Mays v. Parks

2024 IL App (5th) 230033-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 1, 2024
Docket5-23-0033
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 IL App (5th) 230033-U (Mays v. Parks) 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
Mays v. Parks, 2024 IL App (5th) 230033-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 IL App (5th) 230033-U NOTICE NOTICE Decision filed 04/01/24. The This order was filed under text of this decision may be NO. 5-23-0033 Supreme Court Rule 23 and is changed or corrected prior to the filing of a Petition for not precedent except in the

Rehearing or the disposition of IN THE limited circumstances allowed the same. under Rule 23(e)(1). APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIFTH DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

SHERMAN MAYS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Union County. ) v. ) No. 17-LM-31 ) DAVID PARKS, ) Honorable ) William J. Thurston, Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge, presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE WELCH delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Barberis and Boie concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: Where a section 2-1401 petitioner failed to present a factual or legal challenge to the circuit court’s final judgment, the court’s order denying that petition is affirmed.

¶2 Sherman Mays filed a forcible entry and detainer action against David Parks, seeking

possession of an acre of land with a mobile home. The circuit court awarded Mays possession of

the property, but it also awarded Parks money damages. Mays appealed to this court, but his appeal

was dismissed due to the untimeliness of his notice of appeal. Mays filed a petition for relief from

judgment, which is the subject of the instant appeal. The court denied the petition, and Mays now

appeals from the dismissal. Having reviewed the record on appeal, the appellant’s brief filed by

Mays, and Parks’s pro se appellee’s brief, this court affirms the judgment of the circuit court of

Union County.

1 ¶3 BACKGROUND

¶4 In August 2017, Mays filed, by counsel, an action against Parks pursuant to the Forcible

Entry and Detainer Act (FED Act) (735 ILCS 5/9-101 et seq. (West 2016)). Mays alleged that he

was the owner of the property at 1360 Lime Kiln Road in Anna, Illinois (subject property), and

that on some unspecified date in the past, he and Parks had agreed to an oral month-to-month lease

of the subject property, under which Parks was to pay Mays $640 per month in rent. Mays sought

possession of the subject property and $3870 in unpaid rent. Parks never filed an answer or any

other type of responsive pleading.

¶5 Eventually, in October 2017, the circuit court held a bench trial. Mays appeared with

counsel; Parks appeared pro se.

¶6 At the bench trial, Mays testified that sometime in 2015, Parks contacted him about

purchasing the subject property, which consisted of a double-wide mobile home on approximately

one acre of land. Mays had his attorney prepare a contract for deed. Parks made a down payment

of $9500. Parks requested several modifications to the contract for deed, but he never signed it.

Parks was to make monthly payments of $640, which included amounts to reimburse Mays for

property taxes and insurance, but Parks’s payments were sporadic and of varying amounts. Parks

paid $100 in January 2017, but he did not make any subsequent payments. The annual property

taxes were $110, and insurance on the property was $40 per month, Mays testified.

¶7 Parks testified at the trial that in August 2014, he gave Mays a deposit of $9500. However,

Parks did not sign the contract for deed because he felt that it did not accurately reflect his

agreement with Mays. He asked Mays for changes in the contract. Parks reimbursed Mays for the

taxes and insurance that Mays had paid. On September 5, 2015, the parties entered into a written

lease agreement. (No lease agreement is in the record on appeal.) Terms of the lease were “[f]ive

2 years, 16 months of payments, from 5-17, and $35 for water—or $35 for water and $44 for

insurance.” In August 2014, the parties made an oral agreement that Parks would pay Mays for

water for two years, after which Mays would build a well on the subject property. Parks spent “at

least $12,000” on repairing and remodeling the mobile home. According to Parks, he had made

every monthly payment up to January 2017, at which point he stopped paying because Mays had

failed to dig the well.

¶8 Also at the trial, George Stearns testified on behalf of Parks. Stearns, a neighbor of Parks,

testified that in 2014, he and Mays had made an oral agreement that Stearns would continue to

provide water from his well to the property that Parks was buying. Their agreement was for a two-

year period, until Mays could drill a well for Parks. Mays never drilled the well.

¶9 After Stearns had finished testifying, Parks stated that he would have “no problem” paying

Mays the unpaid rent if only Mays would dig the well.

¶ 10 A copy of the contract for deed was admitted into evidence at the trial. The contract was

dated August 24, 2014; it was signed by Mays but not by Parks. According to the contract, Parks

was to purchase the subject property for $35,000, including a $9500 down payment “to be paid by

the Purchaser to the Vendor upon execution of this Contract,” with the remaining amount to be

paid in 60 monthly installments of $517.14. The contract required Parks to pay the county real

estate taxes. Mays was to maintain liability insurance on the subject property, and Parks was to

reimburse him for the monthly premium. The contract further required Parks to pay Mays an

additional $35 per month for 36 months to pay for water usage from Mays, which was drawn from

a neighbor’s property pursuant to an agreement between Mays and the neighbor. The contract

further provided that Mays was to construct a well on the subject property at the end of the 36-

month period.

3 ¶ 11 At the end of the bench trial, the court reserved ruling in the case and set a hearing in

November 2017, giving the parties additional time “to sort this out in a way that’s beneficial to

[both parties].” In answer to Mays’s counsel’s queries, the court did find that there was no contract

for deed, however, there was “a verbal contract” that Mays would drill a well in exchange for

Parks’s making a down payment, and Parks relied on that promise to dig a well when he made

substantial improvements on the property.

¶ 12 Despite the court’s hopes, Mays and Parks did not come to an agreement on the most

beneficial way to move forward.

¶ 13 In December 2017, the court entered judgment. The court ordered Parks to vacate the

subject property within 14 days and to pay Mays $1000, which represented the unpaid rent claimed

by Mays offset by the insurance and property taxes that Parks paid and repairs that Parks made to

the subject property. The court also ordered Mays to return the $9500 deposit and awarded Parks

$3000 for Mays’s failure to drill the well.

¶ 14 In January 2018, Mays filed a motion to modify the judgment pursuant to section 2-1203(a)

of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-1203(a) (West 2016)). Mays argued (1) that

the court erred in ordering Mays to return the $9500 down payment and awarding Parks $3000 in

damages as a result of Mays’s failure to dig the well because (a) Parks did not file an answer,

affirmative defense, or counterclaim on which these awards could be based, and (b) Mays was

denied due process because he had no notice of the defenses and counterclaims the court sua sponte

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Bluebook (online)
2024 IL App (5th) 230033-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mays-v-parks-illappct-2024.