Goodman Chicago Condos, LLC v. Atrium Court Village Home Condominiums

2025 IL App (1st) 232329-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 19, 2025
Docket1-23-2329
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 IL App (1st) 232329-U (Goodman Chicago Condos, LLC v. Atrium Court Village Home Condominiums) 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
Goodman Chicago Condos, LLC v. Atrium Court Village Home Condominiums, 2025 IL App (1st) 232329-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 IL App (1st) 232329-U

SECOND DIVISION August 19, 2025

No. 1-23-2329

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 JUDICIAL DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

) GOODMAN CHICAGO CONDOS, LLC, and ) Appeal from the SOT3, LLC, ) Circuit Court of ) Cook County Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) 2020 CH 7241 ) ATRIUM COURT VILLAGE HOME ) Honorable CONDOMINIUMS, RICK WILLIAMS, MICHELLE ) Pamela McLean Myerson, PONTARELLI, TIFFINEY ALLEN, and LATOYA ) Judge Presiding. HARRIS, ) ) Defendants, ) ) (Michael T. Franz, Respondent-Appellant). ) _____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court. Justices McBride and Howse concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: Vacated and remanded. Rule 137 sanctions could not lie for documents that were not filed in court. Remanded for further proceedings.

¶2 What began as a dispute between two condo owners and their condo association morphed

into allegations that the association’s attorney (or his clients) lied in several court filings. In a

last-minute attempt to escape sanctions for those falsehoods, the attorney, Michael T. Franz,

allegedly fabricated evidence. After an extensive evidentiary hearing in which the circuit court No. 1-23-2329

found that Franz fabricated an email purportedly from the condo association president, the court

imposed Supreme Court Rule 137 sanctions against Franz, awarding the plaintiff’s attorneys

more than $50,000 in fees and costs.

¶3 On appeal, Franz raises several issues. Fortunately for him, we are compelled to vacate

the sanctions, as Rule 137 only applies to documents that are filed with the court. Because Franz

never filed the brief that contained the fake email with the clerk of the court, Rule 137 cannot be

used to punish him. So we vacate the court’s judgment. But that leaves other available remedies

for that fabricated email, plus other allegations of sanctionable conduct that the circuit court

declined to reach. We remand for reconsideration of the sanctions petition.

¶4 BACKGROUND

¶5 This appeal sprouts from two disputes between owners of two condo units in Berwyn and

the condominium association board. The plaintiffs in the original action, Goodman Chicago

Condos, LLC, and SOT3, LLC, each own a condo in the Atrium Court Village Home

Condominium complex. (Because both Goodman and SOT3 are owned by the same members,

controlled by the same managers, share the same registered agent, and hired the same law firm,

we will refer to them collectively as “Goodman” or “plaintiff” for ease.)

¶6 The Atrium condo complex had a board association (“Atrium” or “the association”),

established as a not-for-profit corporation, which managed and administered the condominium

complex. During the relevant events in this case, Rick Williams was the president of the

Atrium’s board of directors, while the other named defendants were board members. Attorney

Franz, the respondent and appellant here, represented Atrium and the board members during

most of the case.

¶7 Sometime before August 2018, water damaged a condo that Goodman owned in the

-2- No. 1-23-2329

Atrium complex. Believing the association should pay to repair the damage, Goodman filed suit,

alleging that the association breached its fiduciary duties by failing to make the necessary repairs

and maintenance to the building. (We will refer to this as the water-damage lawsuit, which is not

the complaint that spawned this appeal.)

¶8 After the water-damage lawsuit was filed, the association board voted to ask Great

American Insurance Company, the association’s insurance carrier, to defend and indemnify them

against the water-damage lawsuit. But Franz, on the association’s behalf, did not tender the claim

until January 2020, more than 18 months later.

¶9 Great American swiftly denied the claim as untimely. Nothing more came of this claim.

¶ 10 In December 2020, Goodman and SOT3 filed a new complaint against the association

and board members. This suit is the action that spawned the allegations relevant to this appeal.

¶ 11 Goodman and SOT3 alleged that the board violated the Illinois Condominium Property

Act and the bylaws of the association by holding unannounced, closed-door board meetings.

Goodman claimed that the Board met to discuss Great American’s denial of the water-damage

lawsuit claim and, at that meeting and without notifying Goodman, decided to not sue Great

American to compel them to defend and indemnify the association. This meeting, held without

prior announcement to the condo owners and behind closed doors, violated the Condominium

Act. SOT3 alleged that the board voted to initiate eviction proceedings against its tenant in a

similar, unannounced, closed-door meeting.

¶ 12 The association and board members filed an answer to the complaint generally denying

the allegations and also asserted several affirmative defenses. In the Second Affirmative

Defense, the board claimed that the directors met in a private meeting to discuss Great

American’s denial of their claim. At that meeting, the board “voted on but did not approve”

-3- No. 1-23-2329

filing suit against the insurance company for wrongful denial of the claim. Franz, as counsel for

the association and board members, signed the answer and affirmative defenses.

¶ 13 Discovery began in the case. After the association missed a deadline to respond to written

interrogatories and disclose documents, Goodman filed a motion to compel their responses,

including to several written interrogatories. The association eventually responded to the written

interrogatories. In an answer to written Interrogatory Number 8, the association asserted that, at a

meeting discussing the insurance denial, the board discussed whether they should sue Great

American to compel coverage but “determined that the cost of filing a lawsuit” would be

“prohibitive,” and that Goodman should be responsible for paying the cost to repair the damaged

unit. Attorney Franz prepared and signed the answers to these interrogatories.

¶ 14 Goodman deposed Rick Williams, the board president at the relevant time. Williams

testified that he did not know that the association had submitted a claim to Great American nor

that the claim had been denied. Williams also testified that the board did not hold a vote about

whether to sue Great American to compel coverage. This testimony, obviously, directly

contradicted both the Second Affirmative Defense and the answer to Interrogatory Number 8,

both of which indicated that the board not only knew that Great American denied its claim for

coverage but that the board considered, and by vote rejected, the idea of suing the insurer.

¶ 15 Soon thereafter, Goodman moved for Rule 137 and Rule 219(c) sanctions, alleging that

the association had lied in the Second Affirmative Defense and the answer to Interrogatory

Number 8. The association, still with Franz as counsel, filed a brief opposing the sanctions. In

that brief, Franz attached an affidavit from Tish McMahon a former board member and treasurer

of the condo association board. As part of her role as treasurer, she handled the insurance and

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2025 IL App (1st) 232329-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodman-chicago-condos-llc-v-atrium-court-village-home-condominiums-illappct-2025.