Court Opinion

ID: 9940300
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-02-13 21:05:09.823884+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:44:43.772750
License: Public Domain

2024 IL App (1st) 221300-U

                                                                                   FIRST DIVISION
                                                                                   February 13, 2024

                                             No. 1-22-1300

     NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in
     the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
     ____________________________________________________________________________

                                        IN THE
                            APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
                                    FIRST DISTRICT
     ____________________________________________________________________________

     WILLIE WESLEY, JR.,                        ) Petition for Direct Administrative
                                                ) Review of the Final Order of the
           Petitioner-Appellant,               ) Illinois Human Rights Commission.
                                                )
     v.                                         )
                                                ) No. 2016 CR 3417
     CHICAGO TRANSIT AUTHORITY, ILLINOIS        )
     HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION, and ILLINOIS )
     DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RIGHTS,               )
                                                )
          Respondents-Appellees.               )
     ____________________________________________________________________________

                  PRESIDING JUSTICE FITZGERALD SMITH delivered the judgment of the
                  court.
                  Justices Lavin and Coghlan concurred in the judgment.

                                                  ORDER

                  HELD: Illinois Human Rights Commission’s final administrative decision
          sustaining Illinois Department of Human Rights’ dismissal of petitioner’s charge of
          employment discrimination for lack of jurisdiction is affirmed where petitioner’s charge
          was, by all accounts, untimely filed.

¶1        In this administrative matter, petitioner-appellant Willie Wesley, Jr. (petitioner) appeals,

       pro se, from a decision issued by respondent-appellee Illinois Human Rights Commission

       (Commission) sustaining respondent-appellee Illinois Department of Human Rights’
     No. 1-22-1300

        (Department) dismissal for lack of jurisdiction of his employment discrimination charge in

        relation to a position he sought with respondent-appellee Chicago Transit Authority (CTA).

        Although his brief is almost incomprehensible (something we will discuss in more detail

        below), petitioner seemingly contends on appeal that his complaint was timely filed and,

        thus, that jurisdiction was appropriate. He asks that we compensate him “$11,000,000,” “or

        precisely .01 tenth’s percent of $1.1 billion dollar’s.” The Commission and Department have

        filed a brief in this matter, as has CTA, contending that the decision below was proper. For

        the following reasons, we affirm.

¶2                                          BACKGROUND

¶3         We begin by making clear for the record that at the time petitioner filed his employment

        discrimination charge, and at all times relevant to this cause, section 7A-102(A)(1) of the

        Illinois Human Rights Act (Act) was in effect and prescribed a 180-day limitations period for

        the filing of such claims. See 775 ILCS 5/7A-102(A)(1) (West 2016). Although that section

        has been subsequently amended to expand this period to 300 days (as it currently stands), that

        amendment did not take effect until 2018. See 775 ILCS 5/7A-102(A)(1) (West 2018)

        (amendment effective Aug. 24, 2018). All parties to this appeal, including petitioner,

        expressly agree that the prior version of the statute mandating a 180-day limitations period is

        applicable to the instant appeal; none, again including petitioner, make any argument that the

        subsequent amended version is at all relevant here.

¶4         The following facts are taken from the record on appeal.

¶5         In June 2015, petitioner applied for a job with CTA as a part-time bus driver. Following

        an interview, CTA emailed him on August 11, 2015 informing him that he was not a “fit” for

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        the position and, thus, had not been selected. The email was sent to the email address

        petitioner had provided on his application and profile documents, via the “bcc” line of the

        email. Later, in October 2015, petitioner emailed CTA’s human resources department

        inquiring about the status of his application. On December 4, 2015, CTA sent petitioner a

        second email to the same email address; this email referenced the prior August email and

        again informed petitioner that he had not been hired for the position.

¶6         On June 9, 2016, petitioner filed a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity

        Commission (EEOC) asserting employment discrimination on the part of CTA based on his

        race, color, sex, age, disability and genetic information. The EEOC declined to pursue the

        charge. Thereafter, he asked the Department to investigate his complaint. The Department

        did so and issued a report with its findings. These included that petitioner had applied for a

        position with CTA, CTA interviewed him, CTA did not hire him, and CTA notified him of

        this via the August 11, 2015 email. It determined that, as the alleged violation occurred on

        August 11, 2015, and as he did not file his claim with the EEOC until June 9, 2016, this was

        “beyond 180 days” as prescribed by the Act, warranting dismissal of his charge.

¶7         Petitioner then requested administrative review from the Commission. In his request, he

        denied ever receiving the August 11, 2015 email and stated he did not learn of CTA’s

        decision not to hire him until January 8, 2016, which would make his June 9, 2016 filing with

        the EEOC timely. The Department responded by providing the Commission with evidence

        that CTA did, indeed, send petitioner the August 11, 2015 email. Upon review, the

        Commission determined that there was a factual dispute as to when petitioner was first

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        informed that he would not be hired, which needed to be resolved. Accordingly, it referred

        the matter to an administrative law judge (ALJ) for an evidentiary hearing.

¶8         When the matter came before the ALJ, CTA field a motion for summary decision in lieu

        of conducting an evidentiary hearing. CTA offered its evidence in support of its contention

        that petitioner was notified via the August 11, 2015 email. This included, among other items,

        the email itself, an affidavit from a CTA employee that it was sent and addressed to

        petitioner at the email he provided, and statements from interviews with petitioner during the

        Department’s investigation wherein he confirmed he knew as of August 2015 that CTA

        would not be hiring him. Petitioner responded by again stating he never received that email.

        However, he admitted CTA emailed him on December 4, 2015, after he had inquired about

        the status of his application. He confirmed that he received that email the same day it was

        sent by CTA, but that he did not open and read it until January 8, 2016. He then argued, first,

        that the 180-day statutory limitations period should not begin to run until January 8, 2016

        when he first learned he would not be hired, making his charge timely; and, second, that even

        using the December 4, 2015 date, only business days, and not holidays or weekends, should

        count toward the time-period, still rendering his charge timely.

¶9         After examining the evidence and arguments, the ALJ issued a Report. In its findings of

        fact, the ALJ made the following factual determinations: CTA emailed petitioner on August

        11, 2015 informing him he would not be hired; CTA emailed him a second time on

        December 4, 2015 following his inquiry to again inform him he was not hired; petitioner

        admitted he received the December 4, 2015 email on that date and chose not to open or read

        it until January 8, 2016; he never denied that he told Department investigators he knew as of

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          August 2015 that he was not hired; all of the emails CTA sent to petitioner used the same

          email address, which he had provided in his application; and there are 188 days between

          December 4, 2015 and June 9, 2016. From all this, the ALJ concluded, first, that as

          petitioner admitted to the Department during the investigation that he learned of CTA’s

          decision in August 2015, and as he has never denied his statements, the 180-day limitations

          period should begin on the date of the first email, August 11, 2015. As this was some 10

          months before he filed the EEOC charge on June 9, 2016, his claim was untimely. Next, and

          putting that earliest date aside for the moment, the ALJ further noted that petitioner conceded

          he received the December 4, 2015 email from CTA and admitted he received it on that date.

          Accordingly, and because 188 days elapsed between December 4, 2015 and June 9, 2016, his

          claim was still untimely. Finally, the ALJ noted that petitioner provided no legal authority

          for his assertion that the limitations period should begin to run only after he chose to open

          and read the December 4, 2015 email. Accordingly, the ALJ’s recommendation to the

          Commission was that it deny petitioner’s request for review.

¶ 10         The matter then returned to the Commission, which adopted the ALJ’s recommendation.

          It found that the evidence was undisputed that CTA sent petitioner an email on August 11,

          2015 notifying him he would not be hired. It also found that petitioner admitted he received

          the December 4, 2015 email from CTA on that date, but chose not to open or read it at that

          time. Based on all the evidence, the Commission concluded that petitioner’s EEOC charge

          filed on June 9, 2016 was untimely under the Act pursuant to either date, given he did so 10

          months after the August 11, 2015 email and/or 188 days after he received the December 4,

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          2015 email. Therefore, in its final administrative decision, the Commission sustained the

          Department’s dismissal of petitioner’s charge for lack of jurisdiction.

¶ 11                                             ANALYSIS

¶ 12         As a threshold matter, we cannot overlook petitioner’s noncompliance with Illinois

          Supreme Court Rule (Rule) 341’s mandates governing the form and content of appellate

          briefs. See Ill. Sup. Ct. R. 341 (eff. Feb. 6, 2013). While we are cognizant that petitioner

          appears pro se, we say this because it is not as if he has violated only one or two of the

          Rule’s requirements, which could potentially be overlooked. See Voris v. Voris, 2011 IL

          App (1st) 103814, ¶ 8 (compliance with rules governing briefs on appeal is compulsory

          regardless of a party's status). That would be a major understatement. His brief is

          handwritten, with comments and thoughts crammed in margins that cannot be followed or

          comprehended. It does not contain a Table of Contents, a Standard of Review, a proper

          Appendix, or a non-argumentative Facts section. There are no relevant record citations nor

          legal citations. His opening brief is 198 pages long and his reply brief is 74 pages long; both

          are interspersed with non-record attachments including photographs, photocopies of

          newspaper articles, and printed emails that are entirely irrelevant to the instant matter. In

          addition to a prayer for relief we do not understand, he presents a multitude of overlapping

          arguments that are mostly indecipherable.

¶ 13         In its brief on appeal, CTA urges us to strike petitioner’s brief and dismiss this appeal.

          And, perhaps, we should. See Matlock v. Illinois Department of Employment Security, 2019

          IL App (1st) 180645, ¶ 14, and Wing v. Chicago Transit Authority, 2016 IL App (1st)

          153517, ¶ 11 (content and formatting rules are mandatory, pro se litigants are not absolved

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       No. 1-22-1300

          from these requirements, and we may choose to dismiss an appeal upon the failure to abide

          by them). However, while we have the prerogative to do so (see Holzrichter v. Yorath, 2013

          IL App (1st) 110287, ¶ 80), we choose not to here because in our view, the issue is clear: it

          is, at its core, the same one petitioner has argued before the Department, the Commission and

          the ALJ, namely, that his discrimination claim should not have been dismissed for lack of

          jurisdiction because, in his view, it was timely filed. Moreover, we have two cogent appellee

          briefs and a complete record before us (see North Community Bank v. 17011 South Park

          Ave., LLC, 2015 IL App (1st) 133672, ¶ 14 (reviewing merits of the appeal despite

          appellant’s Rule 341 violations)). Accordingly, we address this appeal in full so this matter

          can finally receive a judicial resolution.

¶ 14           Turning to the merits, then, we find that petitioner fails to present any viable argument

          warranting the reversal of the Commission’s decision.

¶ 15         Under the Act, it is “a civil rights violation for any person on the basis of unlawful

          discrimination to * * * [d]eny or refuse to another the full and equal enjoyment of the

          facilities, goods, and services of any public place of accommodation.” 775 ILCS 5/5-102(A)

          (West 2016). Where a petitioner brings a charge under the Act, the Department shall conduct

          an investigation to determine whether the allegations are supported by substantial evidence.

          See 775 ILCS 5/7A-102(C)(1) (West 2016). “Substantial evidence is evidence which a

          reasonable mind accepts as sufficient to support a particular conclusion and which consists of

          more than a mere scintilla” of proof. 775 ILCS 5/7A-102(D)(2) (West 2016). If the

          Department determines there is no substantial evidence supporting the charge, it shall dismiss

          the charge. See 775 ILCS 5/7A-102(D)(3) (West 2016). The petitioner may then either

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       No. 1-22-1300

          commence a civil action in circuit court or, as petitioner did here, file a request for review of

          the dismissal with the Commission. 775 ILCS 5/7A-102(D)(3) (West 2016).

¶ 16         A final order of the Commission may be judicially reviewed by our Court under the

          abuse of discretion standard of review. See 775 ILCS 5/8-111(B)(1) (West 2016); Young v.

          Illinois Human Rights Comm’n, 2012 IL App (1st) 112204, ¶ 32. Under this standard, we

          will not disturb the Commission’s decision unless it is arbitrary or capricious. See Young,

          2012 IL App (1st) 112204, ¶ 33. A decision is arbitrary or capricious if it contravenes the

          legislature’s intent, fails to consider a crucial aspect of the problem, or offers an impossible

          explanation contrary to agency expertise. See Owens v. Dep’t of Human Rights, 403 Ill. App.

          3d 899, 917 (2010). We review the final order of the Commission, not the Department’s

          decision. See Zaderaka v. Illinois Human Rights Comm’n, 131 Ill. 2d 172, 180 (1989). The

          Commission’s findings of fact “shall be sustained unless the court determines that such

          findings are contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence.” 775 ILCS 5/8-11(B)(2) (West

          2016). This deference to the Commission’s findings of fact is particularly true of the

          credibility determinations it makes. See Zaderaka, 131 Ill. 2d at 180; accord Folbert v. Dep’t

          of Human Rights, 303 Ill. App. 3d 13, 25 (1999). A reviewing court may not reweigh the

          evidence or substitute its judgment for that of the Commission, and abuse of discretion will

          be found only where no reasonable person could agree with the decision rendered. See

          Young, 2012 IL App (1st) 112204, ¶ 33.

¶ 17         As noted at the outset of our decision, and as all the parties to this appeal agree, the prior

          version of section 7A-102(A)(1) governed the timeliness of the filing of petitioner’s

          discrimination claim. It afforded him 180 days from the date that the civil rights violation

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          occurred to file it. See 775 ILCS 5/7A-102(A)(1) (West 2016); Trembczynski v. Human

          Rights Comm’n, 252 Ill. App. 3d 966, 969 (1993). Our Court has made repeatedly clear that

          this 180-day filing requirement is jurisdictional. See Trembczynski, 252 Ill. App. 3d at 969

          (citing Whitaker v. Human Rights Comm’n, 184 Ill. App. 3d 356, 359 (1989), and Polacek v.

          Human Rights Comm’n, 160 Ill. App. 3d 664, 667 (1987)). The failure to file a charge of

          discrimination within this prescribe time deprives the Department and the Commission of

          jurisdiction to proceed any further with respect to it and any of the claims asserted therein.

          See Trembczynski, 252 Ill. App. 3d at 969 (citing Polacek, 160 Ill. App. 3d at 667, and Lee v.

          Human Rights Comm’n, 126 Ill. App. 3d 666, 669 (1984)). Plainly put, compliance with

          section 7-102(A)(1)’s time limit “is a condition precedent to the right to seek a remedy,” it is

          “a prerequisite to the Commission’s acquisition of subject matter jurisdiction,” and neither

          the Department nor the Commission has any power or authority to consider complaints based

          on untimely-filed charges. Weatherly v. Illinois Human Rights Comm’n, 338 Ill. App. 3d

          433, 437 (2003) (citing Robinson v. Human Rights Comm’n, 201 Ill. App. 3d 722, 728

          (1990), Fredman Brothers Furniture Co. v. Department of Revenue, 109 Ill. 2d 202, 209-10

          (1985), and Pickering v. Illinois Human Rights Comm’n, 146 Ill. App. 3d 340, 344-47

          (1986)).

¶ 18         Considering any of the operable dates mentioned in this cause, petitioner’s discrimination

          claim was untimely and divested the Department and the Commission of any jurisdiction.

¶ 19         First, as the ALJ did here, we examine the August 11, 2015 date. The Department and

          CTA alleged that this was the date that CTA first emailed petitioner to inform him he would

          not be hired. Petitioner denied this, alleging he never received an email on that date from

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          CTA. However, CTA produced the email for the ALJ on which defendant’s email address

          appeared in the “bcc” line, along with an affidavit from a CTA employee attesting that the

          email was sent on that date to the same email address petitioner provided on his application,

          and copies of statements petitioner made during the Department’s investigation in which he

          stated he knew as of August 2015 that he would not be hired. Based on this evidence, the

          ALJ made a finding of fact that petitioner had been informed of the adverse hiring decision

          via CTA’s August 11, 2015 email to him. Deferring to this factual determination as we must

          under our standard of review here, the statutory 180-day limitations period began to run,

          then, on that date. See Cano v. Village of Dolton, 250 Ill. App. 3d 130, 138 (1993) (“for the

          purposed of the 180-day limitation period to file a complaint with [the department], a

          discriminatory event will be complete and will be considered actionable at the first instant in

          which a complainant receives notice of the allegedly discriminatory conduct”). Petitioner,

          however, did not file his claim until June 9, 2016, some 10 months after August 11, 2015.

          As this was more than the 180-day period allowed by the Act, his claim was untimely and

          neither the Department nor the Commission had jurisdiction to consider it.

¶ 20         Next, even were we to, for some reason, choose to ignore the ALJ’s finding of fact that

          petitioner received notice of the adverse hiring decision via the August 11, 2015 email, his

          claim would still be untimely. Petitioner insisted before the Commission and the ALJ, and

          he seemingly does so again in his brief on appeal, that he never received that first email from

          CTA, even though his own statements to the Department indicated otherwise. Indeed, and

          upon the Commission’s acknowledgement and referral, it was this very discrepancy that

          brought this matter before the ALJ. Thus, we could conceivably give petitioner the benefit of

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       No. 1-22-1300

          the doubt. For example, he states, and CTA has never denied, that he emailed CTA in

          October 2015, two months after the August 11, 2015 email, inquiring about the status of his

          application. A plausible reason for this would be that he had not yet received notice of

          CTA’s adverse employment decision.

¶ 21         However, while we recognize this possibility, it would, regardless, do little to help

          petitioner. This is because, while an argument might be made that he did not receive the

          August 11, 2015, email, the same cannot be said when it comes to CTA’s second email sent

          December 4, 2015. That email, which referenced the first, came two months after

          petitioner’s email inquiring about the status of his application. Undeniably, and indisputably,

          petitioner admitted he received CTA’s December 4, 2015 email. Not only that, but he

          conceded that it appeared in his email box on the same day CTA sent it—again, December 4,

          2015. Affixing this later date as the date on which he received notice of the allegedly

          discriminatory conduct, the 180-day limitations period would have begun, then, on December

          4, 2015. However, the day petitioner filed his charge was, again, June 9, 2016—188 days

          later. Accordingly, even under this later date, petitioner’s claim was nonetheless untimely.

¶ 22         The last cognizable argument petitioner raises herein is two-fold. First, he claims that

          because he did not open the December 4, 2015 email, which he admittedly received on that

          date, until January 8, 2016, it is this date that becomes operable for the sake of jurisdiction,

          and as this date is only 154 days from the date he filed his charge (June 9, 2016), his charge

          was timely. This is unfathomable. Not only does he fail to cite to a single piece of legal

          precedent supporting such a claim, but this is in direct contravention to every one we have

          found. It is well established that the Act’s 180-day limitations period “runs from the date the

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          claimant first received notice of the allegedly discriminatory conduct, as opposed to the time

          at which the harm caused by the alleged misconduct was most acutely felt.” See Constant v.

          Turris Coal Co., 199 Ill. App. 3d 214, 222 (1990). In other words, the clock does not begin

          to run when a litigant chooses to make himself aware of the alleged discrimination but,

          rather, when it is communicated to him, i.e., when he actually, and first, receives notice of it.

          See Allen v. Lieberman, 359 Ill. App. 3d 1170, 1178 (2005) (“courts focus on the time the

          discriminatory decision is made and communicated to the complainant, not on the time the

          consequences of the decision are felt). Here, that would have been August 11, 2015, or more

          generously, December 4, 2015, not January 8, 2016. Moreover, we cannot even begin to

          contemplate what our laws would look like and how they would operate if we accepted

          petitioner’s argument that nothing is set in motion until a potential litigant, who admits he

          received an email about a potential claim he might want to pursue, finally opens and reads an

          email notifying him of that potential claim at a time of his own choosing. Not only would

          this make statutes of limitations ineffectual, but any attempt to enforce a limitations period

          would necessarily be swallowed up were this to be accepted.

¶ 23         Second, petitioner insists that were we not to accept his argument for using the January 8,

          2016 date, his charge was nevertheless timely pursuant to the December 4, 2015 date because

          weekends and holidays must not be counted within the 180-day limitations window. Under

          his view, there were only 134 days between December 4, 2015 and June 9, 2016 if weekends

          were not counted, and only 128 days if weekends and holidays (including his own birthday)

          were excluded--either way rendering his charge timely. However, just like his others, this

          argument is meritless in every way possible. Again, he fails to cite any legal proposition for

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          this. And, again, his assertion is in direct contravention to our well-established precedent.

          See, e.g., Budzileni v. Dep’t of Hum. Rts., 392 Ill. App. 3d 422 (2009), and Villalobos v. FDL

          Foods, Inc., 298 Ill. App. 3d 132 (1998) (calculating Act’s 180-day limitations period by

          counting all calendar days from date of alleged violation); see also, e.g., Carroll v. Dept. of

          Employment Security, 389 Ill. App. 3d 404 (2009) (rejecting claim that an administrative 35-

          day statutory filing period included only days on which courts are open). No more needs to

          be said in this regard.

¶ 24                                           CONCLUSION

¶ 25          Ultimately, petitioner failed to file his discrimination charge against CTA in a timely

          manner. His June 9, 2016 filing was 10 months after he received the August 11, 2015 email

          from CTA about its adverse employment decision, and more generously, 188 days after he

          received (via his own concession) CTA’s second December 4, 2015 email stating the same.

          In either instance, his filing was beyond the Act’s 180-day limitations period for filing a

          discrimination claim. As neither the Department nor the Commission have the power under

          the Act to review his charge because of its untimeliness, it was properly dismissed for lack of

          jurisdiction.

¶ 26          Accordingly, for all the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Commission’s order sustaining

          the Department’s dismissal of petitioner’s charge for lack of jurisdiction.

¶ 27          Affirmed.

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