Legat v. Legat Architects Inc. , 2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U ( 2022 )


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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    No. 2-21-0054
    Order filed June 24, 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
    SECOND DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JOSEPH J. LEGAT,                              ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
    ) of Lake County
    Plaintiff-Appellant and Cross-Appellee, )
    )
    v.                                            ) No. 18-L-797
    )
    LEGAT ARCHITECTS INC.,                        )
    )
    Defendant-Appellee and                  )
    Cross-Appellant,                        ) Honorable
    ) Mitchell L. Hoffman,
    (Timothy M. Johnston, Cross-Appellee).        ) Judge, Presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE BIRKETT delivered the judgment of the court.
    Justices Hutchinson and Brennan concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    ¶1    Held: The circuit court erred when it dismissed plaintiff’s breach of oral contract and
    promissory estoppel counts, where the counts were not barred by the statute of
    frauds or the statute of limitations. The court similarly erred when it dismissed
    plaintiff’s unjust enrichment count, which was pleaded in the alternative to the
    breach of oral contract count and did not refer to the existence of an express, oral
    contract. The circuit court properly dismissed plaintiff’s defamation count where
    plaintiff failed to properly allege defamation per se or per quod concerning certain
    of defendant’s statements, and where other of defendant’s statements constituted
    nonactionable opinions. The court did not abuse its discretion in imposing a $3000
    sanction against plaintiff for failing to ensure his conversion count was well
    grounded in fact.
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    ¶2     Plaintiff, Joseph J. Legat, who was the previous owner of defendant company, Legat
    Architects Inc., appeals the circuit court of Lake County’s orders dismissing certain counts of
    plaintiff’s second and third amended complaints, which, among other things, alleged breach of an
    oral contract, promissory estoppel, defamation, and unjust enrichment. Defendant cross-appeals
    the trial court’s adjudication of its motion for sanctions. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and
    remand for further proceedings.
    ¶3                                     I. BACKGROUND
    ¶4      Plaintiff’s second and third amended complaints, which were filed on August 29, 2019,
    and January 29, 2020, respectively, alleged the following facts. Around January 1, 1997, plaintiff
    and defendant executed a written consulting agreement (written agreement), specifying that
    plaintiff would “perform consulting and related services” for defendant, such as engaging in
    conferences, preparing preliminary studies, projecting design studies, developing and maintaining
    client relationships, assisting in document preparation, and completing “strategic planning.” The
    term of the written agreement was to span from January 1, 1997, to December 31, 2006. As
    compensation for his consulting services, the written agreement specified that plaintiff would be
    paid “at the base rate of $108,008 per year, payable in monthly installments of $8,334.00.” This
    compensation would “be increased annually at a percentage rate of the lesser of the previous year’s
    inflation rate *** or the average percentage rate increase of salaries paid to the shareholders of
    [defendant] in the same year.” Additionally, “[i]n the years when shareholders of [defendant]
    receive bonuses for their services provided to [defendant],” plaintiff would receive a bonus “equal
    to 10% of the sum of all such shareholder bonus amounts.” Furthermore, the written agreement
    specified that defendant would “reimburse [plaintiff] for all reasonable out of pocket expenses
    incurred in the performance of his duties,” up to $2000 per month.
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    ¶5     On December 28, 2006, plaintiff and defendant’s then president, Wayne Machnich, had a
    conversation outside of defendant’s offices, in which they acknowledged that the written
    agreement would end soon. During the conversation, plaintiff “expressed to *** Machnich his
    then-present intent to leave [defendant] to open his own architectural sculpture business.” Plaintiff
    also had a desire to “open his own architectural firm,” which plaintiff believed was “known to
    [d]efendant or suspected by [d]efendant.” Defendant asked plaintiff to continue working for
    defendant, offering to extend the written agreement “on its original terms.” Plaintiff orally
    accepted defendant’s offer, and the parties entered into a second consultation agreement (oral
    agreement).
    ¶6     In 2007, defendant indicated to plaintiff “that financial support was necessary to shore up
    [defendant], and [p]laintiff agreed to lend [d]efendant $500,000, which [d]efendant later repaid.”
    ¶7     Plaintiff continued performing under the oral agreement and “repeatedly advanced his own
    funds” in performing his duties. Specifically, plaintiff paid for “membership dues, sponsorships,
    luncheons, seminars, and travel,” regularly spending over $2000 per month. Defendant also
    “performed all of the requirements of the *** [oral a]greement,” except that, “after the second year
    of the [oral agreement,]” defendant had “failed to pay the annual salary increases” and bonuses, as
    referenced in the parties’ original, written agreement. Defendant explained to plaintiff that it could
    not fulfill these aspects of the written agreement, because “it had fallen on hard financial times.”
    Accordingly, defendant also failed to meet its obligation of paying defendant up to $2000 per
    month to cover his work expenses. Still, aside from those deviations, defendant continued “making
    regular payments [to plaintiff] until on or about December 22, 2017.”
    ¶8     “[O]n or about December 22, 2017,” the parties’ relationship soured, and defendant
    “unilaterally terminated the [oral] agreement.” Around that date, “[d]efendant ordered all of its
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    offices’ doors to be locked nationwide, to prevent the violent entry of [p]laintiff,” who “was
    labeled as locked out.” Defendant also instructed its employees to “inform inquirers that [p]laintiff
    was ‘locked out.’ ”
    ¶9     Soon afterwards, in either “late December 2017 or early January 2018,” defendant’s then-
    current president, Patrick Brosnan, and one of defendant’s lead shareholders, Jeffrey Sronkowski,
    “communicated to members of the board of directors [(board)] of [the] College of Lake
    County[ ]that [p]laintiff was erratic to the point that [d]efendant ordered all of its offices in the
    country to lock their doors to prevent [p]laintiff’s violent entry.” Defendant purportedly made
    similar communications to the College of Lake County board “in the spring of 2018[ ]and May
    and June of 2019.” In the spring of 2018, defendant again made similar comments to the president
    and board of Harper College. Prior to defendant making these communications, plaintiff had
    “enjoyed an excellent professional reputation with both colleges.” However, after defendant made
    these comments to both colleges, “[p]laintiff was shunned and his *** qualifications for
    architectural services were rejected out of hand.”
    ¶ 10   On August 29, 2019, plaintiff filed his second amended complaint alleging breach of
    contract (count I), breach of performed oral contract (count II), promissory estoppel (count III),
    defamation (count IV), conversion (count V), and unjust enrichment (count VI). On September 27,
    2019, defendant moved to dismiss counts I, II, IV, and VI of the second amended complaint under
    section 2-619.1 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-619.1 (West 2018)) (Code). On
    January 15, 2020, the circuit court granted defendant’s motion, reasoning that the statute of frauds
    precluded enforcement of the oral agreement. The circuit court dismissed counts I, II, and IV with
    prejudice, and dismissed count VI without prejudice.
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    ¶ 11   On January 29, 2020, plaintiff filed its third amended complaint, in which plaintiff
    repleaded counts III and VI—the promissory estoppel and unjust enrichment counts. On March
    11, 2020, defendant filed a motion to dismiss counts III and VI of the third amended complaint.
    Attached to the motion to dismiss, defendants included an affidavit completed by Bernardo
    Desimone, defendant’s Chief Operating Officer. Defendant attached a stock purchase sale
    agreement and stock redemption agreement to the affidavit, establishing that, on January 10, 1997,
    plaintiff sold all of his shares in his prior company—which shared his name—to several of
    defendant’s employees and to defendant itself. A 1997 promissory note was also attached to the
    affidavit, purportedly governing the repayment of the $500,000 loan that plaintiff had previously
    made to defendant. On August 4, 2020, the circuit court granted defendant’s motion, finding both
    that the statute of frauds precluded plaintiff’s promissory estoppel count and that plaintiff’s unjust
    enrichment count improperly alleged elements of an express contract. Consequently, the circuit
    court dismissed counts III and VI with prejudice.
    ¶ 12   On September 4, 2020, defendant filed its answer to plaintiff’s sole remaining count of
    conversion. On September 25, 2020, defendant deposed plaintiff concerning plaintiff’s conversion
    count, and in doing so, came to believe that plaintiff’s allegations under the count lacked an
    adequate basis in fact. On October 2, 2020, shortly after the deposition, plaintiff filed a motion to
    voluntarily nonsuit the action. On October 19, 2020, defendant filed its motion for sanctions
    against plaintiff, arguing that plaintiff’s conversion count lacked an adequate basis in fact and
    plaintiff’s counsel failed to make a “reasonable inquiry” into the matter. In the motion, defendant
    requested that, if the court agreed that plaintiff’s conduct was sanctionable, it be entitled to file a
    fee petition to establish all of its fees that were expended in defending itself against the conversion
    count. The next day, on October 20, 2020, the circuit court granted plaintiff’s motion to nonsuit
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    the action. On November 17, 2020, plaintiff filed a notice of appeal, but, on December 4, 2020,
    this court dismissed the appeal as premature, because defendant’s motion for sanctions remained
    pending before the circuit court. On January 6, 2021, the circuit court entered an order granting
    defendant’s motion for sanctions, imposing a sanction in the amount of $3000 against plaintiff and
    his counsel. Plaintiff timely appeals, and defendant timely cross-appeals.
    ¶ 13                                      II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 14    On appeal, plaintiff raises four primary arguments: 1) that the trial court erred when it
    found that the statute of frauds precluded plaintiff’s breach of oral contract count; 2) that neither
    the statute of frauds nor the applicable statute of limitations precluded plaintiff’s count of
    promissory estoppel; 3) that, for several reasons, the circuit court erred in dismissing plaintiff’s
    defamation count; and 4) that, for several reasons, the circuit court erred in dismissing plaintiff’s
    unjust enrichment count. On cross-appeal, defendant argues that the circuit court abused its
    discretion in imposing the sanction of $3000. We address these arguments in turn.
    ¶ 15                          A. Count II—Breach of Oral Contract
    ¶ 16   First, because plaintiff sufficiently alleged that it had fully performed its obligations under
    the oral agreement, the circuit court erred when it found that the statute of frauds precluded
    enforcement of the oral agreement and consequently dismissed count II of the second amended
    complaint.
    ¶ 17   Pursuant to the Frauds Act:
    “No action shall be brought *** upon any agreement that is not to be performed
    within the space of one year from the making thereof, unless the promise or agreement
    upon which such action shall be brought, or some memorandum or note thereof, shall be
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    in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person thereunto
    by him lawfully authorized.” 740 ILCS 80/1 (West 2018).
    The statute “tracks the language of the original English Statute of Frauds and Perjuries” and seeks
    to bar “actions based upon nothing more than loose verbal statements.” McInerney v. Charter Golf,
    Inc., 
    176 Ill. 2d 482
    , 489 (1997). In adopting the statute, the legislature concluded that, “while the
    technical elements of a contract may exist, certain contracts should not be enforced absent a
    writing. It functions more as an evidentiary safeguard than as a substantive rule of contract.” 
    Id.
    Accordingly, the statute of frauds serves “to protect not just the parties to a contract, but also—
    perhaps more importantly—to protect the fact finder from charlatans, perjurers and the problems
    of proof accompanying oral contracts.” 
    Id.
    ¶ 18   In determining whether a contract falls within the statute of frauds, many courts consider
    whether a contract is capable of being performed within a year, “regardless of how unlikely it is
    that it will actually be performed within one year.” 
    Id. at 489-490
    . “Under this interpretation, the
    actual course of subsequent events and the expectations of the parties are entirely irrelevant” and
    “[a] contract for lifetime employment would then be excluded from the operation of the statute
    because the employee could, in theory, die within one year, and thus the contract would be ‘capable
    of being performed.’ ” 
    Id. at 490
    .
    ¶ 19   Our supreme court has nonetheless found this reasoning to be “hollow and unpersuasive.”
    
    Id.
     Instead, because a lifetime employment contract inherently “anticipates a relationship of long
    duration—certainly longer than one year,” our supreme court found that “the better view is to treat
    the contract as one ‘not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof.’ ”
    
    Id. at 490-491
    . Accordingly, “writing is required for the fair enforcement of lifetime employment
    contracts.” 
    Id. at 491
    . This same reasoning has also been applied to employment contracts of an
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    unknown duration. Robinson v. BDO Seidman, LLP, 
    367 Ill. App. 3d 366
    , 371 (2006). We review
    de novo the trial court’s judgment on a motion to dismiss under either sections 2-615 or 219 of the
    Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/1-101 et seq. (West 2020)) Krilich v. American National
    Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago, 
    334 Ill. App. 3d 563
    , 571 (2002).
    ¶ 20   Here, the parties dispute whether the oral agreement falls within the statute of frauds.
    According to plaintiff, enforcement of the oral agreement is not precluded by the statute of frauds,
    because it “was to continue for as long as [plaintiff] was needed by *** [d]efendant.” In other
    words, plaintiff characterizes the oral agreement as an at-will employment contract instead of an
    employment contract of an unknown duration. Therefore, pursuant to plaintiff’s logic, because an
    at-will employment contract does not implicate the statute of frauds, the trial court erred in finding
    that the statute of frauds rendered the oral agreement unenforceable for purposes of plaintiff’s
    breach-of-contract count.
    ¶ 21   Plaintiff’s argument ignores pertinent record evidence. In plaintiff’s second amended
    complaint, which the circuit court considered in dismissing plaintiff’s count II, plaintiff clearly
    alleged that, prior to entering the oral agreement, defendant “offered to extend the [written]
    [a]greement by [ten] years on the same terms stated in [the written agreement].” (Emphasis added.)
    Plainly, if the parties agreed that plaintiff would continue working for defendant for an additional
    ten years, such an agreement was not for at-will employment and could not be completed within
    the span of one year, meaning the agreement would fall under the statute of frauds.
    ¶ 22   Nonetheless, in Mapes v. Kalva Corp., 
    68 Ill. App. 3d 362
    , 368 (1979), this court explicitly
    found that “complete performance on the part of one of the parties to [an] alleged [oral
    employment] contract will prevent application of the statute of frauds.” There, the plaintiff brought
    an action against the defendant employer for a breach of an employee contract. 
    Id. at 364
    . “The
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    only writings in support of the alleged employment contract *** were some of [the plaintiff’s]
    paycheck stubs, and[,] at oral argument[, the] plaintiff’s attorney admitted that he could not prove
    the existence of any written contract.”
    ¶ 23   Prior to trial, the plaintiff testified that he had met with the president of the defendant’s
    parent company in October 1972, and that the president “offered [the] plaintiff a new position at a
    salary and bonus which the two men agreed upon.” The agreement provided that the plaintiff’s
    “salary for fiscal 1973 (November 1, 1972[,] to October 31, 1973[,]) was to be $25,000,” and that,
    “if the [defendant] were to realize a profit of at least $50,000 for fiscal 1973[,] [the] plaintiff was
    to receive 5% Of [sic] profit achieved and a salary increase of $2500 to fiscal 1974 (November 1,
    1973[,] to October 31, 1974).” The contract included a similar provision entitling the plaintiff to
    further compensation if the defendant employer achieved a profit of at least $100,000 for the
    following fiscal year. Although the defendant’s profits for 1973 totaled $133,000, the plaintiff only
    received a bonus for $2500, far less than the 5% previously agreed upon. 
    Id.
     In December 1973,
    the plaintiff was told that his salary would be reduced to $12,000 per year. 
    Id.
    ¶ 24   We noted that the parties’ 1972 agreement “involved two separate one[-]year contracts,
    each with its own terms, one for fiscal 1973 and one for fiscal 1974.” 
    Id. at 368
    . We also noted
    that the contract for fiscal 1973 was made in October 1972, and that, pursuant to the statute of
    frauds, “any contract provisions which could not have been performed until after early October[]
    1973, [fell] directly within the scope of the statute [of frauds] and [were] unenforceable unless
    there [was] some reason to not apply the statute.” 
    Id. at 367-68
    .
    ¶ 25   In analyzing whether plaintiff’s performance under the contract “made the statute of frauds
    inapplicable to [that] case,” we noted that the doctrine of partial performance does not bar an
    application of the statute of frauds on “[n]ormal employment contracts, such as the one [there].”
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    Id. at 365-68
    . “However,” we noted, “complete performance on the part of one of the parties to
    the alleged contract will prevent the application of the statute of frauds.” 
    Id.
     Because the plaintiff
    alleged that he had worked for defendant for the entire 1973 fiscal year, we found that any claims
    relating to the contract governing that year were not barred by the statute of frauds. 
    Id. at 368-369
    .
    Accordingly, the plaintiff was entitled to collect his bonuses and full salary as specified in that
    contract. 
    Id.
    ¶ 26    Here, like the plaintiff in Mapes, plaintiff alleged that he fully performed under the
    applicable oral agreement. Defendant does not seem to rebut this allegation, and, in any event, by
    arguing that count II should be dismissed under section 2-619(a)(7) of the Code of Civil Procedure
    (735 ILCS 5/2-619(a)(7) (West 2018)), defendant has acknowledged plaintiff’s allegations under
    count II as being true. Becker v. Zellner, 
    292 Ill. App. 3d 116
    , 122 (1997) (find that “the moving
    party under section 2-619 ‘admits the legal sufficiency of the complaint but asserts an affirmative
    defense or other matter that avoids or defeats the claim.’ ” (citing Brock v. Anderson Road Ass’n,
    
    287 Ill. App. 3d 16
    , 21 (1997))). Accordingly, because plaintiff has alleged full performance under
    the oral agreement, the circuit court erred when it concluded that the statute of frauds precluded
    enforcement of the oral agreement. For this reason, the court also erred in dismissing count II of
    plaintiff’s second amended complaint.
    ¶ 27    Defendant attempts to distinguish Mapes on wholly cosmetic grounds, suggesting that it is
    inapplicable because there were two one-year contracts there as opposed to one 10-year contract
    here. However, this distinction is irrelevant, especially given the described similarities between
    the 1973 fiscal year contract there—which was entered into more than one year before its
    anticipated completion date—and the oral agreement here. Mapes, 68 Ill. App. 3d at 368-369. Both
    here and in Mapes, the relevant contracts were incapable of being performed in their entirety within
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    the scope of a year, meaning they would normally fall under the statute of frauds. 
    Id. at 365-368
    (oral contract from early October 1972 involved salary throughout October 31, 1973, and
    onwards). Both here and in Mapes, the plaintiffs fully performed under their respective contracts.
    
    Id.
     For this reason, Mapes’ holding, that one party’s complete performance of a contract will
    exempt such a contract from the statute of frauds, should equally apply here. 
    Id. at 367-68
    .
    ¶ 28   Defendant also argues that the First District’s decision in Roti v. Roti, 
    364 Ill. App. 3d 191
    (2006) mandates a different result. There, in seeking to enforce an oral agreement that would have
    provided the plaintiff with an interest in certain real estate, the plaintiff argued that his “full
    performance” under the contract precluded an application of the statute of frauds. 
    Id. at 194
    .
    Although the court there recognized that the court in Reiss v. El Bauer Chevrolet Co., 
    96 Ill. App. 2d 266
     (1968) had previously held that “ ‘[t]he [s]tatute of [f]rauds is no defense to an executed
    contract of employment,” the Roti court found that such a principle was “irreconcilable with more
    recent cases,” such as Mariani v. School Directors of District 40, 
    154 Ill. App. 3d 404
    , 407 (1987);
    Promodromos v. Howard Savings Bank, 
    295 Ill. App. 3d 470
    , 476 (1998); and Payne v. Mill Race
    Inn, 
    152 Ill. App. 3d 269
    , 278 (1987), which all purportedly established that “employment
    contracts usually do not qualify for the performance exception to the Frauds Act.” 
    Id. at 198
    .
    Pursuant to these cases, the Roti court found that the plaintiff’s allegations of performance did not
    qualify for an exception under the Statue of Frauds.
    ¶ 29   However, because the Roti case conflated the concepts of partial performance and full
    performance, we decline to follow the decision. Again, in Roti, the plaintiff alleged that he had
    fully performed under the applicable oral contract. 
    Id. at 194
    . As such, the plaintiff relied on Reiss
    for the proposition that fully executed contracts are not voided by the statute of frauds. 
    Id. at 198
    .
    Nonetheless, in reaching the opposite conclusion, the Roti court relied on Mariani, Promodromos,
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    and Payne, which, unlike Reiss, did not involve the full performance of an alleged contract, but
    instead, partial performance. Id.; Mariani, 154 Ill. App. 3d at 407-408 (holding that there was “no
    merit in [the] defendants' partial performance argument”); Promodromos, 295 Ill. App. 3d at 476
    (where the plaintiff argued that “his partial performance based on the contract” entitled him to
    compensation); Payne, 152 Ill. App. 3d at 277-278. Because the Roti case essentially ignored
    relevant caselaw such as Reiss, while embracing irrelevant caselaw such as Mariani,
    Promodromos, and Payne, we decline to follow it. For all of these reasons, we agree with plaintiff
    that the circuit court erred in dismissing count II of its second amended complaint.
    ¶ 30                             B. Count III—Promissory Estoppel
    ¶ 31    Next, because plaintiff’s promissory estoppel count was neither precluded by the statute of
    frauds or the applicable statute of limitations, the circuit court also erred in dismissing count III of
    plaintiff’s third amended complaint. “Promissory estoppel is a common-law doctrine adopted to
    permit the enforcement of promises that are unsupported by consideration, such as gratuitous
    promises, charitable subscriptions, and certain intrafamily promises.” Matthews v. Chicago Transit
    Authority, 
    2016 IL 117638
    , ¶ 91. Under Illinois law, the statute of frauds bars all claims of law
    and equity, as they relate to the alleged contract at issue. Rosewood Care Center, Inc. v.
    Caterpillar, Inc., 
    366 Ill. App. 3d 730
    , 735 (2006). For this reason, one cannot rely on the doctrine
    of promissory estoppel to recover damages under a contract that falls within the statute of frauds.
    
    Id.
    ¶ 32    Furthermore, “actions on unwritten contracts, expressed or implied, *** shall be
    commenced within [five] years next after the cause of action accrued.” 735 ILCS 5/13-205 (West
    2018). While the 10-year statute of limitations applicable to written contracts includes an express
    tolling provision, whereby any payment made pursuant to a written agreement tolls the applicable
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    limitations period, the Code’s five-year statute of limitations applicable to oral contracts contains
    no similar provision. 735 ILCS 5/13-206 (West 2018); 735 ILCS 5/13-205 (West 2018).
    Regardless, our supreme court has established that this “partial payment doctrine” also tolls the
    applicable statute of limitations for unwritten contracts. See Miller v. Cinnamon, 
    168 Ill. 447
    , 456
    (1897) (finding that, for purposes of an unwritten agreement, “[a] part payment of the debt will
    take it out of the statute [of limitations], whether the payment is made in money or by goods and
    chattels”). Various Illinois appellate court decisions have relied on Miller’s logic in more recent
    decades. In re Franke’s Estate, 
    124 Ill. App. 2d 24
    , 33 (1970) (citing Miller for the proposition
    that certain “evidence [may take a] case out of the operation of the statute [of limitations]”); St.
    Francis Medical Center v. Vernon, 
    217 Ill. App. 3d 287
    , 289 (1991) (finding that five-year statute
    of limitations for unwritten contracts was tolled by “part payment of a debt *** such that it
    commences to run from the date of last payment”).
    ¶ 33   Here, in his promissory estoppel count, plaintiff alleged that, as a result of his reliance on
    defendant’s various promises under the oral agreement, plaintiff was prevented from starting his
    own architectural firm. Plaintiff argues that neither the statute of frauds nor the applicable five-
    year statute of limitations for unwritten contracts bars this count, because the limitations period
    was tolled when defendant made “some payments” to plaintiff “through December 22, 2017.”
    Consequently, because the five-year statute of limitations for the instant agreement began to accrue
    on December 22, 2017, plaintiff contends that the promissory estoppel count, which was filed on
    March 28, 2019, falls within the applicable limitations period.
    ¶ 34   Asserting that the statute of frauds does apply to the oral agreement, defendant argues that
    plaintiff’s promissory estoppel count cannot be used to salvage any relief under the oral agreement.
    Because plaintiff’s promissory estoppel count accrued “nearly [12] years” before this action was
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    filed, defendant additionally contends that the action is barred by the five-year statute of limitations
    pertaining to oral contracts. Defendant further asserts that the partial payment exception does not
    apply to the oral agreement.
    ¶ 35   Defendant’s arguments lack merit. First, as we have already discussed, the statute of frauds
    does not bar enforcement of the oral agreement, so the statute does not defeat plaintiff’s promissory
    estoppel count. Rosewood Care Center, 366 Ill. App. 3d at 735. Furthermore, despite the fact that
    section 13-205 of the Code does not contain any language providing that a partial payment of a
    debt tolls the five-year statute of limitations governing unwritten agreements, we are nonetheless
    bound to follow our supreme court’s precedent, which has allowed the limitations period to be
    tolled under identical circumstances. Miller, 168 Ill. at 456. Accordingly, we reject defendant’s
    arguments that the statute of frauds and the statute of limitations precluded plaintiff from bringing
    its promissory estoppel count.
    ¶ 36   Defendant nonetheless suggests that the partial payment exception to the statute of
    limitations is inapplicable here, because plaintiff “has not pled facts that [defendant] was paying
    down a past due debt.” Specifically, defendant cites Kopel v. Board of Education, 
    1 Ill. App. 3d 1083
    , 1086-1087 (1971), to contend that “[n]ot all money that changes hands between a debtor
    and creditor suffices to toll the limitations period[,] because ‘[t]here must be an actual and
    affirmative intention’ to reduce a particular debt before a court may imply at law a new promise
    to pay that debt.” We disagree that Kopel bars application of the partial payment doctrine in the
    instant matter.
    ¶ 37   First, despite defendant’s contentions, plaintiff did allege that, by making payments to
    plaintiff through December 2017, defendant was paying down a debt owed under the oral
    agreement. Specifically, pursuant to the oral agreement, plaintiff alleged that he agreed to stay
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    employed by defendant for ten years under the same terms of the original, written agreement. The
    written agreement stipulated that, in exchange for his services, plaintiff would be entitled to a
    certain salary each year, to be increased by an amount determined from the previous year’s
    inflation rate, or, in an amount proportionate to any increase of defendant’s shareholder’s salaries.
    Moreover, in any years in which defendant’s shareholders received bonuses, the written agreement
    specified plaintiff would “receive a bonus equal to 10% of the sum of all such shareholder bonus
    amounts.” Accordingly, these same terms applied to the oral agreement, and after each year of
    plaintiff’s service under the oral agreement, defendant owed plaintiff his base salary, any
    contractual salary increases, and bonuses. However, while plaintiff acknowledged that
    “[d]efendant paid [p]laintiff” during the duration of the oral agreement, he also alleged that
    defendant failed to pay the “annual salary increases” and the “10% of [defendant’s] [s]hareholder’s
    bonuses” under the oral agreement. As such, plaintiff did allege that defendants paid him only a
    portion of the total amounts due under the oral agreement, and, as a result of this, defendant’s
    partial payments of the total amount owed to plaintiff extended the applicable statute of limitations.
    ¶ 38   Defendant makes the somewhat misleading argument that St. Francis is inapplicable,
    because there, “it was unclear whether a five- or 10-year limitation applied.” We disagree. While
    the St. Francis decision alluded to certain written agreements and itemized hospital statements, the
    court there clearly analyzed the doctrine of partial payments as it relates to the five-year statute of
    limitations applicable to unwritten contracts:
    “[The p]laintiff argues that[,] although the hospital care and services were rendered in
    1984, the five-year limitation on actions on unwritten contracts provided in section 13-205
    presents no bar where [the] plaintiff’s exhibit A shows payments were received on the
    account through February 1990.
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    It is clear that part payment of a debt tolls the statute of limitations such that it
    commences to run from the date of last payment. *** [T]he payment in February 1990
    caused the five-year statute of limitations to run from that date, and the filing of plaintiff’s
    first amended complaint in May 1990 was within the period.” St. Francis Medical Center,
    217 Ill. App. 3d at 289.
    Regardless, even if St. Francis did not involve the five-year statute of limitations, Miller certainly
    did. 168 Ill. at 448.
    ¶ 39    Defendant also confusingly argues that St. Francis is alternatively inapplicable because
    there, “the alleged payments that tolled the limitations period were designedly made to reduce a
    prior existing debt.” Defendant continues, “Here, in contrast, [plaintiff] does not allege that
    [defendant] made any payments on a debt that existed prior to 2006.”
    ¶ 40    Defendant’s argument is illogical. In St. Francis, the partial payment doctrine tolled the
    five-year statute of limitations because the defendants made subsequent payments on a debt arising
    under the alleged, unwritten contract. St. Francis, 217 Ill. App. 3d at 289-290 (unwritten agreement
    for hospital services that was created in 1984 was not barred by five-year statute of limitations
    where defendants made payments under the agreement through February 1990). Similarly, here,
    plaintiff pleaded that the parties entered into the oral agreement in December 2006, and that,
    defendant only paid plaintiff portions of his earned compensation under the oral agreement through
    December 2017. Thus, St. Francis suggests that the five-year statute of limitations for any claims
    arising out of the oral agreement, such as those presented in plaintiff’s promissory estoppel count,
    commence from the date of the last December 2017 payment. Id. at 289. For all of these reasons,
    we conclude that the circuit court erred in dismissing count III of plaintiff’s third amended
    complaint.
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    ¶ 41                                 C. Count IV—Defamation
    ¶ 42   Next, we agree with defendant that the circuit court properly dismissed count IV of
    plaintiff’s second amended complaint. “A statement is considered defamatory if it tends to cause
    such harm to the reputation of another that it lowers that person in the eyes of the community or
    deters third persons from associating with her.” Bryson v. News America Publications, Inc., 
    174 Ill. 2d 77
    , 87 (1996). To state a claim for defamation, a party must present facts indicating that the
    defendant made a false statement about the plaintiff, that the defendant made an unprivileged
    publication of the false statement to a third party, and that the publication caused damages. Green
    v. Rogers, 
    234 Ill. 2d 478
    , 491 (2009). Defamation actions fall into one of two categories: 1)
    defamation per se claims; and 2) defamation per quod claims. Green, 
    234 Ill. 2d at 494-495
    .
    ¶ 43   “A statement is defamatory per se if its harm is obvious and apparent on its face.” 
    Id. at 491
    . Illinois courts have categorized five types of statements that are defamatory per se: 1) words
    imputing that the plaintiff has committed a crime; 2) words that impute that the plaintiff has been
    “infected with a loathsome communicable disease;” 3) words that impute that the plaintiff “is
    unable to perform or lacks integrity” in carrying out his or her profession; 4) words that impute
    that a plaintiff “lacks ability or otherwise prejudices” the plaintiff in his or her profession; and 5)
    words imputing that the plaintiff has engaged in adultery or fornication. 
    Id. at 491-492
    . “Although
    a complaint for defamation per se need not set forth the allegedly defamatory words in haec verba,
    the substance of the statement must be pleaded with sufficient precision and particularity so as to
    permit initial judicial review of its defamatory content.” 
    Id. at 492
    . A plaintiff alleging defamation
    per se does not need to make a showing of special damages to recover. Bryson, 
    174 Ill. 2d at 88
    .
    ¶ 44   On the other hand, claims of defamation per quod may be brought in two circumstances.
    
    Id. at 103
    . “First, a per quod claim is appropriate where the defamatory character of the statement
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    is not apparent on its face, and resort to extrinsic circumstances is necessary to demonstrate its
    injurious meaning.” 
    Id.
     “A per quod action is also appropriate, however, where a statement is
    defamatory on its face, but does not fall within one of the limited categories of statements that are
    actionable per se.” 
    Id.
     Under either type of defamation per quod action, the plaintiff must plead
    and prove special damages. 
    Id.
    ¶ 45    Here, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in dismissing count IV of the second
    amended complaint because he “adequately pled that [d]efendant made such defamatory [per se]
    statements about him to the architectural clients that he had provided high quality architectural
    services to for more than 30 years.” To this point, plaintiff argues that two separate statements that
    defendant purportedly made to the administrators of Harper College and the College of Lake
    County constituted defamation per se. First, plaintiff asserts that, by telling the colleges that
    “[p]laintiff was erratic to the point that [d]efendant ordered all of its offices in the country to lock
    their doors to prevent [p]laintiff’s violent entry” (first statement), defendant “called into question
    [plaintiff’s] ability to perform complex architectural work.” Second, by informing the colleges that
    plaintiff’s locked-out status had “ ‘undermined [p]laintiff’s access to the resources necessary to
    perform substantial architectural commissions for major clients such as’ themselves” (second
    statement), plaintiff suggests that defendant’s statement “imput[ed] a lack of ability in his
    profession as a result of the locked-out status.”
    ¶ 46    We disagree. First, defendant’s first statement concerning plaintiff’s perceived erraticism
    and locked-out status do not fall into any of the five recognized categories of statements that are
    defamatory per se. Green, 
    234 Ill. 2d at 491-492
    . Simply put, by characterizing plaintiff as being
    “erratic,” defendants in no way insinuated any deficiencies in plaintiff’s abilities as an architect.
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    ¶ 47   Second, as defendant points out, plaintiff never argued before the trial court that
    defendant’s second statement, that plaintiff’s locked-out status undermined plaintiff’s access to
    necessary resources, was defamatory per se. Instead, in responding to defendant’s motion to
    dismiss, plaintiff only argued that defendant’s first statement constituted defamation per se.
    Accordingly, because the argument was never presented to the trial court, it is forfeited. BMO
    Harris Bank, N.A. v. Malarz, 
    2021 IL App (2d) 190984
    , ¶ 18. Plaintiff seemingly acknowledges
    that he never made this express argument, but contends that doing so was unnecessary, because
    his second amended complaint already created the inference that defendant’s second statement
    constituted defamation per se. However, even if this were true, we note that plaintiff also failed to
    make this specific argument before the trial court when arguing against defendant’s motion to
    dismiss, meaning it too has been forfeited. 
    Id.
    ¶ 48   Forfeiture notwithstanding, plaintiff never alleged in the second amended complaint that
    any portion of the second statement was false. Instead, plaintiff only suggested that defendant’s
    characterization of plaintiff as being erratic was false, alleging that “[t]here was no legitimate basis
    to make the statements, and indeed they were false in their implication that [p]laintiff, who is not
    a young man, is violent at all or erratic as feigned by defendant.” (Emphasis added.) Accordingly,
    plaintiff has failed to plead the requisite elements of defamation per se or per quod with regards
    to this second statement. Green, 
    234 Ill. 2d at 491-492
    .
    ¶ 49   Furthermore, because defendant’s first statement concerning plaintiff’s erraticism was a
    nonactionable opinion, that statement also could not form the basis of a defamation per quod claim.
    “Only statements capable of being proven true or false are actionable; opinions are not.” Moriarty
    v. Greene, 
    315 Ill. App. 3d 225
    , 233 (2000). However, where a falsified fact is couched in terms
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    of an opinion, the underlying fact remains actionable. Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Co., 
    497 U.S. 1
    , 2 (1990).
    “Courts consider several factors in determining whether a statement is actionable:
    (1) whether the statement has a precise and readily understood meaning; (2) whether the
    statement is objectively verifiable as true or false; and (3) whether the statement's literary
    or social context signals that it has factual content.” Rose v. Hollinger International, Inc.,
    
    383 Ill. App. 3d 8
    , 12 (2008).
    ¶ 50    Here, concerning the first factor, plaintiff acknowledges that the term “erratic” “ha[s] no
    precise meaning in the abstract,” but argues that it has a “very precise meaning in the context of
    the [d]efendant’s statements that it had ordered all of its offices locked because of [p]laintiff’s
    allegedly erratic nature and to prevent [p]laintiff’s violent entry.” Specifically, plaintiff argues that,
    by telling others that plaintiff was so erratic that he needed to be locked out of defendant’s offices,
    defendant “convey[ed] that [p]laintiff had committed some act or acts that caused the [f]irm to fear
    for its employees’ safety.” However, plaintiff seems to be conflating the first and third Rose factors
    with one another, as the first factor does not examine the factual context behind a defendant’s
    statement, only whether the statement, in and of itself, has a precise and readily understood
    meaning. To this point, however, plaintiff concedes that the term, “erratic,” has “no precise
    meaning in the abstract.” Plaintiff has therefore failed to provide any basis for us to find that the
    first Rose factor weighs in his favor, and, by admitting that the term “erratic” lacks a fixed meaning,
    suggests that the factor weighs against his favor. Rose, 383 Ill. App. 3d at 12.
    ¶ 51    With regards to the second Rose factor, plaintiff argues that defendant’s statement is
    verifiable, because “whether [p]laintiff had committed some act or acts that caused [defendant] to
    fear for its employees’ safety” is capable of being proven true or false. Again, though, defendant
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    never insinuated that plaintiff had already acted out in a violent manner to threaten its employees.
    By examining the veracity of the purported context behind defendant’s first statement, defendant
    now conflates the second and third Rose factors with one another. Regardless, there is no way to
    objectively prove whether someone is “erratic,” because, as plaintiff acknowledged, the term does
    not have a fixed meaning. Instead, the term encapsulates defendant’s subjective perception of
    plaintiff, which, by definition, is not objectively verifiable. Furthermore, defendant’s mention of
    plaintiff’s possible “violent entry” concerns a subjective fear about a hypothetical future event,
    which, again, cannot be objectively verified. Instead, the only verifiable fact that could be gleaned
    over from defendant’s first statement is that plaintiff was locked out from defendant’s offices.
    However, this truthful portion of defendant’s first statement—which plaintiff acknowledged as
    being true—cannot form the basis of plaintiff’s defamation count. Green, 
    234 Ill. 2d at 491
    . For
    these reasons, the second Rose factor also weighs against plaintiff’s arguments. Rose, 383 Ill. App.
    3d at 12.
    ¶ 52   Regarding the final Rose factor, plaintiff has repeatedly argued that the context behind
    defendant’s first statement signals factual content, in that defendant insinuated that plaintiff has
    already violently acted out against its employees. However, plaintiff has alleged no facts
    illustrating the context from which we may infer any factual content in the purported defamatory
    statements. Accordingly, defendant has failed to show that the final Rose factor supports his
    arguments. For all of these reasons, we find that the circuit court did not err in dismissing count
    IV of the second amended complaint.
    ¶ 53                            D. Count VI—Unjust Enrichment
    ¶ 54   Next, because count VI of the third amended complaint contained viable theories of unjust
    enrichment, the circuit court erred when it dismissed the count in its entirety. “The doctrine of
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    unjust enrichment underlies a number of legal and equitable actions and remedies, including the
    equitable remedy of constructive trust and the legal actions of assumpsit and restitution or quasi-
    contract.” HPI Health Care Services, Inc. v. Mt. Vernon Hospital, Inc., 
    131 Ill. 2d 145
    , 160 (1989).
    To state a cause of action for unjust enrichment, a plaintiff must plead the following elements: 1)
    that the defendant has unjustly retained a benefit; 2) that the defendant’s unjust retention has led
    to the plaintiff’s detriment; and 3) that the “defendant’s retention of the benefit violates the
    fundamental principles of justice, equity, and good conscience.” 
    Id.
    ¶ 55    Here, under count VI of the third amended complaint, plaintiff alleged that defendant was
    unjustly enriched in four general ways: 1) that, from 1997 through the present, defendant received
    increased architectural commissions and prestige tied to defendant’s use of plaintiff’s surname in
    its trade name; 2) that, as a result of plaintiff working for defendant, defendant received the benefits
    of plaintiff’s professional skills; 3) that defendant avoided having to compete with plaintiff from
    January 1, 1997, through December 26, 2006, as well as from December 27, 2006, through
    December 22, 2017; and 4) that defendant sought and received a $500,000 loan from plaintiff.
    Plaintiff argues that defendant’s enrichments have led to his detriment, in that: 1) plaintiff’s name
    is now linked with defendant’s “substandard architectural work; 2) plaintiff has expended money
    in securing defendant architectural commissions; 3) plaintiff lost personal work equipment; 4)
    plaintiff lost time that he could have otherwise used to start a new firm; and 5) plaintiff’s reputation
    suffered after defendant’s rumors about him began to circulate to prospective clients.
    ¶ 56    On appeal, plaintiff argues that the unjust enrichment count was improperly dismissed
    because it was not barred by the statute of frauds, because it was sufficiently pleaded in the
    alternative and therefore did not involve express contract allegations, and because there was only
    a “rebuttable presumption” that, as a result of a prior stock sale, defendant owned the rights to use
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    plaintiff’s name. In response, defendant argues that count VI was properly dismissed because it
    “could not be [pleaded] without referring to a contract that governed the relationship between the
    parties,” and because the count “improperly alleges matters that are governed by contract.”
    Because we have already found that the statute of frauds does not operate to bar enforcement of
    the oral agreement, we only address the remaining arguments in turn. 1
    ¶ 57                             1. Benefits Tied to Plaintiff’s Name
    ¶ 58       First, the portions of plaintiff’s unjust enrichment count predicated upon defendant’s use
    of plaintiff’s name are precluded by the existence of an express contract. A party cannot
    successfully plead a claim of unjust enrichment concerning a subject that is governed by an
    existing agreement between the parties. C. Szabo Contracting, Inc. v. Lorig Construction Co., 
    2014 IL App (2d) 131328
    , ¶ 25.
    ¶ 59   While a party may nonetheless plead a claim for unjust enrichment in the alternative to a
    breach of contract claim, “the unjust enrichment claim cannot include allegations of an express
    contract.” Gagnon v. Schickel, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 120645
    , ¶ 25. Even where an express contract is
    1
    The parties also dispute whether “other allegations in the unjust enrichment claim should
    be dismissed,” as defendant argues that count VI “include[d] allegations of injuries to [plaintiff]
    that were made in other counts,” without any explanation as to how these injuries benefited
    defendant. We agree that, in alleging the elements of unjust enrichment, a plaintiff’s alleged
    detriments should directly result from a defendant’s unjust retention of a corresponding benefit.
    HPI Health Care Services, Inc., 
    131 Ill. 2d at 160
    . However, as plaintiff has alleged that each
    benefit that defendant unjustly retained is tied to a corresponding detriment suffered by plaintiff,
    defendant’s argument is irrelevant. See 
    id.
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    not mentioned within a claim of unjust enrichment, dismissal of such a claim may nonetheless be
    appropriate if it incorporates allegations of an existing contract and a copy of such a contract is
    attached to the complaint. Guinn v. Hoskins Chevrolet, 
    361 Ill. App. 3d 575
    , 604 (2005).
    ¶ 60   Here, while moving to dismiss plaintiff’s unjust enrichment count, defendant produced a
    certain stock sale agreement and stock redemption agreement that were executed in 1997, whereby
    plaintiff agreed to sell all of his shares in the defendant company to several of defendant’s
    employees and to defendant itself. Otherwise put, at that time, plaintiff sold his business—which
    incorporated his surname as its trade name—to defendant. Because “[t]he transfer of property and
    effect of a business carries with it the exclusive right to use such trademarks or trade[]names as
    have been used in such business,” plaintiff sold defendant the exclusive right to continue using his
    former business’s trade name—which incorporated his surname—when selling all of his shares to
    defendant and defendant’s employees. Thompson v. Spring-Green Lawn Care Corp., 
    126 Ill. App. 3d 99
    , 109 (1984). Consequently, defendant’s continued use of plaintiff’s surname as its trade
    name is governed by express contracts—the stock agreements—and plaintiff cannot successfully
    bring a theory of unjust enrichment based on defendant’s continued use of the name. C. Szabo
    Contracting, Inc., 
    2014 IL App (2d) 131328
    , ¶ 25.
    ¶ 61   Nonetheless, plaintiff argues that the stock purchase agreement did not transfer any rights
    concerning plaintiff’s trade name to defendant, because pursuant to trademark law, “ ‘one cannot
    ‘sell’ to another the right to the name as a symbol of personal skill and ability.’ ” However, our
    search of the record reveals that plaintiff never raised this specific argument to the circuit court.
    Accordingly, the argument is forfeited. BMO Harris Bank, 
    2021 IL App (2d) 190984
    , ¶ 18.
    ¶ 62   Plaintiff also seeks to distinguish Thompson, which we cite above, in three respects. First,
    plaintiff points out that, unlike here, the disputed trade name in Thompson did not involve anyone’s
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    actual surname. Second, defendant argues that, unlike here, “the business seller [there] did not
    dispute that the [name] was transferred.” Third, defendant argues that Thompson is inapplicable
    because “the actual issue [there] was priority of use as against a third party.”
    ¶ 63   First, while plaintiff is correct that Thompson did not involve a trade name that incorporated
    one of the parties’ surnames, Allegretti v. Allegretti Chocolate-Cream Co., 
    177 Ill. 129
     (1898), a
    case on which Thompson relied, did. There, in determining whether the appellee had the sole right
    to use the familial trade name, “Allegretti,” our supreme court specifically found that “[t]he
    transfer of the property and effects of a business carries with it the exclusive right to use such
    trade-marks or trade-names as have been used in such business,” despite the fact that the alleged
    trade name incorporated several of the parties’ actual surnames. 
    Id. at 132
    .
    ¶ 64   Concerning plaintiff’s second and third arguments, plaintiff has failed to provide any
    meaningful explanation as to how the aforementioned distinctions, which seem to be cosmetic in
    nature, render Thompson inapplicable. As such, although plaintiff may be correct that differences
    exist between Thompson and the instant matter, these distinctions, in and of themselves, do not
    negate an application of the case to the matter at hand.
    ¶ 65   Next, citing Dovenmuehle v. Gilldown Mortgage Midwest Corp., 
    670 F. Supp. 795
     (N.D.
    Ill. 1987), which defendant relied upon before the circuit court, plaintiff argues that the sale of a
    business only creates a “rebuttable presumption” that “the rights in a trade name transfer to the
    buyer of a business.” As such, plaintiff argues that, because he has “not been allowed any
    opportunity to develop any contrary evidence to rebut that presumption, unlike [the parties] in
    Dovenmuehle,” “granting a motion to dismiss was improper, and the case should have proceeded
    to the normal discovery period.” Plaintiff further argues that the circuit court’s dismissal of count
    VI “essentially amount[ed] to a ruling that [p]laintiff did not plead evidence in his [t]hird
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    [a]mended [c]omplaint to rebut a presumption,” and that such a dismissal was improper, because
    at this stage of litigation, he was “required only to allege the ultimate facts necessary to state a
    cause of action.”
    ¶ 66   Because plaintiff never actually requested an opportunity to conduct additional discovery
    prior to the circuit court’s resolution of the motion to dismiss, however, the argument has been
    forfeited. BMO Harris Bank, N.A. v. Malarz, 
    2021 IL App (2d) 190984
    , ¶ 18. Still, plaintiff
    contends that the following language, taken from the report of proceedings on defendant’s motion
    to dismiss, establishes that plaintiff requested that the motion to dismiss be denied or postponed
    so that the parties could conduct more discovery:
    “And then regarding the Dovenmuehle arguments and the arguments that they can
    show these contracts and have an affidavit of somebody that says, yeah, these are contracts
    as proof that my client intended to sell his name or that the name was part of the contract
    when it was completely silent, that’s not appropriate. Because what they’re doing is they’re
    arguing—we have pled facts on one side, and against our pled facts on one side, and against
    our pled facts what they’re arguing are rebuttable presumptions based on principles of
    contract law.
    We should have the parties argue what the contracts are. We should have testimony
    as far as offer, acceptance, performance. And where there’s vague terms or where the
    parties argue vaguery [sic], well, then we need testimony to determine what the parties
    actually agreed here.”
    We disagree that the above language served as a formal request for additional discovery, so as to
    properly preserve the issue. Instead, plaintiff only suggested that the circuit court should deny
    defendant’s motion to dismiss because defendants purportedly failed to ascertain the legal effects
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    of the parties’ stock sale agreement. Plaintiff never even mentions the prospect of additional
    discovery. For these reasons, again, the argument is forfeited. 
    Id.
    ¶ 67   Furthermore, plaintiff’s contentions that the circuit court’s dismissal of count VI
    wrongfully “amount[ed] to a ruling that [p]laintiff did not plead evidence in his [t]hird [a]mended
    [c]omplaint to rebut a presumption” is incorrect. To this point, while plaintiff correctly contends
    that, in filing his complaint, he was only required to “allege the ultimate facts necessary to state a
    cause of action,” defendant was still entitled to argue that plaintiff’s claims were barred by another
    affirmative matter—here, the contracts purportedly governing defendant’s use of plaintiff’s name.
    McLean v. Rockford Country Club, 
    352 Ill. App. 3d 229
    , 238 (2004); 735 ILCS 5/2-619(9) (West
    2018). In its motion to dismiss, defendant presented the court with the stock sale and stock
    redemption agreements in conjunction with caselaw establishing that the documents gave
    defendant the right to use plaintiff’s trade name, which, again, incorporated plaintiff’s surname.
    Accordingly, defendant carried its burden to avoid the legal effect of plaintiff’s argument under
    section 2-619(9) of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2-619(9) (West 2018)). At that time, the burden shifted
    to plaintiff to offer any evidence to rebut defendant’s legal conclusion. Turner v. 1212 S. Michigan
    Partnership, 
    355 Ill. App. 3d 885
    , 892 (2005). Plaintiff, however, in responding to the motion to
    dismiss, failed to carry this burden by rebutting defendant’s arguments, and never requested an
    opportunity to conduct more discovery on the matter. Therefore, the circuit court’s dismissal of
    count VI was not due to a lack of evidence alleged in the complaint, but, instead, due to plaintiff’s
    failure to carry his burden of persuasion while responding to the motion to dismiss. 
    Id.
     For all of
    these reasons, the circuit court properly dismissed all portions of plaintiff’s unjust enrichment
    claim concerning defendant’s use of plaintiff’s name.
    ¶ 68        2. Benefits Tied to Plaintiff’s Professional Skills and Lack of Competition
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    ¶ 69     Next, while the circuit court correctly dismissed the portions of plaintiff’s unjust
    enrichment count stemming from plaintiff’s employment from January 1, 1997, through December
    26, 2006, it erred in dismissing the portions of count VI alleging that defendant was unjustly
    enriched through plaintiff’s employment from January 1, 2007, through December 22, 2017.
    Again, a party cannot successfully plead a claim of unjust enrichment concerning a subject that is
    governed by an existing agreement between the parties. C. Szabo Contracting, Inc., 
    2014 IL App (2d) 131328
    , ¶ 25.
    ¶ 70     Here, in the third amended complaint, two of the bases of plaintiff’s unjust enrichment
    count—defendant’s receipt of plaintiff’s professional skills and the lack of professional
    competition with plaintiff—were predicated upon plaintiff’s employment by defendant during two
    applicable periods of time—from January 1, 1997, through December 26, 2006, and December 27,
    2006, through December 22, 2017. Pertinently, plaintiff alleged that, during these times, defendant
    unjustly benefited from “[p]laintiff’s considerable leadership skills running the company he
    founded while serving as its [c]hairman,” from defendant’s avoidance of any direct competition
    with plaintiff, and from its representations that “[p]laintiff was an active, valued member of its
    team.”
    ¶ 71     Concerning plaintiff’s completed work from the first relevant time period, January 1, 1997,
    through December 26, 2006, plaintiff alleged that, “in 1997, upon certain promises, [p]laintiff sold
    his shares in [defendant company] and agreed to work [for defendant] pursuant to a certain
    consulting agreement.” (Emphasis added.) A copy of the consulting agreement was attached to the
    complaint, specifying that it would be in effect from January 1, 1997, through December 31, 2006.
    Thus, because plaintiff has admitted the existence of an employment contract that was in effect
    during this first alleged time period under count VI, any benefits tied to plaintiff’s employment
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    during this time are not actionable under a theory of unjust enrichment. Id.; Guinn, 361 Ill. App.
    3d at 604. Accordingly, the circuit court properly dismissed the portions of plaintiff’s unjust
    enrichment count that were predicated upon plaintiff’s employment from January 1, 1997, through
    December 31, 2006.
    ¶ 72   Plaintiff nonetheless argues that he should have been allowed to amend this count to
    “clarify that it sought a recovery for unjust enrichment in the event the 1997 consulting agreement
    is held invalid or unenforceable, or to modify the time period at issue so that the unjust enrichment
    count only pertains to the time period from January 30, 2007[,] to the present.” Defendant cites no
    authority in support of this argument, and the argument was never raised before the circuit court,
    meaning it is forfeited. Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Oct. 1, 2020); BMO Harris Bank, N.A. v.
    Malarz, 
    2021 IL App (2d) 190984
    , ¶ 18. Regardless, we note that, where multiple avenues of relief
    are brought forth within the same count of a complaint, they should be treated as independent
    claims that all require adjudication as if they were pleaded in separate counts. Gray v. ITT Thorp
    Corp., 
    70 Ill. App. 3d 797
    , 799-800 (1979); See Brown v. K.J.S. Co., 
    189 Ill. App. 3d 768
    , 771
    (1989). Accordingly, plaintiff was not required to amend his pleadings to separate the distinct
    claims made under this count. 
    Id.
    ¶ 73   On the other hand, because plaintiff did not allege the existence of an express employment
    contract that was in effect from January 1, 2007, through December 22, 2017, plaintiff’s theories
    of unjust enrichment stemming from this time period remained actionable. “The elements of a
    contract are an offer, a strictly conforming acceptance to the offer, and supporting consideration.”
    Brody v. Finch University of Health Sciences/The Chicago Medical School, 298 Ill. App, 3d 146,
    154 (1998). In the context of employment contracts, a promise may be taken as an employment
    offer where it is clear enough to lead an employee to reasonably believe that an employment offer
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    has in fact been made. See Ivory v. Specialized Assistance Services, Inc., 
    365 Ill. App. 3d 544
    , 546
    (2006) (finding that an employee manual can create enforceable contract rights where “traditional
    contractual elements are present,” including a clear promise that an employee takes as an offer).
    An employee accepts such an offer when he or she begins working for the employer, and the
    employee’s “continued employment” should be seen as consideration for the employment contract.
    
    Id.
     “As with any contract, the terms of an employment contract must be clear and definite.”
    McInerney, 
    176 Ill. 2d at 485
    .
    ¶ 74   Here, in count VI of plaintiff’s third amended complaint, plaintiff alleged that, on
    December 28, 2006, defendant “made certain promises to [p]laintiff[,] which caused him to
    continue working at [d]efendant.” Plaintiff continued, alleging that “[d]efendant’s promises ***
    actually did induce [p]laintiff to continue working exclusively for the benefit of [d]efendant from
    December 28, 2006[,] until December 22, 2017.”
    ¶ 75   We do not read these allegations to mean that the parties entered into an express
    employment agreement during this later time period. In order to characterize defendant’s promises
    as an offer for purposes of an employment contract, one would necessarily need to know whether
    the language of defendant’s promises was clear and definite enough to lead plaintiff to reasonably
    believe that an employment offer had been made. Ivory, 365 Ill. App. 3d at 546. However, in count
    VI, plaintiff never discussed the actual language that defendant purportedly used in making its
    “promises.” Accordingly, a reviewing court could not properly find that defendant’s promises
    reasonably led plaintiff to find that an employment offer had been made, as necessary to plead the
    existence of an express contract governing the parties’ working relationship from January 1, 2007, 2
    2
    Although defendant purportedly made its promises to plaintiff on December 28, 2006,
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    through December 22, 2017. Because plaintiff did not allege the existence of an express contract
    concerning the parties’ working relationship during this time, the circuit court erred when it
    dismissed the portions of count VI concerning any benefits defendant may have received from
    plaintiff’s employment from January 1, 2007, through December 22, 2017. Id.; Guinn, 361 Ill.
    App. 3d at 604.
    ¶ 76                          3. Benefits Tied to the $500,000 Loan
    ¶ 77   Next, because the $500,000 loan that plaintiff provided to defendant was also governed by
    an express contract, the circuit court correctly dismissed the portions of plaintiff’s unjust
    enrichment count that were based on the loan. In addition to the stock sale agreement, defendant
    also attached a promissory note to its motion to dismiss, which seems to have been made for
    plaintiff’s benefit, establishing that defendant’s officers would pay $500,000 to “THE BANK OF
    WAUKEGAN ON BEHALF OF [PLAINTIFF].” On appeal, plaintiff makes no arguments
    attacking the validity of the promissory note, its subject matter, or whether it in fact operated to
    govern the reimbursement of the $500,000 back to plaintiff. Accordingly, because defendant has
    shown that an express contract existed between the parties concerning the loan, the loan could not
    serve the basis as a claim of unjust enrichment. Guinn, 361 Ill. App. 3d at 604. Moreover, as an
    alternative basis of dismissal, we note that plaintiff never alleged that he suffered any detriments
    as a result of the $500,000 loan, meaning he additionally failed to make a proper claim of unjust
    enrichment relating to the loan. HPI Health Care Services, Inc., 
    131 Ill. 2d at 160
    . For all of these
    the parties’ written agreement, which was directly referenced under count VI and attached to the
    third amended complaint, continued through December 31, 2006, meaning plaintiff’s theories
    concerning any work completed before this date are nonactionable. Guinn, 361 Ill. App. 3d at 604.
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    reasons, the circuit court correctly dismissed the portions of count VI relating to the $500,000 loan
    that plaintiff made to defendant.
    ¶ 78                                        E. Sanctions
    ¶ 79   Finally, we turn to the arguments presented in defendant’s cross-appeal concerning the
    circuit court’s award of sanctions. Defendant argues that the circuit court abused its discretion
    when it “arbitrarily imposed a $[3000] sanction” with respect to plaintiff’s former conversion
    count. Defendant suggests that, because plaintiff’s conversion count formed “the cornerstone” of
    the underlying lawsuit, the circuit court erred in awarding defendant less than the full amount of
    expenses defendant incurred in litigating the count. Defendant additionally argues that the circuit
    court abused its discretion when it “calculated the sanction imposed” without first holding a
    hearing to determine what may constitute “the appropriate sanction.”
    ¶ 80   Plaintiff responds, first arguing that, because defendant failed to immediately object to the
    trial court’s ruling as to the $3000 sanction or file a motion to reconsider thereafter, defendant has
    forfeited any arguments that it was entitled to a higher award. Plaintiff further argues that the
    $3000 sanction was appropriate here, where defendant failed to present the court with “sufficient
    evidence to show that a higher amount was reasonable.” Plaintiff also points out that, in imposing
    the $3000 sanction, the court had reviewed all of the parties’ applicable pleadings, transcripts of
    relevant depositions, and pertinent case law in correctly concluding that “an evidentiary hearing
    was unnecessary.” For the following reasons, we find that the circuit court did not abuse its
    discretion in imposing the $3000 sanction onto plaintiff.
    ¶ 81    Illinois Supreme Court Rule 137 (eff. Jan. 1, 2018) addresses sanctions, providing:
    “The signature of an attorney or party constitutes a certificate by him that he has read [a]
    pleading, motion or other document; that to the best of his knowledge, information, and
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    belief formed after reasonable inquiry it is well grounded in fact and is warranted by
    existing law or a good-faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of
    existing law, and that it is not interposed for any improper purpose, such as to harass or to
    cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation.”
    The rule also authorizes courts to impose sanctions on lawyers who violate its terms. Ill. S. Ct. R.
    137 (eff. Jan. 1, 2018). Still, while a circuit court may impose sanctions when the rule is violated,
    it is not required to do so. Lake Environmental, Inc. v. Arnold, 
    2015 IL 118110
    , ¶ 15. A circuit
    court has sound discretion in imposing sanctions under Rule 137, and its decision will not be
    overturned unless, in imposing the sanctions, the circuit court has abused its discretion. 
    Id.
     “An
    abuse of discretion occurs only when the trial court's decision is arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable
    or where no reasonable person would take the view adopted by the trial court.” Seymour v. Collins,
    
    2015 IL 118432
    , ¶ 41.
    ¶ 82   First, we disagree with plaintiff that defendant forfeited any arguments on appeal
    concerning the amount of the circuit court’s sanction. Here, in arguing that defendant is “barred
    from raising this issue for the first time on appeal,” plaintiff contends:
    “when the [circuit court] announced that it found a $[3000] sanction award to be
    appropriate, [d]efendant made no argument that a higher amount was warranted. Defendant
    did not object to the $500 per hour rate that the [circuit court] set or to the six hours of time
    that the [circuit court] determined should be included in the fee calculation. Defendant did
    not file a [m]otion to [r]econsider the $[3000] fee award in the [circuit court].”
    ¶ 83    We disagree. Again, on appeal, a party forfeits any arguments that were not previously
    raised before the circuit court. BMO Harris Bank, N.A., 
    2021 IL App (2d) 190984
    , ¶ 18. In
    defendant’s memorandum in support of its motion for sanctions, which was filed in the circuit
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    court, defendant explicitly argued that, as a result of plaintiff’s frivolous conversion claims,
    “sanctions should be imposed [against plaintiff] in an amount equal to the attorney’s fees and
    other expenses that [defendant] incurred in connection with the conversion claim.” (Emphasis
    added.) Defendant now makes this same argument on appeal, asserting that it was entitled to the
    full amount of expenses incurred in defending itself against plaintiff’s conversion count. Because
    the argument was previously raised before the circuit court, it was preserved for appeal. 
    Id.
    ¶ 84    Next, we agree with plaintiff that defendant’s “cornerstone” argument is forfeited because
    defendant did not make such an argument before the circuit court. BMO Harris Bank, N.A., 
    2021 IL App (2d) 190984
    , ¶ 18. Defendant seemingly recognizes that it did not previously raise the
    argument, but contends that the argument cannot be forfeited because the circuit court did not
    afford defendant an opportunity to make the argument when it denied defendant’s request to file a
    fee petition and failed to hold a corresponding evidentiary hearing. We disagree, as defendant
    surely could have raised this argument while arguing its motion for sanctions.
    ¶ 85    Forfeiture aside, even if we were to agree with defendant that, at the time it filed its motion
    for sanctions, plaintiff’s conversion count had become the “cornerstone” of the instant lawsuit, this
    would not mean that defendant is entitled to every cent it argues was spent in defending itself
    against the conversion count. Instead, the circuit court retained discretion to impose sanctions if it
    chose to do so, in an amount it found to be appropriate. Ill. S. Ct. R. 137(a) (eff. Jan. 1, 2018);
    Kennedy v. Miller, 
    221 Ill. App. 3d 513
    , 525 (1991) (holding that trial court was “free to determine
    the appropriate sanction” for a violation of Rule 137); but see Rios v. Valenciano, 
    273 Ill. App. 3d 35
    , 41 (1995) (rejecting the circuit court’s sanction award because it did not reimburse the plaintiff
    for the totality of his incurred costs).
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    ¶ 86   In arguing that the circuit court failed to sufficiently compensate defendant for all of its
    claimed expenses once the conversion count became the “cornerstone” of the instant litigation,
    defendant also cites Heckinger v. Welsh, 
    339 Ill. App. 3d 189
    , 193 (2003), to argue that the circuit
    court improperly “focused on the fact that [plaintiff] voluntarily moved to dismiss his complaint
    shortly after his deposition.” There, we found that, “[e]ven if a party withdraws [an] offensive
    pleading, he or she is still accountable for the damage done by violating Rule 137.” Here, by
    imposing a $3000 sanction onto plaintiff, the circuit court did hold plaintiff accountable for
    violating Rule 137. Accordingly, the circuit court’s decision did not run afoul of Heckinger. 
    Id.
    ¶ 87   Finally, we disagree with defendant that the circuit court erred in failing to hold a hearing
    to determine the appropriate sanction for plaintiff’s violation of Rule 137. “ ‘Although an
    evidentiary hearing should always be held when a sanction award is based upon a pleading filed
    for an improper purpose, a hearing is unnecessary if the sanction award is due to the unreasonable
    nature of the pleading based on an objective standard.’ ” Garlick v. Bloomingdale Township, 
    2018 IL App (2d) 171013
    , ¶ 54 (citing Hess v. Loyd, 
    2012 IL App (5th) 090059
    , ¶ 26).
    ¶ 88   After hearing the parties’ arguments concerning defendant’s motion for sanctions, the
    circuit court expressly found:
    “[A]lthough an evidentiary hearing should always be held when a sanction award
    is based upon a pleading filed for an improper purpose, a hearing is unnecessary if the
    sanction award is due to the unreasonable nature of the pleading based on an objective
    standard, and that is what the [c]ourt found here.”
    Defendant does not dispute the circuit court’s finding that the instant sanction was not based on an
    improper purpose. Therefore, pursuant to Garlick, an evidentiary hearing was not required in the
    instant matter. Garlick, 
    2018 IL App (2d) 171013
    , ¶ 54.
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    ¶ 89     Defendant argues that Garlick is inapplicable, because there, “the Garlick court merely
    recognized that a separate evidentiary hearing on the amount of sanctions was not necessary in
    that case because the party seeking sanctions had already presented an affidavit and invoices to the
    trial court detailing the fees and expenses it incurred as a result of the violations [of] Rule 137.”
    Defendant apparently reasons that, because there were no similar affidavits or invoices presented
    to the circuit court here, the circuit court was required to hold an evidentiary hearing before issuing
    any sanctions. Defendant further argues that our interpretation of Garlick runs contrary to the
    holding of Law Offices of Brendan R. Appel, LLC v. Georgia’s Restaurant and Pancake House,
    Inc., 
    2021 IL App (1st) 192523
    , ¶ 59.
    ¶ 90   However, defendant mischaracterizes the Garlick decision. There, after stating that an
    evidentiary hearing is only required where a pleading has been filed for an improper purpose and
    not in instances where sanctions resulted from “the unreasonable nature of the pleading,” the court
    clearly and unequivocally held, “In this case, because [the] plaintiff’s claim was moot, it is clear
    that his complaint was unreasonable under an objective standard. Thus, no evidentiary hearing
    was necessary.” (Emphasis added.) 
    Id.
     This holding in no way conflicts with Appel, which never
    contemplated the specific issue of whether an evidentiary hearing is required under similar
    circumstances. 
    Id.
    ¶ 91   Defendant additionally argues that, by failing to hold an evidentiary hearing on the matter,
    the court failed to “weigh[] the usual factors for awarding attorneys’ fees as a sanction,” including:
    “(1) [A]ll of the activities that [defense] counsel was forced to undertake solely in connection with
    the frivolous conversion claim[;] (2) the skill and standing of the attorney employed[;] (3) the
    nature of the case[;] or (4) the difficulty of the issues involved.” Defendant goes on, arguing that
    “[t]he [c]ircuit [c]ourt also erred when it failed to make any inquiry into whether the expenses
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    actually incurred by [defendant] to defend against the conversion claim bore a reasonable
    connection to the litigation or reflected usual and customary charges.” However, defendant points
    to no authority requiring the circuit court to consider these factors, and defendant also fails to
    explain how any consideration of these factors would have altered the circuit court’s judgment. As
    a result of defendant’s failure to develop this argument or support it by relevant authority, it has
    been forfeited. Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Oct. 1, 2020); Vancura, 238 Ill. 2d at 372.
    ¶ 92    In a further attempt to avoid Garlick’s rationale and our resulting affirmance of the circuit
    court’s sanction, defendant recharacterizes its argument in its reply brief for the cross-appeal, now
    asserting that the circuit court erred in denying defendant an opportunity to file a fee petition
    outlining the total of its costs resulting from plaintiff’s conversion count. However, as alluded to
    above, defendant did not sufficiently present this argument in its initial brief. There, in one
    sentence supporting its argument concerning the prospect of an evidentiary hearing, defendant
    fleetingly suggested that the circuit court also “erred when it refused to allow [defendant to] submit
    a fee petition,” without any accompanying citation to authority establishing as much. Resultingly,
    this unsupported, undeveloped argument was forfeited. Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Oct. 1., 2020);
    Vancura, 238 Ill. 2d at 372; Lake County Grading Co., LLC v. Village of Antioch, 
    2014 IL 115805
    ,
    ¶ 36 (vague allegations of error do not satisfy Rule 341(h)(7)). Therefore, defendant cannot now
    argue in its reply that “the circuit court erred when it refused to allow the firm to submit a fee
    petition.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Oct. 1., 2020); Vancura, 238 Ill. 2d at 372.
    ¶ 93    Defendant unconvincingly seeks to avoid forfeiture by insinuating that its new arguments
    concerning the fee petition were responsive to contentions raised in plaintiff’s response brief.
    Pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 341 (eff. Oct. 1, 2020), an appellant may reply to any
    issue raised in the appellee’s response brief, even if the appellant failed to first raise the issue in
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210054-U
    its opening brief. Rome v. Commonwealth Edison Co., 
    81 Ill. App. 3d 776
    , 780 (1980). Here, in
    presenting its improper fee petition argument, defendant suggests that it is responding to “[t]he
    crux of [plaintiff’s] argument with respect to the sanctions issue[,] *** that [defendant] waived the
    argument that it should have been permitted to file a separate fee petition after the [c]ircuit [c]ourt
    held that [plaintiff] and his counsel both violated Rule 137.” However, while plaintiff noted in
    passing that “[d]efendant’s counsel appeared for the hearing on [its] [m]otion for [s]anctions
    without having submitted or prepared a fee petition,” it made no arguments as to whether defendant
    should have been allowed to file a fee petition, or whether defendant waived this argument on
    appeal. Instead, plaintiff argued that “[d]efendant made no argument in the [t]rial [c]ourt that the
    $[3000] sanction was unreasonable or that a higher award should have been made,” and that
    “[d]efendant therefore cannot raise this argument for the first time on appeal.” By misrepresenting
    plaintiff’s contentions, defendant has created a strawman argument in an attempt to avoid
    forfeiture. We will not condone such tactics by considering this new argument, which, again, has
    been forfeited. Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Oct. 1., 2020); Vancura, 238 Ill. 2d at 372. For all of
    the above reasons, we find that the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in imposing its $3000
    sanction.
    ¶ 94                                     III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 95   For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Lake County as to
    count IV, as well as the circuit court’s imposition of sanctions. We reverse and remand the circuit
    court’s judgments as to counts II, III, and VI.
    ¶ 96   Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and cause remanded.
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