Court Opinion

ID: 3148107
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-22 18:42:05.805512+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:08:31.413052
License: Public Domain

ILLINOIS OFFICIAL REPORTS
                                         Appellate Court

  InsureOne Independent Insurance Agency, LLC v. Hallberg, 2012 IL App (1st) 092385

Appellate Court            INSUREONE INDEPENDENT INSURANCE AGENCY, LLC;
Caption                    AMERICAN AGENCIES GENERAL AGENCY, INC.; and
                           AFFIRMATIVE INSURANCE HOLDINGS, INC., Plaintiffs-Appellants
                           and Cross-Appellees, v. JAMES P. HALLBERG; WILLIAM J.
                           HALLBERG; CASMIRA LENS, as Trustee of the James P. Hallberg
                           1994 Gift Trust; AND CASMIRA LENS, as Trustee of the Patricia L.
                           Hallberg 1994 Gift Trust, Defendants-Appellees and Cross-Appellants.

District & No.             First District, Third Division
                           Docket Nos. 1-09-2385, 1-10-0428 cons.

Filed                      June 27, 2012
Rehearing denied           October 10, 2012

Held                       Damages, plus fees and costs, were properly awarded to plaintiffs for
(Note: This syllabus       defendants’ violation of the noncompetition and nonsolicitation
constitutes no part of     agreements in connection with plaintiff’s purchase of several insurance
the opinion of the court   companies from defendants, but where the record did not reveal a basis
but has been prepared      for the denial of plaintiff’s request for prejudgment interest, the matter
by the Reporter of         was remanded for further consideration; further, defendants lacked
Decisions for the          standing to recover on their counterclaim based on plaintiffs’ failure to
convenience of the         pay part of the purchase price plus conditional attorney fees related to two
reader.)
                           of the companies, because those companies were liquidated.

Decision Under             Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 03-CH-20974; the
Review                     Hon. Peter J. Flynn, Judge, presiding.

Judgment                   Affirmed in part and reversed in part; cause remanded.
Counsel on                 Pedersen & Houpt, of Chicago (Charles M. Gering, of counsel), for
Appeal                     appellants.

                           Sullivan Hincks & Conway, of Oak Brook (Patrick Michael Hincks,
                           Desmond Patrick Curran, Michael Anthony Faccenda, and Kevin O’Brien
                           Gerow, of counsel), for appellees.

Panel                      JUSTICE SALONE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
                           Presiding Justice Steele and Justice Murphy concurred in the judgment
                           and opinion.

                                               OPINION

¶1          This is a consolidated appeal from a bench trial conducted in the circuit court of Cook
        County resolving disputes among the purchasers and sellers of the assets of several insurance
        companies.
¶2          Plaintiffs, InsureOne Independent Insurance Agency, LLC (New Insure One), American
        Agencies General Agency, Inc., and Affirmative Insurance Holdings, Inc. (Affirmative),1
        purchased the assets of several insurance companies owned or controlled by James P.
        Hallberg (Hallberg). The trial court entered judgment in favor of the purchasers on their
        claims that Hallberg, his nephew William Hallberg, and two gift trusts had violated
        noncompetition and nonsolicitation agreements, awarding the purchasers $7,670,210 in
        damages. The trial court also awarded the purchasers reasonable attorneys fees and costs
        associated with these claims. The court, however, declined to award prejudgment interest on
        this amount.
¶3          The trial court also entered judgment in favor of Hallberg on his counterclaim that the
        purchasers had not paid the full amount due on one component of the purchase price–known
        as the “contingent purchase price” (CPP)–awarding him $130,168 in damages plus
        prejudgment interest. The court also conditionally awarded Hallberg reasonable attorneys
        fees and costs in connection with this claim in the event that he can establish that his
        recovery exceeds five percent of the relevant component of the purchase price.
¶4          In case No. 1-09-2385, the purchasers now appeal from the trial court’s decision
        awarding Hallberg damages on the counterclaim and conditional attorney fees. In addition,
        plaintiffs also contend that they should have been awarded prejudgment interest on their
        judgment against defendants for breaching the restrictive covenants. For the reasons that
        follow, we reverse the judgment of the circuit court on each of these issues. With respect

               1
                The three purchasers will be collectively referred to as plaintiffs or purchasers.

                                                   -2-
     solely to the issue of prejudgment interest on plaintiffs’ award, we remand this cause to the
     circuit court for further proceedings.
¶5       In case No. 1-10-0428, defendant sellers have filed a separate appeal, which has been
     consolidated with that of the purchasers. The sellers appeal from the trial court’s judgment
     in favor of the purchasers on their non-competition and nonsolicitation claims. For the
     reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court in all respects.

¶6                                      BACKGROUND
¶7       In January 2002, plaintiffs purchased from sellers the assets of several insurance
     companies that were owned or controlled by Hallberg.2 These companies owned a book of
     nonstandard auto insurance.3 The transaction was governed by a document titled “Asset
     Purchase Agreement” (APA) and dated January 7, 2002. Pursuant to section 8.1 of the APA,
     Hallberg agreed not to compete with the purchasers or solicit any of the purchasers’
     employees or customers for a period of five years.
¶8       The parties’ plan was for Hallberg to run the resulting company. The purchasers hired
     Hallberg as the president of New Insure One pursuant to an employment agreement dated
     January 16, 2002. Pursuant to section 5.2 of this agreement, Hallberg promised not to
     compete with or solicit employees or customers of New Insure One both during the period
     of his employment as president of New Insure One, and for a period following termination
     of his employment of either one or three years, depending upon the circumstances of his
     termination. The purchasers retained many of the sellers’ former employees, including
     Hallberg’s nephew, William Hallberg, who signed a separate covenant not to compete with,
     or solicit employees of, New Insure One for 12 months following the termination of his
     employment.
¶9       However, soon after the transaction closed, Hallberg and the purchasers had several
     disagreements which made it impossible for them to work together. Hallberg and
     Affirmative’s chief executive officer, Thomas Mangold, disagreed about many aspects of the
     new company’s operations. Among other things, they disagreed about the role Hallberg
     would play, if any, in calculating that portion of the purchase price known as the “contingent
     purchase price” (CPP). The APA provided guidelines for the calculation and payment of the
     CPP, which was to be based on certain percentages of renewal business that New Insure One

             2
              Sixteen related entities were involved on Hallberg’s side of the transaction. For purposes
     of this appeal, however, only Hallberg, his nephew William Hallberg, and two gift trusts are
     involved. These entities will be referred to collectively as defendants or sellers.
             3
              Testimony during trial established that “nonstandard” auto insurance refers to a segment
     of the automobile insurance market catering to insurance consumers who do not have evidence of
     prior insurance, who only purchase the minimum limits of coverage, who do not maintain their
     coverage in force, who live in high-crime areas and purchase minimum limits of liability because
     they do not have assets to protect, or who would not buy insurance absent mandatory insurance
     requirements.

                                                -3-
       carried over from Hallberg’s former entities, and which was to be finalized more than a year
       after the closing.
¶ 10       Because of their disagreements over operating the new company, the parties decided that
       Hallberg would leave the company. In March 2003, the parties entered into a “Settlement
       Agreement and Mutual Release” (Settlement Agreement), which was to be effective as of
       May 7, 2003. The Settlement Agreement states that the parties are “desirous of reconfirming
       and clarifying the scope of the restrictive covenants contained in Section 5.2 of the
       Employment Agreement and Section 8.1 of the Asset Purchase Agreement.” As stated, those
       restrictive covenants included Hallberg’s noncompetition and nonsolicitation agreements.
       In August 2003, William Hallberg also left plaintiffs’ employ and soon thereafter created the
       Hallberg Insurance Agency.
¶ 11       On December 16, 2005, plaintiffs filed suit against Hallberg and, inter alia, his nephew,
       William, and two gift trusts, alleging a number of claims, including breaches of the
       covenants not to compete and not to solicit employees which were contained in the APA and
       the employment agreements. Plaintiffs alleged that soon after Hallberg’s departure from New
       Insure One, defendants set up the Hallberg Insurance Agency and other related entities which
       began competing directly with plaintiffs in their respective markets. Plaintiffs also alleged
       that Hallberg used the two gift trusts that he controlled to establish these competing
       businesses while attempting to mask his own involvement and avoid obvious violations of
       his noncompetition and nonsolicitation agreements. Plaintiffs contended that the trusts
       provided funding to these entities at interest rates significantly below market, and received
       funding through other Hallberg-controlled entities that could not compete directly with
       plaintiffs. Plaintiffs also alleged that other Hallberg entities provided office space and
       services to the competing businesses without any reimbursement. In addition, plaintiffs
       contended that defendants solicited plaintiffs’ employees, recruiting them to work in their
       competing entities.
¶ 12       In response, Hallberg filed a verified answer, affirmative defenses and counterclaims to
       the pleading at issue here: the fifth amended verified complaint for injunctive relief and
       damages.4 In his counterclaim, Hallberg alleged that plaintiffs materially breached the APA
       by failing to provide him with accountings and notices related to the CPP, and by failing to
       pay him the full amount of the CPP.
¶ 13       The trial court conducted a bench trial on all claims. The record reflects that this trial
       took place between August 2005 and March 2006, during which more than 20 witnesses
       testified, several hundred exhibits were offered, and a 3,500-page trial transcript was
       generated.
¶ 14       On January 20, 2009, the trial court entered a detailed, 31-page revised memorandum
       order and judgment, as well as an Illinois Supreme Court Rule 304(a) (eff. Feb. 26, 2010)

               4
               This pleading contained eight counts, five of which were dismissed at the close of plaintiffs’
       case and which are not at issue here. This appeal addresses only counts I (breach of contract by
       Hallberg), II (breach of covenant not to compete by the gift trusts) and IV (breach of contract by
       William Hallberg).

                                                    -4-
       certification. In the order and judgment, the court found that: (1) Hallberg “intentionally
       violated APA Art. 8.1(ii) and Employment Agreement, Arts. 5.1 [and] 5.2(ii)”; (2) that
       “James Hallberg and William Hallberg, as well as others acting at James Hallberg’s direction
       or suggestion, solicited and hired plaintiffs’ employees”; and that (3) defendants “hired some
       29 former employees of [plaintiffs], 15 before this suit was filed and 14 while this suit was
       pending.”
¶ 15       The court further found that the evidence established that defendants were liable to
       plaintiffs for $7,670,210 in damages resulting from their breaches of the various
       noncompetition and nonsolicitation provisions at issue. The court also awarded plaintiffs
       their reasonable attorney fees and costs relating to these claims, but did not award them pre-
       or postjudgment interest.
¶ 16       With respect to Hallberg’s counterclaim, the court entered judgment in Hallberg’s favor
       on count I, which related to the purchasers’ payment of the CPP. Noting that the CPP called
       for “complex calculations,” the trial court held that plaintiffs underpaid Hallberg but
       determined that plaintiffs’ miscalculation of this amount and their delay in making these
       calculations was not intentional. The court awarded Hallberg $130,168 on this claim, plus
       pre- and postjudgment interest. Further, the court found that Hallberg may be entitled to
       attorney fees if he ultimately shows that the purchasers underpaid the CPP in an amount
       exceeding 5% of the total amount of the CPP.
¶ 17       On February 19, 2009, the parties filed posttrial motions, each requesting that portions
       of the order and judgment be set aside. Plaintiffs requested that the court reconsider its
       rulings on Hallberg’s CPP counterclaim, its award of pre- and postjudgment interest, and
       potential attorney fees to Hallberg, as well as its failure to award interest on plaintiff’s
       judgment. The trial court revised the order and judgment to reduce the prejudgment interest
       award to Hallberg, and to award plaintiffs postjudgment interest. The court denied all other
       requests for posttrial relief.
¶ 18       Additional factual background will be provided in the course of the analysis set forth in
       the Discussion section.

¶ 19                                        DISCUSSION
¶ 20                               I. Appeal in Case No. 01-10-042
¶ 21       Defendants raise three general issues in their appeal. First, they contend that the trial
       court erred when it held that they were liable for violations of noncompetition and
       nonsolicitation clauses contained within the APA and the employment agreements. Second,
       defendants assert that the trial court erred when it found that plaintiffs’ breaches of the APA
       were not material. Finally, defendants contend that the trial court erred in awarding damages
       to plaintiffs. For the following reasons, we reject defendants’ contentions.

¶ 22                    A. Were Defendants Liable for Violation of the
                       Noncompetition and Nonsolicitation Provisions?
¶ 23      Pursuant to the provisions of the sale, Hallberg was bound by the noncompetition and

                                                 -5-
       nonsolicitation covenants contained in section 8.1 of the APA. Section 8.1 states in relevant
       part:
           “[E]ach seller covenants and agrees that, for a period ending on the fifth anniversary of
           the Closing Date ***, neither it or any of its affiliates will, directly or indirectly, whether
           as an employer, agent, independent contractor, officer, director, consultant, shareholder,
           partner, member or otherwise on behalf of any person:
                                                   ***
                (ii) undertake or carry on, or in any other manner advise or assist any person engaged
           or interested in, any business that is in any way involved in the production, sale or
           solicitation of any personal lines of insurance coverages or related items in any of the
           states listed in Schedule 8.1 (the Territory) or any other business that is in competition
           with the Business (it being understood by the parties hereto that the Business is not
           limited to any particular region of the Territory and that such business may be engaged
           in effectively from any location in the Territory); or
                (iii) induce or attempt to persuade any employee or agent of the Business to terminate
           such employment, agency or business relationship in order to enter into any such
           relationship on behalf of any other business organization in competition with the
           business.”
       Hallberg was further bound by the terms of his employment agreement, which, in article 5.2,
       generally restates the restrictive covenants quoted above from section 8.1 of the APA.
¶ 24       William Hallberg was bound by his own separate employment agreement with plaintiffs,
       entitled “Covenant Not to Compete or Solicit Business,” which states in pertinent part:
                “For a period of twelve (12) months following his or her termination from the
           Companies, Employee will not, directly or indirectly:
                                                   ***
                Participate or be engaged in any manner, in the solicitation of, or acceptance of
           business from any policyholder for the purpose of producing or brokering, financing or
           offering any advice with respect to, any insurance products, with respect to any line, class
           or type of insurance, regardless of whether receiving compensation in connection
           therewith; or
                Perform any act or make any statement which would tend to divert from the
           companies any trade or business with any customer *** to whom Employee previously
           sold insurance offered by or through the Companies; or
                                                   ***
                Induce or attempt to persuade any employee or agent of the companies to terminate
           such employment, agency or business relationship in order to enter into any such
           relationship on behalf of any other business organization in competition with the
           Companies.”
¶ 25       The trial court found that despite these agreements, Hallberg, his nephew William, and
       the gift trusts engaged in a deliberate “pattern of conduct” designed to “recapture from the
       plaintiffs the very business [Hallberg] sold to them.” The court determined that the evidence

                                                  -6-
       established that Hallberg “plainly used the Gift Trusts to fund William Hallberg and others
       who he knew were competing with plaintiffs for business plaintiffs had acquired in the
       APA,” and further found that Hallberg’s “repeated denial that he controlled the Gift Trusts
       was completely without credibility; indeed, ultimately defendants acknowledged that
       [Hallberg] did control the Gift Trusts.” (Emphasis in original.) The court explained:
           “[T]he Gift Trusts were used precisely in order to mask Mr. Hallberg’s involvement
           (though the masks were not very good). *** That happened in two ways: First, a
           manifestly Hallberg entity *** which could not itself fund businesses competing with
           plaintiffs, instead funded the Gift Trusts, which then funded the competing businesses.
           Second, the Gift Trusts themselves used other entities which the Gift Trusts control ***
           as vehicles for assisting businesses competing with plaintiffs (typically by providing
           office space, office resources, and personnel, rather than money, per se).”
¶ 26       The court held that throughout the trial, “[p]laintiffs established th[is] point again and
       again,” and stated that “defendants’ denials, in the face of the evidence, served to undercut
       their credibility.” The trial court thus found that “Hallberg, with the knowing and active
       participation of William Hallberg and the Gift Trusts *** intentionally violated” APA article
       8.1 and article 5.2 of the employment agreement by helping others to compete with plaintiffs.
¶ 27       With respect to the separate issue of whether defendants breached the covenants not to
       solicit and hire plaintiffs’ employees, the trial court found that “James Hallberg and William
       Hallberg, as well as others acting at James Hallberg’s direction or suggestion, solicited and
       hired plaintiffs’ employees.” This conclusion was based on the trial court’s finding that
       William Hallberg created a new insurance agency–the Hallberg Insurance Agency–almost
       immediately after leaving plaintiffs’ employ with a “conscious ‘game plan’ to identify and
       hire ‘top producers’ ” from plaintiffs, on behalf of Hallberg-funded entities and “for the
       purpose of competing with plaintiffs.” The court also noted the trial testimony of Anthony
       Strimel, a vice president of Hallberg Insurance Agency, who acknowledged that “by far the
       majority of agents at Hallberg Insurance Agency are former agents of InsureOne” and that
       they were persons “perceived to be top agents, high-quality people.” The court found that the
       evidence established that defendants hired 29 former employees of plaintiffs, 15 before this
       suit was filed and 14 while the suit was pending.
¶ 28       In their appeal, defendants do not contest these findings of the trial court, including those
       regarding their intent. Instead, they generally contend that the trial court’s judgment that they
       breached the restrictive covenants should be reversed because plaintiffs themselves breached
       the APA with respect to payments to be made to Hallberg under the CPP. Defendants point
       to the trial court’s ruling on Hallberg’s counterclaim that he was entitled to $130,168 from
       plaintiffs due to their miscalculation of the CPP, and argue that because plaintiffs themselves
       violated provisions of the APA with respect to the calculation and payment of the CPP,
       plaintiffs are barred from recovering for defendants’ breaches of that same agreement.
       Defendants also contend that plaintiffs’ breaches of the APA were material and that the trial
       court erred in holding otherwise. In addition, defendants also contend that they did not breach
       the nonsolicitation covenants; that they should not be held jointly and severally liable; and
       that the restrictive covenants were not enforceable. We reject each of defendants’
       contentions.

                                                 -7-
¶ 29       As an initial matter, we note that a trial court’s holding that restrictive covenants are
       enforceable is reviewed de novo. Mohanty v. St. John Heart Clinic, S.C., 225 Ill. 2d 52, 63
       (2006). However, a trial court’s finding that parties have committed a breach of a restrictive
       covenant must be upheld unless it is against the manifest weight of the evidence.
       Amalgamated Bank of Chicago v. Kalmus & Associates, Inc., 318 Ill. App. 3d 648, 655
       (2000). A trial court’s finding is against the manifest weight of the evidence only where the
       “opposite conclusion is clearly evident.” In re Estate of Wilson, 238 Ill. 2d 519, 570 (2010).
       Thus, “[i]f the record contains any evidence to support the trial court’s judgment, the
       judgment should be affirmed.” Id. It is well settled that findings of the trial court “must be
       given deference because the trial court has the opportunity to view and evaluate witnesses’
       testimony and is, therefore, in the best position to evaluate their credibility.” Keel-Keef
       Enterprises, Inc. v. Quality Components Corp., 316 Ill. App. 3d 998, 1012 (2000).

¶ 30                   1. Strict v. Substantial Performance of Contract Terms
¶ 31       Defendants contend that any breach they may have committed of the restrictive covenants
       contained within the APA is excused unless plaintiffs prove that their own performance was
       “in strict accordance” with the APA. Relying upon the 1958 decision in Archibald v. Board
       of Education of City of Chicago, 19 Ill. App. 2d 554, 561 (1958), defendants argue that if
       plaintiffs failed to perform any condition under the APA, no matter how small, they cannot
       recover for any breach of that agreement by defendants. Defendants are mistaken.
¶ 32       The concept relied upon by defendants that a contract plaintiff must prove his own literal
       or strict performance of the terms of the contract has long been repudiated by our courts.
       “Under the common law, one seeking recovery on a contract, had to prove literal
       performance of his promises in order to hold the opposite party to his promise to pay.”
       (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Watson Lumber Co. v. Mouser, 30 Ill. App. 3d 100, 104
       (1975). However, because this rule produced unduly harsh results, it was replaced by a new
       “rule in Equity, that if the [defendant] got substantially the thing for which he bargained,”
       he would be held to his contractual obligations. (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id.
¶ 33       Accordingly, a party suing for breach of contract need only allege and prove that “he has
       substantially complied with all the material terms of the agreement.” George F. Mueller &
       Sons, Inc. v. Northern Illinois Gas Co., 32 Ill. App. 3d 249, 254 (1975). Thus, “[a] partial
       breach by one party *** does not justify the other party’s subsequent failure to perform; both
       parties may be guilty of breaches, each having a right to damages.” (Internal quotation marks
       omitted.) Israel v. National Canada Corp., 276 Ill. App. 3d 454, 460 (1995). Only a material
       breach of a contract provision will justify nonperformance by the other party. Id. at 461.
¶ 34       Accordingly, defendants’ argument that plaintiffs must prove their own literal or strict
       performance of the terms of the APA is not supported by our case law.

¶ 35           2. Was Plaintiffs’ Breach of the CPP Material, Thereby Excusing
                 Nonperformance of the Restrictive Covenants by Defendants?
¶ 36      As stated, only a material breach of a contract provision will justify nonperformance by

                                                -8-
       the other party. Id. Defendants contend that plaintiffs’ breach of provisions of the APA
       regarding calculation and payment of the CPP constituted a material breach of the APA
       which relieved defendants of performance of their restrictive covenants contained within that
       agreement. Defendants argue that although the trial court correctly held that plaintiffs
       breached these provisions, it erred in holding that the breach was immaterial. We disagree.
¶ 37       The trial court began its analysis of the CPP issue by setting forth the formula prescribed
       in the APA5 to be used to compute this amount, and stating that it “called for complex
       calculations.” The CPP was designed to reflect the sum of percentages of various
       commissions, unearned premiums and net written premiums realized by plaintiffs on various
       types of business during the first year following the sale. APA article 3.2(b) states that the
       parties had estimated the CPP at $5 million, and that amount was escrowed by plaintiffs at
       the time of sale. Article 3(c) of the APA instructs that interim payments were to be made
       from the escrowed funds on a monthly basis “to the extent that Contingent Purchase Price
       has actually been earned as of the month end preceding each such payment date.” Finally,
       article 3(d) of the APA details the timing and manner of computing the final CPP amount,
       starting with an accounting by the plaintiffs within 90 days after the expiration of a year from
       the sale.
¶ 38       At trial, defendants argued that plaintiffs had intentionally mishandled the process of
       computing and paying the CPP. After considering evidence adduced by both parties, the trial
       court concluded that although “plaintiffs’ conduct regarding the CPP was far from ideal,” it
       rejected defendants’ assertion that plaintiffs intentionally delayed payments and
       miscalculated amounts. The court explained that after “[h]aving heard the witnesses and
       reviewed the documents, this court finds that plaintiffs’ shortcomings regarding the CPP
       resulted from the difficulty of the task itself–it involved ‘an enormous amount of data,’
       [which] defendants concede.” The court also noted that defendants’ own expert, Lori Noll,
       “was not prepared to say that the time plaintiffs took [to calculate and pay] the CPP was
       manifestly unreasonable,” and that she herself was unable to determine the accuracy of some
       of the calculations. After comparing the figures submitted by both plaintiffs and defendants,

              5
               Pursuant to APA articles 1.1 and 3.2(a), the CPP was to be the sum of:
                       (i) 5% of the “unearned premium reserve of Galant [Insurance Co.] and Valor
              [Insurance Co.] computed as of 12.01 a.m. on January 1, 2002 in accordance with statutory
              accounting principles prescribed by the Illinois D[epartment] O[f] I[nsurance], consistently
              applied”;
                       (ii) 5% of premiums “earned by [buyers] from an insured that was a customer of
              [sellers] at any time during the” year prior to the sale, but only “to the extent that such
              earned premium is actually received” within the year-plus-30-days after the sale;
                       (iii) 8.5% of “the aggregate net written premium (net of cancellations and return
              premiums) produced by [buyers] on renewal policies written within” a year after the sale
              “on policies placed with third-party insurance carriers” in defined lines; and
                       (iv) 40% of “net commissions (net of cancellations, return commissions and
              subproducer commissions) on written premiums produced by [buyers]” on renewal policies
              written within a year after the sale on life and health policies placed with third party
              insurance carriers.

                                                  -9-
       the trial court concluded that plaintiffs had underpaid the CPP by $130,168.
¶ 39       The court then directly spoke to the issue of whether plaintiffs’ breach of the APA with
       regard to handling the CPP payments was material and rejected defendants’ argument that
       it was. The court provided three reasons in support of its conclusion that plaintiffs’ breach
       was immaterial and that it did not entitle defendants to abandon the entire APA.
¶ 40       First, the court held that based upon APA article 3.2(d), “it is doubtful that the parties
       themselves considered a $130,168 difference even to be material–let alone a basis for
       scuttling the entire APA.” The court noted that this provision of the APA provided that if
       defendants disputed plaintiffs’ CPP calculation, they were to bear the cost of any resulting
       arbitration, “unless the Arbitrator’s final determination of the [CPP] is more than 5% greater
       than” plaintiffs’ calculation, “in which case [plaintiffs] shall bear such cost.” Although this
       provision of the APA addressed a different matter, the court looked to the parties’ use of a
       5% trigger to shift costs as a general benchmark as to what they deemed to be a material
       deviation from the agreement.
¶ 41       Second, although the court found plaintiffs’ delay in calculating the CPP to be
       “considerable,” the court also found that “defendants have not established that it was so
       fundamental a breach as to warrant recision, or counter-breach by defendants,” noting that
       during this litigation, “defendants did not take the position that plaintiffs should abandon the
       on-going CPP calculation, nor offer to refund the initial purchase price under the APA.”
¶ 42       Finally, the trial court held that the case law did not support defendants’ argument that
       under the circumstances either the delay or the less-than-5% dollar difference was so material
       and important to justify defendants in considering themselves relieved of the restrictive
       covenants. The court rejected what it termed to be defendants’ “absolute view” and “drastic
       position.”
¶ 43       As stated, only a material breach of a contract provision by one party will justify
       nonperformance by the other. William Blair & Co. v. FI Liquidation Corp., 358 Ill. App. 3d
       324, 346 (2005). The test of whether a breach is “material” is whether it is “so substantial
       and fundamental as to defeat the objects of the parties in making the agreement, or whether
       the failure to perform renders performance of the rest of the contract different in substance
       from the original agreement.” Village of Fox Lake v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 178 Ill.
       App. 3d 887, 900-01 (1989). “The breach must be so material and important to justify the
       injured party in regarding the whole transaction at an end.” Id. at 901. The issue of whether
       a material breach of contract has been committed is a question of fact, and the trial court’s
       judgment will not be disturbed unless it is against the manifest weight of the evidence.
       Mohanty, 225 Ill. 2d at 72.
¶ 44       We agree with the trial court that plaintiffs’ breach of the APA provisions regarding the
       calculation and payment of the CPP was not material. The facts are undisputed that
       defendants sold their businesses to plaintiffs for approximately $16 million, with plaintiffs
       paying roughly $10 million at the time of sale and placing another $5 million in escrow to
       secure the CPP. The APA provided that plaintiffs were to make interim payments and
       ultimately complete all calculations and payments by April 1, 2003. However, plaintiffs were
       delayed in making the calculations and payments, to the extent that all payments under the

                                                -10-
       CPP were made by August 2004. The trial court, however, specifically found that this delay
       was attributable to the complexity of the task. “Under the law of Illinois, time requirements
       *** are by their nature accessory rather than central aspects of most contracts.” (Internal
       quotation marks omitted.) Chariot Holdings, Ltd. v. Eastmet Corp., 153 Ill. App. 3d 50, 58-
       59 (1987) (breach not material where “trial court properly focused *** on the complexity of
       the task to be performed”). Further, although plaintiffs underpaid the CPP by $130,168, this
       amount constitutes approximately 2% of the total CPP and less than 1% of the purchase price
       as a whole. The size of an underpayment relative to the total contract price is relevant in
       determining whether the underpayment constitutes a material breach. Fox Lake, 178 Ill. App.
       3d at 900-01. Finally, the trial court also properly considered Hallberg’s own unwillingness
       to rescind the APA, clearly showing that he did not consider plaintiffs’ breaches to be so
       important as to justify him “in regarding the whole transaction as at an end.” Id. at 901.
¶ 45       We agree with the trial court that under any reasonable reading of the APA, defendants
       got substantially what they bargained for under the agreement. Although the payments under
       the CPP were delayed and miscalculated, this was a function of the complex formula agreed
       to by both parties. Accordingly, the trial court’s ruling that plaintiffs’ breaches of the CPP
       were not material is not against the manifest weight of the evidence.

¶ 46                   3. Defendants’ Breach of the Nonsolicitation Covenants
¶ 47        Defendants next contend that the trial court erred in holding that they breached their
       covenants not to solicit plaintiffs’ employees. The trial court found that defendants acted in
       concert to breach their contractual duties by directly and indirectly “inducing or attempting
       to persuade” plaintiffs’ employees to terminate their employment. Defendants premise their
       argument upon a ruling made by the trial court earlier in the case, as well as upon a
       stipulation entered into between the parties.
¶ 48        At the close of plaintiffs’ evidence at trial, defendants–pursuant to section 2-1110 of the
       Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-1110 (West 2004)) filed a motion requesting the trial
       court to find in their favor on count IV of plaintiffs’ fifth amended verified complaint, which
       alleged that defendants had committed tortious interference with plaintiffs’ prospective
       economic advantage. The trial court granted this motion and dismissed this count.
¶ 49        In support of their claim of error, defendants also point to a stipulation entered into
       between the parties that the former employees, if called, would testify that neither Hallberg
       nor his nephew personally “induced or attempted to persuade” them to terminate their
       employment with plaintiffs.
¶ 50        Defendants now assert that the trial court’s ultimate ruling finding that defendants
       breached their nonsolicitation agreements is in conflict with this earlier one. We reject
       defendants’ assertion that the trial court’s prior ruling on count IV, combined with the
       stipulation, leads to the conclusion that the trial court erred.
¶ 51        In ruling on defendants’ motion for judgment on count IV at the close of plaintiffs’ proof
       at trial, the court explained:
                 “The difficulty here is that while the evidence leaves me with not a great deal of
            doubt that the defendants collectively were prepared to skate as close to the line as they

                                                -11-
           could, there is a dearth of proof specific to any of the defendants. Let me focus in that
           regard on William Hallberg. Mr. William Hallberg, if we look at this solely from the
           standpoint of tortious interference *** [he] ended up with a bunch of former InsureOne
           employees. I am asked to infer that because there were so many of them, he must have
           solicited them. *** [I]t might be a persuasive notion if Mr. William Hallberg were the
           only defendant, the only person involved in this entire scenario from the defendants’ side
           of things; I think it fails when you consider that he wasn’t the only person involved.”
¶ 52       The court’s prior ruling shows that it found a lack of evidence that either Hallberg or his
       nephew had personally and individually solicited plaintiffs’ employees to support plaintiffs’
       tort claim. Defendants fail to note, however, that in the same ruling the court denied their
       section 2-1110 motions to dismiss counts I and V, which stated the claims for breach of
       contract related to these hirings and upon which the court ultimately entered judgment
       against them. At that time, the trial court drew a distinction between the dismissed tort claim
       in count IV and the breach of contract claims in counts I and V, making it clear that the
       restrictive covenants were “not solely limited to the solicitation of employees,” as their
       language was “somewhat broader.” The court then held that “plaintiffs have presented a
       prima facie” case regarding those covenants.
¶ 53       As noted, the restrictive covenants forbid defendants from “directly or indirectly ***
       induc[ing] or attempt[ing] to persuade any employee or agent *** to terminate such
       employment, agency or business relationship in order to enter into any such relationship on
       behalf of any other business organization in competition.” Therefore, the fact that the court
       dismissed the tortious interference claim in count IV on the basis that defendants did not
       personally solicit the employees does not mean–as defendants now suggest–that they also did
       not breach the broader duties under the restrictive covenants by “directly or indirectly
       inducing or attempting to persuade” plaintiffs’ employees to leave. Thus, contrary to the
       argument advanced by defendants, the trial court’s findings in dismissing count IV did not
       obligate it to reject counts I and V as well.
¶ 54       As noted, the trial court found that the evidence established that defendants, in concert,
       deliberately targeted, solicited and hired plaintiffs’ employees as part of a “conscious ‘game
       plan’ to identify and hire ‘top producers’ ” from plaintiffs “for the purpose of competing with
       plaintiffs.” The trial court further found that given the “number and timing of defendants’
       hirings”–specifically, that defendants hired 29 former employees of plaintiffs–that their later
       denials were “not credible.”
¶ 55       Accordingly, we conclude that there was ample evidentiary support for the trial court’s
       finding that defendants breached the covenants prohibiting solicitation of plaintiffs’
       employees, and, therefore, the court’s ruling was not against the manifest weight of the
       evidence.

¶ 56                         4. Defendants’ Joint and Several Liability
¶ 57       Defendants next contend that the trial court erred in making them jointly and severally
       liable for violating the restrictive covenants. We disagree.
¶ 58       The trial court’s order and judgment reveals that the court imposed joint and several

                                                -12-
       liability on defendants based upon their concurrent breaches of the restrictive covenants. The
       trial court explained:
                “James Hallberg, with the knowing and active participation of William Hallberg and
            the Gift Trusts *** intentionally violated [the restrictive covenants]. ***
                                                  ***
                Given the pattern of conduct described above, the court *** rejects defendants’
            argument that the resulting damages must be separately (and somewhat artificially, under
            the circumstances) parsed out defendant by defendant. As defendants assert *** in
            general ‘defendants who have separate and distinct contracts with a common entity
            cannot be subject to joint liability for breach of contract.’ But here, the pertinent
            defendants–James Hallberg, William Hallberg and the Gift Trusts–were hardly ‘separate
            and distinct’ from one from another, vis-a-vis plaintiffs in more than a technical sense.
            It was obvious from the outset, and all of them knew, that plaintiffs intended (and
            defendants agreed) that James Hallberg would not be able to do indirectly what he had
            promised not to do directly. Nor was those defendants’ conduct independent one from
            another in that regard. It was rather a synergy, and consciously so designed. Thus, this
            case does not at all resemble Mercantile Holdings, Inc. v. Keeshin, 187 Ill. App. 3d 1088,
            1094-95 (1989), cited by defendants.
                                                  ***
                *** [T]he court declines to engage in what on this record would be an artificial
            allocation of *** damages between the four defendants, all of whom acted together to
            bring about the damages.”
¶ 59        In support of their contention of error, defendants largely rely on Mercantile Holdings,
       Inc. v. Keeshin, 187 Ill. App. 3d 1088, 1094-95 (1989), a case discussed and rejected by the
       trial court as factually inapposite. We agree. Defendants make citation to Mercantile for the
       proposition that “multiple defendants sued for breach of contract cannot be subject to joint
       and several liability where their duties arise out of separate contracts with separate terms,
       even if they were working together or assisting each other.” Mercantile, however, neither
       stands for this proposition nor is it factually analogous to this case. Rather, Mercantile holds
       that under the law of suretyship, a debtor who contracts with a third party for the assumption
       of his debt is jointly and severally liable with the third party to his creditor, whereas a third
       party who assumes a debt by contracting directly with the creditor becomes primarily liable.
       Mercantile, 187 Ill. App. 3d at 1093-94.
¶ 60        Plaintiffs direct us to cases from other jurisdictions which have adopted the doctrine of
       concurrent breach of contract under similar facts. We find these cases persuasive under the
       unique factual circumstances presented in this matter.
¶ 61        Under the doctrine of concurrent breach of contract, “[w]here A and B owe contract
       duties to C under separate contracts, and each breaches independently, and it is not
       reasonably possible to make a division of the damage caused by the separate breaches closely
       related in point of time, the breaching parties, even though they acted independently, are
       jointly and severally liable.” Lesmeister v. Dilly, 330 N.W.2d 95, 102 (Minn. 1983). In other
       words, “[w]hen two defendants independently breach separate contracts, and it is not

                                                 -13-
       ‘reasonably possible’ to segregate the damages, the defendants are jointly and severally
       liable.” Domtar, Inc. v. Niagara Fire Insurance Co., 563 N.W.2d 724, 740 (Minn. 1997); see
       also California & Hawaiian Sugar Co. v. Sun Ship, Inc., 794 F.2d 1433, 1437 (9th Cir. 1986)
       (“in this case of concurrent causation each defaulting contractor is liable for the breach and
       for the substantial damages which the joint breach occasions”).
¶ 62       Defendants do not contest the trial court’s finding that their conduct in violating the
       restrictive covenants was concurrent and coordinated. Under these specific facts, we hold that
       the trial court did not err in imposing joint and several liability upon defendants.

¶ 63             5. Enforceability of William Hallberg’s Covenant Not to Compete
¶ 64       Defendants next contend that the trial court erred in finding that William Hallberg’s
       noncompetition covenant was enforceable. According to defendants, a fatal flaw in plaintiffs’
       case was their failure to establish a legitimate business interest which needed to be protected
       by the time, area and activity restraints contained within the covenant. Defendants point to
       the trial court’s finding that there was no evidence of long-standing permanent customer
       relationships in the substandard insurance market to support their contention that plaintiffs
       had no legitimate business interest in restricting William Hallberg’s competition. We reject
       defendants’ argument.
¶ 65       Our supreme court recently rendered an opinion which generally addressed breaches of
       noncompetition restrictive covenants and specifically clarified the weight to be given to the
       factor of legitimate business interest as part of that analysis. In Reliable Fire Equipment Co.
       v. Arredondo, 2011 IL 111871, the court held that the legitimate business interest test is to
       “be employed as part of the three-prong rule of reason to determine the enforceability of a
       restrictive covenant not to compete.” Id. ¶ 43. The court explained:
           “[W]hether a legitimate business interest exists is based on the totality of the facts and
           circumstances of the individual case. Factors to be considered in this analysis include,
           but are not limited to, the near-permanence of customer relationships, the employee’s
           acquisition of confidential information through his employment, and time and place
           restrictions. No factor carries any more weight than any other, but rather its importance
           will depend on the specific facts and circumstances of the individual case.” Id.
¶ 66       Our supreme court’s decision in Reliable makes it clear that defendants are incorrect in
       asserting that the legitimate business interest test is determinative in deciding whether a
       restrictive covenant is enforceable. Rather, “ ‘[e]ach case must be determined on its own
       particular facts’ ” and “ ‘[r]easonableness is gauged not just by some but by all of the
       circumstances,’ ” which means that “ ‘[t]he same identical contract and restraint may be
       reasonable and valid under one set of circumstances, and unreasonable and invalid under
       another set of circumstances.’ ” (Emphasis in original.) Id. ¶ 42 (quoting Arthur Murray
       Dance Studios of Cleveland, Inc. v. Witter, 105 N.E.2d 685, 692-93 (Ohio Ct. Com. Pl.
       1952)).
¶ 67       Thus, although the trial court declined to find that the nonstandard auto insurance
       industry is dominated by “near permanent” customer relationships, that is not the only factor
       to be considered in determining whether a restrictive covenant is enforceable. As noted, the

                                                -14-
       trial court found that William Hallberg played a pivotal role in defendants’ concerted and
       “conscious ‘game plan’ to identify and hire ‘top producers’ ” from plaintiff. As part of this
       plan, the court also found that William obtained plaintiffs’ sales production report shortly
       after he left plaintiffs’ employ, “thus giving him precise information about plaintiffs’ sales
       agents’ production numbers.” In addition, the court specifically found that William’s
       noncompetition agreement “was neither facially overbroad nor lacking in consideration.”
       Based upon the totality of the evidence presented at trial, we conclude that the trial court did
       not err in ruling that William Hallberg’s restrictive covenant was enforceable.

¶ 68                     6. Enforceability of the Covenants Not to Compete
                                  Against Hallberg and the Gift Trusts
¶ 69        Defendants next assert that the trial court also erred in holding that the restrictive
       covenants were enforceable against Hallberg and the gift trusts on the basis that there was
       inadequate evidence presented to support their validity. Defendants contend that rather than
       analyze the enforceability of the covenants, the trial court “simply assumed that these
       noncompetes were enforceable based solely on their presence in an agreement for the sale
       of a business.” We disagree.
¶ 70        Restrictive covenants and noncompetition agreements are evaluated differently
       depending upon whether they derive from an employment relationship or are ancillary to the
       sale of a business. “Courts impose a less stringent test of reasonableness on covenants
       ancillary to the sale of a business than on those in employment contracts because of the
       difference in the nature of the interests protected.” Health Professionals, Ltd. v. Johnson, 339
       Ill. App. 3d 1021, 1031 (2003) (citing Central Water Works Supply, Inc. v. Fisher, 240 Ill.
       App. 3d 952, 956 (1993)). A noncompetition agreement ancillary to the sale of a business
       “protects the good will purchased by the buyer, ensuring that ‘the former owner will not walk
       away from the sale with the company’s customers and good will, leaving the buyer with an
       acquisition that turns out only to be chimerical.’ ” Id. at 1031 (quoting Central Water Works
       Supply, Inc., 240 Ill. App. 3d at 957). Goodwill is the “advantages a business has over
       competitors as a result of its name, location and reputation. It is a sufficient interest to justify
       a restrictive covenant and the protection of injunctive relief.” Health Professionals, Ltd. v.
       Johnson, 339 Ill. App. 3d 1021, 1032 (2003). The enforceability of a noncompetition
       agreement ancillary to a sale of a business depends on the reasonableness of its terms. The
       restrictions imposed, in terms of time, geographical scope and activity, must not be greater
       than necessary to protect the buyer, and the agreement must not be oppressive to the seller
       or injurious to the general public. Id.
¶ 71        As stated, the trial court found that Hallberg funded three competing insurance agencies
       by funneling nearly $7 million through the gift trusts in a failed attempt to “mask” his
       involvement in an intentional effort to “recapture from plaintiffs the very business he sold
       to them.” The court further found that other Hallberg-controlled corporate entities provided
       the competing agencies with free office space, office resources and personnel, and that they
       targeted plaintiffs’ businesses by opening in close proximity to plaintiffs’ retail locations,
       which was found to be “neither an accident nor a coincidence.”

                                                  -15-
¶ 72        Hallberg does not dispute these finding of fact. Rather, he contends that his activities
       were “not related to the solicitation or sale of personal lines of insurance” and that the
       restrictive covenants are enforceable only to the extent that they prevent him from “using his
       expertise” to compete with plaintiffs. Hallberg reads the provisions of the covenants far too
       narrowly.
¶ 73        Our careful review of the record leads us to conclude that the trial court did not err in
       finding that Hallberg’s activities were competitive with those of plaintiffs and that there is
       no support for defendants’ assertion that Hallberg’s activities were “completely unrelated”
       to plaintiffs’ businesses. Hallberg, through the gift trusts, funded the competing businesses
       and also provided services to those businesses for free. In addition, the record supports the
       trial court’s judgment, in that the time, geographic scope and activity limitations contained
       within the restrictive covenants were reasonable, protected plaintiffs’ goodwill, were not
       oppressive to defendants, and were not injurious to the public. Accordingly, the trial court
       did not err in holding that the restrictive covenants were enforceable against Hallberg and the
       gift trusts.

¶ 74                               B. Damages Awarded to Plaintiffs
¶ 75        Defendants also contend that the damages awarded to plaintiffs by the trial court for
       defendants’ breaches of the restrictive covenants are unsupported by the evidence presented
       at trial and are “unreasonable” and “absurd.” We disagree.
¶ 76        The trial court heard testimony from experts hired by both parties: Lawrence Levine
       testified as an expert on behalf of plaintiffs, and John Bone testified as an expert on behalf
       of defendants. The trial court noted in its order and judgment that “it is, understandably,
       more than usually difficult for plaintiffs to establish actual loss or measurable damages”
       based upon the type of businesses involved, i.e., competing entities in the substandard
       automobile insurance market. Therefore, the court observed, “both plaintiffs’ and defendants’
       experts approached damages through a combination of modeling and revenue cash flow
       analysis.”
¶ 77        Plaintiff’s expert Levine predicted the total gross premiums of the three competing
       agencies and multiplied that total by plaintiffs’ profit margin for its organization. Levine’s
       model also included “head start” damages which extended beyond the term of the restrictive
       covenants to reflect the ongoing loss arising from defendants’ early entry into the market.
¶ 78        Defendants’ expert Bone criticized various aspects of Levine’s model, and the trial court
       adopted two of these criticisms in its analysis: (1) the trial court agreed with Bone’s
       reduction of the “head start” damages; and (2) the trial court adopted Bone’s criticism of
       Levine’s assumption that every customer gained by defendants was one lost to plaintiffs.
       This caused the trial court to reduce Levine’s calculation of total damages to $5,307,400.
¶ 79        The trial court also rejected some of Bone’s analysis. The court did not agree with Bone’s
       assumption that plaintiffs competed equally with every insurance agency in the relevant
       states, no matter the distance from plaintiffs. The trial court also found that Bone failed to
       account for the local nature of the nonstandard auto insurance industry, defendants’
       deliberate proximity to plaintiffs’ stores, and the competitiveness of other agencies. The

                                                -16-
       evidence at trial also showed that Levine’s model–which he prepared in 2004–underpredicted
       defendants’ success. Using the actual numbers available from 2006, Levine established that
       defendants’ actual gross premiums were, in fact, two to three times greater than he had
       predicted.
¶ 80       The trial court thus concluded that “the truth lies somewhere between the respective
       testimony of the parties’ expert witnesses.” It then went on to explain:
                “Levine’s $5,307,400 is a proper starting point. It must be adjusted upward, however,
           given (i) Bone’s admission that Levine severely underpredicted defendants’ profits
           (which Bone projected at $18.24 million during the noncompete period ***) and (ii)
           Levine’s testimony that his model underpredicted *** revenues [of one of defendants’
           companies] by some 37% in 2004 (actual $9.1 million vs. predicted $3.4 million) and by
           over 50% in 2005 ($17.7 million actual, based on annualizing Bone’s partial-year
           numbers vs. $7.8 million predicted). *** The court concludes that Levine’s $5,307,400
           should be increased by 40%, to $7,430,360 to remedy the underprojection while not
           unduly assuming that all of defendants’ success came at plaintiffs’ expense.
                On the other hand, the court concludes that Mr. Levine’s additional $369,000
           solicitation of employees damage calculation must be reduced to account for the
           likelihood that some of the departing employees would have left anyway. *** In the
           court’s view, a 35% reduction in this component, to $239,850, is appropriate. The
           aggregate damages award is therefore $7,670,210. The court concludes that that award
           fairly compensates plaintiffs, as well as can reliably be estimated on the record herein,
           without inappropriately penalizing defendants.”
¶ 81       A reviewing court will not disturb an assessment of damages made by a trial court sitting
       without a jury unless that award is manifestly erroneous. Lynch v. Precision Machine Shop,
       Ltd., 93 Ill. 2d 266, 278 (1982). As stated, a trial court’s finding is against the manifest
       weight of the evidence only where the “opposite conclusion is clearly evident.” In re Estate
       of Wilson, 238 Ill. 2d 519, 570 (2010). Thus, “[i]f the record contains any evidence to support
       the trial court’s judgment, the judgment should be affirmed.” Id.
¶ 82       The basic theory of damages for breach of contract is that the plaintiff must establish an
       actual loss or measurable damages resulting from the breach in order to recover. Avery v.
       State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., 216 Ill. 2d 100, 149 (2005). In a breach of
       contract action, “the proper measure of damages is the amount of money that will place the
       injured party in as satisfactory a position as he or she would have been in had the contract
       been performed. [Citation.] Loss of profits may be recovered if the plaintiff proves the loss
       with a reasonable degree of certainty, if defendant’s wrongful act resulted in the loss, and if
       the profits were reasonably within the contemplation of defendant at the time the contract
       was entered into.” Equity Insurance Managers of Illinois, LLC v. McNichols, 324 Ill. App.
       3d 830, 837 (2001). Where a claim of lost profits arises from a breach of contract, it is
       “customarily not susceptible of detailed or direct proof, and that unless proof of an inferential
       character is permitted, the result would be to immunize a defendant from the consequences
       of his wrongful acts.” Vendo Co. v. Stoner, 58 Ill. 2d 289, 310 (1974). Because lost profits
       are, to some extent, “uncertain and incapable of calculation with mathematical precision,”

                                                 -17-
       a recovery may be had for such profits “when there are any criteria by which the probable
       profits can be estimated with reasonable certainty.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
       Midland Hotel Corp. v. Reuben H. Donnelley Corp., 118 Ill. 2d 306, 315-16 (1987).
¶ 83        In the matter at bar, it is undisputed that plaintiffs suffered an injury. As the trial court
       found in its order and judgment, “[t]he fact of injury is not in doubt; even defendant’s expert,
       Mr. Bone, acknowledged that some injury occurred.” Defendants assert, however, that
       plaintiffs failed to adduce proof that any losses they incurred were traceable to defendants’
       breaches of the restrictive covenants. They contend that plaintiffs’ evidence that the number
       of potential customers entering its stores declined after defendants opened their competing
       agencies despite increasing advertising by 35% was insufficient. We disagree. Plaintiffs did
       not allege that each lost quote opportunity would have resulted in a sale. Rather, plaintiffs’
       evidence of the sales made by defendants’ competing agencies led to a reasonable inference
       that plaintiffs would have made a portion of these sales absent defendants’ competition,
       especially in light of the uncontradicted evidence that defendants opened stores in close
       proximity to plaintiffs’ in an effort to target their customers.
¶ 84        Defendants also contend that the trial court erroneously awarded damages beyond the
       term of the restrictive covenants to account for the “head start” defendants acquired by
       opening their competing agencies early. The court explained this damages component as
       follows:
            “[H]aving started sooner (gotten a ‘head start’), [defendants are now] in a better position
            to continue competing because [they] have already–and too soon–gotten past [their] post-
            noncompete ‘ramp up.’ Levine’s ‘head start effect’ is an attempt to quantify that
            improper post-noncompete-expiration advantage. In that regard, it also takes into account
            plaintiffs’ loss of a bargained-for side benefit of a noncompete–the lessening of
            defendants’ ability to compete, after the restriction expires, simply due to the passage of
            time.”
       Defendants’ own expert, Bone, did not dispute that such damages occurred, although he
       recommended that the amount calculated by Levine be reduced–a recommendation which
       the trial court adopted.
¶ 85        Although defendants make citation to two cases in support of their argument that, as a
       matter of law, damages cannot be awarded for time periods outside of those governed by the
       restrictive covenants, the decisions relied upon are factually inapposite. Neither Royal’s
       Reconditioning Corp. v. Royal, 293 Ill. App. 3d 1019 (1997), nor Feldstein v. Guinan, 148
       Ill. App. 3d 610 (1986), involved restrictive covenants ancillary to the sale of a business;
       instead, both involved breach of employment contracts. In Royal’s, an employee breached
       a provision which required 30 days’ notice of resignation. Because the employer had no
       legitimate expectation of the services of the employee beyond the 30-day period, its lost
       profits were limited to that period. Royal’s, 293 Ill. App. 3d at 1024. In Feldstein, an
       employer wrongfully discharged an employee prior to his contractually guaranteed one-year
       term of employment. The court found that because the employee had no expectation of
       employment beyond that term, he was limited to recovering the wages he would have earned
       during that term had he not been discharged. Feldstein, 148 Ill. App. 3d at 613.

                                                 -18-
¶ 86       In contrast, pursuant to the provisions of the restrictive covenants, plaintiffs had a
       legitimate expectation that defendants could not even begin to form competing businesses
       until the expiration of those agreements. That expectation, however, was defeated due to
       defendants’ running of competing businesses prior to the expiration of the covenants.
       Although this type of harm is usually addressed through injunctive relief that would extend
       during the covenant’s term, the trial court declined to order equitable relief because it found
       that plaintiffs could be adequately compensated with monetary damages.
¶ 87       Defendants also contend that plaintiffs had a duty to mitigate their damages by doing
       business with defendants, i.e., allowing defendants to write plaintiffs’ policies. We reject
       defendants’ contentions. Under the duty to mitigate, an injured party need only avoid those
       damages he can “without undue risk, burden, or humiliation.” East St. Louis School District
       No. 189 v. Hayes, 237 Ill. App. 3d 638, 644 (1992). Defendants contend that “the record
       clearly shows that [defendants’] competing agencies each attempted to sell [plaintiffs]
       insurance but [plaintiffs] refused to let the competing agencies write their insurance, even
       going so far as to cancel previously-existing relationships.” However, an injured party is not
       required to accept performance from a breaching party on new or modified terms. American
       Fidelity Fire Insurance Co. v. General Ry. Signal Co., 184 Ill. App. 3d 601, 614-15 (1989).
       After defendants intentionally violated the provisions of the restrictive covenants, it would
       be unreasonable to expect plaintiffs to renew business relationships with them without taking
       an “undue risk” that they would not honor their agreements.
¶ 88       In addition, defendants assert that the trial court erred because the damages it awarded
       “were not reasonably within the contemplation of the parties.” Defendants maintain that they
       were unaware that if they breached their restrictive employment covenants, plaintiffs would
       suffer lost profits. The trial court found that “it was certainly foreseeable that defendants’
       conduct would cost plaintiffs business and profits.” We agree.
¶ 89       “[A]ll damages which naturally and generally result from a breach are recoverable; it is
       only where damages are the consequence of special or unusual circumstances that it must be
       shown that the damages were within the reasonable contemplation of the parties.” Midland
       Hotel Corp. v. Reuben H. Donnelley Corp., 118 Ill. 2d 306, 318 (1987). Defendants offer
       nothing to suggest that they were unaware that if they breached their restrictive covenants,
       plaintiffs would experience lost profits–the type of damages which would “naturally and
       generally result” from their breaches.
¶ 90       Defendants also contend that the trial court’s damage award punished defendants rather
       than provided reasonable compensation to plaintiffs. We disagree. The record reflects that
       the trial court did not take either experts’ figures at face value and, instead, adjusted them
       based upon the evidence presented. Thus, there is no support for defendants’ contention.
¶ 91       In sum, the evidence was sufficient to provide a legal basis for the damages award made
       by the trial court. We find no error.

¶ 92                 C. Conclusion as to Appeal in Case No. 01-10-0428
¶ 93      With respect to the appeal brought by defendants in case No. 01-10-0428, we reject each
       argument raised by defendants and affirm the judgment of the trial court in all respects.

                                                -19-
¶ 94                             II. Appeals in Case No. 01-09-2385
¶ 95       We now turn to the issues raised by plaintiffs in their appeal in case No. 01-09-2385.
       Plaintiffs raise four claims of error: (1) the trial court erroneously determined that Hallberg
       was entitled to a judgment of $130,168 on his counterclaim regarding the CPP, even though
       the APA clearly indicated that he personally was not entitled to receive payment of that
       portion of the purchase price; (2) the trial court incorrectly determined that Hallberg was
       entitled to statutory interest based on the timing of the purchasers’ payment of the CPP; (3)
       the trial court erred in awarding Hallberg conditional attorney fees and costs incurred in
       pursuing his CPP counterclaim; and (4) the trial court incorrectly failed to award plaintiffs
       statutory prejudgment interest for the period of time from the court’s initial award in favor
       of plaintiffs to the date of final judgment.

¶ 96              A. The Trial Court’s Award of $138,168 to James P. Hallberg
                 on His Counterclaim Regarding the Contingent Purchase Price
¶ 97                 1. Is Hallberg Entitled to Recover Any Amount Relating
                                 to the Contingent Purchase Price?
¶ 98      Article 3.3 of the APA provides that the CPP “shall be allocated in a manner consistent
      with the allocations set forth in Schedule 3.3.” In turn, schedule 3.3 states that the CPP “shall
      be allocated to Gallant/Valor [Insurance Companies] pro rata in accordance with their
      respective allocations indicated [in the schedule].” The record also reflects that on February
      25, 2002, the Illinois Director of Insurance obtained an order of conservation over Gallant
      and Valor, the two entities to which the CPP payments were to be made. Pursuant to the
      conservation order, the Director of Insurance took possession and control of the property,
      books, records, accounts, assets, business and affairs of Gallant and Valor. On August 9,
      2002, orders of liquidation were entered against Gallant and Valor, effective August 23,
      2002. As of that date, all legal control of Gallant and Valor was vested in the Office of the
      Special Deputy Receiver of the Illinois Department of Insurance (OSD), and the OSD
      acquired title to all rights of action belonging to Gallant and Valor, including their rights to
      collect the CPP. Subsequent to the entry of the orders of liquidation, plaintiffs sent the
      payments due under the CPP to the OSD, on behalf of Gallant and Valor.
¶ 99      In its order and judgment, the trial court found that APA article 3.3 and schedule 3.3
      “plainly specify that the [CPP] shall be allocated to Gallant/Valor pro rata,” and noted that
      since “both Gallant and Valor were in conservation and, later, liquidation proceedings ***
      monies due them under the APA were properly under the control of the Director of
      Insurance.” Nevertheless, upon finding that plaintiffs had underpaid the CPP by $130,168,
      the trial court held that award “will be treated as properly payable to defendants in the first
      instance.” In a footnote, the court stated that “OSD is not a party to this action, and the court
      declines to volunteer a view at this juncture as to how the $130,168 or interest amounts
      should ultimately be allocated as between defendants and OSD.”
¶ 100     Plaintiffs now contend that the trial court erred in awarding the CPP underpayment
      directly to Hallberg, when the APA provided that only Gallant and Valor are entitled to such
      recovery. Under these circumstances, plaintiffs allege that this portion of the circuit court’s

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        judgment in Hallberg’s favor is unsupportable and must be reversed. We agree.
¶ 101        A trial court interprets the meaning of clear and unambiguous contract terms as a matter
        of law, and its interpretation is subject to de novo review. Gallagher v. Lenart, 226 Ill. 2d
        208, 219 (2007). Contracts must be interpreted based on the intent of the parties when the
        contract was formed. Id. at 232. Where the terms of a contract are clear, the court applies the
        contract as written, giving effect to the contract’s terms based on the ordinary and natural
        meaning of the contract language. Id. at 233.
¶ 102        As stated, the trial court found that “APA Art. 3.3 and Schedule 3.3 plainly specify that
        the ‘Contingent Purchase Price’ shall be allocated to Gallant/Valor pro rata” and concluded
        that the “payment of the CPP to Gallant/Valor/OSD was proper [and] was specifically
        intended *** by APA Art 3.3 and Schedule 3.3.” Nowhere within the APA is it provided that
        Hallberg was to directly receive any portion of the CPP payments. Accordingly, under the
        plain language of the agreement, only Gallant and Valor were entitled to the CPP payments
        under the APA. Therefore, there was no basis for the trial court to enter judgment in
        Hallberg’s favor in connection with payments made pursuant to the CPP. To the extent that
        the purchasers underpaid the CPP, any claims relating to that alleged underpayment belonged
        solely to Gallant and Valor, and, by virtue of the order of liquidation, to the OSD.
¶ 103        Because no provision of the APA entitled Hallberg to receive payments under the CPP,
        plaintiffs further contend that Hallberg lacked standing to assert any claim for recovery of
        those amounts. We agree. To establish standing, a claimant must demonstrate the existence
        of an actual or threatened injury in fact to a legally cognizable interest belonging to the
        claimant. Amtech Systems Corp. v. Illinois State Toll Highway Authority, 264 Ill. App. 3d
        1095, 1103 (1994). As stated, Gallant and Valor are the only promisees with respect to the
        CPP under the terms of the APA. Consequently, Gallant and Valor are the only parties with
        standing to sue for payments of the CPP. The trial court provided no explanation as to why
        Hallberg was entitled to recover any shortfall in the CPP payments despite the clear language
        of the APA requiring such payments to be made to Gallant and Valor. The court’s award of
        the additional CPP payments to Hallberg was inconsistent with its finding that the parties to
        the APA specifically intended that the CPP would be paid to Gallant and Valor, and, later,
        to the OSD.
¶ 104        Because Hallberg lacked standing to pursue his claim with respect to CPP payments, the
        trial court erred in granting judgment in his favor on that claim. Accordingly, we reverse the
        trial court’s judgment.

¶ 105            2. Was Hallberg Entitled to Statutory Prejudgment Interest?
¶ 106    Plaintiffs next allege that the trial court erred in awarding Hallberg prejudgment interest
      pursuant to section 2 of the Interest Act (815 ILCS 205/2 (West 2004)) on: (1) the $130,168
      underpayment of the CPP; and (2) on approximately $800,000 of CPP payments which the
      court found that plaintiffs had paid late due to delays in their CPP calculations.
¶ 107    Plaintiffs contend that because Hallberg is not entitled to receive any CPP payments
      under the provisions of the APA, he similarly cannot recover interest relating to the late
      payment of such amounts. We agree.

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¶ 108       Having just determined that the trial court erred in granting judgment to Hallberg on his
        claim regarding CPP payments, we therefore also hold that the trial court’s award of
        prejudgment interest on those amounts is error. We therefore reverse the judgment of the trial
        court with regard to the award of prejudgment interest on this claim.

¶ 109                    3. Was Hallberg Entitled to Attorney Fees and Costs?
¶ 110        Article 8.1 of the APA contains that agreement’s only provision for the payment of
        attorneys fees in court proceedings. Article 8.1 expressly applies to claims relating to the
        sellers’ noncompetition and nonsolicitation agreements and provides that “[t]he prevailing
        party in any action commenced under this section 8.1 shall also be entitled to receive
        reasonable attorneys fees and costs.” In other words, the attorney fee petition in article 8.1
        is expressly limited to claims relating to the restrictive covenants.
¶ 111        Hallberg’s counterclaim, however, relates solely to the purchasers’ payment of the CPP.
        Noting this, the trial court held that article 3.2(d) of the APA provided a basis for its
        conditional award of attorney fees to Hallberg. Although article 3.2(d) relates to calculation
        and payment of the CPP, it specifically speaks to the parties’ responsibility for costs paid to
        an arbitrator in an arbitration relating to a dispute concerning the CPP:
                 “The cost of retaining an arbitrator shall be borne by Sellers, unless the Arbitrator’s
             final determination of the [CPP] is more than five percent (5%) greater than the [CPP]
             Payment computed by purchaser in the preceding paragraph, in which case Purchaser
             shall bear such cost.”
        Relying upon this provision, the trial court held that Hallberg may be entitled to an award of
        attorney fees if he establishes that the “amount of his recovery *** exceeds five percent of
        the CPP as calculated by plaintiffs.”
¶ 112        Plaintiffs contend that the trial court erred in relying upon article 3.2(d) of the APA in
        holding that Hallberg may be entitled to attorney fees in connection with his counterclaim.
        According to plaintiffs, the language of article 3.2(d) makes it clear that the provision applies
        only to the costs of retaining an arbitrator in an arbitration proceeding, and that it has no
        application to attorney fees–even in that limited context. Plaintiffs therefore argue that the
        trial court’s judgment on this issue must be reversed. We agree.
¶ 113        A trial court’s ruling on whether to award attorney fees is a question of law, which is
        reviewed de novo. Peleton, Inc. v. McGivern’s, Inc., 375 Ill. App. 3d 222, 225 (2007). It is
        well-settled that a trial court “may only award attorney fees if they are expressly authorized
        by statute or by agreement of the parties.” Estate of Downs v. Webster, 307 Ill. App. 3d 65,
        70 (1999).
¶ 114        As noted, although the trial court relied upon article 3.2(d) of the APA in awarding
        Hallberg attorney fees to the extent that he can establish that the amount of his recovery on
        his CPP claim exceeds 5% of the amount of CPP as calculated by plaintiffs, the plain
        language of that provision relates exclusively to the parties’ responsibility for the costs paid
        to an arbitrator in an arbitration relating to a dispute concerning the CPP. By its own terms,
        this provision does not apply outside of the arbitration context.

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¶ 115      We conclude that the trial court erred in awarding conditional attorney fees to Hallberg.
        Accordingly, the trial court’s judgment on this issue is reversed.

¶ 116                 B. Did the Trial Court Err in Failing to Award Purchasers
                        Statutory Prejudgment Interest for the Period of Time
                         From the Court’s Initial Award in Favor of Plaintiffs
                                   to the Date of the Final Judgment?
¶ 117       Plaintiffs’ final contention is that they were entitled to statutory prejudgment interest on
        their award of damages for defendants’ breach of the restrictive covenants. Plaintiffs
        calculate the period of prejudgment interest to run from the time the trial court made the
        award on November 21, 2008 until the court’s entry of its order and judgment on January 20,
        2009.
¶ 118       Section 2-1303 of the Code of Civil Procedure governs prejudgment interest:
            “Judgments recovered in any court shall draw interest at a rate of 9% per annum from the
            date of the judgment until satisfied ***. When judgment is entered upon any award,
            report or verdict, interest shall be computed at the above rate, from the time when made
            or rendered to the time of entering judgment upon the same, and included in the
            judgment.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1303 (West 2004).
¶ 119       A trial court’s decision to award statutory prejudgment interest is reviewed for an abuse
        of discretion. Jahn v. Kinderman, 351 Ill. App. 3d 15, 22 (2004). The generally recognized
        basis for an award of prejudgment interest is the need to grant an award to make a deprived
        plaintiff whole. Id.
¶ 120       Here, plaintiffs contend that “the trial court omitted pre-judgment interest from the
        judgment it entered on January 20, 2009, and did not correct this omission in its September
        8, 2009 order resolving the parties’ post-trial motions.” Indeed, the court’s January, 2009,
        31-page order and judgment does not address the issue of prejudgement interest on the award
        given to plaintiffs for defendants’ breaches of the restrictive covenants. Moreover, although
        the parties briefed the issue of prejudgment interest on this award in their posttrial motions,
        it was not specifically addressed by the court in its September 2009 order, which ruled on all
        posttrial motions. That order simply states that “[b]oth plaintiffs’ *** and defendants’ ***
        post-trial motions are denied,” except for the court granting postjudgment interest to both
        plaintiffs and defendants on their respective judgments and making a change in one passage
        of the court’s prior order.
¶ 121       Its is well settled that a court abuses its discretion when it “acts arbitrarily without the
        employment of conscientious judgment or, in view of all the circumstances, exceeds the
        bounds of reason and judgment and ignores recognized principles of law.” Id. Here, the
        record does not reveal the trial court’s basis for denial of plaintiffs’ request for prejudgment
        interest on their award. Accordingly, we are unable to determine whether this denial was a
        proper exercise of the court’s discretion. Therefore, we reverse that ruling and remand this
        cause to the trial court solely for further consideration of the prejudgment interest issue. See
        Id. at 24 (cause remanded to circuit court for further consideration of postjudgment interest

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        issue where record was silent regarding trial court’s denial of award).

¶ 122                                     CONCLUSION
¶ 123       For the foregoing reasons, in case No. 01-10-0428, the judgment of the circuit court is
        affirmed in all respects. With regard to case No. 01-09-2385, the judgment of the circuit
        court is reversed in all respects. We remand this cause to the circuit court for further
        proceedings solely on the issue of whether prejudgment interest should be awarded on
        plaintiffs’ judgment against defendants for their breach of the restrictive covenants.

¶ 124      Affirmed in part and reversed in part; cause remanded.

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