Lurie v. Wolin

2017 IL App (1st) 161571
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 19, 2017
Docket1-16-1571
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2017 IL App (1st) 161571 (Lurie v. Wolin) 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
Lurie v. Wolin, 2017 IL App (1st) 161571 (Ill. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

2017 IL App (1st) 161571 No. 1-16-1571 September 19, 2017

Third Division

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIRST DISTRICT

DEREK LURIE and STEVEN LURIE, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court Individually and d/b/a American Escrow, LLC, ) Of Cook County. ) Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) ) No. 14 L 013007 v. ) ) The Honorable PHILIP S. WOLIN, Individually and d/b/a ) Janet Adams Brosnahan, Wolin, Kelter & Rosen, Ltd., ) Judge Presiding. ) Defendants-Appellees. )

PRESIDING JUSTICE NEVILLE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Pierce and Mason concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 This case comes before us for a second time. In the prior appeal, we held that Derek and

Steven Lurie’s complaint adequately stated a cause of action against the defendants, Philip

Wolin and Wolin, Kelter & Rosen, Ltd., for legal malpractice. We reversed the dismissal of

the complaint. Lurie v. Wolin, 2014 IL App (1st) 130661-U. On remand, defendants asked

the circuit court to reconsider the issue of whether it lost jurisdiction over the case before it

entered the order we reviewed in the prior appeal. After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court No. 1-16-1571

found that the Luries’ attorney filed documents with date stamps falsified to make the court

believe that the attorney had filed the documents within the time permitted. The circuit court

found that it had lost jurisdiction in 2011, before it filed the order we reviewed in the prior

appeal, when the Luries failed to timely file a motion to reconsider the dismissal of the

complaint with prejudice.

¶2 On appeal, the Luries argue that the law of the case doctrine barred relitigation of the

jurisdictional issue and that the evidence did not support the finding that the circuit court lost

jurisdiction in 2011. We agree with the Luries that the circuit court’s original implicit ruling

that it had jurisdiction became the law of the case. However, because the allegations

supported a finding that the Luries’ attorney perpetrated a fraud on the court, we find that the

law of the case doctrine does not prevent us from considering the jurisdictional issue. The

circuit court’s finding of fact that the attorney falsified the documents is not contrary to the

manifest weight of the evidence, and it supports the ruling that the circuit court lost

jurisdiction over the case in 2011, before it entered the order we reviewed in the prior appeal.

Accordingly, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment dismissing the Luries’ complaint.

¶3 BACKGROUND

¶4 The Luries formed American Escrow, LLC, to provide escrow services for homeowners.

Derek hired the law firm of Wolin, Kelter & Rosen to represent American Escrow. In 2003,

Derek discovered that American Escrow’s chief financial officer, Caren Dietz, had

embezzled funds from American Escrow.

¶5 The Luries consulted Wolin about how American Escrow should address the

embezzlement and the loss of funds needed to pay its liabilities. Wolin, Kelter & Rosen

2 No. 1-16-1571

represented American Escrow until February 2009. The states of Illinois and Ohio filed

lawsuits in 2009 and 2010, charging that the conduct of American Escrow and its officers

from 2003 to 2009 violated consumer protection laws. Illinois and Ohio courts entered

default judgments against the Luries and American Escrow.

¶6 The Luries hired attorney Richard Zachary to assist them with a potential claim against

Wolin individually and Wolin, Kelter & Ross for legal malpractice. In October 2010, the

Luries, through Zachary, filed a complaint against the defendants alleging that the Luries

followed Wolin’s legal advice from 2003 through 2009, and Wolin’s advice caused them to

violate consumer protection laws.

¶7 The defendants filed a motion to dismiss the complaint. The circuit court dismissed the

complaint without prejudice by order dated April 1, 2011. The court set May 9, 2011, as the

date for filing an amended complaint. On July 8, 2011, the defendants filed another motion to

dismiss the complaint, alleging that the Luries had not filed an amended complaint. The

Luries filed no response to the motion to dismiss, but at the hearing on the motion, Zachary

claimed that he gave the amended complaint to his employee for filing and that employee

must have misfiled it. Zachary did not present a copy of the amended complaint to the court

or to defense counsel. The circuit court granted the Luries an extension to August 18, 2011,

to file the amended complaint.

¶8 Zachary did not file any documents between July 8 and August 18, 2011. No attorney for

the Luries appeared at the hearing on August 18. The circuit court entered an order on

August 18, 2011, dismissing the complaint with prejudice.

3 No. 1-16-1571

¶9 Zachary, sometime later, filed a motion to reconsider the order dismissing the complaint.

The circuit court entered an order dated December 12, 2011, granting the defendants leave to

respond to the motion to reconsider. On December 20, 2011, Zachary sent an e-mail to

defense counsel, and he attached the motion to reconsider and the amended complaint to the

e-mail. When Zachary presented the documents in court, the amended complaint bore a file

stamp dated May 9, 2011, and the motion to reconsider bore a stamp indicating that Zachary

filed it September 19, 2011.

¶ 10 Defendants attached to their response to the motion to reconsider certified copies of the

official docket sheets for the case. The court’s records showed that neither party filed any

documents between the date of the order dismissing the complaint without prejudice—April

1, 2011—and the date of defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint—July 8, 2011. The

court’s records showed no filings dated May 9, 2011, or September 19, 2011. The court’s

records did not show any amended pleading or motion to reconsider filed before December 5,

2011. The court’s records showed that Lurie did not pay the $60 fee for filing a motion to

reconsider. See 705 ILCS 105/27.2a(g) (West 2010).

¶ 11 Defendants argued that the Luries did not timely file their amended complaint and they

did not timely file the motion to reconsider the order that dismissed their complaint with

prejudice. Defendants said, “Illinois law *** requires that this matter be dismissed because

the motion to reconsider was not ‘filed’ by the September 19, 2011 deadline.” In March

2012, at the hearing on the motion, Daniel Cozzi, counsel for defendants, again emphasized

the evidence:

“[T]he official court docket sheets that we had certified by the court show that

the motion to reconsider and the first amended complaint were never filed.

4 No. 1-16-1571

The on-line docket said that they were never filed. The filing fee for the motion

to reconsider was never paid. None of these documents were ever served on us.

And when I went to look in the official court folder for this case, *** these

documents didn’t exist.”

¶ 12 The court asked the clerk to check the court records. This exchange followed:

“[THE CLERK]: There is a file stamp on this, but there is no activity in the

computer.

[THE COURT]: How is that possible?

[THE CLERK]: There was an order entered on April 1st granting leave to file

an amended complaint ***. And there is no activity after that date until July 8th.

***

[THE COURT]: Just a minute.

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Lurie v. Wolin
2017 IL App (1st) 161571 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2017)

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