Seyller v. County of Kane

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 1, 2011
Docket2-10-1088 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Seyller v. County of Kane (Seyller v. County of Kane) 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
Seyller v. County of Kane, (Ill. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

No. 2—10—1088 Opinion filed March 1, 2011 ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

DEBORAH SEYLLER, as Kane County ) Appeal from the Circuit Court Clerk of the Circuit Court, ) of Kane County. ) Plaintiff and Counterdefendant- ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) No. 10—MR—443 ) THE COUNTY OF KANE; THE KANE ) COUNTY BOARD; KAREN ) McCONNAUGHAY, as County Board ) Chairman; DEBORAH ALLAN, CRISTINA ) CASTRO, DONNELL COLLINS, MARK ) DAVOUST, JOHN P. FAHY, RON FORD, ) DREW FRASZ, JOHN J. HOSCHEIT, ) CATHERINE S. HURLBUT, GERALD ) A. JONES, MICHAEL KENYON, ) ROBERT A. KUDLICKI, BONNIE LEE ) KUNKEL, JENNIFER LAESCH, SYLVIA ) LEONBERGER, PHILIP LEWIS, HOLLIE ) LINDGREN, JOHN B. MAYER, ROBERT ) J. McCONNAUGHAY, JEANETTE ) MIHALEC, JAMES C. MITCHELL, JR., ) JACKIE TREDUP, THOMAS VAN ) CLEAVE, JESSE VAZQUEZ, BARBARA ) WOJNICKI, and WILLIAM A. WYATT, ) as County Board Members, ) ) Honorable Defendants and Counterplaintiffs- ) Stephen Sullivan, Appellees. ) Judge, Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE ZENOFF delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices McLaren and Hutchinson concurred in the judgment and opinion. No. 2—10—1088

OPINION

Plaintiff, Deborah Seyller, as the elected Kane County clerk of the circuit court (Clerk),

appeals from an order of the circuit court of Kane County granting a preliminary injunction in favor

of defendants the County of Kane, the county board, and members of the county board (collectively

the County) and denying her motion for a preliminary injunction. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

The instant controversy is about whether the Clerk may use monies in “special funds”1 to pay

personnel costs, or whether personnel costs are to be funded by monies appropriated from the

County’s General Revenue Fund. The legislature provided for the creation of the special funds, to

be retained by the county treasurer and generated from fees collected by the circuit clerk for

1 The Clerk’s complaint refers to a “general fund” and to “special” or “restricted funds”

without naming them. The County’s counterclaim refers to the County’s General Revenue Fund,

the Court Automation Fund, the Court Document Storage Fund, the Child Support Fund, and the

Court “Operative” and Administrative Fund. The trial court directed the Clerk to pay personnel

costs from the Court Automation Fund, the Court Document Storage Fund, and the

“Administrative Services” Fund. The crux of this appeal involves an analysis of the Court

Automation Fund and the Court Document Storage Fund, which for ease of reference we call the

“special funds.” We adopt the County’s nomenclature for general funds as the “General Revenue

Fund.” Different witnesses referred to the “Court Operation and Administrative Fund” (see 705 ILCS

105/27.3d (West 2008)) simply as the Administrative Fund. For consistency, we use “Court

Operation and Administrative Fund” where applicable.

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automated recordkeeping (705 ILCS 105/27.3a (West 2008)) and document storage (705 ILCS

105/27.3c (West 2008)).

The dispute centers on the Clerk’s request that the County appropriate monies from its

General Revenue Fund, above what it approved for the Clerk’s 2010 budget, in order to meet the

mandated obligations of the office of the Clerk. The Clerk defines her mandated obligations as those

imposed by state statutes, applicable state and federal regulations, rules of the Illinois Supreme Court,

orders of the chief judge of the Sixteenth Judicial Circuit, and orders of other judges. Without such

additional funding, the Clerk cautioned, she would be forced to close her office and the courts, as she

had exhausted before the end of the fiscal year the monies appropriated to her from the County’s

General Revenue Fund. The County passed a resolution denying the Clerk’s request. The resolution

cited the Clerk’s action in hiring without the County’s consent additional employees whose salaries

and benefits were not included in her budget.

On September 14, 2010, the Clerk filed a verified complaint for declaratory judgment and

other relief against the County. In that complaint, the Clerk claimed that the County did not

appropriate sufficient monies from the General Revenue Fund for her office for the fiscal year 2010

and that, if she did not receive additional monies from the General Revenue Fund, she would be

unable to make her payroll for the remainder of the fiscal year and would have to close her office and

the courts.

Specifically, the Clerk alleged that, although she had submitted a proposed budget of

$4,782,665 for the fiscal year 2010, the County appropriated only $4,147,968. The Clerk requested

(1) a declaration that the County is required to fund the reasonable and necessary expenses of the

Clerk’s office; (2) a writ of mandamus requiring the County to fund those expenses; (3) a declaration

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that the Clerk is not required to submit line-item budgets for review by the County; (4) an order

stating that the Clerk’s office is to remain open and staffed and directing the County to fund the

requisite expenses; and (5) an injunction requiring the County to approve the funding requested in

her supplemental budget request.

The Clerk subsequently filed a motion for a preliminary injunction to compel the County to

add funds, beyond those appropriated to her budget from the General Revenue Fund, for the fiscal

year 2010, so that her office could continue to operate as usual. Attached to that motion was an

affidavit from the Clerk. In that affidavit, the Clerk explained the following. Although case filings

had declined between 2006 and 2009, the chancery cases, which were “vastly more time intensive to

manage,” increased by 3,245 cases. In that same period, the judiciary added new judges and new

courtrooms, which required at least one additional clerk to be assigned while court was in session.

Between 2007 and 2010, the average number of documents processed monthly by the Clerk’s office

increased from 91,905 to 121,821. Furthermore, despite the increased workload, the staff had

decreased over time, from 99 in 2008 to 96.5 in 2010 and 95.5 when the motion for a preliminary

injunction was filed. The County’s 2010 budget reduced appropriations for the Clerk’s office by

$116,549 from the 2009 fiscal year and $474,483 from the 2008 fiscal year.

On September 28, 2010, the County filed a verified answer and a counterclaim. As a

threshold matter, the counterclaim explained how the Clerk’s office was funded. The County

appropriated funds for the Clerk’s annual budget from the County’s General Revenue Fund. The

County appropriated further funds for the Clerk’s office from the special funds as well as the Child

Support Fund and the Court Operation and Administrative Fund (other named funds), which are

funded by the litigation fees the Clerk charges. The County alleged that it determined that the Clerk’s

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2010 budget needs from the General Revenue fund should not exceed the 2009 level because of the

decrease in court filings and the improved efficiency of running the Clerk’s office, but that the Clerk’s

allocation from the other named funds, including the special funds, should be increased.

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Seyller v. County of Kane, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seyller-v-county-of-kane-illappct-2011.