Court Opinion

ID: 6496867
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-30 17:04:33.690415+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:49:20.765727
License: Public Domain

2022 IL App (1st) 182211-U
                                                        No. 1-18-2211
                                                         June 30, 2022

                                                                                                         FIRST DIVISION

         NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in
         the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

                                                               IN THE

                                            APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                                                        FIRST DISTRICT

         In re MARRIAGE OF                                                           )    Appeal from the Circuit Court
         DIANA LYNN BARR CRECOS,                                                     )    of Cook County, Illinois
                                                                                     )
                  Petitioner-Appellee,                                               )    No. 07 D 10902
                                                                                     )
            v.                                                                       )    The Honorable
         GREGORY CRECOS                                                              )    Robert W. Johnson,
               Respondent-Appellant.                                                 )    Judge Presiding.
                                                                                     )

                           JUSTICE WALKER delivered the judgment of the court.
                           Justices Pierce and Johnson 1 concurred in the judgment.

                                                            ORDER

¶1          Held: An appellant prevails on appeal when the appellate court reverses the trial court’s
                  judgment, even if the appellate court remands for further proceedings in which
                  the appellee might prevail. The trial court may award fees without seeing detailed
                  time records from the attorneys when the court’s familiarity with the case and the issues
                  allows the court to make an informed decision regarding fees.

     1
         Justice Johnson replaces Justice Griffin, who retired after this court issued its original opinion.
     No. 1-18-2211

¶2         In 2007, Diana Lynn Barr Crecos and Gregory Crecos began divorce proceedings. The trial

        court entered a final judgment dissolving the marriage on December 24, 2009. The parties have

        litigated various post-judgment issues in both the trial and appellate courts for several years.

        The trial court granted Diana’s petitions for an award of attorney fees incurred in two appeals.

        Gregory challenges the award arguing that Diana did not prevail in one of the appeals, and she

        did not sufficiently prove the reasonableness of the fees and costs. We find that Diana prevailed

        in both appeals, and the trial court did not abuse its discretion in awarding fees. We affirm the

        trial court’s judgment.

¶3                                          BACKGROUND

¶4         Diana and Gregory married in 2000 and had two children. Diana petitioned for dissolution

        of the marriage in 2007. On December 24, 2009, Judge Jeanne Reynolds entered an order

        dissolving the marriage, allocating the parties' assets, and directing Gregory to pay child

        support of $10,000 per month. Gregory appealed, and the appellate court affirmed the

        judgment. In re Marriage of Crecos, 2012 IL App (1st) 102158-U (Crecos I).

¶5         The circuit court assigned the case to Judge Raul Vega on July 15, 2010, for post-decree

        issues. Diana filed a motion for substitution of judge as of right, and Judge Vega denied the

        motion on July 27, 2010. Gregory filed a petition to modify child support, and on August 11,

        2010, he filed a motion for “Turnover of Property,” alleging that Diana stole property not

        mentioned in Judge Reynolds’s 2009 order. On May 24, 2013, Judge Vega entered an order

        awarding Gregory a judgment against Diana for $746,000. Diana appealed, challenging all

        orders entered by Judge Vega on grounds that he erred when he denied her motion for

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     No. 1-18-2211

        substitution of judge. After Diana filed her appeal, the trial court entered an order, dated

        December 17, 2013, garnishing her wages.

¶6         In the 2013 appeal, Diana argued: (1) Judge Vega improperly denied the motion for

        substitution of judge, making all subsequent orders void; (2) Judge Vega’s finding that Diana

        stole property from Gregory constituted an unjust modification of the 2009 judgment; (3)

        Gregory’s list of allegedly stolen property, all not listed in the 2009 judgment and all not

        mentioned in Gregory’s appeal from that judgment, showed that either Gregory fraudulently

        hid property from Judge Reynolds or Gregory lied to Judge Vega about the items; (4) the law

        of the case barred Gregory’s claim that Diana stole his property; (5) Judge Vega denied Diana

        her right to a jury trial on Gregory’s claim for conversion of his property; (6) the evidence did

        not support Judge Vega’s award of $746,000 in damages for conversion; and (7) the appellate

        court should vacate the wage garnishment.

¶7         The appellate court agreed with Diana’s first argument and vacated all of Judge Vega’s

        orders and the wage garnishment. In re Marriage of Crecos, 2015 IL App (1st) 132756 (Crecos

        II). The case was remanded for further proceedings on Gregory’s petition to modify child

        support and his motion for turnover of property.

¶8         In March 2016, Diana filed a petition for attorney fees and costs incurred in defending

        against Gregory’s appeal in Crecos I, and she filed a separate petition for attorney fees and

        costs incurred for the appeal in Crecos II. The record presented to the trial court included the

        appellate briefs her attorneys filed and affidavits from the attorneys stating the hourly charges

        and total fees for each appeal. Diana did not file time records detailing the work attorneys’

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       No. 1-18-2211

          performed for each hour charged. Diana sought fees and costs of $32,952.50 for Crecos I and

          fees and costs of $90,840.57 for Crecos II. Gregory’s attorneys charged him more than

          $107,000 for 248 hours of work on the appeal in Crecos II.

¶9           The trial court held a hearing on Diana’s petitions for fees in July 2018. Gregory moved

          for a directed finding in his favor on grounds that Diana failed to present detailed time records.

          The trial court denied Gregory’s motion and, on September 17, 2018, entered an order granting

          Diana the fees and costs she sought. Gregory appealed, and we found we lacked jurisdiction

          because the trial court entered a non-final order for interim fees. In re Marriage of Crecos,

          2020 IL App (1st) 182211. Our supreme court reversed the decision and instructed us to address

          Gregory’s appeal on the merits. In re Marriage of Crecos, 2021 IL 126192. We now do so.

¶ 10                                             ANALYSIS

¶ 11         On appeal, Gregory raises two arguments, (1) the trial court should not have awarded Diana

          any fees for Crecos II because she did not prevail, and (2) the court should not have awarded

          any fees because Diana did not prove the reasonableness of the fees and costs. We review the

          trial court’s award of fees for an abuse of discretion. In re Marriage of Kane, 2016 IL App (2d)

          150774, ¶ 44.

¶ 12                                           Prevailing Party

¶ 13          Section 508(a) of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act (the Act) provides:

             "The court from time to time, after due notice and hearing, and after considering

             the financial resources of the parties, may order any party to pay a reasonable

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       No. 1-18-2211

             amount for his own or the other party's costs and attorney's fees. *** Awards may

             be made in connection with the following:

             ***

             (3) The defense of an appeal of any order or judgment under this Act, including the

             defense of appeals of post-judgment orders.

             (3.1) The prosecution of any claim on appeal (if the prosecuting party has

             substantially prevailed).” 750 ILCS 5/508(a) (West 2016).

¶ 14         Gregory contends Diana did not substantially prevail on any claim appealed in Crecos II

          because the appellate court sent the case back to the trial court for further hearings on Gregory’s

          claims concerning child support and Diana’s alleged theft of Gregory’s property.

¶ 15         The parties have not cited Illinois cases deciding whether an appellant substantially

          prevailed in similar circumstances. We find several cases from other jurisdictions persuasive.

          In McNally v. Department of PATH, 2011 VT 93, ¶¶ 8-11, 190 Vt. 590, 592–93, 31 A.3d 333,

          336–38 (2011), a party contended his opponent had not prevailed because the appellate court

          only reversed and remanded for further proceedings. The court found:

             “In support of its argument that claimant is not entitled to any attorney's fees,

             employer cites various courts holding that attorney's fees are warranted only when

             a party ‘prevails’ on the merits of the case or at least achieves some success on a

             significant legal issue in the case. [Citations.]

             These cases *** do not involve statutes pertaining to attorney's fees exclusively for

             proceedings on appeal. ***

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       No. 1-18-2211

             *** [W]e must construe the word ‘prevails’ in the limited context of the appellate

             proceedings rather than the case as a whole. ***

             As the United States Supreme Court noted in Buckhannon Board & Care Home,

             Inc. v. West Virginia Department of Health & Human Resources, 532 U.S. 598,

             121 S. Ct. 1835 (2001), a ‘prevailing party’ is generally defined as a ‘“party in

             whose favor a judgment is rendered, regardless of the amount of damages

             awarded.”’ 532 U.S. at 603, 121 S. Ct. 1835 (quoting Black's Law Dictionary 1145

             (7th ed. 1999)). In this case, claimant was plainly the prevailing party in the appeal.

             As noted, our mandate reversed the Commissioner's judgment and remanded the

             matter for the Commissioner to make necessary findings and apply the appropriate

             law, neither of which the Commissioner had done in the administrative proceedings

             from which claimant appealed. Although we do not know if claimant will ultimately

             prevail on her claim for benefits, her appeal was necessary to keep her claim alive

             and compel the Commissioner to consider the salient facts and apply the correct

             legal standard. Given these circumstances, claimant prevailed in the distinct

             proceeding before this Court and thus is entitled to reasonable attorney's fees.”

             McNally, 2011 VT 93, ¶¶ 8-11.

¶ 16         The Ohio Supreme Court held: “A party who appeals an order or judgment and prevails to

          the extent that he obtains a new trial *** is a ‘prevailing party’ within the contemplation of

          [the statute allowing fees for a party prevailing on appeal]. There is nothing in that section that

          requires a finding that a prevailing party on an appeal is limited to one who succeeds in having

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       No. 1-18-2211

          a ‘complete victory,’ which presumably means having the entire matter determined in his favor

          without a remand to the tribunal from which the appeal is taken for further proceedings.”

          Parker v. I&F Insulation Co., 2000-Ohio-151, 89 Ohio St. 3d 261, 265, 730 N.E.2d 972, 976–

          77 (2000).

¶ 17         Similarly, the New Hampshire Supreme Court held, “although we did not award medical

          payments to the employee for her chiropractic treatment, the employee is entitled to fees and

          costs incurred on appeal to this court because she received a right—the right to have ... a

          hearing on entitlement to benefits on remand from this appeal—that [s]he did not possess prior

          to [this] appeal.” (Internal quotation marks omitted) In re Silk, 156 N.H. 539, 543, 937 A.2d

          900, 904–05 (2007). As one Illinois court found, “[t]here seems to be no conceivable reason

          why the legislature should want to deny compensation for services in reversing an erroneous

          and therefore unjust decree." Gilmore v. Gilmore, 74 Ill. App. 3d 831, 835, 393 N.E.2d 33

          (1979). We find that Diana substantially prevailed in the appeal in Crecos II when the appellate

          court vacated all the orders Judge Vega entered.

¶ 18         Gregory argues that Diana prevailed in Crecos II only on her argument concerning the

          denial of the motion for substitution of judge. He also contends that the trial court should have

          limited its award to the expenses incurred in making that argument, awarding nothing for the

          many other arguments Diana raised. Gregory relies on In re Marriage of Murphy, 203 Ill .2d

          212, 219, 786 N.E.2d 132 (2003), where our supreme court stated, “in the context of a petition

          for fees for prosecution of an appeal, the circuit court may only award fees incurred for those

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       No. 1-18-2211

          individual claims on which the appellant can be said to have ‘substantially prevailed’ on

          appeal.” (Emphasis in original.) The court clarified:

             “Our interpretation *** comport[s] with the plain language of the statute, giving

             effect to all of the words penned by the legislature. *** [I]t eliminates the difficulty

             which the appellate court frankly confronted, of determining how much relief the

             appellant must obtain in a multi-issue appeal so as to ‘substantially prevail.’ This

             is difficult in any multi-issue appeal; it would be far more difficult in an appeal in

             which one or more of the claims involved nonmonetary concerns—as is frequently

             the case in dissolution proceedings. It is a discomforting prospect to require the

             circuit court to determine whether a party ‘substantially prevailed’ in an appeal in

             which he succeeded in overturning the child support amount but failed in his

             appellate claim that he should receive visitation. Although we acknowledge that it

             still may at times be more of an art than a science for a court to determine whether

             an appellant has substantially prevailed with respect to an individual issue, the

             difficulty will be lessened if the court is not required to weigh the relative import

             of issues raised.”

¶ 19         In Crecos II, Diana sought reversal of the orders entered on July 27, 2010, May 24, 2013,

          and December 27, 2013. The appellate court vacated all those orders. Thus, Diana prevailed

          on all claims she raised in the appeal. The court’s reliance on a single argument for reversing

          all the orders does not make Diana’s victory less complete. Unlike the court in Murphy, the

          court in Crecos II did not decide any issue against Diana. Instead, the Crecos II court had no

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       No. 1-18-2211

          need to address Diana’s other arguments because she prevailed on her first argument. We find

          Diana substantially prevailed on all claims raised in her appeal in Crecos II.

¶ 20                                     Sufficiency of the Evidence

¶ 21         Gregory contends Diana did not prove the right to an award of fees because her attorneys

          did not submit detailed records specifying the attorneys’ services and how much time the

          attorneys spent on those services. See In re Marriage of Shinn, 313 Ill. App. 3d 317, 323, 729

          N.E.2d 546 (2000).

¶ 22         In some circumstances, the trial court has sufficient evidence to support an award of

          attorneys’ fees without detailed time records as with In re Marriage of Hasabnis, 322 Ill. App.

          3d 582, 597, 749 N.E.2d 448 (2001), where the court held that “the trial court did not abuse its

          discretion when it declined to order production of the billing records or when it saw no need

          to examine those records. *** [T]he trial judge had enough evidence to make an informed

          decision.” In re Marriage of Patel, 2013 IL App (1st) 112571, ¶ 110, 993 N.E.2d 1062, also

          addressed an argument of billing records lacking sufficient specificity. The Patel court found,

          “a court may use its own experience to determine the reasonableness of the fee amounts

          requested. [Citation.] Due to its lengthy involvement with this case and the extensive hearings

          on the attorney fees issue, the trial court had a detailed understanding of what work was

          performed by the attorneys and whether it was reasonable and necessary.” Id. In Van Fleet v.

          Van Fleet, 50 Ill. App. 3d 172, 175 (1977), the attorneys did not keep accurate and

          contemporaneous records of their time. In their request for fees, they estimated the amount of

          time spent on the case and provided their hourly rate. The Van Fleet court found: “The matter

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       No. 1-18-2211

          of fixing attorney's fees is one of the few areas in which a trial judge may rely on the pleadings,

          affidavits on file and his own experience.” Id. at 175. The court further found that the trial

          court may rely on knowledge acquired in the discharge of professional duties to value legal

          fees.

¶ 23          Here, the trial judge could rely on his knowledge concerning the complexity of the case,

          the issues involved, and the amount Gregory’s attorneys charged Gregory for their work on

          appeal to determine whether Diana’s attorneys charged a reasonable amount for their services.

          The trial court did not abuse its discretion in awarding attorneys’ fees to Diana’s attorneys for

          their work on the appeals in Crecos I and Crecos II.

¶ 24                                            CONCLUSION

¶ 25          Diana substantially prevailed on all claims she raised in her appeal in Crecos II. The trial

          court did not abuse its discretion in awarding fees for the two appeals. Accordingly, we affirm

          the trial court’s judgment.

¶ 26          Affirmed.

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