delivered the opinion of the court:
Defendants Richard and Joy Lynn Galuska, husband and wife, appeal from the circuit court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of plaintiff Barry Epstein on his complaint for fraudulent conveyance brought under section 5 of the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act (740 ILCS 160/5 (West 2002)). For the reasons that follow, we dismiss defendants’ appeal.
The instant litigation stems from a 1992 lawsuit and subsequent judgment secured by plaintiff against Richard Galuska (Richard) to enforce guarantees and collect on several loans he had made to Richard in the 1980s. Richard’s partnership in National Gas Associates (NGA) and that company’s involvement in National Gas & Electric Corp. (NGEC) had resulted in substantial losses which necessitated loans from plaintiff both to Richard personally and to NGEC. In September 1993, plaintiff and Richard reached a settlement agreement, which included a warranty by Richard of the source of losses both by NGA partnership and in Richard’s personal accounts with Goldman Sachs & Co.
The settlement agreement required Richard to pay $30,000 by February 28, 1994, on his personal debt and an additional $25,000 on the loan to NGEC by December 31, 1997. The agreement also provided that, upon default, judgment would be entered against Richard in the amount of $37,450 as to his personal loan and in the amount of $25,000 as to the NGEC loan, including postjudgment interest. Plaintiff agreed to dismiss the lawsuit with prejudice, with the stipulation that the circuit court would retain jurisdiction for the purpose of enforcing the settlement agreement.
Richard defaulted on the first payment and plaintiff subsequently obtained a judgment
Richard filed multiple motions to dismiss, alleging that the 1993 settlement agreement released him from any claims plaintiff might have had against him. The initial motion additionally alleged that plaintiff had sought to have the circuit court’s chief judge intervene and overrule the court’s prior rulings staying judgment. The circuit court denied each motion.
In his response to plaintiffs motion, Richard argued that his prior dealings with plaintiff, specifically plaintiffs loans to NGEC, raised issues of partnership obligations between the parties and realleged plaintiffs dealings with the chief judge as an improper method of influencing the proceedings. Following arguments, the circuit court entered judgment against Richard in the amount of $41,977.85, which was comprised of the earlier judgments plaintiff sought plus statutory and prejudgment interest.
Richard filed a motion to reconsider, alleging that the 1993 settlement agreement had been amended and that the loans plaintiff had made to Richard in 1986 implicated a partnership between the parties in NGEC and that partnership obligations required plaintiff to turn over NGEC securities related to a federal lawsuit filed by Richard against Geoquest, Inc. Richard again raised the allegation that plaintiff had improperly communicated with the chief judge. The circuit court denied the motion on December 18, 1998.
Richard appealed the judgment, but later voluntarily dismissed the appeal, alleging that it was not a final and reviewable order.
Plaintiff commenced supplementary proceedings to cite Richard’s assets in July 1999. Richard filed a motion to quash, alleging that the judgment was nonfinal, that the proceedings were still subject to the 1995 stay order, and that plaintiff’s attorneys had sought review of the disparate orders entered by the trial judge and the judge presiding over the enforcement proceedings. The circuit court denied Richard’s motion, and the citation proceedings commenced.
During the citation examination, Richard revealed that, in September 1998, while plaintiff’s motion to reinstate and for judgment was pending, he recorded a declaration of trust conveying his interest in his and Joy Lynn’s marital residence, located at 643 Park Road in LaGrange Park (Property), to Joy Lynn, and that, in March 1999, he ordered a quitclaim deed conveying the Property from tenancy of the entirety in fee simple to Joy Lynn. At that time, the only asset Richard claimed was a 1996 federal default judgment he had obtained against Geoquest, which, at the time of Richard’s suit and ever since, was a dissolved corporation with no assets.
The Property had originally been held in joint tenancy and was conveyed into a tenancy by the entirety in October 1990. In July 1991, Richard executed a declaration of trust conveying the property to Joy Lynn in trust. He recorded the declaration of trust and the warranty deed conveying the Property into tenancy by the entirety in September 1998.
Plaintiff thereafter filed the instant complaint for fraudulent conveyance against both defendants, alleging violations of the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act (740 ILCS 160/1 et seq. (West 2002)) and seeking
Richard filed a counterclaim alleging a breach of fiduciary duty by plaintiff as a result of his failure to abide by partnership obligations incurred through his loans to Richard and NGEC. The counterclaim also alleged that plaintiffs letter to the chief judge amounted to an abuse of process and set forth claims for breach of promise of cooperation and quasi contract, conversion, interference with prospective advantage, and negligence.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Plaintiff argued that the sole purpose of the transfers was for Richard to avoid payment on the judgment awarded to plaintiff. Defendants argued that plaintiffs claims for fraudulent transfer lacked merit since the conveyances took place before plaintiff had filed any judgment liens and that the conveyances were not subject to the Act. In a written order, the circuit court found that the trust conveyance had been made for no consideration and was not effective until after Epstein became a creditor in 1994 and 1998, and that defendants failed to provide clear and convincing evidence to rebut the presumption that interspousal transfers that take place pending litigation are fraudulent. The circuit court granted summary judgment in favor of plaintiff on all counts alleged in his complaint and against defendants on each of their counterclaims. The court ordered that the conveyances be voided and awaited plaintiffs motion for foreclosure.
Defendants now appeal, contending that the circuit court erred in allowing plaintiff to pursue enforcement of the 1994 judgment and that issues of material fact remained as to the conveyances and the affirmative defenses raised by defendants.
This court reviews a trial court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Morris v. Margulis,
We first address plaintiffs motion to strike defendants’ brief and dismiss this appeal on grounds that their brief violates numerous supreme court rules governing appellate briefing and procedure and attempts to insert evidence that was not properly included in the certified record on appeal. We cannot help but concur.
While defendants appear pro se, their status does not relieve them of their burden of complying with this court’s rules. See Twardowski v. Holiday Hospitality Franchising, Inc.,
Defendants were also parties to an earlier case with similar circumstances, namely, First Illinois Bank & Trust v. Galuska,
Defendants have also been involved in several appeals in this court’s Second District. See Witkiewicz v. Galuska, Nos. 2—94—0488, 2—94—0286, 2 — 94—1190, cons. (1995) (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23); Elgin State Bank v. Galuska, No. 2—90— 0458 (1991) (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23); Elgin State Bank v. Galuska, No. 2—91—1334 (1992) (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23).
Of particular interest to this court is Galuska v. Blumenthal, No. 92 C 3781 (N.D. Ill. 1994), where plaintiff Joy Lynn sued the attorney representing First Illinois in its action for forcible entry and detainer, claiming he and his firm had violated the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (15 U.S.C. § 1601 et seq. (1988)) (FDCPA). Joy Lynn’s initial complaint was dismissed on grounds that her claims were barred by res judicata and had already been litigated in state court. Joy Lynn filed an amended complaint and Blumenthal moved for summary judgment, which the court granted, finding that the FDCPA was inapplicable, that her action was only filed to harass Blumenthal and his employer, that she had not made any reasonable inquiry into the facts or law of the case, that she made several misstatements to the court, and that she failed to allege any basis for seeking damages. The court also issued sanctions against Joy Lynn for her failure to demonstrate that her lawsuit had been presented for any proper purpose.
Plaintiff argues that defendants’ brief should be stricken and their appeal dismissed for their multiple violations of Supreme Court Rules 321 and 341 (155 Ill. 2d R. 321, 188 Ill. 2d R. 341). Where an appellant’s brief fails to comply with supreme court rules, this court has the inherent authority to dismiss the appeal. In re Marriage of Gallagher,
Supreme Court Rule 341 requires that appellant’s file a brief not exceeding 50 printed pages in length and a reply brief not exceeding 20 printed pages. 188 Ill. 2d R. 341(a). Defendants’ brief totals 72 pages, not including the appendix, and their reply brief totals 27 pages. Such experienced appellants, who otherwise conformed with all other sections of Rule 341, ought to know better than to burden this court with such cumbersome tomes.
The same rule also requires that an appellant’s statement of facts contain facts necessary to the understanding of the case, stated accurately and fairly and without argument. 188 Ill. 2d R. 341(e)(6). Defendant’s statement of facts, which
Supreme Court Rule 321 requires that the record on appeal consist of the judgment appealed from, the notice of appeal, and the entire original common law record. 155 Ill. 2d R. 321. Plaintiff contends that several of the documents defendants wish to include in the' record on appeal are not germane to the instant litigation and should be excluded. We concur.
This court need not consider records that were not filed as part of the common law record following the filing of a notice of appeal. Cala v. Gerami,
Defendants appear to take this court for fools and seem to labor under the presumption that we would take their appeal ignorant of their extensive, prolific, and sometimes ludicrous attempts to elude and forestall judgments against them and the enforcement thereof. A review of the above-cited cases to which they have been parties reveals a seemingly pathological obstinance to recognize the authority of Illinois courts and their duty to abide by judgments entered against them. Indeed, several cases deal directly with the questionable methods by which defendants either attempted to convey their interests in another residence or attempted to hinder the execution of a judgment concerning it. Defendants’ proclivity for levelling outlandish claims and counterclaims against their party-opponents, creditors, and judgment creditors is nothing short of baffling. We refuse to further enable this pathology and we therefore will not consider any of defendants’ contentions on appeal, as they all but ignore the propriety of the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment but rather seek to divert our attention to matters that have already been litigated, have nothing to do with the manner in which Richard conveyed his interest in the couple’s (apparently second) marital residence to Joy Lynn, and whose only bases in fact are ephemeral references to conversations and dealings Richard apparently had with plaintiff nearly two decades ago.
In short, we will not abide defendants’ attempt to perpetuate litigation that concluded long ago, and pursuant to our discretion to dismiss an appeal for violations of supreme court rules (In re Marriage of Gallagher,
Appeal dismissed.
CAMPBELL and MURPHY, JJ., concur.
