Forest Preserve District v. First National Bank

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 27, 2010
Docket2-08-0565 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Forest Preserve District v. First National Bank (Forest Preserve District v. First National Bank) 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
Forest Preserve District v. First National Bank, (Ill. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

No. 2-08-0565 Filed: 5-27-10 ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

THE FOREST PRESERVE DISTRICT OF ) Appeal from the Circuit Court DU PAGE COUNTY, ) of Du Page County. ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) No. 99--ED--54 ) FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF FRANKLIN ) PARK, as Trustee under Trust Agreement ) dated December 17, 1984, a/k/a Trust No. ) 1056, AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK AND ) TRUST COMPANY OF CHICAGO, ) Successor Trustee to North Shore National ) Bank of Chicago, as Trustee under Trust ) Agreement dated February 1, 1978, a/k/a Trust ) No. 87, THE RAINBOW GROUP, ROBERT ) KRILICH, THE UNITED STATES OF ) AMERICA, THE CITY OF NAPERVILLE, ) and UNKNOWN OWNERS, ) ) Defendants-Appellants ) ) Honorable (The State of Illinois ex rel. Lisa Madigan, ) Stephen J. Culliton, Attorney General, Intervenor). ) Judge, Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE SCHOSTOK delivered the opinion of the court:

In December 1999, the plaintiff filed this condemnation action against the defendants,

seeking to take 204 acres of land in Naperville (the Property). Approximately eight years later, a jury

found that just compensation for the taking was $10,725,000, based on the fair market value of the

Property in 1999. The defendants appeal, arguing that the trial court erred in: (1) granting summary No. 2--08--0565

judgment in favor of the plaintiff on the issue of whether the plaintiff met its obligation to negotiate

in good faith before filing suit; (2) granting the plaintiff's motion in limine to bar certain evidence;

and (3) denying the defendants' motion for a posttrial hearing to determine the fair market value of

the Property as of December 2007. We affirm in part and reverse in part and remand for further

proceedings.

BACKGROUND

In 1978, Naper Venture (in which the defendant Robert Krilich held a dominant interest)

applied for the annexation into Naperville of a 456-acre planned unit development (PUD) to be

called Country Lakes. The PUD was approved as a special use in connection with the annexation

agreement. The PUD application for and the preliminary plat of the Country Lakes PUD designated

as open space within the PUD an existing 150-acre public golf course, which was used to satisfy part

of the open-space requirements for the PUD. Around the golf course were seven areas that were to

be developed as residential areas of varying density. Area 1 was already developed at the time of

the annexation agreement. By December 1999, areas 2 through 5 had been developed or were in the

process of being developed. Areas 6 and 7 (totaling approximately 54 acres) had not yet been

developed, and the Summit Development Corporation had a contract pending to purchase these areas

(the Summit parcel) for development.

In November 1999, the plaintiff decided to acquire the Property, which was the 204 acres

comprising the golf course and the Summit parcel. It obtained a preliminary engineering report and,

based on that, a preliminary estimate of value. The Polach Appraisal Group (Polach) provided a

verbal estimate on November 23, 1999, that the Property had a value of $10.3 million. That same

day, the plaintiff's board of commissioners approved an ordinance authorizing the plaintiff to

-2- No. 2--08--0565

negotiate for ownership of the Property, and the plaintiff's staff issued form letters to the two trusts

that they had determined owned the Property. The letters offered the trustees a total of $9.27 million

for the Property and gave them 10 working days to respond before the matter would be referred for

condemnation proceedings. No appraisal report or other written basis for the amount of the offer

was included with the letters. The plaintiff's chief negotiator for the Property later testified in a

deposition that it was the plaintiff's policy to make an initial offer that was 10% below the appraised

value. If the landowner made a counteroffer, the negotiator could immediately offer the full

appraised value, and could go as high as 10% more than the appraised value before having to seek

further approval from the plaintiff's board.

On December 3, 1999, the plaintiff received from Polach an updated verbal appraisal in the

amount of $11.02 million. The plaintiff's attorneys and staff then met with representatives of the

Property's owners to discuss just compensation for the Property. A representative for the Summit

Development Corporation was present, and Summit's pending contract to purchase areas 6 and 7 was

distributed and discussed. The owners rejected the plaintiff's initial offer but did not make a

counteroffer. After the meeting, the plaintiff received from Polach its first written appraisal of the

Property's value, which reflected the verbal estimate of $11.02 million.

Under the plaintiff's acquisition policy, it sought two appraisals on any piece of property it

wished to acquire: an initial estimate by one certified appraiser, and a report by a second certified

appraiser who reviewed the first estimate and gave his own estimate and the reasons for any

difference between the two. The second appraiser for the Property was David W. Phillips. Phillips

reviewed the Polach appraisal and, on December 6, 1999, faxed a one-page document to the plaintiff.

Phillips stated that, although he concurred with the Polach appraisal of certain parcels, he disagreed

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on other parcels and believed that Polach's estimate of $11.02 million for the Property was too high.

Phillips' estimate for the Property was $8.995 million.

On December 7, 1999, the plaintiff's board of commissioners met and considered the

negotiations for the Property. Both the Polach and the Phillips appraisals were before them, as was

a log of all of the communications in connection with the negotiations. Neither side had made any

further offers or counteroffers since the November 23 offer letters. Krilich (the majority beneficiary

under both trusts) had expressly rejected the initial offer. The board of commissioners adopted an

ordinance finding an inability to agree, revoking authority to negotiate further, and authorizing

condemnation of the Property. The plaintiff sent letters to the two trustees and Summit Development

Corporation enclosing a copy of the December 7 ordinance.

On December 21, 1999, the plaintiff filed a complaint for condemnation. At the time the

complaint was filed, the ownership of the Property was disputed and separate litigation to determine

the ownership was ongoing. Proceedings in this case were stayed until the ownership suit was

resolved in October 2001. A further delay arose when Krilich and Edward White, two of the

beneficiaries of the trusts that owned the Property, began to dispute among themselves who had the

right to control the defense in the condemnation action. That dispute was not resolved until

November 2004.

In March 2005, the defendants filed a second amended traverse and a motion to dismiss,

arguing that the trial court lacked jurisdiction and that the condemnation complaint should be

dismissed for several reasons. The parties conducted discovery on the issues raised in the traverse.

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