THE FOREST PRESERVE DISTRICT OF DU PAGE COUNTY, Plaintiff v. BROOKWOOD LAND VENTURE, Defendant-Appellee (National Housing Partnership, Defendant and Intervenor-Appellant; Marquette Properties, Inc., Defendant).
Second District No. 2-91-0745
Appellate Court of Illinois, Second District
Opinion filed June 3, 1992.
Christopher T. Van Wagner and Jerry A. Esrig, both of Epstein, Zaideman & Esrig, P.C., of Chicago (Robert J. Zaideman, of counsel), for appellant.
Thomas W. Fawell and Melbourne A. Noel, both of Katten, Muchin & Zavis, of Chicago, and Scott M. Day, of Helm & Day, of Naperville (David K. Schmitt, of counsel), for appellee.
JUSTICE NICKELS delivered the opinion of the court:
Intervenor, National Housing Partnership (NHP), appeals the order of the circuit court granting summary judgment to defendant, Brookwood Land Venture (Brookwood). NHP sought to participate in the just compensation determined by a jury as the fair-market value of certain property, which Brookwood owned and which was the subject of an underlying condemnation action. NHP‘s claim was based on a contract providing for such participation in the event Brookwood entered a sales or purchase agreement for the property within a given time frame. On appeal, NHP asserts that the circuit court erred in finding as a matter of law that: (1) the condemnation was not a contract for sale within the meaning of NHP‘s contract with Brookwood, and (2) if the condemnation was a contract for sale, such sale did not occur until after expiration of NHP‘s right to participate in the proceeds of the sale of the property. We affirm.
“(b) Seller [Brookwood] shall make a reasonable and good faith effort to sell the premises for cash to another buyer on such terms and conditions as are in the Seller‘s sole judgment acceptable to the Seller, provided only that Seller has no direct or indirect ownership or control of said buyer, and that the purchase/sale agreement is the result of good faith arm‘s length negotiations.
(c) If a contract for the sale of the Premises, as described in paragraph (b) above (the ‘Subsequent Contract‘) is entered into prior to March 1, 1988, Purchaser [NHP] shall be entitled to participate in the ‘Net Proceeds’ (as hereinafter defined) resulting therefrom in accordance with the following:
(i) if the Net Proceeds are less than $1,600,000.00, Purchaser shall receive $160,000.00.
(ii) if the Net Proceeds exceed $1,600,000.00, Purchase shall receive the sum of $160,000.00 plus fifty percent (50%) of the amount by which Net Proceeds exceed $1,600,000.00, but in no event shall Purchaser receive more than $307,250.00.”
After provision for a possible installment contract, the termination agreement defined “Net Proceeds” as the total cash consideration less expenses for title insurance, escrow charges, transfer taxes, real
Early in February 1987, the Forest Preserve District of Du Page County (District) approached Brookwood to acquire the property. After Brookwood rejected the District‘s offer of $1,463,400 for the property, further negotiations were considered futile and ceased and a condemnation action was filed February 24, 1987. Although NHP was initially named a defendant, it was dismissed with prejudice in January 1988 with respect to any legal title or fee interest in the property, but without prejudice as to its rights under the termination agreement. NHP filed a complaint in intervention in June 1988 seeking injunctive and declaratory relief and damages based on the termination agreement.
In April 1989 after a jury trial, just compensation for the property was set at $2,211,898, which was upheld on appeal. (Forest Preserve District v. Brookwood Land Venture (1990), 199 Ill. App. 3d 973.) After completion of the condemnation proceeding, the circuit court allowed NHP‘s petition to intervene finding that its right to participate in the proceeds of a sale required the court to reach the issue now before us of whether the condemnation was a sale as that term was defined and used in the termination agreement. NHP and Brookwood filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and the circuit court granted Brookwood‘s motion. The circuit court found that the relevant provision of the termination agreement was only applicable to a voluntary transfer of title and that, in any event, the condemnation occurred outside the time frame allowed by the termination agreement. NHP timely appealed and now asserts that the court erred as a matter of law in finding that the termination agreement did not apply to transfer of title by condemnation filed but not concluded until after expiration of the contract.
Summary judgment is proper when the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. (
In construing the terms of a contract, a court looks first only to the language of the contract employed by the parties in describing their intent. (Berutti v. Dierks Foods, Inc. (1986), 145 Ill. App. 3d 931, 934.) If such language is clear and unambiguous, it will be
Condemnation, or eminent domain, is the process by which a sovereign exercises the power to “take” private property for public purposes subject to the constitutional requirement that just compensation be paid to the owner. (Department of Public Works & Buildings v. Kirkendall (1953), 415 Ill. 214, 217.) No taking in the constitutional sense occurs until a condemnation petition is filed, just compensation is ascertained, and such compensation is paid. (Towne v. Town of Libertyville (1989), 190 Ill. App. 3d 563, 568Towne, 190 Ill. App. 3d at 568; Griffin v. City of North Chicago (1983), 112 Ill. App. 3d 901, 906.) As a prerequisite to condemnation jurisdiction, the governmental body seeking to exercise its eminent domain powers must attempt to negotiate an agreement to purchase the subject property. (
In contrast, a contract for sale or purchase requires a meeting of the minds, or mutual assent to the terms of the contract. (D.B. Corkey Co. v. Koplin (1988), 176 Ill. App. 3d 1096, 1102.) Such assent is generally the result of offer and acceptance. (D.B. Corkey Co., 176 Ill. App. 3d at 1102.) Both a seller and a buyer have the right to select with whom each will contract, and neither can be forced to agree with another not of his choosing. (Davito v. Blakely (1968), 96 Ill. App. 2d 196, 201.) The terms of the contract must be definite before such meeting of the minds can occur and an agreement or contract can be deemed to have been reached. (D.B. Corkey Co., 176 Ill. App. 3d at 1102; Delcon Group, Inc. v. Northern Trust Corp. (1989), 187 Ill. App. 3d 635, 643.) Thus, a contract or agreement for sale or purchase is a consensual, voluntary relationship. With this fundamental distinction between acquisition by condemnation and transfer of title pursuant to a contract or agreement, we turn to NHP‘s argument that the “contract for sale” language of the termination agreement included transfer of title by condemnation.
The clear and unambiguous language of the termination agreement applies to a “purchase/sale agreement” that is “the result of good faith arm‘s length negotiations.” Such negotiations were completely subject to Brookwood‘s judgment as to what terms and conditions were acceptable, limited only by good faith as is implicit in the performance of every contract (see, e.g., Madonna v. Giacobbe (1989), 190 Ill. App. 3d 859, 866). The termination agreement expressly defines the “net proceeds” in which NHP was entitled to participate as the cash price less only those expenses traditionally associated with a voluntary, arm‘s length negotiated sale by a willing seller. Finally, the fundamental purpose of the termination agreement was to allow NHP to recoup some of the price it paid for what eventually became in essence an option agreement. NHP‘s ability to receive such recoupment was not only expressly limited in duration, but subject to Brookwood‘s good-faith willingness to become a seller on any given terms. We fail to find the challenged language ambiguous in light of the plain language of the termination agreement considered together with the language of the entire agreement in the context of its fundamental purpose, and we need look no further to determine the intent of the parties. The cases cited by NHP do not persuade us otherwise.
City of Chicago is initially and fundamentally distinguishable from the present instance in that there is no ambiguity in the termination agreement. In addition, NHP did not invest in the property speculating that its value would increase and generate a profit, but rather the purpose of the termination agreement was to allow NHP to extinguish both the risks and costs associated with its continued interest in the property. Finally, the limited recovery of NHP‘s expenses under the termination agreement, unlike the note in City of Chicago, was also expressly limited in duration. Thus, City of Chicago is not controlling because the termination agreement is not ambiguous, its purpose was not speculative investment, and it did not allow NHP unlimited recovery of its expenses.
Nor do we find NHP‘s citation of isolated references arising in inapposite contexts from other precedent persuasive. Vournas v. Montgomery County (1982), 53 Md. App. 243, 452 A.2d 1263, concerned an owner‘s attempt to avoid payment of a statutory transfer tax where the statute specifically defined such transfer as acts by the parties or by law through which title to property is conveyed from one person to another. (Vournas, 53 Md. App. at 252, 452 A.2d at 1269.) In discussing the claim of a landowner in Langston v. City of Miami Beach (Fla. App. 1971), 242 So. 2d 481, to just compensation for a portion of the private roadway abutting his property, the Florida court concluded that the government had the same rights upon completion of the condemnation as would a third party upon a bona fide sale. (Langston, 242 So. 2d at 482-83.) Finally, the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois
3 In light of our finding that the circuit court did not err in construing the unambiguous language of the termination agreement, it is unnecessary to consider whether the condemnation occurred at the point in time at which the condemnation complaint was filed or not until the condemnation was concluded and the just compensation determined by the jury was paid. However, we note that no taking occurs until just compensation is paid. (Towne, 190 Ill. App. 3d at 568.) Until such time, a governmental body is free to decline to proceed with the condemnation. (Department of Transportation v. La Salle National Bank (1981), 102 Ill. App. 3d 1093, 1099; see also, e.g., Commissioners of Lincoln Park v. Schmidt (1944), 386 Ill. 550.) So, too, during the time between the filing of a condemnation complaint and a jury‘s finding, the parties are free to continue to negotiate towards a consensual purchase agreement. Thus, an eminent domain proceeding is again distinct from a contractual relationship because in a condemnation proceeding the seller has neither the right to require performance nor a cause of action for damages caused by the government‘s failure to complete the process. (Cf.
Finally, Brookwood asserts that NHP‘s appeal of these issues was frivolous and seeks sanctions against NHP pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 375(b). (
We find no authority for parsing an appeal into individual issues in considering its merit, but rather “[a]n appeal will be deemed frivolous where it is not reasonably well grounded in fact and not warranted by existing law or a good-faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law” (
The order of the circuit court granting the motion for summary judgment of defendant, Brookwood Land Venture, is affirmed.
Affirmed.
BOWMAN, J., concurs.
JUSTICE MCLAREN, respectfully dissenting in part:
I respectfully dissent. I believe this appeal is frivolous and subject to sanctions pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 375(b) (
The majority opinion resolved the merits of the first trial court‘s ruling, but did not resolve the merits of the second trial court‘s ruling. I believe the appeal, dependent upon reversing the trial court‘s second ruling, is frivolous and is nothing more than a feeble attempt to force a large peg into a smaller square hole. The following is the entire argument of appellant regarding the trial court‘s second ruling. The appellant‘s brief states as follows:
“THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN HOLDING AS A MATTER OF LAW THAT THE TAKING BY CONDEMNATION, EVEN IF A SALE WITHIN THE MEANING OF THE TERMINATION AGREEMENT, DID NOT TAKE PLACE WITHIN THE TIME REQUIRED BY THAT AGREEMENT.
As part of the basis of its judgment in favor of Brookwood, the trial court concluded that the transfer of title of the Property through the process of condemnation did not ‘fall within the time limitations of the agreement.’ (SR. C187,
App. 2). Simply stated, there is absolutely no basis for this reading of the Termination Agreement. It is irrelevant that the condemnation award was not made and the monies not paid by the District until after March 1988, so long as the condemnation petition was filed before that date. [(Emphasis added.)] The time limits in the Termination Agreement refer only to the date of contracting and sets [sic] no deadline as to when the transaction must actually be concluded in order for NHP to be entitled to a portion of the proceeds.
By its express terms, the Termination Agreement contemplates that the ultimate sale might be consummated after March 1, 1988. Thus, paragraph 2(d) of the Termination Agreement provides:
‘If no Subsequent Contract [for the sale of the Property] is entered into by March 1, 1988, or if one previously entered into is terminated prior to its consummation after March 1, 1988, then this agreement shall terminate and be of no further force or effect ***. [APP. 48]’ (Emphasis added.)
The trial court simply misread the Termination Agreement in concluding that the condemnation was not timely.”
The appellant‘s reply brief states as follows:
“THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN HOLDING AS A MATTER OF LAW THAT THE TAKING BY CONDEMNATION, EVEN IF A SALE WITHIN THE MEANING OF THE TERMINATION AGREEMENT, DID NOT TAKE PLACE WITHIN THE TIME REQUIRED BY THAT AGREEMENT.
Without explanation, the trial court concluded that the transfer of title of the Property through the process of con-demnation did not ‘fall within the time limitations of the agreement.’ Brookwood now attempts to justify this misreading of the Termination Agreement by noting that the con-demnation judgment was entered on the jury‘s verdict well after the contract deadline of March 1, 1988. Brookwood ignores the fact, however, that this deadline refers not to consummation of the sale, but to the execution of a contract.
As noted in NHP‘s initial brief (and ignored by Brookwood), the Termination Agreement, by its express terms, con-templates that the ultimate sale might be consummated after March 1, 1988. Hence the key date is tied not to a sale, but to the execution of a contract for sale:
‘If no Subsequent Contract [for the sale of the Property] is entered into by March 1, 1988, or if one previously entered into is terminated prior to its consummation after March 1, 1988, then this agreement shall terminate and be of no further force or effect *** (emphasis added).’
This provision also renders irrelevant Brookwood‘s argument that the Forest Preserve District could have, after March 1, 1988, discontinued its efforts to obtain the property. If that happened, and if the sale was never consummated, the Termination Agreement would be deemed terminated and NHP would have no claim thereunder. The same would be true, under the above referenced language, if a private purchaser terminated its efforts to obtain title to the property prior to consummation of the sale after March 1, 1988. The parties clearly contemplated that a sale might fall apart in mid-stream, and that such an occurrence would negate NHP‘s rights. Of course, this did not happen, and the District did in fact purchase the Property.”
The argument wholly fails to establish, let alone address, that the filing of the condemnation suit by the adverse third party is the equivalent of a “subsequent contract entered into by March 1, 1988.” This equivalency is an essential element of appellant‘s theory of reversing the trial court‘s ruling and its final judgment. As it fails, so does the entire appeal. The appellant knew or ought to have known that a successful appeal was dependent upon reversal of the trial court‘s second ruling. The failure to properly address the second ruling resulted in a frivolous appeal.
By analogy, a trial court finds no liability in tort because there is no duty on the part of the defendant and the statute of repose has run. An appeal as to the existence of a duty may arguably be valid. However, the failure to properly address the ruling of the statute of repose ought to result in sanctions for a frivolous appeal pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 375(b). In this case, the appellant has failed to properly address the termination of the contract, under its own terms, prior to liability for breach of contract arising. Therefore, I would grant sanctions pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 375(b) (
