Cellini v. Village of Gurnee

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 20, 2010
Docket1-09-2163 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Cellini v. Village of Gurnee (Cellini v. Village of Gurnee) 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
Cellini v. Village of Gurnee, (Ill. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION JULY 20, 2010

1-09-2163

ELLIOTT CELLINI, BRANDON FORSHALL, JERRY FORSHALL, ) Appeal from the and EDWARD DIAMOND, Individually and as Special Administrator ) Circuit Court of of the Estate of Corey Diamond, Deceased, ) Cook County. Plaintiffs,1 ) ) v. ) ) THE VILLAGE OF GURNEE, a Municipal Corporation; THE VILLAGE ) OF LINCOLNSHIRE, a Municipal Corporation; THE VILLAGE OF ) BUFFALO GROVE, a Municipal Corporation; THE VILLAGE OF ) WHEELING, a Municipal Corporation; RALPH LEWIS, Individually; ) U-HAUL COMPANY OF ILLINOIS, Incorporated, an Illinois ) Corporation; U-HAUL COMPANY OF ARIZONA, an Arizona ) Corporation; U-HAUL INTERNATIONAL, Incorporated, an Arizona ) Corporation; AMERCO, a Nevada Corporation; AMERCO REAL ) Nos. 06 L 8480 ESTATE COMPANY, a Nevada Corporation, ) 06 L 8504 Defendants ) 06 L 8506 ) Consolidated (U-Haul Company of Illinois, Incorporated, an Illinois Corporation; ) Discovery. U-Haul Company of Arizona, an Arizona corporation; U-Haul ) International, Incorporated, an Arizona Corporation; Amerco, a Nevada ) Corporation; Amerco Real Estate Company, a Nevada Corporation, ) Counterplaintiffs-Appellants; ) ) v. ) The Village of Buffalo Grove, a Municipal Corporation, ) Counterdefendant-Appellee; ) ) The Village of Gurnee, a Municipal Corporation; The Village of ) Lincolshire, a Municipal Corporation; The Village of Wheeling, a ) Honorable Municipal Corporation; Ralph Lewis, Individually, ) Diane J. Larsen, Counterdefendants). ) Judge Presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE CUNNINGHAM delivered the opinion of the court:

1 Elliott Cellini; Brandon and Jerry Forshall (the Forshalls); and Edward Diamond each filed a separate lawsuit against the same 10 defendants. The three lawsuits (Nos. 06 L 8480, 06 L 8504 and 06 L 8506) were consolidated for discovery. 1-09-2163

This appeal arises from the July 23, 2009 order of the circuit court of Cook County, which

granted a motion for a good-faith finding that a settlement agreement entered into between one of

the plaintiffs, Elliott Cellini (Cellini), and one of the defendants, Village of Buffalo Grove (Buffalo

Grove), was “made and entered into in good-faith within the meaning of the [Joint Tortfeasor]

Contribution Act.”2 740 ILCS 100/1 et seq. (West 2006). The July 23, 2009 order also dismissed

all claims against Buffalo Grove, including a “counterclaim for contribution” filed by the defendants

U-Haul Company of Illinois, Inc., U-Haul Company of Arizona, U-Haul International, Inc., Amerco,

and Amerco Real Estate Company (collectively, the U-Haul entities). On appeal, the U-Haul

entities’ sole argument is that the circuit court abused its discretion in granting Buffalo Grove’s

motion for a good-faith finding and in dismissing all claims against Buffalo Grove without holding

an evidentiary hearing. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of

Cook County.

BACKGROUND

On July 22, 2006, Ralph Lewis (Lewis) rented a truck from a U-Haul truck rental center in

Markham, Illinois, by producing a fraudulent driver’s license which identified him as “Taylor

Thode.” On July 23, 2006, Lewis, along with his friend, Cordello Webb (Webb), drove the U-Haul

truck to the Village of Gurnee (Gurnee). While in Gurnee, Lewis and Webb visited a shopping

center and met Daysha Freeman (Freeman), who was employed at a cellular telephone kiosk.

2 In the July 23, 2009 order, the circuit court also found that Buffalo Grove’s settlement agreements with the Forshalls and Edward Diamond (Diamond) were also entered into in good- faith. However, this appeal pertains only to the settlement agreement entered into between Cellini and Buffalo Grove.

2 1-09-2163

According to Freeman’s discovery deposition testimony, on July 23, 2006, she was selling cellular

telephones and contract subscriptions at the shopping center in Gurnee when she was approached

by Lewis and Webb. Lewis, posing as “Taylor Thode,” produced the same fraudulent driver’s

license and a social security number to Freeman, who then “ran his credit” and approved Lewis for

the purchase of “five phones, zero deposit.” Lewis then suggested that he would be willing to

purchase the five telephones in exchange for a date with Freeman, to which Freeman agreed. Later

that evening, at approximately 7 p.m., Lewis and Webb returned to the shopping center to pick up

Freeman in the U-Haul truck, which was driven by Lewis.

After Freeman, Lewis and Webb left the shopping mall, Lewis drove to a nearby Home

Depot store to purportedly “drop off” a refrigerator from his U-Haul truck. While Lewis and Webb

were at the Home Depot store, Freeman, who still believed that she and Lewis would go on a dinner

date after Lewis’ detour to the Home Depot store, visited another nearby retailer before returning to

Lewis’ U-Haul truck in the Home Depot parking lot. Several minutes after Freeman waited by the

U-Haul truck, Lewis and Webb reemerged from the Home Depot store. Subsequently, Lewis, Webb

and Freeman reentered the U-Haul truck. Lewis then informed Freeman that there was “a change

of plans” and that he needed to “drop this U-Haul [truck] off.” Lewis then drove to a nearby

highway and headed southbound toward Chicago.

On that same night, July 23, 2006, Officer Matthew Bendler (Officer Bendler) and Officer

Dion Snyder (Officer Snyder), both police officers for the Gurnee police department, received a

police dispatch call stating that employees at a Home Depot noticed “two suspicious subjects that

were trying to *** buy high-priced items with a fake credit card or fake account,” but that the

3 1-09-2163

suspects “had not actually taken anything.” The two suspects, one of whom was later identified as

Lewis, had then left the store and were traveling eastbound in a U-Haul truck. Subsequently, Officer

Bendler located the suspects’ U-Haul truck on Interstate 94 and followed closely behind it in his

police vehicle. Officer Snyder, while driving a separate police vehicle, followed behind Officer

Bendler. Both Officers Bendler and Snyder activated their police emergency sirens and attempted

to “effectuate a traffic stop” of the U-Haul truck. However, the U-Haul truck failed to stop and,

instead, changed lanes and drove onto the shoulder of the highway for approximately “five [to] six

blocks” at an accelerated speed of 55 miles per hour while Officers Bendler and Snyder followed

closely behind. Once Officers Bendler and Snyder realized that the U-Haul truck would not stop,

they deactivated their police vehicle sirens, decelerated, and disengaged from the traffic stop because

no “forcible felony” had been committed, no life was being endangered, and the Gurnee police

department had not authorized a police pursuit of this vehicle.

Subsequently, the Gurnee police department dispatched information through the Illinois

State Police Emergency Radio Network (ISPERN), a radio communications system designed to relay

crime-related information to surrounding jurisdictions. The dispatched information noted that Lewis

was driving recklessly through other municipalities.

Lewis then drove the U-Haul truck through the Village of Lincolnshire (Lincolnshire). At

approximately 8 p.m., Officer Brian Balinski (Officer Balinski) of the Lincolnshire police

department was on patrol in his police vehicle when he learned via ISPERN that “[a] vehicle was

wanted by the Gurnee [p]olice [d]epartment for fleeing and eluding and theft,” and that the suspects’

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Cellini v. Village of Gurnee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cellini-v-village-of-gurnee-illappct-2010.