In a 4-3 decision with a blistering dissent from
the Republican minority, the Illinois Supreme Court declined to rule on a
question of whether Illinois Firearm Owners Identification Act is
unconstitutional.
It was the second time the
case of the People v. Vivian Brown came before the court and the second
time the court declined to rule on the constitutionality of the state
statute requiring Illinoisans to receive a permit to legally own a gun.
The
majority opinion released Thursday was written by Chief Justice Anne M.
Burke and was procedural in nature. It contended that the White County
Circuit Court failed to adhere to the Supreme Court’s previous 2020 ruling in the case, so it once again vacated the lower court’s ruling that the FOID Act was unconstitutional.
Burke was joined in the majority by Democrats Mary Jane Theis, P. Scott Neville Jr. and Robert Carter.
Justice
Michael Burke – who is not related to the chief justice – wrote the
dissent, making up 11 of the 21 pages in the Thursday order.
He
argued the majority decision was “based on a misunderstanding of the
record and a misreading of this court’s precedents,” and that it could
keep the defendant in “legal limbo” for an untold period of years.
The case involves a White County resident, Vivian
Claudine Brown, who was charged in March 2017 with possession of a
firearm without a FOID card after police responded to her estranged
husband’s call that she had fired a gun in her home.
Police found the rifle but no evidence that she fired it. Nonetheless, she was charged with the crime.
But a circuit judge in White County threw out the
charge, ruling that the fees and forms required to receive a FOID
imposed an unconstitutional burden on Brown’s Second Amendment right to
keep a firearm in her own home.
But it was an
alternative ruling made by the same court without prompting from Brown’s
legal team that allowed the state’s high court to decline to rule on
the constitutional grounds.
That alternative
ruling contended that the Illinois General Assembly, when it passed the
FOID Act, never meant for it to apply in the home, because if it did, it
would mean anybody with knowledge of a firearm and exclusive control
over the area where it was kept could be construed as possessing the
gun.
As a general rule, courts decline to rule on constitutional matters when a case can be decided on other grounds.
Because
the circuit court ruled on an aspect of the FOID Act pertaining to
state law, the Supreme Court’s 2020 decision vacated the order
pertaining to constitutionality and sent the matter back to White County
to “permit the normal appellate process to run its course.”
The
ruling was essentially a win for Brown, but her legal team contended it
wouldn’t stand up to an appeal. Thus, Brown’s attorneys filed a motion
to reconsider, arguing that the inevitable loss on appeal would delay
clarity in the case.The circuit court agreed and reinstated the charges. Brown’s attorneys
then filed a new motion to dismiss on constitutional grounds, which the
judge upheld, finding that “any fee associated with exercising the core
fundamental Constitutional right of armed self-defense within the
confines of one’s home violates the Second Amendment.”
Thus, the state appealed the ruling back to the
Supreme Court, leading to the Thursday ruling in which the majority
decided the lower court had no authority to reconsider the case after
the Supreme Court’s 2020 ruling.
“When a cause
is ‘remanded by the reviewing court with instructions to the circuit
court to enter a specific order, the reviewing court’s judgment is, with
respect to the merits, ‘the end of the case,’ and there is ‘nothing
which the circuit court [is] authorized to do but enter the decree,’’”
the court wrote, quoting other case law.
If the
lower court were allowed to make changes to the Supreme Court’s ruling,
the majority wrote, it would set a precedent “upending our hierarchical
judicial system.”
The dissent from Michael
Burke, however, argued that the majority asserted finality of its ruling
while also suggesting that the proper place for review is now an
appellate court, which is itself a lower court.
“In
reality, the judgment of the circuit court was not a judgment of this
court that was final and conclusive on all the parties because this
court declined to reach the merits of the statutory analysis and only
vacated the circuit court’s judgment on procedural grounds,” Michael
Burke wrote in the dissent. “Accordingly, the trial court was free to
reconsider the merits of that ruling, and nothing about it doing so
upends our hierarchical judicial system.”
Michael
Burke argued that the majority’s supposition that Brown received
“complete relief” when the circuit court vacated her charges was faulty,
because the legal reasoning backing that decision is unlikely to hold
up upon appeal.Thus, he predicted, the case will ultimately end up back at the Supreme
Court on the constitutional basis, only after a significant delay to
Brown’s detriment as the case moves through the appellate court.