Village of Lombard v. Department of Transportation ( 2013 )


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  •                            ILLINOIS OFFICIAL REPORTS
    Appellate Court
    Village of Lombard v. Department of Transportation, 
    2013 IL App (2d) 121042
    Appellate Court            THE VILLAGE OF LOMBARD, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. THE
    Caption                    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, Defendant-Appellant (The
    County of Du Page, Defendant-Appellee).
    District & No.             Second District
    Docket No. 2-12-1042
    Filed                      November 6, 2013
    Held                       In an action arising from a dispute over who, as between plaintiff village,
    (Note: This syllabus       defendant county or the State of Illinois, had the authority and
    constitutes no part of     responsibility of maintaining a roadway running through the village, the
    the opinion of the court   trial court properly entered summary judgment for the village based on
    but has been prepared      the evidence showing that the State had jurisdiction in 1971 and the
    by the Reporter of         State’s inability to show any transfer of responsibility to the village or the
    Decisions for the          county since then.
    convenience of the
    reader.)
    Decision Under             Appeal from the Circuit Court of Du Page County, No. 10-MR-358; the
    Review                     Hon. Terence M. Sheen, Judge, presiding.
    Judgment                   Affirmed.
    Counsel on                 Lisa Madigan, Attorney General, of Chicago (Michael A. Scodro,
    Appeal                     Solicitor General, and John P. Schmidt, Assistant Attorney General, of
    counsel), for appellant.
    James W. Fessler and J. Allen Wall, both of Klein, Thorpe & Jenkins,
    Ltd., of Chicago, for appellee Village of Lombard.
    Robert B. Berlin, State’s Attorney, of Wheaton (Lisa Anne Hoffman,
    Assistant State’s Attorney, of counsel), for appellee County of Du Page.
    Panel                      JUSTICE SCHOSTOK delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Presiding Justice Burke and Justice McLaren concurred in the judgment
    and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1          This case involves a dispute among the parties over which of them has jurisdiction (i.e.,
    authority and responsibility) over that portion of Highland Avenue in Lombard running from
    Roosevelt Road south to 20th Street (the Subject Road). The plaintiff, the Village of
    Lombard (Village), sued the Illinois Department of Transportation (State or IDOT) and the
    County of Du Page (County), seeking a declaratory judgment that one of those bodies (and
    not the Village) had jurisdiction over the Subject Road. The trial court granted summary
    judgment in favor of the Village and the County, ruling that the evidence showed that the
    State had jurisdiction over the Subject Road and that there were no questions of material fact.
    The State appeals, and we affirm.
    ¶2                                         BACKGROUND
    ¶3          In 2009, the Village wrote to the County’s director of transportation, asserting that the
    Subject Road was under the jurisdiction of the County and requesting that the County
    perform needed improvements. The County denied that it had jurisdiction over the Subject
    Road and suggested that the Village contact the State. The State likewise denied that it had
    jurisdiction over the Subject Road, contending that the Village had jurisdiction.
    ¶4          In 2010, the Village filed suit in the circuit court of Du Page County against the County
    and the State. The complaint contained three counts: count I sought a declaratory judgment
    that either the State or the County had jurisdiction and was responsible for reconstruction;
    count II sought an injunction directing the State to pay for reconstruction; and count III
    alternatively sought an injunction directing the County to pay for reconstruction. Count II
    -2-
    was dismissed on the basis of sovereign immunity and is not at issue in this appeal.
    ¶5         In August 2011, both the Village and the County filed motions for summary judgment,
    asserting that the State had jurisdiction over the Subject Road. Evidence of the following
    facts was presented in the summary judgment proceedings, and these facts are undisputed
    except as noted.
    ¶6         Highland Avenue, extending 1.894 miles between Roosevelt Road and Butterfield Road
    in Lombard, was constructed of portland cement during the 1930s. The thoroughfare was
    known as State Aid Route 9, and all parties agree that the State had jurisdiction over it at that
    time.
    ¶7         In 1968, for reasons that do not appear in the record, the State and the Village agreed that
    jurisdiction over the southern half of Highland Avenue, running from 20th Street south to
    Butterfield Road, would be transferred to the Village. On April 15, 1968, the Village passed
    an ordinance approving the transfer. The ordinance was signed by the Village president and
    the director of the Illinois Department of Public Works and Buildings (the predecessor of
    IDOT). The ordinance did not mention the Subject Road (the northern half of Highland
    Avenue).
    ¶8         In September 1968, the County issued a contract for the reconstruction and widening of
    the Subject Road as a portland cement road. The construction was under the supervision and
    approval of the Illinois Department of Public Works and Buildings. At that time, section 5-
    404 of the Highway Code (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, ch. 121, ¶ 5-404) provided that, upon the
    State’s approval and acceptance of previously authorized construction work on any county
    highway built of portland cement, the highway would “become part of the State highway
    system *** and such highway, or section thereof, is thereby removed from the county
    highway system.” Under that provision, the State would maintain the highway.1
    ¶9         In 1970, the County and the Village entered into an agreement (1970 Agreement or
    Agreement) regarding the maintenance of certain roadways in and around the Village. The
    Agreement stated that the Village would “maintain, or cause to be maintained, the following
    sections of County Highways, presently under the jurisdiction of the County,” and listed
    three sections of road, including the Subject Road. The County agreed to pay the Village
    $31,565.04 in 10 annual installments for the maintenance of these sections of road, and to
    perform certain maintenance and improvements before the Village’s maintenance obligations
    commenced.
    ¶ 10       In 1971, the State accepted the reconstruction and improvements to the Subject Road (the
    subject of the 1968 contract). The approval letter stated that “[t]he expense for the
    maintenance of this improvement shall henceforth be borne 100 percent by the State.”
    ¶ 11       On October 1, 1975, section 4-409 of the Highway Code, which authorized the
    Department of Public Works and Buildings to enter into written contracts with other highway
    1
    The State notes that, in 1969, the Highway Code was revised to create a state highway
    system and a county highway system (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1971, ch. 121, ¶¶ 2-101, 2-102), and former
    section 5-404 was repealed. The State does not contend that the revisions to the Highway Code in
    themselves resulted in a transfer of jurisdiction over the Subject Road.
    -3-
    authorities for “the maintenance, administration, engineering or improvement of any highway
    or any portion thereof,” was revised to include the word “jurisdiction.” The State interprets
    this amendment to mean that, after October 1, 1975, an agreement for the performance of
    services relating to a particular roadway, such as a maintenance agreement, did not
    automatically transfer jurisdiction over that roadway. See IDOT Bureau of Local Roads and
    Streets Manual § 5-2.01 (2008 ed., updated Nov. 2012),
    http://www.dot.state.il.us/blr/manuals/Chapter%2005.pdf (last visited Oct. 9, 2013) (Manual)
    (submitted as an exhibit in connection with the motions for summary judgment). In addition,
    the State maintains that, after October 1, 1975, it was required to be a party to any transfer
    of jurisdiction from one highway authority to another, either as an executor of the agreement
    (if the transfer involved the State highway system), or as a necessary approval (for all other
    transfers). 
    Id. § 5-2.02.
    As stated in section 4-409 of the Highway Code, any such transfers
    of jurisdiction were required to be in writing. Ill. Rev. Stat. 1977, ch. 121, ¶ 4-409; see also
    605 ILCS 5/4-409 (West 2010).
    ¶ 12        In 1988, the State and the Village entered into a “Local Agency Joint Agreement”
    (LAJA) regarding improvements to a section of Roosevelt Road within the Village: the
    portion running between Finley Road and Highland Avenue. Except for the intersection of
    Roosevelt Road and Highland Avenue, the LAJA did not relate to the Subject Road.
    ¶ 13        The LAJA provided for: the widening and reconstruction of the designated section of
    Roosevelt Road; the modernization of the traffic lights at two intersections (Roosevelt and
    Main Street, and Roosevelt and Highland Avenue); the installation of Opticom equipment
    (to coordinate the passage of emergency and other priority vehicles through traffic lights);
    the installation of new sidewalks; and the planting of additional trees. Under the LAJA, the
    Village agreed to pay $44,879 toward the total cost of the project. This amount represented
    100% of the cost of the sidewalks, the trees, and the Opticom equipment, and one-half of the
    cost of the traffic light modernization. The State would pay the remaining cost of the traffic
    light upgrade and 100% of the cost of the roadway work. Upon completion, the State would
    maintain the roadway, traffic lights, and Opticom equipment, while the Village would
    maintain the sidewalks, parkways, and crosswalk and stopline markings.
    ¶ 14        The LAJA included the following language:
    “Article II
    The [Village] Agrees:
    ***
    10. Upon final field inspection of the improvement to maintain or cause to be
    maintained (within the [Village] limits) those portions of the improvement which are not
    maintained by the State including:
    ***
    D. Sidewalks, parkways, crosswalk and stopline markings and [Village] owned
    utilities including the appurtenances thereto.”
    Markings next to section 10(D) of article II indicated that it had been amended per Exhibit
    E. Exhibit E stated:
    -4-
    “Article II, Item 10, Subsection D is revised to read:
    D. Sidewalks (including the newly constructed sidewalks)[,] parkways, crosswalk and
    stopline markings and [Village] owned utilities including the appurtenances thereto.
    The Village will continue to be responsible for the jurisdiction and maintenance of
    Main Street and Highland Avenue as well as the newly planted trees throughout the
    improvement.”
    ¶ 15        In its motion for summary judgment on count I, the Village argued that the record
    established that the State had jurisdiction of the Subject Road upon its construction in the
    1930s. In discovery responses, the State had admitted that it had no documents showing that
    it subsequently transferred jurisdiction directly to the Village. Further, although the State
    contended that it had transferred jurisdiction to the County, it could not state when that
    transfer occurred and admitted that it had no documents embodying such a transfer. The
    Village disagreed with the State’s position that, before the 1975 amendment of section 4-409,
    an agreement to assume maintenance duties automatically included an agreement to transfer
    jurisdiction. The Village argued that the State had failed to provide any proof to support this
    assertion and called it conclusory. The Village also noted that, when the State and the Village
    wished to transfer jurisdiction over the southern portion of Highland Avenue in 1968, they
    executed a formal agreement and ordinance to that effect.
    ¶ 16        The County’s motion for summary judgment (on counts I and III) similarly argued that
    the State had jurisdiction over the Subject Road beginning in the 1930s and could not show
    that it had ever transferred that jurisdiction. The County (unlike the Village) accepted the
    State’s contention that maintenance agreements were used to transfer jurisdiction prior to
    1975, but it pointed out that the State’s acceptance of 100% of the maintenance responsibility
    for the Subject Road in 1971 (following the 1968-70 improvements) therefore acted as an
    acceptance of jurisdiction over the road. As the State could not show any later transfer of
    jurisdiction, jurisdiction remained with the State.
    ¶ 17        The State responded by conceding that it could not produce any documents showing an
    actual transfer of jurisdiction, but it argued that the 1970 Agreement (in which the County
    and the Village described the Subject Road as under County jurisdiction, and the Village
    agreed to undertake maintenance of it) and the LAJA (which stated that the Village would
    “continue to be responsible for the jurisdiction and maintenance” of the Subject Road) either
    showed or at least raised an inference that jurisdiction in fact had been transferred elsewhere.
    The State submitted the affidavit of Diane O’Keefe, IDOT’s Deputy Director of Highways
    for Region 1. O’Keefe averred that she began working at IDOT in 1981; her job duties
    included “learning and enforcing many of the policies and practices” of IDOT; and “[i]t was
    a well established policy and practice with regard to jurisdiction” that, prior to the 1975
    amendment of section 4-409 of the Highway Code, “maintenance agreements were intended
    to include jurisdictional responsibilities of the highway authority.” The State also noted that
    the local and county IDOT street maps, which were last revised in 1993, showed the Subject
    Road as a county highway. Finally, the State argued that the Village’s jurisdiction was further
    shown by the fact that the Village had issued dozens of permits for work “on the road” and
    had recently listed the Subject Road as part of its snowplowing schedule. To these last points,
    -5-
    the Village replied that all of the permits were for work done at properties adjacent to the
    Subject Road and none involved any work to the road itself, and that the snowplowing was
    a voluntary undertaking for safety reasons, not an agreement to assume jurisdiction.
    ¶ 18        On March 20, 2012, the trial court issued a memorandum opinion and order granting both
    of the motions for summary judgment. The trial court found that the Village and the County
    had demonstrated that the State had jurisdiction over the Subject Road when it was
    constructed, and the State had not produced evidence of any actual transfer of that
    jurisdiction to any other entity. The trial court noted the evidence that was produced by the
    State–the 1970 Agreement, the LAJA, and expenditures for snow removal–but held that at
    most this evidence showed that the parties had sometimes behaved as if someone other than
    the State had jurisdiction over the Subject Road. The trial court noted that the State admitted
    that it had not transferred jurisdiction directly to the Village, but it argued that it “must have
    transferred jurisdiction of the Subject Road to the County” sometime before 1970. Without
    evidence of any actual transfer of jurisdiction, however, this argument was unsupported
    speculation. As such speculation was not legally sufficient to avert summary judgment, the
    trial court found that the State had jurisdiction over the Subject Road. It therefore (1) granted
    the Village’s motion for summary judgment on count I with respect to the State; (2) denied
    the motion with respect to the County; and (3) granted the County’s motion for summary
    judgment on counts I and III.
    ¶ 19        The trial court denied the State’s motion to reconsider on August 20, 2012. This appeal
    followed.
    ¶ 20                                          ANALYSIS
    ¶ 21        On appeal, the State repeats the arguments it raised before the trial court, contending that
    the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the Village and the County.
    ¶ 22        “The purpose of summary judgment is to determine whether a genuine issue of material
    fact exists, not to try a question of fact.” Thompson v. Gordon, 
    241 Ill. 2d 428
    , 438 (2011).
    Therefore, summary judgment is proper only when the pleadings, depositions, and
    admissions on record, together with any affidavits, show that there is no genuine issue as to
    any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 735
    ILCS 5/2-1005 (West 2012); Gaylor v. Village of Ringwood, 
    363 Ill. App. 3d 543
    , 546
    (2006).
    ¶ 23        Although summary judgment has been called a “drastic measure,” it is an appropriate tool
    to employ in the expeditious disposition of a lawsuit where “ ‘the right of the moving party
    is clear and free from doubt.’ ” Morris v. Margulis, 
    197 Ill. 2d 28
    , 35 (2001) (quoting Purtill
    v. Hess, 
    111 Ill. 2d 229
    , 240 (1986)). In reviewing a trial court’s grant of this relief, we do
    not weigh the evidence presented but, rather, determine only whether that evidence created
    an issue of fact. See Jackson v. Graham, 
    323 Ill. App. 3d 766
    , 779 (2001). We review the
    grant of summary judgment under the de novo standard (see 
    Morris, 197 Ill. 2d at 35
    ), and
    will reverse if we find that a genuine issue of material fact exists. However, “[m]ere
    speculation, conjecture, or guess is insufficient to withstand summary judgment.” Sorce v.
    Naperville Jeep Eagle, Inc., 
    309 Ill. App. 3d 313
    , 328 (1999); accord People ex rel.
    -6-
    Department of Professional Regulation v. Manos, 
    326 Ill. App. 3d 698
    , 704 (2001) (on
    motion for summary judgment, mere suggestion that issue of material fact exists, without
    supporting evidence, is insufficient to create one); Billman v. Frenzel Construction Co., 
    262 Ill. App. 3d 681
    , 687 (1993) (summary judgment proper where speculation would be
    necessary to prove element of cause of action alleged); Kimbrough v. Jewel Cos., 
    92 Ill. App. 3d
    813, 817-19 (1981).
    ¶ 24        In reviewing the evidence presented on the issue of jurisdiction over the Subject Road,
    we begin with the undisputed propositions that the State had jurisdiction at the time the road
    was constructed in the 1930s and that there is no formal documentation of any transfer of
    jurisdiction, either to the County or to the Village (such as the ordinance by which
    jurisdiction over the southern portion of Highland Avenue was transferred). This evidence
    raises an initial presumption that jurisdiction remains with the State. We therefore examine
    whether the evidence submitted by the State raised a genuine issue of material fact on this
    point.
    ¶ 25                                     The 1970 Agreement
    ¶ 26       The State points primarily to two items of evidence that it claims raise a question of fact
    about whether it has jurisdiction over the Subject Road. The first is the 1970 Agreement
    between the County and the Village. The Agreement recited that the County had jurisdiction
    over the Subject Road and two other sections of road within its borders, and the Village
    agreed to assume maintenance duties over all three sections of road in exchange for the
    County performing certain repairs and making payments over a 10-year period. The State
    points to this Agreement as establishing two points in favor of its argument. First, the State
    contends that the description of the Subject Road as being under County jurisdiction was a
    binding admission by the County that it had such jurisdiction in 1970. Second, relying on the
    affidavit of Diane O’Keefe, it asserts that, prior to 1975, maintenance agreements between
    highway authorities implicitly transferred jurisdiction too. Thus, the State argues that in 1970
    the Village assumed jurisdiction over the Subject Road by agreeing to maintain it.
    ¶ 27       The Village takes issue with the State’s assertion that, before 1975, a maintenance
    agreement also transferred jurisdiction over the particular roadway that was the subject of
    the agreement. It argues that O’Keefe’s statements about IDOT’s policies and practices
    before 1975 are conclusory and not supported by any evidence. See Village of Montgomery
    v. Aurora Township, 
    387 Ill. App. 3d 353
    , 365 (2008) (conclusory statements lacking a
    factual basis are insufficient to raise an issue of material fact); Kosten v. St. Anne’s Hospital,
    
    132 Ill. App. 3d 1073
    , 1079 (1985) (same). Our own review of the affidavit suggests that
    some of the statements therein might fail to comply with Illinois Supreme Court Rule 191(a)
    (eff. July 1, 2002) in that O’Keefe was not working for IDOT in 1975, and thus does not
    appear to have any personal knowledge regarding the Department’s practices before that
    point.
    ¶ 28       Ultimately, however, we need not resolve the question of whether, prior to 1975, a
    maintenance agreement such as the 1970 Agreement automatically acted to transfer
    jurisdiction over a roadway. That is because, in 1971, the State agreed that it would be
    -7-
    responsible for 100% of the maintenance of the Subject Road when it accepted the
    reconstruction work performed under the County’s 1968 contract. Thus, even if we assume
    that maintenance agreements were effective to transfer jurisdiction and that the 1970
    Agreement transferred to the Village jurisdiction over the Subject Road, in 1971 the State
    reassumed jurisdiction over that road. (Alternatively, if we do not view maintenance
    agreements as sufficient to transfer jurisdiction, jurisdiction always remained with the State
    and the 1971 approval letter simply confirmed that jurisdiction.) We therefore find that, as
    of 1971, the State had jurisdiction over the Subject Road.
    ¶ 29                                         The LAJA
    ¶ 30        The State next argues that the LAJA is evidence that the Village had jurisdiction over the
    Subject Road, because the LAJA recited that the Village would “continue to be responsible
    for the jurisdiction and maintenance of *** Highland Avenue.” Additionally, the Village
    agreed to pay for part of the improvements scheduled under the LAJA, and the State argues
    that there would have been no need to do so if the Village did not have jurisdiction over (and
    the obligation to maintain) the Subject Road. The State does not contend that the LAJA itself
    served as a formal transfer of jurisdiction. Indeed, the LAJA provision referring to a formal
    transfer of jurisdiction was marked “not applicable.” Rather, the State argues that the LAJA
    was an acknowledgment by the Village that, as of 1988, it had continuing jurisdiction over
    all of Highland Avenue, which included the Subject Road. (As noted, the Village agrees that
    it has jurisdiction over the southern portion of Highland Avenue, which was transferred to
    it in 1968.) We therefore examine the LAJA carefully to determine whether it raises a
    question regarding the jurisdiction over the Subject Road.
    ¶ 31        Viewing the LAJA in the light most favorable to the State, as we must (Adams v.
    Northern Illinois Gas Co., 
    211 Ill. 2d 32
    , 43 (2004)), we conclude that the LAJA constitutes
    some evidence that, in 1988, the Village believed that it had responsibility of some kind over
    Highland Avenue, including the Subject Road. We draw this conclusion on the basis of the
    bare statement, in Exhibit E to the LAJA, that the Village would “continue to be responsible
    for the jurisdiction and maintenance of *** Highland Avenue.” However, given that the
    subject matter of the LAJA was another road entirely (Roosevelt Road, which was
    undisputedly a State road), the issue of jurisdiction over the Subject Road was collateral at
    best to the LAJA. Accordingly, we do not believe that the statement can be viewed as a
    binding assertion by the Village of jurisdiction over the Subject Road. We also note that the
    Village’s agreement to share some of the costs of the improvements under the LAJA did not
    show that it had jurisdiction over the Subject Road, in light of the facts that: (1) as noted, the
    subject matter of the LAJA was a different road entirely; (2) none of the Village’s
    contribution went toward the actual roadwork, even where Roosevelt Road intersected the
    Subject Road; and (3) most of the items the Village contributed toward, such as sidewalks
    and parkways, were within the ordinary purview of a municipal government.
    ¶ 32        The difficulty with the State’s reliance on the statement in the LAJA (and the other
    evidence it cites, such as the Village’s voluntary agreement to remove snow on the Subject
    Road) is that it has not shown that the Village’s subjective belief about jurisdiction is legally
    -8-
    equivalent to actual jurisdiction. Jurisdiction over a roadway is a legal right and obligation.
    See Manual § 5-2.01 (“Jurisdiction is the authority and obligation to administer, control,
    construct, maintain, and operate a highway ***.”); Village of 
    Montgomery, 387 Ill. App. 3d at 361
    . A governmental body is not permitted to exercise control over a roadway unless it has
    jurisdiction over that roadway. See 1979 Ill. Att’y Gen. Op. 136 (Nov. 2, 1979) (county
    board may enact an ordinance regulating parking on county roads, but may not regulate
    parking on municipal, township, or state roads). The State has not cited any legal authority
    for the proposition that a municipality’s belief about its jurisdiction over a particular roadway
    (which might or might not be well-founded) is sufficient to transfer such jurisdiction. With
    respect to the designation of the Subject Road as a county highway on IDOT street maps, the
    State has not cited any authority demonstrating that its maps are binding on the issue of
    jurisdiction. Accordingly, we agree with the trial court: the fact that occasionally the parties
    behaved as if the Village or the County had jurisdiction over the Subject Road is insufficient
    to show that either of them actually had such jurisdiction.2
    ¶ 33        We reiterate that there is no evidence in the record showing an actual transfer of this legal
    right and obligation. It is undisputed that, after 1975, jurisdiction over a road could only be
    transferred via a written agreement specifically addressing jurisdiction, with the approval of
    IDOT. It is likewise undisputed that no formal documentary transfer of jurisdiction over the
    Subject Road appears to exist. Thus, such jurisdiction could not have been transferred to the
    Village or the County after 1975. Moreover, the State itself concedes that it never transferred
    jurisdiction directly to the Village. Rather, it suggests that jurisdiction was transferred to the
    County “at some point” and then further transferred to the Village. However, as we have
    seen, any such transfers would have to have occurred after 1971 (when the State resumed or
    confirmed its jurisdiction over the Subject Road) and before 1975. The State does not offer
    so much as a theory as to when, why, or how these transfers would have taken place. We
    agree with the trial court that the State’s suggestion of an undocumented two-fold transfer
    of jurisdiction sometime between 1971 and 1975 is nothing more than speculation. Such
    speculation is insufficient to prevent the entry of summary judgment. 
    Sorce, 309 Ill. App. 3d at 328
    .
    ¶ 34        Because the evidence shows that the State had jurisdiction over the Subject Road in 1971
    and the State cannot show that jurisdiction was transferred to either the Village or the County
    after that point, we affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the Village
    and the County.
    2
    In this respect, the evidence on which the State relies may be compared to the concept in
    real estate law of a “wild” deed, that is a deed outside the official chain of title traceable back to the
    original governmental grant. Such a deed does not create marketable title. Exchange National Bank
    of Chicago v. Lawndale National Bank of Chicago, 
    41 Ill. 2d 316
    , 322 (1968). Were we to accept
    the State’s evidence as sufficient to vary the official record of jurisdiction, it could cause mischief
    by allowing third parties to assert jurisdiction over roadways that the State might not wish to
    relinquish.
    -9-
    ¶ 35                                CONCLUSION
    ¶ 36   The judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is affirmed.
    ¶ 37   Affirmed.
    -10-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2-12-1042

Filed Date: 11/6/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/22/2015