Court Opinion

ID: 8316516
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-17 20:03:01.299367+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:44:56.563973
License: Public Domain

2022 IL App (1st) 210372-U
                                           No. 1-21-0372
                                                                                 FIRST DIVISION
                                                                                  October 17, 2022

 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
 ______________________________________________________________________________
 WILMINGTON SAVINGS FUND SOCIETY FSB, d/b/a                    )   Appeal from the
 CHRISTIANA TRUST, not in its individual capacity but          )   Circuit Court of
 solely as trustee for the Brougham Fund II Trust,             )   Cook County.
                                                               )
           Plaintiff-Appellee,                                 )
                                                               )
     v.                                                        )   No. 2018 CH 11171
                                                               )
 ROBERT W. SCHRADER,                                           )
                                                               )
           Defendant-Appellant.                                )   Honorable
                                                               )   William B. Sullivan,
                                                               )   Judge, presiding.

           JUSTICE PUCINSKI delivered the judgment of the court.
           Justices Hyman and Coghlan concurred in the judgment.

                                             ORDER

¶1        Held: We lack jurisdiction to consider defendant’s challenge to the September 2020 non-
                final order reversing a prior dismissal order in defendant’s favor. However, we
                affirm the January 2021 order granting plaintiff’s motion for voluntary dismissal,
                and the denial of defendant’s motion to reconsider the voluntary dismissal order.

¶2        In this mortgage foreclosure action, defendant-appellant Robert W. Schrader appeals from

the trial court’s September 2020 order granting plaintiff-appellee’s motion to reconsider a January
No. 1-21-0372

2020 order dismissing the action with prejudice. Defendant also appeals the trial court’s January

2021 order granting plaintiff’s motion to voluntarily dismiss the action and the denial of

defendant’s subsequent motion to reconsider the voluntary dismissal. For the following reasons,

we conclude that we lack jurisdiction to consider the non-final September 2020 order denying

defendant’s motion to reconsider. However, we affirm the trial court’s January 2021 order granting

plaintiff’s motion for voluntary dismissal and the denial of defendant’s motion to reconsider the

voluntary dismissal order.

                                     ¶3     BACKGROUND

¶4     On September 4, 2018, plaintiff filed the original complaint. The caption identified plaintiff

as “Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB d/b/a Christiana Trust, not in it’s [sic] individual

capacity but solely as the trustee for the Brougham Fund I Trust.”

¶5     The original complaint attached a mortgage dated January 12, 2001 that identified the

lender as Washington Mutual Bank, FA and identified defendant as the borrower. The mortgage

recited that defendant owed Washington Mutual Bank, FA the principal sum of $232,500,

evidenced by a note executed on the same date.

¶6     Also attached to the original complaint was a “Lost Note Affidavit” in which Natalie

Owens, an officer of BSI Financial Services, attested she searched for the note and could not locate

it. The affidavit attached a copy of the note, which identified Washington Mutual Bank, FA as the

“Lender”. The copy of the note included a number of allonges reflecting that the note was endorsed

at different times to JP Morgan Chase Bank NA, EMC Mortgage LLC f/k/a EMC Mortgage

Corporation, and Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB, not in its individual capacity but solely

as Trustee for the PrimeStar-H Fund Trust (PrimeStar).

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No. 1-21-0372

                                  ¶7    The First Motion to Dismiss

¶8     On March 27, 2019, defendant filed a “Combined Motion to Dismiss” the complaint

pursuant to section 2-619.1 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-619.1 (West

2018) and Supreme Court Rule 113. (Ill. S. Ct. R. 113 (eff. July 1, 2018). Defendant urged that the

complaint’s failure to attach any endorsement of the note to plaintiff rendered it defective.

Defendant otherwise argued that, pursuant to section 2-619(a)(9) of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2-

619(a)(9) (West 2018)), the endorsement of the note to a non-party, PrimeStar, was “affirmative

matter” establishing that plaintiff was not the holder of the note. On March 28, defendant amended

his motion, adding an argument that the complaint was subject to dismissal under section 2-

619(a)(2) for lack of “legal capacity to sue,” as plaintiff was not the holder of the note. 735 ILCS

5/2-619(a)(2) (West 2018).

¶9     On April 17, 2019, the trial court granted the motion to dismiss in an order specifying that

the lost note affidavit was “defective” and “does not link to the correct Plaintiff.” In the same order,

the court recognized that the note was endorsed to PrimeStar but not to plaintiff. The trial court

allowed plaintiff 28 days to replead.

¶ 10   Plaintiff filed a motion to reconsider the April 17, 2019 order. In that motion, plaintiff

argued that there was “no reason” why the “rightful owner’s interest in a lost instrument cannot be

transferred or assigned irrespective of allonge.” However, plaintiff acknowledged there was a

“scrivener’s error” insofar as the lawsuit identified plaintiff as trustee of the “Brougham Fund I

Trust” instead of the “Brougham Fund II Trust.” (Emphases in original). Plaintiff requested leave

to amend to correct that error.

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No. 1-21-0372

¶ 11    On July 8, 2019, defendant responded to plaintiff’s motion to reconsider. Defendant

reiterated his position that plaintiff lacked standing and also argued that the misidentification of

the plaintiff as trustee for “Brougham Fund I Trust” could not be excused as a scrivener’s error.

On August 13, 2019, the court denied the motion to reconsider and granted plaintiff 21 days to file

an amended complaint.

                       ¶ 12   Amended Complaint and Lost Note Affidavit

¶ 13    On August 29, 2019, plaintiff filed an amended complaint, which corrected plaintiff’s name

to “Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB d/b/a Christiana Trust, not in it’s [sic] individual

capacity but solely as the trustee for the Brougham Fund II Trust.” (Emphasis added). The

amended complaint attached the mortgage and a new lost note affidavit executed by Cheryl

Mallory.

¶ 14    In the affidavit, Mallory identified herself as an “AVP for BSI Financial Services,” the

“servicing agent for the subject loan.” She attested she had searched the records of BSI for the

note, and that its whereabouts could not be determined. She further attested that “JPMorgan Chase

Bank, NA, which acquired EMC Mortgage LLC was in possession of the Promissory Note and

entitled to enforce it at the time that the Note was lost.” Mallory further averred that the loan was

subsequently sold by JP Morgan Chase Bank, NA to PrimeStar and then from PrimeStar to

plaintiff.

¶ 15    Mallory’s lost note affidavit attached a copy of the note, which did not include any

indorsement to plaintiff. However, the affidavit also attached an assignment of mortgage from

PrimeStar to plaintiff that referenced the underlying note.

       ¶ 16   Defendant’s Combined Motion to Dismiss and Motion for Summary Judgment

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No. 1-21-0372

¶ 17    On September 27, 2019, defendant filed a combined motion to dismiss “pursuant to 735

ILCS 5/2-619(a)(2) and 735 ILCS 5/2-619(a)(9) and for an order of summary judgment pursuant

to 735 ILCS 5/2-1005.” On October 22, 2019, defendant filed an amended combined motion to

dismiss and for summary judgment.

¶ 18    Defendant sought dismissal under section 2-619(a)(2) due to plaintiff’s lack of legal

capacity, given that the note was indorsed to PrimeStar and not to plaintiff. Defendant argued that

the assignment of mortgage to plaintiff was immaterial because a transfer of a mortgage without

assignment of the underlying debt is treated as a “nullity.” Defendant otherwise argued the

complaint was subject to dismissal under section 2-619(a)(2) due to the earlier misidentification

of plaintiff as trustee for the “Brougham Fund I Trust” instead of the “Brougham Fund II Trust.”

Defendant claimed this could not be “deemed to be a scrivener’s error as a matter of law.”

Defendant also sought dismissal due to “affirmative matter” under section 2-619(a)(9), citing the

fact that the note was indorsed to a party other than plaintiff.

¶ 19    Elsewhere in the combined motion, defendant sought summary judgment on the ground

that plaintiff never possessed the note and thus had no right to enforce it under section 3-309 of

the Uniform Commercial Code. 810 ILCS 5/3-309 (West 2020)1. Defendant argued that under

section 3-309, a party seeking to enforce a lost note must demonstrate possession prior to its loss.

        1
           Section 3-309 provides, in relevant part, that a “person not in possession of an instrument is
entitled to enforce the instrument if (i) the person was in possession of the instrument and entitled to enforce
it when loss of possession occurred, (ii) the loss of possession was not the result of a transfer by the person
or a lawful seizure, and (iii) the person cannot reasonably obtain possession of the instrument because the
instrument was destroyed, its whereabouts cannot be determined, or it is in the wrongful possession of an
unknown person or a person that cannot be found or is not amenable to service of process.” 810 ILCS 5/3-
309 (West 2020).

                                                     -5-
No. 1-21-0372

Defendant asserted that Mallory’s lost note affidavit established that plaintiff never possessed the

note.

¶ 20    In plaintiff’s response, it argued that (1) defendant’s arguments were moot because plaintiff

had already been granted leave to amend and (2) an inadvertent “misnomer” in plaintiff’s name

did not warrant dismissal. With respect to defendant’s summary judgment argument, plaintiff

contended that section 3-309 does not preclude the assignee of a lost instrument from enforcing it,

as it “does not say that once an instrument is lost that the party entitled to enforce it can never

transfer its right to enforce the instrument to another party.”

                  ¶ 21    The January 2020 Oral Argument and Dismissal Order

¶ 22    On January 7, 2020, the court heard argument on the combined motion to dismiss. The

court confirmed with defense counsel that it asserted two arguments under section 2-619(a)(2):

“The first is that plaintiff lacks capacity to sue, and the second argument is that no facts exist

supporting the existence of a scrivener’s error.” Defense counsel also agreed that it sought

dismissal under section 2-619(a)(9) because “the note was made payable to another party.” The

court also confirmed that the basis for defendant’s summary judgment argument was that “plaintiff

never even possessed the note” and thus could not enforce it pursuant to section 3-309.

¶ 23    During argument, the court questioned plaintiff’s counsel about the contents of the lost-

note affidavit and asked if there were documents supporting the affidavit’s statement that the

subject loan was sold to plaintiff. Plaintiff’s counsel responded that the assignment of mortgage

evidenced the transfer of the note to plaintiff. When the court asked if plaintiff provided other

documents “showing the transfer of ownership” to plaintiff, plaintiff’s counsel answered that it

had not. The court then asked if there was case law that “would allow me to use an assignment of

                                                 -6-
No. 1-21-0372

mortgage to * * * determine the validity of a transfer of a negotiable instrument.” Plaintiff’s

counsel cited case law for the proposition that when a valid assignment is executed, “the assignee

acquires all of the interest of the assignor in the property that has been transferred.” Defense

counsel responded by arguing that the assignment of a mortgage without a proper assignment of

the note is a “nullity.”

¶ 24    The court then asked plaintiff’s counsel if it had attached to the lost note affidavit a

“transfer instrument” or “bill of sale” evidencing the transfer of the loan to plaintiff. Plaintiff’s

counsel acknowledged it had not, but argued that it had “pleaded sufficient facts to show that we

do have the capacity to sue” to survive a section 2-619 motion to dismiss. At that point, the court

noted it already gave plaintiff “an opportunity to file an amended complaint” and a new lost note

affidavit. The court remarked it did not believe that it could “rely upon an assignment of mortgage

to prove transfer of ownership.” Plaintiff’s counsel indicated it could produce further documents

at a later stage but believed the lost note affidavit “should suffice * * * to proceed past the motion

to dismiss.”

¶ 25    The court then asked the parties to address the summary judgment portion of the motion.

Defendant’s counsel urged that under section 3-309, “you must establish possession prior to loss”

to enforce a lost note. Defendant urged there was no genuine issue of material fact that plaintiff

could not enforce the note, as the affidavit admitted that a party other than plaintiff possessed it at

the time of loss. In response, plaintiff argued that section 3-309 was not a “prohibition on the

assignment of a lost instrument” and that it could enforce the note as assignee, even if it had not

possessed the note before its loss. Counsel for both parties argued at length as to whether

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No. 1-21-0372

authorities from other jurisdictions interpreting section 3-309 of the Uniform Commercial Code

supported a conclusion that a party suing to enforce a lost note must have had actual possession.

¶ 26   After argument, the court said it would not dismiss the case based on the “scrivener’s error”

regarding plaintiff’s name. However, it found “significant problems” with Mallory’s lost note

affidavit. The court stated that the affidavit contained “legal conclusions” that the note was

transferred to plaintiff and remarked that there was “no supporting documentation other than an

assignment of mortgage” reflecting the transfer to plaintiff. The court found that the assignment

of mortgage was “not enough for me to find that the plaintiff is the actual holder of the note” and

remarked that the lack of “underlying transfer documents” was the reason why it had allowed

plaintiff to file an amended complaint.

¶ 27   The court concluded that “the note and the allonges show that the current holder of the note

is Prime Star-H Fund I Trust,” notwithstanding the Mallory affidavit’s “unacceptable legal

conclusion that the loan has been transferred to [plaintiff.]” The court remarked that “plaintiff did

need to bring its evidence forward at this juncture with regard to the motion for summary

judgment.” The court stated that it would dismiss the complaint with prejudice and would grant

“summary judgment under the same ground that there’s no proof that the plaintiff has the capacity

and/or any ability to enforce the note.” However, the court stated that it did not “rule on the Section

3-309 argument” because it was dismissing due to plaintiff’s lack of “legal capacity to sue.”

¶ 28   Accordingly, the court’s January 7, 2020, written order denied the motion to dismiss with

respect to the “scrivener’s error” but stated: “defendant’s remaining 2-619(a)(2) and 2-619(a)(9)

and 2-1005 motions are granted for the reasons stated on the record and Plaintiff’s Complaint is

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No. 1-21-0372

dismissed with prejudice.” The order specified that the court was “not making a ruling with respect

to the 3-309 possession argument.”

       ¶ 29   The Court Grants Plaintiff’s Motion to Reconsider the January 2020 Dismissal

¶ 30    On February 5, 2020, plaintiff filed a motion to reconsider the dismissal. Plaintiff averred

that it had provided sufficient proof of the transfer of underlying note to plaintiff, citing language

in the assignment of the mortgage to plaintiff. Plaintiff otherwise argued that dismissal was

erroneous because the court had improperly required plaintiff to both plead and prove its right to

foreclosure. Plaintiff argued that, although “evidence of ownership may be necessary to ultimately

prevail” it was “not required at the pleading stage.” Plaintiff suggested that it could subsequently

“provide the Court with proof of ownership” of the note, or that the note could eventually be found.

¶ 31    Insofar as the January 2020 dismissal order granted summary judgment to defendant,

plaintiff maintained that the entirety of defendant’s motion summary judgment was based upon

the section 3-309 issue that the court declined to rule on, i.e., whether “an assignee of a lost

instrument must have been in possession of that instrument when it was lost.” Plaintiff suggested

it was improper for the court to grant summary judgment when it explicitly declined to decide that

issue. Plaintiff otherwise contended that the assignment of mortgage to plaintiff evidenced the

transfer of the note and created an issue of fact precluding summary judgment.

¶ 32    On September 17, 2020, the court heard argument on plaintiff’s motion to reconsider.

Defense counsel contended that plaintiff had failed to respond to the basis of motion for summary

judgment, i.e., that “they were not the holder of the note, and they didn’t have capacity to sue.”

Defendant asserted he was entitled to summary judgment because there were no documents

                                                -9-
No. 1-21-0372

showing the note “was ever sold to this plaintiff” and the affidavit indicated that JPMorgan Chase

Bank, not plaintiff, had capacity to sue on the note.

¶ 33    Plaintiff argued that dismissal with prejudice was improper, as it “would have the res

judicata effect of never allowing [plaintiff] to file this complaint again,” even if it subsequently

discovered further evidence of its ownership of the note. In response to the court’s questions,

plaintiff’s counsel acknowledged that the “last allonge is endorsed to a party who is not the current

plaintiff” but argued that the assignment of mortgage “at least created a genuine issue of material

fact” as to the transfer of the note to plaintiff.

¶ 34    After argument, the court stated that it would “reverse my ruling on the motion for

summary judgment” and give plaintiff “one more opportunity to replead the complaint.” In so

doing, the court commented:

                 “I feel that my only error was not an error necessarily of the law but

                one of equity. After reading everything, I think that it would be fair

                to allow the plaintiffs the opportunity to – out of the interests of

                equity, which I’m authorized to engage in in every case before me,

                one final opportunity to file an amended complaint.”

When defense counsel asked the court to clarify its ruling, the court responded:

                 “I’m reversing the fact that the complaint was dismissed with

                prejudice. I’m granting the motion with regard to the 2[-]619 aspect,

                but I’m dismissing the complaint without prejudice. And I’m

                reversing my ruling as it relates to the motion for summary

                judgment.”

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No. 1-21-0372

¶ 35   On September 21, 2020, the court entered a corresponding written order granting plaintiff’s

motion to reconsider, specifying that it reversed the January 2020 entry of summary judgment and

dismissal in favor of defendant. The court’s order specified that: “The [January 7, 2020] order

granting Defendant’s Section 2-619(a)(2) and Section 2-619(a)(9) Motions to Dismiss is reversed

in that said motions are granted without prejudice, instead of with prejudice.” In the same order,

the court allowed plaintiff 35 days to file a second amended complaint.

          ¶ 36   Plaintiff’s Voluntary Dismissal and Defendant’s Motion to Reconsider

¶ 37   Plaintiff did not file a second amended complaint. Instead, on October 20, 2020, plaintiff

filed a motion to voluntarily dismiss the action. Plaintiff’s motion did not specify why it sought

dismissal at that point, but stated only that “[p]laintiff wishes to voluntarily dismiss this cause of

action without prejudice.” The same October 20 filing included a corresponding notice of motion,

stating that the motion to dismiss would be heard on November 18, 2020 “or as soon thereafter as

counsel may be heard.” However, plaintiff’s October 20, 2020 filing did not include any proof of

service on defendant’s counsel. The parties do not dispute that defendant did not receive plaintiff’s

motion to dismiss on the October 20 filing date.

¶ 38   The following day, October 21, 2020, defendant filed a motion to reconsider the September

21, 2020 order granting plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration.

¶ 39   On October 22, 2020, plaintiff filed an “amended notice of motion” regarding its

previously-filed motion to voluntarily dismiss the complaint. Plaintiff’s October 22 filing included

a certification that plaintiff’s counsel had served the amended notice of motion on defense counsel.

However, the amended notice of motion filed on October 22 did not include a copy of the actual

motion to dismiss that was filed two days earlier. Thus, as of October 22, defense counsel had

                                                - 11 -
No. 1-21-0372

received the amended notice of motion, but had not yet received a copy of the motion to voluntarily

dismiss.

¶ 40   The record reflects that on November 10, 2020, plaintiff’s counsel separately e-mailed to

defense counsel a copy of the motion to dismiss that was filed on October 20.

¶ 41   The parties next appeared before the court on December 17, 2020. The trial court noted

that it had been copied on a number of e-mails in which the parties discussed whether plaintiff’s

motion to voluntarily dismiss or defendant’s motion to reconsider had been filed first, and which

motion had “priority” for consideration by the court.

¶ 42   Defense counsel informed the court that he had not received notice of the plaintiff’s motion

for voluntary dismissal on its filing date, October 20, 2020. He indicated that if he had learned of

the motion on October 20, he may have not proceeded to file defendant’s motion to reconsider the

following day, October 21. Defense counsel acknowledged that on October 22, he received

plaintiff’s amended notice of motion. Defense counsel also acknowledged that the court’s

electronic docket reflected plaintiff’s motion to dismiss was filed before defendant’s motion to

reconsider, but he maintained that, since defendant had not been served with the motion to dismiss

on the October 20 filing date, “there’s a conflict there regarding service and the priority.”

¶ 43   Plaintiff’s counsel remarked that the precise timing of motions was irrelevant, because case

law established that “even if motions are pending, the plaintiff has an absolute right to dismiss its

case voluntarily.” Defendant responded that because he was not served on the day plaintiff’s

motion was filed, “both motions should be given equal weight” and it was “a matter of judicial

discretion what motions [the court] want[s] to consider.”

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No. 1-21-0372

¶ 44   The court declined to rule on either motion at that time, noting that “before a [section 2-

1009] motion can be granted, costs have to be paid.” The court indicated to plaintiff’s counsel that

if defendant’s costs were not paid, it could not grant plaintiff’s motion for voluntary dismissal.

The court asked defendant’s counsel how much time it would take to prepare a summary of costs

for plaintiff’s counsel. Defense counsel indicated that 14 days would be sufficient. The court issued

an order directing defense counsel to provide plaintiff’s counsel a summary of costs within 14

days, on or before December 31, 2020.

¶ 45   On January 4, 2021, defendant filed a “motion to reconsider the December 17, 2020 order,

or in the alternative clarify the service record of competing motions for plaintiff’s voluntary

dismissal and motion to reconsider the September 21, 2020 order.” Defendant argued that because

he was not served with plaintiff’s motion for voluntary dismissal on its October 20 filing date, that

motion did not have priority over his motion to reconsider, and both “must be considered equally.”

Defendant otherwise argued that he was prejudiced by failure to receive notice of the October 20

motion for voluntary dismissal, insofar as he “invest[ed] significant time, resources, and several

days drafting the Motion to Reconsider” that he filed on October 21.

                  ¶ 46   Granting of Plaintiff’s Motion for Voluntary Dismissal

¶ 47   The court conducted a hearing on January 14, 2021, noting there were two motions

pending: plaintiff’s motion to voluntarily dismiss and defendant’s motion to reconsider.

¶ 48   The court acknowledged defendant’s January 4 filing of a motion to reconsider the

December 17 order and to “clarify the service record.” However, the court pointed out that, under

the judge’s rules, counsel may not “piggyback” a new motion for a time previously scheduled for

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No. 1-21-0372

another motion, without first obtaining leave. Because defense counsel had not sought leave, the

court struck defendant’s January 4 motion.

¶ 49   The court asked defense counsel if he had sent a summary of costs to plaintiff’s counsel on

or before December 31, 2020, as directed in the December 14, 2020 order. Defense counsel stated

“we did send a summary of costs” to plaintiff’s counsel but “not by the [December 31] deadline.”

Defense counsel indicated he believed he had asked for more time to prepare the summary of costs.

The court read aloud the portion of the December 17 hearing transcript in which counsel asked for

“14 days,” and then confirmed that defense counsel had not requested an extension.

¶ 50   Plaintiff’s counsel stated that he received an e-mail from defense counsel with a

summarization of costs, but “several of them are incorrect.” For instance, plaintiff’s counsel stated

he confirmed with the court reporter that costs for transcripts were different from what defense

counsel reported to him. Defense counsel told the court that he relied on information from his

client regarding court costs. Defense counsel also acknowledged he had received a $237 check for

an appearance fee from plaintiff’s counsel. The court then found that defense counsel did not

timely provide a summary of costs, and so plaintiff “had no choice but to send what plaintiff

thought was at least the minimum of court costs,” which was the $237 appearance and filing fee.

¶ 51   The court proceeded to find plaintiff had met the three elements of a motion to voluntarily

dismiss without prejudice pursuant to section 2-1009 of the Code of Civil Procedure, “including

the proper notice and court costs.” Because it was granting that dismissal motion, the court stated

that defendant’s motion to reconsider the September 21, 2020 order was “moot.”

                ¶ 52   Defendant’s Motion to Reconsider the Voluntary Dismissal

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No. 1-21-0372

¶ 53    On February 11, 2021, defendant filed a motion to reconsider the January 14, 2021 order

granting plaintiff’s motion to voluntarily dismiss. Defendant argued that because the motion for

voluntary dismissal was not properly served on its October 20 filing date, it did not have priority

over defendant’s motion to reconsider filed October 21, 2020. Defendant claimed that, because he

filed his motion to reconsider before he was served with the voluntary dismissal motion, the court

was obligated to consider defendant’s motion.

¶ 54    Defendant also argued the voluntary dismissal motion did not comply with section 2-1009,

insofar as it required plaintiff to give proper notice. Defendant separately asserted plaintiff had no

right to dismissal, citing section 2-1009(a)’s language that such motion may be filed “at any time

before trial or hearing begins.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1009(a) (West 2020). Defendant urged that since “a

summary judgment hearing had previously been conducted on January 7, 2020”, plaintiff’s motion

to dismiss was “too late.”

¶ 55    On March 4, 2021, the court heard argument on defendant’s motion to reconsider the

voluntary dismissal. Defendant’s counsel emphasized that there was no proof of service page with

plaintiff’s October 20 filing of the motion to dismiss, and so defense counsel was not served on

that date.

¶ 56    The court explained that it had reviewed the “Clerk’s access” database, which showed: (1)

on October 20, plaintiff filed its motion to dismiss and a notice of motion; (2) defendant filed a

motion to reconsider on October 21; (3) on October 22, plaintiff filed an amended notice of motion

and a certificate of service, and (4) also on October 22, defendant filed a notice of motion. Upon

questioning by the court, defense counsel acknowledged he was served with the amended notice

of plaintiff’s motion on October 22. Defense counsel also acknowledged that on November 10,

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No. 1-21-0372

plaintiff’s counsel provided him with a copy of the motion to dismiss. Nevertheless, defense

counsel asserted that plaintiff “needed to notice [the October 20 motion] to me prior to the filing

of defendant’s motion to reconsider.”

¶ 57    Defendant also claimed that the court was obligated to consider defendant’s pending

motion before dismissing the case under section 2-1009 of the Code. When the court asked for

statutory support, defense counsel cited section 2-1009(b)’s statement: “The court may hear and

decide a motion that has been filed prior to a motion filed under subsection (a) * * * when that

prior filed motion, if favorably ruled on by the court, could result in a final disposition of the case.”

735 ILCS 5/2-1009(b) (West 2020). The court pointed out that the statute says the court “may”

consider a prior defense motion, indicating it had discretion to decide such a motion before

granting voluntary dismissal.

¶ 58    After the conclusion of oral argument, the court denied defendant’s motion to reconsider

the January 14, 2021 order. On March 9, 2021, the court entered a corresponding written order.

¶ 59    On April 2, 2021, defendant filed a notice of appeal. On April 4, 2021 defendant filed an

amended notice of appeal, specifying that he challenged: (1) the September 21, 2020 order granting

plaintiff’s motion to reconsider the January 7, 2020 dismissal order; (2) the December 17, 2020

order requiring defendant to produce an itemization of costs; (3) the January 14, 2021 order

granting plaintiff’s motion to voluntarily dismiss the case; and (4) the March 9, 2021 order denying

defendant’s motion to reconsider the January 14, 2021 order. 2

                                          ¶ 60    ANALYSIS

        2
         Plaintiff’s briefing does not contain any distinct arguments specifically challenging the December
17, 2020 or March 9, 2021 orders.

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No. 1-21-0372

¶ 61     On appeal, defendant primarily asserts reasons why the trial court erred in its September

2020 order granting plaintiff’s motion to reconsider the January 2020 order granting summary

judgment to defendant and dismissing the case with prejudice. Defendant urges that the court

should not have disturbed January 2020 entry of summary judgment in defendant’s favor, because

the note was not endorsed to plaintiff and the lost note affidavit stated that JPMorgan Chase Bank

was the last party in possession of the note. He also argues that summary judgment was warranted

under section 3-309 of the Uniform Commercial Code (810 ILCS 5/3-309 (West 2020), because a

party attempting to enforce a lost instrument must have possessed it before the loss.

¶ 62     Separately, defendant attacks the court’s decision to grant plaintiff’s motion for voluntary

dismissal pursuant to section 2-1009 of the Code. 735 ILCS 5/2-1009 (West 2020). He suggests

we should reverse that order because (1) plaintiff did not provide the statutorily required “notice”

of the dismissal motion; (2) the motion for voluntary dismissal was untimely because there had

already been a “hearing” within the meaning of section 2-1009(a), and (3) the court erred in

granting voluntary dismissal without considering defendant’s pending motion to reconsider the

September 2020 order. For the following reasons, we determine that we lack jurisdiction to review

the September 2020 order. However, we affirm the January 2021 order granting plaintiff’s motion

for voluntary dismissal and the denial of defendant’s motion to reconsider that order.

       ¶ 63   We Lack Jurisdiction to Review Non-Final Orders Prior to Voluntary Dismissal

¶ 64     Before we address the merits, we note that we clearly have jurisdiction to review the

January 2021 order granting plaintiff’s motion for voluntary dismissal, as well as the denial of

defendant’s motion to reconsider that order. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 303(a) (eff. July 1, 2017); Kahle v.

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No. 1-21-0372

John Deere Co., 104 Ill. 2d 302, 307 (1984) (holding that a plaintiff’s voluntary dismissal pursuant

to section 2-1009 is “final and appealable by the defendants.”).

¶ 65   However, plaintiff disputes our jurisdiction to review defendant’s challenges to the

September 21, 2020 order that granted plaintiff’s motion to reconsider the January 7, 2020

dismissal order that entered summary judgment in favor of defendant. For the following reasons,

we agree that we lack jurisdiction to consider defendant’s challenge to the September 21, 2020

non-final order, notwithstanding the subsequent voluntary dismissal order.

¶ 66   Our supreme court has explained that a plaintiff’s voluntary dismissal under section 2-1009

renders all previously entered final orders appealable: “The order of voluntary dismissal, because

it disposed of all matters pending before the circuit court, rendered all orders which were final in

nature, but which were not previously appealable, immediately final and appealable. It is well

settled that final orders entered in a case become appealable following a voluntary dismissal.”

(Emphases added.) Dubina v. Mesirow Realty Development, Inc., 178 Ill. 2d 496, 503 (1997); see

also Hudson v. City of Chicago, 228 Ill. 2d 462, 468 (2008) (“Once the voluntary dismissal was

entered, Hudson I was terminated in its entirety and all final orders became immediately

appealable. [Citation.]”).

¶ 67   On the other hand, our precedent indicates that a voluntary dismissal does not confer

appellate jurisdiction to review previously entered non-final orders. As this court has explained:

                “[A]n order granting a plaintiff’s motion for a voluntary dismissal is

                final and appealable by a defendant * * *. However, the power of

                this court to address a defendant’s appeal from an order granting a

                plaintiff’s motion for a voluntary dismissal * * * does not form the

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No. 1-21-0372

                jurisdictional basis from which we may also address the substantive

                merits of other non-final orders entered by a trial court prior to the

                granting of a voluntary dismissal.” (Emphasis added.) Valdovinos

                v. Luna-Manalac Medical Center, Ltd., 307 Ill. App. 3d 528, 537

                (1999) (citing Saddle Signs, Inc. v. Adrian, 272 Ill. App. 3d 132,

                135-40 (1995)).

¶ 68   In Valdovinos, this court stated that “we have jurisdiction to review interlocutory orders of

a trial court if those orders constitute a procedural step in the progression leading to the entry of

the final judgment from which an appeal has been taken. [Citation.]” Id. at 538. However, “[w]hen

the interlocutory orders of a trial court do not constitute such a procedural step, we have no

jurisdiction to review them absent some specific statute or rule granting us the power.” Id. Our

court in Valdovinos held that it lacked jurisdiction over interlocutory orders preceding the

voluntary dismissal in that case, including denial of certain defendants’ motion for summary

judgment. Id. (“None of the interlocutory orders entered * * * denying motions for summary

judgment * * * are a procedural step in granting a motion for a voluntary dismissal * * *.

Consequently, we lack the requisite jurisdiction to review them. [Citations.]”).

¶ 69   The court reaffirmed these principles in Resurgence Financial, LLC v. Kelly, 376 Ill. App.

3d 60 (2007), which bears some resemblance to the instant case, insofar as defendant challenged

plaintiff’s right to sue upon a debt. The plaintiff in Resurgence Financial alleged that it was the

assignee of credit card debt incurred by defendant. Id. at 60. Plaintiff’s amended complaint

attached an affidavit and other documents indicating that plaintiff purchased the underlying

account. Id. at 61. Defendant moved for summary judgment, “arguing that the attachments to the

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No. 1-21-0372

complaint failed to show the existence of an agreement or debt” between defendant and plaintiff.

Id. After the court denied defendant’s motion for summary judgment, plaintiff filed a motion to

dismiss without prejudice. Id. The trial court granted the plaintiff’s dismissal motion, and

defendant unsuccessfully moved for fees pursuant to the Credit Card Liability Act. Id.

¶ 70   On defendant’s appeal, the court determined it lacked jurisdiction to review the denial of

defendant’s summary judgment motion, recognizing that the “the denial of a motion for summary

judgment is not final. [Citation.]” Id. at 62. The court explained that “the power to address a

defendant’s appeal from a voluntary dismissal ‘does not form the jurisdictional basis from which

we may also address the substantive merits of other nonfinal orders.’” Id. (quoting Valdovinos,

307 Ill. App. 3d at 537). Citing Valdovinos, the Resurgence Financial court explained that the

denial of summary judgment was not made reviewable by the subsequent voluntary dismissal:

                       “It is true that an appeal from a final judgment draws into

                issue all previous interlocutory orders that produced the final

                judgment. [Citation.] But such orders must constitute procedural

                steps in the progression leading to the entry of the final judgment.

                [Citation.] The denial of summary judgment is not a procedural step

                to an order of voluntary dismissal. [Citation]. Thus, the denial here

                was neither a final judgment nor a procedural step to a final

                judgment, and it is not appealable.” Id.

¶ 71    More recently, the court has also held “that a voluntary dismissal * * * makes appealable

only those orders preceding the voluntary dismissal that were ‘final in nature.’” Bauman v.

Patterson, 2018 IL App (4th) 170169, ¶ 34 (quoting Dubina, 178 Ill. 2d at 503 (1997)). Bauman

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No. 1-21-0372

found that “Resurgence Financial correctly concluded that because the denial of a motion for

summary judgment lacked finality, a subsequent termination of the case by a voluntary dismissal

did not make the denial appealable. [Citation.]” Id. ¶ 36. Bauman further held that, pursuant to the

supreme court’s instruction in Dubina, “it is irrelevant whether an order preceding the voluntary

dismissal was a ‘procedural step’ to the voluntary dismissal” but that the “only relevant

consideration is the finality of the preceding order.” Id. ¶ 37 (citing Dubina, 178 Ill. 2d at 503).

The Bauman court explained that the “procedural-step analysis applies to a wholly different

question: the construction of a notice of appeal when the appeal is from a final judgment,” under

the principle that the notice is liberally construed to include prior orders that were a step in the

procedural progression leading to the judgment. Id. (citing In re Jamari J., 2017 IL App (1st)

160850, ¶ 39). The court emphasized that “[t]his legal construct is not germane to the issue of the

appealability of an interlocutory order that preceded the plaintiff’s voluntary dismissal, without

prejudice, of all remaining claims.” Id.

¶ 72   Based on the above precedent, we find that we lack jurisdiction to review the September

21, 2020 order granting plaintiff’s motion to reconsider, as it was a non-final order. We agree with

Bauman that the key inquiry in assessing our jurisdiction to review an order preceding a voluntary

dismissal is whether it was a final order. This aligns with our supreme court’s recognition that an

order of voluntary dismissal renders “orders which were final in nature, * * * immediately final

and appealable” (Dubina, 178 Ill. 2d at 503), as well as this court’s prior statement that an order

granting voluntary dismissal “does not form the jurisdictional basis from which we may also

address the substantive merit of other non-final orders entered by a trial court prior to the granting

of a voluntary dismissal. [Citation.]” (Emphasis added.) Valdovinos, 307 Ill. App. 3d at 537.

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No. 1-21-0372

¶ 73   In this case, the September 21, 2020 order granting plaintiff’s motion to reconsider had the

effect of reversing the January 2020 dismissal order, thus allowing the action to proceed. Clearly,

this was a non-final order. See id. at 538 (“A judgment is final for appeal purposes if it determines

the litigation on the merits or some definite part thereof so that, if affirmed, the only thing

remaining to be done by the trial court is to proceed with execution on the judgment. [Citations.]”)

¶ 74   In its reply brief, defendant urges that we do have jurisdiction over the September 21, 2020

order. Defendant does not dispute that it was not a final order but argues it should be reviewable

as a “step in the procedural progression” leading to the voluntary dismissal, insofar as plaintiff

could have not have ultimately dismissed the case, if the court did not grant plaintiff’s motion to

reconsider the January 2020 dismissal. Defendant directs our attention to Cedric Spring &

Associates, Inc. v. N.E.I. Corp., 81 Ill. App. 3d 1031 (1980) and DePluzer v. Village of Winnetka,

265 Ill. App. 3d 1061 (1994). However, those cases are unavailing.

¶ 75   The decision in Cedric Spring & Associates, Inc. is procedurally inapposite. In that action,

the trial court denied a defendant’s motion for summary judgment. 81 Ill. App. 3d at 1032. When

that defendant failed to produce requested documents and witnesses for trial pursuant to Supreme

Court Rule 237(b), the trial court granted plaintiff’s motion for a default judgment as a sanction.

Id. Defendant sought appellate review of the denial of its summary judgment motion. On appeal,

the court stated that “the reviewability of the denial of a motion for summary judgment where the

case is on appeal from a final judgment * * * is not so clear or well established”, suggesting such

an order could be reviewed if “the party seeking such review has not in any way prevented or

avoided such hearing or trial.” Id. at 1033-34. However, since the default judgment stemmed from

defendant’s non-compliance with Rule 237(b), the Cedric Spring court held that the denial of

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No. 1-21-0372

defendant’s motion for summary judgment was not reviewable. Id. Cedric Spring & Associates,

Inc. is not relevant to the instant case, as it did not concern the reviewability of a non-final order

following entry of a voluntary dismissal order.

¶ 76   Our decision in DePluzer v. Village of Winnetka, 265 Ill. App. 3d 1061 (1994) is also not

controlling in light of subsequent precedent. In DePluzer, defendant moved for summary judgment

on plaintiff’s two-count complaint, and plaintiff moved for voluntary dismissal. Id. at 1063. In a

single order, the trial court granted summary judgment to defendant on count I, denied the

summary judgment motion with respect to count II, and granted plaintiff’s motion for voluntary

dismissal as to count II. Id. Defendant appealed the denial of summary judgment as to count II,

and plaintiff cross-appealed. The DePluzer court acknowledged that “the denial of a motion for

summary judgment is typically not appealable.” Id. at 1064. However, it reasoned that it had

jurisdiction to consider the denial of defendant’s motion for summary judgment on count II,

“because, in addition to denying summary judgment, the trial court granted [plaintiff’s] motion to

voluntarily dismiss this count, making the order final and appealable.” Id. at 1064-65. The court

stated: “the order granting DePluzer a voluntary dismissal * * * is a final and appealable order,

which brings before the reviewing court all other orders and rulings directly associated with that

judgment, including, in this case, the denial of summary judgment.” Id. at 1065.

¶ 77   DePluzer does not resemble the instant case. The DePluzer court deemed the denial of

summary judgment was reviewable because it was in the same order granting plaintiff’s voluntary

dismissal motion. Here, the September 2020 order that defendant seeks to challenge was entered

months before the January 2021 voluntary dismissal. More importantly, the 1994 DePluzer

decision preceded our supreme court’s decision in Dubina, as well as this court’s recognition that

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No. 1-21-0372

an order granting voluntary dismissal “does not form the jurisdictional basis from which we may

also address the substantive merit of other non-final orders entered by a trial court prior to the

granting of a voluntary dismissal. [Citation.]” (Emphasis added.) Valdovinos, 307 Ill. App. 3d at

537. As there is no question that the September 2020 order was not final, the subsequent grant of

voluntary dismissal does not afford us jurisdiction to review it.

¶ 78   For the above reasons, we will not address the merits of the parties’ arguments as to the

correctness of the September 2020 order granting plaintiff’s motion to reconsider the January 2020

dismissal order. We will proceed to address defendant’s appeal from the January 2021 order

granting plaintiff’s motion for voluntary dismissal.

                     ¶ 79    Plaintiff’s Mootness Argument Is Without Merit

¶ 80   Before we turn to the merits of defendant’s appeal from the grant of voluntary dismissal,

we note plaintiff’s contention that we should decline to address that challenge as moot. Plaintiff

states that defendant’s appeal from the voluntary dismissal is moot because defendant “has already

received the relief he purports to seek.” According to plaintiff, defendant seeks “dismissal of the

case” but the trial court already granted plaintiff’s voluntarily dismissal motion. We find this

mootness argument is unpersuasive.

¶ 81   “An appeal is considered moot where it presents no actual controversy or where the issues

have ceased to exist. [Citations.] In re Andrea F., 208 Ill. 2d 148, 156 (2003). “[A]n actual

controversy is an essential requisite to appellate jurisdiction, and courts of review will generally

not decide abstract, hypothetical, or moot questions. [Citation.]” Id. “As a general rule, courts in

Illinois do not decide moot questions, render advisory opinions, or consider issues where the result

will not be affected regardless of how those issues are decided. [Citations.]” In re Alfred H.H., 233

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No. 1-21-0372

Ill. 2d 345, 351 (2009). “The test for mootness is whether the issues involved in the trial court no

longer exist because intervening events have rendered it impossible for the reviewing court to grant

effectual relief to the complaining party. [Citation.]” In re Andrea F., 208 Ill. 2d at 156.

¶ 82   Given the procedural posture of this case—and recognizing the distinction between

voluntary dismissal without prejudice under section 2-1009 and an involuntary dismissal with

prejudice—we reject plaintiff’s contention that the appeal is moot. Plaintiff claims reversal of the

voluntary dismissal order would not give any “effectual relief” to defendant “as the relief being

sought by Defendant on appeal is a dismissal of the case.” This mootness argument is an

oversimplification of the complex procedural posture in this case. Before the trial court voluntarily

dismissed the case, it had (1) entered the January 2020 order on defendant’s combined motion that

dismissed the case with prejudice; (2) reversed that dismissal in its September 2020 order granting

plaintiff’s motion to reconsider; and (3) defendant moved in October 2020 to reconsider the

September 2020 order. Defendant’s motion to reconsider was pending when the court granted

plaintiff’s motion for voluntary dismissal. In other words, at the time of the voluntary dismissal

without prejudice, defendant had an outstanding motion which sought to reinstate the January 2020

dismissal with prejudice.

¶ 83    In light of this, we cannot agree with plaintiff’s suggestion that defendant “has already

received the relief he purports to seek”, rendering his appeal moot. Hypothetically, if we were to

reverse the voluntary dismissal and remand for further proceedings, defendant’s October 2020

motion to reconsider would still be pending in the trial court. Although we do not speculate how

the court might rule in that situation, we recognize there is a possibility that the trial court could

decide that motion in defendant’s favor, potentially resulting in a new dismissal order with

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No. 1-21-0372

prejudice. In short, defendant’s appeal from the voluntary dismissal seeks to allow him the

opportunity to obtain dismissal with prejudice, which is substantially different from the dismissal

without prejudice that was entered. Thus, we reject plaintiff’s suggestion that there is no

controversy or that the appeal is moot. We will thus proceed to address the merits of defendant’s

challenges to the voluntary dismissal order.

       ¶ 84   Whether the Court Erred in Granting Plaintiff’s Motion for Voluntary Dismissal

¶ 85     Defendant asserts the trial court’s decision to grant voluntary dismissal pursuant to section

2-1009(a) of the Code was erroneous on multiple grounds. First, he contends that two requirements

of section 2-1009(a) were not met insofar as (1) plaintiff did not give proper “notice” and (2) there

had already been a “hearing” in the case. 735 ILCS 5/2-1009(a) (West 2020). Defendant otherwise

suggests that the court erred in granting voluntary dismissal without deciding defendant’s motion

to reconsider the order of September 21, 2020. As explained below, we find these contentions

without merit.

¶ 86     Section 2-1009 of the Code provides:

                        “(a) The plaintiff may, at any time before trial or hearing

                 begins, upon notice to each party who has appeared or each such

                 party’s attorney, and upon payment of costs, dismiss his or her

                 action or any part thereof as to any defendant, without prejudice, by

                 order filed in the cause.

                        (b) The court may hear and decide a motion that has been

                 filed prior to a motion filed under subsection (a) of this Section when

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No. 1-21-0372

                that prior filed motion, if favorably ruled on by the court, could

                result in a final disposition of the cause.

                        (c) After trial or hearing begins, the plaintiff may dismiss,

                only on terms fixed by the court (1) upon filing a stipulation to that

                effect signed by the defendant, or (2) on motion specifying the

                ground for dismissal, which shall be supported by affidavit or other

                proof.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1009 (West 2020).

¶ 87   “[S]ection 2-1009(a) * * * by its terms, confers on plaintiffs an unfettered right to

voluntarily dismiss their claims without prejudice, upon proper notice and payment of costs, ‘at

any time before trial or hearing begins.’ ” Morrison v. Wagner, 191 Ill. 2d 162, 165 (2000). That

is, “[a]lthough plaintiffs generally have an absolute right to voluntary dismissal, they must comply

with the requirements of section 2-1009. [Citation.]” Vaughn v. Northwestern Memorial Hospital,

210 Ill. App. 3d 253, 258 (1991). “Those requirements are (1) no trial or hearing shall have begun;

(2) costs must be paid; and (3) notice must be given.” Id. at 257. “[T]he failure to comply with any

of the three requirements can deprive the plaintiff of her right to voluntarily dismiss her case.

[Citations.]” Valdovinos v. Luna-Manalac Medical Center, Ltd., 328 Ill. App. 3d 255, 267 (2002).

¶ 88   “ ‘When a party complies with the requirements of section 2-1009(a), her right to a

voluntary dismissal is, with very limited exceptions, unfettered.’ ” Boehle v. OSF Healthcare

System, 2018 IL App (2d) 160975, ¶ 15 (quoting Smith v. Bartley, 364 Ill. App. 3d 725, 727

(2006)). If those threshold requirements are met, the right to dismissal under section 2-1009(a) is

“subject to two qualifications,” as follows:

                                                 - 27 -
No. 1-21-0372

                “First, where a previously filed defense motion could result in a

                final disposition of the cause of action if ruled upon favorably by the

                court, the court has the discretion to hear and decide that motion

                before ruling on the plaintiff’s motion for voluntary dismissal.

                [Citation.] Second, where the circumstances of the case are such that

                dismissal under section 2-1009 would directly conflict with a

                specific rule of this court, the terms of the rule take precedence.

                [Citations.]” Morrison, 191 Ill. 2d at 165 (2000).

¶ 89    Here, defendant argues that two of section 2-1009(a)’s threshold requirements were not

met because (1) plaintiff did not give “notice” of the motion to voluntary dismiss and (2) the

motion was made after a “hearing” occurred. Defendant additionally suggests that the trial court

erred by not ruling on his motion to reconsider before granting plaintiff’s dismissal motion. We

address these challenges in turn.

 ¶ 90    Whether There Was Proper “Notice” of the Dismissal Motion Under Section 2-1009(a)

¶ 91    Defendant suggests that plaintiff failed give the statutorily required “notice to each party”

of the voluntary dismissal motion filed on October 20, 2020. 735 ILCS 5/2-1009(a) (West 2020).

Defendant urges that the motion was not properly served on defendant, emphasizing that plaintiff’s

filing on October 20, 2020 “contained no service list, and thus was defective on its face.”

¶ 92    Defendant acknowledges that two days later, October 22, 2020, plaintiff filed an “amended

notice of motion” that defense counsel received on that date. However, he points out that “[t]here

was no pleading attached to the amended notice,” so that he did not receive a copy of the actual

motion to dismiss at that time. Defendant claims the trial court improperly concluded that notice

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No. 1-21-0372

was sufficient under section 2-1009(a). He further urges that, because service of the plaintiff’s

dismissal motion was defective, that motion did not have “priority” over defendant’s motion, and

thus plaintiff was not entitled to voluntary dismissal.

¶ 93   In its brief, plaintiff does not give a detailed response to defendant’s claim of lack of notice.

Plaintiff notes that the court found that plaintiff had “met all three elements of [section 2-1009(a)]

including the proper notice and the payment of court costs” and urges that its findings “were not

against the manifest weight of the evidence.”

¶ 94   After a close review of the record, we find that defendant’s claim of lack of “notice” is

unavailing. We acknowledge that defendant did not receive a copy of the voluntary dismissal

motion or the original notice of motion on the date they were filed (October 20, 2020), which

technically did not comply with local rules governing service. Nevertheless, the record

demonstrates that defense counsel received the amended notice of motion two days later (October

22, 2020) and received a copy of the actual motion no later than November 10, 2020. Thus,

defendant had actual notice of plaintiff’s motion to dismiss well before it was heard by the court,

and defendant suffered no prejudice by any delay.

¶ 95   Section 2-1009(a) does not explicitly reference any other rules regarding its requirement

that there must be “notice to each party who has appeared or each such party’s attorney.” 735 ILCS

5/2-1009(a) (West 2020). However, our court has held that the notice requirement in section 2-

1009 “is clearly defined by local rules.” Vaughn, 210 Ill. App. 3d at 257 (finding that “[Cook

County] Circuit Court Rule 2.1(a) and (c)(1) governs the notice requirement” and concluding that

plaintiff failed to give requisite notice of motion to voluntary dismiss). We thus review the

governing circuit court rules.

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¶ 96   Cook County Circuit Court Rule 2.1 states in relevant part:

                “(a) Notice required – Except in actions appearing on the daily trial

                call or during the course of trial, written notice of the hearing of all

                motions shall be given to all parties who have appeared * * *.

                (b) Content of notice – The notice of hearing shall show * * * the

                time and date when, and the place where the motion will be

                presented. If the motion is made orally, the notice shall state the

                nature of the motion. If the motion is presented in writing, a copy of

                the motion or a statement that it previously has been served, shall

                be served with the notice. Copies of all papers presented to the court

                with the motion shall be served with the notice or the notice shall

                state that copies have been served.

                (c) Manner and time of service of notice.

                (i)    Notice shall be given in the manner and to the persons described in Supreme

                       Court Rule 11.” (Emphasis added.) Cook County Cir. Ct. R. 2.1 (amended

                       Aug. 21, 2000).

In turn, Supreme Court Rule 11(a) provides that if a party is represented by an attorney of record,

service shall be made upon the attorney. Ill. S. Ct. R. 11(a). Rule 11(c) states that “[u]nless

specified by rule or order of court, documents shall be served electronically.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 11(c).

¶ 97   The record on appeal indicates that when plaintiff filed the motion to dismiss in October

2020, it did not fully comply with Cook County Circuit Court Rule 2.1 Indeed, both its October

20 and October 22 filings were technically deficient, for different reasons: the October 20 filing

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No. 1-21-0372

was missing proof of service on defense counsel, and the October 22 filing was missing a copy of

the previously filed motion.

¶ 98   On October 20, 2020, plaintiff filed a notice of motion for a hearing on a “motion to

dismiss” to occur on November 18, 2020 “or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard.” The

October 20 notice of motion attached a single-page motion to voluntarily dismiss the matter

without prejudice. However, plaintiff’s October 20 filing did not include a proof of service stating

that the filed documents had been served on defendant. There is no dispute that defendant was not

served on the October 20 filing date.

¶ 99   Two days later, on October 22, 2020, plaintiff filed an “amended notice of motion”

referencing the same proposed hearing date, as well as a “proof of service and verification of

certification page” indicating that “the above-referenced documents” would be electronically

served upon defendant’s counsel. The parties do not dispute that this amended notice of motion

was, in fact, sent to defense counsel on October 22. However, plaintiff’s October 22 filing did not

include a copy of the actual motion for voluntary dismissal, meaning the actual motion was not

transmitted to defense counsel at that time. Thus, plaintiff’s October 22, 2020 filing was also

technically non-compliant with Cook County Circuit Court Rule 2.1(b).

¶ 100 Nonetheless, we find this technical non-compliance does not warrant reversal. We are

guided by our court’s recognition that “a failure to serve a nonmoving party with notice renders a

subsequent order based on the motion voidable rather than void. The determining factor is not the

absence of notice but whether there was any harm or prejudice to the nonmoving party.” Matter of

American Mutual Reinsurance Co., 238 Ill. App. 3d 1, 11 (1992).

                                               - 31 -
No. 1-21-0372

¶ 101 On the record before us, we cannot discern any prejudice to defendant resulting from

plaintiff’s noncompliance with Cook County Circuit Court Rule 2.1. Notably, defense counsel

acknowledged in open court that he did receive the amended notice of motion on October 22. Thus,

defense counsel was aware at that time that plaintiff was moving for voluntary dismissal, even if

counsel did not yet have a copy of the single-page motion. Further, defense counsel received a

copy of the actual motion to dismiss from plaintiff’s counsel no later than November 10, 2020.

Defense counsel acknowledged this fact in open court. Thus, defense counsel had received both

the amended notice of motion and a copy of the motion to dismiss by November 10, 2020—eight

days before the November 18 hearing date specified in the amended notice of motion, and over a

month before the motion was actually argued before the court on December 17, 2020.

¶ 102 We also note that defendant does not suggest that his ability to respond to the motion for

voluntary dismissal was prejudiced by any delay in receiving a copy of that motion. Rather, the

only form of “prejudice” he alleges is that he “invest[e]d significant time, resources, attorney fees,

court reporting fees and several days drafting the motion to reconsider” that he filed on October

21, 2020. However, that contention does not relate to whether plaintiff gave the requisite “notice”

of the motion but goes to the separate question of whether the court erred in granting voluntary

dismissal despite the pendency of defendant’s motion to reconsider.

¶ 103 In sum, under the record before us we reject the defendant’s argument that it lacked

“notice” of the motion for voluntary dismissal, as required by section 2-1009(a). 735 ILCS 5/2-

1009(a) (West 2020). We will thus proceed to his alternative contentions challenging that

dismissal.

                                                - 32 -
No. 1-21-0372

 ¶ 104 Plaintiff Moved for Voluntary Dismissal “Before Trial or Hearing” Within the Meaning

                                         of Section 2-1009(a)

¶ 105 We turn to defendant’s claim that we should reverse the voluntary dismissal because

plaintiff failed to meet another requirement of section 2-1009(a): that the motion must be made

“before trial or hearing begins.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1009(a) (West 2020). Specifically, defendant asserts

that the January 7, 2020 hearing on his combined motion to dismiss and motion for summary

judgment was a “hearing” within the meaning of section 2-1009(a), such that plaintiff’s subsequent

October 2020 dismissal motion was untimely. Defendant otherwise suggests that oral arguments

on other motions constituted “hearings” under that statutory provision. 3 We disagree, as our

precedent indicates that only an evidentiary hearing equivalent to a trial is a “hearing” in this

context. On the other hand, the mere fact that the court heard oral argument on a potentially

dispositive motion does not preclude a motion for dismissal under section 2-1009(a).

¶ 106 Our supreme court has stated that, “in the context of section 2-1009, ‘hearing’ is the

equitable equivalent of a trial. [Citations.]” Kahle v. John Deere Co., 104 Ill. 2d 302, 309 (1984).

“In other words, a hearing is a nonjury proceeding in which evidence is taken on the merits.” Id.

This court has held that a “hearing ‘does not begin until the parties begin to present their arguments

and evidence to the court sitting without a jury in order to achieve an ultimate determination of

their rights.’ ” Metcalfe v. St. Elizabeth Hospital, 160 Ill. App. 3d 47, 50 (1987). “The question of

whether a trial or hearing has begun within the meaning of section 2-1009 of the Code is a legal

one. [Citation.]” Valdovinos, 328 Ill. App. 3d at 266 (noting that “the fact * * * that the trial court

        3
          In arguing that plaintiff’s voluntary dismissal was too late under section 2-1009(a), defendant
contends that “four hearings were held, including two Section 2-619.1 motions to dismiss (and for summary
judgment) by the Defendant, and two motions to reconsider by the Plaintiff.”

                                                 - 33 -
No. 1-21-0372

in the instant case had issued far more pre-trial rulings than did the trial court in Kahle does not

change the principle * * * that pre-trial motion practice is not part of the trial itself.”).

¶ 107 Defendant has not identified a case (and we are aware of none) determining that an oral

argument upon a motion for summary judgment constitutes a “hearing” within the meaning of

section 2-1009(a). Defendant, citing pre-Kahle precedent applying section 2-1009’s predecessor

statute in Section 52(1) of the Civil Practice Act, suggests that any hearing on a dispositive motion

qualifies as a “hearing” under section 2-1009(a). See Palos Heights v. Worth, 29 Ill. App. 3d 746,

749 (1975) (“Since a motion * * * by a defendant to dismiss would terminate the litigation if

sustained, a hearing within the meaning of section 52(1) had begun.”); Bernick v. Chicago Title &

Trust Co., 325 Ill. App. 495, 500-01 (1945) (interpreting Section 52’s phrase “at any time before

trial or hearing begins” to preclude a nonsuit after a motion to dismiss on res judicata grounds).

But this case law is unpersuasive, as subsequent decisions applying Kahle’s test have found that

mere argument on a motion to dismiss is not the equivalent of a “hearing” for purposes of section

2-1009. See, e.g., Metcalfe, 160 Ill. App. 3d at 50 (“There had been a hearing on defendants’

motion to dismiss, but this hearing was not the equitable equivalent of a trial. No evidence was

taken on the merits of the action. Therefore, plaintiff had an absolute right to voluntarily dismiss

his action.”); Espedido v. St. Joseph Hospital, 172 Ill. App. 3d 460, 470 (1988) (hearing on motion

to dismiss based on failure to attach physician’s certification to medical malpractice complaint

“was not the equitable equivalent of trial”); Bailey v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 137 Ill. App. 3d

155, 158-59 (1985) (“the granting of defendant’s motion to dismiss, with plaintiff being granted

leave to amend, did not prevent plaintiff from exercising her absolute right to a voluntary

                                                 - 34 -
No. 1-21-0372

dismissal.”). This is consistent with our court’s statement that “pre-trial motion practice is not part

of the trial itself.” Valdovinos, 328 Ill. App. 3d at 266.

¶ 108 Defendant also cites a more recent case holding that, where proceedings on a motion to

dismiss under the Citizen Participation Act (735 ILCS 110/1 et seq.) constituted a full “evidentiary

hearing”, the plaintiff could not then move for dismissal under section 2-1009(a). Midwest REM

Enterprises, Inc. v. Noonan, 2015 IL App (1st) 132488, ¶ 53 (“[T]he evidentiary hearing in the

case had commenced long before plaintiff brought their motion for voluntary dismissal. The parties

do not discuss section 2-1009(c), but we do not see why that section would not apply. If it does

apply, then plaintiffs had already lost the right to voluntarily dismiss the complaint under section

2-1009(a).”). However, the proceedings on the motion to dismiss in Midwest REM Enterprises

“include[ed] extensive discovery, lasted two and a half years” and involved an evidentiary hearing

where the court heard witness testimony and “numerous exhibits.” Id. ¶¶ 25-35. By the time the

motion for voluntary dismissal was filed, “the trial court had already heard a complete trial on the

merits.” Id. ¶ 54. Clearly, the situation in Midwest REM Enterprises went far beyond oral argument

on a dispositive motion.

¶ 109 Taken together, this precedent indicates that mere argument on a party’s dispositive

motion—including a motion for summary judgment—is not the “equitable equivalent of a trial”

where evidence “is taken on merits.” Kahle, 104 Ill. 2d at 309. Indeed, a summary judgment motion

seeks to preclude a trial on the merits. See Bayview Loan Servicing, LLC v. Nelson, 382 Ill. App.

3d 1184, 1187 (2008) recognizing “summary judgment is a drastic remedy that defeats the

nonmovant’s right to a trial”). In other words, for purposes of section 2-1009(a), there is a

distinction between mere argument on a potentially dispositive motion, compared to an evidentiary

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“hearing” that requires the court to weigh the parties’ evidence and make factual determinations

on the ultimate merits. See Metcalfe, 160 Ill. App. 3d at 50 ( a “hearing ‘does not begin until the

parties begin to present their arguments and evidence to the court * * * to achieve an ultimate

determination of their rights.’ ”)

¶ 110 In this case, we cannot say that any of the prior proceedings, including the January 7, 2020

argument on defendant’s combined motion to dismiss and motion for summary judgment, was the

“equitable equivalent of a trial.” Kahle, 104 Ill. 2d at 309. Specifically, although the parties

disputed the legal effect of previously submitted evidence at the January 7, 2020 oral argument

with respect to plaintiff’s capacity to maintain the action, that proceeding was not equivalent to a

trial where evidence is presented and “taken on the merits.” Id. This distinguishes the proceeding

from a “hearing” within the meaning of section 2-1009(a).

¶ 111 We recognize that, at the January 7, 2020, hearing, the court made inquiries and heard

counsel’s arguments about the documents that plaintiff attached to the amended complaint to show

its ability to enforce the note. That is, the parties disputed whether the lost note affidavit and copies

of the note and assignment of mortgage were sufficient indicia of plaintiff’s capacity to maintain

the action. The court challenged plaintiff’s counsel as to whether it had additional documentation

of the alleged transfer of ownership of the note, before concluding that it would dismiss due to

insufficient “proof that the plaintiff has the capacity and/or any ability to enforce the note.”

¶ 112 Although the court heard legal argument on January 7, 2020 as to whether the attachments

to plaintiff’s complaint were enough to avoid dismissal for lack of capacity, that proceeding was

not akin to an evidentiary hearing or trial where evidence is presented and weighed for an “ultimate

determination” of the parties’ rights. Metcalfe, 160 Ill. App. 3d at 50. The court was essentially

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deciding whether plaintiff’s amended complaint was legally sufficient for the action to proceed,

which is different from hearing and weighing evidence at the “equitable equivalent of a trial.”

Kahle 104 Ill. 2d at 309. Applying this distinction in this case comports with the previously cited

post-Kahle precedent finding that mere argument on a motion to dismiss is not a “hearing” for

purposes of section 2-1009.

¶ 113 For these reasons, we conclude that the January 7, 2020 argument was not a “hearing”

within the meaning of section 2-1009, nor were the other oral arguments preceding the voluntary

dismissal. We thus reject defendant’s argument that plaintiff failed to move for voluntary dismissal

“before trial or hearing begins.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1009(a) (West 2020).

   ¶ 114 Defendant’s Pending Motion to Reconsider Did Not Preclude Voluntary Dismissal

¶ 115 We have now rejected defendant’s claims that plaintiff did not meet two of the threshold

requirements to seek dismissal under section 2-1009(a), i.e., that plaintiff did not give “notice” and

that plaintiff did not seek dismissal “before trial or hearing begins.” Id. Defendant otherwise

suggests that the trial court erred in granting voluntary dismissal because it did so without

considering and ruling upon defendant’s motion to reconsider the September 21, 2020 order, which

in turn had reversed the January 2020 dismissal order.

¶ 116 Defendant points out that his combined motion to dismiss and for summary judgment was

filed in October 2019, “long before Plaintiff’s motion to dismiss.” He suggests that the trial court

was required to order briefing and “hear Defendant’s [October 2020] motion to reconsider because

it was part of the procedural progression of” his combined motion “that had been filed and heard

nearly a year prior.” Defendant also states that he was prejudiced by the court’s decision not to

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rule upon his motion to reconsider, because he invested significant time, resources and costs to

prepare it.

¶ 117 We recognize that defendant’s motion to reconsider the September 2020 order was a

potentially dispositive motion, as it sought to reinstate the January 2020 dismissal of the case with

prejudice. Nonetheless, defendant’s argument is unavailing for a simple reason: its motion to

reconsider was not filed before plaintiff’s motion to dismiss was filed. Thus, the judicial discretion

to consider a previously-filed dispositive motion was not at issue. Rather, plaintiff was entitled to

voluntary dismissal because it met the threshold requirements of section 2-1009(a).

¶ 118 It is well-settled that a trial court has discretion to consider a previously-filed dispositive

motion before deciding a plaintiff’s motion for voluntary dismissal. Morrison, 191 Ill. 2d at 165

(explaining that “where a previously-filed defense motion could result in a final disposition of the

cause of action * * * the court has the discretion to hear and decide that motion before ruling on

the plaintiff’s motion for voluntary dismissal.”); Gibellina v. Handley, 127 Ill. 2d 122, 138 (1989)

(“the trial court may hear and decide a motion which has been filed prior to a section 2-1009 when

that motion, if favorably ruled on by the court, could result in a final disposition of the case.”).

That discretion is codified in section 2-1009(b): “The court may hear and decide a motion that has

been filed prior to a motion filed under subsection (a) of this Section when that prior filed motion,

if favorably ruled on by the court, could result in a final disposition of the cause.” (Emphases

added.) 735 ILCS 5/2-1009(b) (West 2020). These authorities make clear that the trial court only

has discretion to hear a defense motion that was filed before the section 2-1009 motion. They do

not indicate a court has such discretion when a later-filed defense motion is pending at the time of

voluntary dismissal.

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¶ 119 Notwithstanding our prior discussion as to when plaintiff’s voluntary dismissal motion was

properly served, the record is clear as to when it was filed: October 20, 2020. Defendant’s motion

to reconsider was filed the next day, October 21, 2020. Thus, the trial court’s discretion to hear a

previously-filed defense motion was not implicated. Rather, once the plaintiff met the threshold

requirements of section 2-1009(a), it was entitled to voluntary dismissal. See Morrison, 191 Ill. 2d

at 165 (section 2-1009(a) “confers on plaintiffs an unfettered right to voluntarily dismiss their

claims without prejudice, upon proper notice and payment of costs, ‘at any time before trial or

hearing begins.’ ”).

¶ 120 In any event, even if defendant’s motion to reconsider could be construed as having been

“filed” before the voluntary dismissal motion, we would not find an abuse of discretion by the trial

court in declining to consider it. An abuse of discretion occurs if the decision is “against the

manifest weight of the evidence such that no reasonable person could take the view adopted by the

trial court.” Mizell v. Passo, 147 Ill. 2d 420, 426 (1992). Under the record in this case, we cannot

say that no reasonable person could agree with the trial court’s decision to grant plaintiff’s

voluntary dismissal motion, without deciding defendant’s motion to reconsider. The record reflects

that the trial court was well aware of the issues raised in numerous motions and oral arguments.

Defendant does not suggest that its pending motion would raise any new legal arguments. To the

contrary, the pending motion sought reconsideration of a prior order granting another motion to

reconsider. In this context, the trial court’s decision was not unreasonable or an abuse of discretion.

¶ 121 We thus reject each of defendant’s challenges to the January 14, 2021 voluntary dismissal

order. Finally, we note that defendant does not raise any distinct argument attacking the March

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2021 order denying his motion to reconsider the January 14, 2021 voluntary dismissal order, and

so we also affirm that order.

                                    ¶ 122 CONCLUSION

¶ 123 In summary, we determine we have no jurisdiction to consider defendant’s challenge to the

September 21, 2020 order. However, we affirm the January 14, 2021 voluntary dismissal pursuant

to section 2-1009(a) of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2-1009(a) (West 2020)), as well as the March 9,

2021 denial of defendant’s motion to reconsider that order.

¶ 124 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County.

¶ 125 Affirmed.

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