Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Steinitz

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 30, 1997
Docket1-96-2234
StatusPublished

This text of Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Steinitz (Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Steinitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Steinitz, (Ill. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

SIXTH DIVISION May 30, 1997

Nos. 1-96-2234 and 1-96-3273 (Consolidated)

CHICAGO TITLE AND TRUST COMPANY, ) Appeal from the as Trustee under the Will of ) Circuit Court of Robert Sonnenschein, Deceased, ) Cook County ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) No. 95 CH 8444 ) HUGO R. STEINITZ and PAUL L. STEINITZ, ) ) Defendants-Appellants ) ) (Ralph R. Sonnenschein, Carl L. ) Sonnenschein, David C. Sonnenschein, ) Lisa Branch, Ann Feiner, Robert ) Sonnenschein and Barbara Sonnenschein, ) ) Defendants-Appellees) ) ) ________________________________________ ) ) HUGO R. STEINITZ and PAUL L. STEINITZ, ) ) Counterplaintiffs-Defendants- ) Appellants, ) ) v. ) ) CHICAGO TITLE AND TRUST COMPANY, ) as Trustee under the Will of ) Robert Sonnenschein, deceased, ) ) Counterdefendants-Plaintiff- ) Appellees ) ) RALPH R. SONNENSCHEIN, CARL L. ) SONNENSCHEIN, DAVID C. SONNENSCHEIN, ) LISA BRANCH, ANN FEINER, ROBERT ) SONNENSCHEIN and BARBARA SONNENSCHEIN, ) ) Honorable Counterdefendants- Defendants- ) Michael Getty, Appellees. ) Judge Presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE GREIMAN delivered the opinion of the court: Robert Sonnenschein (Robert) executed a will (the will) dated December 3, 1937, and died on November 8, 1939. Robert was survived by his wife Flora and three children: Jeanne Anne Sonnenschein (Jeanne), Carl Sonnenschein (Carl), and Ralph Sonnenschein (Ralph). The will bequeathed certain personal property to Flora and the remainder of his estate in trust designating Flora and Chicago Title and Trust Company as trustees. The net income from the trust was to be paid to Flora during her lifetime. Upon the Flora's death, the will provided as follows in the sixth paragraph: "Upon the date of the death of my wife, FLORA K. SONNENSCHEIN, *** I direct my Trustees to divide the trust estate, both as to principal and accrued but undistributed income, into three separate trust funds, one of said three separate trust funds to consist of 40% of said trust estate and to be held for the use and benefit of my daughter, JEANNE ANNA SONNENSCHEIN, and the other two of said three separate trust funds to consist of 30% each of said trust estate and to be held one each for the use and benefit of my two sons, CARL LEO SONNENSCHEIN and RALPH ROBERT SONNENSCHEIN, respectively. My Trustees shall pay over and distribute to each of my said three children, respectively, quarterly or oftener in the discretion of my said Trustees, all of the net income derived from the respective separate trust funds held for the use and benefit of each of my said three children, respectively, during each and every year ensuing subsequent thereto and prior to the dates of the deaths of my said three children, respectively." Flora Sonnenschein died on January 15, 1976, survived by all three children (Jeanne, Ralph and Carl). Pursuant to the will, Chicago Title and Trust then acted as sole trustee and paid the net income from the trust to the three children in their respective portions as designated in the will. Jeanne married, took the name Steinitz, and adopted two sons, Hugo and Paul (the Steinitz defendants). Carl had two children (Robert Sonnenschein and Barbara Sonnenschein). Ralph had three children (David C. Sonnenschein, Lisa Branch and Ann Feiner). Upon the death of any of the three children, the sixth paragraph of the Will further provided as follows: "Upon the dates of the deaths of my said three children, respectively *** my Trustees shall pay over and distribute the separate trust fund of such of my said three children so dying (or so having died), as to both principal and accrued but undistributed income, unto the then surviving lawful issue of such of my said three children, respectively, per stirpes and not per capita. In the event that any of my said three children so dying *** shall leave no lawful issue surviving at that time, the separate trust fund of such of my said three children so dying *** shall be divided between the separate trust funds of the other two of my said three children in the same proportions as is hereinabove provided with respect to the creation of the original separate trust funds, and shall be held, used, paid over and distributed in the same manner and at the same times and to the same persons as is herein provided with respect to said other two separate trust funds." Jeanne died on August 16, 1978. At that time, the trustee correctly determined that the two adopted sons of Jeanne, Hugo and Paul, were not "lawful issue" of Jeanne under then-existing Illinois law and thus not beneficiaries of Jeanne's trust. The trustee then divided Jeanne's 40% share of the trust fund into two equal parts and allocated one part to Carl and one part to Ralph. No principal distributions have ever been made to Robert's children. On June 20, 1995, the aggregate value of the assets held under the will was approximately $541,000. In 1989, the General Assembly amended the Probate Act of 1975 (755 ILCS 5/1-1 et seq. (West 1992)) to treat adopted children the same as natural children in instruments executed before September 1, 1955. The legislature added subsections 2- 4(f) and 2-4(g), which provide in pertinent part as follows: "(f) After September 30, 1989, a child adopted at any time before or after that date is deemed a child born to the adopting parent for the purpose of determining the property rights of any person under any instrument executed before September 1, 1955, unless one or more of the following conditions applies: (1) The intent to exclude such child is demonstrated by the terms of the instrument by clear and convincing evidence." 755 ILCS 5/2-4(f) (West 1992). "(g) No fiduciary or other person shall be liable to any other person for any action taken or benefit received prior to October 1, 1989, under any instrument executed before September 1, 1955, that was based on a good faith interpretation of Illinois law regarding the right of adopted children to take property under such an instrument." (Emphasis added.) 755 ILCS 5/2-4(g) (West 1994). Prior to the 1989 amendments, the statutory presumption that a testator intended for adopted children to be treated as natural offspring applied only to the construction of written instruments executed on or after September 1, 1955. Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 110 1/2, par. 2-4(e). In 1994, after the amendments to the Probate Act, Hugo and Paul indicated to the trustee that they should be beneficiaries of their mother's share of the trust. On the other hand, Carl, Ralph and their children opposed the claim of Hugo and Paul, contending that they were not proper beneficiaries entitled to receive Jeanne's share of the trust upon her death; that subsequent changes in Illinois law have not entitled them to the reestablishment of the terminated share; and that the trustee should continue to administer such share as part of the separate trust funds for the benefit of Carl and Ralph. In light of the competing interests involved, the trustee filed a complaint to construe the trust and for a declaratory judgment to resolve the dispute between the Steinitz defendants and Ralph Sonnenschein, Ralph's children (David C. Sonnenschein, Lisa Branch and Ann Feiner), Carl L. Sonnenschein, and Carl's children (Robert Sonnenschein and Barbara Sonnenschein) (hereinafter collectively referred to as the Sonnenschein defendants). The Steinitz defendants filed an amended countercomplaint, asking that the court declare them to be entitled to Jeanne's entire 40% share in the trust and all income therefrom from the date of Jeanne's death, as her surviving lawful issue.

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Bluebook (online)
Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Steinitz, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-title-trust-co-v-steinitz-illappct-1997.