Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court:
In August 1999, plaintiffs, John McCarty and his wife, Victoria McCarty, filed a third-amended complaint against defendants, Jim Weatherford, Imperial Designs, Inc., Imperial Sign Company, Springfield Properties, Inc., Lynn Grites, Esther Lausen, Raynor Hotel Company, Holiday Inns, Inc., d/b/a Crowne Plaza Hotels & Resorts, and WAI Architects, Inc., seeking to recover for (1) injuries John suffered while installing a rooftop sign during the construction of the Crowne Plaza Hotel and Resort in Springfield and (2) Victoria’s loss of consortium. In February 2004, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Raynor Hotel, Springfield Properties, Grites, and Lausen (collectively the Raynor defendants). In August 2004, the court granted summary judgment in favor of Weatherford, Imperial Designs, and Imperial Sign (collectively the Weatherford defendants).
The McCartys appeal, arguing that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of the Raynor and Weatherford defendants. Because the McCartys, through their attorneys, have failed to provide this court with a sufficiently complete record on appeal, we affirm the court’s summary-judgment orders.
I. BACKGROUND
In August 1999, the McCartys filed their third-amended, 18-count complaint against defendants, including the owner of the Crowne Plaza, the architect of the Crowne Plaza construction project, and others involved in the Crowne Plaza construction project and the installation of a canvas sign on top of the Crowne Plaza. The McCartys sought to recover for (1) severe leg injuries John suffered when he fell from a scaffold while installing the rooftop sign in July 1997, and (2) Victoria’s loss of John’s consortium.
In January 2000, the trial court dismissed with prejudice the counts against WAI Architects. In June 2001, the McCartys voluntarily dismissed Holiday Inns as a defendant. From July 2001 until May 2003, the parties conducted discovery, the trial judge recused himself due to a conflict of interest, another judge was assigned to the case, and the McCartys filed a motion to substitute that judge. (The record does not show that the motion to substitute judge was ever ruled upon.)
In May 2003, the Raynor defendants filed a motion for summary judgment. In February 2004, the trial court entered a written order granting summary judgment in their favor, upon determining that the Raynor defendants exercised no control over the work or the incidental aspects of the work John performed at the Crowne Plaza.
In March 2004, the Weatherford defendants filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that Weatherford and Imperial Designs were entitled to immunity under the Workers’ Compensation Act (820 ILCS 305/1 (a)(4) (West 2002)) because Imperial Designs had loaned Weatherford, who was an Imperial Design employee, as an employee to Siciliano Construction, the general contractor for the Crowne Plaza construction project. In August 2004, the trial court granted summary judgment in the Weatherford defendants’ favor.
This appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Summary Judgments and the Standard of Review
Summary judgment is proper “where the pleadings, affidavits, depositions, admissions, and exhibits on file, when viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, reveal that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Busch v. Graphic Color Corp.,
B. The Evidentiary Material Before the Trial Court and Before This Court
On appeal from a trial court’s grant of summary judgment, a reviewing court must first ask two questions: (1) What evidentiary material did the trial court have before it when it granted summary judgment? and (2) Does the reviewing court have all of that evidentiary material before it on appeal? To assist the reviewing court, the better practice for the trial court would be to specifically indicate all of the evidentiary material the court considered in granting summary judgment. That way, the reviewing court is not left to surmise what evidentiary material was before the trial court both in support of, and in opposition to, the motion for summary judgment. A trial court’s specifying all the evidentiary material it considered in granting summary judgment is consistent with the rule that evidentiary material never considered by the trial court in a summary-judgment proceeding will not be considered on review. Paul H. Schwendener, Inc. v. Jupiter Electric Co.,
We have reviewed the parties’ briefs, the record, and the supplement to the record that we allowed the Weatherford defendants to file. Based thereon, we have determined (as best we can) what evidentiary material was before the trial court when it granted defendants’ summary-judgment motions, as well as what evidentiary material is now properly before this court.
We note that when the McCartys filed their brief with this court, they also included what they referred to as an “appendix.” The “appendix” consisted of a box of over a thousand papers, many of which were not included in the record on appeal. Although the documents were numbered and bound in two volumes, they did not have a cover sheet or an index identifying the documents or their purpose. The McCartys simply “deposited” the documents with the clerk of our court and left it up to the clerk’s office to make sense of them. It is well settled that the record on appeal cannot be supplemented by attaching documents to a brief or including them in an appendix. In re Parentage of Melton,
The dissent suggests that pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 329 (134 Ill. 2d R. 329), this court should “enter an order allowing the two bound volumes to supplement the record.”
The McCartys’ attorneys did not avail themselves of the procedure set forth in Rule 329 by requesting that this court supplement the record on appeal with the Grites and Weatherford depositions or the documentary exhibits missing from the record. Contrary to the dissent, we are not just now “springing” on the McCartys the fact that we would not consider the documents in their “appendix.” The Mc-Cartys were sufficiently put on notice by the Weatherford defendants’ motion to supplement the record with documents not in the record on appeal and the Raynor defendants’ brief. In particular, the Raynor defendants’ brief (1) indicated that the record was incomplete because it did not contain (a) the depositions of John, Grites, Weatherford, and Rick Lawrence, the owner of Siciliano Construction, and (b) several of the documentary exhibits attached to the Raynor defendants’ summary-judgment motion, and (2) argued that the McCartys had failed to provide an adequate record on appeal. Despite that notice, the McCartys’ attorneys never made any effort to correct the material omissions in the record. We recognize that the clerk of the circuit court failed to file many of the documents that were before the trial court. However, the clerk’s failure does not excuse the McCartys, who, as appellants, clearly had the burden to present this court with a sufficiently complete record on appeal. Webster v. Hartman,
In addition, our research has not revealed any Illinois decision in which a reviewing court sua sponte has corrected or amended the record under Supreme Court Rule 329. Given the circumstances of this case, we decline to be the first. Indeed, in the last 21 years, the Supreme Court of Illinois has twice addressed the issue of an appellant’s failure to provide a sufficient record on appeal and how such failure constitutes a basis — without more — to affirm the trial court’s ruling being appealed. See Foutch v. O’Bryant,
We recognize that our refusal to consider the documents in the McCartys’ “appendix” or sua sponte supplement the record with those documents might seem to be a technical application of supreme court rules. See generally Gold Realty Group Corp. v. Kismet Café, Inc.,
1. Evidentiary Material Pertinent to the Raynor Defendants’ Summary-Judgment Motion
According to the Raynor defendants’ brief, when they filed their May 2003 summary-judgment motion, they attached thereto (1) the complete transcripts of the depositions of John, Grites, Weatherford, and Rick Lawrence, the owner of Siciliano Construction, and (2) seven documentary exhibits (which are not further identified by the parties or the record). In the McCartys’ response to the Raynor defendants’ motion, they relied on the deposition transcripts of Grites and Weatherford, but they did not attach any depositions or documents of their own. The record before us contains only a portion of the transcript of Lawrence’s deposition and, according to the Raynor defendants, one of the unidentified documentary exhibits. Even though the Weatherford defendants had absolutely no duty to supplement the record to cure its deficiencies (see People ex rel. Oller v. New York Central R.R. Co.,
2. Evidentiary Material Pertinent to the Weatherford Defendants’ Summary-Judgment Motion
The record contains the Weatherford defendants’ summary-judgment motion and memorandum of law in support thereof. Those documents indicate that the Weatherford defendants attached to their motion the following: (1) the fiill transcripts of the depositions of Lawrence, John, and Mark Hart, a Siciliano Construction employee; and (2) four documentary exhibits — namely, (a) the McCartys’ third-amended complaint, (b) the contract between Raynor Hotel and Siciliano Construction, (c) the change-of-work order requested by Raynor Hotel, and (d) the agreement between Imperial Designs and Siciliano Construction. The McCartys’ response to the Weatherford defendants’ summary-judgment motion relies on the agreement between Imperial Designs and Siciliano Construction and the transcripts of the depositions of John and Lawrence. Their response also indicates that they attached thereto the transcript of Weatherford’s deposition. The record before us contains (1) the McCartys’ third-amended complaint, (2) the contract between Raynor Hotel and Siciliano Construction, (3) the change-of-work order, and (4) a portion of the transcript of Lawrence’s deposition. The supplement to the record contains (1) the agreement between Imperial Designs and Siciliano Construction and (2) the full transcripts of the depositions of Lawrence, John, and Hart. Neither the record nor the supplement contains the transcript of Weather-ford’s deposition.
C. The McCartys’ Failure To Present a Sufficiently Complete Record on Appeal
The McCartys argue that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of the Raynor and Weatherford defendants. However, the McCartys, through their attorneys, have failed to present a complete record that sufficiently enables this court to determine whether the trial court erred by granting summary judgment.
As this court wrote in Webster v. Hartman,
“To determine whether a claimed error occurred, a court of review must have before it a record of the proceedings below. [Citation.] The appellant bears the burden to present a sufficiently complete record, and this court will resolve any doubts that arise from an incomplete record against the appellant. [Citation.] Absent a sufficient record on appeal, ‘it will be presumed that the order entered by the trial court was in conformity with law and had a sufficient factual basis.’ [Citation.]”
In Webster,
“This court has long held that in order to support a claim of error on appeal[,l the appellant has the burden to present a sufficiently complete record. [Foutch,99 Ill. 2d at 391-92 ,459 N.E.2d at 959 ], In fact, ‘[fjrom the very nature of an appeal it is evident that the court of review must have before it the record to review in order to determine whether there was the error claimed by the appellant.’ Foutch,99 Ill. 2d at 391 [,459 N.E.2d at 959 ].”
See also Schwendener,
As earlier stated, in terms of the Raynor defendants’ summary-judgment motion, the record and the supplement thereto contain only (1) the transcripts of the depositions of Lawrence and John and (2) one of the unidentified documentary exhibits. Importantly, neither the record nor the supplement contains the transcripts of the depositions of Weatherford and Grites. In addition, given the state of the record, we have no way of knowing whether the supplement contains any of the remaining six documentary exhibits. Under the circumstances, we must assume that the missing portions of the record support the trial court’s determination that (1) no genuine issue of material fact existed and (2) the Raynor defendants were entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Coleman,
In terms of the Weatherford defendants’ summary-judgment motion, the record and the supplement thereto contain (1) the McCartys’ third-amended complaint, (2) the contract between Raynor Hotel and Siciliano Construction, (3) the change-of-work order, (4) the agreement between Imperial Designs and Siciliano Construction, and (5) the full transcripts of the depositions of Lawrence, John, and Hart. However, neither the record nor the supplement contains the transcript of Weatherford’s deposition. Once again, the McCartys have failed to provide this court with the evidentiary material that was before the trial court.
In support of their argument that the trial court properly granted summary judgment, the Weatherford defendants rely on (1) the agreement between Imperial Designs and Siciliano Construction, (2) the change-of-work order, and (3) the depositions of Lawrence, John, and Hart, which, taken together, establish that Weatherford was a loaned employee of Siciliano Construction. In support of their argument that the court erred by granting summary judgment, the McCartys rely, in part, on Weatherford’s deposition. However, because the McCartys have not provided us with that deposition, we cannot draw any contrary inferences on the loaned-employee issue that would be favorable to the McCartys. Thus, under the circumstances, we must assume that the trial court properly determined that (1) no genuine issue of material fact existed and (2) the Weatherford defendants were entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Palanti,
Accordingly, for the aforementioned reasons, we affirm the trial court’s granting of summary judgment in favor of the Raynor and Weatherford defendants.
In so doing, we note that the dissent incorrectly states that we are “lay[ing] down” a rule that “if anything is missing from the record, appellant must lose.”
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Affirmed.
McCullough, J., concurs.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The majority is critical of the proposed supplement to the record, complaining that the McCartys simply “deposited” the documents with the clerk of our court and left it up to the clerk to make sense of them. 362 111. App. 3d at 311.1 am puzzled by that characterization, as the documents seem clear to me. The materials consist of two bound volumes, with pages consecutively numbered from la through 1020a. Volume I contains the Weatherford defendants’ motion for summary judgment (pages 3a to 48a) and supporting memorandum (pages 49a to 77a). It also contains the Raynor defendants’ motion for summary judgment (pages 95a to 98a) and supporting memorandum (pages 99a to 124a). Those motions and memoranda explain the exhibits referred to, such as the complaint and answer, contract documents, and depositions. The McCarty deposition (pages 139a to 361a) is included, as is the Grites deposition (pages 362a to 496a). Volume II contains only three documents, the Weatherford deposition (pages 497a to 691a), the Lawrence deposition (pages 692a to 844a), and the Hart deposition (pages 845a to 1021a). The documents I have mentioned total 980 pages, 878 of which are depositions. The majority complains that the proposed supplement “consisted of a box of over a thousand papers.”
I do not understand why we do not accept these documents and decide this case on the merits. Defendants were furnished copies and, during oral argument, agreed the contents are accurate. Defendants agree that with the addition of these documents the record is complete. Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Brooklyn Bagel Boys, Inc.,
The majority labels the materials filed by the McCartys as an “appendix” and cites the rule that parties cannot use briefs and appendices to supplement the record. The rule is actually that attachments to briefs not otherwise before the reviewing court cannot be used to supplement the record. Jones v. Police Board,
The majority says that although the materials in the two bound volumes submitted by the McCartys are essential to the decision of this case, we are unable to consider them because they are not a part of the record. We should not pretend we are helpless. Omissions from the record may be corrected “by the reviewing court or a judge thereof.” 134 Ill. 2d R. 329; Robles v. Chicago Transit Authority,
The Weatherford defendants submitted materials similar to those submitted by the McCartys, and the clerk of our court entered a routine order allowing them to be filed as a supplement to the record. Why are the Weatherford materials a proper supplement to the record, while the McCarty materials are an improper “appendix” which we refuse to consider? The Weatherford motion to supplement pointed out that the failure here was the failure of the clerk of the trial court. The clerk had these materials (somewhere), the clerk was required to file them as a part of the record, but the clerk failed to do so.
The majority’s only objection to the proposed supplement is that the McCartys did not file a proper motion for leave to supplement the record under Rule 329.
The majority lays down three rules in its opinion: (1) we must have all the evidentiary material that the trial court had before it, (2) appellees have no obligation in preparing the record, and (3) if anything is missing from the record, appellant must lose. I respectfully disagree.
A court is not always required to affirm the decision of the trial court because the record is incomplete. See Midstate Siding & Window Co. v. Rogers,
Webster did not hold that if anything is missing from the record, appellant must lose. Webster held that a party who asserted that his attorney lacked authority to settle a case had the obligation to present some evidence of that fact in the trial court. “[T]his court will not look beyond the record on appeal to find that plaintiffs attorney lacked his authority to settle. There must be evidence in the record that his attorney, Harris, lacked authority.” Webster,
We should require compliance with supreme court rules so that cases may be decided fairly and on their merits. The committee comments describe Rule 329 as a “sweeping provision,” with “liberal terms,” under which it is possible to employ “the procedure that will most appropriately solve the particular problem.” 134 Ill. 2d R. 329, Committee Comments, at 289. The majority, however, is not interested in compliance, or solving the problem. The majority is only interested in punishing appellant.
