In re The Marriage of Clutts

2022 IL App (1st) 201120-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 18, 2022
Docket1-20-1120
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2022 IL App (1st) 201120-U (In re The Marriage of Clutts) 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 The Marriage of Clutts, 2022 IL App (1st) 201120-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

2022 IL App (1st) 201120-U

SIXTH DIVISION March 18, 2022

Nos. 1-20-1120 & 1-21-0107 (cons.)

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 DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

In re THE MARRIAGE OF: ) ) Appeal from the RAYMOND E. CLUTTS, ) Circuit Court of ) Cook County. Petitioner and Counter-Respondent-Appellant, ) ) and ) No. 11 D 3324 ) DEANNA CLUTTS, ) ) Respondent and Counter-Petitioner, ) The Honorable ) Jeanne Cleveland Bernstein, (Neal H. Levin, Solely as the Receiver of Raymond E. ) Judge Presiding. Clutts, P.C., Receiver-Appellee). )

JUSTICE MIKVA delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Pierce and Justice Oden Johnson concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: The circuit court’s grant of the receiver’s final fee petition is reversed and remanded for the circuit court to consider whether the failure to acquire jurisdiction over the corporations placed in receivership requires vacating the receivership entirely because of the absence of necessary parties. If the receivership is allowed to stand, the circuit court must determine when Mr. Clutts had notice of the receivership and reduce the fee award for any work done or costs accrued before that time. In addressing the receiver’s request for fees or costs accrued after that time, the court is to consider and rule on the objections made by Mr. Clutts as to the conduct of Nos. 1-20-1120 & 1-21-0107 (cons.)

and fees charged by the receiver and his request for discovery relative to those issues.

¶2 The petitioner in this case, Raymond E. Clutts, initiated a dissolution of marriage

proceeding against respondent Deanna Clutts. In November 2014, Mrs. Clutts requested, through

her counsel, and was granted the appointment of a receiver over Mr. Clutts’s businesses. In 2019,

the receiver filed his final report and fee petition, requesting court approval for a total of

$922,009.69 in fees and costs and judgment against Mr. Clutts personally for the $785,009.69 of

that amount that the receiver had not yet been paid. In response, Mr. Clutts, a former lawyer

representing himself pro se, filed a motion to file a special and limited appearance on the basis that

the circuit court lacked the necessary personal jurisdiction over him and his businesses to enter the

receivership orders. As part of Mr. Clutts’s jurisdictional argument, he contended that he did not

receive appropriate notice of much of the receivership proceedings. Mr. Clutts advised the court

in his memorandum that he had numerous objections to the substance of the receiver’s fee petition

but that he reserved those in the event the court found that it did have jurisdiction over him and his

companies. The circuit court entered one order on September 16, 2020, that found jurisdiction to

be proper and granted the receiver’s fee petition. The court entered a judgment against Mr. Clutts

personally in the amount of $785,009.69.

¶3 In a motion to reconsider, Mr. Clutts set forth several arguments about the substance of the

receiver’s fee petition, including that the actions taken and fees charged by the receiver were

unreasonable and that he was entitled to discovery on the matter. Mr. Clutts also filed a notice of

appeal on the same day appealing the judgment that had been entered. The circuit court judge,

stating that she lacked jurisdiction because a notice of appeal had been filed, refused to consider

any arguments raised in the motion to reconsider.

¶4 On appeal, Mr. Clutts, continuing to represent himself pro se, argues (1) the court’s finding

-2- Nos. 1-20-1120 & 1-21-0107 (cons.)

that it had jurisdiction over him and his corporations to impose a receivership was wrong, (2) the

circuit court improperly rejected his argument that he lacked notice of the receivership proceedings

and that discovery should have been provided regarding the lack of notice, and (3) the circuit court

improperly refused to consider the arguments that he made in his motion to reconsider. He sets

forth those arguments again on appeal. Reiterating an argument he made in his motion to

reconsider, Mr. Clutts contends that , pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 776 (eff. Mar. 25,

1991), the receiver should have wound down the business and notified clients, rather than run this

small collection law firm with lawyers from a large firm for five years, accruing almost a million

dollars in fees. He questions whether certain fees charged were reasonable and whether there was

a basis for assessing the receiver’s fees against him, personally. He also argues that he was

improperly denied discovery on the fees charged and actions taken by the receiver.

¶5 We reject Mr. Clutts’s claim that the court lacked jurisdiction over him personally to

impose a receivership as part of the divorce proceeding, as the court clearly had jurisdiction over

all matters related to the dissolution of the Clutts’s marriage. However, it is clear from the record

that the corporate entities Mr. Clutts controlled were never served and no finding was ever made

that would support a decision to disregard their corporate existence. While Mr. Clutts, who is no

longer an attorney, may not represent the corporations directly, as a party he can raise the argument

that they were necessary parties to this proceeding. We agree that they were. We therefore reverse

and remand to allow the circuit court to determine, in the first instance, whether their absence voids

the receivership proceedings. In the event that it does not, the court must determine when Mr.

Clutts received notice of the receivership proceedings. For any period after such notice was

provided, the court must consider the objections raised by Mr. Clutts and his request for discovery

relative to the conduct of the receiver and the fees incurred.

-3- Nos. 1-20-1120 & 1-21-0107 (cons.)

¶6 I. BACKGROUND

¶7 Mr. and Mrs. Clutts were married on April 8, 1977, in Chicago, Illinois, and had two

children during the course of their marriage.

¶8 On March 31, 2011, Mr. Clutts—through his attorneys Grant & Grant, P.C.—petitioned

for the dissolution of his marriage to Mrs. Clutts. In his petition, Mr. Clutts stated that during the

marriage “the parties acquired certain marital property including but not limited to: real estate, ***

[and] businesses, *** the rights of which this Court should adjudicate.” In addition to asking the

court to dissolve their marriage, Mr. Clutts also asked it to determine the custody arrangements for

their two children, allocate marital property, and determine the amount of support and maintenance

to be paid to Mrs. Clutts.

¶9 On October 7, 2011, an additional appearance was entered on behalf of Mr. Clutts by

Raymond E. Clutts, P.C. (Clutts, P.C.).

¶ 10 The law firm Swanson, Martin & Bell, LLP (Swanson), moved to substitute as counsel for

Mr. Clutts, replacing Grant & Grant, P.C., and the court granted that substitution October 19, 2011.

¶ 11 The parties entered into a marital settlement agreement and custody judgment, and on

October 10, 2013, the court entered a judgment of dissolution of marriage that incorporated the

marriage settlement agreement by reference. The marriage settlement agreement is not included in

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