Restaurant asks Illinois Supreme Court to throw out indoor dining ban
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[December 22, 2020]
By SARAH MANSUR
Capitol News Illinois
smansur@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD — Lawyers for a Kane County
restaurant are asking the Illinois Supreme Court to overturn an
appellate court decision that found the governor’s indoor dining ban was
lawfully imposed.
FoxFire Tavern is one of dozens of restaurants that sued Gov. JB
Pritzker and his administration after he issued an executive order
imposing stricter restrictions on businesses, including a ban on indoor
dining and bar service, in response to rising COVID-19 cases and
hospitalizations throughout the state.
The state’s highest court has not yet weighed in on the legal arguments
challenging Pritzker’s power to impose the indoor dining ban, or any
other restrictions implemented in his numerous executive orders.
The 2nd District Appellate Court’s decision last month that upheld
Pritzker’s order prohibiting restaurants from allowing indoor dining
cannot stand because it “leaves the restaurant industry out in the cold
and without legal redress,” Kevin Nelson, one of FoxFire’s attorneys,
wrote in the legal brief to the Illinois Supreme Court submitted on
Friday.
The brief asks the court to accept the case and reverse the appellate
court’s ruling on the governor’s executive order. However, since the
court is not obligated to hear the case, the justices could reject that
request and decline to rule on it.
The restaurant won an early victory after suing Pritzker in October when
a Kane County judge granted the restaurant’s request for a temporary
restraining order that allowed FoxFire to ignore the new indoor dining
restrictions contained in the executive order.
The 2nd District Appellate Court’s decision last month overruled the
Kane County judge’s decision. The appellate court rejected the arguments
from FoxFire’s legal team that Pritzker is limited, under state law, to
issue one 30-day disaster proclamation, and also does not have the power
to order businesses closed.
Instead, the appellate court found that state law empowers the governor
to issue multiple disaster declarations. The appellate court also ruled
that Pritzker’s executive order did not amount to a “closure” for
businesses, and therefore, Illinois Department of Public Health Act
regulations governing business closures did not apply in this case.
Since that appellate court decision, the FoxFire case has been
consolidated in Sangamon County court with 18 other cases filed by
businesses operating as restaurants that are challenging the indoor
dining ban. The consolidated cases in Sangamon County are ongoing, and
no final decision has been issued.
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This photo from its Facebook page, shows the FoxFire Tavern in
Geneva. Attorneys for the Kane County restaurant are asking the
Illinois Supreme Court to overturn an appellate court decision that
found the governor’s indoor dining ban was lawfully imposed.
FoxFire’s appeal to the Illinois Supreme Court is known as an
“interlocutory appeal” because it asks a higher court to review a
decision while the case is pending in a lower court.
The governor, IDPH and the Kane County Health Department, which are
named in FoxFire’s appeal, have 21 days from Friday, Dec. 18, to
file a response but they are not required to do so. A spokesperson
for the Illinois Attorney General’s Office, which represents the
governor and state agencies, said its lawyers are reviewing the
legal filing.
FoxFire, a steak and seafood restaurant in Geneva, continues to
allow seating indoors, in defiance of the governor’s executive
order, as its legal case remains pending.
KC Gulbro, co-owner of the restaurant, did not respond to requests
for comment Monday. A call to the restaurant Monday confirmed it is
still serving customers indoors.
Pritzker has said his administration is relying on county health
departments and local law enforcement to issue citations and fines
to restaurants and bars that violate the ban on indoor dining and
bar service. A misdemeanor citation and fine are a last resort only
after attempts to ensure voluntary compliance are unsuccessful.
A Kane County Health Department spokesperson declined to comment,
citing pending litigation, and referred questions to the Kane County
State’s Attorney’s Office.
Kane County State’s Attorney Jamie Mosser also told Capitol News
Illinois she could not comment on pending litigation.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |