MacDonald v. Wagenmaker

2024 IL App (1st) 230089, 245 N.E.3d 571
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 1, 2024
Docket1-23-0089
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 IL App (1st) 230089 (MacDonald v. Wagenmaker) 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
MacDonald v. Wagenmaker, 2024 IL App (1st) 230089, 245 N.E.3d 571 (Ill. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 IL App (1st) 230089 Nos. 1-23-0089 & 1-23-0141 (cons.) Opinion filed March 1, 2024 Sixth Division

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIRST DISTRICT

JAMES S. MacDONALD, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) ) Appeal from the Circuit Court SALLY WAGENMAKER; WAGENMAKER & ) of Cook County. OBERLY, LLC, an Illinois Corporation; and ) SCHECHTER, DOKKEN, KANTER, ) ANDREWS & SELCER, LTD., d/b/a Schechter, ) No. 2020 L 11785 Dokken, Kanter CPAs, ) ) ) The Honorable ) Jerry A. Esrig, Defendants ) Judge, presiding. ) ) ) (Hoogendoorn & Talbot, LLP, a Nonparty ) Subpoena Respondent-Appellant; Sally ) Wagenmaker and Wagenmaker & Oberly, LLC, ) Defendants-Appellants). )

JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Oden Johnson and Justice Tailor concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Should the crime-fraud exception to the attorney-client privilege potentially extend to

alleged defamatory conduct by attorneys? This question requires grappling with the intricate 1-23-0089

interplay between ethical principles and client expectations. We hold that considering

defamatory conduct as a basis for applying the crime-fraud exception compromises both the

privilege and the exception and reverse.

¶2 Background

¶3 James S. MacDonald was the founder and former senior pastor of HBC, an Evangelical

Christian megachurch. HBC terminated him in February 2019 after determining he was

“biblically disqualified” from ministry for failing to be “above reproach” and having a “sinful

pattern of inappropriate language, anger, and domineering behavior.” According to HBC,

MacDonald’s conduct allegedly included “insulting, belittling, and verbally bullying others,”

“improperly exercising positional and spiritual authority,” and “extravagant spending utilizing

church resources resulting in personal benefit.”

¶4 MacDonald initiated arbitration with the Institute of Christian Conciliation, claiming, in

part, wrongful termination and improper denial of employment benefits. HBC retained

Hoogendoorn & Talbot, LLP (Hoogendoorn), to represent it in the arbitration. The parties

settled the arbitration in April 2021.

¶5 Meanwhile, HBC retained attorney Sally Wagenmaker and her firm, Wagenmaker &

Oberly, LLC (W&O), to look into the church’s corporate structure and finances. This required

them to investigate, evaluate, and make recommendations related to corporate governance,

including corporate tax and other legal compliance accountability structures “in the aftermath”

of MacDonald’s termination. W&O hired the accounting firm Schechter, Dokken, Kanter,

Andrews, & Selcer, Ltd. (Accountants), to conduct a forensic accounting of MacDonald’s

transactions.

-2- 1-23-0089

¶6 After giving HBC’s board of elders (Board) an initial report detailing its preliminary

findings and recommendations, W&O sent the Board its summary report (Wagenmaker Letter)

in November 2019. The Wagenmaker Letter reached multiple conclusions about MacDonald’s

leadership:

“Based on our law firm’s review of available information, we determined that a

massive corporate governance failure apparently developed over several years at HBC,

primarily due to the following factors:

• MacDonald’s powerful and subversive leadership style;

• His development of an inner-circle leadership group through which he could

control HBC;

• His marginalization of broader leadership, particularly the former HBC Elders;

and

• His other aggressive tactics that thwarted healthy nonprofit governance.

Directly resulting from such problems, MacDonald appears to have extensively

misused HBC’s financial resources for improper financial benefit.”

¶7 The Wagenmaker Letter also stated that MacDonald reaped “significant personal financial

benefits, avoiding accountability to any governing board, and with heavy-fisted exclusionary

leadership. His close inner circle of HBC leaders helped him to do so without the important

accountability measures needed for effective nonprofit ministry governance. Such actions are

obvious and patent, such as through lack of appropriate financial controls over certain bank

accounts, the removal of MacDonald from the conflict of interest policy’s coverage, his

spending, and the lack of proper executive compensation evaluations.”

-3- 1-23-0089

¶8 HBC posted the Wagenmaker Letter on its website along with a letter from the Accountants

to Wagenmaker (Accountant Letter), summarizing the findings of forensic analysis of

purported financial irregularities. On the same day, two HBC elders read a statement to the

congregation (the Laird-Stoner Statement), summarizing the Wagenmaker Letter. MacDonald

alleges the Laird-Stoner Statement included intentionally false and salacious details not

included in the published versions of the Wagenmaker and Accountant Letters.

¶9 HBC also posted on its website the findings of its disqualification investigation (DQ

Statement) “to provide clarity to our church family” about its reasons for terminating

MacDonald nearly nine months earlier. The DQ Statement, which MacDonald alleges W&O

helped draft, stated that HBC’s disqualification investigation “led us to conclude that

[MacDonald] had a substantial pattern of sinful behavior.” According to the DQ Statement,

MacDonald “made repeated efforts to profit himself beyond what was honorable” and

displayed a “pattern of extravagant spending utilizing church resources resulting in personal

benefit.” It concluded that MacDonald’s conduct “biblically disqualified [him] from the

position of Elder.”

¶ 10 MacDonald sued Wagenmaker, W&O, and the Accountants, alleging the Wagenmaker and

Accountant Letters included provably false and defamatory statements intended to destroy his

reputation with the HBC congregation and the evangelical Christian community. MacDonald

alleged Wagenmaker and W&O aided and abetted HBC in making other defamatory

statements about him, including helping HBC draft the DQ Letter and the Laird-Stoner

Statement.

¶ 11 Further, MacDonald asserted that defendants conspired to defame him to help HBC gain

an advantage in the arbitration. Specifically, MacDonald alleged that W&O, HBC, and the

-4- 1-23-0089

Accountants delayed responding to his arbitration demand until after publicly defaming him

and then filing counterclaims that aligned with the false statements. He alleged the law firms

and HBC defrauded HBC’s insurance company by falsely stating that Wagenmaker was part

of HBC’s defense team in the arbitration so the insurance company would pay her legal fees.

¶ 12 MacDonald’s amended complaint alleged claims of defamation per se, false light invasion

of privacy, invasion of privacy (intrusion on seclusion), and civil conspiracy against

Wagenmaker, W&O, and the Accountants, and aiding and abetting defamation per se and

aiding and abetting false light invasion of privacy against Wagenmaker and W&O.

¶ 13 During discovery, MacDonald subpoenaed W&O and Hoogendoorn, seeking

communications among the law firms, HBC, and the Accountants. The law firms moved to

quash the subpoenas and declined to produce certain communications, arguing the attorney-

client privilege. (The Accountants produced requested communications; neither the

Accountants nor HBC are parties to the appeal.)

¶ 14 MacDonald filed a motion to compel, arguing, in part, that the crime-fraud exception

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2024 IL App (1st) 230089, 245 N.E.3d 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdonald-v-wagenmaker-illappct-2024.