Robinson v. North Pond Hunting Club

890 N.E.2d 535, 382 Ill. App. 3d 888
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 6, 2008
Docket5-06-0436
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 890 N.E.2d 535 (Robinson v. North Pond Hunting Club) 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
Robinson v. North Pond Hunting Club, 890 N.E.2d 535, 382 Ill. App. 3d 888 (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

JUSTICE CHAPMAN

delivered the opinion of the court:

As a result of a disagreement, the members of the North Pond Hunting Club, a group of avid hunters who had come together to purchase and improve land in furtherance of their hobby, determined that one member — the plaintiff, Charles Jeffrey Robinson — needed to be removed from membership in the land trust which owned the hunting property in question. The proposal to remove Robinson was not to his liking, and he filed a complaint for a partition against all remaining parties to the land trust — members of the North Pond Hunting Club. Following a three-day bench trial on Robinson’s complaint for a partition, the trial court denied his complaint on August 1, 2006. Robinson appeals. We reverse and remand.

The North Pond Hunting Club began in 1983 when eight duck hunters came together to purchase 80 acres of hunting ground in Jackson County. A land trust was drafted by an attorney. The legal title to the land was in the name of David Porter as the trustee for the North Pond Hunting Club. All eight men held a beneficial interest. In 1986, the land trust purchased an additional, adjacent 40 acres of land. No one contends that this original land trust agreement was invalid.

A ninth man, Robinson, was friends with the original eight members and had been allowed to hunt the land. Sometime in 1991, at a cost of $20,000, Robinson purchased 40 acres of adjoining land that were higher in elevation. Robinson’s 40 acres offered a better ingress and egress to the 120 acres.

In exchange for a one-ninth interest in the hunting club land trust, Robinson offered his 40 acres (one-fourth of the total land) to the other land trust beneficiaries. The eight original members agreed to this deal.

The original land trust document would no longer be effective with the addition of Robinson’s acreage. Instead of returning to an attorney to have a new land trust drawn up, one of the men who had limited law school experience offered to create the new document. All nine members signed the document, dated August 31, 1991. The original eight members also executed a revocation of the original land trust conditional upon Robinson’s transfer of his 40 acres into the new trust within 30 days. At that time, the original 120 acres were not transferred into the name of the new land trust but remained in the ownership of the original land trust. In the second land trust document, the drafter eliminated a termination clause requiring the sale of the land if the land remained in the trust for a period of 20 years.

On December 2, 1991, Robinson signed a warranty deed transferring his 40 acres from his name into the name of the original land trust. At some time after this date, an attorney noticed the title discrepancy and caused a new deed to be prepared, signed, and filed, correcting this error.

The new land trust document expressly valued each member’s share at $20,000.

In 1992, one of the original members, Delmar Fulk, died. His widow was allowed to sell his one-ninth share to a man named Jim Justice, for $20,000.

Thereafter, work began on Robinson’s original 40 acres, tearing down old cabins and constructing a new cabin, with construction costs totaling about $40,000. Each member helped to build the cabin and each paid a share of the costs associated with construction. Robinson contends that because he worked in a construction-related field, he did most of the physical labor on this project.

From August 31, 1991, until some time in 2003, the hunting club members used the land in accordance with their practice and the land trust agreement. Conflicts among the nine men developed in 2002 and 2003.

The conflict related to the fact that Robinson, apparently without the express approval of the other eight members, hired an acquaintance of his to perform some clearing on the property. The bulldozer work done was not to the satisfaction of the hunting club. The club refused to pay this man’s bill, and a lawsuit was filed against the land trust. Robinson and Jim Justice went ahead and paid their one-ninth shares of the contractor’s bill, which enraged the other seven members, who claimed that those payments resulted in the acknowledgment of the debt so that a judgment was entered against the land trust by the court. Robinson went ahead and personally paid the judgment.

Jim Justice offered to sell his one-ninth interest. The remaining eight members voted to purchase his share for $23,000.

Seven of the remaining eight members met outside of Robinson’s presence in order to discuss his membership in the group. As a result of this meeting, the decision was made to expel Robinson. The resolution to expel was drafted and signed before the meeting was held in which Robinson was to be given the opportunity to discuss what had transpired. The other seven members tendered a $20,000 check to Robinson.

Robinson refused the tender of the check, and he brought this complaint for a partition.

Robinson advanced two arguments at the trial. His first argument related to the elimination of the 20-year mandatory-sale provision from the second land trust document, which left the land trust without a termination date, thereby invalidating the trust. Additionally, Robinson argued that because his original warranty deed attempting to transfer his 40 acres into the second land trust transferred the property into the North Pond Hunt Club — a nonexistent entity — the transfer was void ab initio. Under this theory, Robinson sought the return of his original 40 acres.

A bench trial was held on May 5, 2006, and June 8 and 9, 2006. After the bench trial, the parties submitted written briefs. In the defendants’ written brief, they acknowledge that “a properly drafted land trust agreement must contain a termination date.” However, they argued that this failing should not prohibit the court from finding a resulting trust. And the defendants argued that there is no absolute right to a partition. Regarding the warranty deed purportedly transferring Robinson’s 40 acres into a nonexistent entity, the defendants essentially contend that Robinson could only have intended to transfer his acreage to the correct entity and that the subsequent warranty deed prepared and filed years later corrected this problem. Regarding partition in general, the defendants argued that the land trust agreement which all parties signed clearly implied that a partition was not allowed. The agreement contained a first-refusal clause, which mandated that any party who wanted out of the group had to offer his portion to the other members first.

In its lengthy order, the trial court denied Robinson’s partition request, finding that if the land trust failed, at best Robinson had only a one-ninth interest in his original 40 acres. The trial court applied the express expulsion terms, allowing the club’s decision to expel Robinson and to pay him only $20,000 for his interest. The trial court did not specifically determine whether the second land trust agreement was void due to the lack of a mandatory-sale provision.

Generally speaking, because a complaint for a partition is seeking equitable relief, we review the matter on a manifest-weight-of-the-evidence standard.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
890 N.E.2d 535, 382 Ill. App. 3d 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-north-pond-hunting-club-illappct-2008.