Tadros v. Marte

2020 IL App (1st) 190905-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 30, 2020
Docket1-19-0905
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2020 IL App (1st) 190905-U (Tadros v. Marte) 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
Tadros v. Marte, 2020 IL App (1st) 190905-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

2020 IL App (1st) 190905-U

SIXTH DIVISION September 30, 2020

No. 1-19-0905

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and may not be cited as precedent by any party except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

MARYANNE TADROS, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of ) Cook County Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) CHRISTINE MARTE as Special Representative ) No. 16 L 1191 of J. Richard Hisaw, deceased, J. RICHARD ) HISAW & ASSOCIATES, GARY A. NEWLAND, ) WASLEED GHUNEIM, DRAKE SHUNNESON, ) and NEWLAND & NEWLAND, LLP, ) ) Honorable Daniel J. Lynch Defendants-Appellees. ) Judge Presiding

JUSTICE GRIFFIN delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Mikva and Justice Harris concur in the judgment.

ORDER ¶1 Held: The trial court did not abuse its discretion in ruling upon the challenged evidentiary issues. Plaintiff is not entitled to a new trial.

¶2 This is a legal malpractice case in which a jury entered a judgment of no liability in favor

of defendants. Plaintiff appeals, and argues that the trial court abused its discretion when it made No. 1-19-0905

rulings as to whether certain evidence could be introduced at trial. Plaintiff contends that she is

entitled to a new trial. Finding no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s evidentiary rulings that

would warrant a new trial, we affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 Plaintiff Maryanne Tadros and her father George Tadros purchased a commercial

property in Schaumburg, Illinois. George Tadros and his son, Mike Tadros, used the property to

run Antenna Systems & Supplies, Inc., a company that manufactured antenna systems for

military and other applications. Plaintiff agreed to help in the purchase of the property because

she had good credit and she wanted to help her father.

¶5 To purchase the property, two loans were obtained that were secured by mortgages on the

property. One loan was made by First American Bank and the other by the Small Business

Administration. Under the terms of the First American Bank loan, a balloon payment was due

approximately 10 years after the loan was made, requiring the borrower to pay the full

outstanding balance which, in this case, was $137,547.45. When the loan matured and the

outstanding balance was not timely repaid, the loan went into default. First American Bank filed

two lawsuits: one to foreclose on the property, and one for a collection of monetary damages.

¶6 When plaintiff was sued by First American Bank, she contacted defendant J. Richard

Hisaw, an attorney she knew from her chiropractic practice. Hisaw primarily practiced personal

injury law, but he agreed to represent plaintiff in the foreclosure and collection cases brought

against her. Plaintiff’s father filed for bankruptcy, leaving her as the only solvent obligee on the

loan obligations. At some point, plaintiff learned that First American Bank was seeking a

deficiency judgment against her which included all the costs and attorney fees that First

American Bank was incurring in its efforts to collect on the defaulted loan obligations. She

2 No. 1-19-0905

claims that Hisaw never informed her about such expenses. Plaintiff terminated Hisaw as her

attorney.

¶7 Plaintiff retained the office of defendant Newland & Newland to represent her. The aim

of Newland & Newland’s representation was to try to help plaintiff avoid having a deficiency

judgment entered against her. First American Bank filed a motion for summary judgment on the

loan obligations. The trial court granted First American Bank’s motion for summary judgment on

the issue of liability, and it continued the case for a prove-up on the issue of damages.

¶8 On the day that First American Bank was set to prove up its damages, Newland &

Newland filed a motion to withdraw as plaintiff’s attorney. Newland & Newland did not appear

at the prove-up hearing on plaintiff’s behalf. A judgment was entered against plaintiff. Plaintiff

eventually sold the property at issue. The proceeds of the sale satisfied the outstanding loan

obligations, but plaintiff was required to pay approximately $210,000 out of pocket due to the

accumulation of interest, taxes, and attorney fees.

¶9 Plaintiff submitted a complaint against Hisaw with the Attorney Registration and

Disciplinary Commission. She also filed this legal malpractice case against Hisaw, Hisaw’s firm,

Newland & Newland, and the individual Newland attorneys that worked on her case. In this case,

plaintiff alleges that Hisaw was negligent, primarily because he failed to advise her at the outset

of his representation that she should immediately sell the property that was the subject of the

case against her. Plaintiff contends that she could have avoided a personal deficiency judgment if

she had been instructed to sell the subject property immediately and she could have likewise

avoided paying collection costs. Plaintiff alleges that the Newland attorneys were negligent for

failing to appear at the prove-up hearing and for failing to seek a lifting of her father’s

bankruptcy stay so that the property could have been sold at an earlier date. Plaintiff contends

3 No. 1-19-0905

that she could have avoided at least some of the attorney fees and costs that ultimately became

part of the judgment against her if the Newland attorneys had taken the above-described actions.

¶ 10 Both Hisaw and the Newland defendants denied the claims of negligence. Defendant

Hisaw died after giving a deposition in this case, but before the case went to trial. Plaintiff’s

father, George Tadros, also died after giving a deposition in the case but before trial. The parties

agreed that both Hisaw and George Tadros’s deposition testimony could be used in place of trial

testimony.

¶ 11 Before trial, the parties moved the court to decide several evidentiary issues through

motions in limine. Plaintiff sought to present the testimony of attorneys Michael Ek and Michael

Newman. Plaintiff sought to introduce those attorneys’ testimony about distinctions between

residential foreclosures and commercial foreclosures because Hisaw testified at his deposition

that he had handled some residential foreclosures in the past, but had never handled a

commercial foreclosure case. In particular, plaintiff wanted to have those witnesses tell the jury

that during and after the financial crisis in 2008, courts in Cook County stopped enforcing

deficiency judgments in residential foreclosures. Plaintiff wanted the witnesses to inform the jury

that the same was not the case with commercial foreclosures. Thus, it was plaintiff’s position that

because Hisaw had only handled residential foreclosures in the past, he did not know about

deficiency judgments in the commercial foreclosure context. The trial court held that plaintiff

could not admit the proffered testimony because Hisaw was not asked at his deposition whether

he appreciated the difference between residential and commercial foreclosures. On appeal,

plaintiff argues that the trial court abused its discretion when it decided that the subject testimony

would not be admitted.

4 No. 1-19-0905

¶ 12 Plaintiff filed motions in limine in which she sought to bar defendants from introducing

evidence about other disputes between plaintiff and her family. She also sought to bar the

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2020 IL App (1st) 190905-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tadros-v-marte-illappct-2020.