Rodi v. Horstman

2015 IL App (1st) 142787, 41 N.E.3d 544
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 15, 2015
Docket1-14-2787
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2015 IL App (1st) 142787 (Rodi v. Horstman) 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
Rodi v. Horstman, 2015 IL App (1st) 142787, 41 N.E.3d 544 (Ill. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

2015 IL App (1st) 142787 No. 1-14-2787 September 15, 2015

SECOND DIVISION

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIRST DISTRICT

ANN E. RODI, ROBERT E. RODI, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court MICHAEL J. RODI, PATRICIA RODI, RODI ) Of Cook County. PROPERTIES and RODI CONSTRUCTION ) COMPANY, ) ) No. 08 L 007284 Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) ) The Honorable v. ) Ronald F. Bartkowicz, ) Judge Presiding. JAMES K. HORSTMAN, CRAY HUBER ) HOSRSTMAN HEIL AND VANAUSDAL ) LLC, a limited liability company, f/k/a Iwan ) Cray Huber Horstman and Vanausdal LLC, ) a limited liability company, ) ) Defendants-Appellees. )

JUSTICE NEVILLE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Pierce and Justice Simon concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 This lawsuit involves allegations that two attorneys separately acted improperly in

providing legal services. Ann Rodi and related parties sued Ronald Roeser, alleging that his

work for his client, Chrysler Financial Services, involved misconduct that injured Ann. The No. 1-14-2787

circuit court dismissed the lawsuit against Roeser. Ann hired James Horstman to help with

the appeal. The appellate court dismissed the appeal. Ann and some related parties then filed

this lawsuit for legal malpractice against Horstman. Horstman moved to dismiss the lawsuit,

arguing that Ann would have lost the appeal against Roeser no matter what he did. The

circuit court entered a judgment in favor of Horstman. Ann now appeals.

¶2 We find that the applicable statute of limitations barred Ann from obtaining any recovery

from Roeser, regardless of Horstman's actions. Because Ann and the other plaintiffs cannot

show that Horstman's actions proximately caused them any damages, we affirm the judgment

entered in favor of Horstman.

¶3 BACKGROUND

¶4 By 1987, Robert J. Rodi (Robert J.) owned controlling interests in several business

ventures. Rodi Yachts (Yachts) sold boats at a boat yard located on Ashland Avenue in

Chicago. Rodi Properties (Properties) owned the land and the building where Yachts

operated its business. Robert J. also owned a 50% stake in Rodi Marine (Marine), which

sold boats from a location near Fox River. In 1987, Robert J., together with his wife, Ann,

and David Copeland, formed Rodi-Copeland Construction Company (Construction) to build

houses on 90 acres of land Construction owned near Joliet.

¶5 On October 14, 1987, Yachts obtained a loan from Chrysler Financial Services Company.

Robert J. personally guaranteed repayment of the loan. Yachts and Marine both signed a

note for the funds Chrysler advanced. Properties obtained a loan from Lakeside Bank in

1989, in exchange for a mortgage on the lot Properties owned on Ashland Avenue.

2 No. 1-14-2787

¶6 In 1990, Robert J. distributed interests in some of his businesses to members of his

family. He gave Ann all of his interest in Construction and a 52% interest in Properties. He

gave an 8% interest in Properties to each of his six children, leaving Robert J. with no

interest in Properties or Construction. Properties became a general partnership with Ann and

the six children as the partners.

¶7 Chrysler v. Robert J.

¶8 Yachts and Marine both defaulted on their loan from Chrysler. Chrysler, through its

attorney, Roeser, sued Yachts, Marine and Robert J. in July 1990. The circuit court entered a

default judgment in favor of Chrysler for $1,228,698.47. A boat manufacturer gave Yachts

more than $800,000 for its inventory, and the funds went to pay the debt to Chrysler. In

January 1991, the circuit court entered an order reflecting the reduction of the debt to

$355,185.24.

¶9 In February 1991, Chrysler, through Roeser, filed Citations to Discover Assets with

several banks that had loaned money to Properties and Construction. Roeser served a

citation on Lakeside, stating falsely that $1,228,698.47 of Robert J.'s debt to Chrysler

remained unpaid. Roeser served a similar citation on First Midwest Bank, which had loaned

money to Construction.

¶ 10 Properties sought renewal of its loan from Lakeside. Lakeside refused to renew the loan.

In March 1991, Construction applied to First Midwest for a loan to help pay for building

houses on Construction's land. First Midwest refused to make any new loan to Construction.

Construction sold off a large chunk of its land, at a substantial loss, so that it could continue

paying contractors to build houses on its remaining land. In February 1992, Copeland

3 No. 1-14-2787

resigned from Construction and sold his interest to Ann, leaving Ann sole owner of

Construction.

¶ 11 Robert J. filed a bankruptcy petition in February 1992. Yachts petitioned for bankruptcy

at the same time. Roeser, acting on Chrysler's behalf, filed a lawsuit accusing Robert J. of

fraudulently transferring his assets to his wife and family in 1990. The case ended with a

judgment entered in favor of Robert J.

¶ 12 Lakeside sued to foreclose its mortgage on the land Properties owned. Properties did not

contest the foreclosure. At the judicial sale in August 1992, Lakeside purchased the land for

less than $1,700,000. Construction eventually sold the few houses it constructed and the land

it owned, leaving it with no significant assets.

¶ 13 Rodi v. Roeser

¶ 14 In 1996, Robert J. and Ann contacted Denice Gierach, an attorney who had worked with

them in the past, and asked her for an opinion on whether they should sue Roeser and

Chrysler. On June 28, 1996, Gierach sent Robert J. and Ann a letter in which she explained

in detail the issues involved in the potential litigation against Roeser and Chrysler. She

agreed with Robert J. and Ann that Roeser's misconduct had substantially damaged them.

She explained that they would face considerable difficulty proving that the erroneous

citations to discover assets caused the banks not to renew loans or make loans to Properties

and Construction. She also said the five-year statute of limitations might bar their claims

because Roeser sent the last erroneous citation in March 1991. She explained that they could

argue that they did not suffer any damages due to the erroneous citations for some months.

She summarized, "based upon the information that you show[ed] me, I would not

4 No. 1-14-2787

recommend that you proceed forward with any litigation against Chrysler, without any

further direct information showing the causal connection between the Citation wrongfully

issued and your damages."

¶ 15 Robert J. and Ann eventually decided that Ann should sue Chrysler and Roeser. Gierach

agreed to represent Ann. Robert J. insisted that his children should help defray the costs of

the lawsuit if they wanted to participate in any recovery from Roeser and Chrysler. Three of

his children chose not to participate in the lawsuit, despite their ownership interest in

Properties.

¶ 16 In July 1997, Gierach filed a complaint against Roeser and Chrysler, naming as plaintiffs

Ann, Robert E. Rodi, Michael Rodi and Patricia Lefkovitz (the participating children). Ann

and the participating children alleged that in February 1991, Robert J.'s attorney told Roeser

that the citations stated an incorrect amount for the outstanding debt, and that because Robert

J. no longer had any ownership interest in Properties and Construction, Roeser had no

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2015 IL App (1st) 142787, 41 N.E.3d 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodi-v-horstman-illappct-2015.