Rohrbacher v. Balaniuk

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 7, 2026
Docket2-25-0434
StatusUnpublished

This text of Rohrbacher v. Balaniuk (Rohrbacher v. Balaniuk) 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
Rohrbacher v. Balaniuk, (Ill. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

2026 IL App (2d) 250434-U No. 2-25-0434 Order filed May 7, 2026

NOTICE: This order was filed under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23(b) and is not precedential except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT

LUKE ROHRBACHER, Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

TARAS BALANIUK, Defendant-Appellant

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Kendall County. Honorable Stephen L. Krentz, Judge, Presiding. No. 25-SC-645

JUSTICE SCHOSTOK delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Kennedy and Justice Jorgensen concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: Defendant forfeited his challenge to the trial court’s judgment in favor of plaintiff on plaintiff’s small claims complaint for breach of contract by failing to present a proper argument in compliance with our supreme court rules; forfeiture aside, the court’s judgment was not against the manifest weight of the evidence or otherwise improper.

¶2 Following a bench trial in small claims court, the trial court entered judgment in favor of

plaintiff, Luke Rohrbacher, on his complaint for breach of contract against defendant, Taras

Balaniuk, and awarded plaintiff $10,000 in compensatory damages and $676 in costs. Defendant

timely appealed. We affirm. ¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 On April 21, 2025, plaintiff filed a small claims complaint for breach of contract against

defendant, stemming from defendant’s improper installation of laminate flooring in plaintiff’s

home. Plaintiff alleged that, in July 2024, he hired defendant to “install flooring, paint multiple

interior areas, and refinish a staircase.” Plaintiff paid defendant $19,255, excluding materials, in

full satisfaction of their agreement. However, the flooring installation was “incomplete and ***

caused significant and costly damage,” requiring “full replacement and repair.” Plaintiff consulted

with a licensed flooring contractor who, according to plaintiff, concluded:

“All the flooring must be removed and replaced due to [defendant’s] decision to install it

over the existing carpet underlayment, which is soft and not rated for this type of floor.

This underlayment caused excessive flex in the flooring, resulting in broken joints and

continued structural failure throughout. The damage will only worsen over time, and no

partial repair is possible—the flooring must be fully redone on a proper hard surface.”

¶5 Plaintiff attached to his complaint (1) numerous photographs of the flooring, (2) two

proposals from “Carpet Near Me” with quotes to remove and replace the flooring, (3) plaintiff’s

April 12, 2025, demand letter to defendant, (4) proof of an April 15, 2025, delivery of the demand

letter, (5) a bank statement showing payments, and (6) a screen shot of a handwritten document

(which is illegible).

¶6 The attached demand letter advised defendant of the issues with the flooring and stated:

“Due to the extent of the damage and deficiencies, the professional estimate I

received for full repair is $8,230.28, excluding materials. Since the existing flooring is no

longer usable due to broken joints, I also obtained an estimate that includes materials,

totaling $15,995.86. This estimate covers removal of your faulty work, proper subfloor

-2- preparation, correct flooring installation, transition strip installation, and other necessary

corrections.

Because the materials quoted in this estimate are higher end than those you

originally used, I have adjusted the replacement cost accordingly. You installed flooring

priced at $1.19 per unit across 1,740 square feet, which amounts to $2,076. Adding this

material cost to the labor estimate brings the total value of the damage to $10,306.28.

However, in good faith and in the interest of resolving this matter without further

escalation, I am willing to settle for $10,000.”

¶7 The matter proceeded to a bench trial on September 9, 2025. Both parties appeared pro se

and each testified on their own behalf. Defendant testified with the aid of a Ukrainian interpreter.

No other witnesses were present.

¶8 Plaintiff testified as follows. In July 2024, he and defendant reached an agreement for

defendant to replace all flooring in plaintiff’s home. Defendant agreed that this would include

removing old carpeting, replacing the underlayment, and installing new flooring, including the

transition strips. Plaintiff purchased the flooring from Floor and Decor. While there, defendant

told plaintiff “that he would provide the underlayment because the Floor and Decor option was too

expensive.” According to plaintiff, when defendant removed the carpeting, he decided to leave

the carpeting underlayment intact, rather than replace it with underlayment designed for laminate

flooring. In addition, defendant never installed the transition strips. Within a few weeks, joints on

the laminate flooring began to separate and break. Further, defendant failed to complete several

other tasks (unrelated to flooring). Given that plaintiff had already paid in full, the process resulted

in several disagreements between plaintiff and defendant, which “allowed defendant to hold off

-3- on completing any of the final work.” After several months, defendant returned and completed all

the necessary work. However, by that time, “more and more [flooring] joints continued to break.”

¶9 Plaintiff asked two different flooring companies—Luna and Carpet Near Me—to evaluate

the damage. According to plaintiff, “[t]hey both advised [him] that the laminate pieces were not

replaceable and the entire job would have to be replaced in full for a proper fix.” Luna quoted

plaintiff $14,442 to complete the work; Carpet Near Me quoted $15,955 to complete the work. A

quote from Carpet Near Me, (admitted as Plaintiff’s exhibit No. 8), included the following

statement:

“Removal of all old flooring all joints are broken from bad install flooring contractor left

old carpet padding which is huge no no. To [sic] much flex caused breakage everywhere!

Will need new shoe old shoe will must [sic] likely break during removal. Flooring is not

included customer must provide!”

¶ 10 Plaintiff attempted to resolve the issue with defendant. On April 15, 2025, he sent

defendant a demand letter, which included photographs of the flooring and the quotes from the

flooring companies. In response, defendant advised that he would send his team to “remove all of

the floor, replace the underlayment, and replace some of the laminates where the locks were

broken.” Plaintiff agreed, with the condition that defendant would sign an agreement for the

corrective work. Defendant stated that he would sign an agreement and provided his email.

Plaintiff sent the proposed agreement to defendant, but he never received a response. After a

couple of weeks, plaintiff decided to have the floor repaired by Luna. Luna completed the work

and plaintiff paid Luna $14,442. Plaintiff then filed the complaint to recoup $10,000 from

defendant.

-4- ¶ 11 Plaintiff asked to admit the following evidence: (1) the demand letter sent to defendant,

(2) proof of delivery of the demand letter, (3) several pictures showing (a) cracks in the flooring

joints, (b) missing transition strips, and (c) carpeting underlayment visible when flooring removed,

(4) quotes from Luna and Carpet Near Me, and (5) screen shots of texts between plaintiff and

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