Appellate Court Clarifies Minor’s Right to ConfidentialityBy Joseph T. Monahan & Melissa LudingtonMental Health Law, May 2022The appellate court answered a number of decades-long questions about mental health records concerning minors in In re Marriage of Wendy W. and James W.
Appellate Court Vacates Large PenaltyBy Raymond ReottEnvironmental and Natural Resources Law, June 2022An Illinois appellate court panel reversed the trial court judgment regarding civil enforcement of the environmental laws at a famous dump site in Ford Heights.
Appellate UpdateBy Andreas LiewaldMental Health Law, April 2022A summary and analysis of Gibbons v. OSF Healthcare System.
Appellate Update: Marcus Appeals Trigger Call to ActionBy Andreas LiewaldMental Health Law, May 2022The opinions in In re Marcus highlight important issues involving respondent’s civil and procedural rights in mental health proceedings, which far too often have been neglected.
ARDC Intermediary ProgramBy Hon. James M. Radcliffe, (ret.)Human and Civil Rights, December 2022An overview of the ARDC's Intermediary Program.
ARDC Intermediary ProgramBy Hon. James M. Radcliffe, (ret.)General Practice, Solo, and Small Firm, November 2022An overview of the ARDC's Intermediary Program.
Assignment of Promissory Note Includes Assignment of Continuing GuarantyBy Kevin StineCommercial Banking, Collections, and Bankruptcy, November 2022In Amos Financial, LLC v. Szydlowski, the trial court entered summary judgment in favor of a creditor enforcing a promissory note guarantee. The appellate court affirmed.
Assignments of Beneficial Interest in Illinois Land Trust Not Invalidated by Failure to Lodge with Land Trustee or to Obtain Approval of Mortgage LenderBy Mary Anne GerstnerGeneral Practice, Solo, and Small Firm, September 2022Where there was a failure by beneficial owner during his lifetime to lodge assignments of beneficial interest in land trust with land trustee, contrary to trust agreement, the assignment was not invalid, and was effective as to defendants, including certain adult children of the decedent who claimed the beneficial interest under the survivorship provisions of the trust. Irrevocable right to approve trust document did not require approval of assignments by lender.
Attack on Olympus: The Rise of FIRPTABy Donald Hyun Kiolbassa & Neil NodenReal Estate Law, September 2022An overview of the Foreign Investment In Real Property Tax Act of 1980.
Attorney Sanctioned Over Emails to Judge and Others; First Amendment Defense FailsBy Pamela Sakowicz MenakerBench and Bar, October 2022An Illinois action before the Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission pits an attorney’s First Amendment rights against allowable speech in emails commenting on a judge and her actions in a pending case.
Avoiding Hustle Culture in the Practice of LawBy Benjamin R. LawsonGeneral Practice, Solo, and Small Firm, September 2022The avoidance of hustle culture is especially important for general, solo, and small-firm practitioners who wear multiple hats, any one of which could be its own full-time job.
Bank Loses Claim to CollateralBy Michael WeissmanCommercial Banking, Collections, and Bankruptcy, July 2022Although after-acquired personal property collateral can be included in a bank's collateral by using an after-acquired clause in the collateral description, that is not true of real estate.
Bank Not Liable Under the Statute of FraudsBy Michael WeissmanCommercial Banking, Collections, and Bankruptcy, March 2022In Modern Industries, Inc., vs. Oxford Bank Corp., the claimants sued the bank for alleged negligence in unilaterally changing the terms of certain loans in violation of the parties’ agreement, breach of fiduciary duty by failing to properly distribute loans, and engaging in in constructive fraud and misrepresentation by waiting to disclose unilateral changes to the final loan documents until the claimants were left with no choice except to close the loans.
Bank’s UCC Liens Trump Wage Claims in Federal ReceivershipBy Michael WeissmanCommercial Banking, Collections, and Bankruptcy, May 2022Even though courts are generally sympathetic to wage claims of employees of insolvent borrowers, they will not use state statutory law to subordinate earlier-perfected security interests in the borrower’s assets to those wage claims unless the state law clearly grants the wage claims a lien priority position.
The Basic Elements of BlockchainBy Aaron W. BrooksLegal Technology, Standing Committee on, November 2022When trying to understand what blockchain is and how it works, it’s helpful to begin by considering the specific problem that blockchain was invented to solve and the historical context within which it arose.
Battle Lines on the Verdict Form: How Many Lines Should Go to the Jury?By Kingshuk RoyCivil Practice and Procedure, November 2022There is often a dispute at trial over how many lines should be included on the verdict form. Some advocate for separate lines for each distinct damage claim while others seek to combine damage categories into a single line. This article reviews how appellate courts have handled this dispute.
Become an Illinois Bar Foundation ChampionBy Bernard G. PeterCorporate Law Departments, December 2022The Champions of the Illinois Bar Foundation are a distinguished group of supporters who believe in the value of justice and philanthropy.