Larson v. Larson

2021 IL App (3d) 200379-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 1, 2021
Docket3-20-0379
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2021 IL App (3d) 200379-U (Larson v. Larson) 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
Larson v. Larson, 2021 IL App (3d) 200379-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

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).

2021 IL App (3d) 200379-U

Order filed December 1, 2021 _____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

GALE W. LARSON, JEREMIAH ) Appeal from the Circuit Court LARSON, JOHANNA LARSON, and ) of the 9th Judicial Circuit, JILLIAN LARSON, ) Warren County, Illinois. ) Plaintiffs-Appellees, ) Appeal No. 3-20-0379 ) Circuit No. 16-LM-10 v. ) ) JOSHUA J. LARSON, ) The Honorable ) David L. Vancil Jr., Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, presiding.

_____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE DAUGHERITY delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Holdridge and Schmidt concurred in the judgment. _____________________________________________________________________________

ORDER

¶1 Held: In an appeal in a conversion case, the appellate court held that: (1) it had appellate jurisdiction to rule upon the merits of the appeal; (2) the trial court did not err in finding that the defendant had converted the plaintiffs’ personal property; and (3) the trial court’s alleged error in denying defendant’s request to admit certain evidence at the bench trial would not require a reversal in this case. The appellate court, therefore, affirmed the trial court’s judgment.

¶2 Plaintiffs (Gale, Jeremiah, Johanna, and Jillian Larson) brought suit against defendant

(Joshua Larson) for partition and conversion relating to certain personal property that was owned jointly by plaintiffs and defendant but located solely on defendant’s land. The partition count

was subsequently dismissed. A bench trial was later held on the conversion count, and the trial

court found in favor of plaintiffs. Defendant appeals, arguing that the trial court erred in: (1)

finding that defendant had converted plaintiffs’ personal property; and (2) denying defendant’s

request to admit a certain federal tax return into evidence at the bench trial. We affirm the trial

court’s judgment.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 Edward Larson and his wife, Ada, owned a 160-acre farm in Berwick, Warren County,

Illinois, and lived in a farmhouse on the property where they raised their two sons, Dale and Gale

(one of the plaintiffs here). In 1975, Edward passed away and left the property to Ada. Ada died

four years later and left the property to Dale and Gale. After Ada passed away, no one lived in

the farmhouse on the property; nor did anyone collect or distribute the items of personal property

in the farmhouse that belonged to Ada’s estate. Although Dale and Gale had initially started

doing so, Dale padlocked or blocked the outside doors and prevented entry into the farmhouse.

¶5 Dale and Gale personally farmed the land until about 1996 when they began cash renting

the farm property. After that time, the farm equipment that Dale and Gale had used was left

sitting on the land. Over the years, while no one was living on the property, Dale went to the

farmhouse often and brought to the farmhouse hundreds of boxes of items that he had collected.

The farmhouse and other structures on the farmland were not maintained and deteriorated over

the years. Some of the structures collapsed. The farmhouse had been invaded by animals and

was filled with the boxes of stuff that Dale had accumulated.

¶6 In 2008, Gale filed a partition action in Warren County against Dale. The following year,

however, before the partition action could be resolved, Dale passed away. Upon his passing,

2 Dale left his one-half interest in the farm property to his four children: Jeremiah E. Larson,

Jillian Larson, Johanna Larson, and defendant, Joshua J. Larson. Each of the children received a

one-eighth interest in the farm. Due to Dale’s death, the four children became the named

defendants in Gale’s partition action. Gale eventually purchased the interest of three of the four

children, except for Joshua, the defendant here. At the conclusion of the 2008 partition case,

defendant received an undivided interest in 26 acres of the farmland (a parcel upon which the

farmhouse was located) plus a cash payment, and Gale received an undivided interest in the

remaining farmland. The trial court’s ruling in the 2008 partition case was affirmed on appeal by

this court in 2013. See Larson v. Larson, 2013 IL App (3d) 120621-U, ¶ 2.

¶7 In January 2016, Gale conveyed to defendant the portion of the farmland that had been

awarded to defendant in the 2008 partition case. The next month (February 2016), Gale filed the

instant action against defendant in the trial court. Following a motion to dismiss, Gale filed an

amended complaint and added Dale’s three other children—Jeremiah, Johanna, and Jillian—as

co-plaintiffs.

¶8 In March 2017, plaintiffs filed their second amended complaint, the operative complaint

in this case. In the second amended complaint, plaintiffs sought to remove and sell certain items

of personal property that were located on defendant’s 26-acre land. Plaintiffs claimed that the

items had been inherited by Gale and Dale upon Ada’s death, were personal items that Gale had

left in the farmhouse from when he was a child, or were items of farm equipment that Gale and

Dale had used to farm the property. Plaintiffs sought in count one of the second amended

complaint to partition the personal property and claimed in count two that defendant had

converted the personal property. The trial court dismissed plaintiffs’ partition count pursuant to

defendant’s motion to dismiss but allowed the conversion count to proceed to trial.

3 ¶9 In September and October 2019, a bench trial was held on plaintiffs’ conversion claim.

Testimony was presented from several witnesses, including plaintiffs, Gale and Jeremiah Larson;

Roger Larson, a cousin of plaintiffs and defendant; Dennis Chandler, a neighbor who had cash-

rented the farmland and had helped Gale move some of the items of personal property off of

defendant’s land; and from defendant. In addition to the testimony, the parties also presented

various exhibits, including the will of Ada Larson, an order declaring heirship from Ada’s estate,

the cash rental agreement for the farmland, a letter that had been sent to plaintiffs by defendant’s

attorney, and a list of the personal property that was the subject of the conversion claim

(plaintiffs’ Exhibit No. 8).

¶ 10 The evidence presented at the trial established much of the background information that

has been set forth above. In addition to that information, the evidence presented indicated that in

November or December 2015, Gale and the cash-renter of the property began moving some of

the farm equipment at issue from defendant’s farmland (defendant’s side of the partition) to an

open area of farmland owned by Gale (Gale’s side of the partition). Gale thought that defendant

had verbally agreed to catalog and sell the items. When defendant found out that some of the

items had been removed from his land, he filed police reports claiming that the property had

been stolen and had his attorney send plaintiffs a letter instructing them not to enter upon or

remove items from defendant’s land. Defendant thereafter refused to allow plaintiffs to remove

any more items from his land without his permission. In return, plaintiffs obtained an injunction

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Bluebook (online)
2021 IL App (3d) 200379-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larson-v-larson-illappct-2021.