New Light Cemetary Association v. Baumhardt

373 Ill. App. 3d 1013, 2007 WL 1531801
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 25, 2007
Docket1-06-1294 Rel
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 373 Ill. App. 3d 1013 (New Light Cemetary Association v. Baumhardt) 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
New Light Cemetary Association v. Baumhardt, 373 Ill. App. 3d 1013, 2007 WL 1531801 (Ill. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

JUSTICE TULLY

delivered the opinion of the court:

Following a hearing, the circuit court denied a motion for a preliminary injunction filed by plaintiff-appellant, New Light Cemetery Association (New Light Cemetery), and granted a motion for a directed finding filed by defendants-appellees, Carolyn Baumhardt, Richard Hoffman, and R. Hoffman & Sons, Inc. (R. Hoffman & Sons). New Light Cemetery’s motion for a preliminary injunction sought to recover cemetery-related records that were maintained by R. Hoffman & Sons and its employees during the time that they served as New Light Cemetery’s caretaker and that were taken from the cemetery by R. Hoffman & Sons when it resigned as the cemetery’s caretakers in January 2006. On appeal, New Light Cemetery asserts that the circuit court erred when it denied New Light Cemetery’s motion for a preliminary injunction and granted R. Hoffman & Sons’ motion for a directed finding because New Light Cemetery satisfied all of the elements for a preliminary injunction, including a showing of a reasonable likelihood of prevailing on the merits of the case. For the following reasons, we reverse and remand with directions.

BACKGROUND

New Light Cemetery, a not-for-profit corporation, operates a Jewish cemetery in Lincolnwood, Illinois. R. Hoffman & Sons, an Illinois corporation, was retained by New Light Cemetery approximately 30 years ago to serve as the caretakers for the Lincolnwood cemetery. Throughout their nearly 30-year relationship, the parties operated pursuant to an oral agreement, which could be terminated at the will of either party. Carolyn Baumhardt, who has been an R. Hoffman & Sons employee for the nearly 30 years that R. Hoffman & Sons provided caretaking services for the Lincolnwood cemetery, was also named as a defendant in the action brought by New Light Cemetery. Pursuant to her employment with R. Hoffman & Sons, Baumhardt was assigned to provide caretaking services at the Lincolnwood cemetery and she was responsible for maintaining cemetery-related records, including cemetery-related records regarding where people were buried presently and where people were to be buried in the future.

When Baumhardt first began providing caretaking services at the cemetery, the cemetery’s prior caretaker delivered cemetery-related records to Baumhardt. The records Baumhardt received from the prior caretaker contained information regarding where people were buried and information regarding the ownership of both the occupied and the unoccupied grave sites. According to Baumhardt, the records she received from the previous caretaker were in poor condition. As a result, Baumhardt copied the records into a new, green notebook and she disposed of the original records. Over the next 30 years, Baumhardt updated the cemetery’s records by updating the green notebook. In addition to creating and maintaining the green notebook, Baumhardt stored the cemetery’s records both in a separate spiral notebook and on the hard drive of a computer owned by R. Hoffman & Sons. Furthermore, Baumhardt maintained a map of the cemetery. The map apparently was given to Baumhardt by New Light Cemetery, and Baumhardt documented the names of the people who were buried in each grave site and often referred to the map to assist her in her duties as caretaker of the cemetery.

On January 17, 2006, R. Hoffman & Sons resigned as caretakers of the cemetery. While the record is unclear as to the circumstances surrounding R. Hoffman & Sons’ resignation, it appears that the parties did not amicably part ways. According to Baumhardt’s testimony, at the time R. Hoffman & Sons resigned as caretakers, the computer on which Baumhardt had maintained the cemetery-related information was undergoing repairs at a computer repair shop. At some point, R. Hoffman & Sons instructed the computer repair shop to destroy the computer’s hard drive and, therefore, New Light Cemetery was never given access to the cemetery-related information stored on R. Hoffman & Sons’ computer.

In addition to its inability to access the computer’s hard drive, New Light Cemetery has been unable to access any of the other cemetery-related information maintained by Baumhardt during her time as the cemetery’s caretaker. Baumhardt testified that recently she destroyed the spiral notebook in which the cemetery-related information was stored. Furthermore, R. Hoffman & Sons has refused to provide New Light Cemetery with the information Baumhardt gleaned from the records she received from the previous caretaker, which Baumhardt transferred into the green notebook and subsequently updated during the approximately 30 years she served as the cemetery’s caretaker. Finally, R. Hoffman & Sons has refused to provide New Light Cemetery with a copy of the map of the cemetery, which New Light Cemetery originally gave to Baumhardt and which Baumhardt maintained as part of her duties as caretaker.

After R. Hoffman & Sons resigned as caretakers and refused to provide New Light Cemetery with the cemetery-related records, New Light Cemetery hired Norman Schwartz, the former president of the Jewish Historical Society, to prepare a new map of the cemetery. In an effort to achieve an accurate and complete map of the cemetery, Schwartz walked through the cemetery and took measurements of each grave site. The map and records prepared by Schwartz, however, could not provide New Light Cemetery with information regarding the ownership of unoccupied grave sites. As such, New Light Cemetery asserts that it has no information regarding where people are to be buried in the future. According to New Light Cemetery, the absence of information regarding ownership of unoccupied grave sites has led to a number of serious problems; on one occasion, New Light Cemetery attempted to bury a deceased in a grave site that was already occupied by the deceased’s husband when, in fact, the deceased was supposed to be buried in an adjacent grave site.

In an effort to obtain the contents of the green notebook and other cemetery-related information maintained by Baumhardt and R. Hoffman & Sons during their time as the cemetery’s caretakers, New Light Cemetery filed suit in the circuit court of Cook County seeking both money damages for conversion and injunctive relief. In bringing the suit, it asserted that the green notebook and other cemetery-related records were prepared by Baumhardt and R. Hoffman & Sons for New Light Cemetery’s benefit and were New Light Cemetery’s property. New Light Cemetery also filed a motion for entry of a preliminary injunction, asserting that, in August 2005, it had provided R. Hoffman & Sons with written caretaker guidelines, which confirmed that the cemetery-related records maintained by R. Hoffman & Sons and its employees were New Light Cemetery’s property. Further, New Light Cemetery asserted that it would experience irreparable harm if the preliminary injunction was not granted in that, in the absence of the cemetery-related records in R. Hoffman & Sons’ possession, New Light Cemetery has been unable to confirm where people are to be buried. Following a hearing, the circuit court denied New Light Cemetery’s motion for a preliminary injunction and granted R. Hoffman & Sons’ motion for a directed finding. New Light Cemetery’s timely appeal follows.

DISCUSSION

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373 Ill. App. 3d 1013, 2007 WL 1531801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-light-cemetary-association-v-baumhardt-illappct-2007.