Masters Enterprises, LLC v. The Landings at Henry Harbor, LLC

2026 IL App (4th) 250116-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 27, 2026
Docket4-25-0116
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2026 IL App (4th) 250116-U (Masters Enterprises, LLC v. The Landings at Henry Harbor, LLC) 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
Masters Enterprises, LLC v. The Landings at Henry Harbor, LLC, 2026 IL App (4th) 250116-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

NOTICE This Order was filed under 2026 IL App (4th) 250116-U FILED Supreme Court Rule 23 and is January 27, 2026 not precedent except in the NO. 4-25-0116 Carla Bender th limited circumstances allowed 4 District Appellate under Rule 23(e)(1). IN THE APPELLATE COURT Court, IL

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

MASTERS ENTERPRISES, LLC, ) Appeal from the Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Circuit Court of v. ) Marshall County THE LANDINGS AT HENRY HARBOR, LLC, ) No. 19MR4 Defendant-Appellee. ) ) Honorable ) Paul E. Bauer, ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE DOHERTY delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Steigmann and Justice Knecht concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: The circuit court had jurisdiction to enter a supplemental award for contractual attorney fees incurred in the process of enforcing the judgment, but the award should not have included fees incurred in a different case.

¶2 Plaintiff Masters Enterprises, LLC (Masters), brought this action to terminate a

lease with its tenant, defendant The Landings at Henry Harbor, LLC (Landings). The circuit court

granted summary judgment in favor of Landings and later awarded contractual attorney fees

against Masters. During postjudgment enforcement proceedings, the court made an additional

attorney fee award. On appeal, Masters contends that the court improperly granted supplemental

attorney fees at a time when it lacked jurisdiction and that some of the fees do not relate to

enforcement of the judgment in this case. For the reasons that follow, we reverse and remand with

directions.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND ¶4 As most of the issues here relate to procedural matters below, we dedicate little of

our discussion to the initial substantive dispute between the parties and instead focus on the

protracted procedural history of this case.

¶5 Landings was already a tenant of property owned by the City of Henry, Illinois,

when Masters bought the property, subject to Landings’s lease, in 2017. In February 2019, Masters

initiated suit alleging, among other things, that Landings breached the lease by failing to keep the

property in good repair and by failing to pay real estate taxes and insurance. Masters eventually

filed a five-count amended complaint, to which Landings filed an answer that included affirmative

defenses. Landings’s answer requested judgment in its favor, “including costs of defending this

suit[ ] and attorney’s fees.” As the matter progressed, the circuit court dismissed counts I and III

of Masters’s complaint, and Masters did not attempt to replead them.

¶6 Landings moved for summary judgment on the remaining counts (II, IV, and V),

which the circuit court granted on February 22, 2022. The motion did not mention a request for an

award of attorney fees, nor did Landings’s counsel when the motion was argued. The circuit court

granted Landings’s motion on all remaining counts and included in its order a finding that “[t]here

is no just reason to delay enforcement or appeal of this order.”

¶7 On March 18, 2022, Masters filed a motion for reconsideration of the circuit court’s

summary judgment ruling. On July 20, 2022, it supplemented its motion. The court denied

Masters’s motion to reconsider on August 16, 2022, and its order again included a finding that

“[t]here is no just reason to delay enforcement or appeal” of the order denying reconsideration.

¶8 On September 14, 2022—204 days after the entry of judgment and 29 days after

denial of Masters’s motion for reconsideration—Landings filed a motion seeking an award of

-2- contractual attorney fees against Masters in the amount of $32,721.52. The motion was

accompanied by a copy of the lease, and it specifically referenced this lease provision:

“Attorney’s Fees and Costs. In the event that either party should find it necessary

to retain an attorney for the enforcement of any of the provisions hereof occasioned

by the fault of the other party, the party not at fault shall be entitled to recover

reasonable attorneys’ fees and court costs incurred as a result thereof, whether said

attorneys’ fees are incurred for the purpose of investigation, negotiation, trial,

appellate proceedings or other legal services.”

The motion was also accompanied by the affidavit of counsel, stating that the total amount of fees

incurred by Landings with respect to “this matter” as of September 14, 2022, was $32,721.52.

¶9 On November 23, 2022, the circuit court granted Landings’s motion and entered a

fee award in the requested amount.

¶ 10 Another motion was filed on December 14, 2022, purporting to be on behalf of

Masters. The motion was not filed by counsel on behalf of Masters, a limited liability company,

but by a person named Audrey Bishop. The motion did not attack the judgment per se, nor did it

specifically seek reversal of the attorney fee award. Instead, the motion sought copies of the

itemized bills of Landings and release of an insurance check, stating:

“Motion for All Itemized Bills from Marvel Law for legal services pertaining to

litigation between Masters Enterprises and Landings at Henry Harbors (Already

requested from Both Marvel Law and The Landings) Release of Insurance check

for Fire Damage at the Landings at Henry Harbor in 10/2020 (Requested for

multiple times to both The Landings and Marvel Law without Response or

Refusal).”

-3- Bishop signed the pleading as herself, without identifying her relationship with Masters; a later

pleading identified her as the sole owner of Masters. As this motion was not filed by counsel on

behalf of Landings, we will refer to it as the “pro se motion.” The motion was noticed for

presentment on February 1, 2023, but an amended notice moved that date to February 14, 2023.

¶ 11 Landings went on to file numerous pleadings in supplementary proceedings in

enforcement of its judgment, including citations to discover assets and a motion seeking a turnover

of insurance proceeds in the amount of $31,312.27.

¶ 12 In response to the pro se motion seeking fee itemization, Landings argued that the

motion was untimely because it was filed approximately three months after the fee award order it

addressed. On January 18, 2023, Landings filed a motion asking that it be awarded additional

expenses and attorney fees against Masters, this time under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 137 (eff.

Jan. 1, 2018). The Rule 137 motion argued that the pro se motion filed in December 2022 was

improper because it was untimely and lacked a legal basis. The same day it filed its response to

the pro se motion, Landings filed a motion seeking turnover of $531.40 in one of Masters’s bank

accounts.

¶ 13 The February 1, 2023, hearing was continued by agreement to March 15, 2023, due

to an appearance being recently filed by new counsel for Masters. The circuit court also entered a

turnover order for the $531.40 bank account on February 1.

¶ 14 On March 14, 2023, Masters’s new counsel filed an “Amendment to Motion to

Reconsider,” which it purported to be an amendment to the still-pending pro se motion filed

December 14, 2022. The new motion argued that the $32,721.52 contractual fee award made on

November 23, 2022, was improper due to insufficient documentation on which to determine its

reasonableness.

-4- ¶ 15 Landings’s response to Masters’s amended motion argued that the initial pro se

motion concerning fees was untimely, as the circuit court had already ruled on the reasonableness

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2026 IL App (4th) 250116-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masters-enterprises-llc-v-the-landings-at-henry-harbor-llc-illappct-2026.