Roffers v. Hagemann Trucking, LLC

2025 IL App (4th) 241254-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 29, 2025
Docket4-24-1254
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 IL App (4th) 241254-U (Roffers v. Hagemann Trucking, 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
Roffers v. Hagemann Trucking, LLC, 2025 IL App (4th) 241254-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

NOTICE 2025 IL App (4th) 241254-U This Order was filed under FILED April 29, 2025 Supreme Court Rule 23 and is NO. 4-24-1254 Carla Bender not precedent except in the 4th District Appellate limited circumstances allowed IN THE APPELLATE COURT Court, IL under Rule 23(e)(1). OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

MONICA ROFFERS, as Executor of the Estate of ) Appeal from the Gregory Roffers, ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Stephenson County v. ) No. 21L23 HAGEMANN TRUCKING, LLC, a Wisconsin Limited ) Liability Company; HAGEMANN TRUCKING, LLC, an ) Illinois Limited Liability Company; and VALERIE ) Honorable WEBER, ) Peter J. McClanathan, Defendants-Appellees. ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE VANCIL delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Knecht and DeArmond concurred in the judgment.

ORDER ¶1 Held: The appellate court affirmed, finding the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the plaintiff leave to file a fifth amended complaint and in granting the defendants’ motion to dismiss with prejudice.

¶2 Monica Roffers, as executor of the estate of her deceased husband, Gregory

Roffers, sued defendants, Hagemann Trucking, LLC, a Wisconsin Limited Liability Company

(Hagemann Trucking-WI), Hagemann Trucking, LLC, an Illinois Limited Liability Company

(Hagemann Trucking-IL), and Valerie Weber, seeking unpaid wages allegedly owed to Gregory.

In 2024, defendants moved to dismiss Monica’s fourth amended complaint with prejudice.

Monica asked the trial court for leave to file a fifth amended complaint. The trial court denied

Monica’s request and granted defendants’ motion to dismiss with prejudice. Monica appeals,

arguing the court abused its discretion. ¶3 We affirm.

¶4 I. BACKGROUND

¶5 Gregory Roffers worked as an over-the-road truck driver for Hagemann

Trucking-IL beginning in July 2012. On July 14, 2015, Gregory died in a crash while on the job.

On January 25, 2021, Gregory’s widow, Monica Roffers, acting as executor of Gregory’s estate,

filed a two-count complaint against Hagemann Trucking-WI alleging that Hagemann

Trucking-WI “falsified every one of Greg Roffers’s paychecks as part of a scheme to pay him

less commission than he was owed” and failed to pay him for unused vacation time. She sought

damages under the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act (Act) (820 ILCS 115/1 et seq.)

(West 2020).

¶6 Monica subsequently filed her first amended complaint on April 19, 2021, naming

Hagemann Trucking-WI, Hagemann Trucking-IL, and Valerie Weber, among others as

defendants. She added allegations that Hagemann Trucking-WI was merely a continuation of

Hagemann Trucking-IL. She also alleged that Weber owned Hagemann Trucking-IL and

Hagemann Trucking-WI.

¶7 Defendants moved to dismiss, and, by agreement of the parties, Monica filed a

second amended complaint in March 2022. In her second amended complaint, Monica

abandoned the unused vacation time claim, but she added a new claim that Hagemann

Trucking-IL failed to pay Gregory for “Wait Time,” meaning compensation for when he waited

“at a shipper or receiver for an excessive amount of time.” Defendants moved to dismiss that

complaint, and the trial court granted defendants’ motion. Monica filed a third amended

complaint, reasserting her “Wait Time” and commission claims. On defendants’ motion, the trial

court dismissed the third amended complaint without prejudice.

-2- ¶8 Monica’s fourth amended complaint, filed on July 21, 2023, repeated her “Wait

Time” and commissions claims. The trial court set a schedule for the parties’ filings, requiring

defendants to file any motion to dismiss by September 22, 2023, requiring Monica to respond by

October 20, 2023, and giving defendants until November 3, 2023, to reply to the response.

¶9 Defendants filed both a timely motion to strike and a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s

fourth amended complaint. Defendants attached to their motion an affidavit from Weber, along

with two employer ledgers, which documented charges and collections from Hagemann

Trucking-IL’s customers. Defendants argued that these documents refuted Monica’s allegations

that they falsified records or underpaid Gregory.

¶ 10 Monica did not file a response to the motion to dismiss, but defendants still filed a

timely reply in support of their motion to dismiss. At a status hearing on December 22, 2023, the

trial court gave Monica until January 11, 2024, to file a response. The court scheduled a hearing

on defendants’ motion to dismiss for February 1, 2024. Monica missed the January 11, 2024,

deadline and filed no response to defendants’ motion to dismiss.

¶ 11 Instead, at 4:32 p.m. on January 31, 2024, the day before the hearing on

defendants’ motion, Monica filed a motion for leave to file a fifth amended complaint.

According to her motion, her proposed fifth amended complaint “significantly narrow[ed] the

allegations and claims” and “provide[d] additional factual details related to her narrowed

claims.” Specifically, her proposed fifth amended complaint abandoned any allegations of

unpaid commission wages, “focus[ing] only on Defendants’ alleged violations due to their

failure to pay Greg Roffers all of his earned wages derived from ‘Wait Time.’ ” She further

claimed, “It was not until Defendants filed its Motion to Dismiss the Fourth Amended Complaint

and attached exhibits and subsequent investigation that it became apparent that Plaintiff’s

-3- remaining claims against Defendants arose from their failure to pay Greg Roffers’ for all of his

‘Wait Time’ wages.”

¶ 12 In the proposed fifth amended complaint, Monica alleged that defendants agreed

to pay Gregory 30% of their revenues from linehauls, meaning revenues from “haul[ing] their

tanker loads from the pick-up point to the consignee.” They later increased his linehaul

commission rate to 31%. She alleged defendants further agreed to pay Gregory $50 for each hour

of “Wait Time” he spent waiting for his haul to be loaded or unloaded, beyond either the first or

second hour. Monica also claimed, for the first time, that she confirmed Gregory’s wage

agreement in her own phone conversations with Weber. She claimed that defendants improperly

combined Gregory’s “Wait Time” wages and his linehaul wages, paying him only 30% to 31%

of his “Wait Time” wages, in violation of their agreement and the Act.

¶ 13 At the hearing on February 1, 2024, Monica’s attorney acknowledged that he was

not contesting the motion to dismiss the fourth amended complaint. Instead, he was asking for

leave to file a fifth amended complaint. Defendants’ attorney objected to Monica’s motion. He

claimed the trial court had previously warned that Monica would have no more chances to

amend her complaint after her fourth attempt. He argued that the motion to dismiss was

unopposed and asked that the case be dismissed with prejudice. Addressing the court, Monica’s

attorney responded,

“[T]his is in full deference to your Honor’s previous statement before to us—or to

the Court, you know, that this would be our last shot. We’re pursuing the same

claim. We were pursuing wait time before. The only difference here is that we’ve

fleshed out some of the facts related to the wait time in that we’ve eliminated the

claim for unpaid commissions.”

-4- ¶ 14 In court on March 15, 2024, the trial court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss

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2025 IL App (4th) 241254-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roffers-v-hagemann-trucking-llc-illappct-2025.