Eychaner v. Gross

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 30, 2001
Docket1-98-3573, 4735 cons. Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Eychaner v. Gross (Eychaner v. Gross) 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
Eychaner v. Gross, (Ill. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION

March 30, 2001

Nos. 1-98-3573, 1-98-4735 (consolidated)

FRED EYCHANER and BETTY LOU WEISS,

Plaintiffs-Appellants

v.

THEODORE GROSS and ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY, an Illinois Not-For-Profit Corporation,

Defendants-Appellees, Counterdefendants-Appellees and Counterplaintiffs-Appellees

(Auditorium Theatre Council, an Illinois Not-For Profit Corporation,

Defendant-Appellant and Counterplaintiff-Appellant;

AUDITORIUM THEATRE COUNCIL, an Illinois Not-For-Profit Corporation, Fred Eychaner and Betty Lou Weiss,

Counterdefendants-Appellants) .

)

Appeal from the

Circuit Court of

Cook County

No. 94 CH 11328

Honorable

Aaron Jaffe,

Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE O'MARA FROSSARD delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs, Fred Eychaner and Betty Lou Weiss, as directors of the Auditorium Theater

Council (Council) and the Auditorium Theatre Council, an Illinois not-for-profit corporation (ATC) (collectively referred to as plaintiffs) brought this action to prevent Roosevelt University (Roosevelt) and its president, Theodore Gross (collectively referred to as defendants), from transferring funds from the Auditorium Theatre (Theatre).  During the ATC executive board meeting on December 15, 1994, Gross presented a resolution to have a distribution from the Theatre of $1.5 million to Roosevelt to finance Roosevelt's new Schaumburg campus.  Gross stated:

"*** I'm saying that we need to do this because as I said at the outset it's the most important step the University has taken in its history.  And therefore, this is a primary project and the chief source of immediate cash is in the Auditorium Theatre.  That belongs to the University.  It does not belong to the Auditorium Theatre Council.  That is our legal interpretation of it.  The Auditorium Theatre Council can take whatever vote it wants to take in its January meeting.  We are going to access those funds, because we must have those funds in order for this project to go forward.  I mean, I have to take this hard line because we've reached the point now with with this fiction and it's a fiction, that the Auditorium Theatre Council, Inc. has some kind of legal authority over those funds.  They do not.  The Auditorium Theatre, Inc. was created for fund raising purposes only.  The Auditorium; those funds are University funds.  As much as the funds for any other unit of the University.  So that's our interpretation of it."  

ATC members objected to the transfer of funds and the meeting was adjourned in order to get an opinion from Roosevelt's counsel as to the legality of the transfer.   

Eychaner and Weiss brought suit the next day.  In the amended complaint they alleged: (1) Roosevelt placed the Theatre in a charitable trust for the benefit of the public with the Council and its successor, ATC, as trustee; (2) ATC has ownership rights to all funds and assets in the Theatre pursuant to the Illinois Charitable Trust Act (760 ILCS 55/1 et seq. (West 1998)) and the Illinois General Not For Profit Corporation Act of 1986 (805 ILCS 105/101.10 et seq. (West 1998)); (3) a constructive trust should be imposed on Roosevelt, allowing ATC to restore and operate the Theatre; and (4) Roosevelt should be estopped from preventing ATC from operating the Theatre.  Defendants brought a counterclaim seeking that Roosevelt be declared the sole and exclusive owner of the Theatre and alleging that Eychaner and Weiss breached a fiduciary duty to Roosevelt and ATC.  ATC brought a counterclaim against Roosevelt and Gross alleging (1) an express charitable public trust; (2) constructive trust; (3) breach of contract based on the 1960 resolution and standard operating procedures; (4) equitable estoppel; (5) breach of contract based on a 1993 letter of intent; (6) promissory estoppel; (7) unjust enrichment; and (8) director conflict of interest.  The trial court dismissed plaintiffs' causes of action and this court reversed and remanded for trial.   Eychaner v. Gross , Nos. 1-95-3614, 1-96-1412 cons. (1997) (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23).

During the 10-week trial, the court heard testimony from 37 witnesses and reviewed

approximately 400 documents generating 98 volumes of transcripts.  On September 28, 1998, the court entered judgment in favor of Roosevelt and Gross on its counterclaim, denied plaintiffs' theories of relief and ATC's counterclaim, declared Roosevelt as the sole and exclusive owner of the Theatre, ordered an accounting, found Eychaner breached his fiduciary duty and reserved resolution of damages against Eychaner until after the accounting.

On September 29, 1998, the court ordered that control of the Theatre be immediately turned over to the Auditorium Theatre of Roosevelt University (AT of RU), created by Roosevelt to take over and operate the Theatre.  On September 29, 1998, plaintiffs filed an interlocutory appeal of the September 28, 1998 order (appeal No. 1-98-3573) and on October 13, 1998, filed an amended appeal of the orders from September 28 and 29.  On December 2, 1998, the trial court denied plaintiffs' motion to stay trial court proceedings, ordered the accounting of the Theatre's financial status to proceed, scheduled a damages hearing against Eychaner and scheduled a Rule 137 hearing (155 Ill. 2d R. 137).  On December 22, 1998, plaintiffs filed an interlocutory appeal from the December 2, 1998, order (appeal No. 1-98-4735).  We consolidated these appeals.

                                                         I. BACKGROUND

In the 1950s, Roosevelt considered undertaking restoration of the Auditorium Theatre.  The board of trustees of Roosevelt (Board) initially rejected creating a separate not-for-profit corporation for restoration because Roosevelt did not want to relinquish control of the Theatre.  In 1959 in order to generate revenue to restore the Theatre, the board of trustees established the "Auditorium Restoration and Development Committee" (ARDC) made up of Roosevelt's Board, faculty and community members.  The Board approved an ARDC fund-raising proposal conditioned upon Roosevelt retaining ownership and control of the Theatre.

ARDC recommended to the Board formation of a separate organization and used attorney Elmer Gertz to draft a resolution stating the organization's mission and responsibilities concerning the Theatre.  On January 21, 1960, Gertz sent a draft of a resolution to Kenneth Montgomery, Roosevelt's attorney and stated in an accompanying letter:

"As a result of a good deal of discussion between certain

officers and members of the board of Roosevelt University and the executive committee of the Auditorium Restoration and

Development Committee, a draft of the resolution has been agreed upon ***.  It is the consensus of all involved in this situation that it is best not to form any separate corporation, foundation, trust or other legal entity, but to proceed in the manner set forth in the resolution."

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