Haney v. Illinois Development Finance Authority

53 Ill. Ct. Cl. 171, 1998 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Claims of Illinois
DecidedOctober 21, 1998
DocketNo. 95-CC-3031
StatusPublished

This text of 53 Ill. Ct. Cl. 171 (Haney v. Illinois Development Finance Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Claims of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haney v. Illinois Development Finance Authority, 53 Ill. Ct. Cl. 171, 1998 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 99 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

ORDER ON MOTIONS

Epstein, J.

This case arises out of an aborted loan/equipment lease from the Respondent, Illinois Development Finance Authority (“IDFA”), to the Claimant, Bob Haney (“Haney”), and is pending on Claimants two-count complaint, which asserts breach of contract (Count I) and breach of fiduciary duty (Count II) claims seeking $500,900 in damages.

The Pending Motions

This case now comes before the Court on a flurry of motions and the response or objection to each of these motions by the other party:

(1) Respondent’s “Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings or [alternatively] * * * for Partial Summary Judgment” (the “motion for judgment”);
(2) Claimant’s “Motion for Finding * * * that * * * §18 of * * # ‘Equipment Lease’ was Unconscionable * * * pursuant to §5/2A — 108(1) of the Uniform Commercial Code e * *; or * * 5 to Present Evidence as to the Setting, Purpose, and Effect of the Lease Contract * * * pursuant to §5/2A — 108(3) « * “unconscionability motion”);
(3) Claimant’s “Motion to Amend Complaint,” which seeks leave to file an amended 3-count complaint asserting two breach of contract actions (Counts I and II), and a breach of fiduciary duties action (Count III) (the “motion to amend”); and
(4) Respondents “Motion for Stay of Ruling on # * [the Motion to Amend] # * until Court Rules on the * * * Motion for Judgment # (“Motion to Stay Ruling”).

Discussion

The Respondent’s motion for judgment asserts a failure of Counts I (breach of lease agreement) and II (breach of fiduciary duty) to state causes of action, and asserts section 2 of the Credit Agreements Act (the “CAA”) (815 ILCS 160/2) as a bar to the Count I claim, based on the failure of the alleged contract to comply with the two-signature requirement of section 2 of the CAA; to which the Claimant replies that the CAA is inapplicable to the lease alleged in Count I.

The Claimant opposes the motion, but also moved for leave to file an amended complaint that appears to re-plead the original Counts I and II as amended Counts I and III and that would add a new Count II, which is a different contract claim than Count I. Ordinarily under our liberal pleading practice, we would grant such leave at this juncture, thus mooting the original complaint and motion and recommencing with the new pleading. However, because it appears that Claimant is standing on the actions asserted in Counts I and II, and that the issues raised by the motion for judgment would apply equally or similarly to amended Counts I and III, we will entertain the motion for judgment along with the motion to amend in an effort to avoid circuity.

Count I — Breach of Lease or of Contract to Make a Lease

Count I is a breach of contract action, based on a “lease agreement” which is alleged to be or to be embodied in an IDFA staff memorandum (on the Claimants request for commercial lease/financing) that the IDFA Board approved on October 20, 1993. (Complaint, Count I, par. 5; amended complaint, Count I, pars. 15, 16, 20.) Essentially, Claimant alleges that the agreement was for the Respondent IDFA to purchase certain identified equipment for $74,000 and to lease it to Claimant for five years on agreed financial terms; and that Respondent breached the agreement by failing to purchase the equipment — or by failing to timely order and purchase the equipment “during the time period in which [it] # * cost $74,000” (Complaint, par. 29) — and then failing to lease it to Claimant, thus wrongfully aborting the transaction.

Respondent points out the admitted fact that the parties did execute a written lease among the “financing documents” that were executed in April, 1994, approximately six months after the October, 1993 IDEA Board approval on which Claimant relies. Respondent insists, inter alia, that the October 1993 Board action was not itself a lease, and that if it were a contract, it is a “credit agreement” within the meaning of the Credit Agreements Act (the “C.A.A.”) and that Claimants action based on it is barred because the October, 1993 board action, including the approved memorandum, were not signed by both parties as required by section 2 of the C.A.A.

Claimant replies with the vehement but unexplained and unprecedented contention that the arrangement was a commercial lease that is governed by section 2A — 201 of the Uniform Commercial Code (the “U.C.C.”) (810 ILCS 5/2A — 201) instead of the C.A.A.; i.e., that the C.A.A. cannot apply to a lease.

Initially we must reject the Claimants statutory argument and its characterization of the October 1993 IDEA Board approval. A commercial lease may be subject to both the U.C.C. and the C.A.A. under appropriate circumstances; these are not either/or statutes nor do they apply to mutually exclusive categories. Equally plainly, the IDEA board approval was not itself a lease, as Claimant urges. If that approval was an enforceable commitment at all, which we assume arguendo (as that is unchallenged), it is clear that at best the agreement at that point was an agreement to enter into a lease, rather than a lease itself.

It is also clear that the purpose and function of the contemplated “commercial lease” was to provide financing assistance (i.e., “credit”) to the Claimant. Indeed, this is not disputed. Financing was the primary purpose of this transaction. The lease was proposed by Claimant in order to obtain financing for his acquisition of certain equipment to expand his business; the credit was to be effectuated by the financial terms of the equipment lease. We do not find it terribly relevant, despite the Respondents emphasis, that it was the Claimant who first proposed the “equipment lease” structure for the transaction. But Claimants reliance on the technical lease form of the transaction is fundamentally erroneous, in light of the governing statutory language (section 12 of the C.A.A.), which defines a “credit agreement” as follows:

‘“Credit agreement’ means an agreement or commitment by a creditor to lend money or extend credit or delay or forbear repayment of money not primarily for personal, family or household purposes, and not in connection with * * * credit cards.” 815 ILCS 160/1(2).

The credit-extension purpose and function of this transaction bring it under the C.A.A. definition of a “credit agreement,” irrespective of the lease form of the transaction. Thus, we are constrained to hold that the alleged “agreement” or “commitment” of the IDFA to enter into this credit-extending commercial lease is subject to the C.A.A. (We presume, and nobody has argued otherwise, that the IDFA is an “entity” within section 1(4) of the C.A.A. and that it is “engaged in the business of lending money or extending credit” within section 1(2) of the C.A.A.

The requirement of section 2 of the C.A.A., which is a kind of super statute of frauds for credit agreements, are as follows:

“Sec. 2. Credit agreements to be in writing.

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Related

Farrell v. State
52 Ill. Ct. Cl. 275 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Ill. Ct. Cl. 171, 1998 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haney-v-illinois-development-finance-authority-ilclaimsct-1998.