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			 Illinois Supreme Court adopts new 
			rule for eviction cases 
			 
			 
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			 [July 20, 2020] 
             
			 
			
			Chief Justice Anne M. Burke and the Illinois Supreme Court announced 
			the approval of new Rule 139 regarding practice and procedure in 
			eviction proceedings. The new rule requires an eviction complaint to 
			include a copy of the written eviction notice or demand and, where 
			applicable, the relevant portions of the lease. The new rule is 
			effective immediately. 
			 
			The Illinois Supreme Court Rules can be found here: 
			
			http://www.illinoiscourts. 
			
			gov/SupremeCourt/Rules/default.asp 
			 
			“This new rule will help self-represented parties on both sides of 
			eviction cases and also the judges hearing these cases by requiring 
			key information at the outset,” Chief Justice Anne M. Burke said. “I 
			would like to thank the Supreme Court Commission on Access to 
			Justice for the development of this important new rule and the 
			Supreme Court Rules Committee for its review.” 
			 
			New Rule 139, first proposed by the Circuit Court of Cook County Pro 
			Se Advisory Committee to the Supreme Court Commission on Access to 
			Justice (ATJ Commission), allows for the attachment of an affidavit 
			by the plaintiff using a standardized form approved for use by the 
			Illinois Supreme Court in place of an eviction notice or demand, as 
			well as the use of an affidavit if the plaintiff does not have the 
			lease or if there is no written lease. The ATJ Commission has 
			developed standardized statewide forms that are available 
			here. 
			
			
			  
			
			
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The new rule is intended to crystallize the law, practices, and procedures in 
eviction courts by definitively requiring the attachment of demands, termination 
notices, proof of service of the demands and notices, and relevant portions of 
leases at the time of filing an eviction complaint. It was proposed and adopted 
to benefit all relevant parties and stakeholders involved in eviction cases. 
Self-represented landlords benefit by being required to attach the demand, 
notice, and lease, when applicable, to the complaints, as those documents are 
necessary to establish a landlord's right to an eviction. 
  
Self-represented tenants, who would have access to the relevant information at 
the outset, rather than having to wait for discovery or trial to understand the 
nature of the allegations against them, can better understand the basis for the 
eviction action and be better prepared to assert timely defenses. 
 
 
Attorneys can more fully assess eviction cases to advise landlords and tenants 
on how to proceed on their own, or to determine whether to accept a matter for 
representation. And judges sitting in eviction courts would benefit from having 
the demand, notice, or lease available and in the record from the initiation of 
an eviction action. 
				 
			[S. Corbin 
			Admin Assistant to Dir. of Communications]  |