2020 IL App (2d) 180851-U No. 2-18-0851 Order filed April 20, 2020
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). ______________________________________________________________________________
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
SECOND DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________
In re MARRIAGE OF ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ANNA McMAHAN, f/k/a Anna Colandrea, ) of McHenry County. ) Petitioner-Appellant, ) ) and ) No. 13-DV-998 ) ZACHARY COLANDREA, ) Honorable ) Michael E. Coppedge, Respondent-Appellee. ) Judge, Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________
PRESIDING JUSTICE BIRKETT delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Schostok and Bridges concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶1 Held: In determining the father’s child support arrearage, the circuit erred in excluding from his net income the monies he obtained from his mother’s trust because the funds were “loans” in name only. Therefore, we affirmed as modified.
¶2 In this post-decree matter, petitioner, Anna McMahan, f/k/a Anna Colandrea, appeals from
the circuit court’s order setting child support arrearages owed by her by former husband, Zachary
Colandrea, respondent. Anna had filed a petition for rule to show cause stemming from Zachary’s
alleged failure to comply with a provision in their marital settlement agreement requiring him to
pay as additional child support “32% of any net income received over and above $234,000 gross 2020 IL App (2d) 180851-U
income *** from any source whatsoever.” Although Zachary was current with his base child
support obligation, Anna alleged that he had received significant sums of money from his family
but had not paid any additional child support on his net income that exceeded $234,000. After a
hearing, Anna was awarded $121,504.64 in arrearages for the years 2015, 2016, and 2017. In
ruling, the circuit court found that certain proceeds Zachary received from his mother’s trust in
2016 and 2017 for which he executed promissory notes were loans and not income subject to the
additional child support provision in the MSA. Anna contends that the circuit court’s finding was
in error because the proceeds are more accurately characterized as gifts and are thus “income.”
Assuming arguendo that the court did not err in finding that the proceeds were loans, she argues
that the court should have nevertheless deemed the loans income for purposes of child support.
We agree with Anna’s first argument and affirm the judgment as modified.
¶3 I. BACKGROUND
¶4 Zachary and Anna were married in 2001 and have three children together, namely:
Gabriella, born in 2003, Alivia, born in 2005, and Adrian, born in 2007. Anna filed a petition for
dissolution of marriage in 2013, and the marriage was dissolved on June 1, 2015. The judgment
for dissolution of marriage incorporated a marital settlement agreement (MSA) and a parenting
agreement. Anna was granted sole custody of the children and Zachary was provided visitation as
established by the parenting agreement. Paragraph 13 of the MSA, which concerns child support,
provides as follows:
“Husband’s net income from all sources is $7,812.50 (seven thousand eight
hundred twelve dollars and fifty cents) per month. Husband shall pay thirty-two percent
(32%) thereof, or $2,500 (two thousand five hundred dollars) * * * beginning on 7/1/2015
and [on] the 1st of each month thereafter. Husband shall also pay to Wife thirty-two (32%)
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of any net income received over and above $234,000 gross income (two hundred thirty
four thousand dollars) from any source whatsoever[,] including but not limited to bonuses,
draws, salary, shareholder distributions, stock options, etc.”
The MSA also provides that Zachary would pay Anna monthly maintenance of $5,900 for 79
months, but the parties agreed to terminate maintenance on September 12, 2018, retroactively to
May 1, 2017, following Anna’s cohabitation with her fiancé.
¶5 Anna filed a petition for rule to show cause on May 8, 2017, alleging that Zachary was
receiving significant sums of money from his family but had failed to pay any additional child
support required by the MSA. Zachary replied on June 7, 2017, denying the material allegations
therein.
¶6 On September 6 and 7, 2018, the circuit court conducted a hearing on Anna’s petition for
rule to show cause. Anna voluntarily withdrew her request for a contempt finding prior to the
commencement of the hearing, and she proceeded only on her request that Zachary be ordered to
pay all child support arrearages she was due by a date certain. We recount only the testimony that
is relevant to the resolution of this appeal.
¶7 Zachary testified that when the dissolution judgment was entered on June 1, 2015, he was
self-employed and operating three companies: Worldwide Trade Partners, LLC (Worldwide),
Forward Motion, and Buy Local Book Shop. None of the businesses were profitable, and he was
not earning any income at the time of the dissolution. Worldwide was a brokering company and,
although Zachary earned approximately $500,000 from it 2013, the company stopped operating in
July 2015 due to legal matters, and it dissolved in 2017. Forward Motion was an education
consulting company that collaborated with domestic companies in order to sell their products and
service solutions to the international school market. Forward Motion never made any money, and
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it dissolved in August 2015. At the time of the hearing on Anna’s petition for rule to show cause,
Zachary was still operating Buy Local Book Shop, albeit at a loss, and he was attempting to sell
the business. Buy Local Book Shop was last profitable in 2014. Zachary had not filed any income
tax returns since 2014 because he had not earned any income since then.
¶8 Zachary acknowledged that the MSA required him to pay Anna base child support plus
32% of any income he received that exceeded $234,000. He was not earning any income when
the marriage was dissolved, however. The $234,000 figure was based on his historical earnings
from when he worked for Follett Corporation. There, he had earned $225,000 per year, plus
bonuses. Zachary’s employment at Follett ceased in 2013, and Follett was the last third-party
employer he worked for.
¶9 Zachary testified that, from the entry of the judgment for dissolution of marriage through
the date of the hearing, he supported himself exclusively with funds he borrowed from his mother,
his father, and his mother’s trust, of which he was a beneficiary. Various health matters impeded
his ability to work, and he was hospitalized twice in 2016 for these matters. Without the funds he
received from his family, he would have been unable to support himself, and he would not have
been able to pay his maintenance and child support obligations required of him under the MSA.
He was current in paying his base child support obligation of $7,812.50 per month. He “made the
choice to borrow what [he] had to in order to make sure [he] was fulfilling [his] obligations.”
¶ 10 Bearing in mind that his checking account statements were entered into evidence, Zachary
testified that it would not surprise him to learn that, during the roughly 3-year period from June 1,
2015, through July 23, 2018, the deposits into his checking account totaled $1,584,113.58.
Specifically, $291,567.97 was deposited between June 1, 2015, and the end of 2015; $707,403.85
was deposited therein in 2016; $465,571.18 was deposited in 2017; and, thus far, $119,570.58 had
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been deposited in 2018. All the deposits came from his father, his mother, and his mother’s trust.
He also testified concerning cash withdrawals he made from his checking account during these
same periods. He testified that it would not surprise him to learn that he made cash withdrawals
of $49,228.55 in 2015, $108,872.45 in 2016, and $90,732.80 in 2017.
¶ 11 Zachary’s uncle, Chuck Follett, served as the trustee of his mother’s trust. Zachary and his
two sisters were equal beneficiaries, and they each received a stipend of $3500 per month. Zachary
did not have a copy of the declaration of trust. He did not know if his beneficial interest was
expressed as a fixed dollar amount or a percentage, and he did not know what his remaining interest
in the trust was. He identified at hearing a consolidated statement from Northern Trust Corporation
from the first quarter of 2018 demonstrating that the value of the trust was $4,095,661.97. He had
received other bank statements relative to the trust, but he did not produce them in discovery
because he did not have them.
¶ 12 Zachary made numerous requests for funds from the trust when he needed money—both
before and after the entry of the judgment for dissolution of marriage. His sisters had not received
any funds from the trust in excess of their monthly stipend. To Zachary’s knowledge, his uncle
was authorized to make loans using trust funds, but he did not know what the trust provided in
terms of what the loaned funds could be used for. He did not think the funds he borrowed could
be used for whatever he wanted—he could spend the funds only “for bills, debts, making sure [he]
was paying Anna the support [required by the MSA] *** as well as, you know, living while [he]
was not working.”
¶ 13 Whenever he sought funds from the trust, Zachary would make a written request to his
uncle and Northern Trust documenting what the funds were to be used for and stating that the
funds were a loan. However, there were times when he was not required to put anything in writing
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regarding the purpose of the loan. He did not know what the funds were drawn from when his
uncle made the various payments to him.
¶ 14 Zachary testified that he, at times, executed unsecured promissory notes to his mother
concerning the funds he borrowed from the trust. At the request of his mother, Zachary and his
uncle “handle[d]” the promissory notes because she was disabled and had no electronic devices
available for her use. Zachary’s exhibit No. 2 consisted of 12 promissory notes that were admitted
into evidence. Zachary testified that he did not originally produce the notes in response to Anna’s
discovery requests in October 2017 because he did not think he was asked for them. He instead
stressed that he “provided dollar amounts that were borrowed.” He eventually produced the notes
in August 2018 following an order for discovery sanctions.
¶ 15 We describe the promissory notes as follows. The total principal amount for the
promissory notes was $710,244. They accrue interest at a rate of 3% per annum until paid in full.
All the notes identify Zachary as the borrower and bear his signature, and all the notes identify
Zachary’s mother, Diana Mikos, as the lender. Neither Mikos nor Zachary’s uncle signed any of
the notes. The notes bear execution dates between August 2012 and July 2018. Eleven notes are
payable to the trust, but the most recent note, bearing an execution date in July 2018, is payable to
Mikos. Two notes preceded the judgment for dissolution of marriage and bear execution dates in
August 2012 and January 2014; they total $110,244. Zachary testified that these funds were used
to pay the parties’ credit card debt. The remaining 10 notes bear execution dates after the entry of
the dissolution of marriage. The total principal amount of these notes is $600,000, and they range
in amount from $5000 to $200,000. Relevant to this appeal, five notes bear execution dates in
2016 and total $390,000, and four bear execution dates in 2017 and total $180,000. The final
promissory note in Zachary’s exhibit is in the amount of $30,000 and bears an execution date in
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2018. All the notes, including those bearing execution dates during the parties’ marriage, mature
on December 31, 2021. Zachary testified that he did not know if this date was pertinent to any
terms of the trust, but he believed the notes are due on this date in order to give him time to get his
professional career going again. Zachary testified that if he is unable to repay the loans by the
maturity date, he believed the loans will be restructured so that the maturity dates are extended.
¶ 16 Zachary testified about each note individually that he borrowed the specified amount on
the date indicated, and that he signed the note either at that time or within a few days after the
funds became available in his checking account. Relative to any notes he may have signed in the
days after the funds became available, he dated them the date of the transfer to his account rather
than the date he truly signed the notes. Accordingly, he could not state with certainty the exact
date he executed any of the notes. After he signed each one, he sent his mother the original and
retained a photocopy for his records.
¶ 17 His mother’s trust also paid certain debt stemming from the sale of the parties’ former
marital residence in Lakewood, Illinois. Zachary lived there following the entry of the dissolution
judgment, and the MSA required him to indemnify and hold Anna harmless concerning the
obligations thereon. The residence was sold in May 2018, but the sale proceeds were insufficient
to cover the debt. The settlement statement, which was entered into evidence, reflected funds due
from Zachary of $118,632.46. Zachary testified that, at his request, his mother’s trust paid these
funds directly. He thought he remembered executing a promissory note for the $118,632.46, but
he did not know where it was.
¶ 18 Zachary did not contemplate that the funds he obtained from his mother’s trust could be
considered income for purposes of child support, and at no time did he think that the money was
gift or that the funds did not have to be repaid. To his knowledge, the judgment for dissolution of
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marriage did not address funds that he received from his family, and he had never had discussions
with anyone about whether the funds he received from his family could be considered income. He
also testified that, if his mother were to pass away, there would be tax implications for the trust
because there may not be enough money left over to pay the estate taxes. “That’s why there is an
obligation for [him] to pay when [he is] ready to pay those funds back when [he is] working again.”
¶ 19 Zachary also testified that he discussed with his uncle how he would repay the money he
borrowed from the trust given that he was neither working nor earning any income. He told his
uncle that he would be “back in the game” and would able to repay the trust once he got over some
of the hurdles in his life. He had worked for his uncle at Follett Corporation for 20 years, and his
uncle was aware of his employment history and ability to earn a high income. He stressed to his
uncle that he had made as much as $500,000 in prior years, and he believed he would make that
much again soon.
¶ 20 When Zachary needed money from a source other than his mother’s trust, he would seek
funds directly from either his mother or father. For example, Zachary testified that his father
expended significant sums on his behalf in connection with litigation initiated in federal court by
Urumqi Trade Enterprises against Worldwide, Zachary in his personal capacity, and a business
formerly owned by Zachary’s father, Rourke Publishing Group. On October 4, 2017, the litigation
resolved wherein Zachary, Worldwide, and Rourke agreed to pay Urumqi $2,000,000 over the
course of four installments of $500,000 each, and Rourke agreed to pay Urumqi $250,000.
¶ 21 Zachary and Worldwide subsequently entered into an agreement with his father and Rourke
on February 1, 2018, wherein Zachary agreed to be personally liable for the $2,000,000 owed to
Urumqi. The agreement noted that his father had already “loaned Zac/WWTP [Worldwide]
approximately $460,000,” and it provided that said loan would be forgiven if “Zac/WWTP make
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all Settlement Payments [to Urumqi] when due.” Zachary testified that his father made the first
two installment payments of $500,000 on his behalf directly to Urumqi. Zachary did not have any
promissory notes regarding the $1,000,000 his father paid on his behalf, but he believed that the
February 1, 2018, agreement with his father “suggest[ed] that [he was] going to reimburse him or
pay him back if [he] ever had the money.” Zachary testified that he tried to borrow the money
from his mother’s trust to repay his father, but he was unsuccessful because “they will not give
[him] any more money.” Zachary likewise had not repaid his father any part of the $460,000 that
was noted in the February 1, 2018, agreement, and there was no fixed date for when Zachary had
to repay his father. Zachary also testified that he paid his attorney $103,638.96 as of August 2017
in connection with the Urumqi litigation, and said amount was paid directly from his checking
account with funds he borrowed from his family.
¶ 22 Zachary denied failing to repay any of the funds he borrowed from his family. He testified
that he repaid his father “about $25,000” sometime in 2016, although he could not recall which
month. Apart from the $25,000 payment to his father, he had “not yet” repaid any of the funds he
borrowed from his father. He also could not recall repaying his mother any of the funds she
contributed to his checking account either before or after the dissolution of marriage, and he had
not repaid any of the funds he borrowed from her trust as reflected in the promissory notes.
¶ 23 Anna testified that she was married to Zachary for 14 years. Zachary was the primary
earner for the household, but they also received money from his family whenever they needed it,
such as when their “credit cards would run up too high.” About 13 or 14 years ago, they received
approximately $100,000 from Zachary’s family to purchase the marital residence in Lakewood,
Illinois. Zachary told her that they would likely never have to worry about repaying the money.
They received other funds during the marriage, as well. Zachary handled their finances, and “any
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time there was money needed, [Zachary] would call the family, and we would get money.” She
did not have any discussions with Zachary during their marriage regarding whether repayment was
required, and she was not present for any of the conversations whereby Zachary received money
from his family.
¶ 24 On September 12, 2018, the circuit court announced its findings on Anna’s petition for rule
to show cause. We recite only those findings that are relevant to Anna’s appeal or necessary to an
understanding of the issue presented. The circuit court began by observing that the child support
provision in the MSA was ambiguous, in that it failed to specify when the $234,000 would accrue
or how the additional 32% would be paid. Noting that the agreement provided for annual
verification of Zachary’s income, the court interpreted the agreement as providing base child
support and additional child support for income exceeding $234,000, with the amount of Zachary’s
income resetting every calendar year. The court then went on to compartmentalize its ruling by
year.
¶ 25 The court began by noting that seven months remained in 2015 when the parties’ marriage
was dissolved. It therefore adjusted the annual gross income threshold pro rata from $234,000 to
$136,500. The court observed that $291,567.97 was deposited into Zachary’s checking account
during this timeframe, and the only sources for the various deposits were his mother, his father,
and the trust. Because Zachary did not produce any promissory notes or loan documents executed
in 2015, the court concluded that the entire amount was a gift such that it was income for purposes
of child support. The court explicitly found that Zachary’s testimony concerning the existence of
other promissory notes that he simply did not produce was “unconvincing and not persuasive.” It
also noted that Zachary received $89,659 from the liquidation of his IRA, and it likewise attributed
this sum as income. Accordingly, it subtracted $136,500 from his total income of $381,226.47,
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multiplied the result by 32%, and ruled that Zachary owed $78,312.63 in additional child support
for 2015.
¶ 26 Regarding 2016 and 2017, the court found that the promissory notes produced by Zachary
and admitted into evidence were clear and convincing proof that there were loans during these
years in the amount of $390,000 and $180,000, respectively. It also observed that the unrebutted
evidence demonstrated that $707,403.85 and $465,571.18 was deposited into Zachary’s checking
account in 2016 and 2017, respectively. The court went on to individually calculate the additional
child support owed for each year by subtracting $234,000 and the loan totals from the annual
deposits, then multiplying the result by 32%. After performing these calculations, it determined
that Zachary owed additional child support of $26,689.23 for 2016 and $16,502.78 for 2017.
Concerning 2018, the court noted that Zachary’s income was not yet at issue because the year was
not over, and it was unclear whether his income that year would trigger the additional child support
provision set forth in the MSA. Based on the foregoing, the circuit court entered judgment in favor
of Anna for $121,504.64 in additional child support for the years 2015, 2016, and 2017. Anna
timely appealed.
¶ 27 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 28 On appeal, Anna argues that the circuit court (1) abused its discretion in finding that
Zachary demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence that the funds he received from his
mother’s trust as reflected in the 2016 and 2017 promissory notes were loans rather than gifts; and
(2) even if the circuit court appropriately classified the proceeds as loans, it should have
nevertheless deemed them income for purposes of child support. She stresses that, had the circuit
court included the proceeds reflected in the promissory notes for the years covered by the court’s
ruling ($390,000 and $180,000 in 2016 and 2017, respectively), the total arrearage would have
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been $303,904.64—or $182,400 more than the $121,504.64 awarded by the court. We address
only Anna’s first argument, which is meritorious and dispositive.
¶ 29 In general, matters involving child support and the judicial determination of a child support
arrearage are reviewed for an abuse of discretion. In re Marriage of Schomburg & Osland, 2016
IL App (3d) 160420, ¶ 19. Further, it is well-established in Illinois that a transfer of property from
parent to child is presumed to be a gift. In re Marriage of Wanstreet, 364 Ill. App. 3d 729, 735
(2006). The gift presumption may be overcome only by clear and convincing evidence to the
contrary. In re Marriage of Hagshenas, 234 Ill. App. 3d 178, 186 (1992). The gift presumption,
coupled with the applicable standard of review, necessitates that we evaluate whether the circuit
court abused its discretion in finding that Zachary demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence
that the sums he received from his mother’s trust as noted in the 2016 and 2017 promissory notes
were loans and not gifts. 1 A trial court abuses its discretion when its decision is arbitrary, fanciful,
or unreasonable, or when no reasonable person would take the view adopted. In re Marriage of
1 The parties appear to agree that the burden at hearing was on Zachary to rebut the
presumption of a gift because the funds were transferred to him from his mother’s trust. See, e.g.,
In re Marriage of Wanstreet, 364 Ill. App. 3d 729, 736 (2006). This presumption can be overcome
only by clear and convincing evidence. In re Marriage of Patel & Sines-Patel, 2013 IL App (1st)
112571, ¶ 76. Zachary argues in his brief that the circuit court did not err in finding that the
promissory notes were clear and convincing evidence that the money he obtained from his
mother’s trust was a loan. Thus, we assume for purposes of our review that a gift presumption
arose upon the transfer of the funds to Zachary and that the onus was on him to rebut the
presumption at hearing by clear and convincing evidence.
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Lindman, 356 Ill. App. 3d 462, 467 (2005). We note that, here, the parties agree that the abuse-of-
discretion standard applies to Anna’s first argument.
¶ 30 It is well-established that, for purposes of determining child support, monetary gifts are
income. In re Marriage of Rogers, 213 Ill. 2d 129, 137 (2004) (Rogers II). Loans, on the other
hand, should generally not be considered income. In re Marriage of Tegeler, 356 Ill. App. 3d 448,
458 (2006). This is so because loans usually do not increase an individual’s wealth, and because
“loans” are not mentioned in the Black’s Law definition of “income” as quoted in Rogers II by our
supreme court. Tegeler, 356 Ill. App. 3d at 458. A key factor in evaluating whether a loan is
income for purposes of calculating child support is whether repayment is required or even intended
when the loan was made. In re Marriage of Baumgartner, 384 Ill. App. 3d 38, 52 (2008).
¶ 31 We agree with Anna that the circuit court abused its discretion in finding that Zachary
established by clear and convincing evidence that the substantial sums he received from his
mother’s trust in 2016 and 2017 were loans and not gifts. Accordingly, these sums should not
have been excluded from Zachary’s income in calculating his additional child support obligation
under the parties’ MSA. In reaching this conclusion, we are guided by our supreme court’s
decision in Rogers II, 213 Ill. 2d 129 (2004), which is largely analogous to the facts of this case.
There, our supreme court evaluated whether cash gifts and “loans” received by the father obligor
from his parents constituted income for purposes of calculating child support. Id. at 131. The trial
court had granted the mother’s motion to increase child support and, in calculating the father’s net
income, it determined that the father earned $15,000 per year from his teaching job, as well as
received $46,000 per year in gifts and loans from his parents. Id. at 133. Predicated on the
combined amount of $61,000, the trial court increased his support obligation accordingly. Id. The
father moved for reconsideration, arguing that the court improperly included the $46,000 in gifts
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and loans he received from his family, and that only the $15,000 he earned at his job should have
been considered. In response, the mother noted that, by the father’s own testimony, the gifts and
loans he received from his family “represent a steady source of dependable annual income *** he
has received each year over the course of his adult life,” and he had never been required to repay
any of the loans. Id. at 134. The circuit court denied reconsideration, and the father appealed.
The First District affirmed, holding that both gifts and loans are income. See In re Marriage of
Rogers, 345 Ill. App. 3d 77, 79-80 (2003) (Rogers I). In specifically addressing the loans, the First
District reasoned that there was no authority for the father’s contention that loans may be excluded
from income because section 505(a)(3) of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act
(Marriage Act) (750 ILCS 5/505(a)(3) (West 2002)) provided only for the deduction of
‘expenditures for repayment of debt,” but not the deduction of loan proceeds. Id. at 80; contra
Tegeler, 365 Ill. App. 3d at 458 (stating that loans should generally not be considered income).
¶ 32 Our supreme court granted leave to appeal and affirmed the appellate court’s decision.
Rogers II, 213 Ill. 2d at 137. Noting that the term “income” was not separately defined in section
505 of the Marriage Act, the court gave it its plain and ordinary meaning, stating:
“As the word itself suggests, ‘income’ is simply ‘something that comes in as an
increment or addition ***: a gain or recurrent benefit that is usu[ually] [sic] measured in
money ***: the value of goods and services received by an individual in a given period of
time.’ [Citation.] It has likewise been defined as ‘[t]he money or other form of payment
that one receives, usu[ually] [sic] periodically, from employment, business, investments,
royalties, gifts, and the like.’ ” Rogers II, 213 Ill. 2d at 136-37 (quoting Webster’s Third
New International Dictionary 1143 (1986); and Black’s Law Dictionary 778 (8th
ed.2004)).
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¶ 33 In concluding that the circuit court was correct to include the annual gifts he received from
his parents, the court observed that the gifts “represented a valuable benefit to the father that
enhanced his wealth and facilitated his ability to support” his child, such that “they *** qualify as
‘income’ and were properly considered by the circuit court.” Rogers II, 213 Ill. 2d at 137.
¶ 34 The court then turned its attention to the “loans” and observed as follows:
“For purposes of determining a parent’s net income, section 505 of the Act
authorizes the deduction of amounts expended in repayment of certain types of debts.
There is no corresponding provision authorizing the exclusion of loan proceeds.
Accordingly, the appellate court reasoned that under the language of the Act, the circuit
court acted correctly when it included the money the father’s parents loaned him when it
calculated his support obligations. [Citation.]
Although the father challenges the appellate court’s construction of the statute, we
have no occasion in this case to address whether and under what circumstances loan
proceeds are properly regarded as an element of income for child support purposes. The
reason for that is that the sums at issue here are loans in name only. According to the
mother, whose testimony was found to be more credible by the circuit court, the father had
never been required to repay any part of the substantial ‘loans’ given to him each year by
his parents. She stated that by the father’s own testimony, those sums ‘represent a steady
source of dependable annual income *** he has received each year over the course of his
adult life.’ That being so, the money the father received from his parents was no less
‘income’ than the gifts they gave him or the salary he received from his teaching job.” Id.
at 139-40.
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¶ 35 Turning to the case at bar, the “loans” the trial court subtracted from Zachary’s income are
more accurately characterized as gifts such that they should have been included in his income in
calculating his additional child support obligation under the MSA. In other words, the substantial
“loans” that Zachary received from his mother’s trust are loans in name only. The documentary
evidence, as well as Zachary’s own testimony, confirm that a total of $1,584,113.58 was deposited
into his checking account between the date of dissolution and July 2018. As noted by the circuit
court in issuing its ruling, Zachary testified that the exclusive sources of these deposits were his
father, his mother, and his mother’s trust. Zachary testified that he supported himself entirely with
these funds because he had not earned any income since 2014—the last year he filed a federal
income tax return.
¶ 36 Here, just as in Rogers II, Zachary has never been required to repay any part of the
substantial sums he has received from his family—including the $570,000 he obtained from his
mother’s trust in 2016 and 2017. Attempting to distinguish Rogers II, Zachary asserts in his brief
that he has “demonstrated that he has repaid debt, at least one time paying back his father the sum
of $25,000.” He argues “there is no evidence to show that there is any history of Zachary failing
to repay loans to his family,” and he maintains that his demonstrated history of debt repayment is
uncontroverted. He produced no documentary evidence, either in discovery or at hearing, to
establish the repayments, but rather, he points only to the following hearing testimony:
"Q. [By Anna’s counsel]: Mr. Colandrea, throughout these time periods which we
have just covered, you’ve received various payments from the trust, an account that you
might have owned, as well as an account that your father owns, correct?
A. [By Zachary]: Yes.
Q. And you have not repaid any of those funds as of today, correct?
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MR. BRODY [Zachary’s counsel]: Objection, form of the question.
THE COURT: Overruled.
A. I have made payments, yes.
Q. Okay. Who have you made payments to?
A. Jim Colandrea [Zachary’s father].
Q. And when have you made payments to—
A. I have no idea. I just know I’ve made a couple payments to him. I’ve made a
payment to my mom. I would have to get the specific details.
Q. But during this entire period, by your prior testimony, you have not had any
income, correct?
A. Right. I was using my father’s money to pay my mom and my mom’s money
to pay my dad.
***
Q. Okay. And when would this *** payment to your father have been?
A. I’d have to think about it. I can’t remember. I remember he— he lent me money
on a short-term, knowing that my mom was going to borrow me some money. And he
goes I’ll give it to you as long as you’re, you know— you’re going to get this money from
your mother and pay me back. And I think that was in 2016.
Q. Do you remember what month?
A. Not off the top of my head.
Q. Do you remember how much it was?
A. About $25,000.”
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¶ 37 Zachary’s testimony plainly contradicts his assertion that he has repaid loans to his family
on prior occasions because, by his own admission, he used his father’s money to pay his mother
and his mother’s money to pay his father. As noted, he also testified that he tried to borrow
additional funds from his mother’s trust in order to repay his father in connection with the sums
his father expended on his behalf to settle the litigation initiated by Urumqi. Zachary was
unsuccessful, and he testified that “[t]hey will not give me any more money.” This is not a history
of family loan repayment, as Zachary argues in his brief—this is a history of robbing Peter to pay
Paul. To conclude otherwise would defy commonsense.
¶ 38 The evidence also established that, just like the father in Rogers II, Zachary received steady
and substantial sums from his family over the course of his adult life, both during the marriage and
after. In his November 28, 2016, financial affidavit, Zachary indicated that he was unemployed
and earned no income, stating “[a]ny money I receive is from my parents. The amount varies
depending on my needs and is considered a loan.” He also listed monthly living expenses of
$18,010 per month, including nearly $9000 for a first and second mortgage, $1200 in
entertainment, dining out, and hobbies, $733 for lawn care and house cleaning, $700 for clothing
and dry cleaning, and $643 for a leased vehicle. In his October 3, 2017, financial affidavit,
Zachary reported that he was still unemployed and that his total living expenses had increased to
$20,388 per month. He identified the $3500 per month stipend he received from his mother’s trust
as his only income and stated “[m]y “parents loan me money based upon my needs.” Thus, by his
own omission, Zachary receives money from his family as needed. 2
2 The impetus for the “loans,” by Zachary’s own testimony, was to provide himself a means
to maintain his lifestyle in the absence of income. We observe that the stated need for these funds
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¶ 39 The evidence also established that Zachary’s dependence on his family’s resources began
long before the hearing on Anna’s petition. For example, he testified that he borrowed $88,000
from his mother’s trust in August 2012 and an additional $28,244 in January 2014 so that he could
pay off credit card debt. 3 He agreed at hearing that his family provided him financial assistance
for the payment of liabilities during the marriage. As of the date of the hearing, Zachary had repaid
none of these funds. Following the dissolution of marriage on June 1, 2015, through July 2018,
Zachary’s testimony and checking account records confirm that he received an additional
$1,584,113.58 deposited into his checking account from his father, his mother, and his mother’s
trust. He also received the benefit of funds that were paid directly on his behalf, such as when the
proceeds from the sale of the marital residence were insufficient to cover all the debt. Zachary
testified that, at his request, his mother’s trust paid directly the deficiency of $118,632.46 reflected
on the closing statement. It therefore stands to reason that the $1,584,113.58 that was deposited
into Zachary’s checking account from June 1, 2015, through July 2018 does not include the
$118,632.46. None of the funds Zachary received or had the benefit of during his adult life had
been repaid as of the date of the hearing. These funds, just like in Rogers II, represent a steady
source of dependable annual income that Zachary has relied on, depending on his “needs.”
shares no resemblance to those of the borrowers in cases wherein loan proceeds were deemed not
to be income for child support purposes. See Tegeler, 365 Ill. App. 3d at 457 (holding that a line
of credit utilized by a farmer to operate his farm was not income because, among other reasons,
there was no evidence he used the loans for anything other than farming purposes); and
Baumgartner, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 52 (holding that a residential mortgage loan made by a bona fide
lender is not income). 3 These sums appear in the first two promissory notes in Zachary’s exhibit No. 2.
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¶ 40 We acknowledge that the “loans” in instant matter are distinguishable from those in Rogers
II in one critical aspect—here, the obligor father produced promissory notes in support of his
assertion that the significant funds he received from his family were loans. Zachary’s nakedly
self-interested testimony is not supported by any objective evidence and, indeed, the record is
devoid of any evidence that the notes are reliable or that repayment is expected.
¶ 41 For instance, Zachary completed financial affidavits in November 2016 and October 2017,
but neither include any of the promissory notes purportedly owed to his mother’s trust under the
“my debts” heading on the form. Although both affidavits list “Diana Mikos; personal loan—
$575,000” in this portion of the form, Zachary testified that the funds he borrowed from his
mother’s trust were “separate and apart from the debts to [his] mother [in her personal capacity],”
and he did not include the loans from the trust on his financial affidavits because he “just didn’t
include them” and he “didn’t know to include the promissory note[s].” Zachary later contradicted
this testimony, stating that he did not list any debt owed to his mother’s trust on the affidavits
because the $575,000 figure was “inclusive of some of the trust numbers.” We note that the
affidavits were completed approximately one year apart—a period between which three
promissory notes were purportedly executed relative to his mother’s trust, namely: a $30,000 loan
on December 1, 2016; a $26,000 loan on December 22, 2016; and another $30,000 loan on
September 14, 2017—yet the total debt owed to his mother as expressed in Zachary’s October
2017 affidavit was the same as in his November 2016 affidavit, notwithstanding an additional
$86,000 in new “loans.” This omission suggests both that Zachary did not actually consider these
payments to be loans, nor were they “inclusive” of the $575,000 personal loan from his mother as
indicated on his financial affidavits.
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¶ 42 Moreover, the timing of the production of the promissory notes is significant. The record
confirms that Zachary did not produce any of the promissory notes in response to Anna’s October
2017 request for production until after an order for discovery sanctions was entered against him
on August 15, 2018. Zachary testified at hearing that he did not initially produce any of the notes
because he did not think he was asked for them but, on further examination, he acknowledged that
promissory notes had been requested. Similarly, Zachary’s testimony concerning when he signed
the notes was also inconsistent. Zachary’s checking account statements confirm that the date and
amount of every deposit from his mother’s trust coincide directly with the date and amount he
wrote on the promissory notes. Zachary initially testified that he did not backdate any of the notes,
but he later acknowledged that he dated the notes with the date of the transfer, not the date he truly
signed them.
¶ 43 The notes also bear only Zachary’s signature, and there is no evidence that anyone else was
involved in their preparation. Zachary testified that he completed each note by writing in the
amount and date, and he then mailed a copy to his mother for her records. These documents, alone,
are insufficient to satisfy Zachary’s burden of persuasion, especially in light of the circuit court’s
announcement that Zachary’s testimony was not credible concerning the existence of other,
additional promissory notes that he simply did not produce, as well as the court’s observation in
announcing its ruling that “[Zachary’s] testimony alone does not cross this threshold and carry this
burden.” Put simply, in the absence of any corroborating evidence or testimony, these promissory
notes are an extension of his testimony. Relying on Leopold v. Halleck, 106 Ill. App. 3d 386
(1982), Zachary posits that the promissory notes were prima facie evidence of a debt such that,
once admitted into evidence, the burden shifted to Anna to rebut Zachary’s testimony. Leopold is
inapplicable because it involved an action to collect on a promissory note under the Uniform
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Commercial Code between a lender and borrower. As such, it does not aid Zachary’s argument
that the funds he obtained from his mother’s trust were not gifts subject to the additional child
support provision in the MSA.
¶ 44 Finally, apart from his own testimony, there is no evidence that Zachary will be required
to repay the loans. A determining factor of whether a loan is “income” is whether repayment is
required. See Baumgartner, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 52. Zachary testified that if he does not repay the
loans by the maturity date, he anticipated that the loans would be restructured so that the due dates
would be extended. Candidly, he acknowledges in his brief that “one cannot say the source of
income from which [he] will repay the debts due [to] his mother or father.” Based on the above,
there is no evidence other than Zachary’s testimony to conclude that his family either expected or
even anticipated that the funds would be paid back. They are “loans” in name only. In light of
our resolution of this issue, we need not address Anna’s second argument.
¶ 45 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 46 We find that the circuit court abused its discretion in concluding that the funds Zachary
received from his mother’s trust in 2016 and 2017 were loans and not gifts. Accordingly, pursuant
to our authority under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 366(a)(5) (eff. Feb. 1, 1994), we modify the
circuit court’s September 12, 2018, order calculating Zachary’s additional child support under the
terms of the parties’ MSA for the years 2015, 2016, and 2017, from $121,504.64 to $303,904.64.
¶ 47 Affirmed as modified.
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