(765 ILCS 1090/2) (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a delayed effective date) Sec. 2. Definitions. In this Act: (1) "Adequate protection" means protection against the decrease in the value of a person's interest in property resulting from the turnover, stay, use, sale, or lease of such property during the receivership. (2) "Affiliate" means: (A) with respect to an individual: (i) a companion of the individual; (ii) a lineal ancestor or descendant, whether by |
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(I) the individual; or
(II) a companion of the individual;
(iii) a companion of an ancestor or descendant
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| described in clause (ii);
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(iv) a sibling, aunt, uncle, great aunt, great
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| uncle, first cousin, niece, nephew, grandniece, or grandnephew of the individual, whether related by the whole or the half blood or adoption, or a companion of any of them; or
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(v) any other individual occupying the residence
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(B) with respect to a person other than an individual:
(i) another person that directly or indirectly
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| controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with the person;
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(ii) an officer, director, manager, member,
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| partner, employee, or trustee or other fiduciary of the person; or
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(iii) a companion of, or an individual occupying
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| the residence of, an individual described in clause (i) or (ii).
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(3) "Claim" means:
(A) a right to payment, whether or not such right is
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| reduced to judgment, liquidated, unliquidated, fixed, contingent, matured, unmatured, disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable, secured, or unsecured; or
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(B) a right to an equitable remedy for breach of
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| performance if such breach gives rise to a right to payment, whether or not such right to an equitable remedy is reduced to judgment, fixed, contingent, matured, unmatured, disputed, undisputed, secured, or unsecured.
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(4) "Collateral" means the property subject to a lien.
(5) "Companion" means:
(A) the spouse of an individual;
(B) the domestic partner of an individual;
(C) another individual in a civil union with an
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(D) an individual sharing the same residence with
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(6) "Court" means a circuit court of this State. In the context of a foreign receiver, the court means the court of the state that appointed the foreign receiver.
(7) "Debtor" means a person having an interest, other than a lien, in collateral, whether or not the person is liable for the secured obligation. The term includes a mortgagor.
(8) "Executory contract" means a contract, including a lease, under which each party has an unperformed obligation and the failure of a party to complete performance would constitute a material breach.
(9) "Foreign receiver" means a receiver appointed by a court in another state.
(10) "Governmental unit" means an office, unit, department, division, bureau, board, commission, or other agency of this State or a subdivision of this State.
(11) "Lien" means a charge against or interest in property to secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation.
(12) "Mortgage" means a record, however denominated, that creates or provides for a consensual lien on real property or rents, even if it also creates or provides for a lien on personal property.
(13) "Mortgagee" means a person entitled to enforce an obligation secured by a mortgage.
(14) "Mortgagor" means a person that grants a mortgage or a successor in ownership of the real property described in the mortgage.
(15) "Owner" means the person for whose property or business a receiver is appointed.
(16) "Person" means an individual, corporation, business trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company, association, joint venture, governmental agency, public corporation, or any other legal or commercial entity.
(17) "Proceeds" means the following property:
(A) whatever is acquired on the sale, lease, license,
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| exchange, or other disposition of receivership property;
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(B) whatever is collected on, or distributed on
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| account of, receivership property;
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(C) rights arising out of receivership property;
(D) to the extent of the value of receivership
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| property, claims arising out of the loss, nonconformity, or interference with the use of, defects or infringement of rights in, or damage to the property; or
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(E) to the extent of the value of receivership
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| property and to the extent payable to the owner or secured party, insurance payable by reason of the loss or nonconformity of, defects or infringement of rights in, or damage to the property.
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(18) "Property" means all of a person's right, title, and interest, both legal and equitable, in real and personal property, tangible and intangible, wherever located and however acquired. The term includes proceeds, products, offspring, rents, or profits of or from the property.
(19) "Receiver" means a person appointed by the court as the court's agent, and subject to the court's direction, to take possession of, manage, and, if authorized by this Act or court order, transfer, sell, lease, license, exchange, collect, or otherwise dispose of receivership property.
(20) "Receivership" means a proceeding in which a receiver is appointed.
(21) "Receivership property" means the property of an owner which is described in the order appointing a receiver or a subsequent order. The term includes any proceeds, products, offspring, rents, or profits of or from the property.
(22) "Record", used as a noun, means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or that is stored on an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form.
(23) "Rents" means all items that constitute leases, rents, and profits arising from real property under applicable State law.
(24) "Secured obligation" means an obligation the payment or performance of which is secured by a security agreement.
(25) "Secured party" means a person entitled to enforce a secured obligation. The term includes a mortgagee.
(26) "Security agreement" means an agreement that creates or provides for a lien. The term includes a mortgage.
(27) "Sign" means, with present intent to authenticate or adopt a record:
(A) to execute or adopt a tangible symbol; or
(B) to attach to or logically associate with the
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| record an electronic sound, symbol, or process.
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(28) "State" means a state of the United States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, or any territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.
(Source: P.A. 104-34, eff. 1-1-26.)
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(765 ILCS 1090/6) (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a delayed effective date) Sec. 6. Appointment of receiver. (a) The court may appoint a receiver: (1) before judgment, to protect a party that |
| demonstrates an apparent right, title, or interest in property that is the subject of the action, if the property or its revenue-producing potential:
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(A) is being subjected to or is in danger of
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| waste, loss, dissipation, or impairment; or
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(B) has been or is about to be the subject of a
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(2) after judgment:
(A) to enforce or otherwise carry the judgment
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(B) to preserve nonexempt property pending appeal
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| or when an execution has been returned unsatisfied and the owner refuses to apply the property in satisfaction of the judgment;
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(3) in an action against a person that is not an
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(A) the object of the action is the dissolution
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(B) the person has been dissolved;
(C) the persons in control of the person are
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| deadlocked in the management of the person's affairs;
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(D) the acts of the persons in control of the
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| person are illegal, oppressive, or fraudulent; or
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(E) the person is insolvent or generally is not
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| paying the person's debts as those debts become due;
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(4) in an action in which a receiver may be appointed
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| by law or on equitable grounds; or
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(5) during the time allowed for redemption, to
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| preserve property sold in an execution or foreclosure sale and secure its rents to the person entitled to the rents.
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(b) In connection with the foreclosure or other enforcement of a lien, the court may appoint a receiver for the collateral if:
(1) appointment is necessary to protect the property
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| from waste, loss, transfer, dissipation, or impairment;
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(2) the debtor agreed in a signed record to
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| appointment of a receiver on default;
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(3) the owner agreed, after default and in a signed
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| record, to appointment of a receiver;
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(4) the collateral and any other collateral security
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| held by the secured party are not sufficient to satisfy the secured obligation;
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(5) the owner fails to turn over to the secured party
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| proceeds or rents the secured party was entitled to collect; or
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(6) the holder of a subordinate lien obtains
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| appointment of a receiver for the property.
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(c) The court may appoint a receiver to prevent irreparable harm without prior notice under Section 3(b)(1) or without a prior hearing under Section 3(b)(2) and may condition such appointment on the giving of security by the person seeking the appointment for the payment of damages, reasonable attorney's fees, and costs incurred or suffered by any person if the court later concludes that the appointment was not justified. If the court later concludes that the appointment was justified, the court shall release the security.
(Source: P.A. 104-34, eff. 1-1-26.)
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(765 ILCS 1090/7) (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a delayed effective date) Sec. 7. Disqualification from appointment as receiver; disclosure of interest. (a) Any person, whether or not a resident of this State, may serve as a receiver unless the person is disqualified under this Act. (b) The court may not appoint a person as receiver unless the person submits to the court a statement under penalty of perjury that the person is not disqualified. (c) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a person is disqualified from appointment as receiver if the person: (1) is an affiliate of a party or the judge presiding |
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(2) has an interest materially adverse to an interest
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(3) has a material financial interest in the outcome
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| of the action, other than compensation the court may allow the receiver;
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(4) has a debtor-creditor relationship with a party;
(5) holds an equity interest in a party, other than a
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| noncontrolling interest in a publicly traded company;
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(6) is a sheriff of any county; or
(7) is otherwise prohibited from acting as an agent
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| of the court under the laws of this State.
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(d) A person is not disqualified from appointment as receiver solely because the person:
(1) was appointed receiver or is owed compensation in
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| an unrelated matter involving a party or was engaged by a party in a matter unrelated to the receivership;
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(2) is an individual obligated to a party on a debt
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| that is not in default and was incurred primarily for personal, family, or household purposes; or
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(3) maintains with a party a deposit account as
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| defined in Section 9-102(a)(29) of the Uniform Commercial Code.
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(e) A person seeking appointment of a receiver may nominate a person to serve as receiver, but the court is not bound by the nomination.
(Source: P.A. 104-34, eff. 1-1-26.)
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(765 ILCS 1090/12) (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a delayed effective date) Sec. 12. Powers and duties of receiver. (a) Except as limited by court order or law of this State other than this Act, a receiver may: (1) collect, control, manage, conserve, and protect |
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(2) operate a business constituting receivership
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| property, including preservation, use, sale, lease, license, exchange, collection, or disposition of the property in the ordinary course of business;
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(3) in the ordinary course of business, incur
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| unsecured debt and pay expenses incidental to the receiver's preservation, use, sale, lease, license, exchange, collection, or disposition of receivership property and otherwise in the performance of the receiver's duties, including the power to pay obligations incurred prior to the receiver's appointment if, in the receiver's business judgment, payment is necessary to preserve the value of receivership property using funds that are not subject to any lien or right of setoff in favor of a creditor who has not consented to the payment;
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(4) incur debt under a secured obligation in effect
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| as of the receiver's appointment subject to the same terms, conditions, and lien priorities that existed as of the receiver's appointment;
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(5) assert a right, claim, cause of action, or
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| defense of the owner which relates to receivership property and maintain in the receiver's name or owner's name any action to enforce any such right, claim, cause of action, or defense and intervene in actions in which owner is a party for the purpose of exercising any rights pursuant to this subsection (a)(5) or requesting transfer of venue of the action to the court;
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(6) seek and obtain instruction from the court
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| concerning receivership property, exercise of the receiver's powers, and performance of the receiver's duties;
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(7) on subpoena, compel a person to submit to
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| examination under oath, or to produce and permit inspection and copying of designated records or tangible things, with respect to receivership property or any other matter that may affect administration of the receivership;
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(8) engage a professional as provided in Section 15;
(9) apply to a court of another state for appointment
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| as ancillary receiver with respect to receivership property located in that state; and
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(10) exercise any power conferred by court order,
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| this Act, or law of this State other than this Act.
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(b) With court approval, a receiver may:
(1) Except as otherwise provided in subsection
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| (a)(4), incur debt for the use or benefit of receivership property other than in the ordinary course of business provided that any lien securing such indebtedness is junior to any existing liens on the receivership property, unless otherwise authorized by the law of this State other than this Act;
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(2) make improvements to receivership property;
(3) use, sell, lease, or transfer receivership
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| property other than in the ordinary course of business as provided in Section 16 and execute in the owner's name any documents, conveyances, and consents as may be required for such use, sale, lease, or transfer;
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(4) assume or reject an executory contract of the
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| owner as provided in Section 17;
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(5) pay compensation to the receiver as provided in
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| Section 21, and to each professional engaged by the receiver as provided in Section 15;
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(6) recommend allowance or disallowance of a claim of
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| a creditor as provided in Section 20;
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(7) make a distribution of receivership property as
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(8) settle or release any rights, claims, causes of
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| action, or defenses or the owner asserted in subsection (a)(5); and
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(9) abandon to the owner any receivership property
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| that is burdensome or is not of material value to the receivership.
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(c) A receiver shall:
(1) prepare and retain appropriate business records
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| from the receiver's appointment until the receiver's discharge, including a record of each receipt, disbursement, and disposition of receivership property;
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(2) account for receivership property, including the
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| proceeds of a sale, lease, license, exchange, collection, or other disposition of the property;
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(3) promptly file or record, as applicable, with the
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| county recorder's office in the county where the real property is located, a notice of the receivership setting forth the name of the receiver, the owner of the real property, the title of the action, a legal description of the real property, if any, and a copy of the order appointing the receiver;
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(4) disclose to the court any fact arising during the
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| receivership which would disqualify the receiver under Section 7; and
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(5) perform any duty imposed by court order, this
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| Act, or law of this State other than this Act.
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(d) The recording of the notice of the receivership set forth in subsection (c) shall constitute constructive notice of the receivership to every person subsequently acquiring an interest in or a lien on the real property affected thereby.
(e) A subordination agreement is enforceable to the same extent that it is enforceable under the law of this State other than this Act.
(f) The powers and duties of a receiver may be expanded, modified, or limited by court order.
(Source: P.A. 104-34, eff. 1-1-26.)
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(765 ILCS 1090/13) (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a delayed effective date) Sec. 13. Duties of owner. (a) An owner shall: (1) assist and cooperate with the receiver in the |
| administration of the receivership and the discharge of the receiver's duties;
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(2) preserve and turn over to the receiver all
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| receivership property in the owner's possession, custody, or control;
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(3) identify all records and other information
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| relating to the receivership property, including a password, authorization, or other information needed to obtain or maintain access to or control of the receivership property, and make available to the receiver the records and information in the owner's possession, custody, or control;
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(4) on subpoena, submit to examination under oath by
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| the receiver concerning the acts, conduct, property, liabilities, and financial condition of the owner or any matter relating to the receivership property or the receivership; and
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(5) perform any duty imposed by court order, this
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| Act, or law of this State other than this Act.
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(b) Without limiting the owner's obligations under subsection (a), and unless the court orders otherwise, the owner shall file with the court and provide the receiver within 14 days of the receiver's appointment:
(1) A list of all receivership property and exempt
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| property of the owner, identifying:
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(A) The location of the property, including the
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| legal description of any real property;
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(B) A description of all liens to which the
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(C) The estimated value of the property.
(2) A list of all creditors, taxing authorities, and
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| regulatory authorities having claims against the owner:
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(A) their mailing addresses;
(B) the amount and nature of their respective
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| claims as of the date of the receiver's appointment;
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(C) whether the claims are secured by liens; and
(D) whether the claims are disputed.
(c) If an owner is a person other than an individual, this Section applies to each officer, director, manager, member, partner, trustee, or other person exercising or having the power to exercise control over the affairs of the owner.
(d) If a person knowingly fails to perform a duty imposed by this Section, the court may:
(1) award the receiver actual damages caused by the
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| person's failure, reasonable attorney's fees, and costs;
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(2) sanction the failure as civil contempt; and
(3) impose other equitable remedies, including an
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| injunction or constructive trust to address a person's failure to comply with a duty under this Section.
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(Source: P.A. 104-34, eff. 1-1-26.)
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(765 ILCS 1090/14) (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a delayed effective date) Sec. 14. Stay; injunction. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d) or ordered by the court, an order appointing a receiver operates as a stay, applicable to all persons, of an act, action, or proceeding: (1) to obtain possession of, exercise control over, |
| or enforce a judgment against receivership property; and
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(2) to enforce a lien against receivership property
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| to the extent the lien secures a claim against the owner which arose before entry of the order.
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(b) In addition to any stay provided in this Section, the court may enjoin an act, action, or proceeding against or relating to receivership property, the owner, or the receiver if the injunction is necessary to protect the receivership property or facilitate administration of the receivership.
(c) A person whose act, action, or proceeding is stayed or enjoined under this Section may apply to the court for relief from the stay or injunction for cause, including lack of adequate protection.
(d) An order appointing a receiver does not operate as a stay or injunction of:
(1) an act, action, or proceeding to perfect, or
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| maintain or continue the perfection of, an interest in receivership property, provided that if perfection of an interest would require seizure of receivership property or commencement of an action, the perfection shall instead be accomplished by filing with the court, and by serving upon the receiver, notice of the interest within the time fixed by law for seizure or commencement;
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(2) commencement or continuation of a criminal
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(3) commencement or continuation of an action or
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| proceeding, or enforcement of a judgment other than a money judgment in an action or proceeding, by a governmental unit to enforce its police or regulatory power;
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(4) establishment by a governmental unit of a tax
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| liability against the owner or receivership property or an appeal of the liability; or
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(5) the exercise of rights of a party to a swap
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| agreement, securities contract, repurchase agreement, commodity contract, forward contract, or master netting agreement, as those terms are defined in the federal Bankruptcy Code, to the extent that a court would not have the power to stay the exercise if the owner were a debtor under the Bankruptcy Code.
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(e) The court may void an act that violates a stay or injunction under this Section.
(f) If a person knowingly violates a stay or injunction under this Section, the court may:
(1) award actual damages caused by the violation,
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| reasonable attorney's fees, and costs; and
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(2) sanction the violation as civil contempt.
(g) If the stay under this Section enjoins the performance of an act or the commencement of an action or proceeding, the time established by law other than this Act, court order or contract to perform such act or commence such action or proceeding shall be tolled during the stay.
(Source: P.A. 104-34, eff. 1-1-26.)
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(765 ILCS 1090/17) (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a delayed effective date) Sec. 17. Executory contracts. (a) In this Section, "timeshare interest" means an interest having a duration of more than three years which grants its holder the right to use and occupy an accommodation, facility, or recreational site, whether improved or not, for a specific period less than a full year during any given year. (b) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (h), with court approval, a receiver may assume or reject an executory contract of the owner relating to receivership property. An executory contract may only be assumed or rejected by court order. The court may condition the receiver's assumption and continued performance of the executory contract on terms appropriate under the circumstances. If the receiver does not obtain court approval to assume or reject the executory contract by the termination of receivership, the receiver is deemed to have rejected the executory contract. At the request of the non-owner party to the executory contract, a court may set a reasonable time after the receiver's appointment to assume or reject an executory contract. (c) A receiver's performance of an executory contract before court approval under subsection (b) of its assumption or rejection is not an assumption of the contract and does not preclude the receiver from seeking approval to reject the contract. (d) A provision in an executory contract which requires or permits a forfeiture, modification, or termination of the contract because of the appointment of a receiver or the financial condition of the owner does not affect a receiver's power under subsection (b) to assume the contract. (e) A receiver's right to possess or use receivership property pursuant to an executory contract terminates upon rejection of the contract under subsection (b). Rejection of an executory contract constitutes a breach of the executory contract effective immediately before appointment of the receiver. A claim for damages for rejection of the contract shall be presented or filed in the same manner as other claims in the receivership no later than: (1) the time set for submitting a claim in the |
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(2) 30 days after the court approves the rejection.
(f) If, at the time a receiver is appointed, the owner has the right to assign an executory contract relating to receivership property under law of this State other than this Act, the receiver may assign the contract with court approval and subject to the terms of the contract.
(g) If a receiver rejects under subsection (b) an executory contract for the sale of receivership property that is real property in possession of the purchaser or a real-property timeshare interest, the purchaser may:
(1) treat the rejection as a termination of the
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| contract, and in that case the purchaser has a lien on the property for the recovery of any part of the purchase price the purchaser paid; or
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(2) retain the purchaser's right to possession under
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| the contract, and in that case the purchaser shall continue to perform all obligations arising under the contract and may offset any damages caused by nonperformance of an obligation of the owner after the date of the rejection, but the purchaser has no right or claim against other receivership property or the receiver on account of the damages.
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(h) A receiver may not reject an unexpired lease of real property under which the owner is the landlord if:
(1) the tenant occupies the leased premises as the
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| tenant's primary residence;
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(2) the receiver was appointed at the request of a
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| person other than a mortgagee; or
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(3) the receiver was appointed at the request of a
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(A) the lease is superior to the lien of the
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(B) the tenant has an enforceable agreement with
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| the mortgagee or the holder of a senior lien under which the tenant's occupancy will not be disturbed as long as the tenant performs its obligations under the lease;
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(C) the mortgagee has consented to the lease,
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| either in a signed record or by its failure timely to object that the lease violated the mortgage; or
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(D) the terms of the lease were commercially
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| reasonable at the time the lease was agreed to and the tenant did not know or have reason to know that the lease violated the mortgage.
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(Source: P.A. 104-34, eff. 1-1-26.)
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(765 ILCS 1090/20) (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a delayed effective date) Sec. 20. Notice of appointment; claim against receivership; distribution to creditors. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (h), a receiver shall give notice of appointment of the receiver to all creditors of the owner by: (1) deposit for delivery through first-class mail or |
| other commercially reasonable delivery method to the last-known address of each creditor; and
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(2) such other means as directed by the court.
(b) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (h), the notice required by subsection (a) must specify the date by which each creditor holding a claim against the owner which arose before appointment of the receiver must file the claim with the court. The date specified must be at least 60 days after the date of the notice under subsection (a). Unless the court orders otherwise, a claim that is not timely filed with the court is not entitled to a distribution from the receivership.
(c) A claim filed by a creditor under this subsection shall be titled "Proof of Claim" and must:
(1) state the name and address of the creditor;
(2) state the amount and basis of the claim;
(3) identify any property securing the claim;
(4) be signed by the creditor or an authorized agent
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| under penalty of perjury; and
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(5) include a copy of any record on which the claim
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(d) An assignment by a creditor of a claim against the owner or receivership is effective against the receiver only if the assignee gives timely notice of the assignment to the receiver in a signed record prior to the entry of an order approving a receiver's final report.
(e) A claim filed with the court in accordance with subsections (b) and (c) constitutes prima facie evidence of the validity and amount of the claim. At any time before entry of an order approving a receiver's final report, the receiver or other person with an interest in the receivership may file with the court an objection to a claim of a creditor, stating the basis for the objection. The court shall allow or disallow the claim according to the law of this State other than this Act.
(f) Upon motion of the receiver or other person with an interest in the receivership, the following claims may be estimated for purpose of allowance under this Section:
(1) any contingent or unliquidated claims, the fixing
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| or liquidation of which would unduly delay the administration of the receivership; or
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(2) any right to payment arising from a right to an
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| equitable remedy for breach of performance.
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(g) Claims subject to estimation under subsection (f) shall be allowed in the estimated amount as determined by the court.
(h) If the court concludes that receivership property is likely to be insufficient to satisfy claims of each creditor holding a perfected lien on the property, the court may order that:
(1) the receiver need not give notice under
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| subsection (a) of the appointment to all creditors of the owner, but only such creditors as the court directs; and
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(2) unsecured creditors need not submit claims under
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(i) Subject to Section 21:
(1) a distribution of receivership property to a
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| creditor holding a perfected lien on the property must be made in accordance with the creditor's priority under law of this State other than this Act;
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(2) a distribution of receivership property to a
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| creditor with an allowed unsecured claim must be made as the court directs on a pro rata basis according to law of this State other than this Act; and
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(3) if all of the creditors holding claims have been
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| paid in full, any residue shall be paid to the owner.
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(Source: P.A. 104-34, eff. 1-1-26.)
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