In re Estate of Fiklin

2022 IL App (3d) 190534-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 8, 2022
Docket3-19-0534
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2022 IL App (3d) 190534-U (In re Estate of Fiklin) 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
In re Estate of Fiklin, 2022 IL App (3d) 190534-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and may not be cited as precedent by any party except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

2022 IL App (3d) 190534-U

Order filed July 8, 2022 ____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

In re ESTATE OF ROY L. FICKLIN, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of the Twenty-First Judicial Circuit, Deceased ) Iroquois County, Illinois. ) (Stephen R. Ficklin, Executor of the Estate ) of Roy L. Ficklin, Deceased ) ) Appeal No. 3-19-0534 Petitioner-Appellee, ) Circuit No. 08-P-47 ) v. ) ) Katherine Kuipers and Russell Ficklin, ) The Honorable ) James Kinzer, Respondents-Appellants). ) Judge, presiding. ) ____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE McDADE delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice O’Brien and Justice Daugherity concurred in the judgment. ____________________________________________________________________________

ORDER

¶1 Held: The circuit court erred in reopening the Estate of Roy L. Ficklin because there were no assets, either remaining or newly discovered, to be probated. In conformity with the testator’s intent, Petitioner Stephen Ficklin, individually and solely, is entitled to the contested parcels of real property. We authorize Stephen to execute a corrected deed from the Family Trust. ¶2 Petitioner Stephen Ficklin, in response to an order of the trial court granting a motion

filed by respondents Katherine Kuipers and Russell Ficklin to set aside a deed in which he had

conveyed two parcels from a Family Trust, of which he was trustee, to himself, sought leave to

reopen the estate of the parties’ father, Roy L. Ficklin, which had closed eight years earlier. All

parties are surviving adult children of Roy Ficklin. Over respondents’ objection, the trial court

granted the petition and allowed Stephen to issue himself a warranty deed for the two tracts of

land he had transferred to a family trust a year before his father’s estate was closed. Thereafter,

Stephen filed an inventory, final accounting, and final report in Roy’s reopened estate. The trial

court accepted the final report and closed the estate over Respondents’ objection. Katherine and

Russell have appealed.

¶3 FACTS

¶4 Roy L. Ficklin, a long time Illinois farmer, died testate on May 24, 2008, in Iroquois

County. He was survived by his wife, Lucille, and his three adult children, Stephen, Katherine,

and Russell. Roy's will included provisions directing gifts and distributions of property to his

wife and children with variations depending on whether or not Lucille survived him. Stephen

was designated as the estate’s executor and administrator. The will, which is quite long and

detailed, contained four major distributive provisions pertinent to this appeal. One of those

provisions makes the terms of a specific land trust relevant as well.

¶5 In Article 2 of the will, entitled “Gifts on My Death,” Roy made the following bequests:

A. All his tangible personal property, which is specifically defined in section 2.1,

to Lucille because she survived him.

B. The “tax-sheltered gift” to a trustee to hold as a Family Trust. The administration and

distribution of the assets of this trust on termination were described in Article 4. The

2 “tax-sheltered gift” was defined in Article 14, section 14.11 and it included, but was

not limited to, two parcels of real estate held in Land Trust 104. The Family Trust

section provided for payment of all income to Lucille, for potential invasion of

principal if necessary for her health and maintenance, and, upon her death, for

termination of the trust and distribution of its assets to the living children, per stirpes,

in equal shares.

C. The “balance of [the] estate” to a trustee to hold as a Marital Trust. The

administration and distribution of the trust assets in equal shares, per stirpes, on its

termination were described in Article 3. The “balance of the estate” is defined in

Article 14, section 14.1.1 Stephen was named trustee of both the Family Trust and

Marital Trust, with Katherine and Russell identified as potential successors if Stephen

failed to so act.

D. Certain specific bequests which “shall be added” to the distribution of each child’s

share “notwithstanding the foregoing provisions” (described in A – C above):

(1) to Stephen (section 2.4) two specifically identified parcels of real property.

Roy stated that “no portion of [those] parcels shall pass to the other shares for my

remaining children (or their descendants).” He acknowledged that this addition to

Stephen’s otherwise-equal share would result in the passing of unequal shares to

his children. Because these parcels were included in Land Trust 104, the will

directed that “all interest in the beneficial interest therein and power of direction

thereover” should pass the same way the parcels did.

1 No “balance” remained after the creation of the Family Trust, so this trust was never created. 3 (2) to Katherine (section 2.5) the residence on East Lincoln in Onarga, Illinois. As

with Stephen’s bequest, Roy stated that the other two children and their

descendants should have no interest in this bequest to Katherine. He also

acknowledged that this addition to Katherine’s otherwise-equal share would result

in the passing of unequal shares to his children. 2

(3) to Russell (section 2.6) there was no bequest of real property, however he would

receive, presumably solely, the benefits of the Roy F. Ficklin Irrevocable Life

Insurance Trust.

E. The will also contained an Article 16, entitled “Statement of Purpose and Estate

Planning Agreement” in which Roy described, clearly and in significant detail, the

time and thought he and Lucille had put into determining how their assets should be

divided among their children and the care they had taken to discuss with the children,

as a family unit, the decisions they had made and the reasons for them. He referenced

their need to balance their business responsibilities to Stephen with their personal

desire to treat all of their children both fairly and equally. He asked that the children

respect, understand, and appreciate their arrangements as expressions of love for all

of them and that they maintain and grow their familial relationships. He further stated

that, to ensure that their intentions would take effect, he and Lucille had executed

reciprocal wills, had agreed that neither of them, while they both lived, would make

2 In Article 15, seemingly to ensure protection of this bequest even while Lucille continued to live in the residence, Roy authorized, but did not require, his executor to put the residence in yet another trust providing that, no matter what Lucille elected to do with it, that residence, any replacement residence, or the proceeds of any sale would remain sheltered for Katherine. 4 any changes, and had provided that any changes after the death of one of them “may

only be taken with the written consent of all three of our then living children…”

¶6 Roy’s will was executed April 28, 2008. On that same day Lucille transferred her 50%

beneficial interest in Land Trust 104 to Roy. Less than a month later, on May 24, 2008, Roy

died. At the time of his death, he owned 100% of that beneficial interest.

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2022 IL App (3d) 190534-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-fiklin-illappct-2022.