ILLINOIS OFFICIAL REPORTS
Appellate Court
Spanish Court Two Condominium Ass’n v. Carlson, 2012 IL App (2d) 110473
Appellate Court SPANISH COURT TWO CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff
Caption and Counterdefendant-Appellee and Cross-Appellant, v. LISA
CARLSON, Defendant and Counterplaintiff-Appellant and Cross-
Appellee.
District & No. Second District
Docket No. 2-11-0473
Filed June 27, 2012
Modified upon denial
of rehearing November 9, 2012
Held In a forcible entry and detainer action seeking possession of defendant’s
(Note: This syllabus condominium unit and an award of unpaid assessments, the severance of
constitutes no part of defendant’s counterclaim based on alleged damage to her unit was upheld
the opinion of the court as not being germane to possession, but the affirmative defense based on
but has been prepared damage to her unit due to disrepair of the exterior was reinstated, only as
by the Reporter of a factual predicate for withholding assessments, since the only legal
Decisions for the ground for withholding assessments is a breach of the duty to repair and
convenience of the maintain common elements.
reader.)
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Lake County, No. 10-LM-301; the Hon.
Review Michael J. Fusz, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Affirmed in part and reversed in part; cause remanded.
Counsel on Norman J. Lerum, of Norman J. Lerum, P.C., of Chicago, for appellant.
Appeal
Diane J. Silverberg, of Kovitz, Shifrin & Waitzman, of Buffalo Grove,
for appellee.
Panel JUSTICE BIRKETT delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices Burke and Hudson concurred in the judgment and opinion.1
OPINION
¶1 Plaintiff, Spanish Court Two Condominium Association, brought an action against
defendant, Lisa Carlson, under the Forcible Entry and Detainer Act (the Forcible Entry Act)
(735 ILCS 5/9-111 (West 2010)), seeking possession of her condominium unit and an award
of unpaid general and special assessments, late fees, and costs and attorney fees. Defendant
appeals from the trial court’s pretrial ruling dismissing her affirmative defenses and
counterclaim, which were premised on plaintiff’s alleged failure to maintain the exterior of
the building, resulting in damage to the interior of defendant’s unit, and on plaintiff’s alleged
failure to repair a toilet that was damaged when plaintiff demolished part of defendant’s unit
while attempting to determine the source of a leak into a neighboring unit. Defendant also
appeals from the court’s subsequent judgments granting plaintiff the right to take possession
of the unit and imposing a monetary award. The latter consisted of (1) delinquent general,
or monthly, assessments as well as a special assessment for replacement of patio doors, (2)
late fees for the delinquent assessments, and (3) costs and attorney fees. Plaintiff cross-
appeals from the court’s refusal to enter judgment for a special assessment to upgrade the fire
alarms and elevator on the condominium property. Plaintiff also requests an award of costs
and attorney fees on appeal. We hold that the trial court was correct in severing the
counterclaim but that it erred in striking the affirmative defenses in their entirety. We reverse
and remand for partial reinstatement of the affirmative defenses.
¶2 BACKGROUND
¶3 At all times relevant here, defendant was the owner of a condominium unit in a building
1
Justice John Bowman participated in the original disposition of this cause. He passed away
on September 26, 2012, before the panel reached a decision on plaintiff’s petition for rehearing.
Justice Donald Hudson was assigned in place of Justice Bowman so that a panel of three could rule
on the petition.
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governed by plaintiff pursuant to its condominium declaration. Plaintiff’s forcible entry and
detainer (FED) complaint, filed February 5, 2010, brought two counts. Count I was entitled
“Possession” and cited provisions of the Forcible Entry Act. Plaintiff alleged that it had
approved, pursuant to the declaration, “monthly and special assessments and other common
expenses,” and that defendant was delinquent in paying the common expenses. Plaintiff
alleged that defendant had not paid the monthly assessments from August 2009 through
January 2010. Plaintiff did not specify the “special assessments” that it claimed defendant
owed. As remedies, plaintiff sought both possession of defendant’s unit and a monetary
award of $2,143.83, which included delinquent monthly and special assessments, late
charges, and costs and attorney fees.
¶4 Count II of the complaint alleged breach of contract. The count incorporated all of the
allegations of count I concerning defendant’s failure to pay the common expenses. The count
incorporated count I’s citations to the Forcible Entry Act and cited no additional authority.
Finally, count II did not seek possession but only the same monetary award sought in count
I.
¶5 On March 18, 2010, defendant filed her combined answer, affirmative defenses, and
counterclaim. On November 9, 2010, the trial court granted plaintiff’s motion to strike
defendant’s affirmative defenses and sever her counterclaim. Following a bench trial, the
court entered judgment awarding defendant both possession of the unit and a monetary sum
comprised of unpaid assessments, late fees, and costs and attorney fees.
¶6 The issues in this appeal involve the following two documents: (1) the “Declaration of
Condominium Ownership and of Easements, Restrictions and Covenants For Spanish Court
II Condominium Development” (Declaration); and (2) the “By Laws of Spanish Court II”
(Bylaws). The sole copies in the record, which are the exhibits admitted at trial, are partly
illegible (apparently from poor photocopying)2 but the portions on which the parties rely, and
that seem most material to the issues at hand, are legible.
¶7 In her combined answer, affirmative defenses, and counterclaim, defendant “admit[ted]
that she ha[d] not paid her assessments from August[ ] 2009,” but “denie[d] that she owe[d]
those assessments in light of the damages she *** incurred as a result of certain property
damage sustained by her condominium unit as a result of [defendant’s] failure to properly
maintain the roof directly above her unit and for destroying property within her unit without
justification.” Defendant alleged as follows regarding the roof. About 12 years ago, plaintiff
replaced the roof directly above defendant’s top-floor unit. Plaintiff thereafter failed to
undertake “certain [yearly] maintenance procedures” recommended by the company that
replaced the roof. As a result of this failure, the roof deteriorated, allowing “a significant
amount of water leakage” into defendant’s unit. The leak deformed the drywall, disengaging
it from the wall studs, and caused the paint to peel. Defendant is “liable to expend significant
sums of money to repair the unit.” Despite repeated requests by defendant, plaintiff has
refused to repair the roof and stop the leak.
¶8 Defendant also alleged that the “brickwork directly above [her unit]” has deteriorated and
2
We are surprised that the trial court did not insist on better copies.
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is in need of “repair, recaulking, and tuckpointing.” Defendant alleged that “an experienced
professional” inspected the brickwork and determined that its condition “has also allowed
water to enter into her unit[,] which has contributed to the damage of the walls and internal
structure of her unit.” Although plaintiff is aware of the deteriorating brickwork, it has
refused to repair it.
¶9 Finally, defendant alleged that plaintiff failed to finish certain interior repairs. Defendant
alleged that, several months ago, plaintiff directed plumbers to enter her unit “and destroy
the wall and plumbing in the bathroom *** on the belief that a leak in a neighboring unit was
caused by a leaking pipe in the bathroom of [her unit].” The plumbers determined that the
leak originated elsewhere. Plaintiff subsequently replaced the drywall and restored the
plumbing, but defendant found that her toilet would not work. Although plaintiff is aware
of the inoperative toilet, it has refused to repair or replace it.
¶ 10 Defendant advanced two separate affirmative defenses based on the foregoing
allegations. Both defenses claimed that the alleged neglect by plaintiff constituted a breach
of its covenant under the Declaration to maintain, repair, and replace the common elements
of the condominium property utilizing the mandatory assessments collected by plaintiff from
unit owners. As her first defense, defendant asserted that plaintiff was “estopped as a matter
of law” from seeking past-due assessments and associated late fees, costs, and attorney fees.
As her second (and alternative) defense, defendant requested that there be deducted from any
monetary award against her an amount between $6,000 and $10,000, the estimated cost of
repairing the damage to her unit.
¶ 11 Based on the same allegations, plaintiff counterclaimed for an award of damages between
$6,000 and $10,000.
¶ 12 On April 14, 2010, plaintiff filed motions to strike defendant’s affirmative defenses and
sever her counterclaim. Citing multiple authorities, principally Sawyier v. Young, 198 Ill.
App. 3d 1047 (1990), plaintiff argued that defendant’s affirmative defenses and counterclaim
were disallowed by section 9-106 of the Forcible Entry Act (735 ILCS 5/9-106 (West 2010))
because they were “not germane to the distinctive purpose of the proceedings,” as that
section provides. In an order dated November 9, 2010, the trial court granted the motions,
but without explanation. The court struck the affirmative defenses and reassigned the
counterclaim to another division of the circuit court.
¶ 13 Defendant argues on appeal that it was error to sever her counterclaim and strike her
affirmative defenses. As we explain below, the trial court properly severed the counterclaim
in its entirely but erred in striking the affirmative defenses in their entirety.
¶ 14 ANALYSIS
¶ 15 At the outset, we note that plaintiff filed a petition for rehearing of our original
disposition in this cause. We allowed answer and reply. Defendant also moved to file a
surreply. We grant that motion. As for the merits of the petition, we think it best to address
them separately, in the final paragraphs of our analysis.
¶ 16 The issue in this case, which appears to be one of first impression in Illinois, is whether,
in an action brought under the Forcible Entry Act by the board of managers of a
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condominium property against a unit owner for possession of the unit due to unpaid
assessments, the unit owner may claim as a defense that her responsibility for the
assessments was diminished or nullified by the failure of the board to maintain the common
elements of the property as required in the condominium instrument. Although there are no
prior decisions on point, we hold, by analogy to the case law on actions brought under the
Forcible Entry Act by landlords for possession of leased property due to unpaid rent, that the
unit owner may claim neglect as a defense to the board’s suit under the Act. We further hold,
also by analogy to existing case law on suits under the Forcible Entry Act involving leased
dwellings, that, with certain narrow exceptions, the unit owner may not counterclaim under
the Forcible Entry Act for damages caused to her unit or to her personal property by the
board’s neglect of the common elements.
¶ 17 This issue involves consideration of what matters are “germane” under section 9-106 of
the Forcible Entry Act. The meaning of a statute is a question of law, which we review de
novo. See Lee v. John Deere Insurance Co., 208 Ill. 2d 38, 43 (2003). Our review also
requires us to construe contractual provisions, a matter that is likewise subject to de novo
review. Gallagher v. Lenart, 226 Ill. 2d 208, 219 (2007). In both instances, the aim is to
discern the intent of the drafter, the best indicator of which is the language used. See
Gallagher, 226 Ill. 2d at 233; Lee, 208 Ill. 2d at 43. We also note that, in assessing a motion
under section 9-106, we assume the truth of all well-pleaded facts. Heller v. Goss, 80 Ill.
App. 3d 716, 719 (1980).
¶ 18 Before we address the text of section 9-106, we first examine some preliminary sections
of the Forcible Entry Act. As to which persons may bring an action, the Forcible Entry Act
provides in relevant part:
“(a) The person entitled to possession of lands or tenements may be restored thereto
under any of the following circumstances:
***
(4) When any lessee of the lands or tenements, or any person holding under such
lessee, holds possession without right after the termination of the lease or tenancy by
its own limitation, condition or terms, or by notice to quit or otherwise.
***
(7) When any property is subject to the provisions of the Condominium Property
Act [(765 ILCS 605/1 (West 2010))], the owner of the unit fails or refuses to pay
when due his or her proportionate share of the common expenses of such property,
or of any other expenses lawfully agreed upon or any unpaid fine, the Board of
Managers or its agent have served the demand set forth in Section 9-104.1 of this
Article [(735 ILCS 5/9-104.1 (West 2010))] in the manner provided for in that
Section and the unit owner has failed to pay the amount claimed within the time limit
prescribed in the demand ***.” 735 ILCS 5/9-102(a)(4), (a)(7) (West 2010).
There is no dispute here that plaintiff has met the prerequisites in section 9-102(a)(7) for a
suit under the Forcible Entry Act.
¶ 19 Next, we note the parallels between what a landlord may seek, and what a condominium
board of managers may seek, in an action under the Forcible Entry Act. When, following
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appropriate notice to the tenant, the landlord deems the lease terminated due to unpaid rent,
the landlord may couple the claim for possession with a claim for unpaid rent. 735 ILCS 5/9-
209 (West 2010). Section 9-106 of the Forcible Entry Act (735 ILCS 5/9-106 (West 2010))
reiterates that “a claim for rent may be joined in the complaint, and judgment may be entered
for the amount of rent found due.” Similarly, a board of managers is not limited to seeking
possession alone. Section 9-111(a) of the Forcible Entry Act (735 ILCS 5/9-111(a) (West
2010)) provides:
“(a) *** [W]hen the action is based upon the failure of an owner of a unit therein to
pay when due his or her proportionate share of the common expenses of the property, or
of any other expenses lawfully agreed upon or the amount of any unpaid fine, and if the
court finds that the expenses or fines are due to the plaintiff, the plaintiff shall be entitled
to the possession of the whole of the premises claimed, and judgment in favor of the
plaintiff shall be entered for the possession thereof and for the amount found due by the
court including interest and late charges, if any, together with reasonable attorney’s fees,
if any, and for the plaintiff’s costs.”
¶ 20 We turn now to section 9-106 of the Forcible Entry Act, which is the subject of
conflicting interpretations as it applies to this case. The section provides in relevant part:
“The defendant may under a general denial of the allegations of the complaint offer
in evidence any matter in defense of the action. Except as otherwise provided in Section
9-120 [(735 ILCS 5/9-120 (West 2010))3] no matters not germane to the distinctive
purpose of the proceeding shall be introduced by joinder, counterclaim or otherwise.
However, a claim for rent may be joined in the complaint, and judgment may be entered
for the amount of rent found due.” 735 ILCS 5/9-106 (West 2010).
The supreme court has defined “germane” as “closely allied; closely related, closely
connected; *** appropriate.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Rosewood Corp. v. Fisher,
46 Ill. 2d 249, 256 (1970). “ ‘Forcible entry and detainer is a summary statutory proceeding
to adjudicate rights to possession and is unhampered and unimpeded by questions of title and
other collateral matters not directly connected with the question of possession.’ ” Id. at 255
(quoting Bleck v. Cosgrove, 32 Ill. App. 2d 267, 272 (1961)). Possession and directly related
matters might be the only substantive issues for decision in a FED action, but, as our review
of the statutory sections revealed, possession is not the sole remedy available to the plaintiff
in the action: a landlord may seek overdue rent (735 ILCS 5/9-106, 9-209 (West 2010)), and
a condominium board of managers may seek overdue assessments (735 ILCS 5/9-111(a)
(West 2010)). Cases involving rented dwellings have held that, where the landlord seeks
possession under the Forcible Entry Act for nonpayment of rent, the tenant has the right to
defend the action by disputing some or all of the claim for rent. In Jack Spring, Inc. v. Little,
50 Ill. 2d 351, 367 (1972), the supreme court held that an implied warranty of habitability
3
This provision is not relevant here.
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exists in a lease for a dwelling in a multiunit building4 and that section 9-106 of the Forcible
Entry Act permits a tenant to claim an alleged breach of the warranty as a defense to an
action for possession due to unpaid rent. Jack Spring’s rationale for finding an implied
warranty of habitability in multiunit dwellings is that, with society’s transformation from an
agrarian to an industrial society, it can no longer be assumed that tenants have the expertise
to make their own repairs to the leased premises as did the “jack-of-all-trades” farmers of
old, and hence rent is now paid with the assumption that the dwelling will be maintained by
the landlord in a habitable state. Id. at 364-66.
¶ 21 In Peoria Housing Authority v. Sanders, 54 Ill. 2d 478, 483 (1973), the court, making no
mention of Jack Spring’s express restriction of its holding to rentals in multiunit buildings
(see Jack Spring, 50 Ill. 2d at 367), held without qualification that “when an action for
possession is based upon nonpayment of rent, the question whether the defendant owes rent
to the plaintiff is germane, whether or not the plaintiff seeks judgment for the rent that he
says is due.” In Sanders, the plaintiff, a housing authority, sought possession for nonpayment
of rent (specifically, one month’s rent plus a late fee) but did not seek an award of overdue
rent. The defendant filed a counterclaim (1) asserting that the parties had orally modified the
rental agreement to soften the late-fee provision (Sanders, 54 Ill. 2d at 479-80), and (2)
challenging as unconstitutional the plaintiff’s policy that it would make a downward
adjustment in rent only if the tenant’s income decreased by 25% (Peoria Housing Authority
v. Sanders, 2 Ill. App. 3d 610, 617 (1971) (Stouder, J., dissenting)).5 The counterclaim
“prayed that defendant’s rent be recomputed and that she be allowed as damages any
overcharge that might have been made.” Sanders, 54 Ill. 2d at 480. The court reversed the
trial court’s dismissal of the counterclaim, reasoning that the defendant was permitted to
dispute whether and in what amount rent was due, and even to counterclaim for recoupment
of rent. Id. at 483.
¶ 22 There have been several appellate decisions applying the holdings of Jack Spring and
Sanders. In Richardson v. Wilson, 46 Ill. App. 3d 622, 623 (1977), the defendant “admitted
that rent had not been paid for 2 months but advanced affirmative defenses that plaintiff had
breached implied and express warranties by failing to repair the premises to comply with the
municipal building code and by failing to comply with an express covenant to repair.” The
appellate court reversed the trial court’s dismissal of the affirmative defenses. The court
explained:
“Under these circumstances, although possession is the only issue in this appeal
because the landlord is not seeking a judgment for unpaid rent, the resolution of the
demand for possession turns upon whether rent was due and unpaid. If rent is due and the
4
About 10 years later, the court extended the warranty to leases of single-family residences,
on the ground that “[a] tenant will legitimately have the same expectations that a single-family
dwelling will be fit to live in as he would have in the case of a structure with multiple dwelling
units.” Pole Realty Co. v. Sorrells, 84 Ill. 2d 178, 182 (1981).
5
Only Justice Stouder’s dissent in the appellate court revealed the nature of the counterclaim
regarding the plaintiff’s rent reduction policy.
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tenant has not paid after proper notice, the landlord is entitled to possession. If rent is not
owed because the tenant’s setoffs based on alleged violations of the landlord’s breach of
an implied warranty of habitability or his express covenant to repair exceed the amount
of rent the landlord claims to be owing, plaintiff is not entitled to possession solely by
reason of nonpayment of rent.” Id. at 624.
¶ 23 In Quel v. Hansen, 126 Ill. App. 3d 1086, 1088-89 (1984), the appellate court held that
the defendant was entitled to assert the defense that he was due rent credits for management
and caretaking services as provided in the lease agreement.
¶ 24 The foregoing cases show that, where possession is sought under the Forcible Entry Act
for nonpayment of rent, the tenant may challenge the amount of rent or late fees claimed, and
may do so by asserting, e.g., (1) that the lease did not actually call for rent or late fees in the
amount claimed (Sanders), (2) that the rent charged was unconstitutional or otherwise illegal
(Sanders), or (3) that a setoff was due because of a provision in the lease for rent credits
(Quel) or because the landlord breached an express or implied duty to repair (Richardson).
Any of these bases may also be alleged as part of a claim for recoupment of rent.
¶ 25 The principles of these cases apply equally to actions under the Forcible Entry Act in
which the board of managers of a condominium property seeks possession of a condominium
unit because of the owner’s nonpayment of assessments. As the court in Jack Spring
explained, it was once understood that land was the principal focus of the leasehold, and
tenants were expected to make their own repairs to the dwelling (Jack Spring, 50 Ill. 2d at
363-66). With the fundamental shift in the economic structure, it became understood that rent
was paid in exchange for the landlord’s promise to maintain the property in a liveable
condition. However, there is no need to rely on such assumptions to determine the purpose
for the assessments collected by plaintiff’s board of managers, or by condominium boards
of managers generally. Section 18.4 of the Condominium Property Act (Condominium Act)
(765 ILCS 605/18.4 (West 2010)) prescribes duties for boards of managers that are implied
in all condominium governance documents in Illinois. See 765 ILCS 605/18.4(r) (West
2010) (“[a]ny portion of a condominium instrument which contains provisions contrary to
these provisions shall be void as against public policy and ineffective,” and “[a]ny such
instrument that fails to contain the provisions required by this Section shall be deemed to
incorporate such provisions by operation of law”). Among these is the duty “[t]o provide for
the operation, care, upkeep, maintenance, replacement and improvement of the common
elements” (765 ILCS 605/18.4(a) (West 2010)), which duty may be carried out by the
collection of assessments from unit owners (765 ILCS 605/18.4(c), (d) (West 2010)).
Consistent with section 18.4(a), article XIII of the Declaration provides that “[m]aintenance,
repair, and replacements of the Common Elements shall be furnished by [plaintiff’s board]
as part of the common expenses.” Article VIII of the Declaration provides that unit owners
shall pay their proportionate share of the common expenses. Article VI of the Bylaws
authorizes plaintiff to collect monthly assessments for the common expenses.
¶ 26 It is unquestioned, and unquestionable, in this appeal that the assessments collected by
plaintiff are for the maintenance of the common elements, and that the roof and the brick
facade of the building–the two exterior areas that defendant claims were neglected–are
among the common elements. We conclude that defendant’s assertion that plaintiff has not
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performed its duties with respect to the common elements is as viable a defense to plaintiff’s
suit under the Forcible Entry Act as a landlord’s failure to maintain a rented dwelling would
be to a suit under the Forcible Entry Act for possession of that dwelling for nonpayment of
rent.6
¶ 27 Plaintiff points to section 18.4(d) of the Condominium Act, which empowers a board of
managers to “collect assessments from unit owners” as part of the board’s “powers and
duties” (735 ILCS 605/18.4(d) (West 2010)). Plaintiff suggests that a board’s right to collect
assessments is absolute and that a claim for nonpayment of assessments is not subject to any
affirmative defense. Certainly, the Forcible Entry Act does provide a remedy for nonpayment
of assessments, implying that the collection of assessments is not only a power and a duty
but a right as well, but nowhere does the Forcible Entry Act or the Condominium Act suggest
that the right is absolute. Notably, the board’s power and duty to maintain the common
elements–and the concomitant right of the unit owner to have the common elements
maintained–are just as unequivocally affirmed in section 18.4 of the Condominium Act as
the board’s power and duty to collect assessments. Thus, the Condominium Act appears to
set the rights of unit owners on par with the rights of the board of managers. Moreover, the
rights arise from mutually exchanged promises–on the one hand to pay assessments, on the
other hand to maintain the common elements–and so the Declaration and the Bylaws are best
seen as contracts. See La Salle National Bank v. Vega, 167 Ill. App. 3d 154, 159 (1988) (a
contract is an agreement between competent parties, on a consideration sufficient in law, to
do or not to do a particular thing); 1230-1250 Twenty-Third Street Condominium Unit
Owners Ass’n v. Bolandz, 978 A.2d 1188, 1191 (D.C. 2009) (“A condominium instrument,
such as the bylaws, is a contract between the unit owners and the condominium
association.”); 1 Gary A. Poliakoff, Law of Condominium Operations § 1:23 (2011) (while
sometimes referred to as a constitution, a condominium governance document is “more
accurately described as a contract between the unit owner and the association, promising that
in exchange for the unit owner’s payment of assessments, the association will maintain the
property and enforce the other covenants within the documents”). Notably, plaintiff entitled
count II of its complaint “Breach of Contract.” We do not suggest, however, that count II
actually alleged common-law breach of contract, as it incorporated most of count I, did not
cite any law other than the Forcible Entry Act, and did not set forth any elements of breach
of contract.7 Plaintiff’s choice of a title for count II is, nonetheless, suggestive of how it
6
We acknowledge a potential distinction in this case between the two types of assessments
that plaintiff claims are overdue. The monthly assessments, it seems, are those that defendant claims
should have gone toward the repair of the roof and the brick facade. The special assessments were
specifically allocated to a different purpose. Potentially, then, neglect of the roof and the brick
facade would not itself be a ground for withholding the special assessments. As plaintiff, however,
does not argue along these lines, we will not discriminate between the two types of assessments in
deciding what defenses or counterclaims defendant may bring in this suit under the Forcible Entry
Act for possession due to nonpayment of assessments.
7
If count II was a bona fide breach-of-contract count, then plaintiff would have been hard
pressed to claim that defendant could not argue that plaintiff itself breached the contract sued on.
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viewed the character of the documents sued on.
¶ 28 Based on the foregoing, we hold that, where a condominium board of managers sues for
possession of a unit because of delinquent assessments, and the condominium instrument
indicates (as presumably most do) that the unit owner’s promise to pay assessments is in
exchange for the board of managers’ promise to use those assessments for the repair and
maintenance of the condominium property, the unit owner may claim, as a justification for
nonpayment of assessments, that the board of managers breached its duty of repair and
maintenance. Standard principles of contract law apply in determining whether the breach
of the duty to repair and maintain is substantial enough to warrant nonpayment of
assessments. A party to a contract is entitled to suspend her performance if the other party
has materially breached the contract. Watson v. Auburn Iron Works, Inc., 23 Ill. App. 3d 265,
269 (1974); Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 242 cmt. a (1981). “The test of whether a
breach is material is whether it is ‘so substantial and fundamental as to defeat the objects of
the parties in making the agreement, or whether the failure to perform renders performance
of the rest of the contract different in substance from the original agreement.’ ” InsureOne
Independent Insurance Agency, LLC v. Hallberg, 2012 IL App (1st) 092385, ¶ 43 (quoting
Village of Fox Lake v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 178 Ill. App. 3d 887, 900-01 (1989));
see also Trapkus v. Edstrom’s, Inc., 140 Ill. App. 3d 720, 725 (1986) (test of materiality is
“whether or not the matter, in respect to which the failure of performance occurs, is of such
a nature and of such importance that the contract would not have been made without it”). The
materiality of a breach is a question of fact. Mohanty v. St. John Heart Clinic, S.C., 225 Ill.
2d 52, 72 (2006).
¶ 29 Thus far we have determined that a board of managers’ breach of its duty to repair and
maintain the common elements may, depending on the circumstances, justify a unit owner
in suspending her payment of assessments and, hence, that the failure to repair and maintain
may be germane to a FED action for possession based on nonpayment of assessments. We
further determine that the particular failure to repair and maintain alleged by defendant here
is germane to plaintiff’s action for possession. Defendant has alleged that plaintiff’s neglect
of the building’s roof and brick facade has caused water leakage and, consequently,
substantial damage to the interior of her unit, and that plaintiff has refused repeated requests
to repair the damage and the cause of the leak.
¶ 30 We caution that not every lapse by a board of managers in its repair and maintenance
duties will justify a unit owner in suspending payment of assessments. Without making any
definitive remarks on factual scenarios not before us, since that is not our place here, we note
that, for example, overgrown bushes and unrepaired sidewalk cracks may rarely constitute
a material breach. The lapse alleged here, however, is in a different category altogether, as
it affects the basic comfort of the dwelling. A sound roof and exterior walls are perhaps the
most fundamental expectations of those who purchase condominium units and expend
considerable sums each year for “maintenance-free” living. Jack Spring extended legal
protection to the same kind of expectations as those held by tenants.
¶ 31 The remainder of our analysis concerns the nature of the relief that defendant may seek
in this action. She seeks recompense for damage to her own property, both as a setoff from
any assessments due and as a basis for an affirmative plea for damages. We review the case
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law that has attempted to articulate the relief a defendant in a FED action may seek. In
Sawyier, 198 Ill. App. 3d at 1054, the court gave the following categorization of available
defenses:
“The types of claims which Illinois courts have found to be germane to the issue of
possession generally fall into one of four categories: (1) claims asserting a paramount
right of possession [citation]; (2) claims denying the breach of any agreement vesting
possession in plaintiff [citation]; (3) claims questioning the validity or enforceability of
the document upon which plaintiff’s right to possession is based [citation]; and (4) claims
questioning a plaintiff’s motivation for the bringing of the forcible action [citation].”
¶ 32 Defendant’s affirmative defenses and counterclaim would qualify as germane, if at all,
under category (2); defendant neither asserts a paramount right of possession, questions the
validity or enforceability of the condominium documents, nor questions plaintiff’s impetus
for bringing this action. Once again, we analyze the cases on rented dwellings to determine
what kind of relief the owner of a condominium unit may seek as a defendant in a FED
action.
¶ 33 Statements in some of the cases on rented dwellings suggest that a defendant in a FED
action may never bring a counterclaim for damages: (1) “Counterclaims seeking money
damages are not germane to forcible entry claims” (American National Bank v. Powell, 293
Ill. App. 3d 1033, 1044 (1998)); and (2) “[N]o cross-demand in the nature of recoupment can
be interposed by way of defense [in a FED action]” (Sauvage v. Oscar W. Hedstrom Corp.,
322 Ill. App. 427, 430 (1944)). A more accurate statement is: “Where a [defendant’s] claim
seeks damages and not possession, it is not germane to the distinct purposes of the forcible
entry and detainer proceeding.” (Emphasis added.) Sawyier, 198 Ill. App. 3d at 1053.
Damages sought by the defendant must be tied to the issue of possession. The first corollary
to this principle is that, where possession is not contested, the defendant may not seek
damages at all. For example, in Sawyier, the defendant sold property to the plaintiffs with
the written understanding that the defendant could live rent-free in the coach house for the
rest of his life. Several months later, the plaintiffs filed an action under the Forcible Entry
Act, claiming that they were entitled to possession of the coach house. The complaint was
silent as to the basis for the claim of possession. The defendant filed a combined answer and
counterclaim, in which he admitted that the plaintiffs were entitled to possession of the main
house on the property but did not address their claimed entitlement to possession of the coach
house. In the remainder of his answer and counterclaim, the defendant (1) “den[ied] that he
wrongfully possessed the coach house, alleging that he had vacated the house because of
certain wrongful acts of plaintiffs,” and (2) “alleged that plaintiffs had breached the real
estate contract and committed various torts.” Id. at 1049.
¶ 34 The appellate court held that the combined answer and counterclaim were not germane
to the proceeding:
“Although defendant claims to be seeking a determination of his right to possession of
the coach house, he, in effect, conceded the issue of possession when, in his answer, he
stated that he had vacated the coach house and no longer claimed any interest in it. Thus,
the issue of possession was not even involved in the proceeding. Additionally, although
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he now claims that the damages sought in his counterclaim include the equivalent of
unpaid rent, it is clear from his pleading that he is seeking only monetary damages,
including damages measured by the value of rent-free use of the coach house for the
remainder of his life, for the alleged breach of the real estate contract and
misrepresentation of plaintiffs. Where a claim seeks damages and not possession, it is not
germane to the distinct purposes of the forcible entry and detainer proceeding.
[Citations.]
***
*** As a result of defendant’s pleadings, possession is not in issue in this case. His
claim only seeks monetary damages for plaintiffs’ alleged breach of the real estate
contract and the various torts. Where a claim essentially involves damages and not
possession, it is not germane to forcible actions.” Id. at 1053-54.
See also Reid v. Arceneaux, 63 Ill. App. 2d 113, 116 (1965) (no error in striking of
counterclaim that did not question the plaintiff’s right to possession but claimed fraud and
misrepresentation in the inducement of the agreement).
¶ 35 The second corollary is that, where possession is contested, the defendant may claim
damages, but restrictedly. In any case where possession is sought on the basis of delinquent
rent, it is legally permissible for the defendant not only to deny liability for rent, but also to
seek recoupment of overpaid rent. For instance, the supreme court in Sanders allowed the
defendant to claim not only that she owed no rent, but also that she actually overpaid and
should be reimbursed. Sanders, 54 Ill. 2d at 480. The defendant asserted that the
overpayment would be established once it was proved that the parties orally modified the
contract to mitigate the late-fee provision and that the plaintiff’s policy on rent reduction due
to diminished income was too restrictive. Id.
¶ 36 The counterclaim in Sanders was representative of Sawyier’s category (2), i.e., of a
“claim[ ] denying the breach of any agreement vesting possession in plaintiff” (Sawyier, 198
Ill. App. 3d at 1054). The counterclaim was ultimately premised on the contention that the
rental agreement (at least, as orally modified and also as adjusted to conform with the law)
did not permit the plaintiff to charge what it did, and hence that the defendant did not breach
the agreement.
¶ 37 Another defense available under the case law is to concede the validity of the amounts
stated on the face of the rental agreement but claim that, due to an extrinsic consideration,
less or no rent is in fact owed. For instance, in People ex rel. Department of Transportation
v. Walliser, 258 Ill. App. 3d 782 (1994), the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT)
brought a FED action against the former owner of a home that was to be demolished to make
space for state roads. The defendant had sold his property to IDOT and signed a one-year
lease to remain in the home as a tenant. Eventually, the defendant ceased paying rent, and
IDOT sued for possession. Id. at 784-85. The appellate court affirmed the trial court’s
decision barring the defendant from arguing at trial that IDOT improperly denied him
relocation benefits. The appellate court determined that the claim was “for monetary relief”
and therefore not germane. Id. at 788. However, the appellate court proceeded to reverse the
lower court’s decision barring the defendant from arguing at trial that he was allowed by
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administrative regulations to instruct IDOT to deduct his rent from his relocation benefits.
Citing Jack Spring, the court noted that “[w]here a [FED action] is brought for nonpayment
of rent, the question of whether rent is due and owing is the crucial issue.” Id. at 789 (citing
Jack Spring, 50 Ill. 2d at 359). The court held that “the question of whether IDOT was
required to deduct [the defendant’s] rent payments from the benefits that [he] might be
eligible to receive from the IDOT was a germane defense.” Id.
¶ 38 Thus, in Walliser, the defendant cited specific authority that he claimed would
demonstrate that, though the rental agreement validly called for rent in the amount specified,
he was liable for less or no rent because the amount should have been deducted from the
relocation benefits to which he was entitled under federal law.
¶ 39 Walliser appears to be a strict application of the rule restricting the defenses and
counterclaims available to a defendant in a FED action. Considered in isolation, the
defendant’s claim that IDOT should have awarded him relocation benefits was simply a
claim for monetary relief, but, when coupled with the citation to the administrative
regulations allowing IDOT to deduct from relocation benefits any rent that a displaced person
owes to IDOT, it became germane to the issue of whether rent was due.
¶ 40 Sauvage and Miller v. Daley, 131 Ill. App. 3d 959 (1985), enforce, like the first part of
the Walliser analysis, the default rule that the defendant-tenant in a FED action may not seek
damages other than overpaid rent. In Miller, the plaintiff brought suit against the road
commissioner of Canton Township. The plaintiff alleged that, during the pendency of a
previous FED action against the plaintiff to dispossess him of an apartment he was leasing
from the township, the defendant locked the plaintiff out of the only available restroom on
the premises. The plaintiff requested in the second action an award of damages for the
property damage and mental distress he claimed the defendant caused during the FED action.
The defendant argued that the present claim was barred because the plaintiff could have
brought it in the FED action. The appellate court disagreed, holding that the present claim
was “not related to the question of which party is entitled to rightful possession” and
therefore would not have been appropriate in the FED action. Id. at 961; see also Munden v.
Hazelrigg, 711 P.2d 295, 298 (Wash. 1985) (a defense or counterclaim in a FED suit for
possession premised on unpaid rent must be based on facts that would excuse the tenant’s
breach; thus, in action for possession for nonpayment of rent, the defendants could not
properly assert a counterclaim for damage to their vehicle from a rockslide on the plaintiff’s
property).
¶ 41 In Sauvage, the plaintiffs brought a FED action for possession of a rented dwelling based
on the defendant’s failure to pay rent for March 1943. The defendant did not dispute that it
failed to pay rent for that month, yet it still denied any breach of contract. Specifically, the
defendant argued that the rent it owed for March 1943 was exceeded by the compensation
that the plaintiffs owed the defendant for heating a portion of the premises that was not
included in the lease and that the defendant did not occupy. The trial court refused to take
evidence on the counterclaim. Sauvage, 322 Ill. App. at 428-30. Affirming, the appellate
court reasoned:
“The lease makes no provision whatsoever for heating the garage in the rear of the
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premises, which was expressly excepted [in the lease]. If defendant heated the garage it
was purely gratuitous, and if entitled to any compensation for that service, such claim
would be entirely outside the provisions of the lease and the subject matter of another
suit. Plaintiffs did not join in their demand for possession any request for a judgment for
March rent, and no such judgment was entered.” (Emphasis added.) Id. at 430.
The emphasized portion of the discussion rests on a point that is no longer valid. After
Sanders, a tenant-defendant in a FED action may claim as a defense that no rent is owed,
even if the landlord-plaintiff does not seek a money judgment for the rent it claims is
delinquent. See Sanders, 54 Ill. 2d at 483. Sauvage’s remaining analysis is, however, sound.
¶ 42 Some decisions appear to recognize an exception to the default rule that the defendant-
tenant in a FED action may claim no damages other than overpaid rent. The landlord in
Powell filed a FED action, and the tenant asserted an affirmative defense and counterclaim,
both pursuant to the Chicago Residential Landlord and Tenant Ordinance (RLTO) (Chicago
Municipal Code § 5-12-150 (amended Nov. 6, 1991)). The affirmative defense alleged that
the FED action was retaliatory, and the counterclaim sought damages as permitted by the
RLTO, namely, “an amount equal to and not more than two months’ rent or twice the
damages sustained *** and reasonable attorneys’ fees.” Id. The appellate court reversed the
trial court’s order striking and dismissing the RLTO affirmative defense and counterclaim.
The court first noted that “[a] retaliatory eviction claim is germane to a forcible entry action
and states a defense.” Powell, 293 Ill. App. 3d at 1044. On the applicability of the RLTO, the
court cited Oak Park Trust & Savings Bank v. Village of Mount Prospect, 181 Ill. App. 3d
10, 23-24 (1989), where the court upheld the constitutionality of a Mount Prospect ordinance
permitting the defendant-tenant in a FED action to counterclaim for any amounts owed him
under the rental agreement. The Oak Park Trust court held that the ordinance neither
contravened the Forcible Entry Act nor abrogated the autonomy of the courts:
“Presumably, any matter arising under the rental agreement or the [ordinance] would be
germane to the issue of whether the landlord is entitled to possession or rent. Further, if
a court found that the matter raised by the tenant in his counterclaim was not germane
to the forcible entry and detainer action, nothing in the [o]rdinance prevents a court from
striking the counterclaim.
Furthermore, the mere fact that an ordinance defines notice procedures, the duties of
the parties, and the remedies available to the parties does not interfere with the court
system. Our courts are often requested to enforce or interpret municipal ordinances.” Id.
at 23.
¶ 43 Powell held, on the basis of Oak Park Trust, that the Chicago ordinance was applicable.
Powell, 293 Ill. App. 3d at 1045. The court further stated that it saw “no good reason to allow
[the defendant] to argue retaliatory eviction under the RLTO, but not to allow him to pursue
remedies specifically provided in the RLTO.” Id.
¶ 44 The Powell court clearly erred, however, in affirming the dismissal of the defendant’s
counterclaim seeking a “refund of overpaid rent for [the plaintiff’s] breach of the implied
warranty of habitability.” Id. at 1037. The court held that the implied-warranty counterclaim
was not germane “because it [sought] money damages independent of the RLTO.” In
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Sanders, however, the supreme court permitted a claim for recoupment of rent that was not
based on an ordinance or other enactment. Powell seems to run squarely contrary to this
holding.
¶ 45 Powell suggests that courts will recognize a claim for damages in addition to recoupment
of rent if there is an applicable legal provision authorizing it.
¶ 46 Based on the foregoing authorities, we can separate what is legally proper in defendant’s
affirmative defenses and counterclaim from what is not. We held above that, just as the
contract principle of mutually exchanged promises can justify a tenant’s refusal to pay rent,
so that principle can justify a condominium unit owner’s refusal to pay assessments that the
board of managers collects to fund its services. We determined above that the Condominium
Act, the Declaration, and the Bylaws together establish here a duty of repair and maintenance
of the common elements, the funds for which are provided through the mandatory
assessments paid by unit owners. We further held that, because the Condominium Act, the
Declaration, and the Bylaws indicate that the promise to pay assessments was exchanged for
the promise to repair and maintain the common elements, it is permissible for defendant to
claim neglect of the common elements as an offset to, or even nullification of, plaintiff’s
claim for assessments.
¶ 47 The damage to defendant’s unit, her own property, does not have the same relevance. The
fact of damage to the unit might, we acknowledge, be probative to the factual question of
whether the common elements were damaged or in disrepair and, to that extent, would be
probative to whether there was a breach of the duty to repair and maintain the common
elements. For instance, moisture in the drywall could tend to factually establish that the roof
is leaking. We stress, however, that damage to the unit will have no relevance to the issue
of possession other than by serving as a factual predicate for the conclusion that there was
a breach. The reason, simply, is that assessments are paid in exchange for repair and
maintenance of the common elements, not of the units themselves. If plaintiff has any duty
with respect to the units themselves, it does not lie in the promise(s) in exchange for which
defendant and other unit owners pay assessments. Moreover, defendant points to no other
ground in the Condominium Act, the Bylaws, or the Declaration for a duty respecting the
units themselves. Even if there were such a duty, defendant would also have to establish that
its breach would justify her in withholding assessments.
¶ 48 Since defendant’s promise to pay assessments was not exchanged for any promise
regarding her unit itself, the fact of damage to her unit does not in itself provide a legal
justification for withholding assessments. If defendant has any ground for withholding
assessments, or now counterclaiming for monetary relief, because of damage to her unit, it
would have to lie elsewhere than in the Condominium Act, the Bylaws, or the Declaration.
Defendant, however, cites no extrinsic authority such as the ordinances in Oak Park Trust
and Powell or the administrative regulations in Walliser. Therefore, like the tort claims in
Miller and the claim for unpaid compensation in Sauvage, defendant’s counterclaim and
request for a setoff, grounded as both are in alleged damage to her unit, are not germane to
the issue of possession as framed in this case. Since the counterclaim seeks nothing but
monetary relief for damage to defendant’s unit, it was properly severed in its entirety.
However, the affirmatives defenses are based partly on breach of the duty to maintain and
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repair the common elements, and partly on the resulting damage to defendant’s unit (notably,
the failure to repair the toilet has no apparent relation to any alleged breach of the duty as to
the common elements). Accordingly, we vacate the judgment of the trial court and remand
for partial reinstatement of the affirmative defenses. The defenses are to be reinstated such
that the only alleged legal ground for withholding assessments is a breach of the duty to
repair and maintain the common elements. The allegation that there is damage to defendant’s
unit due to disrepair of the building’s exterior is reinstated, but only as a factual predicate,
not as a ground in itself for withholding assessments. The allegation that plaintiff has failed
to repair the toilet is not to be reinstated at all in the affirmative defenses, as it bears no
probative value in establishing a breach of the duty to repair and maintain the common
elements.8
¶ 49 Given this resolution, we do not address plaintiff’s or defendant’s various claims of error
as to the relief awarded at trial. Also, since plaintiff has not substantially prevailed on appeal,
we reject its request for costs and attorney fees on appeal.
¶ 50 We proceed to plaintiff’s petition for rehearing (PFR). The general tenor of the PFR is
urgency and astonishment. For 14 pages (the lengths of the PFR and supporting reply
combined), plaintiff energetically assails our decision as being not only legally incorrect, but
also woefully misguided as policy. Plaintiff suggests that our reasoning creates a “Catch 22,”
is susceptible to a reductio ad absurdum, and opens a “Pandora’s Box.” We do not begrudge
plaintiff such intensity, but would have appreciated it if such animation and substance were
on display in plaintiff’s first pass on the issue. Where plaintiff now devotes 14 pages to the
issue, it previously devoted only 3. In those three pages, plaintiff spent one short paragraph
arguing that a unit owner has an unconditional duty to pay assessments. Plaintiff’s sole
authority was section 18.4(d) of the Condominium Act, which states that the “powers and
duties” of a condominium association’s board of managers include the right “[t]o collect
assessments from unit owners.” 765 ILCS 605/18.4(d) (West 2010). Now plaintiff adds
several other authorities that it could have cited previously. Additionally, where plaintiff
made no policy arguments before, it now discourses for several pages on the upheaval it
predicts our decision will bring to condominium life. Back-loading of appellate arguments
does not serve judicial efficiency. For this reason, Illinois Supreme Court Rule 341(h)(7) (Ill.
S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. July 1, 2008)) provides that “[p]oints not argued” in the initial brief
“are waived and shall not be raised in the reply brief, in oral argument, or on petition for
rehearing.”9 While we could rightly deem these new points forfeited, we will consider them
in the interest of rendering a more informed decision. See Halpin v. Schultz, 234 Ill. 2d 381,
8
Again, plaintiff does not claim that defendant is on different footing with the monthly
assessments than with the special assessments. Plaintiff does not, that is, claim that its neglect of the
roof and the brick facade cannot be a justification for nonpayment of the special assessments because
the latter were allocated for areas of the common elements other than the roof and the brick facade.
9
Tellingly, when plaintiff refers to its prior policy arguments, it directs us to its oral
argument, not to its appellee’s brief. Arguments raised for the first time at oral argument are
forfeited. Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. July 1, 2008).
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390 (2009) (the rule of waiver “is an admonition to the parties rather than a limitation on a
court of review,” which “may look beyond considerations of waiver in order to maintain a
sound and uniform body of precedent or where the interests of justice so require”).
¶ 51 We begin with additional statutory provisions that plaintiff cites. Plaintiff directs us to
sections 18(o) and 18(q) of the Condominium Act, which provide:
“Contents of bylaws. The bylaws shall provide for at least the following:
***
(o) The association shall have no authority to forbear the payment of assessments by
any unit owner.
***
(q) That a unit owner may not assign, delegate, transfer, surrender, or avoid the
duties, responsibilities, and liabilities of a unit owner under this Act, the condominium
instruments, or the rules and regulations of the Association; and that such an attempted
assignment, delegation, transfer, surrender, or avoidance shall be deemed void.
The provisions of this Section are applicable to all condominium instruments
recorded under this Act. Any portion of a condominium instrument which contains
provisions contrary to these provisions shall be void as against public policy and
ineffective. Any such instrument which fails to contain the provisions required by this
Section shall be deemed to incorporate such provisions by operation of law.” 765 ILCS
605/18(o), (q) (West 2010).
¶ 52 Neither section 18(o) nor section 18(q) persuades us that the Condominium Act grants
boards of managers the absolute right to collect assessments. Section 18(o) reinforces that
a board of managers has a duty to collect assessments from all unit owners. Duty implies
right, but not necessarily absolute right. That a unit owner may not be exempted from
assessments by executive grace of the board of managers does not entail that the unit owner
owes assessments in all circumstances.
¶ 53 As for section 18(q), plaintiff relies specifically on the terms “avoid” and “avoidance.”
Plaintiff contends that, if a unit owner cannot “avoid” responsibility for paying assessments,
it must be because the duty to pay assessments is absolute. Plaintiff misconstrues the
language. Section 18(q) does not purport to fix as absolute the duty to pay assessments but,
rather, invalidates actions by which the unit owner might evade responsibility for paying
assessments.
¶ 54 We begin with section 18(q)’s first four terms: “assign,” “delegate,” “transfer,” and
“surrender.” None of them is defined in the Condominium Act. When a statute does not
define a term, courts may resort to dictionaries in order to ascertain the plain and ordinary
meaning of the term. Gaffney v. Board of Trustees of the Orland Fire Protection District,
2012 IL 110012, ¶ 60. Black’s Law Dictionary defines all four of these terms. “Assignment”
is defined as “[t]he transfer of rights or property.” Black’s Law Dictionary 115 (7th ed.
1999). “Delegation” is defined as “[t]he act of entrusting another with authority or
empowering another to act as an agent or representative.” Id. at 438. “Transfer” has the
following definitions:
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“1. Any mode of disposing of or parting with an asset or an interest in an asset, including
the payment of money, release, lease, or creation of a lien or other encumbrance. ! The
term embraces every method–direct or indirect, absolute or conditional, voluntary or
involuntary–of disposing of or parting with property or with an interest in property,
including retention of title as a security interest and foreclosure of the debtor’s equity of
redemption. 2. Negotiation of an instrument according to the forms of law. ! The four
methods of transfer are by indorsement, by delivery, by assignment, and by operation of
law. 3. A conveyance of property or title from one person to another.” Id. at 1503.
Finally, “surrender” has these definitions:
“1. The act of yielding to another’s power or control. 2. The giving up of a right or claim;
RELEASE (1). 3. The return of an estate to the person who has the reversion or
remainder, so as to merge the estate into a larger estate. 4. Commercial law. The delivery
of an instrument so that the delivery releases the deliverer from all liability. 5. A tenant’s
relinquishment of possession before the lease has expired, allowing the landlord to take
possession and treat the lease as terminated.” Id. at 1458.
¶ 55 “Assign,” “delegate,” “transfer,” and “surrender” are all actions of purported legal
significance. In their essence, they denote a transfer or relinquishment of “the duties,
responsibilities, and liabilities of a unit owner under [the Condominium Act].” 765 ILCS
605/18(q) (West 2010). Unlike these well-established legal terms of art, “avoid” is broader
in scope, yet nonetheless denotes action. Black’s Law Dictionary defines “avoidance” as
“[t]he act of evading or escaping < avoidance of tax liability >.” Black’s Law Dictionary 132
(7th ed. 1999). While perhaps other definitions of “avoid” are broader and not specifically
action-oriented, the canon of statutory construction known as ejusdem generis would still
compel us to conclude that the legislature intended a meaning of “avoid” that, consistent with
the preceding terms in the series, is action-oriented. See People v. Rutledge, 104 Ill. 2d 394,
397 (1984) (“It is a well[-]settled rule of construction that where general words follow
particular and specific words in a statute[,] the general words must be construed to include
only things of the same kind as those indicated by the particular and specific words.”
(Internal quotation marks omitted.)).
¶ 56 Plaintiff unwarrantedly attributes indirection and inefficiency of expression to the
legislature. If the legislature had wanted to establish as absolute the duty to pay assessments,
it could have said so directly rather than declare “void” any attempted “avoidance” of that
duty. What the legislature was declaring “void” were actions, namely, attempted transfers or
relinquishments of the duty to pay assessments. Here, defendant’s ground for refusing to pay
assessments is not that she has transferred or relinquished the duty but, rather, that the
obligation is suspended because of plaintiff’s failure to repair and maintain the common
elements.
¶ 57 Plaintiff next cites two Illinois decisions, Schiro v. W.E. Gould & Co., 18 Ill. 2d 538
(1960), and Beese v. National Bank of Albany Park, 82 Ill. App. 3d 932 (1980). Plaintiff cites
Schiro for the proposition that “the law existing at the time and place of the making of [a]
contract is deemed a part of the contract, as though expressly referred to or incorporated into
it.” Schiro, 18 Ill. 2d at 544. Plaintiff suggests that, since the “[Condominium Act] does ***
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provide for the absolute right to collection of assessments,” and the Condominium Act’s
provisions on the rights and duties of boards of managers and unit owners are implied in all
condominium instruments, then the Bylaws and the Declaration necessarily prescribe an
absolute right to collect assessments. We have examined the Condominium Act, including
the provisions that plaintiff has untimely cited to us, and we disagree with its interpretation.
Plaintiff’s citation to Schiro simply begs the question of what the Condominium Act
provides.
¶ 58 Plaintiff claims that Beese undercuts our analogy to landlord-tenant cases. Beese claims
that “Jack Spring did not disturb the conventional principle that the covenant to repair and
the covenant to pay rent were mutually exclusive.” Beese, 82 Ill. App. 3d at 935. This
comment, according to plaintiff, directly confutes a premise of our reasoning, which is that
a tenant’s promise to pay rent is conditioned on the landlord’s compliance with both the
implied covenant of habitability and any express covenant to repair and maintain the
premises. We clarify that the landlord-tenant cases do not, of course, control the issue of
whether the obligation of defendant–a condominium unit owner, not a tenant–to pay
condominium assessments is independent of the board of managers’ duty to repair and
maintain the common elements. The landlord-tenant cases are persuasive authority alone.
They do, however, figure prominently in our reasoning, and so we emphasize that Beese is,
simply, mistaken about Jack Spring. Interestingly, plaintiff seems to have overlooked that
Jack Spring itself made a similar comment at the conclusion of the decision. The court said
that its holding “does not alter the long established rule that liability for rent continues so
long as the tenant retains possession of the premises” (Jack Spring, 50 Ill. 2d at 367). The
qualification, however, that Jack Spring added to that “long-established rule” is that the
tenant-defendant in a FED action may “prove that damages suffered as a result of the breach
of [the] warranty [of habitability] equalled or exceeded the rent claimed to be due” (Lensey
Corp. v. Wong, 83 Ill. App. 3d 207, 209 (1980)). The tenants in Jack Spring, Sanders,
Richardson, and other cases withheld rent while remaining in possession of the premises. If,
as long as she is in possession of the premises, a tenant owes, without exception, all rent due
on the face of the lease, then the tenants in Jack Spring and the other cases would not have
been permitted to assert, as a defense in a FED action, that the rent obligation was nullified
in whole or in part by a breach of the implied covenant of habitability or an express duty to
repair and maintain. Obviously, then, even while the tenant is in possession of the premises,
the obligation to pay rent is not absolute but, rather, is conditioned on compliance with
implied or express duties to repair and maintain.
¶ 59 Finally, we briefly address plaintiff’s various policy arguments. Plaintiff invests the most
energy and time in predicting that our decision will not, as we intend it, encourage
condominium associations to maintain the common elements, but instead will frustrate their
efforts. First, plaintiff claims that our holding leaves too much to the unit owner’s
“perception” of the condition of the common elements. We have clarified above (supra
¶¶ 28-29) that our holding cleaves to the common-law rule that a breach must be material
before performance may be suspended. Second, plaintiff asserts that the “self-help remedy”
(as plaintiff terms it) of withholding assessments based upon the condition of the common
elements will only reduce the association’s funds and, hence, impair its ability to repair the
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very condition of which the unit owner complains. Relatedly, plaintiff submits that
assessments are put toward many expenses aside from repair and maintenance, such as taxes,
insurance, and employment of personnel.
¶ 60 Similar concerns, however, apply to the administration of multiunit rentals, yet evidently
they did not deter the courts in Jack Spring and its progeny. The implied warranty of
habitability extends to the common areas of multiunit rentals. See Jarrell v. Hartman, 48 Ill.
App. 3d 985, 987 (1977) (“Building code violations in the common areas of a multiunit
dwelling may be as dangerous or uncomfortable to the tenants as defective conditions within
their respective apartments. The public policy considerations that permit of a cause of action
are not so fractured as to allow for a cause of action for a substantial defect in an apartment
and deny any remedy for defects in halls or stairs leading to the apartment.” (Emphases
omitted.)). Certainly, the withholding of rent by one or more tenants might jeopardize a
landlord’s ability to maintain those common elements, but, nonetheless, the “self-help
remedy” of withholding rent has been validated by Jack Spring. Landlords also draw from
the common pool of rental income to pay insurance and taxes and to employ personnel, but
again, in Jack Spring, this consideration obviously yielded to the interests of tenants.
¶ 61 Plaintiff predicts a crippling of condominium associations, but we question how well a
condominium association is currently functioning if one of its unit owners suffers such
neglect as defendant has alleged. We also note that plaintiff hardly arouses sympathy for its
cause in commenting that defendant’s concern to have the roof and the brick facade repaired
“is actually adversely impacted by the self-help she has advocated.” Plaintiff invites the
question of why it did not address the source(s) of the leaks before defendant instituted her
“self-help.”
¶ 62 Third, plaintiff suggests that the remedy of withholding assessments is unnecessary
because unit owners have an existing remedy, namely a suit against the board of managers
for breach of fiduciary duty. See 765 ILCS 605/18.4 (West 2010) (“In the performance of
their duties, the officers and members of the board, whether appointed by the developer or
elected by the unit owners, shall exercise the care required of a fiduciary of the unit
owners.”). That the same right can be vindicated by more than one avenue is nothing novel
in the law. For example, a tenant aggrieved by her landlord’s failure to comply with an
implied or express mandate to repair and maintain may, inter alia, (1) sue for a declaration
that rent should be offset, while either paying full rent or, through “self-help,” instituting the
offset herself; or (2) institute the offset herself and, in the event of a consequent FED action,
plead the landlord’s breach as a defense. We have determined that the remedy of withholding
assessments is well grounded in statutory and decisional law. If another remedy is available,
the two may coexist.
¶ 63 Finally, we acknowledge that our decision places us in the small minority of jurisdictions
recognizing that a condominium unit owner may claim an offset to assessments based on the
association’s material breach of its mandated duty to repair and maintain the common
elements. See Poliakoff, supra § 5.19 (collecting cases). Each court is beholden to its own
state’s statutory and decisional law, and we have made a decision according to our best
interpretation of the particular law that guides us.
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¶ 64 CONCLUSION
¶ 65 We affirm the judgment of the trial court severing defendant’s counterclaim, and we
affirm in part and reverse in part the judgment striking defendant’s affirmative defenses. We
remand for reinstatement of defendant’s affirmative defenses and for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
¶ 66 Affirmed in part and reversed in part; cause remanded.
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