delivered the opinion of the court:
The plaintiffs, M. Lois Jackim, Meyer and Gertrude Kruglik, and Margery Shurman, are residents of a new retirement community known as Classic Residence by Hyatt at The Glen (the Glen), which is owned, operated, and managed by the defendant, CC-Lake, Inc., and situated north of Chicago in Glenview, Illinois, on land formerly occupied by the Glenview Naval Air Station.
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CC-Lake, Inc. (CC-Lake or provider), holds a permit under the Illinois Life Care Facilities Act (210 ILCS 40/1 et seq. (West 2002)) to contract to provide at the Glen a continuum of care known as “life care” to individuals who are at least 62 years old. Each of the four plaintiffs executed a written “continuing care residency
A section 2 — 615 motion poses the question of whether the complaint states a cause of action. Doe v. Chicago Board of Education,
The life care contract at issue was expressly “executed in accordance with the Illinois Life Care Facilities Act [(210 ILCS 40/1 (West 2002))] and will be in effect for the rest of [the contracting individual’s] life” provided that individual complies with certain payment obligations and does not give CC-Lake “just cause” for termination. The statute referenced in the contract indicates in relevant part:
“(c) ‘Life care contract’ means a contract to provide to a person for the duration of such person’s life or for a term in excess of one year, nursing services, medical services or personal care services, in addition to maintenance services for such person in a facility, conditioned upon the transfer of an entrance fee to the provider of such services in addition to or in lieu of the payment of regular periodic charges for the care and services involved.
(d) ‘Provider’ means a person who provides services pursuant to a life care contract.
(e) ‘Resident’ means a person who enters into a life care contract with a provider, or who is designated in a life care contract to be a person provided with maintenance and nursing, medical or personal care services.
(f) ‘Facility’ means a place or places in which a provider undertakes to provide a resident with nursing services,medical services or personal care services, in addition to maintenance services for a term in excess of one year or for life pursuant to a life care contract. ***
(g) ‘Living unit’ means an apartment, room or other area within a facility set aside for the exclusive use of one or more identified residents.
(h) ‘Entrance fee’ means an initial or deferred transfer to a provider of a sum of money or property, made or promised to be made by a person entering into a life care contract, which assures a resident of services pursuant to a life care contract.
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(j) ‘Medical services’ means those services pertaining to medical or dental care that are performed in behalf of patients at the direction of *** licensed *** professional and technical personnel.
(k) ‘Nursing services’ means those services pertaining to the curative, restorative and preventive aspects of nursing care ***.
(l) ‘Personal care services’ means assistance with meals, dressing, movement, bathing or other personal needs or maintenance, or general supervision and oversight of the physical and mental well-being of an individual, who is incapable of maintaining a private, independent residence or who is incapable of managing his person whether or not a guardian has been appointed for such individual.
(m) ‘Maintenance services’ means food, shelter and laundry services.” 210 ILCS 40/2 (West 2002).
With this terminology in mind, we set out additional facts from the parties’ life care agreement.
When construction is complete, provider CC-Lake will offer 296 independent living units at the Glen, consisting of 251 apartments in the main building and 45 villas. The independent living units will range in size from a 1-bedroom/l-bath apartment to a 2-bedroom/2 1 /2-bath villa with a den and an attached garage. Each unit comes with a fully equipped kitchen, smoke alarm, emergency call system, washer and dryer, and window and floor coverings. Residents may furnish the units as they wish, within the standards described in a community handbook. In addition to the independent living units, the Glen will also have a “care center” which will offer (a) private suites for memory support, (b) assisted living residences, and (c) private, skilled nursing suites. Provider CC-Lake is obligated to provide long-term care at the care center, including basic skilled nursing care, assisted living and memory support, and is not obligated to provide some of the other care defined in the Life Care Facilities Act, such as “medical services,” which encompasses physician care and dental care. 210 ILCS 40/2(j) (West 2002). If the Glen’s care center has not opened or is full, CC-Lake will pay for a resident to receive long-term care in a nearby facility. In addition, a “Care Team” consisting of four administrative and health care professionals will “monitor care at the Community, and participate in decisions regarding care and transfer.”
Individuals interested in becoming residents of the Glen and receiving long-term care from CC-Lake, however, must initially meet minimum financial and health criteria. A material misrepresentation in a resident’s application for acceptance into the community is one of the enumerated circumstances constituting “just cause” for the provider to terminate the relationship. Depending upon which independent living unit they select, residents of the Glen pay entrance fees ranging between $255,612
Monthly fees, which as indicated earlier are intended to cover all the Glen’s operating costs, may be adjusted upon 60 days’ notice. Some of the Glen’s specified operating costs result from the provision of meals, weekly housekeeping and semiannual window washing, weekly towel and linen service, social, cultural, and recreational activities, local group transportation, the emergency call system, space for storage and automobile parking, and routine property maintenance. The monthly fees also cover utilities, taxes, property insurance, liability insurance, employment expenses, the costs of maintaining, repairing and replacing capital items, including furnishings, fixtures and equipment, a management fee fixed at 8% of revenues, and an annual lease payment which is initially set at $661,000 and to be adjusted every 10 years for inflation.
Monthly fees are not affected by a resident’s temporary or permanent transfer from one of the Glen’s independent living units to the care center. A resident’s refusal to transfer to the care center when “requested” by the provider is another example of “just cause” for ending the relationship. The provider is entitled to “request” a resident’s transfer to another care setting at the Glen after having a “consultation” with its Care Team and the resident, or the resident’s physician, or the resident’s family members. In addition, a resident may “elect to move” from one independent living unit to another available independent living unit and may “request a transfer” to a different care setting within the community. If a resident makes what was expected to be a permanent transfer from an independent living unit to the care center but becomes able to return to residential living, the provider will offer a unit comparable to the one that was vacated, as soon as it becomes available. After initial occupancy, a resident has the right to terminate the life care agreement for any reason, by giving at least 60 days’ notice.
After agreeing to these terms in writing in December 2002, but prior to taking up residency at the Glen, plaintiff M. Lois Jackim paid an entrance fee of $366,800, plaintiffs Meyer and Gertrude Kruglik paid an entrance fee of $525,000, and plaintiff Margery Shurman paid an entrance fee of $610,000.
The residents argue on appeal that although the life care agreement they entered into does not use the terms “lease,” “rent,” “landlord,” “tenant,” and “security deposit,” this court should interpret the contract without regard to its labels in order to determine if a landlord-tenant relationship actually exists between the parties. This court is not bound by the parties’ characterization of their relationship and may disregard inaccurately applied labels or technical terms. Chemical Petroleum Exchange, Inc. v. Metropolitan
Section 1 of the Security Deposit Interest Act provides in relevant part:
“A lessor of residential real property, containing 25 or more units in either a single building or a complex of buildings located on contiguous parcels of real property, who receives a security deposit from a lessee to secure the payment of rent or compensation for damage to property shall pay interest to the lessee *** on any deposit held by the lessor for more than 6 months.” 765 ILCS 715/1 (West 2002).
A lessor who willfully fails to pay statutory interest is also liable for court costs and attorney fees. 765 ILCS 715/2 (West 2002).
The primary rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and give effect to the legislature’s true intent and meaning. Kunkel v. Walton,
After considering the parties’ contractual rights and obligations in light of the clear, plain language of the interest statute, we conclude that the statute does not apply to the parties or the funds at issue in this appeal. The defendant life care provider CC-Lake does not stand in a “lessor”/“lessee” relationship with the plaintiff residents of the Glen within the meaning of the interest statute and the entrance fees collected from the residents are not “security deposit[s]” within the meaning of the interest statute. In fact, CC-Lake’s obligations as a provider under the Life Care Facilities Act are significantly different in both character and scope from the obligations of a “lessor” of “residential real property.” 765 ILCS 715/1 (West 2002). CC-Lake has agreed to shelter the plaintiff residents for their lifetimes somewhere at the Glen, or if need be, off-site at an alternate care facility. Capable residents may chose to live in any of the available on-site independent living units within their financial means, and may relocate from unit to available unit as frequently as they wish. Conceivably, a married couple could start their residence at the life care facility in one of the 2-bedroom/2V2-bath villas that includes a den and attached garage, later sell the car and downsize to one of the 2-bedroom apartments, opt for a different apartment if they tired of the unit’s floor plan, view, or neighbors, and if deteriorating health forced one of the partners into one of the three types of care settings established in the Glen’s on-site care-center, the other partner could relocate to an even smaller independent living unit. CC-Lake’s obligation to accommodate the fluctuating residential preferences and health care needs of the Glen’s residents (with the exception of hospital care) far exceeds the duty undertaken by a “lessor” of a specific dwelling unit. However, CC-Lake does not provide just a range of residential and health care options; it also “participate^] in decisions regarding [the residents’] care and transfer” and employs a “Care Team” of administrative and health care professionals for that purpose. CC-Lake is also obligated to provide the Glen’s residents with meals, transportation, housekeeping, clean linen service, social, cultural and recreational programs, and, possibly, skilled nursing care, and daily assistance with bathing, dressing, personal grooming, and medication, and must employ a staff capable of meeting all of these obligations. In short, CC-Lake’s duties as a provider under the Life Care Facilities Act are very different in scope and character from the duties of a “lessor” of “residential real property.” We cannot construe “lessor” (765 ILCS 715/1 (West 2002)) as a synonym
Furthermore, the parties’ life care agreement cannot be construed as a lease because it does not convey the right to exclusive possession of specific premises. In Leonardi, the court indicated that exclusive possession of the premises is a characteristic of a lease arrangement and that “ ‘there must be agreement as to the extent and bounds of the property, the rental price and time and manner of payment, and the term of the lease.’ ” Leonardi v. Chicago Transit Authority,
In effect, the plaintiff residents are asking us to isolate a few of the characteristics of the parties’ relationship and a few of the terms of their contract in order to find that there is a “security deposit” for rent and property damage which is subject to the interest statute. 765 ILCS 715/1 (West 2002). The residents, however, have not cited any authority or rule of contract construction that would allow us to disregard bargained-for terms of their contract. We will not remake a contract in order to give a litigant “a better bargain than he himself was satisfied to make; and when the terms of a contract are clear and unambiguous, they must be enforced.” Newcastle Properties, Inc. v. Shalowitz,
We also point out that the legislature has expressly defined a life care facility entrance fee as “an initial or deferred transfer *** of a sum of money or property *** which assures a resident of services pursuant to a life care contract.” (Emphasis added.) 210 ILCS 40/3(h) (West 2002). We would have to disregard the legislature’s express definition of the funds at issue in order to grant the residents what they are seeking, which would be improper. Kunkel,
Furthermore, when the legislature specified that an entrance fee may consist of “property” instead of “a sum of money” and that it may be given on a “deferred” basis instead of prior to the beginning of a residency, the legislature further distinguished an “entrance fee” (210 ILCS 40/2(h) (West 2002)) from the conventional “security deposit” (765 ILCS 715/1 (West 2002)) of money which is tendered to a landlord prior to the beginning of a residential tenancy. In addition, under the contract at issue, residents are entitled to a refund of no more than 90% of their entrance fees. The fact that the defendant provider keeps 10% of each entrance fee, and takes additional deductions for unpaid monthly fees and property damage beyond ordinary wear and tear, has not been reconciled with the statutory mandate that a “lessor *** who receives a security deposit *** to secure the payment of rent or compensation for damage to property shall pay interest to the lessee *** on any deposit held *** for more than 6 months.” 765 ILCS 715/1 (West 2002).
The plaintiff residents also emphasize that in section 15 — 170 of the Property Tax Code, the legislature extended a senior citizen real estate tax exemption to residents of a life care facility “irrespective of any legal, equitable, or leasehold interest in the facility.” 35 ILCS 200/ 15 — 170 (West 2002). They argue we should infer (a) that the legislature was contemplating condominium ownership of units in a life care facility, (b) that the Life Care Facilities Act (210 ILCS 40/1 et seq. (West 2002)) must therefore regulate only the services aspect of the parties’ relationship, and (c) that the Security Deposit Interest Act (765 ILCS 715/1 et seq. (West 2002)) must therefore be applied to the residential aspect of their relationship. We do not find the residents’ construction of the statutes persuasive. The clear, plain terms of the Security Deposit Interest Act (765 ILCS 715/1 et seq. (West 2002)) do not suggest we isolate any portion of the parties’ wide-ranging relationship or contractual rights and obligations in order to apply the interest statute. We will not strain in order to find a “lessor’’/“lessee” relationship or a “security deposit” where none exists.
For all these reasons, we reject the plaintiff residents’ analysis of their relationship with defendant life care provider CC-Lake and conclude that the Security Deposit Interest Act (765 ILCS 715/1 et seq. (West 2002)) is not applicable to the entrance fees tendered pursuant to their life care agreement.
Our rejection of the residents’ reasoning is supported by Antler v. Classic Residence Management Limited Partnership,
“We consider the Hallmark’s status as a life care facility to be a significant factor differentiating the relationship it maintains with its residents from a basic landlord/tenant relationship. Defendants, as providers under the Life Care Facilities Act, have reposed in them special responsibilities toward their residents that differ in nature and in scope from those existent in the common landlord/ tenant relationship. ***
Moreover, a comparison of the relationships created between parties to a landlord/tenant relationship as contemplated by the definitions in the RLTO, and a provider/resident relationship, as contemplated by the definitions in the Life Care Facilities Act, reveals that different treatment under the law is appropriate.” Antler,315 Ill. App. 3d at 266 ,733 N.E.2d at 398-99 .
The plaintiff residents of the Glen contend Antler should be disregarded here because the court was resolving whether the Hallmark qualified as an “extended care facility,” which was one of several types of “ ‘[hjousing accommodations’ ” expressly exempted from the Chicago landlord/tenant ordinance. Antler,
Furthermore, other jurisdictions have similarly concluded that a life care agreement is not a lease or that a life care provider and resident do not have a landlord and tenant relationship. For instance, in American National Bank & Trust of New Jersey v. Presbyterian Homes of New Jersey,
We also find another New Jersey opinion, Starns v. American Baptist Estates of Red Bank,
Similarly, a New Mexico court declined to find it unconscionable for an Albuquerque “life care retirement center” to collect nonrefundable entrance fees, in part because “the services and contractual obligations of [the life care provider] are not comparable to those provided by landlords of apartments.” Guthmann v. La Vida Llena,
Thus, each of these courts considered the full scope of the parties’ relationship before deciding whether it was dealing with an ordinary tenancy or a life care arrangement. We also note that none of the courts used the analytical approach the plaintiffs are relying upon of estimating the relative costs of the real property and all other benefits conveyed in order to infer the purpose of the parties’ relationship.
The plaintiff residents of the Glen contend we should disregard the weight of this out-of-state authority, because none of the courts was addressing the same factual circumstances, this state’s life care facilities statute, this state’s security deposit interest statute, or their own state’s security deposit interest statute. None of the narrow distinctions the plaintiffs draw, however, detract from the fact that numerous courts have considered and rejected the premise of the plaintiffs’ complaint.
The exception to these cases is one that the residents cite, Markham v. John Knox Village of Florida, Inc.,
Instead, we conclude that the clear, plain language of the Security Deposit Interest Act indicates it is not applicable to the entrance fees collected from the plaintiff residents of the Glen, because they each entered into a life care agreement with the defendant life care provider CC-Lake, rather than a lease. After examining the life care contract in its entirety, we cannot conclude that it created a traditional landlord/ tenant relationship. It is the legislature’s role to extend the scope of the Security Deposit Interest Act to agreements such as the Glen’s residence agreement if it sees fit to do so. Accordingly, we find the plaintiff residents did not and could not state facts sufficient to bring a claim under the statute they relied upon, and affirm the circuit court’s dismissal of their class action complaint.
Affirmed.
GORDON and BURKE, JJ., concur.
Notes
References to CC-Lake include affiliated corporations that are involved in the ownership, operation, and management of the Glen.
