In re Estate of Sperry

2017 IL App (3d) 150703
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 14, 2017
Docket3-15-0703
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2017 IL App (3d) 150703 (In re Estate of Sperry) 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 Sperry, 2017 IL App (3d) 150703 (Ill. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

2017 IL App (3d) 150703

Opinion filed October 23, 2017 _____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

In re ESTATE OF ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ANNE SPERRY, Deceased ) of the 9th Judicial Circuit, ) Knox County, Illinois, (JACK SPERRY, )

)

Respondent-Appellant, )

) Appeal No. 3-15-0703 v. ) Circuit No. 13-P-179 )

MATTHEW SPENCER, Independent ) Honorable

Administrator of The Estate of ) Dwayne I. Morrison,

ANN SPERRY, Deceased, ) Judge, Presiding.

Petitioner-Appellee). )

_____________________________________________________________________________

PRESIDING JUSTICE HOLDRIDGE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices O’Brien and Wright concurred in the judgment and opinion. _____________________________________________________________________________

OPINION

¶1 Petitioner-Appellee Matthew Spencer (Matthew) is the independent administrator of the

estate of his late sister, Anne Sperry (Anne). Matthew brought an action in the circuit court of

Knox County against Anne’s ex-husband, Jack Sperry (Jack), the respondent-appellant in this

case, seeking a declaration that Anne’s estate was entitled to control the design and placement of

a headstone for Anne’s grave, which was located in a cemetery plot that Jack had purchased. Following a bench trial, the trial court found that Jack had gifted the cemetery plot where Anne

was buried to Anne’s estate and that the estate had the right to control the design and placement

of the headstone. This appeal followed.

¶2 FACTS

¶3 On or about September 16, 2013, Anne died in an automobile accident. At the time of her

death, Anne was not married. Her ex-husband, Jack, had filed a petition to dissolve his marriage

to Anne in May 2009, and a final judgment for dissolution of marriage was entered in September

2009. Jack and Anne had two children together, Jordan Sperry and Jacob Sperry. Anne also had

a third child, Elizabeth Winter, who was born of another father. Anne did not leave a will.

¶4 At the time of her death, it was uncertain whether Anne’s estate would be solvent. After

Anne’s death, Jack purchased two adjoining cemetery plots at Memorial Park in Galesburg,

Illinois with the intention of having a place for himself and a place for Anne to be buried. Anne

was interred in one of these adjoining plots. Anne’s father paid for her funeral and for the burial

expenses, and he was subsequently reimbursed by Anne’s estate.

¶5 On May 6, 2015, Matthew filed a “Petition for Authority to Place Headstone” in the

circuit court of Knox County. In pertinent part, the petition alleged the following: (1) in

September 2014, approximately one year after Anne’s interment, Matthew and Anne’s oldest

child, Elizabeth Winter, selected a headstone design for Anne’s grave, which was approved by

Anne’s father and siblings; (2) that same day, Matthew went to Jack’s home to share the

headstone plans with Jack and Anne’s two other children, Jordan Sperry and Jacob Sperry, who

were in Jack’s custodial care; (3) Jack became angry and told Matthew that there were “not

sufficient funds to pay for a headstone due to litigation expenses Jack had incurred as a result of

contested child support matters between Jack and the [e]state”; (4) Matthew told Jack that

Anne’s estate would pay for the headstone; (5) Jack “informed [Matthew] of his position that the

burial plot was [Jack’s] property, since he paid for it, and [Jack] would not allow a headstone to

be installed; (6) Jack suggested that Matthew have Anne exhumed and reinterred in a different

plot; (7) due to the conflict surrounding this matter, Lacky Monument (the company that sold the

headstone at issue) refused to place the headstone pending further direction from the court; and

(8) after making an inquiry, Matthew believed that it could cost approximately $3,000 to remove

the defendant’s remains.

¶ 6 In the petition, Matthew further alleged that, pursuant to the Disposition of Remains Act

(755 ILCS 65/5 (West 2012)), he, as the independent administrator of Anne’s estate, had the

authority to control Anne’s remains because Anne left no written direction on the matter, she was

not married, and her surviving children were all minors. 1 Matthew contended that the right to

bury a decedent carries with it the right to erect a monument at the gravesite “according to the

usual custom.” He further argued that Jack paid for the plot “specifically for the purpose of

burying” Anne and was “estopped from denying” that a headstone would be placed on the grave,

pursuant to the usual custom. Matthew asked the trial court to enter an order (1) finding that

Matthew “has a preferential right to place a headstone of his choosing” upon the existing grave

of Anne Sperry, pursuant to 755 ILCS 65/5”; (2) finding that Jack purchased the grave

“specifically for the purpose of burying” Anne, that Jack’s participation in Anne’s burial

“implied that he would acquiesce in the placement of a headstone as is usual and customary,”

and that Jack “is estopped from preventing the placement of a headstone now that the burial has

already taken place”; (3) enjoining Jack from interfering with the selection, placement, and quiet

enjoyment of a headstone on Anne’s existing grave; and (4) awarding “all other relief proper in

1 The petition also noted that Anne’s surviving parent and siblings had all approved the proposed headstone. 3

the premises.” In the alternative, Matthew asked the trial court to enter an order (1) granting

Matthew a preferential right to apply for a permit to disinter Anne’s remains and reinter them in

another location and (2) enjoining Jack from interfering with said permit application or with the

subsequent disinterment (should such a permit be granted).

¶7 Jack did not file an answer to the petition. Nor did he file a motion challenging the legal

sufficiency of the petition.

¶8 On June 9, 2015, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing on Matthew’s petition. Jack’s

counsel appeared on Jack’s behalf and informed the trial court that Jack objected to the petition,

but did not specify the basis for Jack’s objection.

¶9 During the hearing, Matthew testified that—upon Anne’s death—he, Anne’s three other

siblings, and Jack participated in making the funeral arrangements. Anne’s father, Bruce

Spencer, ultimately paid for the funeral and burial expenses. 2 Jack paid for the burial plot. It was

agreed that Jack would pay for two plots, and that Anne would be buried in one of them.

Matthew stated that Jack and Bruce paid for these expenses because it was uncertain at the time

whether Anne’s estate would have the money to pay for them. In September 2013, Anne was

interred one of the burial plots that Jack bought.

¶ 10 Matthew testified that, in September 2014, he took Anne’s oldest daughter, Elizabeth

Winter, to Lacky Monument to obtain designs for a headstone for Anne. Matthew e-mailed the

designs to Anne’s and Matthew’s father and siblings, all of whom approved. Matthew and

Elizabeth then went to Jack’s house to discuss the headstone. Jack told Matthew that the

proposed headstone “wasn’t acceptable” and that he did not have the money to pay for a

headstone.

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Bluebook (online)
2017 IL App (3d) 150703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-sperry-illappct-2017.