Policeman's Benevolent Labor Committee v. The City of Pekin

2023 IL App (4th) 221018-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 16, 2023
Docket4-22-1018
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2023 IL App (4th) 221018-U (Policeman's Benevolent Labor Committee v. The City of Pekin) 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
Policeman's Benevolent Labor Committee v. The City of Pekin, 2023 IL App (4th) 221018-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NOTICE 2023 IL App (4th) 221018-U FILED This Order was filed under June 16, 2023 Supreme Court Rule 23 and is NO. 4-22-1018 Carla Bender not precedent except in the 4th District Appellate limited circumstances allowed Court, IL under Rule 23(e)(1). IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

POLICEMEN’S BENEVOLENT LABOR ) Appeal from the COMMITTEE (PBLC), A Labor Organization, ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Tazewell County v. ) No. 18MR44 THE CITY OF PEKIN, ILLINOIS, a Municipal ) Corporation, and JOHN DOSSEY, in His Official ) Capacity as Chief of the Pekin Police Department, ) Defendants-Appellants, ) and ) Honorable THE PEKIN POLICE AND FIRE COMMISSION, ) Paul E. Bauer, Defendant. ) Judge Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE HARRIS delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Turner and Steigmann concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: Defendants’ appeal is dismissed for lack of appellate jurisdiction.

¶2 Defendants—the City of Pekin, Illinois, (City) and John Dossey, chief of the Pekin

Police Department—appeal the trial court’s order denying a request to vacate an arbitration award

on public policy grounds and requiring them to proceed to arbitration for “a de novo hearing”

regarding whether just cause existed for terminating the employment of Greg Simmons, a City

police officer. We dismiss this appeal based upon a lack of appellate jurisdiction.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 From May 1, 2015, to April 30, 2019, the City and plaintiff—the Policemen’s

Benevolent Labor Committee (Union)—were parties to a collective bargaining agreement (CBA), which named the Union the sole bargaining representative of the City’s police officers, including

Simmons. Article 12 of the CBA contained a four-step grievance procedure aimed at resolving

“any dispute or difference of opinion raised by an [e]mployee or the Union against the [City]

involving the meaning, interpretation, or application of the provisions of the [CBA].” The fourth

step provided for referrals “to arbitration” for unsettled grievances.

¶5 Article 13 of the CBA concerned the procedures for the discipline or discharge of

police officers. The parties agreed that disciplinary action would be imposed “only for just cause.”

The CBA further provided as follows:

“Section 13.6 Discipline and Discharge

All disciplinary matters shall remain under the jurisdiction of the Chief of

Police subject to the laws of the State of Illinois and the rules and regulations of the

Board of Police and Fire Commissioners [(Board)], except as otherwise expressly

provided for herein.

Section 13.7 Appeal and Discipline

The officer may elect to appeal a decision by the [Board] either through the

Courts or Arbitration, but not both.”

¶6 In August 2017, Dossey filed a complaint with the Board, alleging Simmons had

engaged in misconduct by making inappropriate remarks about another officer’s anatomy, defying

directions not to discuss the investigation into the remarks with any other officer, and lying during

his formal interrogation. Dossey asked the Board to conduct a hearing to determine whether cause

for discipline against Simmons existed, find that Simmons’s conduct constituted “cause for

discipline up to and including termination,” and order that Simmons be disciplined or discharged

from his employment. In February 2018, Dossey filed an amended complaint with the Board,

-2- adding a claim that Simmons engaged in misconduct by surreptitiously recording the statements

and conversations of other members of the police department.

¶7 Simmons filed grievances following each of Dossey’s complaints, asserting

Dossey’s allegations could not be proven and that “just cause” for his discharge was lacking.

Dossey responded to Simmons’s initial grievance by acknowledging that he was seeking to have

Simmons discharged from the Pekin Police Department and asserting that the matter was not

subject to the CBA’s grievance procedure. He also maintained that there was sufficient “just cause”

under the circumstances to justify discipline. Following Dossey’s response, Simmons’s attorney

informed defendants by email that Simmons would not be participating in a hearing before the

Board so as “to preserve all rights to arbitration” through the CBA’s grievance procedure.

¶8 On February 20, 2018, the Union filed a two-count complaint in the trial court

against the City, Dossey, and the Board. In count I, labeled as a “Petition for Declaratory Ruling,”

the Union alleged that under the parties’ CBA, the Board “makes the decision to discipline, which

is then subject to grievance arbitration.” It maintained, however, that a controversy developed

between the parties “about the proper mechanism to follow *** to make sure [Simmons’s]

contractual rights to grievance arbitration [were] not waived.” The Union asked that the court stay

further action by the Board “pending a declaration of whether the [CBA could] be applied as

written without waiving [Simmons’s] rights to have the disciplinary question resolved at grievance

arbitration ***.” In count II of its complaint, the Union sought to compel grievance arbitration.

¶9 On February 21, 2018, the day after the Union filed its complaint in the trial court,

the Board conducted a hearing on Dossey’s complaints. At the hearing, Dossey presented witness

testimony and evidence in support of his claims that Simmons had engaged in misconduct.

Simmons elected not to participate in the hearing, neither appearing for the hearing nor presenting

-3- any evidence. In March 2018, the Board issued its findings and decision. It determined Simmons

had violated policies, rules, and regulations of the Pekin Police Department and ordered him

terminated from his employment. Shortly following the Board’s decision, Simmons filed another

grievance, asserting the City lacked “just cause” for his discharge and that its discharge decision

was subject to arbitration under “the traditional just cause standard.”

¶ 10 In November 2019, the Union moved in the trial court for partial summary

judgment on count II of its complaint, seeking to compel arbitration. It alleged the undisputed facts

in the case showed that a controversy existed between the parties; the parties generally agreed to

arbitrate their disputes; and the parties specifically agreed that if the Board disciplined a police

officer, the officer could elect to appeal the Board’s decision through arbitration. The Union argued

that such facts, coupled with defendants’ refusal to arbitrate, warranted the court entering an order

to compel arbitration under the Uniform Arbitration Act (Arbitration Act) (710 ILCS 5/2 (West

2018)).

¶ 11 In June 2020, defendants responded to the Union’s motion and filed a cross-motion

for summary judgment. They agreed there was “no dispute that the [CBA] allows the [Union] to

appeal a decision of the [Board] to arbitration.” (Emphasis in original.) However, they asserted

the Union was not entitled to compel arbitration in the present case because participation in

proceedings before the Board was a condition precedent to arbitration and neither Simmons nor

the Union appeared or presented argument at the February 2018 Board hearing. Defendants

maintained that because the Union did not participate in the Board’s hearing, it acted inconsistently

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2023 IL App (4th) 221018-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/policemans-benevolent-labor-committee-v-the-city-of-pekin-illappct-2023.