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Dec 21, 2021

IL Supreme Court Sidesteps Important Issue on Technical Grounds

Dodging an issue that had spawned multiple amicus curiae briefs regarding an interesting (and important) question—whether an employee’s representation in a workers’ compensation settlement agreement that he had only suffered a knee injury would later bar him from also pursuing damages for alleged injuries to his shoulder and back in a separate third-party action—the Supreme Court of Illinois held it had no appellate jurisdiction [Armstead v. National Freight, Inc., 2021 IL 126730, 2021 Ill. LEXIS 1187 (Dec. 16, 2021)]. Stressing that the state trial court’s order had disposed only of a certain issue—whether plaintiff’s injury allegations were limited by a previous judicial admission, the Court said that the underlying negligence claim survived the motion [emphasis added]. The trial court’s ruling was not a final order, therefore, and was not subject to review under Illinois Rule 304(a). The Supreme Court’s decision vacates a lower appellate court’s holding that the plaintiff’s statement in his settlement agreement barred him from later introducing evidence of injuries to his back and shoulder.

Background

On March 6, 2015, plaintiff was involved in a vehicular collision when a truck, owned by his employer and driven by plaintiff, was struck by another commercial vehicle. The other vehicle was owned by an unrelated company and was being operated by an employee of that other company (collectively referred to herein as “the defendants”). As a result of the collision, plaintiff filed a Pennsylvania workers’ compensation claim against his employer, which led to the execution of a “Compromise and Release Agreement by Stipulation” (the settlement agreement) settling the claim. Plaintiff also filed the instant third-party claim against the defendants in an Illinois county circuit court.

Settlement Agreement

Under the terms of the settlement agreement, the plaintiff was required to state “the precise nature of [his] injury.” He responded:

Right knee strain. The parties agree that [the plaintiff] did not sustain any other injury or medical condition as a result of his 3/06/2015 work injury.

The “Conclusions of Law” section of the Agreement further stated as follows:

[T]he Agreement as referenced of record is appropriately approved as binding only on the signing [p]arties, and limited to their respective rights and obligations under the [Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation] Act. This [d]ecision is entered without adoption or litigated determination on the merits of the matters agreed upon, and is not to alter rights or obligations of any third party not a signatory to the Agreement, including any health insurance company or governmental agency.

The settlement agreement was approved in Pennsylvania.

Civil Action Alleged Injuries Beyond the Knee

In plaintiff’s civil action filed against the defendants, he alleged that he had been injured through the defendant’s negligent actions. He further alleged that due to their negligence he had sustained injuries to his back, shoulder, and knee.

Defendants Sought Partial Summary Judgment

The defendants moved for partial summary judgment, contending in relevant part that plaintiff’s statements in the settlement agreement amounted to a judicial admission that he had only sustained injuries to his knee. They further contended that, pursuant to the doctrine of collateral estoppel, they were entitled to judgment as a matter of law regarding the nature and extent of the injury plaintiff sustained in the collision. Plaintiff countered that he had executed the settlement agreement without litigating and without having the incentive to litigate the matter. He argued that the settlement agreement had not altered his rights beyond the terms of the Pennsylvania Act and did not affect third-party liabilities since the defendants were not involved in the settlement agreement.

Circuit Court Grants Defendants’ Motion

The circuit court disagreed with plaintiff and granted defendants’ motion, holding that the settlement agreement’s statement regarding plaintiff’s right knee strain constituted a judicial admission that prohibited him from claiming additional injuries. The circuit court rejected defendants’ collateral estoppel argument as a basis for granting the motion, however. Later, the circuit court denied plaintiff’s motion to reconsider.

Lower Appellate Court Affirms

A state appellate court affirmed the circuit court’s order but on a different basis, holding that plaintiff’s contentions of additional injury were barred pursuant to the doctrine of collateral estoppel. Finding the requirements of collateral estoppel met, the appellate court concluded that plaintiff was estopped from seeking compensation for any injury beyond the right knee strain referenced in the settlement agreement. It further found no unfairness in barring plaintiff from complaining of additional injuries since he had the opportunity to pursue those contentions during the Pennsylvania workers’ compensation proceedings.

Supreme Court Hears the Appeal

Thereafter, The Illinois Supreme Court allowed plaintiff’s petition for leave to appeal and granted the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association and the Workers’ Compensation Lawyers Association leave to submit amicus curiae briefs in support of plaintiff’s position. The court also granted the Illinois Association of Defense Trial Counsel leave to submit an amicus curiae brief in support of the defendants’ position.

In its decision on the case, the Court noted that the defendants had filed a separate motion to dismiss the appeal as moot. The defendants argued that after the circuit court granted the motion for partial summary judgment, plaintiff had voluntarily dismissed his cause of action in the circuit court and had not refiled by the required one-year refiling date. Accordingly, said the defendants, the statute of limitations had expired.

The Court gave plaintiff a Pyrrhic victory on that issue. The Court noted, however, that its review of the record showed that the Court—as well as the lower appellate court—lacked jurisdiction to address the issue in the appeal.

Circuit Court’s Decision Had Not Been a “Final Judgment or Order”

Citing multiple authorities, the Court stressed that where an order disposed only of certain issues relating to the same basic claim, such a ruling was not subject to review under Illinois Rule 304(a). The Court noted that it had consistently drawn a clear distinction between judgments that dispose of “separate, unrelated claims,” which are immediately appealable under Rule 304(a), and orders that dispose only of “separate issues relating to the same claim,” which are not immediately appealable under Rule 304(a).

The Court said the circuit court’s order granting defendants’ motion disposed of an issue, i.e., whether plaintiff’s statement in the settlement agreement amounted to a judicial admission that precluded him from later asserting injuries to his back and shoulder. The Court circuit court’s order did not, however, dispose of plaintiff’s negligence claims against the defendants. Those negligence claims against defendants remained pending in the circuit court even after the circuit court entered its order limiting plaintiff to allegations involving only his knee strain injury. Because the circuit court’s order disposed only of a certain issue, i.e., whether plaintiffs injury allegations were limited by a previous judicial admission, which related to the same basic negligence claims, its ruling was not subject to review under Rule 304(a). The Court concluded by stressing that permitting this appeal would promote precisely the type of piecemeal appeals Rule 304(a) was designed to discourage.

Case Sent Back to Circuit Court for Dismissal

The Court turned back to the fact that after to the circuit court’s Rule 304(a) finding, plaintiff had dismissed his action in the circuit court, where jurisdiction remained due to the improper Rule 304(a) finding. After dismissal, plaintiff failed to refile the action within one year pursuant to section 13-217 of the Code of Civil Procedure or within the statute of limitations period. Plaintiff’s civil action, therefore, remained dismissed. Accordingly, the Court vacated the appellate court’s decision in its entirety and remanded the cause to the circuit court for dismissal.