Walker v. Chasteen

2025 IL 130288
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 2025
Docket130288
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2025 IL 130288 (Walker v. Chasteen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Chasteen, 2025 IL 130288 (Ill. 2025).

Opinion

2025 IL 130288

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS

(Docket No. 130288)

REUBEN D. WALKER et al., Appellees, v. ANDREA LYNN CHASTEEN (The People of the State of Illinois ex rel. Kwame Raoul, Attorney General of Illinois, et al., Appellants).

Opinion filed January 24, 2025.

JUSTICE ROCHFORD delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.

Chief Justice Theis and Justices Overstreet, Holder White, Cunningham, and O’Brien concurred in the judgment and opinion.

Justice Neville took no part in the decision.

OPINION

¶1 Plaintiffs are a class of individuals who filed mortgage foreclosure complaints in the circuit courts and paid “add-on” filing fees mandated by section 15-1504.1 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/15-1504.1 (West 2012)). Defendants are Illinois circuit court clerks who imposed the fees in accordance with the statute.

¶2 Plaintiffs filed a class-action complaint asserting, inter alia, that defendants must be permanently enjoined from enforcing section 15-1504.1 of the Code because it is unconstitutional on its face. This court agreed and declared that section 15-1504.1 and two other statutes that created programs funded by the filing fees (see 20 ILCS 3805/7.30, 7.31 (West 2012)) violated the free access clause of the Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 12). Walker v. Chasteen, 2021 IL 126086, ¶ 47 (Walker II). We affirmed the injunction entered by the Will County circuit court against defendants and remanded the cause for further proceedings. Id. ¶ 51.

¶3 On remand, plaintiffs pursued their sole pending claim, which was for a return of the unconstitutional fees. The circuit court dismissed the refund claim, concluding that it was a claim against the State and thus barred by the doctrine of sovereign immunity. The appellate court reversed the dismissal, holding that the circuit court has jurisdiction to order the refunds under the officer-suit exception to sovereign immunity. We granted defendants leave to appeal.

¶4 We hold that the officer-suit exception initially gave the circuit court jurisdiction to enjoin the prospective enforcement of the fee statute as facially unconstitutional. But once the courts declared the fee statute unconstitutional and enjoined its enforcement, plaintiffs’ claim for a monetary award to redress a past wrong was the type of claim that is the province of the Court of Claims, not the circuit court. Because the officer-suit exception does not apply to the refund claim, we reverse the appellate court’s judgment and affirm the circuit court’s judgment of dismissal.

¶5 I. BACKGROUND

¶6 This case has a long procedural history that began with two underlying residential mortgage foreclosure lawsuits. In April 2012, plaintiff Reuben D. Walker filed a mortgage foreclosure complaint in Will County. In August 2015, plaintiff M. Steven Diamond filed a mortgage foreclosure complaint in Cook County.

-2- ¶7 Section 15-1504.1 of the Code created a $50 “add-on” filing fee for residential mortgage foreclosure actions like those filed by Walker and Diamond. 735 ILCS 5/15-1504.1 (West 2012). Sections 7.30 and 7.31 of the Illinois Housing Development Act (Act) created social welfare programs funded by the fee created in section 15-1504.1. 20 ILCS 3805/7.30, 7.31 (West 2012). Walker and Diamond each paid the $50 add-on fee. 1

¶8 In October 2012, Walker filed a putative class-action complaint against the clerk of the Will County circuit court, alleging, inter alia, that section 15-1504.1 was facially unconstitutional. The circuit court certified the class, which included Walker and all individuals who had paid the $50 filing fee up to the time Walker filed his foreclosure action. The court also certified a class of defendants that consisted of all the circuit court clerks in Illinois in their official capacities. The State, through the attorney general, was allowed to intervene.

¶9 In November 2013, the circuit court granted plaintiffs partial summary judgment, finding section 15-1504.1 to be facially unconstitutional. The court determined that (1) the circuit court clerks fell within the “fee officer” prohibition in article VI, section 14, of the Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970, art. VI, § 14) and (2) the provision in section 15-1504.1 that authorized circuit court clerks to retain 2% of the $50 filing fees for administrative expenses created an unconstitutional fee office. This court reversed the judgment and remanded the class action for further proceedings without addressing plaintiffs’ other constitutional claims. Walker v. McGuire, 2015 IL 117138, ¶¶ 30, 44 (Walker I).

¶ 10 Diamond was added as a named party, and in April 2018, plaintiffs filed a second-amended complaint for a permanent injunction prohibiting enforcement of the statutes and for the return of the unconstitutional filing fees. More specifically, count I alleged section 15-1504.1 of the Code and sections 7.30 and 7.31 of the Act violated separation-of-powers principles. Count II alleged the statutes violated equal protection, due process, and uniformity-of-burden principles. Count III alleged the statutes violated the free access clause by providing for the imposition

1 Plaintiffs conceded at oral argument in this appeal that the State currently holds almost all the fees that defendants collected under section 15-1504.1, except for a very small percentage retained by defendants under the statute to cover the circuit courts’ administrative costs.

-3- of a filing fee for a purpose that was not court related. Count IV requested the creation of a protest fund for all fees collected or to be collected pursuant to section 15-1504.1 until the conclusion of plaintiffs’ action. Counts I, II, and III requested the same relief: (1) a declaratory judgment that the statutes were unconstitutional; (2) “[a] declaratory judgment that any expenditures of State funds collected pursuant to this statute must be returned to Plaintiffs”; (3) temporary, preliminary, and permanent injunctions “enjoining Defendants from disbursing fees collected pursuant to [section 15-1504.1]”; and (4) “[a]n order to return all fees collected pursuant to [section 15-1504.1] to Plaintiffs.” Defendants responded that the statutes were constitutional.

¶ 11 The circuit court granted plaintiffs partial summary judgment and declared the three statutes unconstitutional. However, the court granted defendants summary judgment on count IV on the grounds that the creation of a protest fund is not an independent cause of action. The court entered a permanent injunction that prohibited the future collection of the fees and the funding of the social welfare programs, but the court stayed the injunction so this court could review the matter.

¶ 12 This court, in turn, held that plaintiffs paid the filing fees under duress such that the voluntary payment doctrine did not bar plaintiffs’ cause of action. Walker II, 2021 IL 126086, ¶ 28. This court further held that section 15-1504.1 of the Code and sections 7.30 and 7.31 of the Act violated the free access clause of the Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 12). Walker II, 2021 IL 126086, ¶¶ 47-48. We affirmed the judgment of the Will County circuit court and remanded the cause for “further proceedings consistent with [the] opinion.” Id. ¶ 51. The proceedings on remand are the subject of this appeal.

¶ 13 On remand, plaintiffs pursued their sole pending claim for a refund of the unconstitutional fees.

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Bluebook (online)
2025 IL 130288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-chasteen-ill-2025.