Williams v. Miracle Center, Inc. , 2022 IL App (1st) 210291 ( 2022 )


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  •                                    
    2022 IL App (1st) 210291
    Opinion filed: March 24, 2022
    FIRST DISTRICT
    FOURTH DIVISION
    No. 1-21-0291
    VICKY WILLIAMS,                                          )           Appeal from the
    )           Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                             )           Cook County.
    )
    v.                                                       )           No. 2019 L 007529
    )
    THE MIRACLE CENTER, INC.; FRAZIER                        )
    PREPARATORY ACADEMY; and THE BOARD                       )
    OF EDUCATION OF THE CITY OF CHICAGO,                     )
    )
    Defendants,                                      )
    )           Honorable
    (Frazier Preparatory Academy and the Board of            )           Christopher E. Lawler,
    Education of the City of Chicago, Defendants-Appellees). )           Judge, presiding.
    JUSTICE ROCHFORD delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justices Lampkin and Martin concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     This case arises out of an incident on August 20, 2018, in which plaintiff, Vicky Williams,
    slipped and fell on a puddle of water leaking from a defective water cooler inside a commercial
    building owned by the Miracle Center, Inc., and being occupied by Frazier Preparatory Academy
    (Frazier) for a school event. Plaintiff brought a three-count, second amended complaint sounding
    in negligence against the Miracle Center (count I), Frazier (count II), and the Board of Education
    of the City of Chicago (Board) (count III). Frazier and the Board (collectively, Frazier defendants)
    each filed a combined section 2-619.1 motion to dismiss (735 ILCS 5/2-619.1 (West 2020)) counts
    II and III against them, respectively, pursuant to sections 2-615 and 2-619 of the Code of Civil
    Procedure (Code). The Frazier defendants argued in their section 2-615 motions that plaintiff failed
    to plead that they owed her a duty of care; they argued in their section 2-619 motions that both
    counts were premised on their alleged negligence in failing to properly inspect the water cooler
    No. 1-21-0291
    prior to its use but that they were immune under section 2-105 of the Local Governmental and
    Governmental Employees Tort Immunity Act (Tort Immunity Act) (745 ILCS 10/2-105 (West
    2020)). Section 2-105 provides:
    “A local public entity is not liable for injury caused by its failure to make an inspection, or
    by reason of making an inadequate or negligent inspection, of any property, other than its
    own, to determine whether the property complies with or violates any enactment or
    contains or constitutes a hazard to health or safety.” 
    Id.
    ¶2     The circuit court denied the Frazier defendants’ section 2-615 motions but granted the
    section 2-619 motions to dismiss counts II and III based on the immunity provided in section 2-
    105. Count I against the Miracle Center was not dismissed. The circuit court subsequently entered
    an order pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 304(a) (eff. Mar. 8, 2016) finding that there was
    no just reason to delay enforcement or appeal of the dismissal of counts II and III against the
    Frazier defendants.
    ¶3     On appeal from the dismissal order, plaintiff argues that section 2-105 tort immunity is
    inapplicable to the negligence allegations against the Frazier defendants. We reverse and remand
    for further proceedings.
    ¶4     On August 20, 2019, plaintiff filed a three-count, first amended complaint against the
    Miracle Center and the Frazier defendants. Plaintiff alleged that the Miracle Center owned,
    controlled, and maintained a commercial building at 2311 North Pulaski Road in Chicago. Frazier
    was a charter school under the Board. On August 20, 2018, plaintiff was lawfully on the premises
    as a business invitee, having been invited by the Frazier defendants to provide catering services
    there for a school event.
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    No. 1-21-0291
    ¶5     Count I was directed against the Miracle Center and alleged that it owed plaintiff a duty to
    exercise ordinary care by controlling and maintaining its premises in a reasonably safe condition
    for her and for all other persons of the general public lawfully on the premises and “further not to
    create or allow any dangerous conditions to exist on or about the premises.” Despite its duty, the
    Miracle Center committed the following negligent acts and/or omissions:
    “(a) created a dangerous condition inside the building by providing a defective
    beverage stand which leaked water as the ice melted, creating a puddle of water in which
    Plaintiff slipped and fell;
    (b) failed to provide a safe premise for Plaintiff to perform her work;
    (c) failed to inspect the premises to be certain that it was in good, safe, and proper
    condition;
    (d) failed to warn the Plaintiff and the others of the unsafe, defective, and dangerous
    condition of the floor and/or beverage stand;
    (e) failed to inspect and maintain the beverage stand when Defendant knew or in
    the exercise of ordinary care should have known that said inspection and maintenance was
    necessary to prevent injury;
    (f) otherwise failed to reasonably maintain entrance/exit staircase, creating an
    unreasonable risk of injury.”
    ¶6     Counts II (against Frazier) and III (against the Board) alleged that they each controlled and
    maintained the premises as part of an event held by Frazier and that each of them owed her a duty
    to exercise ordinary care by controlling and maintaining the premises in a reasonably safe
    condition for plaintiff and for all other persons of the general public lawfully on the premises, and
    not to create or allow any dangerous conditions to exist on or about the premises. Plaintiff further
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    No. 1-21-0291
    alleged in counts II and III that, despite their duty, each of the Frazier defendants committed the
    same negligent acts and omissions as set forth in count I against the Miracle Center.
    ¶7      Plaintiff subsequently testified in a discovery deposition that she was hired by Frazier to
    provide lunchtime catering for an in-service meeting of teachers at the premises on August 20,
    2018. Plaintiff arrived around 11 a.m. and began setting up in a conference room. As plaintiff was
    carrying a tray of fruit to a table in the center of the room, she slipped and fell, injuring her left
    shoulder. After falling, she noticed a puddle of water on the floor and determined that she had
    slipped on the water.
    ¶8      Plaintiff testified that there was a water cooler to the left side of the table, near the puddle,
    which contained bottled water and sodas as well as melted ice. Water was dripping from the cooler.
    Plaintiff opined that the water she had slipped on came from the cooler because “there was nothing
    else in the area other than that.”
    ¶9      Plaintiff testified that the owner of the Miracle Center, Mary Santana, spoke with plaintiff
    after her fall and told her that there had been a party at the premises on the previous night and that
    she had been made aware that the water cooler had a hole in it and was leaking. Santana apologized
    to plaintiff.
    ¶ 10    Plaintiff tendered a request for production to the Miracle Center, which produced a
    transcribed statement from Santana in which she said that plaintiff was hired as a caterer by Frazier
    for an employee development event at the premises on August 20, 2018. Plaintiff arrived at the
    premises and was walking in the first-floor conference room when she slipped and fell on a puddle
    of water. Santana stated that “the water had leaked out” from a water cooler located in the southeast
    corner of the room. The water cooler was owned by the Miracle Center and “was left in the
    conference room from a prior event and was simply sitting in the corner of the room at the time of
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    No. 1-21-0291
    the incident.” Water and ice “would periodically leak out of the cooler so they had placed a large
    black hefty garbage bag inside the cooler” to try and stop the leaking. The garbage bag was in the
    cooler at the time of the incident.
    ¶ 11   Felicia Williams, the director of operations for Frazier, provided a sworn affidavit stating
    that Frazier is a charter school that held an “event” at the premises on August 20, 2018. Frazier
    did not own, operate, control, or maintain the premises. Plaintiff was not an employee or agent of
    Frazier.
    ¶ 12   Emily Abarca, the manager of operations for the Board, provided a sworn affidavit stating
    that the Board did not own or operate the premises and that plaintiff was not an employee or agent
    of the Board.
    ¶ 13   On September 29, 2020, the trial court entered an order sua sponte striking plaintiff’s first
    amended complaint without prejudice and instructed her to file a second amended complaint
    clarifying which of the defendants owned, controlled, or maintained the premises.
    ¶ 14   On October 1, 2020, plaintiff filed her three-count, second amended complaint. Count I
    was directed against the Miracle Center and alleged that it owned, managed, controlled, and
    maintained the premises and owed plaintiff a duty to exercise ordinary care by controlling and
    maintaining its premises in a reasonably safe condition for her and, further, not to create or allow
    any dangerous conditions to exist on the premises. Despite its duty, the Miracle Center committed
    the following negligent acts and/or omissions that proximately caused her to fall and injure herself
    on August 20, 2018:
    “(a) created a dangerous condition on the premises by providing a defective water
    cooler to Defendants Frazier and Board of Education, which leaked and created a puddle
    of water in which Plaintiff slipped and fell;
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    No. 1-21-0291
    (b) failed to provide a safe premises for Plaintiff Vicky Williams to work;
    (c) failed to inspect the premises to ensure that it was in good, safe, and proper
    condition for people lawfully on the premises, including Plaintiff Vicky Williams;
    (d) failed to warn Defendants Frazier and Board of Education of the defective
    condition of the water cooler;
    (e) failed to inspect and/or maintain the water cooler to ensure that it was in proper
    working order;
    (f) failed to secure or remove the water cooler when they knew it was defective and
    that the premises were going to be used by Defendant Frazier.”
    ¶ 15   Count II (against Frazier) and count III (against the Board) alleged that they each controlled
    and maintained the premises as part of an event held on the premises by Frazier and that they each
    owed plaintiff a duty to exercise ordinary care in controlling and maintaining the premises so as
    not to create or allow any dangerous conditions. Despite their duty, each of the Frazier defendants
    committed the following negligent acts, which caused plaintiff to fall and injure herself on August
    20, 2018:
    “(a) created a dangerous condition on the premises by using a defective water cooler
    which leaked and created the puddle of water in which Plaintiff Vicky Williams slipped
    and fell;
    (b) failed to provide a safe premises for Plaintiff Vicky Williams to work;
    (c) failed to ensure that the water cooler was in good and safe working order before
    using it, thereby creating the puddle of water in which Plaintiff Vicky Williams fell;
    (d) failed to warn the Plaintiff Vicky Williams of the unsafe, defective, and
    dangerous condition of the floor and/or water cooler;
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    No. 1-21-0291
    (e) failed to use the water cooler in a safe manner, thereby creating the puddle of
    water in which Plaintiff Vicky Williams fell;
    (f) failed to use the water cooler for its intended use, thereby creating the puddle of
    water in which Plaintiff Vicky Williams fell.”
    ¶ 16    The Frazier defendants each filed a combined section 2-619.1 motion to dismiss,
    respectively, counts II and III against them pursuant to sections 2-615 and 2-619 of the Code. With
    respect to the section 2-615 motions, the Frazier defendants each argued that, despite the court’s
    explicit instructions to amend the first amended complaint so as to plead particular allegations
    regarding which of the defendants owned, maintained, or controlled the premises, plaintiff had
    failed to do so. Instead, as in the first amended complaint, plaintiff alleged in the second amended
    complaint that the Miracle Center owned, managed, controlled, and maintained the premises and
    that each of the Frazier defendants simultaneously also controlled and maintained it. The Frazier
    defendants argued that plaintiff’s allegations that they each owed her a duty of care based on their
    control and maintenance of the premises was “vague” and “conclusive” and as such failed to state
    a cause of action for negligence against them.
    ¶ 17    With respect to the section 2-619 motions, the Frazier defendants argued that all of
    plaintiff’s allegations of negligence against them were premised on their underlying failure to
    properly inspect the Miracle Center’s water cooler to determine whether it constituted a hazard to
    plaintiff’s health or safety. They argued for immunity under section 2-105 of the Tort Immunity
    Act, which provides that a local public entity 1 is not liable for injury caused by its failure to make
    1
    Frazier argued that it is a local public entity pursuant to the Charter Schools Law (105 ILCS 5/27A-
    5(a), (g)(3)(West 2020)) (defining a charter school as a “public, nonsectarian, nonreligious, non-home
    based, and non-profit school [that is] organized and operated as a nonprofit corporation or other discrete,
    legal, nonprofit entity” and which is “not exempt from” the Tort Immunity Act; see also Danzig v.
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    No. 1-21-0291
    an adequate inspection of any property other than its own to determine whether it constitutes a
    hazard to health or safety. See 745 ILCS 10/2-105 (West 2020).
    ¶ 18    On January 13, 2021, the trial court entered an order denying the section 2-615 motions to
    dismiss, stating:
    “Taking all well pleaded facts as true, Counts II and III plead Frazier and the Board hosted
    an event at the Miracle Center. Despite [plaintiff] not alleging that Frazier or the Board
    rented or leased the venue under a contractual or other agreement, the record is sufficient
    for the Court to infer that [the Frazier defendants] controlled the premises so as to give rise
    to a duty of care.”
    ¶ 19    The court further stated:
    “Taking all well pleaded facts as true: [plaintiff] pleads that Frazier, and thus the Board,
    hosted an event at the Miracle Center. During the event, [both of the Frazier defendants]
    allegedly controlled and maintained the premises which included a water cooler. The water
    cooler leaked and created a puddle on the floor that [plaintiff] later encountered. The
    encounter caused [plaintiff] to fall and suffer the injuries for which she now seeks to
    recover. At this stage, such suffices to state claims for negligence against both Defendants.”
    ¶ 20    In the same January 13, 2021, order, the trial court granted the section 2-619 motions to
    dismiss. The court found that all the allegations of negligence against the Frazier defendants in
    counts II and III were premised on their underlying failure to inspect the Miracle Center’s water
    University of Chicago Charter School Corp., 
    2019 IL App (1st) 182187
    , ¶ 4 (holding that a charter school
    is a local public entity for purposes of the Tort Immunity Act)). The Board argues that it is a local public
    entity because the Tort Immunity Act’s definition of “local public entity” expressly includes school boards
    (see 745 ILCS 10/1-206 (West 2020)).
    -8-
    No. 1-21-0291
    cooler but that they were local public entities and that section 2-105 of the Tort Immunity Act
    immunized them for the failure to conduct a proper inspection.
    ¶ 21   On January 22, 2021, plaintiff filed a motion to reconsider the dismissal order, arguing that
    the immunity provided in section 2-105 does not apply because none of the allegations in counts
    II and III of the second amended complaint are premised on the Frazier defendants’ failure to
    inspect the water cooler; rather, the Frazier defendants are alleged to have created the dangerous
    condition (the puddle of water) by their use of the defective water cooler. Plaintiff argued in the
    motion to reconsider that, as the allegations in counts II and III of the second amended complaint
    center on the Frazier defendants’ use of the property and not on their inspection of the property,
    section 2-105 is inapplicable here.
    ¶ 22   On February 1, 2021, the trial court entered an order amending the dismissal order to
    include a Rule 304(a) finding allowing for an interlocutory appeal. The February 1 order stated in
    pertinent part:
    “3. Pursuant to this Order, Defendants, Frazier Preparatory Academy and Board of
    Education of the City of Chicago’s, Motions to Dismiss pursuant to 735 ILCS 5/2-615 are
    DENIED.
    4. Pursuant to this Order, Defendants, Frazier Preparatory Academy and Board of
    Education of the City of Chicago’s, Motions to Dismiss pursuant to 735 ILCS 5/2-619 are
    GRANTED.
    5. This Honorable Court has made an express written finding that there is no just
    reason for delaying either enforcement or appeal or both of Defendants, Frazier Preparatory
    Academy and Board of Education of the City of Chicago’s, dismissal pursuant to Illinois
    Supreme Court Rule 304(a).”
    -9-
    No. 1-21-0291
    ¶ 23   On March 2, 2021, the trial court denied plaintiff’s motion to reconsider the dismissal
    order. On March 17, 2021, plaintiff filed her Rule 304(a) appeal.
    ¶ 24   Initially, the Frazier defendants argue that we lack jurisdiction to consider plaintiff’s Rule
    304(a) appeal because she filed it 44 days after the February 1, 2021, dismissal order, rendering it
    untimely. We disagree.
    ¶ 25   Rule 304(a) states:
    “The time for filing a notice of appeal shall be as provided in Rule 303. In computing the
    time provided in Rule 303 for filing the notice of appeal, the entry of the required finding
    shall be treated as the date of the entry of final judgment.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 304(a) (eff. Mar. 8,
    2016).
    ¶ 26   Rule 303 states:
    “The notice of appeal must be filed with the clerk of the circuit court within 30 days after
    the entry of the final judgment appealed from, or, if a timely posttrial motion directed
    against the judgment is filed, whether in a jury or a nonjury case, within 30 days after the
    entry of the order disposing of the last pending postjudgment motion directed against that
    judgment or order ***.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 303(a)(1) (eff. July 1, 2017).
    ¶ 27   In the present case, the trial court entered the initial dismissal order on January 13, 2021,
    and plaintiff timely filed a postjudgment motion to reconsider on January 22, 2021. The trial court
    subsequently entered an amended dismissal order with the concomitant Rule 304(a) finding on
    February 1, 2021. However, the time for filing the notice of appeal did not start on February 1,
    2021, because plaintiff’s timely filed postjudgment motion directed against the dismissal order had
    not yet been disposed of by the trial court. The trial court disposed of the postjudgment motion on
    March 2, 2021, which triggered the 30-day period for filing her notice of appeal. Plaintiff timely
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    No. 1-21-0291
    filed her notice of appeal on March 17, 2021, within 30 days of the entry of the order disposing of
    the postjudgment motion. Accordingly, we possess jurisdiction to consider plaintiff’s appeal.
    ¶ 28   Plaintiff argues on appeal that the trial court erred by granting the Frazier defendants’
    section 2-619 motion to dismiss counts II and III of her second amended complaint based on
    section 2-105 of the Tort Immunity Act. Neither party argues the propriety of the denial of the
    section 2-615 motion or of the court’s finding that plaintiff had properly pleaded a duty of care
    owed to her by each of the Frazier defendants. Accordingly, we limit our analysis to a consideration
    of the section 2-619 dismissal order.
    ¶ 29   A section 2-619 motion to dismiss admits the legal sufficiency of the complaint but raises
    defects, defenses, or other affirmative matters appearing on the face of the complaint or established
    by external submissions, which defeat the cause of action. Nourse v. City of Chicago, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 160664
    , ¶ 14. When deciding the section 2-619 motion, the court accepts all well-pleaded
    facts in the complaint as true and will grant the motion when no set of facts can be proved that
    would allow plaintiff to recover. 
    Id.
     Thus, the court must construe the pleadings and supporting
    documents in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Valerio v. Moore Landscapes, LLC,
    
    2021 IL 126139
    , ¶ 20. Our review of an order granting a section 2-619 motion to dismiss is
    de novo. 
    Id.
    ¶ 30   The Tort Immunity Act protects local public entities and public employees from liability
    arising from the operations of government. Van Meter v. Darien Park District, 
    207 Ill. 2d 359
    , 368
    (2003). In enacting this law, the legislature adopted the general principle that local governmental
    units are liable in tort on the same basis as private tortfeasors but limited this liability with an
    extensive list of immunities based on specific government functions. Barnett v. Zion Park District,
    
    171 Ill. 2d 378
    , 386 (1996). The Tort Immunity Act does not create new duties on a governmental
    - 11 -
    No. 1-21-0291
    unit. 
    Id.
     Rather, it codifies the duties that existed at common law, to which the subsequently
    delineated immunities apply. 
    Id.
     The immunities established in the Tort Immunity Act are
    affirmative matters, and so local public entities bear the burden of proving their immunity. Van
    Meter, 
    207 Ill. 2d at 370
    . Because the Tort Immunity Act was enacted in derogation of the common
    law, it must be strictly construed against the public entity seeking immunity. 
    Id. at 368
    .
    ¶ 31    Plaintiff’s argument on appeal is that the trial court erred in dismissing counts II and III
    against the Frazier defendants based on the court’s construction of section 2-105 as conferring a
    “blanket immunity” for a local public entity against any allegation of liability based on its negligent
    inspection of any type of property that it does not own. 2 Plaintiff contends that the court failed to
    properly consider that section 2-105 only immunizes the local public entity for its negligent
    performance of a particular type of inspection, specifically, an inspection “to determine whether
    the property complies with or violates any enactment or contains or constitutes a hazard to health
    or safety.” 745 ILCS 10/2-105 (West 2020). Plaintiff asserts that “[t]his section only makes sense
    if the intent was to immunize those governmental units whose function it is to perform
    inspections—like building inspectors, elevator inspectors, restaurant inspectors and the like.”
    ¶ 32    Plaintiff further argues that a survey of cases applying section 2-105 of the Tort Immunity
    Act shows that it has only been used to immunize governmental units whose official function is to
    perform health and safety inspections of properties. In support, plaintiff cites Nourse, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 160664
    , Ware v. City of Chicago, 
    375 Ill. App. 3d 574
     (2007), and Hess v. Flores, 
    408 Ill. App. 3d 631
     (2011). In Nourse, an apprentice elevator serviceman brought a personal injury action
    2
    Plaintiff does not contend on appeal that the court erred in finding that the Frazier defendants are
    local public entities for purposes of the Tort Immunity Act. Nor does plaintiff contend on appeal that the
    court erred in finding that all the allegations of negligence contained in counts II and III against the Frazier
    defendants were premised on their underlying failure to inspect the water cooler prior to its use.
    - 12 -
    No. 1-21-0291
    against the City of Chicago (City) and an elevator inspector employed by the City’s bureau of
    elevators, alleging that he was injured as a result of the elevator inspector’s wrongful acts, or his
    failures to act, in his role as an inspector for the City. Nourse, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 160664
    , ¶ 1. In
    pertinent part, the suit was dismissed with prejudice under section 2-105. 
    Id.
     We affirmed, finding
    that section 2-105 specifically immunized the City for the elevator inspector’s conduct during the
    inspection. Id. ¶¶ 18-38.
    ¶ 33   In Ware, plaintiffs were injured when the back porch of a third-floor apartment in Lincoln
    Park collapsed. Ware, 375 Ill. App. 3d at 575-76. Plaintiffs filed suit against the City, alleging that
    its acts or omissions regarding inspection of the subject porch for building code violations
    constituted willful and wanton misconduct. Id. at 576. The circuit court denied the City’s motion
    to dismiss and, in pertinent part, certified the question of whether plaintiffs’ claims were barred by
    section 2-105 of the Tort Immunity Act. Id. at 575. We answered the question in the affirmative
    and reversed the denial of the City’s motion to dismiss, holding that section 2-105 immunizes the
    City for allegations of willful and wanton misconduct arising out of its inspection of the porch. Id.
    at 582-83.
    ¶ 34   In Hess, plaintiff fell from the second-floor, rear staircase of an apartment building in
    Chicago. Hess, 408 Ill. App. 3d at 632. Prior to her fall, the rear staircases and porches had been
    the subject of multiple inspections by the City’s department of buildings and judicial proceedings
    relating to building code violations. Id. Plaintiff sued the City for allegedly willful and wanton
    conduct on the part of its building inspectors. Id. The trial court granted summary judgment for
    the City. Id. We affirmed, finding in pertinent part that section 2-105 granted the City immunity
    for the allegations of willful and wanton conduct arising out of the building department’s
    inspections of the rear staircases and porches. Id. at 645-49.
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    No. 1-21-0291
    ¶ 35   Unlike in Nourse, Ware, and Hess, the Frazier defendants are not governmental inspectors
    whose official function is to inspect properties other than their own to determine whether they
    constitute a health or safety hazard or violate any enactment. Rather than being such governmental
    health and safety inspectors, the Frazier defendants are a charter school and school board who were
    conducting a school event at the Miracle Center and whose use of the Miracle Center’s water
    cooler during the event allegedly created the puddle that caused plaintiff to slip and fall. Plaintiff
    contends that, on these facts, section 2-105 immunity is inapplicable.
    ¶ 36   The Frazier defendants respond that the trial court properly read section 2-105 as it is
    written and that nothing in the language of the statute (or in any of the cases cited by plaintiff)
    limits the application of section 2-105 immunity to only those public entities whose function is to
    conduct official or formal health and safety inspections of properties other than their own. Nor
    does the Tort Immunity Act’s definition of “local public entity,” contained in section 1-206, limit
    it to such health and safety inspectors; rather, the definition of “local public entity” expressly
    includes school boards and school districts. See 745 ILCS 10/1-206 (West 2020). The Frazier
    defendants also point out that section 2-207, which contains the same protections for employees
    of local public entities as those contained in section 2-105, states:
    “A public employee is not liable for an injury caused by his failure to make an inspection,
    or by reason of making an inadequate or negligent inspection, of any property, other than
    that of the local public entity employing him, for the purpose of determining whether the
    property complies with or violates any enactment or contains or constitutes a hazard to
    health or safety.” Id. § 2-207.
    ¶ 37   The Frazier defendants argue that section 2-207 tracks the language of section 2-105 and
    contains no express statement limiting its protection to only those public employees specifically
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    No. 1-21-0291
    charged with the function of conducting official health and safety inspections of properties. They
    further argue that the legislative intent, as expressed by the language used in sections 2-105 and 2-
    207, clearly shows that the legislature intended to immunize all local public entities for any
    negligence in failing to properly conduct a health and safety inspection on any property other than
    their own prior to using it, even if those entities were not specifically charged with the function of
    conducting such an inspection. Under the Frazier defendants’ construction of section 2-105, they
    are immune from any negligence in failing to inspect the Miracle Center’s water cooler prior to
    using it at the school event and creating the puddle of water upon which plaintiff fell and injured
    herself.
    ¶ 38       When interpreting the Tort Immunity Act, our primary goal is to give effect to the intent
    of the legislature, which is best indicated by the language used in the Act. Hess, 408 Ill. App. 3d
    at 646. To accomplish this goal, we consider the entire statute, giving the words used their plain
    and ordinary meanings. Shannon Court Condominium Ass’n v. Armada Express, Inc., 
    2020 IL App (1st) 192341
    , ¶ 12. The statutory language must be viewed as a whole, such that each section of
    the statute is examined in relation to every other section. Scadron v. City of Des Plaines, 
    153 Ill. 2d 164
    , 185 (1992). We must not depart from the plain language of the Tort Immunity Act by
    reading into it exceptions, limitations, or conditions that conflict with the express legislative intent.
    See Barnett, 
    171 Ill. 2d at 389
    . However, where the statutory language is ambiguous, we may turn
    to extrinsic aids of statutory construction including legislative history and consideration of the
    reason and necessity for the law, the evils sought to be remedied, and the purpose to be achieved.
    Nowak v. City of Country Club Hills, 
    2011 IL 111838
    , ¶ 13; Williams v. Staples, 
    208 Ill. 2d 480
    ,
    487 (2004). When considering legislative intent, we must presume that the legislature did not
    intend an absurd, inconvenient or unjust result, and we select an interpretation of the statute that
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    No. 1-21-0291
    leads to a logical result and avoids an absurd one. Palm v. 2800 Lake Shore Drive Condominium
    Ass’n, 
    2014 IL App (1st) 111290
    , ¶ 53. Issues involving interpretation of the Tort Immunity Act
    are reviewed de novo. Nourse, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 160664
    , ¶ 15.
    ¶ 39   Applying these principles to the case at bar, we begin by considering the express language
    of section 2-105, which states that a local public entity is immunized for failing to make an
    inspection, or making a negligent inspection, of any property other than its own “to determine
    whether the property complies with or violates any enactment or contains or constitutes a hazard
    to health or safety.” 745 ILCS 10/2-105 (West 2020). The question unanswered by the statutory
    language is whether the local public entity so immunized must be tasked with the official function
    of conducting such a health and safety inspection of the property or whether the immunity for the
    failure to conduct a proper health and safety inspection applies to any local public entity (such as
    the Frazier defendants here), even where its official function has nothing to do with conducting
    such inspections. On the one hand, the Frazier defendants argue that section 2-105 does not contain
    any language specifically limiting the immunity provided therein to only those local public entities
    charged with the official function of conducting health and safety inspections of any properties
    other than their own; on the other hand, plaintiff argues that the last clause in section 2-105 limiting
    the immunity to a very specific type of inspection (i.e., an inspection to determine whether any
    property other than its own complies with or violates any enactment or contains a health or safety
    hazard) effectively clarifies that the immunity applies only to those local public entities whose
    official function, training, and expertise is to perform such specific health and safety inspections.
    ¶ 40    “A statute is ambiguous when it is capable of being understood by reasonably well-
    informed persons in two or more different senses, thus warranting the consideration of other
    sources to ascertain the legislative intent.” Advincula v. United Blood Services, 
    176 Ill. 2d 1
    , 18
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    No. 1-21-0291
    (1996). We find section 2-105 to be ambiguous, as it is capable of being understood by reasonably
    well-informed persons in two different senses: either as immunizing from tort liability only those
    public entities whose official function or purpose is to perform health and safety inspections of
    any properties other than their own or as more expansively immunizing all local public entities for
    any tort liability arising out of a negligent inspection of any property other than their own prior to
    its use, even if their official function was not to perform such an inspection.
    ¶ 41    Given this ambiguity in section 2-105 regarding the scope of its coverage, we may consider
    the historical and legislative background of the Tort Immunity Act, which gives insight into the
    reason and necessity of the law, the evils sought to be remedied, and the purpose to be achieved
    (while keeping in mind that the Act is to be strictly construed against the local public entity seeking
    immunity). Such a review of the historical and legislative background reveals that traditionally,
    under the doctrine of sovereign immunity, a governmental unit in Illinois was immune from tort
    liability. In re Chicago Flood Litigation, 
    176 Ill. 2d 179
    , 190 (1997). The doctrine originated in
    the common-law principle that “the King can do no wrong” and “the more logical and practical
    principle that there can be no legal right against the authority that makes the law on which the right
    depends.” 
    Id.
     However, the Illinois Supreme Court abolished the doctrine of sovereign immunity
    in 1959 (Molitor v. Kaneland Community Unit District No. 302, 
    18 Ill. 2d 11
     (1959)). In response
    to Molitor, the legislature enacted the Tort Immunity Act, which adopted the general principle that
    local public entities are liable in tort but limited this liability with “an extensive list of immunities
    based on specific government functions.” Barnett, 
    171 Ill. 2d at 386
    . By protecting local public
    entities in their performance of specific government functions, the legislature sought to preserve
    public funds for their intended purpose, instead of using those funds to pay damages on tort claims.
    Harris v. Thompson, 
    2012 IL 112525
    , ¶ 17.
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    No. 1-21-0291
    ¶ 42   With this historical and legislative underpinning of the Tort Immunity Act in mind, we
    must consider which specific government function the legislature sought to immunize under
    section 2-105, which is best indicated by the statutory language. Our review of the statutory
    language of section 2-105 reveals that it immunizes those local public entities whose function is
    to inspect any property other than its own to “determine whether the property complies with or
    violates any enactment or contains or constitutes a hazard to health or safety,” for example, those
    entities performing the elevator and building inspections at issue in Nourse, Ware, and Hess. By
    contrast, the Frazier defendants are a charter school and a school board whose function is to
    provide educational services. At the time of plaintiff’s injury, they were conducting an in-service
    teacher’s meeting and were not tasked with the function of inspecting the Miracle Center’s water
    cooler. As such, the Frazier defendants are not immune from liability under section 2-105.
    ¶ 43   Another rule of statutory construction is to view the statute as a whole so as to read section
    2-105 harmoniously and consistently with every other section of the Tort Immunity Act. Colella
    v. Lombard Park District, 
    2017 IL App (2d) 160847
    , ¶ 39. Review of the entirety of the Tort
    Immunity Act reveals that (consistent with its historical underpinnings), immunities are directed
    toward public entities and their employees who perform certain specified government functions.
    See, e.g., 745 ILCS 10/2-104 (West 2020) (providing tort immunity for the local public entity
    whose function is to issue, deny, suspend, or revoke any permit, license, or similar authorization);
    
    id.
     § 3-106 (immunizing the local public entity whose function is to provide recreational property).
    Consistent with the entirety of the Tort Immunity Act, then, we read section 2-105 as directing its
    immunity only toward the local public entities tasked with performing the specific government
    function described therein, i.e., those entities whose function is to conduct formal health and safety
    inspections of any properties other than their own as opposed to a charter school and local school
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    No. 1-21-0291
    board whose function is to perform educational services. Our holding leads to a logical result in
    which the Frazier defendants are not immunized for their alleged negligence that was unrelated to
    their intended purpose or function.
    ¶ 44   During oral argument held on this case, the Frazier defendants argued that Choice v. YMCA
    of McHenry County, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 102877
    , compels a different result. In Choice, students
    from Lawndale High School were attending a leadership program at a camp operated and
    maintained by the YMCA of McHenry County (YMCA). Id. ¶ 1. Early one morning, 16 of the
    students snuck out of the dormitory to ride paddleboats on the nearby Fox River. Id. Three of the
    students drowned and their estates brought a wrongful death suit against Lawndale High School,
    the YMCA, the Board of Education of the City of Chicago (Board), and Visionquest Association,
    which allegedly designed and conducted the leadership retreat. Id. ¶¶ 1-2.The Lawndale High
    School and the Board filed motions to dismiss claiming they were fully immunized under section
    3-110 of the Tort Immunity Act (745 ILCS 10/3-110 (West 2008)), which states: “Neither a local
    public entity nor a public employee is liable for any injury occurring on, in, or adjacent to any
    waterway, lake, pond, river or stream not owned, supervised, maintained, operated, managed or
    controlled by the local public entity.” The trial court granted the motions to dismiss and entered a
    Rule 304(a) finding that there was no just reason to delay enforcement or appeal. Choice, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 102877
    , ¶ 4.
    ¶ 45   The appellants argued on appeal that section 3-110 only afforded protection from suit to
    riparian public entities, meaning public entities located on the bank of a river or stream, and not to
    landlocked public entities such as the Lawndale High School and the Board. Id. ¶ 39. We held that
    “[t]he plain language of this statute does not purport to draw any distinction based on the
    geographic location of the entity but, rather, on the location of the injury ‘on, in, or adjacent to’ a
    - 19 -
    No. 1-21-0291
    waterway.” Id. ¶ 40. Thus, the plain language of the statute indicated, contrary to appellants’
    contention, that the legislature “did not intend to deny landlocked public entities the protection
    afforded by section 3-110.” Id. In the instant case, the Frazier defendants argue we should hold,
    similar to Choice, that there is no language in section 2-105 limiting its applicability to only a
    certain subsection of public entities but rather the immunity afforded therein is available to all
    local public entities, including to them.
    ¶ 46   Choice is factually inapposite, as it construed section 3-110 of the Tort Immunity Act as
    opposed to section 2-105, which is at issue here. Unlike section 2-105, section 3-110 clearly
    delineated the scope of the immunities afforded therein (specifically, immunity for injuries
    occurring on, in, or adjacent to a waterway) and to who they were afforded (specifically, any public
    entity that did not own, supervise, maintain, manage, operate, or control the waterway upon which
    the injury occurred). By contrast, section 2-105 is ambiguous as to which public entities are
    afforded the immunity provided therein for failing to conduct a proper health and safety inspection
    of a third party’s property. Given this ambiguity, we have employed rules of statutory construction
    to ascertain that the legislative intent was to direct section 2-105 immunity only toward the local
    public entities whose function is to conduct formal health and safety inspections of properties other
    than their own. In the instant case, as the Frazier defendants were not tasked with the function of
    conducting a formal health and safety inspection of the water cooler at issue, they do not fall within
    the scope of the immunity afforded under section 2-105.
    ¶ 47   Accordingly, based on our de novo interpretation of section 2-105 which must be strictly
    construed against the public entity, we find that the Frazier defendants have failed to meet their
    burden of proving their immunity from plaintiff’s claims of negligence arising out of their alleged
    failure to inspect the Miracle Center’s water cooler prior to using it at the school function at which
    - 20 -
    No. 1-21-0291
    plaintiff was injured. Therefore, we reverse the order dismissing counts II and III of the second
    amended complaint against the Frazier defendants and remand for further proceedings.
    ¶ 48   Reversed and remanded.
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    No. 1-21-0291
    No. 1-21-0291
    Cite as:                 Williams v. Miracle Center, Inc., 
    2022 IL App (1st) 210291
    Decision Under Review:   Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 2019-L-
    007529; the Hon. Christopher E. Lawler, Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                John S. Eliasik, of Chicago, for appellant.
    for
    Appellant:
    Attorneys                Chad M. Castro, Joseph E. Comer, and Krista R. Frick, of
    for                      Barker, Castro, Kuban & Steinback, LLC, and Joseph T.
    Appellee:                Moriarty, of Board of Education of the City of Chicago (Thomas
    A. Doyle, of counsel), both of Chicago, for appellees.
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