Country Club Estates Condominium Ass‘n v. Bayview Loan Servicing LLC
No. 1-16-2459
Appellate Court of Illinois, First District, Second Division
August 8, 2017
2017 IL App (1st) 162459
Illinois Official Reports
Appellate Court Caption: COUNTRY CLUB ESTATES CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. BAYVIEW LOAN SERVICING LLC and ALL UNKNOWN OCCUPANTS, Defendants (Bayview Loan Servicing LLC, Defendant-Appellee).
Decision Under Review: Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 15-M6-3500; the Hon. Camille E. Willis, Judge, presiding.
Judgment: Reversed and remanded.
Counsel on Appeal: Fullett Rosenlund Anderson PC, of Lake Zurich (Stuart A. Fullett, Jeffrey D. Swanson, and Antonio C. Capozzi, of counsel), for appellant.
Noonan & Lieberman, Ltd., of Chicago (James V. Noonan and Robert Reynolds, of counsel), for appellee.
OPINION
¶ 1 Defendant, Bayview Loan Servicing LLC (Bayview), purchased a condominium unit through a foreclosure sale confirmed in November 2014. At the time of the sale, the unit had accrued nearly $14,000 in unpaid monthly assessments to plaintiff, Country Club Estates Condominium Association (Association). But seven months after its purchase, despite a demand from the Association, Bayview refused to pay any assessments, past or present. Thus, in April 2015, the Association filed the present lawsuit against Bayview pursuant to the
¶ 2 Nearly two months after the lawsuit was filed, and seven months after Bayview acquired the unit, Bayview tendered to the Association a payment of $4771.85, which represented only the assessments that accrued after the foreclosure sale. Bayview then moved for summary judgment, arguing that under
¶ 3 We reverse and hold that, in order to extinguish presale assessments under
BACKGROUND
¶ 4 The following facts are undisputed. ¶ 5 On November 21, 2014, Bayview acquired title via sheriff‘s deed to a condominium unit located at 4002 West 193rd Street in Country Club Hills, Illinois. That unit is part of the Association, and pursuant to the Act, the unit owner is required to pay monthly assessments to the Association. The previous owner had unpaid assessments dating back to January 2011.
¶ 6 After it purchased the property at the foreclosure sale, Bayview failed to pay any assessments. On March 13, 2015, the Association sent Bayview a letter demanding payment of $18,379.26 in past-due assessments that accrued both before and after Bayview acquired the unit. When Bayview still refused to pay, the Association filed this lawsuit on April 27, 2015, seeking (i) possession of the unit and (ii) a judgment against Bayview for $18,659.26, plus late charges, interest, fines, chargebacks, and any assessments accruing after the filing of the action.
¶ 8 In response, the Association argued that, under our supreme court‘s interpretation of
¶ 9 The trial court granted Bayview‘s motion for partial summary judgment and denied the Association‘s motion for reconsideration. Following a prove-up, the court granted $5249.92 in postsale assessments to the Association. The court also entered a finding under
ANALYSIS
¶ 10 The Association argues, as it did before the trial court, that under 1010 Lake Shore, a foreclosure buyer must make prompt payment of current assessments in order to extinguish an association‘s lien for any presale amounts due and owing. It further argues that Bayview‘s delay of seven months in tendering payment of postsale assessments was not prompt as a matter of law, or, alternatively, that the reasonableness of Bayview‘s payment presents a material issue of fact precluding summary judgment.
¶ 11 Bayview argues that, under the plain language of
¶ 12 The interpretation of a statute is a question of law that we review de novo (Taddeo v. Board of Trustees of the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund, 216 Ill. 2d 590, 595 (2005)), as is the propriety of the trial court‘s grant of summary judgment (Allegis Realty Investors v. Novak, 223 Ill. 2d 318, 330 (2006)). In interpreting a statute, our main goal is to ascertain and effectuate the intent of the legislature. 1010 Lake Shore, 2015 IL 118372, ¶ 21. The best indicator of that intent is the language of the statute itself, given its plain and ordinary meaning. Id. If the language is unambiguous, we apply it as written, but where the language is unclear,
¶ 13
“(1) If any unit owner shall fail or refuse to make any payment of the common expenses or the amount of any unpaid fine when due, the amount thereof *** shall constitute a lien on the interest of the unit owner in the property ***.
***
(3) The purchaser of a condominium unit at a judicial foreclosure sale *** shall have the duty to pay the unit‘s proportionate share of the common expenses for the unit assessed from and after the first day of the month after the date of the judicial foreclosure sale ***. Such payment confirms the extinguishment of any lien created pursuant to paragraph (1) or (2) of this subsection (g) by virtue of the failure or refusal of a prior unit owner to make payment of common expenses ***”
765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1), (3) (West 2014) .
Under the plain language of this section, it is clear that a foreclosure buyer‘s duty to pay monthly assessments begins on “the first day of the month after the date of the judicial foreclosure sale.”
¶ 14 In determining the legislature‘s intent, we consult the legislative history of
“[T]he issue here is that within a condo building there are other condominium owners. They were not responsible for the delinquency, they didn‘t cause the foreclosure, but they as an association are responsible for paying the operating expenses and maintenance costs associated with that building. It‘s not their fault that there‘s a foreclosure, but they‘re going to have to eat the costs ***. *** There are costs to operating that building and the rest of the unit owners are going to end up paying the cost for the delinquency.” 94th Ill. Gen. Assem., House Proceedings, Apr. 11, 2006, at 36-37 (statements of Representative Hamos).
See also 94th Ill. Gen. Assem., House Proceedings, Apr. 10, 2006, at 22 (statements
¶ 15 Even though the legislators were discussing the 2006 amendment to the Act, their concerns about the difficulties faced by condominium associations are still pertinent to the interpretation of
¶ 16 Now, Bayview concedes that it owes the assessments that accrued since it purchased the unit—and it could not reasonably do otherwise, given the clear language of
¶ 17 In this regard, our supreme court‘s discussion of
“The first sentence of section 9(g)(3) plainly requires a foreclosure sale purchaser to pay common expense assessments beginning in the month following the foreclosure sale. The second sentence provides an incentive for prompt payment of those postforeclosure sale assessments ***. Accordingly, under the plain language of section 9(g)(3), the payment of postforeclosure sale assessments formally approves and makes certain the cancellation of the condominium association‘s lien.” (Emphasis added.) Id. ¶ 24.
Thus, 1010 Lake Shore acknowledges that a time requirement is implicit in section 9(g)(3), insofar as that section gives foreclosure buyers an “incentive for prompt payment.” If, as Bayview argues, a foreclosure sale buyer could withhold payment of postforeclosure sale assessments indefinitely and still obtain the benefit of section 9(g)(3), the statute would not provide any such incentive.
¶ 18 Bayview asserts that even without any time limit on extinguishment of an association‘s lien, the statute still incentivizes prompt payment of assessments as they become due because foreclosure buyers typically wish to unencumber and sell their acquisitions as soon as possible. But Bayview‘s own actions in this case belie such an argument. Bayview was in no apparent hurry to pay the assessments it
¶ 19 Bayview additionally argues that 1010 Lake Shore is distinguishable because the foreclosure buyer in that case did not make any payments, prompt or otherwise; thus, the court‘s discussion of “prompt payment” is merely dictum. But we are not free to ignore the dicta of our supreme court. As our supreme court has repeatedly stated, “‘Even obiter dictum of a court of last resort can be tantamount to a decision and therefore binding in the absence of a contrary decision of that court.‘” Exelon Corp. v. Department of Revenue, 234 Ill. 2d 266, 282 (2009) (quoting Cates v. Cates, 156 Ill. 2d 76, 80 (1993)); see also People v. Williams, 204 Ill. 2d 191, 207 (2003) (regardless of whether Illinois Supreme Court‘s statement was best classified as judicial or obiter dictum, appellate court erred by not following it).2
¶ 20 Therefore, based on 1010 Lake Shore and the statements of our legislature concerning the policies animating section 9(g), we hold that in order to extinguish an association‘s lien for preforeclosure sale assessments, a foreclosure buyer must make “prompt” payment of current assessments. In keeping with the well-established principle that a mortgage foreclosure proceeding is a proceeding in equity (PNC Bank, National Ass‘n v. Wilson, 2017 IL App (2d) 151189, ¶ 25 (citing Federal National Mortgage Ass‘n v. Bryant, 62 Ill. App. 3d 25, 27 (1978))), the question of whether a particular payment is “prompt” is fact-based, taking the particular circumstances and the equities of the situation into account.
¶ 21 We note that, in denying the Association‘s motion for reconsideration, the trial court stated that it was unsure what “prompt” payment would mean in this context and requested guidance on that matter if, in fact, we held that prompt payment was required. For that, we look to the language of the statute itself, which provides that foreclosure buyers become responsible for paying assessments “from and after the first day of the month after the date of the judicial foreclosure sale” (
¶ 22 Bayview argues that such a rule is unfair to foreclosure buyers for two reasons: first, according to Bayview, it gives condominium associations an incentive to wrongfully refuse a buyer‘s tender of postsale assessments in an effort to recover all past-due assessments and, second, given the delay in some cases between the sale and the order confirming the sale, it would be unreasonable to expect foreclosure buyers to pay condominium assessments before ownership of the property has been confirmed by the court.
¶ 23 Courts can and should take such circumstances into account when determining whether a buyer‘s payment of assessments is “prompt.” Thus, for instance, if a buyer‘s prompt tender of all postsale assessments is unreasonably refused by a condominium association, any further delay in payment would clearly be the fault of the association rather than the buyer. See State Bank of Geneva v. Sorenson, 167 Ill. App. 3d 674, 680 (1988) (a party seeking equitable relief cannot take advantage of its own wrongdoing). Similarly, if it takes months for a judicial sale to be confirmed by the court, but the buyer pays its assessments shortly after the confirmation order (dating back to the month following the sale), the buyer‘s payment could be deemed prompt under the circumstances. But no such mitigating facts are evident here. The record does not state when the foreclosure sale occurred, but we know that Bayview acquired title to the unit on November 21, 2014, and yet did not tender any payments until June 22, 2015. The record does not disclose any facts that would explain or mitigate this seven-month delay in payment.
¶ 24 Bayview additionally argues that this case is analogous to Pembrook Condominium Ass‘n-One v. North Shore Trust & Savings, 2013 IL App (2d) 130288, and 5510 Sheridan Road Condominium Ass‘n v. U.S. Bank, 2017 IL App (1st) 160279, in which a foreclosure buyer‘s tender of postsale assessments extinguished the condominium association‘s lien for presale assessments. For the reasons that follow, we find both cases distinguishable.
¶ 25 The Pembrook defendant purchased a condominium unit at a foreclosure sale on April 13, thus becoming responsible for monthly assessments from May 1 onwards. On June 18, defendant tendered a check to the condominium association for its May and June assessments. The Pembrook court held that, under section 9(g)(3) of the Act, defendant‘s tender extinguished the association‘s lien for assessments that came due before the foreclosure sale. Pembrook, 2013 IL App (2d) 130288, ¶ 17.
¶ 26 But Pembrook does not hold that a foreclosure buyer may delay payment indefinitely and still claim the benefit of section 9(g)(3). The court held only that defendant‘s payment, which it made about a month and a half after its first payment became due, was sufficient under the circumstances. There is, in our view, a material distinction between a seven-week delay and a seven-month delay in payment. And the Association here did not jump the gun in filing suit in an effort to obtain payment of presale assessments. Rather, Bayview‘s inaction and its steadfast refusal to pay forced the Association to file suit and incur additional expense. Finally, to the extent that Pembrook might be read as carte
¶ 27 In Sheridan Road, a decision from a different division of this court, the plaintiff condominium association argued that section 9(g)(3) required a foreclosure buyer to pay postsale assessments by “the first day of the month after the date of the judicial foreclosure sale” (
¶ 28 We do not disagree with this conclusion; like the Sheridan Road court, we do not read that statutory phrase as an explicit deadline for payment. Rather, for the reasons stated above, we hold that payment must be prompt under the circumstances (though not necessarily strictly by the first of the month after the sale) to extinguish an association‘s lien. Indeed, the Sheridan Road court acknowledged that ensuring prompt payment was one of the legislature‘s key concerns in enacting the present version of section 9(g)(3):
“[T]he General Assembly was aware of and concerned with the possibility that purchasers who became liable for postsale expenses would not pay in a timely manner. To address that problem, the legislature designed section 9(g)(3) to encourage prompt payment of postsale expenses by setting their payment as a precondition to the extinguishment of association liens for presale expenses.” (Emphases in original.) Id. ¶ 24.
Additionally, as with Pembrook, to the extent that Sheridan Road may be read as imposing no timing deadline whatsoever on foreclosure buyers, we find that conclusion to be inconsistent with 1010 Lake Shore.
¶ 29 Finally, Bayview argues that even if 1010 Lake Shore imposes a requirement of prompt payment, that requirement should not be applied retroactively in this case. But 1010 Lake Shore did not create a requirement of promptness; it merely articulated the requirement that was already implicit in the purpose underlying section 9(g)(3). See id. (noting that “the legislature designed section 9(g)(3) to encourage prompt payment of post-sale expenses” (emphasis in original)) Accordingly, we do not find that Bayview‘s pre-1010 Lake Shore tender is exempt from the timeliness requirement of section 9(g)(3).
¶ 30 Thus, we turn to consider whether summary judgment for Bayview as to the presale expenses was proper. We cannot discern from the record what reasons, if any, existed for Bayview‘s delay in payment. And the Association did not file a cross-motion for summary judgment, so we are not in a position to say that Bayview‘s tender was not prompt as a matter of law. Because we have determined that the trial court erred in entering summary judgment in favor of Bayview, we remand for further proceedings to resolve whether Bayview‘s tender of postsale assessments was timely under section 9(g)(3).
CONCLUSION
¶ 31 We hold that, in order to obtain extinguishment of a condominium association‘s lien for presale assessments under section 9(g)(3) of the Act, a foreclosure buyer must make prompt payment of postsale assessments. We therefore reverse the trial court‘s grant of partial summary
¶ 32 Reversed and remanded.
