Beerman v. Graff

621 N.E.2d 173, 250 Ill. App. 3d 632, 190 Ill. Dec. 304
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 5, 1993
Docket1-92-3936
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 621 N.E.2d 173 (Beerman v. Graff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beerman v. Graff, 621 N.E.2d 173, 250 Ill. App. 3d 632, 190 Ill. Dec. 304 (Ill. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

PRESIDING JUSTICE JIGANTI

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiffs, Miles Beerman, Nathan Swerdlove, William Woloshin, Lawrence Barezky, Mitchell Weiss, and Joseph Rush (collectively, Beerman), and the defendants, Lee Graff and David Check, individually and doing business as Graff & Check Real Estate, and Mario Ceresini (collectively, Graff), entered into an oral partnership agreement in 1971 to own and manage a 78-unit apartment building in Hyde Park, Illinois, commonly known as the Poinsettia Apartments. The defendants were employed by the partnership to act as the managing agents of the building. Eighteen years later, the plaintiffs filed a complaint against the defendants alleging that they breached their fiduciary duties when they reported one of the apartments in the building as vacant while they had, in fact, rented the apartment. The plaintiffs further alleged that the defendants used partnership funds to construct an office in the building which was subsequently used to conduct nonpartnership business. The plaintiffs sought an accounting and injunctive relief.

The defendants’ answer alleged several affirmative defenses which were all predicated upon the plaintiffs’ failure to inspect the premises or to inquire about the vacant apartment. The defendants also alleged that the plaintiffs told one of the defendants that he could use and retain the apartment as a perquisite and as part of his compensation for managing the building. The defendants also filed a counterclaim alleging that the plaintiffs were unjustly enriched because they did not compensate the defendants for the value of their labor in constructing an office in the building which they used for partnership purposes. They further counterclaimed for dissolution of the partnership pursuant to the Uniform Partnership Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1989, ch. 106½, par. 32) and for the recovery of legal fees which the partnership paid the plaintiffs’ law firm for legal work concerning partnership business. They also asked that approximately $1,000 in legal fees which were deducted from their capital accounts be apportioned to all of the partners.

Following a bench trial, the court ordered the defendants to file an accounting with respect to the rental value of the apartment from the inception of the partnership through the defendants’ termination as managing agent by court order in 1989. The parties stipulated the value of the apartment rental to be $70,430. The court also entered judgment against the defendants on their counterclaims for unjust enrichment, dissolution of the partnership, and for legal fees paid to the plaintiffs’ law firm. The court ordered that $1,004.77 in legal fees be allocated to the capital accounts of each partner in proportion to each partner’s respective interest in the partnership.

The defendants appeal from the court’s order requiring an accounting and from the amount of the damage award. The defendants further allege that the court erred by not ordering a return of the legal fees which the partnership paid to the plaintiffs’ law firm and in not granting a dissolution of the partnership.

At trial, William Woloshin testified that he is an attorney and practices at the law firm of Beerman, Swerdlove, Woloshin, Barezky, Becker, Genin and London. In 1971, he and Beerman, Swerdlove, Barezky, Weiss, and Rush purchased an ownership interest in the Poinsettia Apartments building in Hyde Park, Illinois. Graff and Check managed and owned a portion of the building prior to the purchase. Graff and Check retained a 23% interest in the building. All of the partners agreed that Graff and Check would remain as managers of the building and a monthly management fee would be paid to them. Graff was primarily responsible for the day-to-day management of the building which included collecting rents and taking care of building problems. Woloshin was the liaison between Graff and the remaining partners. Graff would send him monthly statements which listed each apartment unit, the tenant’s name, the rental charged, the rental collected, gross rentals for the month, expenses, and the checking account balance. Woloshin stated that he received these statements from Graff on a monthly basis for 18 years.

Woloshin visited the building only a few times a year. He believed that Graff was running the building properly. He also sporadically spoke with Graff on the telephone. He stated that he relied on Graff to operate the entire building and absolutely trusted him.

Beginning in 1987, Graff spoke of retirement and would discuss selling Poinsettia. In 1988, Graff’s attorney contacted Woloshin and told him that Graff had negotiated a contract for the sale of the building to Abe Mizrahi. The purchase offer was rejected by the remaining partners because they were not willing to pay Graff the commission which Graff had structured as a part of the sale.

At one point in the negotiations, Mizrahi telephoned Woloshin and told him that while he was reviewing the records, he noticed that apartment 401 was listed as vacant. However, Mizrahi observed that there was a name on the doorbell to that apartment. Graff had told Mizrahi that apartment 401 was his apartment. Woloshin stated that he had not known that Graff was living in the apartment. Woloshin never agreed to allow Graff to use the apartment as his personal perquisite. He never approved such an arrangement. Woloshin contacted other partners and they did not know anything about Graff’s arrangement either. Woloshin telephoned Graff, who told him that he was not living in the apartment at the time because it was rented. Graff told him that he had lived there in the past and insisted that Woloshin knew about it. Woloshin stated that he knew that Graff was living there for a short time in 1971 because Graff was going through a divorce, but that the divorce had been over for 17 years. Graff told him that he had lived there for a time, kept it empty for 15 years to accommodate his wife’s visiting family from New York, and that he had just rented it recently. Woloshin was told later by the building superintendent that the apartment had been rented for the past several years but a name had never gone on the sheets.

Woloshin further testified that he and another partner went to the partnership premises and found Graff’s entire staff working in a room on the main floor of the building. The room measured approximately 30 by 15 feet and was fully equipped with office machinery. Woloshin stated that he never approved of the construction of an office on the premises. About three weeks prior to his visit to the building, he had a conversation with Graff in which Graff told him that he had put a desk in a linen closet of the building and was using it as an office. Upon their discovery of the newly constructed office, Woloshin and another partner immediately dispatched a letter to Graff terminating his management of the building and asking him to remove his business from the premises. Graff telephoned him and was screaming at the receptionist and threatened to kill her. Graff spoke with Woloshin and threatened to punch him out. Graff and Check were ultimately removed from their management position by court order.

Woloshin testified that the partnership had lost approximately $65,000 as a result of the vacancy in the apartment Graff had been using. His calculations were based upon the rental rate for other comparable apartments.

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Bluebook (online)
621 N.E.2d 173, 250 Ill. App. 3d 632, 190 Ill. Dec. 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beerman-v-graff-illappct-1993.