Equipment Leasing Group of America, LLC v. MCG Cane Bay, LLC

2024 IL App (1st) 231143-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 18, 2024
Docket1-23-1143
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 IL App (1st) 231143-U (Equipment Leasing Group of America, LLC v. MCG Cane Bay, LLC) 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
Equipment Leasing Group of America, LLC v. MCG Cane Bay, LLC, 2024 IL App (1st) 231143-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 IL App (1st) 231143-U

FOURTH DIVISION Order filed: January 18, 2024

No. 1-23-1143

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIRST DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

EQUIPMENT LEASING GROUP OF AMERICA, LLC, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 21 L 7920 ) MCG CANE BAY, LLC, BOMA, L.C., and BMB ) INVESTMENTS, LLC, ) Honorable ) Jerry Esrig, Defendants-Appellees. ) Judge, presiding.

JUSTICE HOFFMAN delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Rochford and Justice Ocasio III concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: Lessor was not entitled to damages for lessee’s breach of contract when the lessor profited more from the breach than it would have had the contract been fully performed, and lessor was also not entitled to damages for lost depreciation tax deductions because lessor is an LLC that does not pay income taxes and, therefore, does not claim tax deductions.

¶2 In this appeal from a breach-of-contract action concerning a commercial equipment lease,

plaintiff-lessor Equipment Leasing Group of America, LLC (“ELGA”), appeals a final judgment

in favor of defendant-lessee MCG Cane Bay, LLC (“MCG”), and defendants-guarantors BOMA, No. 1-23-1143

L.C. (“BOMA”), and BMB Investments, LLC (“BMB” and, together with BOMA, “Guarantors”).

ELGA contends that the circuit court erred in concluding that it was not entitled to damages for

MCG’s breach of a lease agreement on the grounds that ELGA had profited more from the breach

than it would have from full performance of the contract and that ELGA was not entitled to

damages for its alleged loss of a depreciation tax deduction for the leased equipment because

ELGA is not a tax-paying entity. We affirm the circuit court’s judgment.

¶3 On December 30, 2015, ELGA and MCG entered into a contract (“the Lease” or “Lease

1”) providing that ELGA would purchase certain equipment to be leased by MCG for five years

and installed at MCG’s planned assisted living facility in Cane Bay, South Carolina. The parties

also entered into a second lease agreement (“Lease 2”) that ELGA later assigned to Lakeside Bank.

Only Lease 1 is at issue in this appeal. Concurrently with the signing of Lease 1, the Guarantors

executed guarantees in favor of ELGA, guaranteeing MCG’s obligations under the Lease. Around

the same time, MCG also signed a “Pre-Delivery Certificate” stating that MCG “desires to

commence the Lease prior to the complete delivery and installation of all the equipment” and that,

in order to induce ELGA to begin making payments to the equipment vendors, MCG “hereby

certifies that the portion of the Equipment that has already been delivered to [MCG], if any, is fully

installed, working properly and irrevocably accepted by [MCG].”

¶4 In July 2017, MCG decided that it would no longer move forward with its Cane Bay project

and ceased making payments on both leases. By that time, MCG had made monthly payments

totaling $112,635.27 toward Lease 1 and ELGA had made down payments to equipment vendors

totaling $90,623.43 under the Lease. Following MCG’s default on Lease 1, ELGA elected not to

-2- No. 1-23-1143

complete the purchase of the equipment that it was to deliver to MCG, and it instead recovered

$55,889.50 of its deposits to the equipment vendors.

¶5 On August 5, 2021, ELGA filed suit against MCG and the Guarantors for breach of contract

seeking approximately $265k in damages for Lease 1 and approximately $351k in damages for

Lease 2. The defendants collectively answered the complaint and raised affirmative defenses, and

the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. In its motion for summary judgment, MCG

asserted that the leases were unenforceable, that ELGA was not entitled to any damages arising

from Lease 2, in which ELGA no longer had any interest after assigning it to Lakeside Bank, and

that ELGA was also not entitled to damages for any lost depreciation tax deductions that it

anticipated receiving for the equipment that it was to purchase for MCG. For its part, ELGA sought

partial summary judgment on the issue of whether MCG had breached Lease 1.

¶6 Following a hearing, the circuit court granted ELGA’s motion for partial summary

judgment, ruling that MCG breached Lease 1 by failing to make required payments. The court also

granted MCG’s motion in part, ruling that ELGA’s claims relating to Lease 2 were extinguished

by its assignment of that lease to Lakeside Bank and that ELGA was not entitled to damages for

lost depreciation because ELGA is not a taxable entity and that any such damage would only be

inflicted on its tax-paying member, LBBB, LLC (“LBBB”), which was neither a party to Lease 1

nor a third-party beneficiary. The court denied the portion of MCG’s motion relating to the

enforceability of Lease 1, finding the Lease valid and enforceable. The court’s oral rulings were

memorialized in a written order dated April 25, 2023.

¶7 The court then held a three-day trial on the issue of damages for MCG’s breach of Lease 1.

Based on the testimony of its expert witness, ELGA sought damages totaling $482,578.16 for the

-3- No. 1-23-1143

gross amount that it was to receive under the Lease, legal fees, late fees, default interest, processing

fees, inspection fees, accounting fees, and the residual value of the equipment to be leased.

According to ELGA, those damages were all authorized by the terms of the Lease, which, in

relevant part, provided that, in the event of a default by MCG, ELGA could sue for and recover all

unpaid lease payments, all accelerated future payments due, all costs of enforcement and

collection, and the residual value of the equipment. MCG’s expert testified that, had the Lease

been fully performed by both parties, ELGA would have received a total of $236,003 in lease

payments and residual equipment value and would have expended $181,247 to acquire the

equipment for MCG, for a net profit of $54,756. According to MCG’s expert, that expected profit

was less than ELGA’s actual profit following MCG’s breach, which totaled $77,898 when

subtracting ELGA’s net post-refund outlay to vendors from MCG’s lease payments at the time of

breach.

¶8 At the conclusion of trial, the court found that ELGA was not entitled to damages because

it had realized more profit following MCG’s breach than it would have had the parties fully

performed the Lease. The court found MCG’s expert’s analysis to be “theoretically sound,

supported by the evidence, persuasive, and *** consistent with the law.” According to the court,

the only element missing from MCG’s analysis of ELGA’s damages was the cost of recovering

ELGA’s deposits to vendors, but the court found that to be a consequence of ELGA’s own failure

of proof, with the court noting that ELGA “produced no evidence as to what actual efforts were

required, no evidence of actual or even estimated costs, and there was nothing to suggest that the

cost of those efforts would have reduced the actual profits made by [ELGA] below those it

expected to make had both sides faithfully performed.” Additionally, the court found that ELGA’s

-4- No. 1-23-1143

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2024 IL App (1st) 231143-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/equipment-leasing-group-of-america-llc-v-mcg-cane-bay-llc-illappct-2024.