Sheikholeslam v. Favreau

2019 IL App (1st) 181703
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 24, 2019
Docket1-18-1703
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2019 IL App (1st) 181703 (Sheikholeslam v. Favreau) 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
Sheikholeslam v. Favreau, 2019 IL App (1st) 181703 (Ill. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

2019 IL App (1st) 181703

FIRST DISTRICT SIXTH DIVISION May 24, 2019

No. 1-18-1703

ELHAM SHEIKHOLESLAM, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 18 L 2164 ) ANTONIN FAVREAU, ) Honorable ) Daniel T. Gillespie, Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE HARRIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Cunningham and Connors concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 This appeal arises from an action for fraud and legal malpractice, brought by plaintiff

Elham Sheikholeslam against defendant Antonin Favreau. Defendant filed a motion to dismiss

for lack of personal jurisdiction, which the trial court granted upon the documentary evidence

submitted by the parties. On appeal, plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in finding that it

lacked personal jurisdiction over defendant because defendant could have performed the contract

only because he had a license to practice law in Illinois and because defendant had continuous

and systematic business contacts with Illinois. For the reasons stated below, we affirm.

¶2 I. JURISDICTION

¶3 The circuit court found that it lacked personal jurisdiction over the sole defendant and

dismissed this case with prejudice on July 12, 2018. Plaintiff timely filed her notice of appeal on

August 7, 2018. Accordingly, this court has jurisdiction pursuant to article VI, section 6, of the No. 1-18-1703

Illinois Constitution and Illinois Supreme Court Rule 301 (eff. Feb. 1, 1994), governing appeals

from a final judgment in a civil case. Ill. Const. 1970, art. VI, § 6.

¶4 II. BACKGROUND

¶5 Plaintiff filed her complaint in February 2018, naming Favreau as the sole defendant. She

alleged regarding jurisdiction that defendant conducted business transactions in Illinois, made or

performed a contract substantially connected with Illinois, or breached his fiduciary duty to

plaintiff as an Illinois-licensed attorney. Regarding venue, plaintiff alleged that defendant was a

nonresident of Illinois. Plaintiff alleged that she employed defendant in March 2016 to represent

her in a federal immigration matter upon his representation at that time that he was “an Illinois-

licensed attorney and [was] thereby an authorized immigration attorney within the United

States.” She claimed fraud upon allegations that, in August 2016, he made certain knowingly

false representations to her that she relied upon to her detriment. She claimed legal malpractice

upon allegations that defendant overcharged her for her immigration matter and employed a

nonattorney to provide legal advice and service on plaintiff’s matter without attorney

supervision.

¶6 In April 2018, defendant filed his appearance and motion to dismiss (735 ILCS 5/2-619.1

(West 2016)), arguing, in relevant part, that the circuit court lacked personal jurisdiction over

him. He argued that the complaint failed to allege sufficient facts to confer personal jurisdiction

over him and that his attached affidavit established a lack of sufficient contacts with Illinois to

confer personal jurisdiction over him. He argued that plaintiff’s allegations of personal

jurisdiction were “boilerplate and conclusory.” He also argued that being licensed to practice law

in Illinois does not by itself confer personal jurisdiction to Illinois.

-2- No. 1-18-1703

¶7 In his attached April 2018 affidavit, defendant averred that he is a citizen of Canada

residing “exclusively” in Montreal. He was licensed to practice law in Illinois since January

2014 but had no office in Illinois and never practiced law in Illinois. He was last in Illinois in

August 2013, when he came here for the bar examination. He never met or spoke to plaintiff in

Illinois, the contract at issue was executed by plaintiff in Iran and ACIC Management Co. Ltd.

(ACIC) in Canada, and none of the services to be performed under the agreement were to be

performed in Illinois. Defendant was “affiliated with” ACIC but “never acted in his capacity as

an attorney on behalf of, or otherwise represented, Plaintiff.” The services contracted for were to

be provided by ACIC, a British Virgin Islands corporation, and Progressive Immigration

Services (Progressive), a Canadian corporation.

¶8 Also attached to the motion to dismiss was a copy of a March 2016 “client representation

agreement” between plaintiff and Progressive and ACIC. ACIC and defendant were referred to

interchangeably therein—that is, the parties included “Antonin Favreau (‘ACIC Management

Co. Limited’)”—and defendant signed on ACIC’s behalf.

¶9 Plaintiff filed a response to the motion to dismiss, arguing, in relevant part, that the

circuit court had personal jurisdiction over defendant under section 2-209 of the Code of Civil

Procedure. Id. § 2-209 (West 2016). She argued that she would not have hired defendant if he

had not been an immigration attorney, while his “only claim to being a[ ] U.S. immigration

attorney is by the virtue of being an Illinois attorney” because he is not a nonattorney

“Accredited Representative” and is an attorney in only one state, Illinois. She also argued that

defendant breached his fiduciary duty pursuant to his Illinois law license and that “it was

reasonable to require Defendant to litigate in Illinois as Illinois has a substantial interest in

-3- No. 1-18-1703

resolving a legal malpractice claim against an Illinois lawyer practicing directly under the scope

of an Illinois bar license.” She argued that defendant and ACIC were “one and the same” and

that the immigration advice and services defendant contracted to provide her through ACIC were

“the practice of law under Illinois state law and federal immigration law.” She argued that she

need not prove every factual allegation in her complaint before discovery but may allege ultimate

facts to be proven in the course of litigation.

¶ 10 Attached to plaintiff’s response was a printout of a webpage for the Favreau Law Firm,

describing it as “an international law firm focusing on immigration” to Canada and the United

States and identifying defendant as its “founder and owner” who “has lived in Canada, China and

Ecuador” and as a “Canadian and American immigration lawyer” who “is a member in good

standing of the Quebec Bar in Canada and of the Illinois Bar in U.S.A.”

¶ 11 Also attached to plaintiff’s response was a printout of the relevant portions (the first page

and the “F” listings) of an “Accredited Representatives Roster” as of April 30, 2018, not

showing defendant’s name. Plaintiff also attached a printout from the Illinois Secretary of State,

showing no certificate of good standing for a corporation or limited-liability company named

“ACIC Management” and a printout of a similar unsuccessful search result for “acic

management” in the records of the Quebec “Registraire des enterprises.”

¶ 12 Defendant filed a reply in support of his motion to dismiss, arguing that (1) plaintiff was

relying entirely upon defendant’s Illinois law license for personal jurisdiction but his license “is

irrelevant to the issue of jurisdiction” because no services by defendant were alleged to have

occurred in Illinois, (2) plaintiff “fails to allege a single act or omission that occurred in this

state,” and (3) neither plaintiff nor defendant resided in Illinois.

-4- No. 1-18-1703

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2019 IL App (1st) 181703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheikholeslam-v-favreau-illappct-2019.