ILLINOIS OFFICIAL REPORTS
Appellate Court
Nava v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 2013 IL App (1st) 122063
Appellate Court ADRIAN NAVA, Individually and on Behalf of All Others Similarly
Caption Situated, Plaintiff-Appellant and Cross-Appellee, v. SEARS, ROEBUCK
AND COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee and Cross-Appellant.
District & No. First District, First Division
Docket No. 1-12-2063
Filed July 29, 2013
Held The trial court erred in entering summary judgment for defendant in a
(Note: This syllabus class action alleging that defendant violated the Consumer Fraud and
constitutes no part of Deceptive Business Practices Act by assessing the state sales tax on the
the opinion of the court full amount of the sales of digital television converter box purchases,
but has been prepared even though part of the retail cost of the boxes was subsidized by federal
by the Reporter of vouchers distributed to consumers, since plaintiff raised a genuine issue
Decisions for the of material fact as to each of the elements required to establish a claim
convenience of the under the Act, and defendant’s contention that the claim was barred by
reader.)
the voluntary payment doctrine was rejected on the ground that the
doctrine is not applicable to claims brought under the Act.
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 09-CH-11800; the
Review Hon. Mary Anne Mason, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Reversed and remanded.
Counsel on Sweetnam LLC, of Northbrook (William M. Sweetnam, of counsel), and
Appeal Holstein Law Offices LLC, of Chicago (Robert A. Holstein, of counsel),
for appellant.
Greenberg Traurig, LLP, of Chicago (Francis A. Citera, Bevin M.
Brennan, and Paul A. Del Aguila, of counsel), for appellee.
Panel PRESIDING JUSTICE HOFFMAN delivered the judgment of the court,
with opinion.
Justice Rochford concurred in the judgment and opinion.
Justice Delort specially concurred, with opinion.
OPINION
¶1 The plaintiff, Adrian Nava, appeals from an order of the circuit court granting summary
judgment to the defendant, Sears, Roebuck and Company, on the plaintiff’s action under the
Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act (Act) (815 ILCS 505/1 et seq. (West
2010)). The plaintiff’s claim was based on the defendant’s having assessed state sales tax on
the entire amount of digital television converter box purchases, despite the fact that part of
the retail cost of those devices was subsidized by federal vouchers distributed to consumers.
On appeal, the plaintiff argues that summary judgment was improper, because he produced
evidence creating at least a genuine question of material fact as to each of the elements of his
claim. In addition to contesting the plaintiff’s argument on appeal, the defendant filed a
cross-appeal to argue in the alternative that summary judgment was appropriate because the
sales tax was statutorily proper and that the plaintiff’s claim was mooted when it tendered
him damages. For the reasons that follow, we dismiss the defendant’s cross-appeal, reverse
the circuit court’s judgment, and remand for further proceedings.
¶2 In March 2009, the plaintiff filed a class-action complaint alleging that the defendant had
collected sales tax on the full amount of his converter box purchase, including the amount
that was subsidized by a federal consumer voucher program. Under the federal program,
consumers were provided vouchers that retailers could submit to the federal government for
reimbursement of the lesser of $40 or the price of a converter box. The plaintiff alleged that
the defendant assessed sales tax on the full gross purchase price of the boxes despite a ruling
from the Illinois Department of Revenue (the Department) stating that the federally
subsidized amount was not subject to state sales tax. That complaint was replaced by a first
amended complaint, which sought damages for violations of the Act, recovery under other
legal theories, and attorney fees and costs. In June 2010, the circuit court allowed the
plaintiff’s claim under the Act to proceed but dismissed the remainder of the first amended
complaint. Two days later, the plaintiff filed his second amended complaint, which contained
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the same basic factual allegations as his previous complaints. In its answer, the defendant
agreed that the Department had issued guidance stating that sales tax should not be collected
on the voucher amounts, but it denied that the guidance was applicable “to the extent that [it]
conflict[ed] with the applicable state and federal laws.” The defendant’s answer also raised
affirmative defenses of “failure to state a claim” and voluntary payment, but it did not cite
any particular Illinois tax laws authorizing its collection of sales tax on the subsidized
amount of converter box purchases. During the course of the litigation, the plaintiff withdrew
his motion for class certification and elected to proceed in his individual capacity.
¶3 Following discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. In its motion
and responses, the defendant noted that, without admitting liability, it had tendered $1,000
to the plaintiff to settle his claim, and the defendant argued that the offer rendered the
plaintiff’s claim moot. The defendant also argued that its collection of sales tax was proper
and that the plaintiff had failed to produce evidence to support all of the elements of his
claim under the Act. In support of its motion and response, the defendant produced the
plaintiff’s deposition. At his deposition, the plaintiff said that, when he came home from his
shopping trip and examined his receipt, he noticed the sales tax he had been charged for his
subsidized converter box purchase at a Sears store. He said that he believed he had been
overcharged, especially after comparing his receipt to a receipt for another converter box
purchase he made that same day at a different, nearby store. Nine days later, the plaintiff filed
his initial class action complaint.
¶4 To support his motion for summary judgment and responses, the plaintiff presented the
deposition transcript of Eric Fellner, the defendant’s manager of sales and use tax
compliance. Fellner testified that the defendant sent a memorandum to its Sears stores to
provide directions on how to process converter box purchases so that sales tax was assessed
on only the net, subsidized price, not the full gross price. He said that the defendant had no
way to automate the process of modifying the sales tax to reflect the federal coupons at Sears
stores, so the memorandum instructed Sears employees to alter the taxable base manually at
the point of sale. He said that any taxes the defendant collected on sales of the boxes were
remitted to the State. According to Fellner, the filing of the current lawsuit put him on notice
that “the stores may not be using the manual process correctly or in all circumstances.” As
a result, the defendant changed its policy and collected no sales tax on converter box sales,
yet still remitted tax to the State on those purchases. Fellner also explained that K mart
stores, which are owned by the same company, charged no sales taxes on converter box
purchases, because the manual override process on K mart registers would have been too
cumbersome.
¶5 In June 2012, the circuit court denied the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and
granted the defendant’s. The circuit court noted that the defendant had a policy of not taxing
the subsidized portion of converter box purchases and of refunding any taxes mistakenly
assessed, and thus that the cause of the plaintiff’s damages was his failure to seek a refund,
not the defendant’s policy. The plaintiff now timely appeals, and the defendant cross-appeals.
¶6 Before analyzing the merits of this appeal and cross-appeal, we must discuss three
procedural matters. First, we note that the defendant’s cross-appeal asks us to affirm the
circuit court’s summary judgment ruling on alternative grounds. However, as our supreme
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court has explained, “[a] party cannot complain of error which does not prejudicially affect
it, and one who has obtained by judgment all that has been asked for in the trial court cannot
appeal from the judgment.” Material Service Corp. v. Department of Revenue, 98 Ill. 2d 382,
386 (1983). Thus, where the circuit court grants summary judgment in favor of a party, that
party cannot file a cross-appeal to seek relief from the summary judgment order. Dowe v.
Birmingham Steel Corp., 2011 IL App (1st) 091997, ¶ 25. For that reason, we must dismiss
the defendant’s cross-appeal. We note, however, that we consider the arguments it raises in
its cross-appeal in our disposition of the plaintiff’s appeal.
¶7 The second procedural matter we must address concerns the plaintiff’s violation of our
supreme court rules governing the preparation of briefs. As the defendant points out in its
written argument, the plaintiff submitted no appendix with his opening brief. Illinois
Supreme Court Rule 342 (eff. Jan. 1, 2005) requires an appellant to include in its brief an
appendix with, among other things, a copy of the judgment appealed from, any findings of
fact or memorandum opinions issued by the circuit court, any relevant pleadings, and a
complete table of contents of the record on appeal. Ill. S. Ct. R. 342 (eff. Jan. 1, 2005). The
plaintiff’s brief fails in each of these respects. We remind counsel that our supreme court
rules are not advisory suggestions, but, rather, rules to be followed. E.g., In re Marriage of
Hluska, 2011 IL App (1st) 092636, ¶ 57. Even so, we decline the defendant’s request that we
dismiss the plaintiff’s appeal as a sanction for this violation.
¶8 The third procedural matter we must address is the defendant’s claim that this matter is
moot because it tendered a payment to the plaintiff. We address this claim as a threshold
procedural matter because it is well established that “courts in Illinois do not decide moot
questions, render advisory opinions, or consider issues where the result will not be affected
regardless of how those issues are decided.” In re Alfred H.H., 233 Ill. 2d 345, 351 (2009).
According to the defendant, its tender of $1,000 to the plaintiff afforded him all the direct
damages he suffered and covered any reasonable attorney fees incurred in the matter. The
plaintiff, however, states that his attorney fees far exceeded this $1,000 threshold. Without
a circuit court finding that the plaintiff’s claimed fees are unreasonable, and with no circuit
court determination that fees should or should not be awarded, we cannot say as a matter of
law that the plaintiff would not be entitled to more than $1,000 in attorney fees if his suit
were to succeed. Thus, we cannot say that the defendant’s tender to the plaintiff mooted this
appeal. In so stating, we mean to express no opinion regarding the plaintiff’s assertion that
his reasonable attorney fees exceeded $1,000.
¶9 On the merits, the plaintiff argues that the circuit court erred in granting summary
judgment against him. We agree.
¶ 10 Summary judgment is proper where “the pleadings, depositions, and admissions on file,
together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact
and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1005(c)
(West 2010). “The function of a reviewing court on appeal from a grant of summary
judgment is limited to determining whether the trial court correctly concluded that no
genuine issue of material fact was raised and, if none was raised, whether judgment as a
matter of law was correctly entered.” American Family Mutual Insurance Co. v. Page, 366
Ill. App. 3d 1112, 1115 (2006). “The propriety of a trial court’s decision to grant summary
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judgment presents a question of law, which we review de novo.” Bigelow Group, Inc. v.
Rickert, 377 Ill. App. 3d 165, 168 (2007). We may affirm the circuit court’s grant of
summary judgment for any reason that is supported by the record, regardless of whether that
reason formed the basis for the trial court’s judgment. Hess v. Flores, 408 Ill. App. 3d 631,
636 (2011).
¶ 11 We begin with the defendant’s argument that the plaintiff’s claim, which is based on the
premise that the defendant overcharged him for sales tax, fails because Illinois law mandates
collection of the taxes at issue.
¶ 12 In its brief, the defendant acknowledges that the Department issued an informational
bulletin stating that the subsidized amount of converter box purchases was exempt from state
sales tax. The plaintiff relies heavily–indeed almost exclusively–on this bulletin for his
argument that the defendant violated the Act. That bulletin, which was issued to “all retailers
and consumers of the television converter box,” stated, in relevant part:
“This is to inform you that the $40 coupon issued by the federal government through
the TV Converter Box Program to be used to help pay for the cost of a certified converter
box is exempt from sales tax.”
To consumers, the bulletin gave the following instruction:
“You will redeem the coupon when you make a purchase of a converter box from a
retailer. *** The portion paid with the coupon will be nontaxable.”
To retailers, the bulletin instructed:
“You will report the transaction as any other sale ***. *** Since the federal
government is issuing the coupon, the sale is considered a sale to an exempt organization.
You will be reimbursed by the federal government for the value of the coupon. Any
remaining balance due on the converter box will be reported [as a normally taxable
purchase].”
¶ 13 As the defendant points out, the Department’s interpretation of the statutes and
regulations within its ambit may be entitled to some deference, but it is not binding on this
court. See Van’s Material Co. v. Department of Revenue, 131 Ill. 2d 196, 202-03 (1989).
Thus, the defendant asks us to depart from the Department’s interpretation and instead
endorse its assessment of sales tax on the full gross sale price of the boxes. To address this
issue, we must examine our state’s relevant tax laws.
¶ 14 Our state’s sales taxation scheme is comprised of two interlocking statutes, the Retailers’
Occupation Tax Act (ROTA) (35 ILCS 120/1 et seq. (West 2010)) and the Use Tax Act (35
ILCS 105/1 et seq. (West 2010)). See Kean v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 235 Ill. 2d 351, 362-64
(2009) (explaining Illinois’s sales tax scheme). ROTA imposes a tax on persons engaged in
the business of selling tangible personal property at retail (35 ILCS 120/2 (West 2010)),
while the Use Tax Act imposes a tax on the privilege of using tangible personal property,
purchased at retail, in this state (35 ILCS 105/3 (West 2010)). Kean, 235 Ill. 2d at 362. “A
retailer, however, is relieved of the duty of remitting the use tax it collects if it has paid to
the Department the [ROTA] tax upon the gross receipts from the same sale.” Kean, 235 Ill.
2d at 363. Further, ROTA allows retailers to collect reimbursement from purchasers for their
sales tax liability, provided that the retailers provide the purchasers refunds of any
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overcharges or, failing that, pay any excess to the Department. 35 ILCS 120/2-40 (West
2010). Accordingly, “[i]n the usual case, the use tax is collected from the purchaser by the
retailer, who must remit the tax to the [Department].” Kean, 235 Ill. 2d at 363. Under this
scheme, “although a single sale and purchase at retail of tangible personal property triggers
the imposition of two taxes, one on the retailer and one on the purchaser, only one tax is
remitted to the Department, and ‘the single payment satisfies both taxes.’ ” Kean, 235 Ill. 2d
at 363 (quoting Department of Revenue ex rel. People v. Steinkopf, 160 Ill. App. 3d 1008,
1014 (1987)).
¶ 15 A retailer’s tax liability under both ROTA and the Use Tax Act is computed as a
percentage of its gross receipts, or selling price, and the tax rates under those statutes are set
at an identical 6.25 percent. Kean, 235 Ill. 2d at 362-63. This sales tax does not apply,
however, to all receipts on all retail sales. The statutes set forth several exemptions, including
a full exemption for government purchases. See 35 ILCS 120/2-5(11) (West 2010) (stating
ROTA tax exemption for government purchasers); 35 ILCS 105/3-5(4) (West 2010) (stating
Use Tax Act exemption for government purchasers).
¶ 16 Normally, then, the sale of a retail product, such as a digital converter box, would accrue
a sales tax of 6.25% of the gross purchase price. Here, however, that purchase price was
satisfied in part by a voucher funded by the federal government. The question for us is
whether this voucher amount should be considered part of a fully taxable sale to the
consumer, or should be considered a tax-exempt partial payment by the federal government.
Although the relevant tax statutes themselves are silent regarding taxation of coupon or
voucher purchases, the Department has issued a regulation on the matter:
“If a retailer allows a purchaser a discount from the selling price on the basis of a
discount coupon for which the retailer will receive full or partial reimbursement (from
a manufacturer, distributor or other source), the retailer incurs Retailers’ Occupation Tax
liability on the receipts received from the purchaser and the amount of any coupon
reimbursement. *** Technically, the coupon issuer *** owes the corresponding Use Tax
on the value of the coupon. However, in many cases, the coupon issuer incorporates
language into the coupon that requires the bearer *** to assume this Use Tax liability.”
86 Ill. Adm. Code 130.2125(b)(2)(A) (2008).
¶ 17 A court will interpret an administrative regulation in the same manner as it would
interpret a statute. Union Electric Co. v. Department of Revenue, 136 Ill. 2d 385, 391 (1990).
Thus, our primary aim is to give effect to the drafters’ intent, and the best indicator of that
intent is the regulation’s language, given its plain and ordinary meaning. Nolan v. Hillard,
309 Ill. App. 3d 129, 143 (1999). The plain and ordinary meaning of the above-quoted
regulation, read in conjunction with the ROTA statute, does not allow taxation of the
federally subsidized portion of converter box purchases.
¶ 18 The regulation provides that, in the case where a purchaser uses a coupon or voucher,
ROTA tax liability applies to both the customer’s payment and to the coupon reimbursement
amount. Accordingly, in the typical case where the reimbursing entity is a manufacturer or
other taxable entity, this regulation would dictate that ROTA tax be imposed on the full gross
purchase price. Here, however, the reimbursing entity is the federal government, which is
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exempt from ROTA tax. 35 ILCS 120/2-5(11) (West 2010) (stating ROTA tax exemption
for government purchasers). Thus, the ROTA tax cannot be applied to the federal
government voucher. Likewise, the regulation states that, typically, the use tax for a coupon
or voucher purchase would be applied against the issuer of the voucher. Here, however, the
federal government issued the voucher, and it is exempt from the use tax. See 35 ILCS
105/3-5(4) (West 2010). In short, because the federal government is exempt from sales tax,
its voucher reimbursement cannot be taxed as would the typical manufacturer’s coupon, and,
indeed, cannot be taxed at all.
¶ 19 For these reasons, we agree with the plaintiff’s premise that the defendant was not
statutorily authorized to collect sales tax on the full gross price of the converter boxes. We
must next consider whether the plaintiff created at least a genuine issue of material fact as
to each of the elements of his claim based on that premise, so that his claim should have
survived summary judgment.
¶ 20 In order to succeed on a deceptive practices claim under the Act, a plaintiff must prove
“(1) a deceptive act or practice by the defendant, (2) the defendant’s intent that the plaintiff
rely on the deception, (3) the occurrence of the deception in a course of conduct involving
trade or commerce, and (4) actual damage to the plaintiff that is (5) a result of the deception.”
De Bouse v. Bayer, 235 Ill. 2d 544, 550 (2009). The “deceptive acts or practices” described
in the first element includes “misrepresentation or the concealment, suppression or omission
of any material fact, with intent that others rely upon the concealment, suppression or
omission of such material fact.” 815 ILCS 505/2 (West 2010). As the plaintiff notes in his
brief, neither this element nor the second element requires the defendant’s intent to
deceive–innocent deceptions and omissions violate the Act as well as intentional deceptions.
Randels v. Best Real Estate, Inc., 243 Ill. App. 3d 801, 805 (1993). Here, we have established
that the defendant’s practice of collecting sales tax was not statutorily authorized. If, as the
plaintiff alleges, the defendant charged a tax neither it nor the plaintiff was bound to pay, it
can be found to have engaged in a deceptive act. There is also substantial evidence that the
defendant intended that the plaintiff rely on the deception, as the plaintiff’s paying the tax
was a natural and predictable consequence of its asking the plaintiff to do so.
¶ 21 On the third element, the parties do not dispute that the defendant’s actions related to
trade or commerce. On the fourth element, the record establishes that the plaintiff suffered
actual damage in the form of his excessive sales tax payment. That leaves only the fifth
element, which requires that the plaintiff’s damage have been caused by the deception. In
order to establish this causative link, a plaintiff must show that he was actually deceived by
the defendant’s deception and that the deception proximately caused his damages. De Bouse,
235 Ill. 2d at 554. Ordinarily, the question of proximate cause is one of fact for the jury, but
it may be determined as a matter of law where the facts alleged show that the plaintiff would
never be entitled to recover. Abrams v. City of Chicago, 211 Ill. 2d 251, 257-58 (2004).
¶ 22 Here, the plaintiff testified that, at the time he purchased the converter box from the
defendant, he was unaware that he was being overcharged. Although the defendant disputes
the credibility of the plaintiff’s assertion, we do not resolve such credibility questions at the
summary judgment stage. See Gulino v. Economy Fire & Casualty Co., 2012 IL App (1st)
102429, ¶ 25 (“The trial court cannot make credibility determinations or weigh the evidence
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at the summary judgment stage.”). The plaintiff’s testimony creates at least a genuine issue
of fact regarding whether the defendant’s actions caused his injury.
¶ 23 The defendant also notes, as the circuit court noted, that the plaintiff never sought a
refund, but instead opted to file suit against the defendant within two weeks of his converter
box purchase. Based on this fact, the circuit court concluded that the real proximate cause
of the plaintiff’s injury was his refusal to seek a refund, not the defendant’s deceptive act.
The circuit court may have been correct that the defendant’s failure to seek a refund caused
his injury, but that revelation does not mean that the defendant’s actions were not also a
cause of the injury. Indeed, in order to suffice as proximate cause, an action “ ‘need not be
the only cause, nor the last or nearest cause’ ” of a plaintiff’s injury. Richter v. Village of Oak
Brook, 2011 IL App (2d) 100114, ¶ 21 (quoting Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions, Civil, No.
15.01 (2011)). The plaintiff has presented some evidence to support his claim that the
defendant’s actions produced his injury, even if it could be said that his failure to seek a
refund also produced his injury. Thus, we conclude that the plaintiff has created at least a
genuine issue of material fact as to each of the elements of his claim under the Act.
¶ 24 Notwithstanding the above, the defendant argues that the plaintiff’s claim is precluded
by the voluntary payment doctrine. Under that doctrine, “absent fraud, misrepresentation or
mistake of fact, money that is voluntarily paid under a claim of right to the payment and with
full knowledge of the facts by the payer cannot be recovered unless the payment was made
as a result of compulsion.” Flournoy v. Ameritech, 351 Ill. App. 3d 583, 587 (2004). As
applied to tax disputes, the voluntary payment doctrine provides that “a retailer who collected
[tax] which was later held to have been erroneously imposed [is] not subject to a suit for
refund from its customers if the customers paid the tax voluntarily and if the retailer had
remitted the tax to the State.” Lusinski v. Dominick’s Finer Foods, Inc., 136 Ill. App. 3d 640,
643 (1985). However, although the voluntary payment doctrine bars suits against retailers
for tax refunds, it does not apply where the payment was procured by deception or fraud. See
Jenkins v. Concorde Acceptance Corp., 345 Ill. App. 3d 669, 675 (2003). Indeed, for that
reason, and because the doctrine cannot apply to impede causes of action based on statutorily
defined public policy, this court has held that it should not apply to claims brought under the
Act. Ramirez v. Smart Corp., 371 Ill. App. 3d 797, 805 n.2 (2007). Accordingly, the
defendant cannot invoke the voluntary payment doctrine to defeat the plaintiff’s claim here.
¶ 25 For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the circuit court erred in granting the
defendant summary judgment on his claims under the Act. We therefore reverse the circuit
court’s judgment and remand the matter for further proceedings.
¶ 26 Reversed and remanded.
¶ 27 JUSTICE DELORT, specially concurring.
¶ 28 I concur with the result reached by the panel. I write separately, however, to explain my
own concerns about two issues: one procedural, one substantive.
¶ 29 As noted above, the appellant’s brief contains neither a copy of the judgment being
appealed nor an index to the 9-volume, 2,000-page record. Supra ¶ 7. Both are required by
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our rules, and their omission is hardly a procedural technicality that can be easily ignored.
When appellate justices receive a new case for decision, many will open the appellant’s brief
to the back to first read the trial court’s judgment order. When the appellant omits this
appendix, but merely cites the judgment’s location in the record by volume and page, the
justices must sift through an often-voluminous record to first locate the appropriate volume,
and then find the exact page.
¶ 30 The appellee noted these omissions and asked us to dismiss the appeal because of the
appellant’s violations of Supreme Court Rules 341 and 342. However, rather than filing a
motion requesting that relief, or asking us to strike the brief and make the appellant go
through the time and expense of doing it right, the appellee placed the dismissal request in
its own brief, and then proceeded to address the full merits of the case. The appellee also
prepared the index on its own and included it, along with copies of the trial judge’s oral and
written rulings and hundreds of pages of other materials duplicated from the record, in a
telephone-book-sized appendix. Having done that, it became extraordinarily unlikely we
would have dismissed the appeal, since we had jurisdiction and the case was fully briefed on
the merits.
¶ 31 In its reply brief, the appellant does not even feign an apology, and instead impugns the
appellee’s legitimate complaints as an attempt at “leverage.” He makes short shrift of his
own brief’s glaring omissions by noting that his brief contains numerous citations to the
record. That, however, is not the point. Justices may wish to locate material in the record that
neither party cites. The index helps them do exactly that. We understand when persons
representing themselves in small claims cases do not exhibit punctilious compliance with our
rules. It is another thing, altogether, when litigants in chancery class action cases, who claim
they are owed hundreds of thousands of dollars in attorney fees, cavalierly ignore the
requirements for the structure and content of appellate briefs.
¶ 32 Because cases are not assigned to a panel for disposition until they are fully briefed, it is
unlikely that a justice will see a deficient appellant’s brief until the case is ready for decision.
See Ill. App. Ct., First Dist., R. 2, § I(B) (July 1, 2008). Accordingly, an appellee is well-
advised to file a motion to strike a noncompliant brief, including therein a request that the
appellant be required to file a substitute brief that complies with our rules.
¶ 33 On the merits, I agree that the record contains material issues of genuine fact sufficient
to prevent Sears from obtaining victory on the Consumer Fraud Act claim through summary
judgment. However, the evidence is rather thin, particularly on the element of whether the
plaintiff’s damages were actually caused by deception. Supra ¶ 22. The circumstantial
evidence in the record points strongly to the conclusion that the plaintiff was not actually
deceived, because he knew or should have known that his milk run purchases of converter
boxes at various retailers were merely shams to establish his standing to bring a lucrative
class action lawsuit.
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