Handelsman v. Handelsman

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 7, 2006
Docket2-05-0790 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Handelsman v. Handelsman (Handelsman v. Handelsman) 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
Handelsman v. Handelsman, (Ill. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

No. 2--05--0790 filed: 7/7/06 ______________________________________________________________________ ________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________ ________

SUSAN HANDELSMAN, Indiv. and as ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of Executor of the Estate of Richard A. ) McHenry County. Handelsman; and as Trustee of the Trust ) Agreement establishing the Richard A. ) Handelsman Revocable Trust, Richard A. ) Handelsman, Grantor, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) No. 02--MR--263 ) GARY HANDELSMAN and ROBIN ) GOULD, ) Honorable ) Michael J. Sullivan, Defendants-Appellants. ) Judge, Presiding. _________________________________________________________________________ ______

JUSTICE BOWMAN delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendants, Gary Handelsman and Robin Gould, the adult children of decedent, Richard A.

Handelsman, appeal a grant of summary judgment (735 ILCS 5/2--1005(c) (West 2004)) to plaintiff,

Susan Handelsman, Richard's widow. The parties are beneficiaries of the Richard A. Handelsman

Revocable Trust (Trust). Using extrinsic evidence of Richard's intent, the trial court held that the

document creating the Trust (Trust Agreement) requires that (1) if the corpus of the Trust is

insufficient to pay the bequests to plaintiff and defendants, plaintiff's bequest must be satisfied to the extent possible before any funds are paid toward defendants' bequests; and (2) funds from the Trust

must be used to pay off the mortgage on certain real estate.

On appeal, defendants contend that the trial court erred in relying on extrinsic evidence of

Richard's intent, either to interpret the Trust Agreement or to reform it. According to defendants, the

Trust Agreement unambiguously bars the Trust from paying the mortgage and requires that the

bequests to plaintiff and defendants abate ratably. They also contend that reforming the Trust

Agreement is impermissible. We agree, and we reverse the judgment and remand the cause.

I. BACKGROUND

Richard Handelsman died on February 8, 2002. He was survived by plaintiff, his wife, and

defendants, his adult children from a previous marriage. Richard's will, dated July 29, 1999, left

some personal items to plaintiff and directed that his residuary estate would be "added to and

become a part of the trust estate of the trust," to be held and administered per the Trust Agreement.

As pertinent here, the Trust Agreement provides:

"THIS AGREEMENT, made this 29 [sic] day of July, 1999, by and between

RICHARD A. HANDELSMAN, of Woodstock, Illinois, as Grantor ***, and RICHARD A.

HANDELSMAN, of Woodstock, Illinois, as Trustee ***;

***

ARTICLE III

Marital Deduction

3.1 Marital Distribution. On the date of the death of the Grantor, if the Grantor's wife

shall survive him, the Trustee shall distribute to the Grantor's wife from the trust estate of the

trust, including therein any property distributable to the trust pursuant to the *** Grantor's

Will, the amount hereinafter stated in this Article III. No. 2--05--0790

3.2 Amount of Marital Distribution. The Trustee is hereby authorized to select and

distribute to the Grantor's wife cash, securities and other assets, including but not limited to

real estate or interests therein, in such proportions and amounts as the Trustee shall

determine in his sole discretion; provided, however, that in satisfying such distribution, the

Trustee shall distribute to the Grantor's wife the following assets:

(a) all real estate located in Woodstock, Illinois, which shall be owned as an asset of

the trust estate of the trust, which currently is comprised of 155 acres, more or less, including

all buildings, outdoor sculptures and improvements thereon, free and clear of any and all

mortgages, which the Trustee shall pay in full prior to the distribution of such property;

(b) the sum of One Million Dollars ($1,000,000.00); and

(c) all of the Grantor's works of fine art.

ARTICLE IV

Specific and Residuary Distributions

4.1 Specific Allocation to Grantor's Children. Upon the death of the Grantor, the

Trustee shall allocate the sum of One Million Dollars ($1,000,000.00) to each of Robin and

Gary who shall survive the Grantor; *** provided, however, that in making this allocation,

the Trustee shall reduce the amount allocable to Robin or Gary *** under this Section 4.1 of

this Article IV by the amount each has been allocated, outright or in trust, from the Richard

A. Handelsman Insurance Trust, created under the Trust Agreement establishing said trust,

heretofore created ***. Each such share so allocated to a descendant of the Grantor shall be

retained in trust by the Trustee as a separate trust of which the person for whom such share

shall have been allocated shall be the beneficiary ***.

-3- No. 2--05--0790

4.2 Debts and Taxes. Upon the death of the Grantor, to the extent that the assets of

the Grantor's estate (other than tangible personal property, property or sums specifically

bequeathed or devised or property which in the sole judgment of the Trustee does not have a

readily realizable market value) are insufficient, the Trustee (a) is authorized to pay the

expenses of the Grantor's last illness, the Grantor's debts (except those secured by mortgage,

lien or other encumbrance and not due and payable at the date of the Grantor's death, unless

otherwise provided herein or in the Grantor's Will) ***."

Plaintiff's "Second Amended Complaint for Declaratory Judgment for Trust Construction or

Trust Reformation" alleged as follows. On or about July 29, 1999, Richard executed both the will

and the Trust Agreement. Both documents were prepared by attorneys at Levin & Schreder, and

Robert Levin of the firm was familiar with Richard's estate-planning intentions. On February 6,

2002, Richard died, and, on March 1, 2002, plaintiff was appointed the executor of his estate. She

had also been designated a co-trustee of the Trust.

Count I of the complaint sought "construction of the Trust due to Ambiguity" and alleged as

follows. Richard had intended to provide a "three-tiered" distribution scheme. First, under article 3,

plaintiff would receive the 155 acres of real estate mortgage-free, the cash bequest, and the artwork;

second, defendants would receive $1 million each; and third, any remaining assets would be divided

50% to plaintiff and 25% to each defendant. However, in two respects, the Trust Agreement was

ambiguous, requiring resort to writings by the attorneys who drafted it.

The first alleged ambiguity related to the three-tiered distribution scheme. According to the

complaint, the Trust's assets were insufficient to make the full distributions to plaintiff and

defendants. However, the Trust Agreement did not clearly say how to adjust for this shortfall. It did

not specify whether assets were to be distributed "in the order of the Trust's articles" (in which case

-4- No. 2--05--0790

plaintiff would receive whatever the Trust could provide to satisfy article 3 before defendants

received anything under article 4) or whether the specific bequests in articles 3 and 4 were to be

reduced pro rata. This ambiguity was resolved by Levin's correspondence, which clearly showed

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