Lake Suzanne MHP, LLC v. Gavins

2025 IL App (5th) 240848-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 18, 2025
Docket5-24-0848
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 IL App (5th) 240848-U (Lake Suzanne MHP, LLC v. Gavins) 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
Lake Suzanne MHP, LLC v. Gavins, 2025 IL App (5th) 240848-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

NOTICE 2025 IL App (5th) 240848-U NOTICE Decision filed 06/18/25. The This order was filed under text of this decision may be NO. 5-24-0848 Supreme Court Rule 23 and is changed or corrected prior to not precedent except in the the filing of a Petition for IN THE limited circumstances allowed Rehearing or the disposition of under Rule 23(e)(1). the same. APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIFTH DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

LAKE SUZANNE MHP, LLC, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) St. Clair County. ) v. ) No. 24-EV-459 ) AMANDA GAVINS, ) Honorable ) Patrick R. Foley, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE MOORE delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Boie and Sholar concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: Trial court’s finding of a forcible entry and detainer judgment was not against the manifest weight of the evidence, where appellant’s reasons for not paying rent were not among those permissible by statute.

¶2 I. BACKGROUND

¶3 On March 15, 2024, Lake Suzanne MHP, LLC (Lake Suzanne) filed an eviction complaint

against Amanda Gavins and Warrior Properties, LLC. It alleged that it had the right to possession

of Lot 91 in its mobile home park because Amanda had stopped paying rent. It requested payment

of past-due rent in the amount of $5,375.81, plus attorney fees. A copy of the lease was attached,

which indicated that Amanda had entered into a lease on May 14, 2020, for Lot 91 at Lake Suzanne

for $400 per month. The lease commenced on June 1, 2020, and terminated on May 31, 2022, with

an automatic renewal provision if neither party terminated the lease.

1 ¶4 Amanda was served with a copy of the complaint on April 21, 2024. She filed an answer

on May 6, 2024, denying the allegations of the complaint. The matter was scheduled for trial on

June 13, 2024.

¶5 On that date, Diane Sikes, the community manager at Lake Suzanne, testified that Amanda

signed a lease wherein she agreed to pay $400 per month plus utilities for a lot on which she placed

her own mobile home. The last time Amanda made a payment was on August 3, 2023. In addition

to late fees and administrative charges, the total amount Amanda owed was $7,235.81. Lake

Suzanne also sought immediate possession, attorney fees, and costs.

¶6 Sikes testified that Amanda’s mother lived in the trailer but had no lease with them. She

did not know how long Amanda’s mother had been living in the trailer, but she was not maintaining

the lot and had not mowed the grass, which was approximately three feet high.

¶7 Amanda testified that she purchased the mobile home in 2020 and stopped living there in

September 2023, when she moved to California. She returned periodically for various reasons and

stayed at the property. No one lived there, but Amanda’s family visited to keep the interior in good

condition and to check her mail. They did not perform maintenance to the exterior.

¶8 Amanda admitted that she stopped paying rent in August 2023. She did not know how

much she owed because she disputed the utility fees, administrative fees, trash fees, and the

increase in lot rent. The lease allowed her to be assessed for utilities, and for the first two years,

she was only charged for water and sewer. When the lot rent increased in December 2022, a fee

for waste removal and an administrative fee were also imposed, the terms of which were not added

to her lease, nor did she receive notification thereof. She believed that she did not owe any money.

¶9 Since purchasing the mobile home in 2020, she had never had any late payments until

September 2023. Amanda wanted to sell the mobile home and took a potential buyer to the

2 manager’s office so the buyer could complete an application to purchase it. The manager, Amanda

Wellbaum, told Amanda that she could not sell the mobile home to the buyer, but she needed to

sell it to management, who would then sell it to the buyer. Ms. Wellbaum also told Amanda that

she could not sell the mobile home because she had an outstanding balance on her account. After

some conversation, Ms. Wellbaum “stood corrected in regards to the past due balance,” and

Amanda was told that her account would be corrected. At some point, her ledger was corrected,

but no one followed up with her regarding the sale of her mobile home, and she was unable to get

in touch with Ms. Wellbaum. At one point, Amanda went into the management office looking for

Ms. Wellbaum, and law enforcement was called. As a result, Amanda was cited for trespassing.

Amanda eventually received an email from upper management and conversed with Sikes.

¶ 10 Despite disputing the utility charges on her account, Amanda paid them in full to bring her

ledger balance to zero so she could sell the mobile home. Approximately 75 families contacted her

and expressed interest in the mobile home, and she showed it to about 15. However, the

management office did not screen the applicants until Amanda sent them the Illinois Mobile

Landlord and Tenants Rights Act. Upon sending it, Amanda immediately received an email from

Ms. Wellbaum inquiring about the purchasers interested in the home. There was no explanation

from Ms. Wellbaum as to why it took four weeks for the process to start. Before management

started to screen the applicants, Amanda had informed them that she would withhold rent and had

voided the September rent payment. Amanda then spoke to Sikes, who told her that the previous

manager had not sabotaged her sale and that she could now sell it privately. Sikes did not mention

the passing of the several weeks, the behavior of the previous manager, or being cited for

trespassing.

3 ¶ 11 Amanda had several family members stop by the mobile home to ensure everything was

being taken care of. She lost money on flights and had job interviews that had to be rescheduled.

She hired movers to transport items from her mobile home into storage, making the mobile home

clean and empty for the new buyers. However, after the sale did not occur, she was left with storage

fees, utility bills, and had to pay family members to check on the home. She testified that she lives

at the home part-time when she is in Illinois.

¶ 12 Amanda stated that she does not owe any rent because if Lake Suzanne had not interfered

with the mobile home sale in August 2023, she would no longer have had to pay rent for the lot.

She stated that if she was ordered to pay back rent, it should be $400 per month minus the

administrative and trash fees. In addition to the administrative and trash fees, Amanda was

disputing the rent increase.

¶ 13 On rebuttal, Sikes testified that if a buyer wanted to purchase a mobile home, they would

have to apply online, and in this instance, she did not believe anyone did so. To apply online, the

applicant must first be forwarded a link.

¶ 14 Brian Flynn, Lake Suzanne’s attorney, testified regarding attorney fees. He had been

practicing for 14 years and had an hourly rate of $310. In this matter, including the trial, he spent

4.75 hours, for a total of $1,472.50, and believed that was fair and reasonable for like services in

the community. His costs, including filing fees and service fees of $616.58, totaled $2,089.08.

¶ 15 Amanda objected to the attorney fees, filing fees, and costs. As a result, Mr. Flynn was

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2025 IL App (5th) 240848-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-suzanne-mhp-llc-v-gavins-illappct-2025.