocent people, including Gregory, resulting in over 200 overturned convictions in

what amounted to one of the most momentous examples of police corruption in Chicago history.

¶6 In April 2022, a decade after this large-scale police corruption came to light, the circuit

court vacated Gregory’s conviction. That May, Gregory filed a petition for a COI, which was

scheduled to be heard on June 22, along with other Watts-related exonerees’ petitions.

Unfortunately, Dobbins died before that June 22 hearing. The circuit court granted the other

Watts exonerees’ petitions but continued Gregory’s case to allow his estate to be opened.

¶7 Katrina Crawford was appointed to serve as the independent administrator for the Estate

of Gregory Dobbins. Crawford had a child with Gregory and was his domestic partner from his

arrest until his death. The estate filed a motion to substitute as petitioner in the COI proceedings.

See 735 ILCS 5/2-1008(b) (West 2022).

¶8 The State objected to the substitution, relying on this court’s earlier decision in Rudy v.

People, 2013 IL App (1st) 113449. In Rudy, this court held that the COI statute did not permit

the estate of a wrongly convicted individual to seek the certificate; the COI was “personal to the

-2- No. 1-23-0566

individual who was wrongly convicted rather than to one suing on his or her behalf.” Id. ¶ 13.

Just as the estate in Rudy could not obtain a COI there, argued the State, likewise Gregory’s

estate here was not entitled to seek a COI.

¶9 The estate tried to distinguish Rudy, as the wrongly convicted individual in that case had

not filed a petition for a COI before her death. Here, in contrast, Gregory had already filed his

petition before his death, so the estate was not asking the court to allow a new COI action to be

initiated but to allow an existing matter to survive the petitioner’s death. The circuit court found

that Rudy applied as a matter of precedent and was “not a matter of discretion at all.” The court

thus denied the motion to substitute and dismissed the COI petition.

¶ 10 ANALYSIS

¶ 11 The estate claims the circuit court erred in denying its motion to substitute and dismissing

the COI petition. The estate does not ask us to revisit Rudy. Rather, the estate argues that the

Survival Act governs here, allowing the pending COI action to “survive” Gregory’s death.

¶ 12 I

¶ 13 We first address the issue of forfeiture. The State argues that we should not reach the

question of whether the Survival Act applies, as the estate never raised it below.

¶ 14 An appellant must preserve its claims and issues for appeal to avoid forfeiture. Brunton v.

Kruger, 2015 IL 117663, ¶ 76. But arguments in support of preserved issues or claims are not

similarly limited by forfeiture. Id. (“We require parties to preserve issues or claims for appeal;

we do not require them to limit their arguments here to the same arguments that were made

below.”); 1010 Lake Shore Ass’n v. Deutsche Bank National Trust Co., 2015 IL 118372, ¶ 18

(same). The estate has always argued that this pending action should continue after Gregory’s

-3- No. 1-23-0566

death. And in fairness, though it never cited the Survival Act, the estate’s distinction of the Rudy

decision was essentially a survival argument without the statute.

¶ 15 We would further note that forfeiture is a limitation on the parties, not this court, and we

may relax the forfeiture rule where we deem it appropriate in the interests of justice. Deutsche

Bank National Trust Co. v. Cortez, 2020 IL App (1st) 192234, ¶ 32; Duniver v. Clark Material

Handling Co., 2021 IL App (1st) 200818, ¶ 18. The forfeiture rule serves two critical functions:

it ensures that the trial court has the chance to correct any errors before appeal, and it refuses to

reward an appellant for its inaction below via reversal on appeal. 1010 Lake Shore Ass’n, 2015

IL 118372, ¶ 14.

¶ 16 Neither concern is present here. This is not a situation where the estate’s failure to raise

the Survival Act prevented the trial court from making findings, factual or otherwise, that would

be necessary to our disposition of this question on appeal. Even had the estate raised that

argument below, it is a question of statutory interpretation subject to de novo review; we would

not defer to the circuit court’s legal interpretation. Unzicker v. Kraft Food Ingredients Corp., 203

Ill. 2d 64, 74 (2002). Regardless of whether the estate raised this issue below, both the parties

and this court would be in precisely the same position as we now find ourselves—the parties

having fully briefed the issue on appeal, and this court reviewing the matter with fresh eyes.

Reviewing this question does not prejudice the State. It does not advantage the estate. Nor does it

undermine judicial economy in the least. We will consider the merits of this argument.

¶ 17 II

¶ 18 Substitution of parties, as the estate sought here, is permitted when “the action is one

which survives.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1008(b) (West 2022). That begs the question of whether a COI

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Related

People v. Dobbins
2026 IL 131187 (Illinois Supreme Court, 2026)
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2025 IL App (5th) 230219-U (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2025)
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2025 IL App (2d) 240120-U (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2025)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 IL App (1st) 230566, 253 N.E.3d 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-dobbins-illappct-2024.