Reese v. Forsythe Mergers Group, Inc.
State: Illinois
Court: 2nd District Appellate
Docket No: 2-96-1144
Case Date: 06/20/1997
No. 2--96--1144
_________________________________________________________________
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
SECOND DISTRICT
_________________________________________________________________
ROGER REESE, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
) of Kane County.
Plaintiff-Appellant, )
) No. 94--L--1031
v. )
)
FORSYTHE MERGERS GROUP, INC., )
and GERALD FORSYTHE, )
)
)
Defendants-Appellees )
) Honorable
(Glen Marino, Guy Courtney, and ) Pamela K. Jensen,
The Machaira Group, Defendants).) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________
JUSTICE COLWELL delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, Roger Reese, appeals from the trial court's order
granting the defendants' motion for summary judgment pursuant to
counts I, III, and IV of his complaint and the court's granting the
defendants' section 2--619 motion (735 ILCS 5/2--619 (West 1994))
to dismiss pursuant to count V of his complaint. The trial court
determined that a binding agreement did not exist between Reese and
the defendants and that the alleged partial performance by the
parties was insufficient to take any oral agreement out of the
statute of frauds (740 ILCS 80/1 et seq. (West 1994)). Further,
the trial court found that there was no factual basis to support
Reese's allegations that a fiduciary duty existed between defendant
Gerald Forsythe and himself. On appeal, Reese contends that the
trial court's ruling is erroneous because a genuine issue of
material fact exists regarding each of the counts in his complaint.
We affirm.
The parties in this action were involved in an investment
project that never materialized. The record shows that Reese knew
Guy Courtney, an employee of Barron Chase Securities and president
of the Machaira Group, Inc. (TMG), through Reese's investments in
TMG. Courtney knew defendant Gerald Forsythe through Forsythe's
investments in TMG. Late in 1993, Courtney met with Forsythe to
discuss the formation of a "blank check" company. The purpose of
the company was to fund an acquisition of a financial institution.
Forsythe stated that he would be interested in investing "if the
proper people could be put together." The blank check company
became known as Forsythe Mergers Group (FMG).
Thereafter, Courtney met with Reese about his possible
investment and participation in FMG. Reese was the president and
CEO of Market Dimensions, Inc. (MDI), as well as an employee. As
an MDI employee, Reese consulted with banks relative to market
research issues and provided computer services to these banks and
savings and loans institutions. Reese also had experience with
initial public offerings (IPOs) similar to the one planned for FMG
because he had put together an IPO while working for Amcore
Financial in 1986. During the period that he was involved with
FMG, Reese remained employed with MDI.
At the meeting, Reese and Courtney discussed FMG and the IPO.
Reese testified in a deposition that he and Courtney orally agreed
that Reese would be "a principal of Forsythe Mergers Group, ***
assuming [Forsythe] would approve the deal." Reese said that he
was told more than once that the entire deal depended upon
Forsythe's approving the deal and his signing onto it.
Reese began working on the project. He reviewed prospectuses
of two other deals similar to the one that FMG was attempting to
complete, wrote a report after researching the pricing of banks and
recent transactions, and provided projections concerning FMG based
upon other similarly typed companies.
Meanwhile, Courtney forwarded Reese's r
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