Court Opinion

ID: 2783764
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-03-03 23:03:11.080221+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:28:28.641581
License: Public Domain

Illinois Official Reports

                                          Appellate Court

                             Bowman v. Ottney, 2015 IL App (5th) 140215

Appellate Court              CONNIE L. BOWMAN, Special Administrator of the Estate of Char
Caption                      L. Bowman, Deceased, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. MICHAEL D.
                             OTTNEY, Defendant-Appellee.

District & No.               Fifth District
                             Docket No. 5-14-0215

Filed                        January 21, 2015
Rehearing denied             February 9, 2015

Held                         The certified question presented to the appellate court pursuant to
(Note: This syllabus         Supreme Court Rule 308 in a medical malpractice case was whether,
constitutes no part of the   in a case that had previously been voluntarily dismissed pursuant to
opinion of the court but     section 2-1009 of the Code of Civil Procedure and then refiled, the
has been prepared by the     trial court has the discretion to deny plaintiff’s immediately filed
Reporter of Decisions        motion for substitution of judge, brought pursuant to section 2-1001 of
for the convenience of       the Code, based on the fact that the court had made substantive rulings
the reader.)                 in the previously dismissed case, and the appellate court answered in
                             the affirmative, since the courts strongly disfavor allowing “shopping”
                             for a new judge after a party has determined the original judge’s
                             disposition toward the case, the trial court already has the discretion to
                             deny a motion for substitution made to delay or avoid a trial, and in
                             plaintiff’s case, even though the coincidental reassignment of
                             plaintiff’s second case was to the original judge and no substantial
                             rulings were made in the second case, the spirit and purpose of section
                             2-1001 could not be disregarded and attempts to circumvent the venue
                             rule should not be condoned.

Decision Under               Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, No. 13-L-41; the
Review                       Hon. David K. Overstreet, Judge, presiding.
     Judgment                 Certified question answered in the affirmative.

     Counsel on               John J. Hopkins, of John J. Hopkins & Associates, P.C., of Alton, for
     Appeal                   appellant.

                              Brad A. Elward, of Heyl, Royster, Voelker & Allen, of Peoria, and
                              Richard K. Hunsaker and Sara A. Ingram, both of Heyl, Royster,
                              Voelker & Allen, of Edwardsville, for appellee.

     Panel                    JUSTICE WELCH delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
                              Justice Schwarm concurred in the judgment and opinion.
                              Justice Stewart dissented, with opinion.

                                                OPINION

¶1          The underlying cause of action giving rise to this certified question on appeal is for money
       damages, alleging medical malpractice. The plaintiff, Connie Bowman, special administrator
       of the estate of Char L. Bowman, deceased, filed a complaint against Michael D. Ottney, D.O.,
       and Core Physician Resources, P.C., under Jefferson County circuit court designation 09-L-28.
       Judge David K. Overstreet made substantive rulings in the case, such as in regard to the
       plaintiff’s efforts to obtain materials and whether certain witnesses’ opinions should be barred
       or limited. This court answers the certified question in the affirmative.
¶2          On March 27, 2013, the plaintiff moved to voluntarily dismiss the claim pursuant to section
       2-1009 of the Code of Civil Procedure (the Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-1009 (West 2012)). On April
       1, 2013, that motion was granted without prejudice as to all defendants.
¶3          On August 21, 2013, the plaintiff filed a new complaint under the designation 13-L-41,
       pursuant to section 13-217 of the Code (735 ILCS 5/13-217 (West 2012) (stating that a
       plaintiff who has voluntarily dismissed an action may commence a new action within one
       year)). The complaint alleged that “[t]his action was previously filed and voluntary dismissed
       on April 1, 2013,” and asserted the same causes of action, but named only Ottney as a
       defendant. Coincidentally, the plaintiff’s action was again assigned to Judge Overstreet. Prior
       to any rulings by Judge Overstreet, on September 3, 2013, the plaintiff filed a motion for
       substitution of judge pursuant to section 2-1001(a) of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2-1001(a) (West
       2012)). The defendant filed an objection to the plaintiff’s motion, noting that Judge Overstreet
       had made prior substantive rulings in the voluntarily dismissed action.
¶4          A hearing was held on January 21, 2014. The plaintiff asserted that because this case was a
       new action and her motion was properly made, her right to a substitution of judge is absolute.
       The defendant responded that several substantive rulings had been made in the dismissed case,
       giving the plaintiff an opportunity to “test the waters” as to the court’s inclination toward her.
       Noting that a growing body of law expresses concern about voluntary dismissals in the face of
       dispositive motions, the defendant stated that the Third District had recently ruled that a trial

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     court may properly deny a motion for substitution of judge as of right where the plaintiff
     “tested the waters” in the voluntarily dismissed action.1
¶5       The court noted that prior Fifth District rulings indicated that substitution would be
     improper, but acknowledged that no direct authority existed where a new and distinct cause of
     action is the subject of the motion. The court found Ramos to be “honest and persuasive” and
     was concerned that to rule otherwise “would allow plaintiffs to make an end run behind *** the
     prior voluntary dismissal, and I think that [the ruling in Ramos is] consistent with *** [the]
     limited cases we do have in the Fifth District.” In an order filed on February 27, 2014, the court
     denied the plaintiff’s motion for substitution of judge.
¶6       This case comes before us pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 308 (eff. Feb. 26,
     2010). The circuit court certified the following question for our review: “In a case which had
     previously been voluntarily dismissed pursuant to 735 ILCS 5/2-1009 and then subsequently
     re-filed, does the trial court have discretion to deny a Plaintiff’s immediately filed Motion for
     Substitution of Judge, brought pursuant to 735 ILCS 5/2-1001, based on the fact that the Court
     had made substantive rulings in the previously dismissed case?”
¶7       As a question certified by the circuit court to this court pursuant to Supreme Court Rule
     308 must only involve a question of law, our review is de novo. Tri-Power Resources, Inc. v.
     City of Carlyle, 2012 IL App (5th) 110075, ¶ 9.
¶8       In conjunction with the relevant case law, we are asked to interpret section 2-1001(a) of the
     Code of Civil Procedure, which reads as follows:
                  “§ 2-1001. Substitution of judge.
                  (a) A substitution of judge in any civil action may be had in the following
              situations:
                      ***
                      (2) Substitution as of right. When a party timely exercises his or her right to a
                  substitution without cause as provided in this paragraph (2).
                           (i) Each party shall be entitled to one substitution of judge without cause as
                      a matter of right.
                           (ii) An application for substitution of judge as of right shall be made by
                      motion and shall be granted if it is presented before trial or hearing begins and
                      before the judge to whom it is presented has ruled on any substantial issue in the
                      case ***.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1001(a) (West 2012).
¶9       The plaintiff asserts that because case No. 13-L-41 is a new and distinct action from the
     voluntarily dismissed case No. 09-L-28, Judge Overstreet had no discretion to deny her motion
     for substitution of judge. Indeed, the law fully supports the plaintiff’s assertion that her
     voluntary dismissal of case No. 09-L-28 terminated that action in its entirety and that the
     original and refiled cases are completely distinct actions. Dubina v. Mesirow Realty
     Development, Inc., 178 Ill. 2d 496, 503-04 (1997). Further, the plaintiff correctly notes that
     civil litigants in Illinois are entitled to one substitution of judge without cause as a matter of
     right, so long the motion is “timely presented” pursuant to the requirements of section
     2-1001(a)(2)(ii) of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2-1001(a)(2)(ii) (West 2012)).

        1
         We discuss this case, Ramos v. Kewanee Hospital, 2013 IL App (3d) 120001, in our opinion
     below.

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¶ 10       However, we cannot agree with the plaintiff that “the determining factor is whether or not
       the judge in question has made rulings of substance in the existing case.” (Emphasis in
       original.) While the statute seemingly provides a bright-line rule regarding substitution, the
       defendant correctly points out that a “weight of appellate authority” in Illinois has concluded
       that even in the absence of a substantial ruling, a trial court may deny a motion for substitution
       as of right if the litigant has had an opportunity to “test the waters” and form an opinion as to
       the court’s disposition toward his or her case. Schnepf v. Schnepf, 2013 IL App (4th) 121142,
       ¶ 30.
¶ 11       The crux of the matter, then, is our court’s historical application of this doctrine. Illinois
       courts have expressed varying concerns regarding the statutes’ potential for abuse where a
       judge “tips his hand,” thus providing a litigant the opportunity to “test the waters” as to the
       outcome of his case with that particular judge. Our supreme court has explicitly condemned the
       practice, noting the “serious [potential for] abuse of the venue act.” In re Marriage of Kozloff,
       101 Ill. 2d 526, 530-31 (1984) (reversing the appellate court ruling and holding that postdecree
       petitions do not constitute new actions, but merely continuations of the dissolution proceeding,
       and a substantive ruling on one petition will preclude a change of venue as of right on another).
       In support of its decision, the court noted the potentially problematic results if it accepted the
       appellate court’s position:
                “[I]f after one change of venue on a particular petition the litigant is still unhappy, he
                could replace the second judge simply by voluntarily dismissing his petition and
                refiling a substantially similar petition and another motion for change of venue. The
                venue act’s prohibition against more than one change of venue [citation] would be
                rendered meaningless since, under the appellate court rule, the second petition would
                constitute a new proceeding. [Citation.] Taken to its logical extreme, a resourceful
                litigant could repeat the process until he found a judge he considered sympathetic to his
                cause. Obviously, such maneuvering is anathematical to the efficient use of judicial
                resources.” Id. at 531.
¶ 12       However, the Fourth District has held that the right to substitution “is absolute, and the trial
       court does not have discretion to consider whether the movant had an opportunity to ‘test the
       waters.’ ” Illinois Licensed Beverage Ass’n v. Advanta Leasing Services, 333 Ill. App. 3d 927,
       933 (2002). Our sister court noted that the Kozloff court held only that postdecree petitions
       were not new proceedings and “did not hold, as a general matter, that the mere opportunity to
       form an opinion as to the judge’s disposition toward a case barred the litigant from thereafter
       seeking a change of venue.” Schnepf, 2013 IL App (4th) 121142, ¶ 36.2
¶ 13       However, the relevant Fifth District case law on point begs the opposite conclusion. We
       have favorably applied the “test the waters” doctrine, noting that “[a] party is not free to ‘judge
       shop’ until he finds a jurist who is favorably disposed to his cause of action.” (Internal
       quotation marks omitted.) City of Granite City v. House of Prayers, Inc., 333 Ill. App. 3d 452,

           2
             The court noted that Public Act 87-949 amended section 2-1001(a)(2) to provide each party the
       right to one substitution without cause, which eliminated the requirement that a party provide a reason
       for seeking a substitution. See Pub. Act 87-949, § 1 (eff. Jan. 1, 1993). The Schnepf court strongly
       condemned the “test the waters” doctrine, noting that it was “rendered obsolete 20 years ago by
       introduction of the right to a substitution of judge without cause under the new version of section
       2-1001(a)(2).” Schnepf, 2013 IL App (4th) 121142, ¶ 50.

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       461 (2002). A well-reasoned application of the doctrine was opined in Niemerg v. Bonelli, 344
Ill. App. 3d 459 (2003). In that case, this court held that like the postdecree divorce
       proceedings in Kozloff, a section 2-1401 proceeding (735 ILCS 5/2-1401 (West 2000)) is not a
       new cause of action for purposes of a section 2-1001(a)(2) motion. Niemerg, 344 Ill. App. 3d at
       466. The appellants argued that since a section 2-1401 motion to vacate is a new action subject
       to the usual rules of civil procedure, and since section 2-1001(a)(2) allows a substitution of
       judge as a matter of right in a new action where no substantial ruling has been made, it follows
       that a party filing a section 2-1401 motion must be granted a substitution of judge, “provided
       that the trial judge has not ruled upon any substantial issue in the section 2-1401 proceeding.”
       (Emphasis in original.) Id. at 464-65. Favorably citing to the rationale of Kozloff, we noted that
       while the appellants’ argument appears logical, “it is clear to us that to allow a substitution of
       judge in a section 2-1401 proceeding would defeat the policy behind the rule requiring a
       motion for substitution to be presented before the judge has ruled on any substantial issue in
       the case: to preclude litigants from ‘judge-shopping.’ ” Id. at 465.
¶ 14        The Third District, too, has explicitly found that courts may consider “all the circumstances
       surrounding the pretrial proceedings,” and a motion for substitution of judge by right may be
       properly denied if the litigant had an opportunity to “test the waters.” In re Estate of Gay, 353
Ill. App. 3d 341, 344 (2004). In Gay, the court held that even if no substantial rulings were
       made by the trial court, the motion was untimely because it was made after the appellant had an
       opportunity during pretrial conferences to form an opinion as to the judge’s reaction. Id. The
       court recognized that this gave the appellant a “unique ability to determine the court’s attitude
       concerning certain issues.”3 Id.
¶ 15        What our relevant precedent in the Fifth District has in common is that the courts were able
       to rule that the policy behind the rule defeats the seemingly bright-line language of the statute
       because the case at bar was not a new and distinct cause of action; thus, the motion could be
       declared untimely pursuant to the statute. See Kozloff, 101 Ill. 2d at 530-31; Niemerg, 344 Ill.
       App. 3d at 466; In re D.M., 395 Ill. App. 3d 972, 976 (3d Dist. 2009) (noting that our courts
       have long held that a motion to substitute is untimely if it was filed after the judge has ruled on
       a substantive issue in the case).
¶ 16        However, in its recently reaffirmed adherence to the doctrine, the Third District Appellate
       Court held that even where a case is indeed a new action and not the “re-commencement” of
       the prior action, the motion for substitution was properly denied where the plaintiff had the
       opportunity to “test the waters.” Ramos v. Kewanee Hospital, 2013 IL App (3d) 120001. In
       Ramos, the plaintiff made two jury trial demands, which were stricken by the court as
       untimely; after the ruling, the plaintiff voluntarily dismissed the case. Id. ¶ 20. Six weeks later,
       the plaintiff filed another action, in which both counts alleged in the former case were again
       alleged in the latter. Id. ¶¶ 20-21. The plaintiff then sought a substitution of judge as of right
       before any ruling in the latter action, but the trial court denied the motion. Id. ¶ 21. The
       appellate court noted that, while there was no doubt that the latter case was a new and distinct

           3
            We note that Justice McDade’s concurring opinion sets forth well-reasoned concerns with the
       subjectivity and elusiveness of the “testing the waters” doctrine. See Gay, 353 Ill. App. 3d at 345
       (McDade, J., specially concurring). McDade opines that while the majority’s result was consistent with
       case law, “[i]t is a standard that can *** be easily manipulated by the parties” and appears to leave our
       courts “poised at the top of a slippery slope.” Id.

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       action, the plaintiff had ample opportunity to “test the waters” in the previous action. Id. ¶¶ 86,
       89. Conceding that it could not be sure whether the derisive language present in the Kozloff
       rationale was intended to extend to the present action, or if the critical factor in Kozloff was
       simply the fact that the latter action did not constitute a new action, the court concluded, “Our
       best guess is that the supreme court would not endorse the exercise of the right to voluntary
       dismissal as an end run around the prohibition against judge shopping.” Id. ¶ 98.
¶ 17       Bearing the historical application of “testing the waters” in mind, we come to the facts
       before us. With guidance from our supreme court’s rationale in Kozloff, we agree with the trial
       court that the Third District’s analysis in Ramos is consistent with the relevant precedent in this
       appellate court. We therefore hold that a trial court has the discretion to deny a plaintiff’s
       immediately filed motion for substitution of judge where the court had made substantive
       rulings in the previously dismissed case.
¶ 18       We are cognizant of the concerns inherent in this determination, as we cannot remain in
       established territory by finding that the current action is a recommencement of the previous
       action. We also remain mindful of the contradiction of these tenets before us: that the
       provisions of this statute are to be liberally construed and interpreted to effect rather than
       defeat the right of substitution (Beahringer v. Hardee’s Food Systems, Inc., 282 Ill. App. 3d
600, 601 (1996)), yet our courts strongly disfavor allowing a party to “shop” for a new judge
       after determining the original judge’s disposition toward the case. City of Granite City, 333 Ill.
       App. 3d at 461. However, we find additional support for departing from the black-and-white
       parameters of section 2-1001(a)(2) in the existence of another, more well-established
       exception to this rule, in that a trial court already has the discretion to deny a motion for
       substitution of judge if such a motion was made simply to delay or avoid a trial. See In re
       Marriage of Paclik, 371 Ill. App. 3d 890, 896 (2007).
¶ 19       Like the Third District, we must simply read Kozloff in conjunction with our precedent in
       the Fifth District and glean what we may. While the plaintiff’s action is indeed new and
       distinct from her previous action, the plaintiff admits to the nearly identical nature of the two
       actions in her complaint under the designation No. 13-L-41. It is also clear that substantial
       rulings were made in that previous action, affording the plaintiff her opportunity to “test the
       waters” with Judge Overstreet. Thus, even if no substantial rulings were made by the trial court
       in the plaintiff’s second action, the motion may be considered untimely because it was made
       after the plaintiff had an opportunity to form an opinion as to Judge Overstreet’s reaction to her
       cause of action. Frankly, the plaintiff’s strategy was thwarted by chance; a purely coincidental
       reassignment to Judge Overstreet brings this matter to our attention today. We find that we
       cannot simply disregard the spirit and purpose of the statute, and we therefore choose to remain
       consistent in holding that our courts will not condone attempts to circumvent the venue rule.

¶ 20       Certified question answered in the affirmative.

¶ 21      JUSTICE STEWART, dissenting.
¶ 22      I respectfully dissent from the opinion of my distinguished colleagues.
¶ 23      The majority acknowledges that a refiled action after a voluntary dismissal “is an entirely
       new and separate action, not a reinstatement of the old action.” Dubina, 178 Ill. 2d at 504.
       Further, the majority acknowledges that a litigant in a civil action is entitled to a substitution of

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       judge as a matter of right prior to a ruling on any substantial issue in the case, and that the
       circuit judge in this case had made no rulings in the refiled action. 735 ILCS 5/2-1001(a) (West
       2012). Finally, the majority acknowledges that the statutory right to substitution of judge
       should be “liberally construed in order to effect rather than defeat the right of substitution.”
       Beahringer, 282 Ill. App. 3d at 601. Nevertheless, the majority casts aside these principles and
       follows a Third District case in which the court expressly grounded its decision upon its “best
       guess” that the supreme court would approve denial of a motion for substitution under similar
       circumstances.
¶ 24       The primary basis for the majority’s decision is its approval of the “test the waters”
       doctrine. In my view, the “test the waters” doctrine was thoroughly discredited and properly
       rejected by the Fourth District in its comprehensive and thoughtful opinion in Schnepf v.
       Schnepf, 2013 IL App (4th) 121142. There is a clear disagreement among the appellate
       districts on this issue, which should be determined by the supreme court.
¶ 25       In this case, all statutory prerequisites were met in the refiled action and the circuit judge
       had no discretion to deny the motion for substitution of judge. I would answer the
       certified question in the negative.

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