205 ILCS 511/10-30

Current through Public Act 103-1056
Section 205 ILCS 511/10-30 - Suspension; revocation of licenses; fines
(a) Upon written notice to a licensee, the Secretary may suspend or revoke any license issued pursuant to this Act if, in the notice, he or she makes a finding of one or more of the following:
(1) that through separate acts or an act or a course of conduct, the licensee has violated any provisions of this Act, any rule adopted by the Department, or any other law, rule, or regulation of this State or the United States;
(2) that any fact or condition exists that, if it had existed at the time of the original application for the license, would have warranted the Secretary in refusing originally to issue the license; or
(3) that if a licensee is not an individual, any ultimate equitable owner, officer, director, or member of the licensed partnership, association, corporation, or other entity has acted or failed to act in a way that would be cause for suspending or revoking a license to that party as an individual.
(b) No license shall be suspended or revoked, except as provided in this Section, nor shall any licensee be fined without notice of his or her right to a hearing as provided in Section 10-75.
(c) The Secretary, on good cause shown that an emergency exists, may suspend any license for a period not exceeding 180 days, pending investigation.
(d) The provisions of subsection (d) of Section 5-35 shall not affect a licensee's civil or criminal liability for acts committed before surrender of a license.
(e) No revocation, suspension, or surrender of any license shall impair or affect the obligation of any preexisting lawful contract between the licensee and any person.
(f) Every license issued under this Act shall remain in force and effect until the license expires without renewal, is surrendered, is revoked, or is suspended in accordance with the provisions of this Act, but the Secretary shall have authority to reinstate a suspended license or to issue a new license to a licensee whose license has been revoked if no fact or condition then exists which would have warranted the Secretary in refusing originally to issue that license under this Act.
(g) Whenever the Secretary revokes or suspends a license issued pursuant to this Act or fines a licensee under this Act, he or she shall execute a written order to that effect. The Secretary shall post notice of the order on an agency website maintained by the Secretary or on the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System and Registry and shall serve a copy of the order upon the licensee. Any such order may be reviewed in the manner provided by Section 10-75.
(h) If the Secretary finds any person in violation of the grounds set forth in subsection (i), he or she may enter an order imposing one or more of the following penalties:
(1) revocation of license;
(2) suspension of a license subject to reinstatement upon satisfying all reasonable conditions the Secretary may specify;
(3) placement of the licensee or applicant on probation for a period of time and subject to all reasonable conditions as the Secretary may specify;
(4) issuance of a reprimand;
(5) imposition of a fine not to exceed $25,000 for each count of separate offense; except that a fine may be imposed not to exceed $75,000 for each separate count of offense of paragraph (2) of subsection (i); or
(6) denial of a license.
(i) The following acts shall constitute grounds for which the disciplinary actions specified in subsection (h) may be taken:
(1) being convicted or found guilty, regardless of pendency of an appeal, of a crime in any jurisdiction that involves fraud, dishonest dealing, or any other act of moral turpitude;
(2) fraud, misrepresentation, deceit, or negligence in any pawn transaction;
(3) a material or intentional misstatement of fact on an initial or renewal application;
(4) insolvency or filing under any provision of the federal Bankruptcy Code as a debtor;
(5) failure to account or deliver to any person any property, such as any money, fund, deposit, check, draft, or other document or thing of value, that has come into his or her hands and that is not his or her property or that he or she is not in law or equity entitled to retain, under the circumstances and at the time which has been agreed upon or is required by law or, in the absence of a fixed time, upon demand of the person entitled to such accounting and delivery;
(6) failure to disburse funds in accordance with agreements;
(7) having a license, or the equivalent, to practice any profession or occupation revoked, suspended, or otherwise acted against, including the denial of licensure by a licensing authority of this State or another state, territory, or country for fraud, dishonest dealing, or any other act of moral turpitude;
(8) failure to comply with an order of the Secretary or rule made or issued under the provisions of this Act;
(9) engaging in activities regulated by this Act without a current, active license unless specifically exempted by this Act;
(10) failure to pay in a timely manner any fee, charge, or fine under this Act;
(11) failure to maintain, preserve, and keep available for examination all books, accounts, or other documents required by the provisions of this Act and the rules of the Secretary;
(12) refusing, obstructing, evading, or unreasonably delaying an investigation, information request, or examination authorized under this Act, or refusing, obstructing, evading, or unreasonably delaying compliance with the Secretary's subpoena or subpoena duces tecum; and
(13) failure to comply with or a violation of any provision of this Act.
(j) A licensee shall be subject to the disciplinary actions specified in this Act for violations of subsection (i) by any officer, director, shareholder, joint venture, partner, ultimate equitable owner, or employee of the licensee.
(k) A licensee shall be subject to suspension or revocation for unauthorized employee actions only if there is a pattern of repeated violations by employees or the licensee has knowledge of the violations or there is substantial harm to a consumer.
(l) Procedures for surrender of a license include the following:
(1) The Secretary may, after 10 days' notice by certified mail to the licensee at the address set forth on the license, stating the contemplated action and in general the grounds for the contemplated action and the date, time, and place of a hearing thereon, and after providing the licensee with a reasonable opportunity to be heard at the hearing before the action, fine such licensee an amount not exceeding $25,000 per violation, or revoke or suspend any license issued under this Act if he or she finds that:
(A) the licensee has failed to comply with any provision of this Act or any order, decision, finding, rule, regulation, or direction of the Department or Secretary lawfully made pursuant to the authority of this Act; or
(B) any fact or condition exists that, if it had existed at the time of the original application for the license, clearly would have warranted the Secretary in refusing to issue the license.
(2) Any licensee may submit an application to surrender a license, but, upon the Secretary approving the surrender, it shall not affect the licensee's civil or criminal liability for acts committed before surrender or entitle the licensee to a return of any part of the license fee.

205 ILCS 511/10-30

Added by P.A. 103-0585,§ 10-30, eff. 3/22/2024.