                           ILLINOIS OFFICIAL REPORTS
                                        Appellate Court




                   Shatku v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 2013 IL App (2d) 120412




Appellate Court            MYQEREM SHATKU, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. WAL-MART STORES,
Caption                    INC., Defendant-Appellee.



District & No.             Second District
                           Docket No. 2-12-0412


Filed                      May 10, 2013


Held                       Plaintiff’s appeal was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, since the trial
(Note: This syllabus       court’s final judgment was its grant of defendant’s motion to dismiss
constitutes no part of     plaintiff’s motion to refile her negligence complaint, and plaintiff’s
the opinion of the court   motion to reconsider the dismissal did not extend the 30-day deadline for
but has been prepared      filing her notice of appeal, because the “Proof of Mailing” of that motion
by the Reporter of         showed it was mailed to opposing counsel within 30 days of the final
Decisions for the          judgment, but there was no mention of when the motion was mailed to
convenience of the         the clerk of the court, and defendant’s opposition to the motion to
reader.)
                           reconsider without making a jurisdictional objection did not revest the
                           trial court with jurisdiction.


Decision Under             Appeal from the Circuit Court of Kane County, No. 09-L-826; the Hon.
Review                     F. Keith Brown, Judge, presiding.



Judgment                   Appeal dismissed.
Counsel on                 Brian R. Porter, of Brian R. Porter Law Offices, of Chicago, for
Appeal                     appellant.

                           James P. Balog, Heather E. Shea, and Elizabeth M. Bartolucci, all of
                           O’Hagan Spencer LLC, of Chicago, for appellee.


Panel                      JUSTICE JORGENSEN delivered the judgment of the court, with
                           opinion.
                           Presiding Justice Burke and Justice Zenoff concurred in the judgment and
                           opinion.




                                             OPINION

¶1          Plaintiff, Myqerem Shatku, appeals following the trial court’s denial of her motion to
        reconsider the dismissal of her “Motion to Refile” her negligence action against defendant,
        Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. Because plaintiff filed her motion to reconsider more than 30 days
        after the dismissal, we hold that the motion and the notice of appeal were both late. We reject
        plaintiff’s argument that jurisdiction revested in the trial court as a result of the parties’
        addressing plaintiff’s motion on the merits. In so holding, we follow Sears v. Sears, 85 Ill.
        2d 253, 260 (1981), over later appellate court cases that broadened the revestment doctrine.

¶2                                       I. BACKGROUND
¶3          On March 19, 2009, plaintiff filed a negligence complaint against defendant in the Cook
        County circuit court. Defendant moved for a forum non conveniens transfer of the case to
        Kane County, and the court granted the motion. Defendant then answered. Plaintiff moved
        pursuant to section 2-1009 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-1009 (West
        2010)) to dismiss the cause of action voluntarily. The court granted the motion on October
        27, 2010, also granting defendant leave to file instanter a motion asking the court to
        involuntarily dismiss the case or bar plaintiff from presenting evidence, as a sanction for
        noncompliance with discovery. The court required defendant to send plaintiff a copy of the
        order. On November 1, 2010, “defendant’s counsel being present,” the court entered an order
        stating that the hearing was again on plaintiff’s section 2-1009 motion to dismiss: the order
        “dismissed [defendant] as a party from this cause of action” and required “Plaintiff *** to
        pay Defendant’s costs as required by statute.”
¶4          On October 27, 2011, plaintiff filed a “Motion to Refile,” citing sections 2-1301 and 2-
        1401 of the Code as bases for relief. See 735 ILCS 5/2-1301, 2-1401 (West 2010). Defendant
        responded with a “Motion to Dismiss” plaintiff’s “Motion to Refile.” The court, on


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       December 22, 2011, granted the “Motion to Dismiss.”
¶5         Plaintiff filed a motion to reconsider; the “Proof of Service” stated that counsel certified
       that he had mailed and faxed it to “all counsel of record” on January 23, 2012 (a Monday).
       That paper did not allude to the motion’s filing. The motion received a “filed” stamp on
       January 26, 2012. On February 1, 2012, defendant filed a response, addressing the motion
       entirely on the merits. The court denied the motion on March 6, 2012, addressing it entirely
       on the merits. The court ruled that, under Kahle v. John Deere Co., 104 Ill. 2d 302, 305
       (1984), plaintiff’s only option was to refile the case as a new case, and that neither section
       2-1301 relief nor section 2-1401 relief was available. Defendant filed a notice of appeal on
       April 5, 2012.

¶6                                          II. ANALYSIS
¶7          On appeal, plaintiff asserts that the trial court erred when it granted her section 2-1009
       motion for voluntary dismissal, as defendant was the one that prosecuted the motion.
       Defendant responds that the court entered the final judgment in this case no later than
       December 22, 2011. (It holds open the possibility that the true final judgment was the grant
       of the section 2-1009 motion.) It argues that, after December 22, 2011, plaintiff had no more
       than 30 days to file a motion to reconsider or a notice of appeal, and that plaintiff filed her
       motion to reconsider after that deadline. In her reply, plaintiff accepts December 22, 2011,
       as the date of the final judgment, but argues that she filed her motion to reconsider by fax on
       January 23, 2012, a Monday and the effective thirtieth day. She attaches to her reply a
       purported copy of a fax transmission sheet, purportedly showing transmission to the Kane
       County circuit clerk. The sheet also says that a “hard copy will follow in the mail.” In the
       alternative, plaintiff notes “the complete and utter dearth of any suggestion [by defendant in
       its response to the motion] or in the [trial court’s] 6 page March 6, 2012 Order that plaintiff’s
       Motion for Reconsideration was not filed in a timely manner.” In oral argument, she more
       specifically argued that jurisdiction revested in the trial court with argument on the merits
       of the motion to reconsider.
¶8          We assume here that, consistent with the parties’ arguments, the court’s final judgment
       for purposes of this appeal was entered on December 22, 2011. With that assumption, we
       now explain why plaintiff’s motion to reconsider did not extend the time to appeal the
       dismissal of the “Motion to Refile.”
¶9          Under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 303(a)(1) (eff. June 4, 2008), only a timely motion
       directed against the judgment extends the time in which to file a notice of appeal. To be
       timely, absent a proper extension granted by the court, the motion must be filed within 30
       days after the entry of the judgment, with the deadline extended to the next business day if
       the thirtieth day falls on a weekend or court holiday. 5 ILCS 70/1.11 (West 2010); 735 ILCS
       5/2-1203(a) (West 2010). Here, the court file-stamped plaintiff’s motion to reconsider on
       January 26, 2012, when the last day to file, adjusted for the weekend, was January 23, 2012.
¶ 10        Under our case law, a postjudgment motion may be deemed filed when it is mailed to the
       circuit clerk. See Baca v. Trejo, 388 Ill. App. 3d 193, 195-96 (2009). Here, however,
       plaintiff’s “Proof of Mailing” shows service on opposing counsel, but says nothing about

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       mailing to the clerk. See Baca, 388 Ill. App. 3d at 197 (requiring, by analogy to Illinois
       Supreme Court Rule 373 (eff. Feb. 1, 1994), a proof of mailing under Illinois Supreme Court
       Rule 12(b)(3) (eff. Nov. 15, 1992) for a postjudgment motion received by the clerk after the
       due date). Moreover, no authority allows us to assume that a party filed a document at the
       same time he or she served it. Thus, the mailbox rule does not apply here.
¶ 11        Plaintiff asserts that she filed the motion by fax on January 23, 2011. At least three things
       are wrong with that assertion. First, plaintiff provides no support for her implication that the
       clerk may accept documents for filing by fax. We find nothing in state or local rules to
       support that claim; Illinois Supreme Court Rules 11 and 12 (eff. Dec. 29, 2009) provide for
       service by fax, but not for filing. Second, Rule 12 further provides that service by fax is
       effective the day after transmission, so that, even if the rule applied to filing, the filing would
       have been a day late. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 12(e) (eff. Dec. 29, 2009). Third, and in any event, the
       transmission sheet on which plaintiff relies is not part of the record, and so we must discount
       it. See, e.g., Ruiz v. Walker, 386 Ill. App. 3d 1080, 1081 (2008) (a reviewing court should not
       consider evidence that is not part of the record).
¶ 12        The remaining question is whether defendant’s active contesting of the motion to
       reconsider revested jurisdiction in the trial court, extending the time to appeal despite the
       motion’s untimeliness. See People v. Minniti, 373 Ill. App. 3d 55, 67 (2007) (“The
       defendant’s notice of appeal, filed within 30 days after the ruling on his untimely but
       revested postjudgment motion, vests the appellate court with jurisdiction.”). Following Sears,
       we hold that it did not. In Sears, the supreme court held that, where “[n]othing in the
       proceeding was inconsistent with the judgment,” in that “the participants did not ignore the
       judgment and start to retry the case, thereby implying by their conduct their consent to having
       the judgment set aside,” no revestment occurred. Sears, 85 Ill. 2d at 260. Consistent with
       this, we recently held in People v. Bailey, 2012 IL App (2d) 110209, ¶ 33, that an adversarial
       proceeding on the issue of whether the judgment should be set aside does not revest
       jurisdiction in the trial court, despite a failure by the party opposing the reopening of the
       judgment to make an issue of the court’s lack of jurisdiction. The proceeding at issue here
       was similar: defendant, though without noting the lack of jurisdiction, actively opposed any
       reopening of the judgment. See Sears, 85 Ill. 2d at 260 (“the hearing was about whether the
       judgment should be set aside; and Conde insisted it should not”). Thus, the rule in Sears and
       Bailey applies here.
¶ 13        In Bailey, we noted that appellate courts, in the years after Sears, had expanded the
       revestment doctrine to any circumstance in which a party opposed reopening the judgment
       without making a jurisdictional objection. Bailey, 2012 IL App (2d) 110209, ¶ 33. We noted
       that such expansion went beyond what the supreme court approved in Sears and a similar
       case, People v. Kaeding, 98 Ill. 2d 237, 241 (1983). Bailey, 2012 IL App (2d) 110209, ¶ 33.
       In accord with Sears and Bailey, we hold here that, when a party opposes a motion to
       reconsider, a simple failure to note the untimeliness of the motion is not inconsistent with
       the merits of the judgment and does not cause jurisdiction to revest in the trial court.
¶ 14        A final jurisdictional note is in order. In Hanson v. De Kalb County State’s Attorney’s
       Office, 391 Ill. App. 3d 902, 906 (2009), we acknowledged a line of cases holding that, in
       civil cases, “trial and appellate courts must treat a filing that is too late to be a postjudgment

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       motion as a section 2-1401 petition.” (Emphasis added.) If we were to apply that holding
       here, we would be required to treat plaintiff’s motion to reconsider as a section 2-1401
       petition, and we would deem timely plaintiff’s appeal of the trial court’s ruling on that
       “petition.” See Ill. S. Ct. R. 304(b)(3) (eff. Feb. 26, 2010). However, for two reasons, we do
       not apply it.
¶ 15        First, plaintiff has not requested that we do so. In Hanson, the appellants expressly
       invoked that rule (Hanson, 391 Ill. App. 3d at 905), and on that basis we applied it. In doing
       so, however, we noted that we had not done so in Baca, “where the postjudgment motion
       was untimely and [the] appellant conceded the absence of a section 2-1401 claim.” Hanson,
       391 Ill. App. 3d at 906 n.2. Thus, despite the mandatory language with which the rule is
       generally stated, our recent decisions reflect that we need not invoke it sua sponte.
¶ 16        Second, and more importantly, the supreme court has cast serious doubt on the rule. In
       Keener v. City of Herrin, 235 Ill. 2d 338 (2009), which the supreme court filed shortly after
       we filed Hanson, the plaintiff filed an untimely “Motion to Reconsider.” Without even
       acknowledging the line of cases we cited in Hanson, and despite the fact that the “Motion
       to Reconsider” cited section 2-1401 as a basis for relief, the supreme court refused to deem
       the ruling on the “Motion” a ruling on a section 2-1401 petition. The supreme court noted
       that the plaintiff “did not even attempt” to satisfy the service requirements for a section 2-
       1401 petition; that the trial court ruled “before the 30 days to answer [a section 2-1401
       petition] had even expired”; that the trial court did not purport to be ruling on a section 2-
       1401 petition; and that the plaintiff did not attempt to satisfy the section 2-1401 requirement
       of “proof, by a preponderance of the evidence, of a defense or claim that would have
       precluded entry of the judgment in the original action and diligence in both discovering the
       defense or claim and presenting the petition.” (Emphasis in original.) Keener, 235 Ill. 2d at
       348-50. Thus, the supreme court ruled that the plaintiff’s appeal had been untimely.
¶ 17        Obviously, Keener is at odds with the notion that “trial and appellate courts must treat
       a filing that is too late to be a postjudgment motion as a section 2-1401 petition” (emphasis
       added) (Hanson, 391 Ill. App. 3d at 906). The supreme court did not necessarily preclude
       such treatment; but it certainly precluded a requirement of such treatment in all cases. Thus,
       we maintain, per Hanson and Baca, that we need not apply such treatment unless the
       appellant requests it and demonstrates its appropriateness. As noted, plaintiff has failed to
       do so here.

¶ 18                                    III. CONCLUSION
¶ 19       Because plaintiff did not file a timely motion directed against the judgment, her notice
       of appeal was due 30 days after the entry of the judgment. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 303(a)(1) (eff.
       June 4, 2008). Her notice of appeal thus was untimely, and we must dismiss her appeal for
       lack of jurisdiction. See Baca, 388 Ill. App. 3d at 198-99.

¶ 20      Appeal dismissed.



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