Munive v. Town of Cicero et al
Filing
343
MEMORANDUM Opinion and Order. The Court rejects Cicero's alternative arguments in support of its motion for summary judgment on plaintiff's negligent hiring and supervision claims. The Court's December 1, 2015 order reinstating those claims against Cicero stands. Signed by the Honorable Jorge L. Alonso on 12/21/2015. Notice mailed by judge's staff (ntf, )
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
EASTERN DIVISION
WANDA COLON, as the Administrator )
of the Estate of Cesar Munive,
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Plaintiff,
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v.
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TOWN OF CICERO and CICERO
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POLICE OFFICER DONALD
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GARRITY,
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Defendants.
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12 C 5481
Judge Jorge L. Alonso
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
On October 19, 2015, the Court entered summary judgment for Cicero on plaintiff’s
negligent hiring and supervision claims on the grounds that §§ 2-109 and 2-201 of the Illinois Tort
Immunity Act gave Cicero immunity from the claim. Having reached that conclusion, the Court did
not consider the other arguments Cicero proffered in support of its motion. On December 1, 2015,
the Court reconsidered its conclusion that §§ 2-109 and 2-201 gave Cicero immunity and reinstated
plaintiff’s negligent hiring claims. The Court now considers the arguments Cicero offered to support
its motion for summary judgment that the Court did not previously consider.
Cicero’s first argument is that § 4-102 of the Tort Immunity Act shields it from plaintiff’s
negligent hiring claims. In relevant part, that section provides:
Neither a local public entity nor a public employee is liable for failure to establish
a police department or otherwise provide police protection service or, if police
protection service is provided, for failure to provide adequate police protection or
service, failure to prevent the commission of crimes, failure to detect or solve crimes,
and failure to identify or apprehend criminals. . . .
745 Ill. Comp. Stat. 10/4-102. Given the statute’s plain language, it seems unlikely it would apply
to claims of negligent supervision.
Yet, in DeSmet ex rel. Estate of Hays v. County of Rock Island, 848 N.E.2d 1030 (Ill. 2006),
the Illinois Supreme Court held that it did. In that case, a motorist reported to the Clerk of the
Village of Orion that she had seen a car drive into a ditch at a high rate of speed. Id. at 1034. The
Clerk passed the information onto local police authorities, none of whom investigated. Id. at 103435. Three days later, the body of plaintiff’s decedent was found lying outside of her car in the ditch
about which the motorist had called. Id. at 1035. Thereafter, plaintiff sued the police authorities,
alleging, among other things, that they had “failed to [properly] train and supervise [law
enforcement] employees.” Id. at 1041 (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted). The trial
and appellate courts held that the failure to supervise claim was barred by § 4-102. Id. at 1035.
The Supreme Court agreed:
[Plaintiff’s] allegations implicate the structural adequacy of police protection
services that defendants provided to the general public. In essence, plaintiff alleges
that those inadequacies resulted in a failure to obtain sufficient information
concerning decedent’s motor vehicle accident, a failure to timely dispatch
appropriate law enforcement personnel, and a failure to timely dispatch emergency
medical personnel. Thus, plaintiff’s allegations implicate the adequacy of services
provided to the general public–services that are intended to determine whether and
when police officers will be dispatched into the community in response to specific
calls for assistance.
Id. at 1041 (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted).
The appellate court echoed DeSmet in Doe v. Village of Schaumburg, 955 N.E.2d 566 (Ill.
App. Ct. 2011). Plaintiffs in that case were minors who had been sexually assaulted by another
student while all of them were attending summer school at Hoffman Estates High School. Id. at 568.
Before assaulting plaintiffs, the assailant had been arrested for aggravated criminal sexual assault
of a minor. Id. Though the arresting officers knew the assailant was attending summer school at
a local high school and the police department had agreed to tell the school district when a minor
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enrolled in one of its schools was taken into custody, the officers did not report the assailant’s arrest
to the school district. Id. The plaintiff-victims sued the police department for, among other things,
“fail[ing] to properly train and supervise their employees . . . regarding the requirements of the
reciprocal reporting agreements with [the school district].” Id. at 571. The Court held that the claim
was barred by § 4-102: “The failure to properly train and supervise employees, or to have in force
procedures to ensure the adequate performance of their duties, ‘implicat[e] the structural adequacy
of police protection services’ provided by defendants, and such failure is immune from liability
under section 4-102.” Id. at 572 (quoting DeSmet, 848 N.E.2d at 1041).
The claims in both DeSmet and Doe arose from alleged failures to provide police services,
the failure to investigate an accident and the failure to report an arrest, respectively, which, plaintiff
says, distinguishes them from this case. The Court agrees. The DeSmet court’s statement that § 4102 bars claims “implicat[ing] the structural adequacy of police protection services” has to be
understood in the context of the statutory language; that is, claims arising from the failure to provide
police service that “implicate the structural adequacy of police protection services” are barred by
§ 4-102. See LaPorta v. City of Chi., 14 C 9665, 2015 WL 1888810, at *3 (N.D. Ill. April 24, 2015)
(not citing DeSmet but holding that a negligent hiring claim was not barred by § 4-102 because “[a]
city’s duty to [sic] ‘to refrain from hiring or retaining an employee who is a threat to third persons
to whom the employee is exposed’ exists independently of its duty to provide police protection.”).
But see Crowell v. City of Chi., No. 14 C 565, 2014 WL 3585300, at *5 (N.D. Ill. July 21, 2014)
(upholding, on law-of-the-case grounds, a state court’s dismissal of a negligent hiring claim as
barred by § 4-102 because “[t]he Illinois Supreme Court has broadly interpreted [§ 4-102] to
immunize municipalities from claims that implicate the manner in which they go about establishing
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police departments and providing police services” and “[h]iring, evaluating, and firing police
officers is at the core of establishing a police department and providing police services”) (citing
DeSmet, 848 N.E.2d at 1042). Because plaintiff’s negligent hiring and supervision claims do not
arise from an alleged failure to provide police protection, they are not barred by § 4-102.
Alternatively, Cicero argues that plaintiff has not created a triable fact issue as to the
negligent hiring claim. To do so, plaintiff must offer evidence that suggests: “(1) [Cicero] knew
or should have known that [Garrity] had a particular unfitness for the position so as to create a
danger of harm to third persons; (2) that such particular unfitness was known or should have been
known at the time of [Garrity’s] hiring or retention; and (3) that this particular unfitness proximately
caused the plaintiff’s injury.” Van Horne v. Muller, 705 N.E.2d 898, 904 (Ill. 1998). Cicero
contends that there is no evidence that it knew or should have known that Garrity posed any threat
to civilians at the time it hired him. However, viewed favorably to plaintiff, the record suggests that,
before it hired Garrity, Cicero knew or should have known that: (1) he had shot a suspect when he
was a Berwyn police officer; (2) he had been asked to resign from the Berwyn Police Department
(“BPD”) and the BPD had sealed Garrity’s file; (3) Garrity lied about the reason for his resignation
from the BPD on his Cicero employment application; and (4) Garrity suffers from PTSD, a condition
which “substantially increases the likelihood of violent reactions,” and anxiety disorder, and was
taking medications for them that “impairs judgment and interferes with decision making.” (Pl.’s LR
56.1(b)(3)(B) Stmt. ¶¶ 49-50; Pl.’s LR 56.1(b)(3)(C) Stmt. ¶¶ 9, 22, 32, 33; id., Ex. E, Employment
Application § 41 (stating “Family” as the reason for leaving the BPD).) Thus, there is a triable fact
issue with respect to the first and second elements.
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Cicero also contends that there is no material fact issue as to proximate causation, which it
says “includes a requirement [that] the employer ‘know of the need’ to control and have ‘opportunity
for exercising control over the employee.’” (Cicero Mem. Law Supp. Mot. Summ. J. at 12) (quoting
Doe v. Boy Scouts of Am., 4 N.E.3d 550, 561 (Ill. App. Ct. 2014) (“BSA”)). In fact, BSA says those
elements must be present only if the alleged injury arises from an act outside the scope of
employment, see id., a situation not present here.
Proximate cause exists for acts taken within the scope of employment if “the injury itself .
. . ‘occurred by virtue of the [employee’s] employment.’” Id. at 561 (emphasis in original) (quoting
Carter v. Skokie Detective Agency, Ltd., 628 N.E.2d 602, 604 (Ill. App. Ct. 1993)). In other words,
“there must be a tangible connection between the employee’s violent tendencies, the particular job
he is hired to do, and the harm to the plaintiff.” Carter, 628 N.E.2d at 606. Viewed favorably to
plaintiff, the record suggests that Cicero made Garrity a police officer–though it knew or should
have know that he shot a suspect when he was a BPD officer, was asked to resign from the BPD,
and was receiving treatment for PTSD and anxiety disorder–and he shot and killed plaintiff’s
decedent while acting in that capacity. That is sufficient to create a triable fact issue as to proximate
cause.1
Conclusion
1
The cases cited by Cicero do not dictate a different result. See Strickland v. Commc’ns
& Cable of Chi., 710 N.E.2d 55, 58 (Ill. App. Ct. 1999) (because a background check would not
have revealed information suggesting that employee would rape a customer, cable company’s
failure to perform one was not the proximate cause of the rape); Carter, 628 N.E.2d at 604-06
(employer’s negligent hiring of employee who, while off duty, murdered someone he met
through his job, was not the proximate cause of the murder); Escobar v. Madsen Constr. Co.,
589 N.E.2d 639-40 (Ill. App. Ct. 1992) (employer’s negligent hiring of employee who shot coworker before work and off the job site was not the proximate cause of the shooting).
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For the reasons set forth above, the Court rejects Cicero’s alternative arguments in support
of its motion for summary judgment on plaintiff’s negligent hiring and supervision claims. The
Court’s December 1, 2015 order reinstating those claims against Cicero stands.
SO ORDERED.
ENTERED: December 21, 2015
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HON. JORGE L. ALONSO
United States District Judge
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