PAUL A. MAGNUSON, District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on the parties' Motions for Judgment on the Pleadings. For the following reasons, Plaintiffs' Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings is granted, Defendant Community Bank's Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings is granted, and the remaining Defendants' various Motions are denied.
The personal and corporate relationships underlying this case are complex and opaque. For purposes of the dispositive Motions, however, a complete understanding of the parties' interactions is not necessary. The Court will thus briefly describe the events giving rise to the litigation.
In July 2002, Plaintiffs Bradley Hartke, Douglas Hartke, Joan Hartke, and the two Hartke family trusts entered into a $900,000 note for the purchase of a trucking business, Solace Transfer, from Defendant The One Stop, Inc. (Larson Aff. (Docket No. 68) Ex. 2.)
Waldner had filed for bankruptcy protection for Solace's predecessor company, H&W Motor Express Company, one month before the Hartkes' purchase. (Compl. ¶ 16.) Waldner had purchased H&W and transferred all of its assets to Solace, but Solace was in debt for more than $2 million, all secured with Community Bank-issued mortgages either personally guaranteed by Waldner or secured with various property Waldner and his associates owned. (
The terms of the note required "11 monthly payments of $7,800 beginning 8-24-2002 and 1 balloon payment of $887,894.68 on 7-24-2003." (
In November 2002, the Hartkes signed another note, in the amount of $500,000, in favor of The One Stop. (Larson Aff. Ex. 4.) The note was secured with a mortgage on Plaintiff Joan L. Hartke Marital Trust's property. (
The IRS began investigating Waldner in 2005, and in 2006 he was charged in federal court in Iowa with multiple counts of making false statements in H&W's bankruptcy proceedings. He pled guilty to two counts in May 2007, and received a 120-month sentence.
In 2007, after Waldner pled guilty but before he was sentenced, RDW-KILT attempted to accelerate the November note and mortgage. (Compl. ¶ 51.) The Hartkes allege that they discovered at that time that their homesteads were collateral for the mortgage, and they disputed the acceleration because neither of their spouses had signed the mortgage. (
In late December 2016, WIPT notified the Hartkes that it had acquired the July note and mortgage from Community Bank, and demanded payment from the Hartkes for $1.5 million that WIPT had ostensibly paid on the note. (
The only real issue here is whether the relevant statutes of limitations bar Defendants from taking any action to enforce the notes. The notes went into default, at the latest, in late 2002. There was no attempt to enforce the July note until the end of 2016. The Complaint contains no allegation regarding demands for payment on the November note.
The July 2002 note provides that Illinois law governs the note and mortgage. (Larson Aff. Ex. 2 at 2; Ex. 3 ¶ 24.) The Illinois statute of limitations on promissory notes is ten years "after the cause of action accrued." 735 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/13-206. The November 2002 mortgage provides that it is "governed by the laws of the jurisdiction in which Lender is located." (Larson Aff. Ex. 5 ¶ 24.) The One Stop was the lender on the November note; it is an Iowa corporation with an address in Dubuque. The Iowa statute of limitations is also ten years. Iowa Code § 614.1(5).
Because Defendants did not make any demand for payment on the July 2002 note until December 29, 2016, the statute of limitations bars them from seeking to enforce the loan. Any demand on the November 2002 note would also be time-barred.
Defendants argue that an Illinois statute that preserves counterclaims against statutes of limitations applies here to render the notes enforceable.
Here, by contrast, Plaintiffs could not have brought a declaratory judgment claim before December 29, 2016, the date Defendants made a demand under the July 2002 note. By that date, however, any counterclaim Defendants might have was untimely. Thus, Plaintiffs did not "own" their declaratory-judgment claims before the limitations period on Defendants' counterclaims expired, and the Illinois counterclaim-saving statute does not save Defendants' counterclaims.
Finally, Defendants' claim that judgment is premature because they need time to conduct discovery is without merit. The issues here are purely legal: whether the statute of limitations bars Defendants from seeking payment on these notes. The discovery Defendants claim to require is discovery into whether Plaintiffs in fact received money under either of the notes, and more information about the "conspiracy" that Waldner alleges regarding the Hartkes and Galley Smith. But none of those facts has any bearing on the legal issue here, and the resolution of that issue is clear. Defendants are time-barred from seeking payment on these loans, and Plaintiffs are entitled to a declaratory judgment to that effect.
Accordingly,