Court Opinion

ID: 4666256
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-03-09 23:03:39.997405+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:02:47.795224
License: Public Domain

2021 IL App (2d) 200047
                                  No. 2-20-0047
                            Opinion filed March 9, 2021
______________________________________________________________________________

                                             IN THE

                              APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                              SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

DAVID SOUZA, JEFFREY POSADZY,          ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
ATCHERSON ASSOCIATION, and             ) of Du Page County.
ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED,         )
                                       )
   Plaintiffs-Appellants,              )
                                       )
v.                                     ) No. 19-MR-164
                                       )
THE CITY OF WEST CHICAGO and           )
WATER RESOURCES, INC.,                 ) Honorable
                                       ) Paul M. Fullerton,
   Defendants-Appellees.               ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE JORGENSEN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
       Justices Hutchinson and Birkett concurred in the judgment and opinion.

                                           OPINION

¶1     Plaintiffs, David Souza, Jeffrey Posadzy, and Atcherson Association, on behalf of

themselves and all others similarly situated, appeal the trial court’s decision granting the motion

for judgment on the pleadings under section 2-615(e) of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735

ILCS 5/2-615(e) (West 2018)) filed by defendant the City of West Chicago (City), as well as its

earlier decision granting the motion to dismiss under section 2-619(a)(9) of the Code (id. § 2-

619(a)(9)) filed by defendant Water Resources, Inc. (Water Resources). At issue on appeal,

generally, is whether the court correctly determined that the City’s home rule authority permits it

to exempt itself, via an amended ordinance passed after the amended complaint in this case was
2021 IL App (2d) 200047

filed, from statutory requirements concerning water-utility billing. In addition, we are asked to

consider whether the City’s ordinance may be applied retroactively. Finally, plaintiffs challenge

the court’s dismissal of the counts against Water Resources. For the following reasons, we affirm.

¶2                                        I. BACKGROUND

¶3                          A. Complaint Allegations and City Ordinance

¶4     On February 14, 2019, Souza and Posadzy filed a three-count class action complaint

against defendants, alleging that plaintiffs Souza, Posadzy, and all potential class members were

residential water-service customers and that the City, a municipality formed under the Illinois

Municipal Code (65 ILCS 5/1-1-1 et seq. (West 2018)), 1 had engaged in unlawful billing practices,

charging them for water and sewer services outside of the 12-month period prescribed by the

water-utility billing provision of the Municipal Code, section 11-150-2 (id. § 11-150-2).2

       1
           There is no dispute that the City is a home rule unit.
       2
           For context, we note upfront that section 11-150-2 of the Municipal Code provides:

                 “On or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General

                 Assembly, the corporate authorities of any municipality operating a waterworks or

                 combined waterworks and sewerage system

                              (1) shall bill for any utility service, including previously unbilled

                         service: (A) within 12 months after the provision of that service to the

                         customer if the service is supplied to a residential customer; or (B) within

                         24 months after the provision of that service to that customer if the service

                         is supplied to a non-residential customer; however, the corporate authorities

                         of a municipality may bill for unpaid amounts that were billed to a customer

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2021 IL App (2d) 200047

Specifically, the complaint alleged that the City owned a water and sewage system that provided

services to residential and commercial properties within City boundaries. In July 2011, defendants

contracted with Water Resources to replace residential water meters, update meter equipment, and

implement electronic advancements that would benefit customers by allowing electronic access to

monitor water consumption. Shortly after the equipment installation, the City learned that

numerous customers were experiencing deficient, inaccurate, and/or missing water meter readings.

After experiencing years of these errors, the City terminated its contract with Water Resources,

effective July 30, 2016. However, despite the water-meter and software malfunctions, the City

attempted to bill and collect water-usage charges from affected residents.

¶5     The complaint’s first two counts sought declaratory and injunctive relief and economic

damages from the City, based on the City’s attempt to bill more than 12 months after the alleged

usage, in contravention of section 11-150-2’s restriction, effective August 18, 2017, that billing

must occur within 12 months of the service provided. Plaintiffs alleged that, since 2013, the City

issued bills for services that were provided several years prior to the invoice. In the third count,

plaintiffs sought economic damages from Water Resources, for breach of its contract with the City,

premised upon plaintiffs’ alleged status as third-party beneficiaries of that contract. Plaintiffs

alleged that, to the extent that the City’s billing was based on a breach of contract occasioned by

Water Resources, plaintiffs, as third-party beneficiaries to that contract, were entitled to recover

                       or if the customer was notified that there is an unpaid amount before the

                       effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly

                       [(August 18, 2017)] for service that was supplied to the customer before

                       January 1, 2016[.]” 65 ILCS 5/11-150-2(a)(1) (West 2018).

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2021 IL App (2d) 200047

all service charges wrongfully billed and/or collected by the City. A few days later, plaintiffs

moved for class certification.

¶6     On March 19, 2019, plaintiffs filed an amended complaint, adding Atcherson Association

as a nonresidential plaintiff and adding two counts relating to section 11-150-2’s requirement that

nonresidential customers be billed within 24 months of the service. Counts III and VI of the

amended complaint pertained to Water Resources, again alleging third-party beneficiary breach-

of-contract claims related to the City’s contract with Water Resources.

¶7     On March 26, 2019, the court granted the City’s earlier-filed motion for an extension of

time to answer the complaint, ordering a response by May 22, 2019.

¶8     Between the court’s March 26, 2019, order, and the May 22, 2019, response due date, the

City amended its local ordinance concerning billing practices. Specifically, on April 15, 2019, the

City amended section 18-37 of the West Chicago Code of Ordinances (City Code) with ordinance

No. 19-O-0010 (Ordinance). See West Chicago Ordinance No. 19-O-0010 (eff. Apr. 15, 2019)

(amending West Chicago Code of Ordinances § 18-37). (The amended ordinance is summarized

in the next section).

¶9                      B. Responsive Motions and Court Rulings Thereon

¶ 10   On April 5, 2019, Water Resources filed a section 2-619(a)(9) (735 ILCS 5/2-619 (a)(9)

(West 2018)) motion to dismiss the amended complaint, arguing that plaintiffs lacked standing to

bring claims against it, as plaintiffs were not parties to its contract with the City. Attaching the

contract to its motion, Water Resources argued that a third party may sue for breach of contract

only if the actual parties to the contract intended to confer upon the third party a “direct benefit”

and that mere incidental benefits were insufficient to sustain a cause of action. Water Resources

disagreed with plaintiffs’ conclusory complaint allegation that they were third-party beneficiaries

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2021 IL App (2d) 200047

of the contract, noting that nothing in the contract expressed any intent to protect plaintiffs from

improper billing practices that the City might perform. Rather, the intent of the contract was for

Water Resources to upgrade almost 7000 water meters managed by the City, as well as its hardware

and software, and, therefore, any benefit to plaintiffs from the contract was merely incidental. In

short, Water Resources argued, the contract “simply does not address any intent to provide a

benefit to [p]laintiffs with respect to the alleged harm at issue in the instant lawsuit.” On June 5,

2019, the court agreed, and it dismissed counts III and VI against Water Resources. In so doing, it

noted that virtually every contract into which a city enters is for the benefit of its citizens but that

those contracts do not all provide citizens third-party beneficiary status. Here, the court found, the

contract’s purpose was to provide good working water meters and technology for the City and its

citizens but the benefit to citizens was incidental, not direct.

¶ 11    On May 22, 2019, the City filed its section 2-615(e) motion for judgment on the pleadings

as to counts I, II, and V of the amended complaint. The City conceded that, since 2013, it had to

delay issuing water bills to many of its customers. It explained that, in 2011, the City contracted

with Water Resources to implement an “Advanced Metering Infrastructure,” which required

installation of new smart water meters, radio signal transmission devices, and other infrastructure

that could deliver “real time” meter reads to the City through installed software. According to the

City, Water Resources was to ensure that the software (which compiled meter-usage data)

interfaced with the City’s billing software, so as to allow the City to automatically issue bills.

Almost immediately, numerous problems ensued with the installed hardware, and significant

software-interfacing and hardware errors impacted the City’s ability to provide timely billing to

its customers. Accordingly, as the meter issues persisted for years, the City agreed that some water

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2021 IL App (2d) 200047

bills were issued to customers more than one year after the water service was provided. The City

noted that it continued to attempt to bring its customer accounts current.

¶ 12   However, even assuming that the amended complaint’s allegations were true, the City

argued that it was, nevertheless, entitled to judgment on the pleadings, i.e., as a matter of law, for

two reasons. First, it argued, its exercise of home rule authority under section 18-37 of the City

Code (West Chicago Code of Ordinances § 18-37 (amended Apr. 15, 2019)), as amended by the

Ordinance, controlled over section 11-150-2 of the Municipal Code. Alternatively, the City argued

that the procedural commands in section 11-150-2 of the Municipal Code are merely directory,

precluding plaintiffs’ requested relief. It further explained:

               “[S]ection 11-150-2 sets forth certain procedural commands concerning municipal

       water billing practices, [but] it contains no explicit limitations on the power of home rule

       municipalities or any consequence to home rule or non-home rule municipalities for the

       failure to strictly follow the procedural commands therein. Concurrently, section 18-

       37(a)(3) of the City Code provides for the City’s water billing practices. Section 18-

       37(a)(3) was recently amended by City Ordinance No. 19-O-0010 and likewise sets forth

       certain procedural commands concerning the City’s billing practices. Section 18-37 of the

       City Code has never contained a consequence for the City’s failure to follow the procedural

       commands set forth therein.”

¶ 13   The Ordinance provides, in sum:

               “The aforesaid rates apply to bimonthly billing periods, or as otherwise determined

               by the city administrator or his designee, and the charge shall be based upon meter

               readings, provided however, that the minimum charge set forth is as above. The

               reading device on the meter shall be considered the primary reader and will be used

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2021 IL App (2d) 200047

               for billing if different than the remote reader. For cases of faulty meters or

               unmetered service, the minimum charge plus a usage estimate by the director of

               administrative services or his designee shall establish the charges. All charges

               provided herein may be billed bimonthly. Failure to bill any charges provided

               herein on a bimonthly basis shall have no impact on liability for any outstanding

               usage charges incurred for any period of time.” (Emphases added.) West Chicago

               Code of Ordinances § 18-37(a)(3) (amended Apr. 15, 2019).

¶ 14   In addition, the City noted that the Ordinance (again, amended after the amended complaint

in this case was filed) also expressly provided that it (1) controlled over section 11-150-2 of the

Municipal Code; (2) applied to any and all billed or unbilled charges incurred for water usage prior

to and subsequent to the amended ordinance’s effective date; and (3) applied to “any and all causes

of action that have accrued, will accrue, or are currently pending before a court of competent

jurisdiction, including courts of review.” Thus, the City concluded, “[t]here can be no question

that section 18-37(a)(3) as amended by City Ordinance No. 19-O-0010 precludes [p]laintiffs’

claims against the City.” Moreover, the City argued that the language in the Municipal Code was

merely directory, not mandatory, with no prescribed consequence for noncompliance.

¶ 15   Alternatively, the City also filed a section 2-615 (735 ILCS 5/2-615 (West 2018)) motion

to dismiss the complaint. In sum, the City argued that plaintiffs were seeking to avoid payment for

consumed water and that the complaint should be dismissed because (1) plaintiffs had not

identified a cognizable legal theory to support their claims for declaratory relief, (2) no cause of

action had been alleged for the claims seeking injunctive relief and damages, (3) the claims for

damages were barred by the Moorman doctrine (see Moorman Manufacturing Co. v. National

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2021 IL App (2d) 200047

Tank Co. 91 Ill. 2d 69 (1982)), and (4) plaintiffs fundamentally misunderstood the requirements

of the statute at issue.

¶ 16    In separate responses to the motions, plaintiffs noted, in sum, that the State’s express public

policy when enacting section 11-150-2 was to protect consumers of municipally provided water

services from being billed for services provided more than 12 months earlier. Plaintiffs argued that

the provision’s application to “any municipality operating a waterworks or combined waterworks

and sewage system,” included home rule municipalities. They noted that, after receiving a

complaint concerning its violations of state requirements for public-utility billing, the City took

three months to respond and, during that time, sought to “retroactively alter its utility ordinance

and invoke its home rule status as a defense.” Plaintiffs argued that the City’s position was

meritless and that home rule powers cannot preempt statewide concerns relating to utilities.

Moreover, plaintiffs disagreed that the Municipal Code was directory, asserting that it was, instead,

a “mandate to municipal providers to be put in the same regulatory footing as private utility

providers.”

¶ 17    In addition to other points raised, we note that, in its reply in support of its section 2-615(e)

motion, the City, in a footnote, commented:

                “Plaintiffs acknowledge the retroactive application of City Ordinance No. 19-O-

        0010 negating their claims for relief in this matter; yet, [p]laintiffs make no argument that

        City Ordinance No. 19-O-0010 is impermissibly retroactive. Notwithstanding, the

        retroactive effect of City Ordinance No. 19-O-0010 is permissible under Illinois law.

        Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Will County Collector, 196 Ill. 2d 27, 38 *** (2001) (‘[I]f

        the legislature has clearly indicated what the temporal reach of an amended statute should

        be, then, absent a constitutional prohibition, that expression of legislative intent must be

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2021 IL App (2d) 200047

        given effect.’). Ordinance 19-O-0010 clearly expresses its temporal reach and explains that

        it clarifies section 18-37 of the City Code.”

It also noted that plaintiffs did

        “not dispute that they have no fundamental right to complimentary water usage and service.

        Moreover, untimely water billing does not affect plaintiffs’ ability to evaluate and contest

        the reasonableness of charges. *** [A]ny economic hardship occasioned by a delayed

        water bill can be remedied through extended payment plans as authorized under section

        18-30.1 of the City Code.”

¶ 18    On September 10, 2019, the court held argument on the City’s two motions. 3 Thereafter,

on October 15, 2019, the court granted the City’s section 2-615(e) motion for judgment on the

pleadings. In its written memorandum decision, the court determined that two conflicting laws

were at issue—section 11-150-2 (which contains billing timeframes) and the Ordinance (which

does not contain billing timeframes)—but that the Ordinance governed because it was a valid

exercise of the City’s home rule authority, which section 11-150-2 did not expressly limit.

Specifically, the court found that the City’s water-billing practices were a function pertaining to

its government and local affairs and that the Ordinance addressed unique problems that the City

faced, for example, with defective water meters and missed meter readings. The court did not agree

with plaintiffs’ argument that municipal control over public utilities had been preempted by

statewide control of public utilities, thus rendering the Ordinance void. Rather, the court found

        3
            We note that, during argument, plaintiffs pointed out that the City had amended the

Ordinance to purportedly have retroactive application. The City responded that retroactive

application was valid and that plaintiffs did not assert otherwise.

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2021 IL App (2d) 200047

that the argument failed, in light of the absence of any express language in section 11-150-2

limiting home rule authority. The court noted, “home rule authority is not subservient to the

doctrine of implied preemption,” and “[u]nless there is a clear expression of preemption, home

rule authority will stand.” Although plaintiffs cited “ostensibly compelling” legislative history,

which would reflect an intent to prevent back-billing in situations such as those alleged in this

case, statutory interpretation principles did not permit the court to read into the statute a legislator’s

comments. Again, the court noted, the legislature was well aware of its duty to use specific

language to limit or deny home rule authority. The court determined that, because the Ordinance

was a valid exercise of home rule power, the City was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

Moreover, because the court granted the section 2-615(e) motion, it found no need to address the

City’s alternative section 2-615 motion and ordered it stricken as moot.

¶ 19                                   C. Postjudgment Motions

¶ 20    On November 12, 2019, plaintiffs filed a “motion to limit the scope of [the trial] court’s

October 15, 2019[,] ruling and to strike as unconstitutional any retroactive application of the City’s

newly amended ordinance.” In the motion, plaintiffs argued that the court admittedly ruled on two

contradictory laws but did not address that the Ordinance was adopted after the state law and,

further, after the amended complaint had been filed in this case. Plaintiffs argued that the court

made no finding concerning how applying the Ordinance retroactively might deprive them of

vested abatement rights granted under state law before the Ordinance’s passage. Plaintiffs argued

that permitting retroactive application of the Ordinance would violate their due process rights and,

while expressly claiming that they were not waiving their underlying position that state law

expressly preempts the City’s contradictory home rule ordinance, asked the court to limit the

breadth and scope of its judgment in to apply the Ordinance only prospectively.

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2021 IL App (2d) 200047

¶ 21   The next day, November 13, 2019, plaintiffs filed a motion for reconsideration. They

argued that the court’s judgment constituted a misapplication of existing law, that it effectively

allowed the “fox to guard the hen house,” and that the court should reverse the judgment and deny

the section 2-615(e) motion in its entirety.

¶ 22   On November 20, 2019, the City moved to strike plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration,

arguing that it violated Illinois Supreme Court Rule 274 (eff. July 1, 2019) in that the rule permitted

only one postjudgment motion. In a separate motion, the City also moved to strike plaintiffs’

motion to limit the scope of the court’s judgment, arguing, in sum, that the issues raised therein

(namely, the constitutionality of the Ordinance’s retroactive application) were being improperly

raised for the first time postjudgment and, accordingly, were forfeited.

¶ 23   In response, plaintiffs specified that their motion to limit the scope was not a motion to

reconsider but, rather, it was a motion to modify the judgment and was being brought pursuant to

section 2-1301(e) of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2-1301(e) (West 2018) (the trial court “may on motion

filed within 30 days after entry thereof set aside any final order or judgment upon any terms and

conditions that shall be reasonable”). Section 2-1301(e), plaintiffs argued, simply considered

whether substantial justice was done between the litigants. Further, plaintiffs noted that the issue

of retroactivity did not arise until the City mentioned it in a footnote in its reply in support of the

motion for judgment on the pleadings and that, thus, plaintiffs did not have an opportunity to

respond. In any event, they argued, the court itself was required to perform constitutional scrutiny

of an attempt to retroactively apply a changed law and, here, the court did not, in its decision,

perform that analysis.

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¶ 24   On November 20, 2019, the court entered an order granting plaintiffs leave to withdraw

their motion to reconsider, filed November 13, 2019, “without prejudice to assert arguments made

therein on any appeal.”

¶ 25   On December 17, 2019, the court held oral argument on plaintiffs’ motion to limit the scope

of the judgment. It granted the City’s motion to strike; however, it also denied on the merits

plaintiffs’ motion to limit the scope of the judgment. The court explained that it agreed with the

City that section 2-1301(e), which allows a court to set aside a judgment, does not permit

modification of a judgment and that, thus, plaintiffs improperly used it and should have instead

filed the motion under section 2-1203(a) of the Code (id. § 2-1203(a)) (“In all cases tried without

a jury, any party may, within 30 days after the entry of the judgment or within any further time the

court may allow within the 30 days or any extensions thereof, file a motion for a rehearing, or a

retrial, or modification of the judgment or to vacate the judgment or for other relief.”). However,

the court agreed with plaintiffs that, regardless of the motion’s label, it was, nevertheless,

appropriate for the court to consider the arguments on their merits. Doing so, it rejected plaintiffs’

arguments, finding their cited cases distinguishable and noting that curative legislation is

permissible, legislative intent formed the primary consideration in a retroactivity analysis (as

opposed to vested rights, as plaintiffs had asserted), and the Ordinance was permissible. It found

no unconstitutionality in the City’s retroactive application of the Ordinance. Thus, the scope of its

prior order was appropriate.

¶ 26   In accordance with the oral ruling, the written order granted the City’s motion to strike on

the basis that plaintiffs’ motion to limit the scope of the judgment, was not properly brought under

section 2-1301(e). However, it held “additionally,” having considered the merits of plaintiffs’

motion to limit the scope of the order, the motion was denied.

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¶ 27    On January 15, 2020, plaintiffs filed their notice of appeal.

¶ 28                                        II. ANALYSIS

¶ 29    Plaintiffs raise numerous arguments on appeal, which can be distilled into three

overarching categories. First, plaintiffs challenge the propriety of the court’s analysis and ruling

that the Ordinance is a valid exercise of home rule authority and, thus, the City is not bound by

section 11-150-2’s requirements for water-utility billing. Second, plaintiffs challenge the court’s

denial of their motion to limit the scope of the judgment, resulting, they argue, in unconstitutional

retroactive application of the Ordinance. Third, they challenge the propriety of the court’s decision

granting Water Resources’ section 2-619 motion to dismiss, which had asserted that plaintiffs did

not have standing to bring their claims, as they were not third-party beneficiaries to defendants’

contract. We note that the City and Water Resources have filed separate appellee briefs.

¶ 30                                 A. Jurisdiction and Forfeiture

¶ 31    After plaintiffs filed their notice of appeal, the City moved this court to dismiss the appeal

for lack of jurisdiction. On March 4, 2020, in a minute order, we denied the motion. The City has

again challenged jurisdiction, and it also asserts that plaintiffs’ arguments are forfeited. The denial

of a motion to dismiss an appeal for lack of jurisdiction is not final, the question of our jurisdiction

may be revisited at any time prior to our disposition of the appeal, and “we have the obligation to

be certain of our jurisdiction before proceeding.” In re Marriage of Breslow, 306 Ill. App. 3d 41,

58 (1999); see also, e.g., Buffa v. Haideri, 362 Ill. App. 3d 532, 536 (2005) (“we have an

independent obligation to verify our jurisdiction over every appeal that is filed in this court”).

Thus, we address this issue first.

¶ 32    The City asserts that plaintiffs’ appeal is “too little too late” and must be dismissed because

it (1) is untimely, (2) raises new legal arguments and theories for the first time on appeal, and

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(3) presents belated legal arguments “on a belated request for declaratory relief concerning an

unpled challenge to the City’s [o]rdinance in a postjudgment motion.”

¶ 33   As to the first point, the City contends that the appeal is untimely because the trial court

entered a final judgment on October 15, 2019, and the notice of appeal was filed more than 30

days later (specifically, on January 15, 2020). The City acknowledges that, on November 12, 2019,

plaintiffs moved to limit the scope of the court’s judgment, which the court substantively denied

on December 17, 2019, but the City points out that the court also struck plaintiffs’ motion as

improperly filed under section 2-1301(e). The City argues that plaintiff’s motion did not request

proper section 2-1301 relief and it was not a motion to reconsider under section 2-1203; thus it

was not a motion directed against the judgment, as required by Illinois Supreme Court Rule

303(a)(1) (eff. July 1, 2017), and so did not toll the time for appeal. The City notes that plaintiffs’

motion did not ask the trial court to set aside or vacate the judgment but, rather, it requested for

the first time the court to declare the Ordinance unlawfully retroactive and to limit, on that basis,

the scope of the final order.

¶ 34   This transitions into the City’s second argument, i.e., that plaintiffs’ request to the court to

deem the Ordinance unlawfully retroactive was not pleaded in their amended complaint and was

a new legal theory raised for the first time after judgment was entered. The City notes that the

motion did not request any modification of the judgment concerning the court’s disposition of the

claims pleaded in the complaint. According to the City, because plaintiffs never previously

requested a declaration that the Ordinance was unconstitutionally retroactive, the court had no

authority to grant their request, made for the first time in a postjudgment motion. The City

concludes that, since the motion to limit the scope of the judgment was requesting, for the first

time, new relief on an unpleaded claim, it was not sufficient to toll the time for appeal.

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¶ 35   In addition, separate from timeliness, the City contends that we should dismiss the appeal

because plaintiffs’ arguments in opposition to the court’s judgment are forfeited as being raised

for the first time on appeal. For example, the City contends that plaintiffs argued below that the

Ordinance must yield to the Municipal Code but that plaintiffs have abandoned that argument on

appeal, instead arguing, for the first time, that the City lacked home rule authority to assess water

charges, that the ordinance did not pertain to the City’s government and affairs, that the ordinance

was impliedly or expressly preempted by the Municipal Code, and that the ordinance should be

stricken because it interferes with section 11-150-2 of the Municipal Code and leads to absurd

results. Similarly, in its third point, the City notes again that plaintiffs’ arguments concerning the

Ordinance’s retroactivity were raised for the first time postjudgment. Thus, the City argues, those,

too, are forfeited because it is improper to raise new arguments postjudgment. For the following

reasons, we reject the City’s arguments.

¶ 36   As described above, the City’s challenges concern both jurisdiction and forfeiture. As to

jurisdiction, the timely filing of a notice of appeal is both mandatory and jurisdictional. Joseph v.

Evergreen Motors, Inc., 2019 IL App (1st) 180360, ¶ 19. Rule 303(a)(1) provides, in part, that,

when a party files a postjudgment motion, the notice of appeal must be filed “within 30 days after

the entry of the order disposing of the last pending postjudgment motion directed against that

judgment or order.” (Emphasis added.) Ill. S. Ct. R. 303(a)(1) (eff. July 1, 2017).

¶ 37   The court’s order, both striking plaintiffs’ “motion to limit the scope” and substantively

denying it, was a bit unusual. Nevertheless, we agree with plaintiffs that, regardless of whether the

motion was filed pursuant to section 2-1203 or section 2-1301 of the Code it was a motion directed

against the judgment, because it sought a substantive modification of the judgment. “A

postjudgment motion extends the time for filing a notice of appeal under Rule 303(a)(1) only when

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it seeks rehearing, retrial, modification or vacation of the judgment, or other similar relief.”

(Emphases added.) Heiden v. DNA Diagnostics Center, Inc., 396 Ill. App. 3d 135, 138 (2009). The

City correctly points out that a motion is directed against the judgment only if it actually challenges

the judgment, not when it merely requests a change to the language of the judgment (see, e.g., In re

Estate of Russell, 372 Ill. App. 3d 591, 594-95 (2007)), but the motion to limit the judgment’s

scope here was not requesting merely a superficial change. Namely, it requested that the court

modify the judgment to include a constitutional assessment of the City’s retroactive application of

a newly enacted ordinance that was passed after plaintiffs filed their amended complaint. The

requested modification had the potential to affect plaintiffs’ relief, and, regardless of form or how

and when the question arose, the court agreed that the requested analysis was required. It

performed the substantive analysis but denied the motion. The notice of appeal was filed within

30 days after the court’s ruling, and, therefore, it tolled the time to appeal. Our jurisdiction is

proper.

¶ 38      Whether all of the issues raised on appeal (particularly those that were contemplated in the

withdrawn motion to reconsider) are preserved is a question different from that of jurisdiction. We

are mindful of the fact that, after plaintiffs filed their amended complaint, the City amended the

Ordinance and then, instead of answering the complaint, moved for judgment on the pleadings.

Thus, plaintiffs became respondents to the motion, thereby positioned only to respond to the

allegations in the motion and were, therefore, somewhat constrained in what arguments could be

proffered. Their overarching argument in opposition to the City’s motion for judgment on the

pleadings centered around their dispute that the City could validly assert home rule authority as a

defense to Municipal Code regulations. The trial court ultimately sided with the City on that issue;

plaintiffs were then presented with their first opportunity to dispute the trial court’s rationale for

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its decision (including noting that the court’s order had not addressed the propriety of applying the

Ordinance retroactively). In their motion to limit the scope of the judgment, plaintiffs expressed

that they did not intend to forfeit their other challenges to the merits of the court’s judgment. They

also filed a motion to reconsider the judgment and, although they ultimately withdrew that motion,

the order itself allowed conditional withdrawal, i.e., withdrawal under the condition that plaintiffs’

arguments remained preserved for appeal. Without question, that court order was also unusual. A

party generally preserves an issue by actually presenting it to the trial court and, so, it seems

incongruous for the trial court here to order that an issue is preserved, even though it was not,

ultimately, presented to the trial court. Indeed, we implore trial courts to carefully consider the

impact of their orders, remaining mindful that they are not necessarily positioned to pronounce as

preserved issues that are not or to bestow upon us jurisdiction where there is none. In any event, it

is well settled that the issue of forfeiture, as opposed to jurisdiction, is a limitation on the parties,

not on this court. See, e.g., Jill Knowles Enterprises, Inc. v. Dunkin, 2017 IL App (2d) 160811,

¶ 22. All things considered, it strikes us as unfair to deny plaintiffs what the trial court specifically

allowed, i.e., the ability to raise these issues on appeal (even if the trial court was misguided in

doing so).

¶ 39    As such, we conclude that we have jurisdiction over the appeal. Further, under these

circumstances, forfeiture is not a basis for dismissal.

¶ 40                                   B. Standards of Review

¶ 41    We review de novo a motion for judgment on the pleadings (Gillen v. State Farm Mutual

Automobile Insurance Co., 215 Ill. 2d 381, 385 (2005)), the constitutionality of an ordinance

(Wilson v. County of Cook, 2012 IL 112026, ¶ 14), and a section 2-619 motion to dismiss (Krilich

v. American National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago, 334 Ill. App. 3d 563, 571 (2002)).

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¶ 42   Judgment on the pleadings is proper where the pleadings disclose that there is no genuine

issue of material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Gillen, 215
Ill. 2d at 385. In ruling on a motion for judgment on the pleadings, the court will consider only

those facts apparent from the face of the pleadings, matters subject to judicial notice, and judicial

admissions in the record. Id. We take as true all well-pleaded facts and reasonable inferences. Id.

On review, we must determine whether any issues of material fact exist and, if not, whether the

movant was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Id.

¶ 43   In addition, to the extent that the judgment on appeal concerns statutory interpretation, that,

too, is a question of law to be reviewed de novo. See, e.g., Carter v. SSC Odin Operating Co., 237
Ill. 2d 30, 39 (2010). When interpreting statutes, we must ascertain and give effect to legislative

intent, and we must presume that the legislature did not intend absurd results. See, e.g., In re Estate

of Wilson, 238 Ill. 2d 519, 561 (2010); In re Marriage of Best, 228 Ill. 2d 107, 116 (2008). “The

best indicator of the legislative intent is the language in the statute, which must be given its plain

and ordinary meaning.” Dynak v. Board of Education of Wood Dale School District 7, 2020 IL
125062, ¶ 16. We must not interpret a statute in a manner that renders other statutory provisions

meaningless (see, e.g., Wilson, 238 Ill. 2d at 561), nor may we read into statutes exceptions,

limitations, or conditions that the General Assembly did not express (see Hines v. Department of

Public Aid, 221 Ill. 2d 222, 230 (2006)).

¶ 44                               C. Judgment on the Pleadings

¶ 45   On October 15, 2019, the trial court granted the City’s motion for judgment on the

pleadings, concluding, in sum, that the Ordinance reflected a valid exercise of its home rule

authority and that, as section 11-150-2 did not expressly limit home rule authority, the statute’s

billing requirements did not preempt the Ordinance. Plaintiffs argue that the court’s ruling is

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incorrect because, while both state and local legislation may attempt to regulate the same subject

matter or issue, the concept of home rule authority generally provides a basis for local governments

to tailor local solutions to local affairs. That concept does not make sense here, plaintiffs contend,

because section 11-150-2 imposed requirements on the local entity itself, in order to pursue a vital

state interest of consumer protection. Therefore, plaintiffs argue, it is absurd to interpret home rule

power as allowing a municipality to nullify a state mandate, designed to regulate it, by passing a

directly contradictory ordinance. According to plaintiffs, it is critical here to identify (1) what or

who is being regulated under the conflicting state and local laws, (2) what problem is being

addressed by those laws, and (3) which unit of government has a more vital interest in regulating

the issue. Doing so, plaintiffs argue, reveals that the Ordinance is not a valid exercise of home rule

authority and that, even if it were, section 11-150-2 expressly limits that authority. For the

following reasons, we disagree.

¶ 46                                  1. Home Rule Authority

¶ 47   We first summarize pertinent constitutional and statutory provisions, as well as case law

interpreting those provisions, concerning home rule authority. The 1970 Illinois Constitution

bestows broad authority on home rule units. Article VII, section 6(a), states in part:

       “Except as limited by this Section, a home rule unit may exercise any power and perform

       any function pertaining to its government and affairs including, but not limited to, the

       power to regulate for the protection of the public health, safety, morals and welfare; to

       license; to tax; and to incur debt.” Ill. Const. 1970, art. VII, § 6(a).

¶ 48   Home rule is “based on the assumption that municipalities should be allowed to address

problems with solutions tailored to their local needs” (Palm v. 2800 Lake Shore Drive

Condominium Ass’n, 2013 IL 110505, ¶ 29), and section 6(a) intends to give home rule units the

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broadest powers possible, with section 6(m) of the Illinois Constitution providing that the

“ ‘[p]owers and functions of home rule units shall be construed liberally’ ” (id. ¶ 30 (quoting Ill.

Const. 1970, art. VII, § 6(m))). However, under article VII, section 6(h), the General Assembly

“may provide specifically by law for the exclusive exercise by the State of any power or function

of a home rule unit.” Ill. Const. 1970, art. VII, § 6(h). To limit or deny a municipality’s home rule

powers, the statute “must contain an express statement to that effect,” and if there is no express

limitation or denial of home rule authority, a municipal ordinance and a state statute may operate

concurrently. Palm, 2013 IL 110505, ¶ 31. Indeed, section 6(i) of the Illinois Constitution

provides:

       “Home rule units may exercise and perform concurrently with the State any power or

       function of a home rule unit to the extent that the General Assembly by law does not

       specifically limit the concurrent exercise or specifically declare the State’s exercise to be

       exclusive.” (Emphases added.) Ill. Const. 1970, art. VII, § 6(i).

¶ 49   In Palm, our supreme court reiterated that, even if the State has regulated activities, home

rule units may continue to regulate the same activities, unless the General Assembly restricts the

concurrent exercise of home rule power by enacting “a law specifically stating home rule authority

is limited.” (Emphasis in original.) Palm, 2013 IL 110505, ¶ 32. The legislature also codified this

principle in section 7 of the Statute on Statutes, which provides:

       “No law enacted after January 12, 1977, denies or limits any power or function of a home

       rule unit *** unless there is specific language limiting or denying the power or function

       and the language specifically sets forth in what manner and to what extent it is a limitation

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        on or denial of the power or function of a home rule unit.” 4 (Emphasis added.) 5 ILCS 70/7

        (West 2018).

¶ 50    The court in Palm also noted that, in the Home Rule Note Act (25 ILCS 75/5 (West 2018)),

the legislature provided that any bill seeking to limit home rule power must, before a second

reading, include an explanation that reliably estimates the probable impact of the bill on the powers

and functions of home rule units. Palm, 2013 IL 110505, ¶ 33. “Accordingly, the legislature has

recognized its principal role in determining whether to preempt or limit home rule power and its

responsibility to use specific language when preempting or limiting that power.” (Emphasis

added.) Id.

¶ 51    Collectively, the constitutional provisions and the statutes reflect an intention to minimize

limitations on home rule powers, and, due to the constitutional design, courts should apply

“judicial interpretation of unexpressed legislative inaction” to limit home rule powers only in the

“clearest cases,” wherein local ordinances interfere with “vital” state policy. (Emphasis in original

and internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. ¶ 34. It is the function of the legislature, not the courts,

to restrict home rule authority. Id. In short, the Illinois Constitution, the Statute on Statutes (5 ILCS

70/0.01 et seq. (West 2018)), and our supreme court’s case law evidence that, unless there are

unequivocal, clear, and, indeed, almost “magic words” expressed in a statute reflecting an intent

to limit home rule authority, we cannot interpret the statute in a manner to impose such restrictions.

See, e.g., Palm, 2013 IL 110505, ¶¶ 80-81 (Thomas, J., specially concurring).

        4
            The court in Palm noted that section 7 of the Statute on Statutes (5 ILCS 70/7 (West 2010))

was formally adopted as part of the court’s home rule jurisprudence in Schillerstom Homes, Inc.

v. City of Naperville, 198 Ill. 2d 281, 287 (2001). Palm, 2013 IL 110505, ¶ 32.

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¶ 52                             2. Local Government and Affairs

¶ 53   Plaintiffs argue first that the Ordinance does not pertain to local government and affairs

and that, therefore, the attempted exercise of home rule power is not constitutionally authorized.

Plaintiffs contend that the Illinois Municipal Code’s regulations concerning utilities and, more

specifically, the billing requirements placed upon the municipality itself concern a vital statewide

interest in bringing municipal water utilities in line with consumer protections afforded to public

water-utility customers. Plaintiffs argue that home rule units have no authority to concurrently

regulate issues that are statewide in nature and that this court must “assess whether the City’s

motive in avoiding liability for its non-compliance with the statute, presents a more vital interest

than the State’s interest in establishing uniform and consistent consumer protections to all Illinois

water consumers.” In support of their argument (that the statute reflects an alleged vital state

interest to regulate municipalities and create uniform consumer protection standards), plaintiffs

point to section 11-15-2’s legislative history, wherein the bill’s sponsor stated:

       “[T]his is a consumer protection Bill that would really bring local water utilities in line to

       the requirements that we have for [public] utilities. *** [Public] utilities *** can only go

       back and back-bill up to 12 months for issues that might be a company-related matter.

       There’s not that requirement on local municipal water billing and we’ve had instances

       where cities have gone back and billed 5, 6 even 10 years due to issues that were

       [attributable to the] municipal water provider [itself]. So, we’re looking to fix that [and]

       protect consumers. And [the municipal water provider would] only be able to back-bill up

       to 12 months for issues that would come up.” 100th Ill. Gen. Assem., House Proceedings,

       April 7, 2017, at 10-11 (statements of Representative Sosnowski).

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¶ 54   Accordingly, plaintiffs contend that the City’s attempt to unilaterally exempt itself from

section 11-150-2’s requirements through local ordinance reflects impermissible interference with

a vital state interest and, thus, must be viewed as an invalid and unauthorized use of home rule

power. We disagree.

¶ 55   In reviewing the constitutionality of asserted home rule power, we incorporate the concept

of “ ‘vital state interest’ ” into a two-part (formerly three-part) test. Palm, 2013 IL 110505, ¶¶ 35-

36. In short, “ ‘[i]f a subject pertains to local government and affairs, and the legislature has not

expressly preempted home rule, municipalities may exercise their power.’ ” Id. ¶ 36 (quoting City

of Chicago v. StubHub, Inc., 2011 IL 111127, ¶ 22 n.2). The supreme court has recognized that,

“because the legislature can always vindicate state interests by express preemption, only vital state

interests would allow a court to decide that an exercise of home rule power does not pertain to

local government and affairs.” (Emphases added.) StubHub, Inc., 2011 IL 111127, ¶ 22. An

ordinance pertains to local government and affairs where it addresses local, not state, problems,

and whether a problem is a statewide one is decided by considering the nature and extent of the

problem, the units of government that have the most vital interest in its solution, and the role

traditionally played by local or state authorities to address it. See Youngberg v. Village of Round

Lake Beach, 2017 IL App (2d) 160539, ¶ 6.

¶ 56   The trial court found that the City’s water-billing practices were a function pertaining to

its local government affairs, as it provides a public water-utility service, the Ordinance regulates

billing for that service, and the Ordinance addresses unique problems the City faces. “These are

local matters that lie squarely within the domain of City functions pertaining to the City’s

government and affairs.” We agree. Plaintiffs assert that the legislature has regulated public

utilities for almost a century and that the problem being addressed here is the timeliness with which

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a municipality issues bills for consumers’ water-utility usage. Yet, state regulation of utilities

generally does not, in our view, render the method of utility billing (which apparently was an area

traditionally exercised by municipalities until the legislature chose, in 2017, to enact section 11-

150-2) of vital statewide concern, as opposed to a concurrent interest that still concerns local

affairs. Indeed, as the trial court found, that is exactly what is at issue here; due to concerns that

are exclusively local, i.e., the issues with equipment and billing technology, the City crafted an

ordinance to address its unique billing circumstances. An ordinance is not rendered invalid simply

because it conflicts or is inconsistent with a state statute or because the State has “occupied some

field of government endeavor.” Palm, 2013 IL 110505, ¶ 42. Our supreme court has also noted

that “comprehensive” or coincidental legislation is insufficient to declare the State’s exercise of

power to be exclusive. City of Chicago v. Roman, 184 Ill. 2d 504, 517 (1998). Here, the question

concerns collecting money to fund the City’s water-utility system, which it operates to the benefit

of its citizens. As the City puts it, “[t]his is clearly a matter of local concern and it is the City, not

the State, which has the most vital interest in the funding and operation of the City’s water utility

system.”

¶ 57    Plaintiffs dispute that local frustrations and obstacles in complying with state law can turn

a statewide problem into a local one. In other words, plaintiffs contend, unique local obstacles

concerning water-meter infrastructure do not outweigh the State’s interest in consumer protections;

thus, the Ordinance is an invalid attempt to exercise home rule authority over an issue of statewide

concern. Plaintiffs argue that the State has the more vital interest in solving the problem, because

water consumers are a captive audience to a monopoly when it comes to water service and citizens

consuming municipal water were being treated differently from citizens receiving public-utility

water. Thus, the State has a vital concern of providing uniform consumer protections to all water-

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utility consumers, while the City’s interest in adopting the conflicting Ordinance is purely to avoid

the legal implications of its noncompliance.

¶ 58    First, we disagree that the City’s interest in adopting the Ordinance solely to avoid the legal

implications of noncompliance. While the ordinance was adopted after this lawsuit was filed and

addresses legal exposure, the other purpose of the Ordinance is to address billing customers for

water usage, in light of local issues and complications. Although plaintiffs characterize the

statewide interest as one of consumer protection, whether the citizens of West Chicago receive

water-utility bills from their water provider more than 12 months after usage is also, arguably, a

local issue, not one solely of statewide concern. Further, we disagree with plaintiffs’ suggestion

that the Ordinance here does not concern a legitimate home rule function under section 6(a) of the

Illinois Constitution; to the contrary, it facilitates the City’s ability to provide water to its citizens,

which indisputably implicates local public health. Moreover, we disagree that plaintiffs’ cited

authority, namely Village of Bolingbrook v. Citizens Utilities Co. of Illinois, 158 Ill. 2d 133, 135

(1994), and Kalodimos v. Village of Morton Grove, 103 Ill. 2d 483, 501 (1984), should alter our

conclusion.

¶ 59    Bolingbrook concerned village ordinances that imposed fines when untreated water or

sewage was discharged onto property within the Village of Bolingbrook. Although the State had

enacted comprehensive public-utilities regulations, including some that addressed aspects of

wastewater discharge, the court upheld the ordinances as a valid exercise of home rule authority,

as they were imposed to protect public health in the village, they imposed fines regardless of who

was responsible for the discharge, and the discharge of raw sewage onto property within the village

did not present a statewide problem. Bolingbrook, 158 Ill. 2d at 138-40. Plaintiffs argue that, here,

the Ordinance meets none of those standards, as the City itself is the subject of the state regulation,

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the Ordinance contradicts the statute with respect to the City’s obligations, and standardizing

requirements between municipal and public water utilities is a vital statewide concern. However,

the court in Bolingbrook focused on the fact that the ordinance at issue addressed a problem borne

by the village—wastewater being dumped on property therein—so, although regulating

wastewater might be of statewide concern “in the abstract,” the problem itself was being borne

locally, not statewide. Id. at 140.

          “[R]egarding the unit of government which has the most vital interest in solving the

          problem, we believe [the village’s] interest here outweighs that of the State. While the State

          is concerned with the maintenance of effective utility service in the abstract, the citizens of

          [the village] have been subjected to raw sewage being dumped on their property. This

          represents a real and immediate danger to the health and welfare of plaintiff’s constituents.”
Id.

Here, while the State may be concerned in the abstract with uniform consumer protections, the

Ordinance is designed to address billing local consumers for water usage through services provided

by the City, in a manner that addresses impediments to billing that are unique to the City. It is a

problem of local dimension.

¶ 60      Similarly, plaintiffs reference Kalodimos, where the court addressed a municipality’s

attempt to regulate handguns, which the defendants claimed was a matter of statewide concern. If

anything, however, Kalodimos is primarily useful for its conclusion that there is no one formula

for deciding whether an ordinance is of local or statewide concern. Specifically, the court there

stated:

                 “Whether a particular problem is of statewide rather than local dimension must be

          decided not on the basis of a specific formula or listing set forth in the Constitution but

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       with regard for the nature and extent of the problem, the units of government which have

       the most vital interest in its solution, and the role traditionally played by local and statewide

       authorities in dealing with it.” Kalodimos, 103 Ill. 2d at 501.

In our view, ultimately, Kalodimos supports the City’s argument.

¶ 61   Here, the nature of the problem being addressed by the ordinance is, at least in part, a local

one, and comprehensive utility regulation or abstract state interest in consumer protection does not

render the ordinance one that impinges on a vital state interest. In short, applying the two-part test

as summarized in Palm, does the ordinance pertain to local affairs? Yes. Nevertheless, did the

legislature expressly restrict home rule authority in this area? As we conclude below, no.

¶ 62                   3. No Express Preclusion of Home Rule Regulation

¶ 63   Having determined that the Ordinance concerns matters of local affairs, we turn now to

whether the statute expressly precludes or limits home rule power. Again, section 11-150-2 of the

Municipal Code provides in relevant part:

       “On or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly, the

       corporate authorities of any municipality operating a waterworks or combined waterworks

       and sewerage system:

                       (1) shall bill for any utility service, including previously unbilled service:

               (A) within 12 months after the provision of that service to the customer if the

               service is supplied to a residential customer; or (B) within 24 months after the

               provision of that service to that customer if the service is supplied to a non-

               residential customer; however, the corporate authorities of a municipality may bill

               for unpaid amounts that were billed to a customer or if the customer was notified

               that there is an unpaid amount before the effective date of this amendatory Act of

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               the 100th General [(August 18, 2017)] for service that was supplied to the customer

               before January 1, 2016[.]” 65 ILCS 5/11-150-2(a)(1) (West 2018).

¶ 64   There is no language in the statute clearly reflecting an intent to limit home rule authority.

Plaintiffs, nevertheless, submit that the statute expressly limits home rule authority by using the

word “any” before the word “municipality” and the word “shall” after it. As such, plaintiffs argue,

the word “any” means “all” and the only defining characteristic for inclusion is that the

municipality operate a waterworks system. Logically, plaintiffs continue, “any” municipality must

be construed to include both home rule and nonhome rule municipalities. Any other interpretation,

plaintiffs assert, would be absurd. We disagree.

¶ 65   The phrase “any municipality” is not sufficiently specific to express a limitation on home

rule authority or concurrent authority. As other courts have noted, when the legislature wants to

ensure that a term applies to a home rule unit, it further clarifies the term. See, e.g., Village of

Schaumburg v. Doyle, 277 Ill. App. 3d 832, 840 (1996) (discussing section 3 of the Illinois

Pesticide Act, which provided that “ ‘[t]he regulation of pesticides by any political subdivision of

this State, including home rule units, is specifically prohibited’ ” (emphases added) (quoting 415

ILCS 60/3(4) (West 1992))). A statute restricting powers must do so with specificity, if it is to

apply to a home rule unit. Illinois Coin Machine Operators Ass’n v. County of Cook, 2015 IL App

(1st) 150547, ¶¶ 39-40 (holding that a statute’s provision referencing “any political subdivision’ ”

was not sufficiently specific to include home rule units). Indeed, the phrase “municipalities” has

been held insufficiently specific to include home rule municipalities and thus limit or restrict home

rule authority. Specifically, in Shachter v. City of Chicago, 2016 IL App (1st) 150442, ¶ 42, the

court found that such an argument as plaintiffs present here was “ ‘exactly backwards,’ ” as the

statute must contain an express statement to limit or deny home rule powers. Again, as the City

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notes, it is clear that the legislature is well aware of the requirement to use specific language, as it

has, in fact, inserted specific home rule limitations in other Municipal Code provisions. See, e.g.,

65 ILCS 5/3.1-10-17(c) (West Supp. 2019); 65 ILCS 5/8-13-20, 11-5-9, 11-13-26(b), 11-19-1(e),

11-20-6.5(c), 11-124-1(d) (West 2018).

¶ 66    We note that, although plaintiffs present one piece of legislative history concerning the

enactment of section 11-150-2 (i.e., the sponsor’s comments about its purpose), they do not

comment on whether, before a second reading, the bill that eventually became section 11-150-2

ever presented a statement estimating its probable impact on the power and functions of home rule

units, as required by section 5 of the Home Rule Note Act. See 25 ILCS 75/5 (West 2016)). Indeed,

the City asserts that no such explanatory note is, in fact, present in the statute’s legislative history.

As the Home Rule Note Act requires the explanatory note and second reading when a statute seeks

to deny or limit home rule authority, the absence of any such reading would suggest that home rule

authority was not, ultimately, limited by section 11-150-2.

¶ 67    In addition, neither party notes that, on January 22, 2020 (i.e., after the trial court’s decision

in this case issued), a bill was introduced to amend section 11-150-2 to expressly provide that it

applies to home rule municipalities and that it limits home rule powers. 101st Ill. Gen. Assem,

House Bill 4221, 2019 Sess. (introduced January 22, 2020). It appears that the most recent action

on the bill occurred on June 23, 2020, when it was re-referred to the rules committee. In any event,

the bill proposes that the statute be amended to include the following language:

                “(c) On and after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General

        Assembly, a home rule municipality operating a waterworks or combined waterworks and

        sewerage system may not bill customers in a manner inconsistent with this Section. This

        Section is a limitation under subsection (i) of Section 6 of Article VII of the Illinois

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       Constitution on the concurrent exercise by home rule units of powers and functions

       exercised by the State.” Id.

¶ 68   We will not speculate as to the reasons for the bill’s introduction, and we do not rely on

this proposal as a basis for our conclusion that the statute does not, in its current form, limit home

rule authority. We nevertheless think it reasonable to infer that, if the statute already contained

express language denying or limiting home rule authority, such proposed amendments would be

unnecessary.

¶ 69                                      4. Absurd Results

¶ 70   Plaintiffs express that validating the City’s claim of home rule power here could potentially

result in absurd consequences, in that a municipality could pass legislation changing the rules as

applied to it, thereby rendering inconsistent the rules throughout the State and from municipality

to municipality. Plaintiffs refer us to the Environmental Protection Act (415 ILCS 5/1 et seq. (West

2018)), explaining that, there, the legislature established regulatory provisions concerning water

quality and pollution, creating water-quality standards that must be maintained by both public

utilities and municipal-owned water utilities. These statutes, plaintiffs argue, do not expressly state

that concurrent home rule authority is preempted or prohibited, but, they continue, it is “objectively

absurd and illogical to suggest that a municipal home rule authority could override and reject the

[S]tate imposed regulatory mandates concerning water quality standards and impose different

standards upon itself based on its unique water-quality circumstances.”

¶ 71   The Environmental Protection Act is not before us for interpretation. We would briefly

note, however, that water is not fixed to one locale and, thus, standards concerning water quality

necessarily implicate statewide interests. The timing of billing for water usage does not compare

to regulating the water itself. In any event, to the extent that the legislature wishes to ensure that

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home rule municipalities cannot reject the restrictions being placed upon them, it can correct the

problem by curing the legislation, which, as previously noted, it appears has been proposed here

through amending legislation.

¶ 72   Plaintiffs bemoan the potential for inconsistent billing practices from one municipality to

the next, such that the City’s customers here might be the only people in Illinois being billed for

water services provided more than 12 months in the past. However, to borrow Justice Thomas’s

comments from his Palm special concurrence, “of course” “[t]hat is the whole point of home rule.”

(Emphasis added.) Palm, 2013 IL 110505, ¶ 75 (Thomas, J., specially concurring). That home rule

municipalities may choose to govern locally in differing manners is entirely consistent with the

purpose of home rule authority. Indeed,

       “the possibility that different home rule units may adopt similar ordinances with differing

       [requirements] should be of no concern. The grant of home rule powers contemplates that

       different communities which perceive a problem differently may adopt different measures

       to address the problem, provided that the legislature has taken no affirmative steps to

       circumscribe the measures that may be taken and that the measures taken are reasonable.”

       (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Roman, 184 Ill. 2d at 514-15.

Here, the legislature did not affirmatively circumscribe the measures the City, a home rule

municipality, can take. We are not presented with any developed argument that the Ordinance

itself is unreasonable and, as the City notes, hardship occasioned by its consumers due to delayed

water bills may potentially be addressed through extended payment plans authorized by other

sections of the City’s code. Again, if the legislature did not intend a patchwork of regulations, then

the State can vindicate its interests by legislating in the “proper form.” Id. at 519.

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¶ 73   In sum, as the court in Palm noted, where (1) the constitutional framework relies almost

exclusively on the legislature to determine whether to preempt home rule authority; (2) yet, here,

the legislature has not specifically denied the City’s use of home rule power or required that it

exercise that power consistent with statutory provisions; and (3) the legislature may, if it wishes

to deny or restrict the City’s home rule authority, enact a statute expressly providing for that action

in its next legislative session, we must conclude that the City’s ordinance is a valid exercise of its

home rule power. Palm, 2013 IL 110505, ¶ 44 (majority opinion). As such, plaintiffs’ claims

against the City, premised on the billing-period limitations in section 11-150-2, fail, and the trial

court properly granted the City’s section 2-615(e) motion for judgment on the pleadings.

¶ 74                             D. Retroactivity of the Ordinance

¶ 75   Plaintiffs next argue that the trial court erred when it denied their motion to limit the scope

of the judgment and to strike as unconstitutional any retroactive application of the amended

ordinance. They argue that retroactive application of the Ordinance might deprive the City’s

residents of rights that vested from August 17, 2017 (when section 11-150-2 became effective),

(so thus no vesting on and after April 15) until April 15, 2019 (when the amended ordinance

became effective). During that period, plaintiffs argue, the City issued water bills that, if they

charged for water usage provided more than 12 months (for residential customers) or 24 months

(for commercial consumers) earlier, were unlawful under section 11-150-2. Although the

Ordinance contains a “reach-back” provision and a retroactive-impact provision, plaintiffs argue

that the attempted retroactive reach unconstitutionally deprives them of abatement rights. Plaintiffs

request that we remand this case and order that all bills issued by the City on and after August 18,

2017, but before April 15, 2019, for water services provided more than 12 or 24 months earlier

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(depending on the customer) are null and void and that all such charges not timely billed are legally

abated as to the affected customers.

¶ 76   As the City points out, our standard of review for this issue is somewhat complicated by

the fact that it was an issue of law, raised for the first time in a section 2-1301(e) postjudgment

motion that the trial court both ordered stricken and considered substantively. However, since the

court considered the issue substantively and the constitutionality of an ordinance is a question of

law, we will apply de novo review. See, e.g., Wilson, 2012 IL 112026, ¶ 14.

¶ 77   Here, the Ordinance provides that it applies to all billed and unbilled charges incurred for

water usage “prior to and subsequent to” its effective date and that it applies to all causes of action

that “have accrued, will accrue, or are currently pending” before the courts. As the trial court

correctly noted, our supreme court has held that, when considering whether a change in law should

be applied retroactively, legislative intent, as opposed to vested rights, is the primary consideration.

Perry v. Department of Financial & Professional Regulation, 2018 IL 122349, ¶ 39. “If the

legislature has clearly indicated the temporal reach, then such temporal reach must be given effect

unless to do so would be constitutionally prohibited.” Id. ¶ 40. Thus, “[i]f *** the legislature

indicates that it wants a change of law to be applied retroactively, then a court must ask whether

effectuating the legislature’s intent would be constitutionally prohibited, which in turn would take

into account vested rights, as such rights are constitutionally protected.” (Emphasis omitted.) Id.

¶ 64. The supreme court has previously explained, generally, that, “[a]lthough not capable of

precise definition, a vested right is a complete and unconditional demand or exemption that may

be equated with a property interest.” First of America Trust Co. v. Armstead, 171 Ill. 2d 282, 291

(1996). As this court has summarized:

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       “The old approach *** provided that an amended law could not be retroactively applied if

       the application of the change in the law would affect a vested right. Vested rights are

       interests that are protected from legislative interference by Illinois’s due process clause (Ill.

       Const. 1970, art. I, § 2). [Citation.] ‘While a vested right is difficult to define, it has

       frequently been defined to consist of something more than a mere expectation, based upon

       an anticipated continuance of the existing law, and it must have become a title, legal or

       equitable, to the present or future enjoyment of property, or to the present or future

       enjoyment of the demand, or a legal exception from a demand made by another.’ ” Randich

       v. Pirtano Construction Co., 346 Ill. App. 3d 414, 427 (2004) (quoting Harraz v. Snyder,

       283 Ill. App. 3d 254, 262 (1996)).

¶ 78   The Ordinance expressly calls for retroactive application. We disagree with plaintiffs’

premise that applying the Ordinance retroactively deprives them of a vested right. They assert that

a change in the law that retroactively imposes a new duty is prohibited and that the Ordinance

imposes upon them a new duty, namely, a financial obligation for older, “abated” charges. As to

abatement, plaintiffs assert that, when section 11-150-2 was enacted on August 17, 2017, they

were provided with “unconditional abatement” of water-service charges for services provided

more than 12-months (residential) and 24-months (commercial) earlier, and their cause of action

had accrued. This is a mischaracterization of the effect of section 11-150-2.

¶ 79   First, we note that the cases upon which plaintiffs rely concerned retroactive application of

statutes eliminating vested statutory defenses. See Lazenby v. Mark’s Construction, Inc., 236 Ill.
2d 83 (2010); Henrich v. Libertyville High School, 186 Ill. 2d 381 (1998); Randich, 346 Ill. App.
3d 414. Second, nothing in section 11-150-2 reflects that untimely bills “abate” the financial

obligation for consumed water. Section 11-150-2 simply concerns timing for billing, while the

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Ordinance authorizes the City to issue the bill without time limitation. Neither provision absolves

citizens from obligations to pay for consumed water or provided services. Indeed, as the City notes,

the statute says nothing concerning the effect of or penalties for a municipality’s violation of the

billing timelines set forth within the statute, let alone does it clearly create a duty, defense, or cause

of action for consumers. Generally speaking, it is presumed that a law does not create a private

vested right and that vested rights under a statute arise when so decreed by a court of competent

jurisdiction. See, e.g., Fumarolo v. Chicago Board of Education, 142 Ill. 2d 54, 104 (1990) (the

presumption is that a law is not intended to create private vested rights but, rather, that it declares

a policy to be pursued until the legislature says otherwise); Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Will

County Collector, 305 Ill. App. 3d 819, 825 (1999) (“[w]hile there is generally no vested right in

a public law, rights that arise under a statute vest when they are decreed by a court of competent

jurisdiction”). Our supreme court has noted that, when assessing whether an amended law should

be applied to a particular case, it bears considering whether “settled expectations honestly arrived

at with respect to substantial interests ought not to be defeated.” (Internal quotation marks

omitted.) Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Will County Collector, 196 Ill. 2d 27, 48 (2001).

¶ 80    Here, there is no right to complimentary water usage under the Municipal Code, and no

court has decreed that section 11-150-2 gives consumers a right to timely water billing. We do not

agree that plaintiffs could have held a settled expectation respecting any substantial interest,

certainly not one akin to a property interest, such that retroactively applying the ordinance to their

case is improper.

¶ 81                             E. Section 2-619 Motion to Dismiss

¶ 82    Plaintiffs’ final argument concerns the trial court’s section 2-619 dismissal of the amended

complaint’s claims against Water Resources, on the basis that plaintiffs were not third-party

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beneficiaries to the contract between defendants and, thus, had no standing to pursue those claims.

The court found that the purpose of the contract was to provide working water meters for the City

and its citizens and that, although the citizens would benefit from the meters, the nexus was

insufficient to give plaintiffs a cause of action against Water Resources. Plaintiffs argue that the

court’s determination was incorrect because the agreement (a public contract) between defendants

confers a direct benefit upon plaintiffs and similarly situated consumers, such as by requiring

Water Resources to schedule equipment installation for consumers, install equipment at their

homes, promote “buy in” from city residents, honor warranty repairs and maintenance, provide

long-term customer support, and populate their information into electronic systems. Plaintiffs also

note that, when the City’s attorney wrote to Water Resources in June 2016, the correspondence

noted that the City had wished to select a company that could provide a project that allowed

customers to look online at their data consumption and that, because of technical problems,

customers will not be able to access archived data, “thereby eliminating most of the benefit of this

feature which is highly touted and desired by the City.” Collectively, plaintiffs argue, “there is no

legitimate question that [they] are, as a matter of law, intended third-party beneficiaries to the

contract between the City and [Water Resources.]”

¶ 83   Water Resources responds that plaintiffs fail to point to express language that overcomes

the strong presumption that the contract, even if it incidentally benefits others, confers direct

benefits only on the two contracting parties. It argues that the trial court correctly granted the

motion to dismiss, as the contract evinces that its purpose was to implement for the City an

“Advanced Metering Infrastructure Fixed Network Program” and that any benefit to plaintiffs

from the contract was incidental, not direct. It contends that the public contract enumerated many

tasks and obligations to be completed by Water Resources and that, while those tasks involved

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citizens’ homes, equipment, and water-usage technology, plaintiffs are only incidental

beneficiaries of the public improvements being provided to the City. In addition, Water Resources

notes that plaintiffs do not even allege that the identified provisions purportedly benefitting them

were breached or that they form the basis of their causes of action; rather, plaintiffs seek redress

for violations of billing practices. We agree and reject plaintiffs’ arguments.

¶ 84   In short:

               “ ‘The rule is settled in this state that if a contract be entered into for a direct benefit

               of a third person not a party thereto, such third person may sue for breach thereof.

               The test is whether the benefit to the third person is direct to him [or her] or is but

               an incidental benefit to him [or her] arising from the contract. If direct[,] he [or she]

               may sue on the contract; if incidental he [or she] has no right of recovery thereon.

               ***’

                       ***

       *** [T]he intention of the parties, as evidenced by the contract, determines whether or not

       a third-party beneficiary may sue. It is not enough that the beneficiary is an incidental

       beneficiary: only a direct beneficiary has a right against [the contracting parties].” People

       ex rel. Resnik v. Curtis & Davis, Architects & Planners, Inc., 78 Ill. 2d 381, 384-85 (1980)

       (quoting Carson Pirie Scott & Co. v. Parrett, 346 Ill. 252, 257 (1931)).

¶ 85   Indeed, even if the contracting parties know, expect, or intend that others will benefit from

their agreement, that alone is insufficient to overcome the strong presumption that the contract was

intended only for the contracting parties’ direct benefit. See Wilfong v. L.J. Dodd Construction,

401 Ill. App. 3d 1044, 1057 (2010). The intention to make a third party a direct beneficiary to a

contract must be demonstrated through an express provision in the contract identifying that party

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by name or description and must almost be an express declaration. Id.; F.H. Paschen/S.N. Nielson,

Inc. v. Burnham Station, L.L.C., 372 Ill. App. 3d 89, 96 (2007). Critically, “most contracts entered

into by a governmental unit are made for the benefit of the public at large.” Ocasek v. City of

Chicago, 275 Ill. App. 3d 628, 635 (1995) (“ ‘[g]overnment contracts often benefit the public, but

individual members of the public are treated as incidental beneficiaries unless a different intention

is manifested’ ” (quoting Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 313, Explanatory Notes, cmt. a, at

472 (1981))).

¶ 86    The contract here benefits plaintiffs only incidentally, and references within the contract to

Water Resources’ responsibilities as they pertained to citizens do not to confer a direct benefit

upon the citizens but, rather, are referenced only to specify its obligations under the contract. For

example, although not a case involving a governmental contract, Alaniz v. Schal Associates, 175
Ill. App. 3d 310, 312-13 (1988), illustrates the point. There, the plaintiff, a sub-subcontractor’s

employee, suffered a work-related injury. He alleged that he was an intended third-party

beneficiary of a contract entered into between the subcontractor and the general contractor, relying

on a provision stating that “ ‘[t]he subcontractor *** has the responsibility for maintaining the

safety and loss prevention programs covering all work performed by it, and its subcontractors.’ ”
Id. at 311-12. The plaintiff argued that the provision allowed him to maintain an action against the

subcontractor for personal injuries caused by unsafe work conditions and equipment, but the court

disagreed, concluding that general language about safety reflected only an intent by the contracting

parties to benefit themselves by setting forth their respective responsibilities, not to confer a direct

benefit to the plaintiff. Id. at 312-13; see also Consolidated Biscuit Co. v. Illinois Iowa Power Co.,

303 Ill. App. 80, 84-85 (1939) (property owner could not hold liable a waterworks company, under

a contract between that company and the city, where the company failed to furnish adequate water

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supply for fire protection, because the contract was meant to provide protection for citizens

generally, not for any particular property or person). Here, references to customers or citizens and

Water Resources’ tasks to install equipment, help encourage “buy in” to the new system, maintain

the equipment, or handle complaints are insufficient to reflect anything more than its own

obligations under the contract that will, incidentally, benefit the public at large.

¶ 87   The cases upon which plaintiffs rely are readily distinguishable. In Briarcliffe West

Townhouse Owners Ass’n v. Wiseman Construction Co., 118 Ill. App. 3d 163 (1983), a

homeowners’ association sued a developer for its breach of an implied warranty of fitness in

common land (including townhouses and the storm sewer system) in which the association held

easements. The association, which also held title to the common land, had standing as a third-party

beneficiary to sue the developer under a subdivision-improvement agreement because the

developer had the duty to maintain the system until the city accepted it. Id. at 173-74. Thus, there

was no large class of citizens involved and there was a much more direct benefit than here to the

plaintiffs. Similarly, in Redarowicz v. Ohlendorf, 92 Ill. 2d 171, 179 (1982), a city agreed to forgo

legal action for building-code violations if the contractor promised to make specific repairs to a

plaintiff’s house. The contract enumerated the repairs that the contractor had to perform, and the

homeowner-plaintiff was, therefore, clearly a direct and intended beneficiary of that contract. Id.

Plaintiffs argue that, like in those cases, here, they were “expressly referenced in the contract in

that [Water Resources] was required to enter their properties and install water meter improvements

and had continuing obligations owing to those property owners thereafter.” This misses the mark,

for the reasons discussed, as the contract does not clearly intend to directly benefit plaintiffs.

¶ 88   In sum, the court properly granted Water Resources’ section 2-619 motion to dismiss.

¶ 89                                   III. CONCLUSION

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¶ 90   For the reasons stated, the judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is affirmed.

¶ 91   Affirmed.

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2021 IL App (2d) 200047

                                   No. 2-20-0047

Cite as:                  Souza v. City of West Chicago, 2021 IL App (2d) 200047

Decision Under Review:    Appeal from the Circuit Court of Du Page County, No. 19-MR-
                          0164; the Hon. Paul M. Fullerton, Judge, presiding.

Attorneys                 George L. Acosta, of Acosta & Associates, of St. Charles, for
for                       appellants.
Appellant:

Attorneys                 Sean Conway, Mary E. Dickson, and Patrick K. Bond, of Bond,
for                       Dickson & Conway, of Wheaton, for appellee City of West
Appellee:                 Chicago.

                          Jeffrey A. Risch and Steven W. Jados, of SmithAmundsen LLC,
                          of St. Charles, and Michael Resis, of SmithAmundsen LLC, of
                          Chicago, for other appellee.

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