Stokovich Family Limited Partnership v. Kaufman

2024 IL App (2d) 230271-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 19, 2024
Docket2-23-0271
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 IL App (2d) 230271-U (Stokovich Family Limited Partnership v. Kaufman) 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
Stokovich Family Limited Partnership v. Kaufman, 2024 IL App (2d) 230271-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 IL App (2d) 230271-U No. 2-23-0271 Order filed August 19, 2024

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

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

STOKOVICH FAMILY LIMITED ) Appeal from the Circuit Court PARTNERSHIP, ) of Lake County. ) Plaintiff and Counterdefendant- ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) No. 22-CH-131 ) LARISA KAUFMAN, as Trustee of the ) Larisa Kaufman Revocable Trust Dated ) July 16, 2007, ) ) Honorable Defendant and Counterplaintiff- ) Janelle K. Christensen, Appellee. ) Judge, Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE SCHOSTOK delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Jorgensen and Mullen concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: Plaintiff’s improvements on a portion of defendant’s adjacent property constituted possession that was both (1) hostile or adverse because, although defendant’s property was undeveloped and vacant, the improvements were inconsistent with permissive use and incompatible with defendant’s claim of right; and (2) open and notorious because the improvements were visible to the community from certain vantage points and suggested that the improved property belonged to plaintiff.

¶2 Plaintiff and counterdefendant, Stokovich Family Limited Partnership, filed a complaint

for trespass against defendant and counterplaintiff, Larisa Kaufman, as Trustee of the Larisa 2024 IL App (2d) 230271-U

Kaufman Revocable Trust Dated July 16, 2007. Plaintiff sought an injunction requiring defendant

to remove certain improvements she made to plaintiff’s property. Defendant filed an answer and

an affirmative defense, claiming she came to own portions of plaintiff’s property by adverse

possession. Defendant also filed a counterclaim, seeking to quiet title to the portions of plaintiff’s

property that defendant allegedly now possessed. Following a bench trial, the trial court found in

favor of defendant on the complaint and counterclaim. Plaintiff appeals, arguing that the court

erred in finding that defendant’s possession was (1) hostile or adverse and (2) open and notorious.

We affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 A. The Parties and Properties at Issue

¶5 Plaintiff (a partnership that included Milan Stokovich and Deborah Ann Stokovich as

partners) owned two adjacent lots in Libertyville. Lot 1 was at 335 North Saint Mary’s Road, and

Lot 2 was at 315 North Saint Mary’s Road (Lot 2). The property was transferred to plaintiff in

2002 by Stokovich Enterprises, LLC (Milan and Deborah’s parents), which had previously owned

the property for about 20 years. The property was vacant, unmaintained, and unenclosed at all

relevant times.

¶6 In 1989, defendant and her now-deceased husband purchased property at 285 North Saint

Mary’s Road in Green Oaks, immediately south of Lot 2. Defendant has since lived there

continuously. In 2007, defendant transferred the property to the Larisa Kaufman Revocable Trust

Dated July 16, 2007, of which she is the trustee.

¶7 B. The Pleadings

¶8 On May 19, 2022, plaintiff filed a complaint for trespass, alleging that, while attempting

to sell Lot 2, it learned that “a garden shed consisting of two sections and a portable wire fence

-2- 2024 IL App (2d) 230271-U

were encroaching” on the southern boundary of Lot 2. Plaintiff also alleged that defendant had

been parking vehicles on Lot 2 and had erected barrier tape on Lot 2. Defendant refused plaintiff’s

request to remove the improvements and items. Plaintiff asked the court to order defendant to

“remove the garden shed, temporary wire fence, personal property, refuse, vehicles[,] and barrier

tape” from Lot 2.

¶9 On June 15, 2022, defendant filed an answer and affirmative defense. In her affirmative

defense, defendant argued that she was the legal owner, through adverse possession, of two areas

of Lot 2. According to defendant, when she purchased her property in 1989, a wire fence on the

property extended onto Lot 2. Defendant described the “area enclosed by the wire fence” as the

“ ‘Garden Shed Area.’ ” Defendant alleged that, in or around 1990, she erected a shed in the

garden shed area. Defendant referred to the second area as the “ ‘Parking Area’ ” and described it

as a “grassy area immediately north of [d]efendant’s driveway.” Defendant alleged that, since

1989, she has actually and continuously occupied and maintained both the garden shed area and

the parking area. Defendant further alleged that her use of the two areas “has been open, notorious,

hostile, and exclusive” and “under a claim of title inconsistent of [sic] the true owner(s).”

Defendant also alleged that her use has been without permission of the true owners.

¶ 10 On June 15, 2022, defendant filed a counterclaim, asking the trial court to quiet plaintiff’s

title to the garden shed area and the parking area, based on defendant’s claim that she was the legal

owner of the two areas by adverse possession.

¶ 11 C. The Relevant Facts

¶ 12 A bench trial occurred on April 12 and April 14, 2023. Five witnesses testified in addition

to defendant, Milan, and Deborah. They were: (1) Richard Pavletic, a surveyor hired by plaintiff;

(2) Manuel Tellez, defendant’s landscaper; (3) Ina Katz, defendant’s longtime friend; (4) David

-3- 2024 IL App (2d) 230271-U

John Pinter, who owned the property at 265 North Saint Mary’s Road, immediately south of

defendant’s property; and (5) Artur Grushevski, defendant’s live-in boyfriend. Admitted exhibits

included the relevant deeds, a Plat of Survey, numerous photographs, and fence pieces.

¶ 13 The photographs show that defendant’s driveway runs west off North Saint Mary’s Road.

Defendant’s mailbox is to the left of the driveway, which generally parallels the northern boundary

line of defendant’s property. As one enters the driveway, there are dense areas of trees and bushes

on the right and left. The parking area is to the right of the driveway, just past the trees and bushes.

The parking area is an open grassy clearing, described by Pavletic as a grassy “[a]lcove” mowed

and bordered on three sides by “buckthorn[,] which are overgrown bushes.” Defendant’s garage

is to the left of the driveway, across from the parking area. Defendant explained that she uses the

parking area (1) to turn her car around, (2) as guest parking, and (3) for parking “extra” vehicles

related to Grushevski’s employment. The garden shed area is west of the parking area (also on the

right) as one continues past the western edge of the buckthorn that formed the parking area alcove.

(The driveway ends before reaching the garden shed area, but defendant’s property extends past

the end of the driveway.) A shed is located on the right, immediately west of the buckthorn. A

structure for storing firewood (referred to as a “lean-to” by Pavletic) is located immediately north

of the shed. Defendant testified that, when she bought the property, the garden shed area had a

fence around the perimeter, which was still in place. Pavletic described the fence as a “portable,

wire, garden type fence” that consisted of “green flimsy post[s] and square wire mesh.” Pavletic

testified that the fence begins north of the lean-to, runs west, and curves south to defendant’s

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Bluebook (online)
2024 IL App (2d) 230271-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokovich-family-limited-partnership-v-kaufman-illappct-2024.