In re Marraige of Thomas

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 16, 2026
Docket1-24-2491
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re Marraige of Thomas (In re Marraige of Thomas) 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
In re Marraige of Thomas, (Ill. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

2026 IL App (1st) 242491-U

SECOND DIVISION June 16, 2026

No. 1-24-2491

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 ______________________________________________________________________________

IN RE MARRIAGE OF: ) ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of DARRYL THOMAS, ) Cook County, Illinois ) Petitioner-Appellee, ) ) No. 17 D 630062 v. ) ) REGINA THOMAS, ) Honorable Bonita Coleman ) Judge Presiding Respondent-Appellant. ) ___________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court. Justices McBride and D.B. Walker concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: Affirmed as modified and remanded. This court modifies allocation of property so that ex-wife retains two-thirds of her pension and two-thirds of equity in her home, while one-third of pension and one-third of home equity is allocated to ex-husband.

¶2 This is an appeal from a judgment of marital dissolution between Darryl and Regina

Thomas. Regina challenges the trial court’s allocation of marital property. After a bench trial, the

court allocated half of Regina’s pension and half the equity in her home to Darryl. In our view,

the court abused its discretion in failing to properly consider that Regina is the sole provider and

caregiver for Regina’s and Darryl’s disabled adult son. We thus modify the distribution of No. 1-24-2491

property such that Regina is allocated two-thirds of her pension and two-thirds of the equity in

her home, while Darryl is allocated one-third of her pension and one-third of the home equity.

¶3 BACKGROUND

¶4 Darryl and Regina married on October 5, 1993. Each had a child that predated the

marriage, though Darryl’s did not reside with him. They had a child together before their

marriage as well—Darryl, Jr., whom they sometimes called “D.J.” and sometimes “Junior.”

(Regina calls him “Junior” on appeal, so we will, too.) Junior was born in 1992 with significant

heart and lung afflictions and developmental disabilities. As an adult, Junior remains unable to

live independently.

¶5 The parties lived together for twenty years until, in 2013, Darryl was incarcerated for

twenty months on a domestic-battery conviction (not involving Regina). He was released in

2015, at which time Regina and Darryl separated, though still married. So it helps to differentiate

between their first twenty years, from 1993 to 2013, when they were married and cohabitating,

and the remaining years up to the present, when they were separated.

¶6 I. 1993 to 2013

¶7 After their marriage in 1993, the parties lived together with Regina’s child and Junior in

the home of Darryl’s mother. In 2000 or 2001, they bought a home in Riverdale. The court found

that, over the first twenty years of marriage, each spouse contributed financially to the marriage

and to the care and needs of Junior and Regina’s child. Regina had a more traditional wage-

earning job with the Chicago Transit Authority (“CTA”), which among other things earned her a

pension. The trial court noted that Regina provided no evidence of her salary or earnings during

the marriage. (She retired in 2024 and receives a pension of $4,374 per month.)

-2- No. 1-24-2491

¶8 Darryl, who appeared pro se, testified that his education was limited to a GED and he

“always worked” during the marriage or sought unemployment benefits when he was between

jobs (it appears he received benefits at various periods in 2002, 2007, and 2010). His jobs

included work as a cook, material handler, and forklift driver. Some were traditional W-2 wage-

earning jobs, others not; Darryl would sometimes seek day-labor work. Regina attempted to

prove that Darryl was jailed more than once during this time for traffic-related offenses, but the

evidence was excluded for lack of foundation or on hearsay grounds.

¶9 Darryl had an extramarital affair during their marriage and fathered three children out of

wedlock. He has no relationship with those children but is obligated for child support.

¶ 10 Regina handled the finances. She filed for personal bankruptcy protection twice over

unpaid income taxes, once in 2006 and again in 2011. The testimony was vague on the

circumstances accompanying these bankruptcy filings. Though Regina blamed their financial

problems on Darryl, the trial court found that “Regina filed bankruptcy petitions individually

without explanation as to credible and specific factors that led to the bankruptcy and/or how

Darryl’s actions or inactions factored into the need to file for debtor’s relief.”

¶ 11 As noted, in 2013, Darryl was imprisoned for twenty months on a domestic-battery

conviction involving the mother of his out-of-wedlock children.

¶ 12 II. 2015 to Present

¶ 13 Darryl was released in 2015, but the parties had separated by then. Darryl moved in with

his sister. Darryl filed for divorce in 2017. Regina filed cross-petitions in 2018. The proceedings

moved slowly. Darryl moved back into the Riverdale home in 2019; he paid rent to Regina and

slept in the basement with his dog.

-3- No. 1-24-2491

¶ 14 The Riverdale home was sold in 2022 or 2023. According to Regina, the sale price was

$103,000, the proceeds of which paid off a $90,000 mortgage. Regina testified that a $1,000 net

profit remained after associated fees and costs. Regina used the profit to pay for expenses

associated with moving out of a sold home.

¶ 15 Darryl claimed he did not know the house had been sold until he was suddenly ordered to

leave. He testified that Regina handled the entire transaction, from selecting a realtor through

closing, without his knowledge; he testified that he has never seen the details of the transaction.

He claimed that Regina sold the house to a co-worker.

¶ 16 Regina testified that Darryl selected the realtor and knew full well that the house was

being sold. The trial court found that Regina testified “incredibly” on this point and likewise

noted that Regina presented no documentary evidence of the sale of the Riverdale home.

¶ 17 From September 2017 until June 2022, Darryl worked as a forklift operator for Gotham

Greens. He was then fired in a “mass layoff” and collected unemployment insurance. He worked

for Skyline Furniture as a fabricator—applying fabric to the wood furniture—until he was

injured on that job in June 2023. He received worker’s compensation benefits until he was

cleared for return to work, by which point the job was no longer open for him. But he testified

that he would be physically unable to perform that job, in any event.

¶ 18 Though he did not specify how he was injured, Darryl testified that he had a hip

replacement and “had to have [his] spine bone cut, and they put rods and screws in [his] spine

because [his] spine is pushed up against [his] nerve that goes all the way down [his] leg. So it’s

kind of impossible for [him] to work.” He receives shots for the pain from a doctor who has

recommended that a “monitor” be placed under his skin, but he is afraid of that procedure. He

testified that if he walks more than a few hours, the pain is excruciating.

-4- No. 1-24-2491

¶ 19 Regina bought a home in Matteson in 2023 and lives there with Junior. She owes about

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In re Marraige of Thomas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marraige-of-thomas-illappct-2026.