2023 IL App (2d) 220115-U
No. 2-22-0115
Order filed January 31, 2023
NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23(b) and is not precedent
except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
______________________________________________________________________________
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________
THE VILLAGE OF DEERFIELD, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
) of Lake County.
)
Plaintiff-Appellee, )
)
v. ) No. 21-OV-497
)
LAURA K. MERTEN, ) Honorable
) Bolling W. Haxall, III,
Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________
JUSTICE JORGENSEN delivered the judgment of the court.
Justices Hutchinson and Hudson concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶1 Held: Trial court’s order finding defendant guilty of violating a local ordinance is
affirmed.
¶2 On June 4, 2021, plaintiff, the Village of Deerfield, charged defendant, Laura K. Merten,
with criminal damage to property in violation of a local ordinance. After a bench trial, the court
found that defendant committed the violation and sentenced her to six months’ probation, 40 hours
of community service, and $500 in fines and fees. Defendant appeals. For the following reasons,
we affirm.
¶3 I. BACKGROUND
2023 IL App (2d) 220115-U
¶4 A. Charges and Trial
¶5 On June 4, 2021, the Village police department issued to defendant a non-traffic complaint
and notice to appear, charging her with criminal damage to property in violation of Deerfield’s
Municipal Code (Municipal Code) section 15-29.1, in that she,
“knowingly hired Advanced Tree Care to enter upon the property at 370 Shenandoah Court
and remove approximately 20 Buckthorn plants covering approximately 85 feet of the
property line, causing damage to said property, which is owned by the beneficiaries of the
Pauline Tanzillo Trust.”
¶6 On February 1, 2022, the court held a trial. With minor stylistic exceptions, the following
facts from trial are adopted virtually verbatim from the certified bystander’s report submitted on
appeal pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 323(c) (eff. July 1, 2017).
¶7 At trial, Michael Bramucci, owner and operator of Advanced Tree Care (“ATC”), testified
that, since approximately 2015, defendant had been an ATC customer. Bramucci stated that
defendant lived at 380 Shenandoah Court, Deerfield. The Village admitted Village exhibit No. 1,
which Bramucci identified as a series of proposals or work orders for maintenance that ATC had
completed for defendant. The orders were dated September 8, 2016, October 10, 2018, October
13, 2019, October 18, 2020, and March 3, 2021.
¶8 Bramucci testified that, beginning in approximately 2016 or 2017, defendant hired ATC to
complete several projects, including trimming back buckthorn from her neighbor’s property that
encroached onto defendant’s property. However, because the work was expensive and defendant
did not want to pay for all of it at once, the project extended over multiple years. Bramucci said
that it was possible to cut back the neighbor’s buckthorn to the property line, so long as the trees
themselves were not damaged. According to Bramucci, ATC had to trim back the neighbor’s
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buckthorn to the property line on more than one occasion because it continued to grow over
defendant’s property. Bramucci testified that he was aware of the property line’s location because,
in 2016, he identified a property marker where two fence lines had converged.
¶9 Bramucci testified that, in 2016, he had a conversation with defendant during which she
broached cutting the neighbor’s buckthorn. Bramucci testified that, during this conversation, he
told defendant that she would have to discuss the issue with her neighbor. Bramucci testified that,
in 2017, he had another conversation with defendant about trimming back the buckthorn, and
defendant informed him that she had the neighbor’s consent for ATC to complete the project.
¶ 10 Bramucci testified that it was his general practice to inform customers that they need to get
their neighbors’ consent for any work that would require ATC to go onto a neighbor’s property or
touch anything on the neighbor’s property. According to Bramucci, he always relied on the
customer to gain the consent; he would not contact the neighbor himself.
¶ 11 Further, Bramucci testified that, on or about June 4, 2021, he had a telephone conversation
with defendant. During the conversation, defendant stated that she was “ready to remove the
remainder of the buckthorn.” Bramucci said that he understood defendant’s request to be for ATC
to eradicate the buckthorn from the neighbor’s property that would otherwise grow over
defendant’s property. According to Bramucci, defendant asked that ATC remove a row of
buckthorn near the west side of defendant’s property from the front of the house to the back tree
line, constituting approximately 75 to 80 feet of buckthorn.
¶ 12 On June 6, 2021, an ATC crew removed the buckthorn. Bramucci testified that the
removed buckthorn was located on the property of 370 Shenandoah, the property adjacent to
defendant’s. Bramucci was not present at the time but directed his employees to remove the
buckthorn based on defendant’s request during their prior conversation. However, Bramucci
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testified that he received a communication from defendant directing ATC to stop work until
defendant told him otherwise. Accordingly, ATC did not complete the project, which would have
included removing the buckthorn stumps. The Village admitted into evidence Village exhibit No.
2, a proposal dated June 4, 2021, and purporting to represent the work order for the removal of the
buckthorn at issue.
¶ 13 During cross-examination, Bramucci noted that Village exhibit No. 2 was dated June 4,
2021, but was prepared later. Bramucci testified that there was no written contract with defendant
prior to ATC performing the work on June 5, 2021. Bramucci agreed that the address listed on the
proposal was 380 Shenandoah Court, i.e., defendant’s address.
¶ 14 Bramucci confirmed that he was not present on June 5, 2021, the day ATC employees
trimmed the buckthorn, and, therefore, was not an eyewitness to what occurred. Bramucci testified
that he had a telephone consultation with defendant to discuss the work to be performed. Bramucci
denied that he and defendant were supposed to meet at the property prior to the scheduled
performance of the work. When asked why there would be an email confirmation of a meeting,
Bramucci stated that, when he scheduled the telephone meeting with defendant, ATC’s system
would have automatically generated one. Bramucci acknowledged that defendant was unable to
personally show him the plants she wanted removed. Further, Bramucci testified that defendant
contacted him after ATC removed the buckthorn—either that evening or the next day—and told
him that he should not return to the property to complete the work “until I [the defendant] resolve
this” and she indicated that the neighbors were unhappy.
¶ 15 Bramucci also answered multiple questions about buckthorn. He testified: (1) buckthorn
is an invasive and damaging weed; (2) many villages, including Deerfield, have restrictions on
planting buckthorn and are attempting to eradicate it; (3) because buckthorn is deciduous, it drops
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foliage and is not an ideal plant to provide privacy; and (4) buckthorn emits a chemical impeding
plant growth and killing grass near or under it. Moreover, Bramucci testified that defendant’s
property had been substantially damaged by her neighbor’s buckthorn. He said the buckthorn
caused her lawn to flood, no grass was able to grow in areas, and the site was continuously muddy.
¶ 16 Bramucci further testified that he provided all of defendant’s invoices to the Deerfield
Police Department, he confirmed that there was not a written contract for the work to be performed
prior to June 5, 2021, and he agreed that his company also performed work for the Village of
Deerfield, which was lucrative for his business.
¶ 17 When shown defense exhibit No. 1, a photograph bearing a date of September 22, 2021,
Bramucci testified that the depicted buckthorn appeared to be regrowing.
¶ 18 During redirect examination, Bramucci testified that Village exhibit No. 2 listed
defendant’s address because she was the customer and was to be billed for the work and that the
address does not indicate that ATC’s work was limited to defendant’s property. Bramucci again
testified that defendant hired ATC to remove buckthorn from her neighbor’s property and that
defendant implied by her request that she had received permission from the neighbor.
¶ 19 The Village next presented Karen DeCicco, who testified that she presently resides in
Prairie View, but her family’s home was located at 370 Shenandoah Court in Deerfield. DeCicco
said she lived in the home from 1965 to 1974, along with her parents and three siblings. According
to DeCicco, her father died 30 years earlier, and her mother, Pauline Tanzillo, continued to live in
the house. At various times, DeCicco’s sister, niece, and a caregiver resided in the home with
Pauline until her death on February 14, 2021. In approximately May 2021, the Tanzillo home
became vacant, and it remained empty on June 5, 2021. DeCicco stated that she and her siblings
inherited the home through a Tanzillo family trust.
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2023 IL App (2d) 220115-U
¶ 20 DeCicco testified that her father had the northeast corner of the property landscaped in
1966, and the buckthorn was planted at that time. The Village admitted a series of exhibits that
purported to show the buckthorn located on 370 Shenandoah Court shortly after it had been
planted. DeCicco testified that Village exhibit No. 3 was from a family party in 1965; Village
exhibit No. 4 showed DeCicco in approximately 1968 or 1969 with the shrubbery visible behind
her on the northeast corner of the property; and Village exhibit No. 5 showed the buckthorn in the
backyard of 370 Shenandoah Court. DeCicco circled the area of buckthorn in Village exhibit No.
5 that she said was cut down on June 5, 2021.
¶ 21 The Village next admitted Village exhibits Nos. 6 and 7, which purported to show the
condition of the property after ATC removed the buckthorn. DeCicco testified that Village exhibit
No. 6 showed the northeast portion of the property as it looked on approximately June 7, 2021.
DeCicco testified that the photograph showed “the destruction” of approximately 87 feet of
property. DeCicco identified the buckthorn stumps in the photograph as being located on the
property of 370 Shenandoah Court. DeCicco testified that Village exhibit No. 7 depicted the same
northeast corner of the family property but also showed the approximately six to eight feet of
buckthorn bushes that remained.
¶ 22 DeCicco testified that she visited the Tanzillo home a few days per week and was there on
June 4, 2021. She testified that neither defendant nor anyone else asked her for permission to
remove any of the buckthorn from the property. DeCicco denied that any family member gave
defendant permission to remove the buckthorn. After DeCicco learned the buckthorn was cut
down, she had her son take photographs of the damage and contacted her brother and the Deerfield
police.
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¶ 23 DeCicco testified that the family intended to sell the home, but because of the damage to
the buckthorn and the pending cases the sale was “on hold.”
¶ 24 On cross-examination, DeCicco testified that she was not familiar with defendant and does
not believe that they had ever met or spoken before June 7, 2021. Pauline never previously
mentioned defendant to DeCicco.
¶ 25 Defense counsel showed DeCicco a series of photographs. DeCicco identified defense
exhibit No. 2 as depicting the northeast corner of the Tanzillo home, defense exhibit No. 3 as the
houses with a property line, and defense exhibit No. 4 as the west side of “our yard.”
¶ 26 DeCicco testified that she wanted the Deerfield police to arrest defendant and that she and
her siblings hired a lawyer. DeCicco reviewed defense exhibit No. 5, a letter from the attorney
retained to handle a potential claim against defendant and which demanded restitution in the
approximate amount of $10,000 for damage caused to the buckthorn. DeCicco acknowledged that
defense exhibit No. 3 was included with the attorney’s demand letter to defendant, and that it
inaccurately depicted the area of the buckthorn removal. DeCicco denied involvement in the
photograph’s preparation, stating that either her brother or the lawyer was responsible for the
mistake.
¶ 27 DeCicco testified that she confronted defendant about the damage to the buckthorn and
told her, “I think you’re going to have to be arrested.” DeCicco also told defendant’s daughter
that defendant would be arrested if she did not pay the demanded restitution. DeCicco
acknowledged that the Village of Deerfield considered buckthorn a weed with no value. DeCicco
confirmed that she was not present on June 5, 2021, and was not an eyewitness to the buckthorn’s
removal. DeCicco stated that the family utilized a landscaping company to, among other things,
trim the buckthorn on the 370 Shenandoah Property.
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¶ 28 Pasquale Tanzillo testified that he is DeCicco’s brother and another heir to the property at
370 Shenandoah Court. Tanzillo testified that he last lived in the family home in 1968, when he
moved out to join the army.
¶ 29 Tanzillo testified that he worked as an excavating contractor for approximately 45 years
and was familiar with how property lines are designated. According to Tanzillo, property lines
are marked using iron pins placed approximately one foot from the public sidewalk. Tanzillo
testified that he went to 370 Shenandoah after learning of the property damage to determine the
property line. Tanzillo testified that he located the property boundary pins with a metal detector,
then used string between the pins to demarcate the property line. Tanzillo testified that the
removed buckthorn was located on the property of 370 Shenandoah Court.
¶ 30 Tanzillo reviewed Village exhibit No. 6 and identified it as a photograph of the side of
“mom’s house” prior to June 5, 2021. The Village then admitted Village exhibits Nos. 6 through
8. Tanzillo testified that the photograph in Village exhibit No. 6 showed the property line between
defendant’s home and Tanzillo home. Tanzillo identified Village exhibit No. 7 as the reverse view
of the property line. Tanzillo testified that Village exhibit No. 8 also was intended to show the
line between the two properties. Tanzillo testified that he never gave anyone permission to remove
buckthorn from the property.
¶ 31 During cross-examination, Tanzillo testified that he did not have his glasses and was unable
to see the string depicted in the photographs. Tanzillo had difficulty seeing the photographs at all.
Tanzillo acknowledged that he did not have a formal survey of the property line completed and
that the string he used to mark the property line was an approximation. He also stated that he was
not present when the buckthorn was removed.
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¶ 32 Defense counsel asked Tanzillo about the photographs sent to defendant along with the
demand letter. Tanzillo stated that the family gave several photographs to the lawyer and that, if
anything was mislabeled or misrepresented, it was the lawyer’s fault.
¶ 33 After the Village rested its case, defendant called Deerfield Police Officer Wesley Carner,
who testified remotely via Zoom. Carner testified that he was involved in the investigation of
DeCicco’s complaint.
¶ 34 According to Carner, he did not personally witness the events in the case but did have a
conversation with DeCicco about the allegations. Carner testified that he did not cite defendant
under a Village tree protection ordinance, because buckthorn is invasive and not a protected
species. Carner also stated that the Village was attempting to remove buckthorn from all Village-
owned property and that it was his understanding that buckthorn has “no value.”
¶ 35 Carner testified that he consulted with the Village prosecutor, who advised him to charge
defendant with criminal damage to property. In response to defense counsel’s question, Carner
testified that defendant declined to make a statement about the case. Carner testified that he
suggested to the Tanzillos that they may wish to consult with an attorney or realtor if they wished
to further pursue this matter in civil court. The Village did not cross-examine Carner.
¶ 36 Defendant testified that she had lived at 380 Shenandoah Court for 15 years. She scheduled
an appointment with Bramucci at the property for June 3, 2021, at 6 p.m., so that she could show
him the work that ATC was to perform. Defendant said that Bramucci failed to appear for the
appointment. Defense exhibit No. 7 was admitted, which defendant testified was an email
confirmation of the scheduled in-person meeting.
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¶ 37 Defendant identified the photograph in defense exhibit No. 2 as one she had taken on June
17, 2021. Defendant stated that the photograph showed buckthorn, some of which was located on
her property and some of which was located on the Tanzillo property.
¶ 38 Defendant testified that she received defense exhibit No. 5 and that it demanded payment
of $9,999 to the Tanzillos. Defendant also stated that DeCicco followed her and her daughter into
her driveway and blocked them in and that DeCicco threatened defendant with arrest if she did not
pay the Tanzillos. Defendant testified that an employee of the Tanzillo family also confronted her,
saying that defendant should just pay the family so that there would be no further trouble.
Defendant stated that, due to their threats and other conduct, she was fearful of the Tanzillo family.
¶ 39 During cross-examination, defendant testified that she first spoke to Pauline Tanzillo in
approximately 2007, but that she had never met any of the Tanzillo children. Defendant stated
that, until she was charged in this case, she was unaware that Pauline had died. Defendant
acknowledged that she did not have permission to remove anything from the Tanzillo property but
stated that she did not ask Bramucci to cut down anything that was not on her property.
¶ 40 In argument, the Village contended that it had proven that defendant, without permission,
hired ATC to remove buckthorn from the Tanzillo property. In so doing, defendant lied to
Bramucci about having consent to remove the buckthorn. The Village also argued that defendant
waited until Pauline died and then attempted to have the buckthorn removed.
¶ 41 During the Village’s argument, the court asked whether the Municipal Code allowed
liability for the conduct of another. The prosecuting attorney stated that it did and that he would
attempt to locate the relevant provision.
¶ 42 Defendant made three primary arguments in closing: (1) the Village failed to prove the
removed buckthorn was not on defendant’s property; (2) assuming the buckthorn was on the
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Tanzillo property, its removal was due to error by ATC and not at defendant’s request; and (3)
defendant could not be guilty of destroying buckthorn, a plant with no value considered a nuisance
and targeted for eradication by the Village. Defendant argued that Bramucci was not truthful about
the scheduled appointment at defendant’s home and that the removal of buckthorn was due to a
lack of clarity on Bramucci’s part. According to defendant, ATC was only hired to cut the
buckthorn that had spread to her yard, and the written proposal containing only her address
confirmed this. Because Bramucci stood to lose business with the Village, he was unwilling to
acknowledge his error. Further, the Village failed to offer a survey or an expert witness as to the
location of the property line. Defense counsel argued that the case was more appropriate for
resolution in a civil courtroom than a criminal one.
¶ 43 After hearing argument, the court agreed that the allegations in the case might also have
been appropriate for a civil courtroom, but that it was not unusual for cases to be brought in both
criminal and civil actions. The court noted that many traffic accidents result in both a traffic
citation and a civil complaint.
¶ 44 The court stated that it had reviewed the complaint and the section of the Municipal Code
charged in therein. Specifically, the complaint charged defendant with criminal damage to
property, in violation of Municipal Code section 15-29.1, in that, on June 5, 2021, defendant
knowingly hired ATC to enter upon the property at 370 Shenandoah Court and remove
approximately 20 buckthorn plants covering approximately 85 feet of the property line, causing
damage to said property, which is owned by the beneficiaries of the Pauline Tanzillo Trust.
¶ 45 Municipal Code section 15-29.1 provides,
“No person shall willfully, maliciously or negligently break, deface, injure or destroy any
property within the Village, whether such property is owned by the State, county, Village
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or any other governmental body, or owned by any private person.” Municipal Code § 15-
29.1.
¶ 46 Therefore, the court first found that, on June 5, 2021, the buckthorn ATC cut down was on
the property owned by the Tanzillo family trust. The court found that the evidence supported the
proposition that the buckthorn was located at 370 Shenandoah Court: the testimony of Tanzillo
regarding the property line; Bramucci’s testimony that the buckthorn was not on defendant’s
property and that he believed defendant received the property owner’s permission to remove it;
and even defendant’s own testimony, during which she claimed that ATC cut down the wrong
bushes. The court noted that defendant would not have made such a claim had she believed the
buckthorn was on her land.
¶ 47 The court also found that defendant intentionally hired ATC to remove the buckthorn,
rejecting defendant’s claim that the Village failed to prove that she did so. The court stated that it
found credible Bramucci’s testimony that defendant specifically hired ATC to remove the
buckthorn that was located on the Tanzillo property. The court did not find credible defendant’s
testimony that she only hired the company to perform work on her own property. The court noted
that other evidence corroborated Bramucci’s version of the events. For example, during
defendant’s subsequent communication to Bramucci directing ATC to stop work, she never
complained that the company had removed the buckthorn in error. Similarly, during the
confrontations by the Tanzillo family, defendant did not indicate that the damage was the result of
a mistake by the landscaping company. The court stated that the Village was required to prove the
allegations by preponderance of the evidence and found that it did so, but the court noted that it
might have reached a different determination under the more-exacting standard of beyond a
reasonable doubt.
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¶ 48 The court also rejected defendant’s claim that she had the lawful ability to hire ATC to
remove the buckthorn, because it was considered a weed by the Village and targeted for
eradication. The court noted the buckthorn was not defendant’s and there was no legal authority
presented permitting her to damage the plants.
¶ 49 While the court made these factual findings, it did not initially determine whether
defendant was guilty of the charged violation. The court noted that section 15-29.1 did not, on its
face, indicate that liability could be predicated on the conduct of another. The allegation in the
complaint was that defendant hired ATC to remove the buckthorn, so, while the damage was
requested by defendant, it was not performed by her. The court informed the parties that they
would have time to address the limited legal issue raised by the court: whether defendant could be
found liable under the Municipal Code for the acts she commissioned, i.e., whether accountability
liability existed for a charge of criminal damage to property under the Municipal Code. The court
stated that, while it found that defendant performed the acts alleged in the complaint, if the
Municipal Code did not permit liability for the acts of another, then the court would enter a not-
guilty verdict. The court provided each side with an opportunity to submit case law or other
authority on the issue and set the case for verdict/ruling. Later, the court noted that it had raised
the question concerning liability for actions of another around 6 p.m., after a long day and after
the courtroom staff had already worked past normal hours, and that it and the Village prosecutor
did not have the relevant citation at hand.
¶ 50 On February 3, 2022, the court sent an email to the Village prosecutor and defense counsel
and copied the clerk. The email stated,
“Counsel-
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Please see the attached provision from the Deerfield Village Ordinances. The parties
should feel free to submit any additional authority they believe is relevant.”
Attached to the email was a copy of Municipal Code section 1-17, downloaded from a website
linked to the Village’s official website. That provision provided,
“Unlawful or prohibited acts include causing, permitting, concealing. Whenever in this
code any act or omission is made unlawful or prohibited it shall include causing, allowing,
permitting, aiding, abetting, suffering or concealing the fact of such act or omission.”
Municipal Code § 1-17.
¶ 51 Thereafter, on February 15, 2022, the court found defendant guilty of the charged
violation. 1 It noted that defendant had submitted materials in response to the court’s February 3,
2022, email, but it found defendant’s cited authority distinguishable. In sum, the court found that
many of defendant’s arguments were untimely, as defendant did not file prior to trial any motions
challenging the ordinance or the non-traffic citation charges. Further, the court rejected
defendant’s argument that she was unaware that she was being charged under a theory of liability
premised on ATC’s conduct. The court noted that, while the Village did not specify in its
complaint the applicability of section 1-17, the charges specifically described defendant’s conduct
as hiring ATC to remove the buckthorn, and at no time during trial did defendant’s questioning of
witnesses or argument suggest that she believed she was being charged with personally operating
the tools to remove the buckthorn. “From the beginning of this case in the charging document the
Village alleged that the [d]efendant was liable for the conduct of the landscaping company in
1
A transcribed report of proceedings, as opposed to a bystander’s report, was prepared for
the remaining hearings summarized herein.
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cutting down the buckthorn.” As such, the court found that it was inaccurate to suggest that
defendant was not put on notice regarding the Village’s theory of liability.
¶ 52 Further, the court rejected defendant’s argument that section 1-17 was void for vagueness.
It noted that many Illinois and federal accountability provisions contain similar language, without
the specific terms being defined, and, because they are terms within the general understanding of
the population, the language was not vague.
¶ 53 Next, the court rejected defendant’s argument that the complaint failed to include the
“willful” mental state required by section 15-29.1. Again, the court noted, the argument was
untimely and should have been raised prior to trial. Further, the court continued, the Village
alleged in the complaint that defendant committed the conduct “knowingly,” which was a higher
mental state than that required by section 15-29.1, which also included liability for negligence.
“Essentially, the Village set a higher bar for itself than was required and cleared it.” In any event,
the court continued, “Just for the record, I would note that the evidence that was presented
established not only that the [d]efendant negligently or knowingly committed the violation I will
find that she willfully did so.”
¶ 54 In addition, the court rejected defendant’s argument that she could not be found guilty if
ATC also committed the offense. The court noted the issue was not directly before it, “[w]hether
or not the company and its employees were charged I simply don’t know.” Moreover, the
accountability cases defendant cited were the “opposite” of her situation, because they concerned
whether the defendants could be accountable for conduct by another that they did not know was
going to occur, where “not only was [defendant] aware of it[,] she hired the company” to commit
it.
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¶ 55 Finally, the court rejected defendant’s argument that she could not be guilty of criminal
damage to property, because buckthorn is a plant targeted for eradication. Citing Municipal Code
sections 21-15 and 21-17, the court noted that they concern procedures by which the Village can
pursue removal of the plants. “This is not a self[-]help situation where the [d]efendant was granted
legal authority to remove those weeds if they were weeds to remove the buckthorn on her own.
Nowhere in the Village ordinances [is] this kind of self[-]help [ ] provided for and therefore it is
not a ground to prevent the prosecution here.” The court found that defendant hired ATC to
remove the buckthorn and, in doing so, caused damage to property that was not hers (noting that
“causing” is a term contained in section 1-17 of the Municipal Code).
¶ 56 B. Posttrial Motions and Sentencing
¶ 57 Defendant filed posttrial motions, including a memorandum in opposition to restitution.
With respect to the posttrial motion, the court asked whether defendant acknowledged that she was
charged with hiring the company that removed the buckthorn. “Is that your understanding of what
the allegation was against your client?” Defense counsel responded, “As in the complaint, yes,
Judge.” Upon further discussion, the court again denied defendant’s argument that she was
charged as a principal and that the allegations did not charge her with accountability. In explaining
its rationale, the court noted that the complaint specifically charged defendant with hiring ATC to
remove the plants, so defendant’s cited authority that the theory could not be changed in a manner
unfair to a defendant was inapplicable. “Here[,] in the charging document[,] [defendant] was
charged with hiring the company to remove the buckthorn, hiring someone else to commit the
offense. And because of that I do believe she was on notice from the outset that this was an
accountability case in the broad sense of the term.”
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¶ 58 In addition, the court noted that defendant had accused the court of stepping into the role
of prosecutor. It rejected that argument, noting that: the theory was clear from the outset; if
anything, by raising the point about which ordinance allowed prosecution on an accountability
theory, it had raised a defense argument and was ensuring that the prosecution met its burden
based on what was alleged and what was allowable under the ordinance; and although defendant
seemed to take issue with the court doing its own research, “[w]henever I had a legal question, I
am going to research *** I don’t believe it’s improper for the [c]ourt to research legal questions,
in fact I think it would be improper if I didn’t.” The court finally noted again that: it had not found
any cases where similar ordinances were stricken for vagueness; while referring to section 1-17 in
the charging instrument would have been preferable, the failure to do so here should not result in
dismissal of the charge; and, with respect timeliness, while in limited circumstances a posttrial
challenge to a charging document may be allowed, the more appropriate time to raise those issues
was pretrial, so that they could be addressed. Finally,
“As far as the sufficiency of the evidence[,] I found and continue to find that the
Village has proven by a preponderance of the evidence[,] which is the standard[,] that
[defendant] did hire the company to remove the buckthorn, that she did so willfully[,] and
had there been a challenge to the provision prior to trial and the Village amended or filed
an updated charge with the willful which was the proper mental state I would continue to
find [defendant] guilty.”
¶ 59 After denying defendant’s posttrial motion, the court proceeded to sentencing. It rejected
the Village’s request that defendant pay restitution. The court agreed with defendant that the
ordinance did not provide for restitution and declined to order it as part of the sentence. Therefore,
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it sentenced defendant to six months’ supervision, $500 in fines and assessments, and 40 hours of
community service. Defendant appeals.
¶ 60 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 61 Defendant raises five issues on appeal. First, that she could not be found guilty under the
ordinance of destroying property, when the property that was allegedly destroyed was contraband.
Second, she argues that she was denied due process where the court sua sponte raised
accountability as a new theory of guilt after trial. Third, plaintiff argues that section 1-17 of the
Municipal Code listed seven different provisions in the disjunctive, and the complaint did not
specify which one applied. Fourth, defendant argues that the evidence was insufficient to find her
guilty by a preponderance of the evidence. Finally, defendant asserts that the cumulative effect of
the errors violated her due process rights. For the following reasons, we disagree and affirm.
¶ 62 A. Destruction of Contraband
¶ 63 Defendant first argues that the charge against her was unsustainable because buckthorn,
the only property that she allegedly damaged, is an invasive species that the Municipal Code
considers a nuisance. 2 Further, defendant argues, permitting buckthorn to grow or remain on any
2
Specifically, defendant cites Municipal Code section 21-15, entitled “Weeds; Nuisance,”
which lists specific weeds (but not buckthorn) and provides that they or,
“other weeds of a like kind, found growing in any lot or tract of land in the village
are hereby declared to be a nuisance, and it shall be unlawful for any person to permit any
such weeds to grow or remain on any such place.” Municipal Code § 21-15.
Defendant further notes that Municipal Code section 21-22 defines “Rhamnus (Buckthorn)” as,
“a non-native species such as seeds, eggs, spores, or other propagules, whose
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lot or tract of land in the Village is unlawful, and the Municipal Code provides that an owner that
removes it shall be entitled to a mitigation credit. 3 Defendant contends that the plant is also
considered an invasive weed under State law. 4 Therefore, she argues that, because the plant is
introduction causes or is likely to cause economic harm, environmental harm, or harm to
human health. *** Rhamnus is considered an aggressive species, commonly known as an
‘invasive species.’ The Buckthorn invades forests, prairies, and savannas in the
Midwestern United States and can form dense thickets crowding out native shrubs and
understory plants. It is difficult to eliminate and can regenerate after cutting or burning.
This invasive species grows and reproduces rapidly, negatively, impacting wildlife and
water quality in the areas in which it is present.” (Emphasis added.) Municipal Code §
21-22.
3
Municipal Code section 21-34, “Mitigation Credit for the Elimination of Rhamnus
(Buckthorn)” states,
“An owner that removes trees in a manner that requires mitigation *** and as part
of the removal eliminates an invasive species of Rhamnus (Buckthorn) on the subject
property shall be entitled to a credit *** to offset, in whole or in part, any mitigation fees
based on the amount of Rhamnus (Buckthorn) eliminated from the property.” (Emphasis
added.) Municipal Code § 21-34.
4
Defendant cites section 10/2 of the Illinois Exotic Weed Act (525 ILCS 10/1 et seq. (West
2022), which defines exotic weeds as,
“***plants not native to North America which, when planted either spread
vegetatively or naturalize and degrade natural communities, reduce the value of fish and
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illegal, neither the Village nor her neighbor had standing to bring a complaint. Comparing
buckthorn to cocaine and heroin, she asserts that, if her neighbors tried to have the Village
prosecute defendant for destroying those substances, it would be plainly understood there would
have no basis to seek such prosecution and bringing such a charge would have the Village “laughed
out of Court and possibly held in contempt.” Here, she notes that her neighbors not only possessed
an illegal substance, but allowed it to encroach upon her property. Particularly given that the
Village encourages the destruction of buckthorn, defendant asserts that she cannot be held
accountable for destruction of property that was unlawful to possess. Concluding that there is no
legal right to possession of an illegal substance and no enforceable property right, defendant argues
that the Village had no right to be in court in the first place. As such, defendant asks that we
reverse the judgment and dismiss the charge as unstainable as a matter of law.
¶ 64 Defendant asserts that this issue, i.e., whether she can be found guilty of destroying
something that is contraband, requires us to simply interpret the ordinances, requiring de novo
review. See, e.g., Majid v. Retirement Board of Policemen’s Annuity & Benefit Fund of City of
Chicago, 2015 IL App (1st) 132182, ¶ 13. The Village disagrees, noting that salient facts were
disputed and, thus, because the issue is neither a pure question of fact or law, we review it under
wildlife habitat, or threaten an Illinois endangered or threatened species.” See 525 ILCS
10/2 (West 2022).
Further, section 10/3 includes buckthorn as an example of an exotic weed. See 525 ILCS 10/3
(West 2022). Finally, defendant notes that, under section 10/4(a) of the Illinois Exotic Weed Act,
it is unlawful for any person to “buy, sell, offer for sale, distribute or plant seeds, plants or plant
parts of exotic weeds without a permit ***.” See 525 ILCS 10/4(a) (West 2022).
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the clearly-erroneous standard, reversing only if we are left with a definite and firm conviction that
a mistake has been made. See, e.g., Carpetland U.S.A., Inc. v. Illinois Department of Employment
Security, 201 Ill. 2d 351, 369 (2002). Here, we conclude that reversal is not warranted under either
standard.
¶ 65 Specifically, although defendant argues that her neighbors had no standing to bring a
complaint, the complaint at issue here was prosecuted by the Village, which had standing to pursue
enforcement of its own ordinance. Again, section 29.1 provided,
“No person shall willfully, maliciously or negligently break, deface, injure or destroy any
property within the Village, whether such property is owned by the State, county, Village
or any other governmental body, or owned by any private person.” (Emphases added.)
Municipal Code § 29.1.
¶ 66 Defendant’s argument focuses on the type of property destroyed, but none of the local and
State provisions she cites specifically identify buckthorn as illegal contraband, a nuisance, or even
specifically establish that buckthorn is a “weed of like kind” to those identified as a nuisance that
are unlawful to maintain (see, e.g., section 21-15). Without question, the evidence established that
buckthorn is a weed and that the Village seeks to eradicate it; but the provisions cited do not
specifically establish its illegality. More importantly, the provisions defendant cites do not in any
way support the notion that a private actor may destroy buckthorn or “contraband” on another
person’s property. Simply put, the buckthorn at issue here still constituted property of another: it
was not defendant’s to destroy. As the court noted, nothing about the characterization of buckthorn
as an invasive species or the fact that owners who eliminate it may receive a mitigation credit,
suggests that defendant therefore had the authority to destroy someone else’s buckthorn. The
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ordinances cited simply do not countenance one property owner deciding the worth of another
owner’s property and taking unauthorized steps to destroy it.
¶ 67 Defendant asserts that she is not arguing that the statutes entitle her to “self-help” but,
rather, that they establish buckthorn is contraband that is no different than an illegal narcotic and,
“[w]hile nothing specifically entitles [defendant] to self-help to destroy it, it also is not a crime to
destroy an illegal substance.” She contends that there is no legal basis to prosecute the deprivation
of property where the property was illegal in the first place. However, the cases that defendant
cites for the proposition that the Village may not “prosecute someone for destroying someone
else’s property that is illegal” do not stand for that proposition. Specifically, defendant cites
People v. Moore, 410 Ill. 241, 247 (1951), Tranchita v. Dep’t of Natural Resources, 2020 IL App
(1st) 191251, ¶ 17, People v. Fratto, 32 Ill. App. 2d 354 (1961), and People v. Wrest, 345 Ill. App.
186 (1951), for the proposition that a person may not assert legal ownership or a right to possession
of property that is contraband. However, in those cases, the party that seized the “contraband” was
a government actor, and the issue was whether, for example, the property was, in fact, contraband
such that the owner had a claim for its return. Here, the Village prosecuted its own ordinance
because defendant was acting as a private citizen to destroy buckthorn on the property of another.
¶ 68 In sum, we reject defendant’s claim that the charge against her was unsustainable as a
matter of law because of the nature of the substance destroyed.
¶ 69 B. Accountability Raised After Trial
¶ 70 Next, defendant argues that her due process rights were violated where, although she was
charged as a principal with violating Municipal Code section 15-29.1, a section which does not
expressly provide for accountability liability, the court then assisted the Village by conducting its
own research and finding Municipal Code section 1-17, which presented a theory of liability upon
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which the Village could proceed. Defendant argues that, even if we do not find improper the
court’s decision to conduct research on a theory of prosecution that it, itself, had raised, the court
erred in concluding that the evidence and argument at trial sufficiently put her on notice of what
she was charged with, when that was the “duty of the charging instrument.” She argues that, even
if the complaint apprised her of the fact that she hired someone to conduct the work, it still charged
her under a substantive section that made no reference to section 1-17 or accountability. Defendant
asserts that, at trial, she knew that her actions, as alleged, did not amount to a violation under the
section she was charged with and was never advised that the “Village was proceeding under the
Accountability Section under 1-17 *** since the Village was unaware of the provision[’]s
existence until the [t]rial [c]ourt brought it up.” Defendant concludes that, if charged on an
accountability theory, due process requires that she be informed of the correct section under which
she is being charged.
¶ 71 Procedural due process is guaranteed by the United States and Illinois Constitutions.
People v. Bradley, 2017 IL App (4th) 150527, ¶ 15 (citing U.S. Const., amend. XIV, § 1; Ill. Const.
1970, art. 1, § 2). Due process is satisfied when a party receives a hearing with adequate notice of
the charges and an opportunity to be heard. Reichert v. Court of Claims of State of Illinois, 203
Ill. 2d 257, 261 (2003). We review de novo a due process claim. Bradley, 2017 IL App (4th)
150527, ¶ 13.
¶ 72 Here, we cannot conclude that defendant lacked notice of the charges against her or an
opportunity to be heard. The complaint charged defendant with violating Municipal Code section
15-29.1, where she hired ATC to remove her neighbor’s buckthorn. Section 15-29.1 is the specific
offense with which defendant was charged, but the complaint clearly charged her with violating it
by hiring someone else to remove the buckthorn. Section 1-17, in itself, does not define an
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unlawful or prohibited act so much as it serves as a global provision that expressly allows liability
under any Municipal Code provision if an actor, for example, “caused” the violation to occur. As
such, even if not specified in the complaint here, defendant was charged with the only provision
she allegedly violated, i.e., section 15-29.1, and section 1-17 simply allowed her to be charged
with causing the violation by hiring ATC to remove the buckthorn. Accordingly, despite her
attempts to argue to the contrary, the complaint clearly put defendant on notice concerning the
theory of liability against her.
¶ 73 The cases upon which defendant relies are distinguishable. In both People v. Millsap, 189
Ill. 2d 155 (2000), and People v. Laabs, 2011 IL App (3d) 090913, ¶ 22, the criminal defendants
were charged as principals, and, then, the juries were instructed on a new theory of guilt,
accountability, after deliberations had begun. Here, at the outset, the complaint charged defendant
with violating the Municipal Code by hiring someone else to take action that caused damage to
property. Similarly, in People v. Panozzo, 2022 IL App (3d) 190499, ¶ 49, at a jury instruction
conference, the State for the first time indicated that it was pursuing three separate acts as
independent violations of a no-stalking order, as opposed to the one charged in the information.
Here, unlike in Panozzo, where the defendant was not provided with adequate notice of the number
of acts the State was pursuing, defendant here was always charged with one violation and that did
not change. Defendant was provided with the opportunity to present evidence and argue whether,
in fact, she hired ATC to take down her neighbor’s buckthorn. She did so, before the court raised
the accountability question. As such, even if the complaint had specifically referenced section 1-
17, defendant has not explained what other argument or evidence she would or could have
presented. In sum, defendant has not demonstrated that she was denied due process or was
prejudiced.
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¶ 74 We further reject defendant’s contention that the trial court acted improperly by raising the
issue of accountability or conducting independent research. First, although defendant suggests
that the Village was completely unaware of authority allowing defendant to be liable for acts ATC
performed and that, instead, it simply leaped at an opportunity the court presented on its behalf, in
fact, the bystander’s report reflects that, when the court asked whether the Municipal Code allowed
liability for the conduct of another, the prosecuting attorney answered that “it did, and that he
would attempt to locate the relevant provision.” (Emphasis added.) Defendant’s omission of this
critical portion of the quotation from the bystander’s report is, we can only presume, an attempt to
intentionally mislead this court. The Village was not aware of the provision solely because the
court brought it to the Village’s attention; rather, the Village understood that the authority existed,
but did not have the citation at hand.
¶ 75 Second, and as noted by the trial court, there is nothing inherently partial about the court’s
efforts to confirm that prosecution was proper. The record reflects that the court raised the question
before both parties around 6 p.m., after a long day and after the courtroom staff had already worked
past normal hours, and it and the Village prosecutor simply did not have the relevant citation at
their fingertips. The court later located the provision, emailed it to both parties, and gave them an
opportunity to submit any additional provisions or authority desired. Thus, although defendant
seeks to portray the court as an advocate for the Village, the record before us instead reflects the
court simply confirming the particulars of the Village’s authority to pursue the theory that was
charged in the complaint. If anything, raising the issue could have benefitted defendant, who had
not previously moved for dismissal or argued that prosecution under an accountability theory as
improper. This series of events simply does not reflect a changed theory of liability or improper
advocacy by the court.
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¶ 76 Finally, the only cases defendant cites to suggest that the court erred in conducting research
and locating the relevant provision concern the concept that, where a party does not develop an
argument, an appellate court will not research and argue the point on its behalf. See e.g., In re
Estate of Divine, 263 Ill. App. 3d 799, 809 (1994) (citing Nicholl v. Scaletta, 104 Ill. App. 3d 642
(1982)). While defendant is correct that Divine noted that both trial and appellate courts must take
the case as it is presented to them (Divine, 263 Ill. App. 3d at 809), the context again was the
propriety of raising issues or arguments not presented by the parties. Ironically, defendant
challenges that the trial court raised an issue that might have benefitted defendant; in the end, it
did not, but the cited cases simply do not reflect that the trial court engaged in improper advocacy
here.
¶ 77 In sum, we reject defendant’s argument that she was charged with one theory of liability
and then ambushed with another. In fact, the complaint always charged her with a violation of
section 15-29.1 based on a theory of liability authorized by section 1-17.
¶ 78 C. Municipal Code Section 1-17
¶ 79 Next, defendant argues that Municipal Code section 1-17 lists seven disjunctives that
suffice to establish liability, but the complaint did not specify which one she was charged with
violating. Again, section 1-17 provides, “Whenever in this code any act or omission is made
unlawful or prohibited it shall include causing, allowing, permitting, aiding, abetting, suffering or
concealing the fact of such act or omission.” Municipal Code § 1-17. As such, defendant asserts
that, even if properly charged, there was vast uncertainty in determining which language she would
have had to prepare to defend against, and she could not prepare a defense after the trial court
“constructively amended the complaint” following the close of evidence. Defendant further asserts
that “causing” the hiring of ATC to remove the buckthorn is not the same as “allowing” ATC to
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do so. She notes that, although raised posttrial, the court addressed only the lack of definitions in
the section and not her argument that she did not know which of the different theories she was
being charged with. Finally, defendant argues that she could not have raised the issue pretrial
because section 1-17 was first raised after trial. “Defendant could not possibly have raised a
challenge to a section that neither party including the Village, who brought the charge, knew
existed.”
¶ 80 As previously noted, procedural due process is satisfied when a party receives a hearing
with adequate notice of the charges and an opportunity to be heard. Reichert, 203 Ill. 2d at 261.
We review de novo a due process claim. Bradley, 2017 IL App (4th) 150527, ¶ 13.
¶ 81 Again, we reject defendant’s argument. A charging instrument is insufficient only if the
disjunctive creates uncertainty as to the charges against the defendant and prevents the defendant
from preparing a defense thereto. See, e.g., People v. Bergeson, 255 Ill. App. 3d 601, 603 (1994).
Here, the complaint charged that defendant violated section 15-29.1 in that she,
“knowingly hired Advanced Tree Care to enter upon the property at 370 Shenandoah Court
and remove approximately 20 Buckthorn plants covering approximately 85 feet of the
property line, causing damage to said property, which is owned by the beneficiaries of the
Pauline Tanzillo Trust.” (Emphases added.)
¶ 82 Thus, the complaint’s descriptions of “knowingly hiring” ATC to remove the buckthorn
and “causing damage” to the property, which were not used in the disjunctive, specifically
described the charge against defendant of criminal damage to property in section 15-29.1. The
disjunctive of which defendant presently complains appears in section 1-17’s description of how
unlawful or prohibited acts under the Municipal Code include causing, permitting, concealing, etc.
those acts. Thus, the complaint was not uncertain as to the charge of criminal damage to property
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against defendant. As such, she suggests that section 1-17’s use of disjunctive terms renders
uncertain which actions she took under that section. Again, we disagree. We note that the
complaint used the term “causing,” which is a verb specified in section 1-17. Further, “knowingly
hiring” ATC to remove the buckthorn is sufficiently akin to “causing,” such that we are not
convinced that section 1-17, particularly when read in conjunction with the complaint, caused such
uncertainty that defendant lacked notice of the charge against her or was at all prejudiced in
preparing a defense.
¶ 83 Defendant’s reliance on People v. Heard, 47 Ill. 2d 501, 504-05 (1970), is misplaced.
There, the disjunctive terms were manners of charging the offense itself. For example, in Heard,
the charging instrument charged the defendants in disjunctive terms with gambling by “having set
up a policy game or promoted a policy game or sold tickets,” etc. 5 The court noted,
“While a charge which follows the language of the statute defining the crime and
uses the disjunctive ‘or’ will be sufficient under some circumstances, it will not be
sufficient where the statute names disparate and alternative acts, any one of which will
constitute the offense. The statute here named specific acts which constitute the crime of
gambling, some of which acts are clearly disparate and alternative. The promoting of a
policy game is not the same act as transferring a policy ticket, for example. The use of the
5
Specifically, the instrument charged that the defendants,
“set up or promoted a Policy Game or (Sold) or (Offered to Sell) or (transferred) a ticket
or (share) for a lottery or (sold) or (offered to sell) or (transferred) or (knowingly possessed) a
policy ticket or other similar device: To Wit: Policy results tickets, Policy bet writings and other
related gambling policy paraphernalia.” Heard, 47 Ill. 2d at 504.
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disjunctive under these circumstances causes uncertainty and conjecture as to which of the
alternatives the accused is charged with committing.” (Internal citations omitted.) Heard,
47 Ill. 2d at 504-05.
¶ 84 Similarly, in Bergeson, this court noted that, for certain offenses that can be committed in
a variety of ways, a charging instrument merely parroting the language of the statute is insufficient
because a wide variety of conduct might be included. Bergeson, 255 Ill. App. 3d at 603. However,
where a complaint does more than merely charge in the language of the statute, it may sufficiently
inform a defendant of the specific conduct charged to allow for preparation of a defense. Id.
¶ 85 Again, here, the complaint did not simply parrot language from the Municipal Code.
Rather, it specified precisely that defendant was charged with criminal damage to property based
upon knowingly hiring ATC to remove buckthorn on specific property owned by another and
causing damage to that property. In sum, we reject the argument that section 1-17’s disjunctive
terms violated her right to due process.
¶ 86 D. Sufficiency of the Evidence
¶ 87 Defendant next argues that there was insufficient evidence to find her guilty on an
accountability theory. Defendant notes that she testified that she did not ask Bramucci to cut down
anything on the Tanzillo property, and the court’s failure to find her credible is against the manifest
weight of the evidence. Specifically, defendant points out that Bramucci’s interpretation of her
statement to him—that she was ready to remove the remainder of the buckthorn—as meaning that
she wanted him to remove the buckthorn from the Tanzillo property was vague, was only his
interpretation, and was not supported by the invoice, which lists work only on defendant’s
property. In addition, defendant notes that no evidence concerning property lines was introduced
to established that the buckthorn was cut from the Tanzillo property, and only uncorroborated
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testimony and speculation was introduced to establish even by a preponderance of the evidence
that defendant cut buckthorn from that property.
¶ 88 A municipality’s action to enforce an ordinance is quasi-criminal but is “tried and reviewed
as a civil proceeding.” Village of Plainfield v. American Cedar Designs, Inc., 316 Ill. App. 3d
130, 135 (2000). An ordinance violation must be proved by a preponderance of the evidence,
meaning it is more likely than not that the violation occurred. Ill. S. Ct. R. 578 (eff. Dec. 7, 2011);
City of Peoria v. Heim, 229 Ill. App. 3d 1016, 1017 (1992). We consider on appeal whether the
trial court’s judgment was against the manifest weight of the evidence. County of Kankakee v.
Anthony, 304 Ill. App. 3d 1040, 1048 (1999). A decision is against the manifest weight of the
evidence when the opposite conclusion is apparent, or the court’s findings are unreasonable. See,
e.g., Eychaner v. Gross, 202 Ill. 2d 228, 252 (2002).
¶ 89 Here, the court’s conclusion that the Village proved defendant’s ordinance violation by a
preponderance of the evidence was not unreasonable. Specifically, although defendant takes issue
with the court’s decision to find Bramucci credible, such credibility findings are specifically in the
realm of the finder of fact. Indeed, in a bench trial, it is the job of the trial judge, sitting as the
factfinder, to make determinations about witness credibility and those determinations are entitled
to great deference. See, e.g., People v. Siguenza-Brito, 235 Ill.2d 213, 224 (2009). Defendant
contends that Bramucci’s testimony was unsupported, because the invoice listed only her property
address. However, the court could have reasonably found that only defendant’s address was listed
because she was, in fact, the client being billed for the work that ATC performed. Moreover, the
court could have reasonably credited Bramucci’s interpretation of defendant’s request, given that
she had been his client for several years, they had multiple conversations concerning the
buckthorn, ATC had performed trimming and other work on the buckthorn more than once, and
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they had previously discussed removing it and obtaining permission from the neighbor before
doing so. Defendant notes that Bramucci’s work for the Village provided him incentive to protect
ATC for its own mistakes, but the court was aware of this potential bias before ruling. We also
note that Bramucci testified that the buckthorn damaged defendant’s property and he explained
how it created muddy conditions and dead areas on her yard, which the court could have found
enhanced Bramucci’s credibility as a balanced and honest witness. As such, we cannot find
unreasonable the court’s decision to find Bramucci credible.
¶ 90 Further, we disagree with defendant that the court’s finding that the removed buckthorn
was on the Tanzillo property was against the manifest weight of the evidence. First, the court
credited Tanzillo’s testimony that he, an excavating contractor for approximately 45 years and
familiar with property lines, located the property boundary pins with a metal detector and then
used string between the pins to demarcate the property line. Tanzillo testified that the removed
buckthorn was located on the Tanzillo property. Second, the court found that, because defendant
testified that ATC removed the wrong bushes, she effectively conceded that they were not on her
property. Third, according to the trial court, when defendant communicated to Bramucci to stop
the work because the neighbors were upset, she did not complain to him that the company had
removed the wrong bushes, nor tell the Tanzillo family that ATC had made a mistake. In her reply
brief, defendant notes that the bystander’s report does not indicate whether she was ever asked
questions along those lines or what her responses were, but that she did testify that she was scared
of the Tanzillos, which might explain why she did not engage in conversation with them, and that
she had asked Bramucci to stop the work. And while “no reason was given” for why she asked
Bramucci to stop, defendant asserts that she was not required to give one. She continues, “if she
had hired and paid Bramucci to remove buckthorn, even though she did not communicate a reason
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to him, there must have been a reason she asked him to stop,” and she then surmises that the reason
could have been that she learned her neighbor’s property had been compromised. Yet, it was for
the trial court, not this appellate court, to decide the weight to give the evidence and any inferences
to be derived therefrom. See e.g., People v. Nelson, 246 Ill. App. 3d 824, 832 (1993) (“particularly
in a bench trial, it is the function of the trial court to determine the credibility of the witnesses, the
weight to be given their testimony and the inferences to be drawn from the evidence” and it “may
accept or reject as much of the testimony as it wishes and draw reasonable inferences therefrom.”
Notably, it “is not required to believe the defendant's testimony.”)
¶ 91 Moreover, and again, the ordinance violation needed to be established by only a
preponderance of the evidence, i.e., that it more likely than not occurred, not by the more stringent
beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard, which the court here acknowledged might have required
another conclusion. The court’s determination that the evidence rendered it more likely than not
that defendant knowingly and willfully hired ATC to remove the buckthorn from the Tanzillo
property was not unreasonable. Other than her own testimony, the fact that the invoice reasonably
lists only her address on it, and her challenges to Bramucci’s testimony, which we have rejected,
defendant offers no affirmative evidence that would render the court’s decision as being against
the manifest weight of the evidence. In sum, we disagree with defendant that the court’s finding
that the Village established its case by a preponderance of the evidence was erroneous.
¶ 92 E. Cumulative Error
¶ 93 Finally, defendant argues that, based upon the cumulative effect of the several errors raised
on appeal, this court cannot be confident that defendant received a fair trial. She notes that her
conviction leads to an absurd result, where she was convicted of destroying unlawful contraband
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to which her neighbor had no valid property right. Defendant concludes that the pervasive pattern
of errors and prejudice requires that we reverse her conviction or remand for a new trial.
¶ 94 When considering whether a defendant was deprived of a fair trial due to cumulative error,
we must consider whether a substantial right was affected “to such a degree that [we] cannot
confidently state that defendant’s trial was fundamentally fair.” People v. Blue, 189 Ill. 2d 99, 138
(2000).
¶ 95 Here, we have rejected defendant’s arguments and have not found error. As such, there
can be no cumulative error.
¶ 96 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 97 For the reasons stated, the judgment of the circuit court of Lake County is affirmed.
¶ 98 Affirmed.
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