2015 IL App (1st) 141689
No. 1-14-1689
Opinion filed May 27, 2015
Third Division
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
FIRST DISTRICT
)
THE PRIVATE BANK AND TRUST
) Appeal from the Circuit Court
COMPANY,
) of Cook County.
)
Plaintiff-Appellee,
)
) No. 12 L 9313
v.
)
)
EMS INVESTORS, LLC, HERBERT P.
) The Honorable
EMMERMAN, and EQUITY MARKETING
) Raymond Mitchell,
SERVICES, INC.,
) Judge, presiding.
)
Defendant-Appellants.
)
JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Presiding Justice Pucinski and Justice Lavin concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 In the absence of a reservation of rights, co-borrowers contend that a lender's release and
discharge of a third co-borrower regarding mortgages secured by property of the third co-
borrower and others released and discharged them as well.
¶2 Herbert P. Emmerman and Cheryl Bancroft formed EMS Investors, LLC (Investors), to
convert an apartment building in downtown Chicago into condominiums. To finance the project,
Emmerman, Bancroft, and Investors borrowed $1.62 million from The Private Bank and Trust
Company (Private Bank). Equity Marketing Services, Inc. (EMS), another entity Bancroft and
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Emmerman owned, guaranteed the loan. Bancroft and her husband also had several mortgages
with Private Bank on property they owned individually, together and through Bancroft Group LP
(BGLP). When the housing bubble collapsed in late 2008, Bancroft, Emmerman, and Investors
slid into financial difficulties. Sales of condominium units stalled, making repayment of the
$1.62 million loan difficult. Before the note became due, Bancroft filed for chapter 11
bankruptcy (11 U.S.C. § 101 et seq. (2006)), and she and her husband entered into a settlement
agreement with Private Bank. The settlement agreement, which only mentioned the Bancrofts'
personal real estate and not the $1.62 million loan, released and discharged them "from any and
all claims, demands, actions, causes of action, suits, costs, damages, expenses and liabilities of
every kind, character and description, either direct or consequential, at law or in equity."
Emmerman was not a party to the release or aware of it at that time.
¶3 When the note matured, Emmerman asked for an extension or modification. Private Bank
refused and filed a breach of contract action against Emmerman and Investors on the loan and
EMS on its guaranty. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Emmerman and
Investors contended that Private Bank's release of Bancroft also released them from liability as
co-obligors under the note. The trial court disagreed, granting Private Bank's motion for
summary judgment and denying defendants' motion. The court also entered judgment in Private
Bank's favor for the amount owed on the loan, interest, and attorney fees.
¶4 Emmerman and Investors argue the trial court erred in finding that the Private Bank's
settlement agreement with Bancroft did not release all of them from liability on the note in the
absence of a reservation of rights. We affirm. The language of the release between the Bancrofts
and Private Bank and the circumstances under which it arose present enough evidence to
demonstrate that Private Bank did not intend to release defendants from liability on the note.
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Thus, the trial court did not err in granting Private Bank's motion for summary judgment and
entering judgment in the bank's favor.
¶5 BACKGROUND
¶6 The facts are not in dispute. EMS Investors, LLC, is an Illinois limited liability company,
with two members, Herbert C. Emmerman and Cheryl Bancroft. On January 29, 2008, Private
Bank loaned $1.62 million to Investors, Emmerman and Bancroft, which was documented by a
promissory note and a first amended promissory note. Emmerman and Bancroft were co-makers
on the promissory note and agreed to be "jointly and severally" liable under it. Defendant Equity
Marketing Services, Inc., guaranteed repayment of the loan. Defendants defaulted under the
terms of the note and amended note by failing to make payment due on the maturity date,
January 1, 2012. EMS also defaulted by failing to make payments after defendants defaulted.
¶7 On November 22, 2011, a few months before the note became due, Private Bank entered
into a settlement agreement with Cheryl Bancroft, Stephen Bancroft, and BGLP. The settlement
agreement noted that Private Bank had mortgages on several residential properties owned
together and separately by Cheryl and Stephen, and that "disputes exist among the Parties with
respect to various claims and issues relating to" the residential real estate, and they want to
"settle any and all claims and disputes by, among and against each other under this Agreement."
The agreement also noted that Cheryl filed for bankruptcy under chapter 11 on January 14, 2011,
and that the bank had begun legal action against Stephen on property he owned separately and
with BGLP. The settlement agreement then stated, in relevant part:
"10) Release of Cheryl, Stephen and BGLP. Except as expressly set forth in this
Agreement, the Bank, and each of its respective successors, affiliates, assigns,
shareholders/members, directors, officers, agents, servants, employees, heirs,
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executors, administrators and assigns, does hereby forever release and discharge
Cheryl, Stephen, and BGLP, and their respective parents, successors, affiliates,
assigns, directors, officers, agents, servants, and employees from any and all claims,
demands, actions, causes of action, suits, costs, damages, expenses and liabilities of
every kind, character and description, either direct or consequential, at law or in
equity, which they may now, may have had at any time heretofore, or in any manner
whatsoever, provided, however, that such released claims shall not include any claims
asserted by any Party arising solely out of any obligation specifically set forth in this
Agreement.
***
26) Parties in Interest. Nothing herein shall be construed to be to the benefit of
any third party, nor is it intended that any provision shall be [for] the benefit of any
third party."
¶8 The settlement agreement does not specifically mention the note or the amended note
with Emmerman or Investors and does not mention Emmerman or Investors by name.
¶9 On August 16, 2012, Private Bank filed a two-count complaint in the circuit court of
Cook County alleging breach of contract claim against Emmerman and Investors, as obligors of
the loan (count I), and against EMS, as guarantor of the loan (count II). Defendants filed an
answer admitting the note was in default and raising as an affirmative defense that Private Bank's
unconditional release of Bancroft's liability under the note, without a reservation of rights, also
released Emmerman and Investors from liability under the note and EMS from liability under the
guaranty.
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¶ 10 Private Bank moved to strike EMS's affirmative defense as to its liability on the guaranty,
which the trial court granted, with prejudice. Private Bank then moved for summary judgment.
Defendants filed a combined motion for summary judgment and a response to Private Bank's
motion for summary judgment. Among the exhibits attached to Private Bank's motion was an
affidavit from Kimberly Kourelis, a Private Bank managing director, stating, that the bank's
settlement agreement with Bancroft was unrelated to the note, amended note, and guaranty and
was not intended to apply to Emmerman, Investors, or EMS. Private Bank also attached
deposition testimony from Emmerman stating that at the time the settlement agreement was
executed, he had no knowledge of it and had not been asked to review it at any time. Emmerman
also stated that after the loan matured in January 2012, he spoke with Alan Fine, another Private
Bank managing director, about how Emmerman was going to repay the loan. Emmerman stated,
"I was looking for a modification of the loan. None of that was forthcoming. They were
interested in me paying or else."
¶ 11 On May 1, 2014, the trial court granted Private Bank's motion for summary judgment and
denied defendants' motion. The court also entered judgment in Private Bank's favor in the
amount of $1,704,718.79, which included the principal due on the loan, plus interest, attorney
fees, and costs. The court found that defendants' liability under the note was joint and several,
and thus, "a plaintiff is entitled to pursue distinct remedies upon the same instrument, treating it
as a joint contract and as a several contract, until satisfaction is fully obtained. [Citation]."
Further, citing Diamond Headache Clinic, Ltd. v. Loeber, 172 Ill. App. 3d 364, 369 (1988), the
trial court stated that joint and several liability permits the plaintiff to sue until payment in full
from one or more of the defendants, with the limitation that the plaintiff may not collect more
than what is owed by the defendants jointly. This prevents multiple recoveries for a single injury.
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¶ 12 Addressing the settlement agreement, the court stated, "an obligor is not released when it
is apparent from the circumstances that the settling parties did not intend the release of one to act
as a release of all." The court found that the evidence, including Kourelis's affidavit,
Emmerman's deposition testimony, and a third-party beneficiary clause in the release ("[n]othing
herein shall be construed to be to the benefit of any third party") demonstrates that Private Bank
always intended to enforce its rights against defendants.
¶ 13 ANALYSIS
¶ 14 Defendants' primary contention is that the trial court erred in entering summary judgment
and a monetary judgment in Private Bank's favor, because the release of one joint and several co-
obligor releases all other joint and several co-obligors absent a reservation of rights. Defendants
also contend the trial court erred by: (i) referring to Bancroft as a guarantor rather than as a co-
obligor and (ii) relying on section 294 of the Restatement (Second) of Contracts (Restatement
(Second) of Contracts § 294 (1981)), which has not been enacted in Illinois. Defendants ask us to
reverse the summary judgment in plaintiff's favor and enter summary judgment in their favor and
vacate the monetary judgment.
¶ 15 Summary judgment is proper where the pleadings, depositions, admissions and affidavits
on file, when viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, reveal no genuine issue
of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 735 ILCS 5/2-
1005(c) (West 2012); Home Insurance Co. v. Cincinnati Insurance Co., 213 Ill. 2d 307, 315
(2004). We review the entry of summary judgment de novo and may affirm on any ground
appearing in the record. Id.
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¶ 16 Release of a Joint and Several Co-Obligor
¶ 17 Defendants' primarily argues that the trial court erred in finding that Private Bank's
release of Cheryl Bancroft did not release defendants from liability on the note. But we first
address defendants' contention that the trial court erred when, in its order, it referred to Cheryl
Bancroft, who is not a party, as a guarantor rather than as a co-obligor on the note. We agree the
trial court erred when it stated that "Cheryl Bancroft also guaranteed the obligations brought
about by the loan documents" and "Private Bank *** released Cheryl Bancroft from any
obligations she had arising under the guaranty." But the court then proceeded to whether Private
Bank's release of Bancroft also released defendants, who were jointly and severally liable under
the note or whether they were not released because the circumstances indicated that Private Bank
did not intend for their release of Bancroft to also release defendants. Thus, because in making
its decision the trial court addressed whether joint and several co-obligors on a note are released
after release of one of a co-obligor, any error in describing Bancroft as a guarantor rather than a
co-obligor did not affect the outcome and was harmless.
¶ 18 Turning to the liabilities of joint and several co-obligors on a loan, under Illinois law, a
joint and several contract has been deemed "equivalent to independent contracts, founded upon
one consideration, for performance severally, and also for performance jointly, and distinct
remedies upon the same instrument, treating it as a joint contract and as a several contract, may
be pursued until satisfaction is fully obtained.” Moore v. Rogers, 19 Ill. 347, 348 (1857); see also
People v. Harrison, 82 Ill. 84, 86 (1876) (“Contracts which are joint and several may be regarded
as furnishing two distinct remedies: one by a joint action against all the obligors, the other by a
several action against each.”); 735 ILCS 5/2-410 (West 2012) ("All parties to a joint obligation,
including a partnership obligation, may be sued jointly, or separate actions may be brought
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against one or more of them. A judgment against fewer than all the parties to a joint or
partnership obligation does not bar an action against those not included in the judgment or not
sued. Nothing herein permits more than one satisfaction."). Each of the obligors “may be liable
for the entire damages resulting from the failure to perform.” Brokerage Resources, Inc. v.
Jordan, 80 Ill. App. 3d 605, 608 (1980).
¶ 19 Despite the general rule holding joint and several co-obligors separately liable, a release
of one co-obligor may also release the other co-obligor. Under Illinois common law, the full
release of one co-obligor released all “even if the release contained an express reservation of
rights against the others.” Porter v. Ford Motor Co., 96 Ill. 2d 190, 193 (1983). As observed by
the supreme court in Porter, it “rejected the strict common law rule ‘in favor of the more
reasonable rule, that where the release of one of several obligors shows upon its face, and in
connection with the surrounding circumstances, that it was the intention of the parties not to
release the co-obligors,' " the agreement shall be construed as a covenant not to sue, rather than a
release. (Emphasis omitted.) Id. at 194-95 (quoting Parmelee v. Lawrence, 44 Ill. 405, 413-14
(1867)). In other words, the entry of one co-obligor into an unconditional release will release all
co-obligors except when a contrary intent appears from the face of the document with the
release. Id.; see also Cherney v. Soldinger, 299 Ill. App. 3d 1066, 1070 (1998).
¶ 20 In Parmelee four partners, Bigelow, Parmelee, Gage, and Johnson, borrowed $50,000
from Lawrence and conveyed real estate to Lawrence as security. The partners agreed to repay
the loan in five annual installments with 10% interest, after which Lawrence agreed to reconvey
the property to the partners. Parmelee, 44 Ill. at 406-07. After they stopped repaying the loan, the
partners argued that a release executed in favor of one of the partners, Bigelow, served to release
them all. Id. at 408. The release read, in relevant part:
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" 'I release and discharge *** Bigelow, his property and estate, from all claims on
account of the same.
If the property mentioned in the above articles has to be sold under any order of
the court at Chicago, the interest of said Bigelow in it is to be protected according to
this settlement. Nothing herein shall in anywise affect my rights or demand against
said Parmelee, Gage or Johnson, or their interest in said property.' " Id. at 408.
¶ 21 In examining the effect of the release on the liability of Bigelow's partners, the Illinois
Supreme Court held that a "release, like every other written instrument, must be so construed as
to carry out the intention of the parties. This intention is to be sought in the language of the
instrument itself when read in light of the circumstance which surrounded the transaction." Id. at
410. The court further stated that "where the release of one of several obligors shows upon its
face, and in connection with the surrounding circumstances, that it was the intention of the
parties not to release the [co-obligors], such intention, as in the case of other written contracts,
shall be carried out, and to that end the instrument shall be construed as a covenant not to sue."
Id. at 414.
¶ 22 Accordingly, a court must assess whether the parties intended the agreement to serve as
an “absolute and unconditional” release of the co-obligor executing the agreement. Id. The
purpose of this doctrine is to prevent a claimant from receiving multiple recoveries for a single
claim (Diamond Headache Clinic, 172 Ill. App. 3d at 369), and not to release a co-obligor when
a claim has been only partially settled if the claimant's intent is not to release the other obligor
but to hold him or her responsible for the balance. Id.
¶ 23 In ruling in Lawrence's favor, the Parmelee court had "no hesitation or doubt" finding
that Lawrence executed the release "for the purpose of saving Bigelow from further legal
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liability so far, and only so far, as this could be done without affecting [his claim] against the
[co-obligors.]" Parmelee, 44 Ill. at 411. The court noted the release contained an express
reservation of rights and that Lawrence had refused to sign other releases Bigelow presented to
him lacking a reservation of rights out of concern that it might jeopardize his rights against the
co-obligors. Id.
¶ 24 To determine Private Bank's intent in releasing Bancroft from liability, we examine the
language of the release and the circumstances leading to its execution. In finding that Private
Bank's release of Bancroft did not release defendants from liability under the note, the trial court
cited the affidavit of Kimberly Kourelis of Private Bank, the deposition testimony of Herbert
Emmerman, and the third-party beneficiary language of the settlement agreement ("Nothing
herein shall be construed to be to the benefit of any third party, nor is it intended that any
provision shall be [for] the benefit of any third party.").
¶ 25 Addressing the last item first, defendants assert that the trial court erred in relying on the
third-party beneficiary language in paragraph 26 of the settlement agreement as evidence that
Private Bank reserved its rights against Emmerman and Investors. Defendants note that in
Holland v. United States, 621 F.3d 1366 (Fed. Cir. 2010), a case from the Federal Circuit Court
of Appeals interpreting Illinois law, the court stated that "the general 'Third Party Beneficiaries'
clause in the Settlement Agreement is not sufficient to show that the parties intended the release
to be less than an absolute release of the FDIC as a manager of the FRF and thus, under Illinois
law, fails to establish that the agreement should be construed as merely a covenant not to sue the
FDIC as manager of the FRF." Id. at 1381. Defendants contend that because the third-party
beneficiary clause is not sufficient to reserve rights against them and the settlement agreement
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contained no reservation of rights clause, the agreement contains no evidence that Private Bank
intended to reserve its rights against Emmerman and Investors.
¶ 26 State courts are not bound to follow decisions of the federal district courts or circuit
courts of appeal. Hinterlong v. Baldwin, 308 Ill. App. 3d 441, 452 (1999) (except for the United
States Supreme Court, federal courts exercise no appellate jurisdiction over state courts and their
opinions are not binding on state courts). Federal decisions may, however, be considered
persuasive authority. Wilson v. County of Cook, 2012 IL 112026, ¶ 30. In the absence of Illinois
precedent on whether a general third-party beneficiary clause shows an intent to reserve rights
against other co-obligors, we may be inclined to follow the Holland and find that the third-party
beneficiary clause in the release failed to expressly reserve Private Bank's rights against
defendants. But we need not address that issue, because even absent that clause, the remainder of
the settlement agreement, the circumstances surrounding its execution, and the stated intent and
understanding of both Private Bank and Emmerman as to the effect of the release establish that
Private Bank did not intend to release Emmerman or Investors from liability under the note.
¶ 27 We start with the fact that the release refers to mortgages on several parcels of residential
real estate Cheryl Bancroft and her husband own individually, together, and through BGLP.
Private Bank and the Bancrofts entered into the settlement 10 months after Cheryl Bancroft filed
for chapter 11 bankruptcy and while Private Bank had pending litigation against Stephen
Bancroft and BGLP involving property referred to in the release. The note, the amended note, or
the co-obligors here are not mentioned at all. In her affidavit, Kourelis states that the settlement
agreement was unrelated to the note, the amended note, or the obligations of Emmerman,
Investors, and EMS and was not intended to apply to them. Emmerman's deposition testimony
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likewise indicates he did not think that in releasing Bancroft, Private Bank also intended to
release him or Investors from their obligations under the note.
¶ 28 Emmerman testified that he was unaware of the release just before and after it was
signed, that when the note became due in January 2012, three months after the release was
executed, he spoke with Alan Fine from Private Bank about a modification but none was
forthcoming and that he knew that the bank was "interested in me paying or else." Private Bank's
actions in attempting to obtain payment from Emmerman and Investors, as the only remaining
liable co-obligors, show it intended to continue to hold them liable despite the release of
Bancroft.
¶ 29 Further, we reject defendants' contention that the mere absence of a reservation of rights
clause in the note and amended note means that Private Bank did not intend to reserve its rights
against defendants. Specifically, defendants assert that because all other notes and loan
modifications they or Bancroft executed included a reservation of rights clause and because
Private Bank almost always included that provision in their notes and loan agreements, the
absence of that clause in this note and amended note is evidence that Private Bank did not intend
to preserve its rights against co-obligors. As noted, Illinois case law holds that it is the intent of
the parties to the release and the language of the release that controls is scope and effect.
Defendants offer no cases to support their argument that the language of the note alone controls
whether a later release of one co-obligor also releases the other co-obligors.
¶ 30 Thus, even in the absence of an express reservation of rights in the release, the
circumstances, which we must consider, show that Private Bank did not intend to release
defendants from their liability under the note when they entered into a settlement agreement with
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defendants' co-obligor, Cheryl Bancroft. Therefore, the trial court did not err in granting Private
Bank's motion for summary judgment and entering a judgment in the bank's favor.
¶ 31 Section 294 of Restatement of Contracts
¶ 32 Defendants contend the trial court erred in relying on section 294 of the Restatement
(Second) of Contracts (Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 294 (1981)), because it has not been
enacted as law in Illinois. Nothing in the record or the order granting summary judgment shows
that the trial court relied on the restatement in reaching its decision. Defendants note that in its
order, the trial court relied, in part, on El Funding Partnership v. Voegel, 2012 IL App (1st)
113712-U. In El Funding, the appellate court mentioned the trial court's reliance there on section
294 of the Restatement (Second) of Contracts but found it irrelevant, because Illinois courts
modified the common law rule to find that intent is the determining factor in whether the release
of a co-obligor is releases the remaining obligors. Even though, as noted above, the trial court
improperly relied on El Funding under Supreme Court Rule 23 (eff. July 1, 2011), its reference
does not amount to evidence that the trial court relied on the Restatement (Second) of Contracts
in reaching its decision.
¶ 33 CONCLUSION
¶ 34 The trial court did no err in granting plaintiff's motion for summary judgment or entering
judgment in plaintiff's favor.
¶ 35 Affirmed.
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