FoxFire Restaurant will appeal decision to state Supreme Court.
By Sarah Mansur, Capitol News Illinois
An appeals court has handed down a favorable ruling to Gov. JB Pritzker in a legal challenge to his administrations restrictions on bars and restaurants to curb the spread of COVID-19.
The 2nd District Appellate Court overruled a Kane County judges decision to temporarily block Pritzkers indoor dining ban from taking effect at the FoxFire Restaurant in Geneva.
The state court on Friday decided that Pritzker has the power under state law to issue successive disaster proclamations.
In an email, Kevin Nelson, one of FoxFires attorneys, said his client plans to appeal the ruling to the Illinois Supreme Court, which could accept or decline to hear the case.
Unfortunately, the 2nd District has decided to play politics rather than applying the statute. This case is about separation of powers, which the appellate court has missed completely. Instead, the justice authoring the opinion misstates law and fact, Nelson wrote in an email. Needless to say, FoxFire will file their appeal to the Supreme Court of Illinois where they hope justice will be served against the governors overreach and for the ability of a local restaurant to continue to pursue its calling, safely.
A spokesperson for the Illinois Attorney Generals Office, which represents Pritzker and the state Department of Public Health, said they are pleased with the decision.
As the first appellate court to rule on the governors authority, the 2nd District agreed that the law clearly gives the governor the authority to issue multiple and successive 30-day disaster proclamations and executive orders, and the governors authority to respond to the pandemic with executive orders is not limited by the Public Health Acts quarantine and business closure provisions, the spokesperson said in an email.
However, the appellate courts order was issued under Supreme Court Rule 23 which means the order cannot be cited as precedent in other cases, with limited exceptions, and applies only to this case.
The court dissolved the temporary restraining order and sent the case back to Kane County for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
FoxFire filed a lawsuit in response to restrictions imposed last month in Region 8, which includes Kane and DuPage counties. Those restrictions, referred to as Tier 1 mitigations, include banning indoor service at bars and restaurants, and limiting capacity of gatherings to the lesser of 25 people or 25 percent of maximum occupancy.
Kane County Judge Kevin Buschs now overruled Oct. 26 decision to grant a temporary restraining order allowed the FoxFire Restaurant to ignore those restrictions.
FoxFires owners argued the states prohibition on bars and restaurants from having indoor dining could not be enforced because the state Emergency Management Agency Act only gives the governor the authority to issue a single 30-day disaster proclamation.
The owners also maintained that business closures enforced by the state must comply with the guidelines mandated under the states Department of Public Health Act, and they claimed these guidelines were ignored.
In reversing Buschs ruling, the appellate court found that nothing in (the Emergency Management Agency Acts) language precludes the governor from issuing multiple disaster proclamations each with its own 30-day grant of emergency powers arising from one ongoing disaster, according to the courts 17-page order.
The appellate court also referenced laws passed by the Illinois General Assembly during the spring session regarding the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act.
According to the court, in addition to the clear language of the (IEMAA), these statutes all confirm our conclusion that the Legislature intended to allow the governor to issue successive disaster proclamations stemming from an ongoing disaster.
The appellate court also rejected the argument that restrictions imposed on businesses related to COVID-19 must follow the Illinois Department of Public Health Acts quarantine and closure guidelines.
Pritzkers latest executive order did not impact the IDPHA because it did not reference quarantine orders, isolation orders, or the business closure orders, the court wrote in its decision.
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