Illinois Official Reports
Appellate Court
Van Pelt Construction Co. v. BMO Harris Bank, N.A.,
2014 IL App (1st) 121661
Appellate Court VAN PELT CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC., Plaintiff and
Caption Counterdefendant, v. BMO HARRIS BANK, N.A., f/k/a Harris Bank,
N.A., as Assignee of Amcore Bank, N.A., Defendant, Counterplaintiff
and Third-Party Plaintiff-Appellant (BWA, Inc., Defendant and
Counterdefendant-Appellee; Unknown Owners and Nonrecord
Claimants, Defendants and Counterdefendants; Albert Belmonte,
Allen Kutchins, Angelos Mitroussias, Danny Karalis, Dorance
Lorenzo Padron, Pedro Cevallos Candau, Rogelio Llamedo, and Rosa
Gonzalez, Third-Party Defendants-Appellees; and James Papas and
Luis Flocco, Third-Party Defendants).–VAN PELT
CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC., Plaintiff and Counter-
defendant, v. BMO HARRIS BANK, N.A., f/k/a Harris Bank, N.A.,
as Assignee of Amcore Bank, N.A., Defendant, Counterplaintiff and
Third-Party Plaintiff-Appellant (BWA, Inc., Defendant and
Counterdefendant-Appellee; Unknown Owners and Nonrecord
Claimants, Defendants and Counterdefendants; Albert Belmonte,
Allen Kutchins, Angelos Mitroussias, Danny Karalis, Dorance
Lorenzo Padron, Pedro Cevallos Candau, Rogelio Llamedo, and Rosa
Gonzalez, Third-Party Defendants-Appellees; and James Papas and
Luis Flocco, Third-Party Defendants).
District & No. First District, Fourth Division
Docket Nos. 1-12-1661, 1-12-2075 cons.
Filed March 27, 2014
Rehearing denied April 23, 2014
Held The trial court’s order granting the emergency motion filed by the
(Note: This syllabus guarantors of a mortgage seeking the enforcement of a purported
constitutes no part of the settlement by which the guarantors would be released from their
opinion of the court but obligations under the mortgage upon the tender of a deed in lieu of
has been prepared by the foreclosure and an amount of cash was reversed on the ground that the
Reporter of Decisions settlement was unenforceable under the Credit Agreements Act, since
for the convenience of the forebearance required of the mortgagee under the agreement
the reader.) brought it within the scope of the Act, but there was no proof of a
meeting of the minds as to the terms of the agreement, especially in the
absence of a recitation of the names of all parties to be bound, a
statement of the specific property to be transferred in the deed in lieu
of foreclosure, a deadline for the parties’ performance, or a definition
of how a determination was to be made as to whether the guarantors
experienced an “upward variance” in their personal financial
conditions that would negate the agreement.
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 08-CH-45136; the
Review Hon. Robert J. Quinn, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Reversed and remanded.
Counsel on Kurt M. Carlson and Martin J. Wasserman, both of Carlson Dash,
Appeal LLC, of Chicago, for appellant.
Thomas Rosenwein, of Glickman, Flesch & Rosenwein, of Chicago,
for appellees.
Panel JUSTICE LAVIN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices Fitzgerald Smith and Epstein concurred in the judgment and
opinion.
OPINION
¶1 This appeal arises from the trial court’s order enforcing a settlement agreement purportedly
entered into between mortgagee BMO Harris Bank, N.A., f/k/a Harris Bank, N.A. (Harris), as
assignee of Amcore Bank, N.A. (Amcore), and mortgagor BWA, Inc. (BWA), as well as
several guarantors of related promissory notes executed in Harris/Amcore’s favor. Pursuant to
the alleged settlement agreement, Harris agreed to accept $350,000 and a deed in lieu of
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foreclosure in place of the greater amount due. On appeal, Harris asserts that (1) the settlement
agreement was unenforceable under the Credit Agreements Act (the Credit Act) (815 ILCS
160/0.01 et seq. (West 2010)) and the Frauds Act (740 ILCS 80/0.01 et seq. (West 2010)); (2)
no evidence showed that Harris’s attorney had the authority to enter into the agreement; (3) no
settlement agreement was reached; and (4) the condition precedent to Harris’s duty under the
agreement was not satisfied. We agree with Harris’s assertion that the alleged settlement
agreement failed to satisfy the Credit Act. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for further
proceedings.
¶2 I. BACKGROUND
¶3 We recite only those facts necessary to resolve the issues raised on appeal. The record
indicates that in 2008, BWA borrowed money from Amcore in order to purchase real estate
located at 43 West Dundee Road in Wheeling, Illinois (the Property), and build a bank thereon.
Specifically, BWA granted Amcore a mortgage on the Property, secured by two promissory
notes. In addition, the 10 organizers of BWA (Albert Belmonte, Allen Kutchins, Angelos
Mitroussias, Danny Karalis, Dorance Lorenzo Padron, Pedro Cevallos Candau, Rogelio
Llamedo, Rosa Gonzalez, James Papas and Luis Flocco) signed commercial guaranties
promising to pay any and all of BWA’s indebtedness. Afterward, however, BWA failed to
raise the necessary capital and the planned bank never materialized.
¶4 In December 2008, plaintiff Van Pelt Construction Company, Inc. (Van Pelt), commenced
this action by filing a complaint against BWA and Amcore, seeking foreclosure of Van Pelt’s
mechanic’s lien on the Property. 1 In September 2009, Amcore filed a counterclaim against
BWA and a third-party complaint against the 10 guarantors, the pleading that ultimately led to
the dispute before us. Count I of Amcore’s pleading sought to foreclose BWA’s mortgage on
the Property while counts II and III asserted that BWA breached the promissory notes. At that
time, the total amount due under the two promissory notes was approximately $1.5 million. In
addition, counts IV through XIII individually asserted that each guarantor had breached his or
her respective guaranty to pay BWA’s indebtedness. Subsequently, in July 2010, the trial court
granted Harris’s motion to substitute itself for Amcore, as the loan documents at issue were
acquired by Harris after Amcore was taken over by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation. 2
¶5 Throughout these proceedings, attorney Kent Maynard represented BWA and all
guarantors with the exception of Papas, who was represented by other counsel, and Flocco,
who was discharged in bankruptcy proceedings (the Maynard guarantors). In August 2010,
BWA and the Maynard guarantors filed an answer denying that they had failed to pay amounts
due. Meanwhile, Maynard and counsel for Harris/Amcore had begun settlement negotiations.
These negotiations occurred mostly in the form of more than a year’s worth of emails between
Maynard and Harris’s counsel, originally Tzivia Masliansky of Much Shelist Denenberg
Ament and Rubenstein, P.C. Throughout these negotiations, the parties attempted to resolve
1
Van Pelt is not a party on appeal and the issues before us do not pertain to Van Pelt’s claims.
2
The trial court later granted Harris leave to add a counterclaim against Van Pelt due to its interest
in the Property. Ultimately, the trial court entered an agreed order between the two parties stating that
Harris’s mortgage lien was superior to Van Pelt’s mechanic’s lien.
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their differences regarding the guarantors’ ability to pay, the mechanism for determining
whether they had experienced an increase in that ability, Papas’s role in any settlement, and the
settlement amount. Harris apparently believed the guarantors may have understated the
strength of their financial circumstances.
¶6 A. Communications With Masliansky
¶7 In March and April 2010, the two attorneys communicated regarding the guarantors’
personal financial statements and 2008 tax returns, which Maynard was to provide to
Masliansky. On August 19, 2010, Maynard told Masliansky that he had been authorized to
offer a deed in lieu of foreclosure and $200,000 to settle all claims. That offer was not
accepted. On November 15, 2010, Masliansky emailed Maynard that she had spoken with her
client, who demanded $475,000 as well as a deed in lieu of foreclosure to settle all claims. The
next day, Maynard inquired whether Masliansky’s client would consider settlement with fewer
than all of the guarantors or was willing to negotiate release prices with individual guarantors.
She responded that Harris was not willing to do so. The record indicates that following a phone
conversation on December 13, 2010, she told Maynard that she had conveyed an offer he had
made to Harris, who countered at $450,000 with a deed in lieu of foreclosure. After further
dickering, Maynard responded with an offer of $350,000.
¶8 According to Maynard’s clients, the emails written a week later on December 20 and 21 of
2010 culminated in the settlement agreement at issue. On the former date, Masliansky
confirmed that she had received the counteroffer of $350,000 and asked how soon Maynard’s
clients could provide updated personal financial statements in order for Harris to consider the
offer. Maynard then reminded Masliansky of the “lengthy and cumbersome ordeal” in
gathering that information and expressed his belief that requiring updated financial
information would “be more trouble than it is worth–and would, if anything, show that the
various guarantors have continued to suffer diminution of their wealth.” Maynard then asked
whether Masliansky could respond to his clients’ last counteroffer.
¶9 Later that day, Maynard wrote Masliansky a second email confirming the details of another
telephone conference and asked her to correct any misstatements. According to Maynard,
Masliansky understood that Maynard did not represent Papas and that Maynard’s settlement
offer did not include him. Masliansky also believed that the counteroffer of $350,000 and a
deed in lieu of foreclosure, when aggregated with a settlement amount negotiated separately
with Papas, would be acceptable to Masliansky’s client; “provided however that, [Harris]
cannot confirm that $350,000 from [the Maynard guarantors] is acceptable and enter into a
binding settlement agreement until it has received and reviewed updated financial statements
from all of the Guarantors whom I represent.” (Emphasis in original.) In contrast to those
representations, Maynard stated, in a third email to Masliansky that day, that a client reminded
him that Papas had previously committed to contribute toward the settlement and his
contribution had been included in the Maynard guarantors’ last counteroffer. Therefore,
Maynard’s clients were actually prepared to offer only $325,000 toward settlement exclusive
of any contribution from Papas, “with the settlement contingent–as you requested–on
submission of updated financials, so long as your client agrees that the settlement amount will
become final in the event that the updated financials do not show, in the aggregate, a
substantial increase in net worth.” Maynard further stated that they could negotiate the
definition of “substantial increase.”
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¶ 10 The next morning, December 21, 2010, Masliansky responded that this was the first she
had heard of Papas being included in Maynard’s amount so she would need to discuss it with
Harris. Masliansky emailed Maynard minutes later, stating that “[t]he offer will be subject to
the review of the financials. If the guarantors’ financials show[ ] that they have the ability to
settle for more, then the $350,000 [sic] will not [be] the final $$ amount.” Shortly thereafter,
Maynard asked, “Can we agree that if the updated financials do NOT show an upward variance
in the guarantors’ aggregate net worth, then the settlement number will become binding and
effective?” Maynard stated, “This gives my clients some comfort that we have a deal unless the
updated financials show a substantial improvement (which I am told is not the case).”
Masliansky did not specifically answer Maynard’s question but replied, “Take out the words
‘substantial improvement’ and let’s just leave it at ‘upward variance.’ If the financials show
any upward variance, the $350,000 [sic] is off the table.”
¶ 11 That same day, Maynard further attempted to define “upward variance.” He proposed that
no upward variance would occur if the group of guarantors, other than Flocco, did not report an
aggregate net worth greater than that reported in the previous financial statements tendered.
Masliansky rejected Maynard’s proposed test and stated, “Just give us the updated financials
ASAP, and the Bank will decide whether or not the financials support the offer of $350,000, or
if the guarantors are able to pay more.” The next day, on December 22, 2010, Masliansky
informed Maynard that Papas’s counsel said Papas would not participate in the settlement offer
made by Maynard’s clients. Maynard responded, “That is news to me.”
¶ 12 On January 3, 2011, Maynard emailed Masliansky to memorialize a conversation between
the two attorneys and asked her to respond if any of the following representations were
incorrect: (1) Papas said he would not contribute to any settlement; (2) Harris would release all
guarantors for a deed in lieu of foreclosure and $350,000, regardless of the source of those
funds and regardless of Papas’s involvement, “subject to final approval” after Harris had
reviewed updated personal financial statements; (3) “The bank will not finally approve the
foregoing $350,000 settlement until it has received and reviewed all of the updated PFSs,
including those three which have not yet been provided”; and (4) Masliansky acknowledged
that Maynard did not represent Papas but suggested that he attempt to persuade him to provide
an updated personal financial statement if the other guarantors wished to close the settlement at
$350,000. (Emphases in original.) Later that afternoon, Masliansky confirmed that Maynard’s
recitation of the conversation was accurate. A week later, on January 10, 2011, Maynard
advised Masliansky, “I have settlement authority of $350,000.00, plus a deed in lieu, in
consideration of a release of all guarantors.” At that point, Martin J. Wasserman of Carlson
Dash replaced Masliansky as counsel for Harris.
¶ 13 B. Communications Following Harris’s Change in Counsel
¶ 14 On February 20, 2011, Maynard emailed Wasserman to thank him for his phone call in
which he “advised that [Harris] is willing to settle its claims against my nine clients in the
captioned litigation (I represent all of the ten guarantors except Mr. James Papas, who is
represented by Mr. Perry Callas), for a deed in lieu and a payment of $350,000.” (Emphasis in
original.) Minutes later, Wasserman responded that “the terms your e-mail contains are not the
exact terms we discussed. As a reminder, we discussed how a [deed in lieu of foreclosure]
could serve to release any guarantors who are not included in the settlement agreement and ***
specifically how this poses a problem as to Mr. Papas. We were both going to try to come up
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with a creative solution to this problem.” Further dialogue then ensued regarding Wasserman’s
concern that releasing the Maynard guarantors would have the legal effect of releasing Papas
as well, an undesirable result from Harris’s perspective.
¶ 15 On March 9, 2011, Callas, Papas’s attorney, wrote to Wasserman regarding an inaccurate
2010 financial statement that Papas had previously provided when he scratched out the date on
his 2009 financial statement and wrote “2010.” Callas essentially explained that Papas’s
finances were actually worse in 2010 than in 2009 and provided an accurate updated statement.
In addition, Callas stated, “It is my understanding that you had worked up a settlement for
$350,000.00 and a deed in lieu of foreclosure. Mr. Papas cannot make any substantial separate
offer to you of any amount which would increase that amount.” Callas further stated, “It would
seem to me the best thing would be for Mr. Papas to participate in the $350,000.00 settlement
to the extent that he can because it seems that the partners are willing to adjust whatever
contributions have to be made in order to terminate this problem that they have.” A week later,
Callas wrote that he was “perplexed why you are singling out Mr. Papas after you made a
group decision to settle the matter for $350,000.00[.] Mr. Papas is part of that group and would
have to work out some arrangement with the other organizers of the bank who were also
guarantors to make some contribution to the $350,000.00. Why you are suddenly singling him
out because you think he has a better financial statement than some of the other people is
bewildering to me.”
¶ 16 On July 14, 2011, Maynard sent Wasserman an email to confirm a recent conversation in
which Wasserman allegedly said he would file a motion for summary judgment if, by July 28,
2011, the guarantors had not provided a matrix showing their respective contributions to the
settlement and the guarantors’ most recent tax returns and/or personal financial statements.
Maynard added that Harris agreed that Papas “may be among the parties released in
consideration of the settlement amount of $350,000.” Shortly thereafter, Maynard sent
Wasserman a second email stating that if Maynard’s clients could not reach a consensus as to
how to allocate the full settlement amount, “then you will consider negotiating separate
settlement agreements with individual guarantors.” Wasserman responded, “I do not believe
your summary accurately describes our conversation.” Wasserman then indicated that his
client would be filing a motion for summary judgment in the immediate future. “Until such
time that a settlement has been finalized, we have been instructed to move the case along.”
¶ 17 Karalis, one of the Maynard guarantors, emailed Wasserman that same day regarding their
recent phone conversation. Karalis represented that he had previously tendered a $50,000
check to Maynard as part of the proposed $350,000 settlement but, “[u]unfortunately, the
group effort has stalled.” Karalis then stated that he wanted to enter into a separate settlement
agreement with Harris. Apparently, that never occurred.
¶ 18 On August 5, 2011, Maynard asked Wasserman to provide the form of settlement
agreement acceptable to Harris so that Papas’s lawyer, now Konstantine Sparagis, could
approve of the form and transfer Papas’s $25,000 contribution to Maynard. A few days later,
Maynard informed Wasserman that Maynard hoped to have commitments for the entire
settlement amount by the end of that day. Wasserman responded, “I wanted to once again make
it clear *** that I have been instructed to move this case forward towards judgment and will be
filing a summary judgment motion in the next couple days.” Minutes later, Maynard told
Wasserman that Maynard’s clients were “nonetheless proceeding on the assumption that you
will not reject a tender of the full $350,000 settlement amount, along with the requested
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schedule identifying the amount of each guarantor’s contribution.” Maynard asked Wasserman
to reply if this was incorrect. Wasserman then reiterated that Harris was moving forward with
the case. “If you would like to revisit settlement, please submit all the information previously
requested. At that time[,] the bank will review and make a decision regarding settlement.”
Following further communication between the attorneys, Wasserman stated, “I think I have
made it clear multiple times that if you provide all the information previously requested by the
bank, the bank will review the settlement offer. At that time it is possible the bank *** will
need further information to decide on the offer. Until the time that we have an agreement
(which we do not have now) we are moving forward with the case.”
¶ 19 On August 10, 2011, Maynard informed Wasserman that the $350,000 settlement amount
had been fully committed by the guarantors. Maynard said his clients would have good funds
totaling $320,000 in his Interest on Lawyers’ Trust Account (IOLTA) by Friday, which, when
combined with Papas’s $30,000 contribution, represented the full commitment. Within the
hour, Wasserman responded, “[l]ike I have mentioned multiple times before[,] the bank had
previously decided to move forward with the case and until the time the bank approves this
offer we do not have a settlement.” Consistent with Wasserman’s response, Harris filed a
motion for summary judgment and judgment of foreclosure and sale that same day. Harris
requested that a judgment be entered in the amount of $1,880,939.61.
¶ 20 Two weeks later, Wasserman emailed Maynard a letter relaying that Harris had rejected
the guarantors’ offer. Harris had found that the offer was not aligned with the ability of
Maynard’s clients to pay. Harris then offered the following settlement: “In exchange for a full
release of your clients’ obligations to the bank, your clients will provide good and marketable
title to the mortgaged property, free and clear of any liens and a $525,000.00 cash payment.”
Two days later, Maynard responded that Wasserman’s letter was too problematic to discuss in
his response. Maynard stated he would speak to his clients and urged Wasserman to consult
with Masliansky, “the lawyer who spoke for your client at the time settlement was negotiated.”
¶ 21 A flurry of correspondence then ensued. Attorney Kurt Carlson of Carlson Dash told
Maynard that Masliansky was no longer employed by Much Shelist but more importantly,
everyone knew that “[a]t all times, the settlement proposed was conditioned on the bank being
comfortable with personal financials.” Carlson further stated that “Banks are regulated by the
fed ***. *** [T]hey cannot simply settle an obligation without due diligence to assure [that]
the settlement of a valid, legal obligation owing to a federally insured institution is well
grounded and supported by the facts and circumstances of their obligors.” Carlson later
elaborated that “every settlement with a bank is conditioned upon the bank verifying personal
financials”; “[t]his is not a new or novel theory.” Carlson also stated that according to
Masliansky, she had made this clear in her communications with Maynard. In addition,
Carlson essentially stated that in light of Maynard’s experience, he was surely aware of this as
well as the difficulties presented by the differing personal financial statements presented.
Maynard subsequently asked for clarification as to how the bank reached the determination
that the guarantors’ offer was not aligned with their ability to pay. Specifically, Maynard
asked, “Is it your position that the ability to pay of one or more of my clients changed
materially after the $350,000 settlement amount was negotiated? If so, which guarantor(s) do
you include in that category, and why?” A couple hours later, Maynard emailed both
Wasserman and Carlson, stating that based on Masliansky’s correspondence on December 21,
2010, Harris could not withdraw the $350,000 settlement amount absent a showing of upward
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variance in the personal financial statements and that to Maynard’s knowledge, no upward
variance had occurred.
¶ 22 C. Motion to Enforce the Alleged Settlement Agreement
¶ 23 On September 12, 2011, BWA and the Maynard guarantors filed an emergency motion to
enforce the purported settlement agreement with Harris, alleging that on December 21, 2010,
the parties agreed to settle this case for a deed in lieu of foreclosure and a $350,000 payment.
The motion also stated that the “Guarantors readily concede that the Settlement amount was
subject to an upward adjustment, in the event that personal financial disclosures by the
guarantors show an upward revision in their ability to pay. That, however, did not occur.” In
response, Harris stated, in pertinent part, that while the parties came close to reaching a
settlement agreement, it never came to fruition. Harris argued that even if a settlement
agreement was reached, it failed to comply with the Credit Act because it was not in writing
and signed by the parties. Maynard’s clients subsequently disputed that the Credit Act applied,
arguing that the settlement did not constitute a credit agreement under that act.
¶ 24 A lengthy evidentiary hearing then commenced on the motion to enforce the purported
settlement agreement. The testimony of Maynard, Wasserman and Callas generally pertained
to the contents of the aforementioned emails and the attorneys’ understanding thereof.
Maynard’s understanding that the parties had a settlement agreement was derived largely from
the attorneys’ email correspondence. In addition, we note that Callas testified that any
information he had with respect to settlement would have come through Maynard or
Wasserman, rather than first hand participation in the negotiations. Moreover, the parties
testified regarding the financial circumstances of Papas and Belmonte.
¶ 25 On May 16, 2012, the trial court entered a written order finding that “the agreement of the
parties, Harris and the Settlement Guarantors through their respective counsel on January 3,
2011 constituted a binding settlement agreement.” Specifically, the court found that “[t]he
discussions which occurred between December 19th and 22nd contain piecemeal assent to
terms which, when read together, constitute the material conditions by which the parties agreed
to be governed.” The court also found, however, that counsel’s email exchanges on January 3,
2010, contained a more definite expression of the agreement’s terms. Specifically, Maynard’s
email to Masliansky that day memorialized the settlement amount, responsibilities of the
guarantors, the parties to be bound, and contingencies to performance. In addition,
Masliansky’s response confirming the accuracy of Maynard’s representations expressed her
assent. The court also determined that Harris’s acceptance of terms in no way hinged on the
financial contribution of Papas and that the “upward variance” condition went solely to the
parties’ obligation to perform. Moreover, the court essentially found the parties’ intentions
were that Harris would be required to execute the agreement if review of the updated financials
did not disclose an increase in an individual guarantor’s liquidity, rather than an increase in the
aggregate liquidity of the guarantors. The court further found Harris had not shown an increase
in the ability of either Papas or Belmonte to pay. Finally, the court concluded that the
settlement agreement was not a new credit agreement but, rather, was a mere modification of
an existing agreement that did not invoke the Credit Act.
¶ 26 II. ANALYSIS
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¶ 27 On appeal, Harris asserts that the trial court erroneously found the parties had entered into
an enforceable settlement agreement. We begin by addressing Harris’s contention that the
Credit Act barred enforcement of the alleged agreement. Although testimony was presented at
an evidentiary hearing, resolution of this issue depends solely on the emails themselves, i.e.,
documentary evidence, and consideration of the Credit Act. Thus, the credibility of the
witnesses is not at issue and the trial court was in no better position than this court is now.
Accordingly we review this contention de novo. Barnes v. Michalski, 399 Ill. App. 3d 254, 264
(2010). Under any standard of review, however, we would find the Credit Act barred
enforcement of the alleged settlement agreement.
¶ 28 Section 1(1) of the Credit Act defines “Credit agreement” as “an agreement or commitment
by a creditor to lend money or extend credit or delay or forbear repayment of money not
primarily for personal, family or household purposes, and not in connection with the issuance
of credit cards.” 815 ILCS 160/1(1) (West 2010). Section 2 of the Credit Act states that “[a]
debtor may not maintain an action on or in any way related to a credit agreement unless the
credit agreement is in writing, expresses an agreement or commitment to lend money or extend
credit or delay or forbear repayment of money, sets forth the relevant terms and conditions, and
is signed by the creditor and the debtor.” (Emphasis added.) 815 ILCS 160/2 (West 2010).
Thus, the Credit Act is broadly worded and was intended to extend beyond the existing Frauds
Act (740 ILCS 80/0.01 et seq. (West 2010)). See McAloon v. Northwest Bancorp, Inc., 274 Ill.
App. 3d 758, 762-64 (1995). “There is no limitation as to the type of actions by a debtor which
are barred by the Act, so long as the action is in any way related to a credit agreement.” First
National Bank in Staunton v. McBride Chevrolet, Inc., 267 Ill. App. 3d 367, 372 (1994). This is
true even in the face of harsh results. Id.
¶ 29 Moreover, section 3 of the Credit Act clarifies the scope of the act, stating, in pertinent part,
as follows:
“The following actions do not give rise to a claim, counter-claim, or defense by a
debtor that a new credit agreement is created, unless the agreement satisfies the
requirements of Section 2:
***
(3) the agreement by a creditor to modify or amend an existing credit agreement or
to otherwise take certain actions, such as entering into a new credit agreement,
forbearing from exercising remedies in connection with an existing credit agreement,
or rescheduling or extending installments due under an existing credit agreement.”
(Emphases added.) 815 ILCS 160/3 (West 2010).
Thus, an agreement to modify an existing credit agreement, or forbear from exercising
remedies connected with an existing agreement, can give rise to a claim or defense that a new
agreement has been formed, so long as the agreement satisfies section 2.
¶ 30 Having considered the aforementioned provisions, we find the purported agreement, which
effectively modified an existing agreement by requiring Harris to forbear from exercising its
remedies and right to repayment, is clearly the type of agreement encompassed by the act. In
addition, we find the Maynard guarantors’ suggestion that they are not attempting to maintain a
defense based on a new credit agreement, to be disingenuous. They clearly filed their motion to
enforce a settlement agreement in defense of Harris’s action seeking to enforce an earlier credit
agreement, i.e., the mortgage documents. Moreover, we are not persuaded by the trial court’s
contrary determination, which relied on the unpublished memorandum opinion in Fidelity
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Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. American National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago, No. 93 C 2851,
1994 WL 14635 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 20, 1994). See Montes v. Taylor, 2013 IL App (4th) 120082,
¶ 21 (observing that federal district court decisions may be persuasive but are not binding).
¶ 31 In Fidelity, the court found that “[s]ection 3 states that agreements to modify existing credit
agreements are not credit agreements.” Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Co., No. 93 C 2851, at
*4. The Fidelity court then found that the settlement agreement between the parties for an
amount less than that owed by the debtor pursuant to the original agreement did not involve a
claim or defense by a debtor that a new credit agreement was created and thus, the Credit Act
did not apply. Id. Contrary to Fidelity’s reading of section 3, however, the plain language of the
statute contemplates that an agreement to modify an existing credit agreement can itself be a
new credit agreement.
¶ 32 In contrast, we find the appellate court’s prior decision in Teachers Insurance & Annuity
Ass’n of America v. La Salle National Bank, 295 Ill. App. 3d 61, 70 (1998), to be instructive.
There, the appellate court determined that where the parties’ original written agreement did not
require the creditor to restructure the loan at issue, their subsequent agreement to that effect fell
within section 3 of the Credit Act and thus, could not be enforced absent a signed writing. Id.
Similarly, here, the Maynard guarantors have cited nothing in the parties’ original agreement
that required Harris to accept a lesser sum than what was otherwise due.
¶ 33 We also reject the Maynard guarantors’ assertion that “[b]uying a permanent respite from
litigation, in consideration of a payment of monetary consideration and a deed in lieu, is not
forbearance or delay in the enforcement of a creditor’s rights under a credit agreement.” While
it is true that the effect of the settlement agreement would be to extinguish the present
litigation, the Maynard guarantors ignore that the means to that end involve Harris forbearing
from collecting the remaining sum due and from exercising its right to foreclose on the
Property. See Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 455 (10th ed. 1998) (defining forbear
as to hold back). In addition, we find no reason why the legislature would find the importance
of temporary forbearance, which requires a signed writing under the Credit Act, to be of
greater importance than permanent forbearance. See Resolution Trust Corp. v. Thompson, 989
F.2d 942, 943-44 (7th Cir. 1993) (finding loan forgiveness to be a credit agreement under the
Credit Act); Westinghouse Electric Corp. v. McLean, 938 F. Supp. 487, 491 (N.D. Ill. 1996)
(rejecting the hypertechnical distinction between forbearance and forgiveness, a distinction
that would be inconsistent with the broad reading of the Credit Act).
¶ 34 Having determined that the Credit Act applies, we now determine whether the record
supports the trial court’s finding that an enforceable settlement agreement existed, an inquiry
governed by section 2. Initially, we note that precious little proof exists that a meeting of the
minds occurred here. Even if that did occur, the emails at issue do not evince the relevant terms
of that agreement (see 815 ILCS 160/2 (West 2010)), regardless of whether an agreement was
formed on December 21, 2010, as suggested by the Maynard guarantors, or January 3, 2011, as
found by the court.
¶ 35 Those emails do not recite the names of every party to be bound (indisputably relevant
terms) or expressly incorporate other documents that recite those names. In addition, we note
that although the attorneys’ emails on January 3, 2011, clearly indicated that Papas was not
part of any settlement agreement at that time, it left open the possibility that he would
contribute. Indeed, Harris still wanted Papas’s financial statement and Papas ultimately did
attempt to contribute $30,000. See also Hubbard Street Lofts LLC v. Inland Bank, 2011 IL App
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(1st) 102640, ¶ 25 (the Credit Act barred the debtor’s claim that an agreement existed to apply
8.000% interest for 365 days where the Note relied on actually prescribed the 365/360 method
for calculating interest). We also note that the parties’ emails did not set forth the specific
property to be transferred in the deed, did not specify the legal instruments to be rendered
inoperable by the agreement and provided no deadlines for the parties to fulfill their
obligations under the agreement. In addition, those writings never set forth how the parties
were to determine whether an upward variance occurred, a subject matter that was clearly
relevant to Maynard’s clients, as shown by his multiple attempts to define that term. Although
the court inferred that the parties intended that upward variance in ability to pay contemplated
an increase in an individual guarantor’s liquidity, the parties’ writings never set forth that
definition. Simply put, any unwritten understanding by the parties has no bearing on whether
the Credit Act has been satisfied. Even when reading the emails together, the relevant terms
cannot be found in those writings.
¶ 36 BWA and the Maynard guarantors have also failed to develop any argument specifying
where the signatures of the creditor and each debtor can be found in the writings at issue. See
Bartlow v. Costigan, 2014 IL 115152, ¶ 52 (a reviewing court is entitled to cohesive
arguments). It is undisputed that none of the guarantors personally signed any of these
writings. See also Guel v. Bullock, 127 Ill. App. 3d 36, 39 (1984) (pursuant to the statute of
frauds, an attorney lacks authority to sign as the client’s agent unless the attorney’s specific
authority to bind the client is in writing); McMillan v. Ingolia, 87 Ill. App. 3d 727, 730-31
(1980) (where no writing expressly authorized the attorney to bind clients to a contract, the
attorney’s signature could not have bound his clients for the purposes of the statute of frauds).
In addition, Papas’s attorney did not even ascribe his name to the emails written on the
December and January dates. Furthermore, Harris asserts that although Masliansky had the
authority to negotiate on its behalf, she did not have the requisite express authority to enter into
the purported settlement agreement. See Shapo v. Tires ’N Tracks, Inc., 336 Ill. App. 3d 387,
399 (2002) (a client will not be bound by his attorney’s out-of-court settlement absent proof of
the attorney’s express authority, whereas the existence of an attorney’s authority to settle in
open court is presumed absent evidence to the contrary); Blutcher v. EHS Trinity Hospital, 321
Ill. App. 3d 131, 136-37 (2001). This is corroborated by Masliansky’s repeated assertions that
settlement was subject to Harris’s review. Although BWA and the Maynard guarantors argue
Harris forfeited the right to challenge the extent of Masliansky’s authority, a valid signature by
the parties was at issue in this case from the moment Harris asserted that the agreement did not
satisfy the Credit Act. See Help at Home, Inc. v. Medical Capital, L.L.C., 260 F.3d 748, 755
(7th Cir. 2001) (observing that section 2 of the Credit Act required the signature of both parties
and that the signature of one party renders an agreement unenforceable). As a result, any
settlement agreement reached between the parties was unenforceable.
¶ 37 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 38 In conclusion, the trial court erred in granting the motion of BWA and the Maynard
guarantors to enforce the settlement agreement because that agreement failed to comport with
the Credit Act and, as a result, was unenforceable. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for the
trial court to resolve the remaining issues before it, primarily Harris’s motion for summary
judgment.
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¶ 39 For the foregoing reasons, we reverse and remand.
¶ 40 Reversed and remanded.
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