Cory v. Hunt

2021 IL App (4th) 190809-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 25, 2021
Docket4-19-0809
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2021 IL App (4th) 190809-U (Cory v. Hunt) 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
Cory v. Hunt, 2021 IL App (4th) 190809-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOTICE 2021 IL App (4th) 190809-U FILED This Order was filed under NO. 4-19-0809 January 25, 2021 Supreme Court Rule 23 and is Carla Bender not precedent except in the 4th District Appellate limited circumstances allowed IN THE APPELLATE COURT Court, IL under Rule 23(e)(1). OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

LAURA ANN CORY, ) Appeal from the Plaintiff and Counterdefendant-Appellee, ) Circuit Court of v. ) Jersey County DOUGLAS EDWARD HUNT and CNB BANK & ) No. 12CH63 TRUST, N.A., ) Defendants ) Honorable (Douglas Edward Hunt, Defendant and Counterplaintiff- ) Eric S. Pistorius, Appellant). ) Judge Presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE KNECHT delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Turner and Cavanagh concurred in the judgment.

ORDER ¶1 Held: The trial court’s finding the defendant failed to meet his burden of proof was not against the manifest weight of the evidence.

¶2 In 2016, defendant, Douglas Hunt, filed a second amended counterclaim to an

action initiated by plaintiff, Laura Cory, claiming breach of an oral partnership related to

plaintiff’s hog operation. After a bench trial, the trial court held defendant failed to meet his

burden of proof as to the existence of the oral partnership. Defendant appeals, and we affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 In August 2012, after an irretrievable breakdown of the personal relationship

between defendant and plaintiff, plaintiff filed a complaint against defendant for the dissolution

of two partnerships, Greene Deere and Hunt Family Farms. The Hunt Family Farms partnership was formed in 2002 and the Greene Deere partnership was formed in 2009. Both partnerships

were formed under oral partnership agreements, whereby plaintiff loaned her name, credit, and

real property as additional security for various partnership loans and refinancing arrangements.

In January 2013, plaintiff filed a first amended complaint, which included the two original

actions for dissolution of the Greene Deere and Hunt Family Farms partnerships, as well as two

claims defendant breached oral agreements for payments of debts related to the Greene Deere

and Hunt Family Farms partnerships, respectively. In April 2013, plaintiff filed a motion for

partial summary judgment, asking the trial court to enter judgments dissolving the Greene Deere

and Hunt Family Farms partnerships. An agreed order dissolving the partnerships was entered on

April 4, 2013. Neither of these partnerships are involved in this appeal.

¶5 A. Counterclaims

¶6 In May 2013, defendant filed a counterclaim for quantum meruit related to

plaintiff’s hog farm. Defendant alleged in 2000, plaintiff and defendant entered into “an oral

agreement whereby [defendant] would provide the labor, farming equipment, trucks, tractors,

tools, and services required to raise and market the hogs.” Defendant alleged, per the agreement,

he would be “compensated for the labor, services, and use of equipment incurred on behalf of

[plaintiff’s] hog operation.” Defendant alleged 10 years of labor and services.

¶7 Plaintiff denied defendant’s claim and alleged affirmative defenses of failure to

state a cause of action upon which relief may be granted, the doctrines of laches, estoppel, and

unclean hands, and statute of limitations.

¶8 On August 6, 2015, plaintiff filed a motion to dismiss defendant’s counterclaim

under the Frauds Act (740 ILCS 80/1 et seq. (West 2014)), arguing defendant was asserting an

oral contract that could not be completed within one year.

-2- ¶9 On October 15, 2015, defendant, represented by new counsel, filed a first

amended counterclaim. Defendant alleged, in relevant part, a breach of a “hog partnership

agreement” he and plaintiff had formed as an oral partnership in 2000 as to plaintiff’s hog

operation.

¶ 10 On November 20, 2015, plaintiff filed a combined motion to dismiss

counterclaim, alleging the claims as to a hog partnership were time barred by the statute of

limitations. The trial court dismissed the hog partnership claim without prejudice.

¶ 11 On January 6, 2016, defendant filed a second amended counterclaim, again

alleging, in relevant part, a breach of a “hog partnership” formed in 2000 between defendant and

plaintiff as to plaintiff’s hog operation. In his claim, defendant alleged a plan was formed to

create a hog partnership during plaintiff’s bankruptcy proceedings in 2000 and the partnership

was based on “multiple conversations between the two of them, yet it was never reduced to

writing in a formal partnership agreement.” Defendant alleged in exchange for a 50% interest in

the hog partnership, he would manage the day-to-day operations of the hog farm.

¶ 12 On February 5, 2016, plaintiff filed a combined motion to dismiss, arguing, in

relevant part, the interest in real estate claimed was against the Statute of Frauds. On April 12,

2016, the trial court denied the motion to dismiss, finding “the agreement does not directly

involve the real estate but only peripherally.”

¶ 13 On June 17, 2016, plaintiff filed an answer to defendant’s second amended

counterclaim, denying the existence of the hog partnership.

¶ 14 B. Bench Trial

¶ 15 1. Defendant’s Case

-3- ¶ 16 On January 2, 2020, the matter proceeded to a bench trial. Defendant testified he

had known plaintiff since high school and had helped out on her and her husband’s hog farm in

the past. In 1999, after plaintiff filed for divorce, she disclosed to defendant she was having

financial troubles and plaintiff’s husband no longer wished to be involved with the farm.

Defendant suggested she file for bankruptcy. Defendant testified he discussed with his family a

plan to help save plaintiff’s farm, which involved defendant managing the day-to-day operations

of the hog farm. Defendant testified on an evening in 1999, he had a discussion with an “upset”

plaintiff:

“I told her that *** I spoke to my parents and my brother and we had an option

for her if she wanted to use it we proposed a *** 50/50 *** partnership on the

hogs and the grain operation *** simple as that and *** she agreed and then

where the farm was concerned we[,] my dad and me[,] neither one of us wanted to

attach to it in any way in liens anything like that. Just a simple agreement that if

we made it and we got any *** any value in the farm then we would split 50/50 at

the time we decided we no longer wanted to operate together.”

Defendant stated the agreement was never in writing because all his farming deals had been oral

partnerships and he “didn’t want to do anything that would jeopardize [plaintiff’s] bankruptcy.”

¶ 17 Defendant testified while he was managing the hog operation, plaintiff was

working 12-hour shifts, working seven shifts every 14-day period. Plaintiff’s son, who was 11 or

12 years old in 2000, would help with the farm work. Defendant’s brother would perform

maintenance every evening after work, but he was only paid “[i]n a few few times. Mainly any

checks written to him was reimbursement for supplies and parts that he got on the way to come

up to fix a tractor or whatever.” Equipment from Hunt Family Farms was used at the hog farm.

-4- Defendant testified he lost landlords for Hunt Family Farms because he “[w]asn’t getting things

done on a timely basis” due to his “commitment to the hog operation.” Defendant started living

full-time in plaintiff’s farmhouse starting in 2000 and lived there exclusively until 2012.

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2021 IL App (4th) 190809-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cory-v-hunt-illappct-2021.