Schwendener v. Jupiter Electric Co.

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 11, 2005
Docket1-04-2361 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Schwendener v. Jupiter Electric Co. (Schwendener v. Jupiter Electric Co.) 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
Schwendener v. Jupiter Electric Co., (Ill. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION

FILED:  MAY 11, 2005

No. 1-04-2361

PAUL H. SCHWENDENER, Inc., an Illinois corporation,    )    Appeal from the  

)    Circuit Court of

Plaintiff-Appellant, )    Cook County

)

v. )    No. 98 L 1047

JUPITER ELECTRIC COMPANY, INC., an Illinois corporation; )

THOMAS M. GIBSON; RAMI NASSIB; BANCO POPULAR, )

ILLINOIS, an Illinois corporation; and ALEXANDER S. KNOPFLER, )

Defendants-Appellees, )

and )

JUPITER TECHNICAL SERVICES CORPORATION, an Illinois )

corporation; and FIRST BANK OF SCHAUMBURG, an Illinois banking )

corporation; )    Honorable

) Ronald F. Bartkowicz,

Defendants. )    Judge Presiding.  

JUSTICE HOFFMAN delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff, Paul H. Schwendener, Inc. (Schwendener), filed the instant action against Jupiter Electric Company, Inc. (Jupiter), its officers, an accountant to whom Jupiter's assets were assigned, and two of Jupiter's creditors after Jupiter failed to perform on two construction contracts.  During the course of litigation, the trial court entered several orders dismissing various counts of Schwendener's first, third, and fourth amended complaints pursuant to section 2-615 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-615 (West 1998)), granting summary judgment on count VI of its fifth amended complaint, and denying Schwendener leave to file certain counts of the fifth amended complaint.  It is from these orders that Schwendener now appeals and, for the reasons which follow, we dismiss the appeal in part, affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand this cause to the circuit court for further proceedings.   

The following facts are taken from the allegations contained in Schwendener's first, third, and fourth  amended complaints which we accept as true for purposes of examining the circuit court's orders dismissing Schwendener's claims pursuant to section 2-615 of the Code ( Miner v. Gillette Co. , 87 Ill. 2d 7, 19, 428 N.E.2d 478 (1981)).  Further, as there is no dispute regarding these facts, they have also been accepted as true for purposes of our analysis regarding the trial court's grant of summary judgment.  

Schwendener was hired as the general contractor for the construction of a new enlisted mens bachelor quarters at the naval training center in Great Lakes, Illinois (BEQ project) and a new public library in Woodridge, Illinois (library project).  Schwendener subcontracted the necessary electrical work on both projects to Jupiter.  At the time, Thomas M. Gibson was the president and sole shareholder of Jupiter, and Rami Nassib served as its vice-president and general manager.  Near the end of 1996, after work on the projects had begun, Jupiter was experiencing financial difficulties and was heavily in debt.  Jupiter's creditors included American Midwest Bank & Trust (American), its primary lender and a secured creditor, and the First Bank of Schaumburg (FBS) which had purchased a participation in the loans made by American to Jupiter.  After consulting with a financial analyst, Jupiter met with certain of its creditors and decided that the best course of action was to enter into an assignment for the benefit of its creditors.  Additionally, Jupiter ceased working on the BEQ and library projects on November 27, 1996, and December 23, 1996, respectively.  

On December 23, 1996, Jupiter entered into a "Trust Agreement and Assignment for the Benefit of Creditors" (assignment agreement) under which all of Jupiter's assets were assigned to Alexander Knopfler, a certified public accountant.  Contemporaneously with the execution of the assignment agreement, Knopfler entered into an "Agreement for the Purchase and Sale of Assets" (purchase agreement) with 61875 Corporation, a newly formed corporation.  Nassib was the sole shareholder and president of 61875 Corporation.  Pursuant to the purchase agreement, Knopfler sold all of Jupiter's assets relating to its residential and technical services divisions and certain assets relating to its commercial division to 61875 Corporation for $3,738,500.  The purchase agreement provided that, in the event Knopfler could locate a higher bidder at an auction within 21 days, 61875 Corporation would reconvey the assets to Knopfler.  After notice of the assignment and purchase agreements was given to certain of Jupiter's creditors, an auction for the sale of Jupiter's assets was advertised to the general public.  The auction took place and, having yielded no higher bidders, the sale of Jupiter's assets to 61875 Corporation became final on January 21, 1997.   Two days later, 61875 Corporation amended its articles of incorporation, changing its name to Jupiter Technical Services Corporation.

In 1998, Schwendener filed the instant action against Jupiter, its officers, Knopfler, and its secured creditors (collectively referred to as "the defendants").  Schwendener amended its complaint numerous times during the proceedings.  According to the general allegations common to all of the amended complaints, by the end of 1996, Jupiter, Gibson, and Integrated Technologies (Integrated), another company owned by Gibson, had incurred a total indebtedness to American in the sum of $4,158,294.  Schwendener alleged that the defendants developed a scheme to repay the debt owed to American and at the same time "shed" certain of Jupiter's other creditors.  It claimed that the defendants colluded to restructure Jupiter by assigning its assets to Knopfler, who then immediately transferred title of selected assets and valuable contracts to 61875 Corporation, a corporation which was created to effectuate the purpose of the scheme.  

Schwendener claimed that, in furtherance of this scheme, American and FBS entered into a financing agreement with Gibson which provided that:  American would loan an additional $250,000 to Jupiter; FBS would loan 61875 Corporation $3,738,500 which would be used to purchase Jupiter's assets from Knopfler, and an additional $400,000 on the date on which the sale of Jupiter's assets became final; and Gibson would "collateralize" part of the loan made by FBS with a certificate of deposit in the amount of $1,069,206.  According to the complaints, Gibson also agreed to pay American $469,794 which, when combined with the payment of $3,738,500 to American from the sale of Jupiter's assets, retired the indebtedness of Gibson, Jupiter, and Integrated to American.  The agreement also provided that 61875 Corporation would pay FBS all amounts received in connection with a project that Jupiter had been working on for the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA).  Schwendener alleged that, along with the transfer of Jupiter's assets, certain of the defendants agreed that Jupiter would "walk off" the BEQ and library projects because they determined that those contracts were unprofitable.

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