Illinois Official Reports
Appellate Court
Spencer v. Di Cola, 2014 IL App (1st) 121585
Appellate Court LYLE SPENCER, JR., as Beneficiary of the Lyle M. Spencer Trust,
Caption Plaintiff-Appellant, v. JOAN DI COLA, as Successor Trustee of the
Lyle M. Spencer Trust, Defendant-Appellee (Loren Spencer, a Minor,
Lyle Spencer III, a Minor, and Melissa Spencer, a Minor, as
Beneficiaries of the Lyle M. Spencer Trust, Plaintiffs; Emily Spencer
and Julia Spencer, as Beneficiaries of the Lyle M. Spencer Trust, and
the Spencer Foundation, an Illinois Not-For-Profit Corporation,
Defendants).–LYLE SPENCER, JR., as Beneficiary of the Lyle M.
Spencer Trust, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. JOAN DI COLA, as Successor
Trustee of the Lyle M. Spencer Trust, Defendant-Appellee (Loren
Spencer, a Minor, Lyle Spencer III, a Minor, and Melissa Spencer, a
Minor, as Beneficiaries of the Lyle M. Spencer Trust, Plaintiffs; Emily
Spencer and Julia Spencer, as Beneficiaries of the Lyle M. Spencer
Trust, and the Spencer Foundation, an Illinois Not-For-Profit
Corporation, Defendants).
District & No. First District, Fourth Division
Docket Nos. 1-12-1585, 1-12-2196 cons.
Filed May 1, 2014
Rehearing denied August 18, 2014
Modified upon
denial of rehearing August 21, 2014
Held The trial court properly entered summary judgment for the individual
(Note: This syllabus trustee of a family trust in a beneficiary’s action seeking the
constitutes no part of the appointment of a different trustee, since the trust’s terms did not grant
opinion of the court but such authority to the beneficiaries and the agreements entered into by
has been prepared by the the beneficiaries were ineffective to achieve that goal; furthermore,
Reporter of Decisions the individual trustee was properly awarded attorney fees for
for the convenience of defending the challenge on behalf of the interests of the beneficiaries
the reader.) as a whole.
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 09-CH-41964; the
Review Hon. LeRoy K. Martin, Jr., Judge, presiding.
Judgment Affirmed and remanded.
Counsel on Kerry R. Peck, Timothy J. Ritchey, and Jesse A. Footlik, all of Peck,
Appeal Bloom, LLC, of Chicago, for appellant.
Nancy G. Lischer and Peter D. Sullivan, both of Hinshaw &
Culbertson LLP, of Chicago, for appellee.
Panel JUSTICE LAVIN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices Fitzgerald Smith and Epstein concurred in the judgment and
opinion.
OPINION
¶1 In the matter before us, we confront an appeal by beneficiaries of a trust, who claim that
they ought to be able to appoint a corporate trustee to effectively replace an individual
trustee, without any proof of cause for removal, in a manner that they suggest is consistent
with the trust’s terms. The original trust documents provided for both an individual trustee
and a corporate trustee. Many years before the action triggering this appeal was filed,
however, the original corporate trustee filed suit asking to be removed because of a perceived
conflict between the corporate trustee, the appointed individual trustee and several
beneficiaries (No. 82 CH 436). In the 1982 order that granted this request, the trial court
specifically found that the relevant will creating the trust did not “require the appointment of
a successor corporate trustee.” Two years later, pursuant to petition, the trial court reformed a
trust provision to grant the adult beneficiaries the power to appoint successor trustees (No. 84
CH 2159). More than two decades later, disputes arose concerning the amount of
distributions by the individual successor trustee, which led the beneficiaries to file the present
action (No. 09 CH 41964). The beneficiaries, led by plaintiff Lyle Spencer, Jr., initially
wanted to remove the trustee but ultimately changed course, asserting that they were merely
attempting to appoint a corporate trustee, notwithstanding the 1982 action. The beneficiaries
also executed documents attempting to appoint a “successor” or “substitute” corporate
trustee. After cross-motions for summary judgment were filed, the trial court denied the
beneficiaries relief. This appeal followed.
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¶2 I. BACKGROUND
¶3 We recite only those facts necessary to resolve the issues raised on appeal. Lyle M.
Spencer, Sr. (the Settlor), died in 1968, leaving an estate in excess of $75 million. The
portion of his estate relevant to this appeal consisted of a family trust, which left $3 million
to his four male children, Lyle Spencer, Jr. (Lyle), Steven Spencer, Richard Spencer and
David Spencer, as well as their descendants. The trust was primarily oriented toward
education and housing, with the possibility of assisting in the start up of businesses. In
addition, the trust language empowered these individual and corporate trustees with great
discretion, including the ability to make unequal distributions to the beneficiaries. As
originally drafted, the trust appointed Harlowe E. Bowes as the individual trustee and Harris
Trust and Savings Bank or its corporate successor (Harris) as the corporate trustee. Article
VIII(a) of the trust provided, in pertinent part, as follows:
“If at any time no individual hereunder is acting as Trustee, then such individual as
shall be designated by a majority of the partners of Sidley & Austin or of any
successor to the law practice of said firm, shall act as successor individual Trustee.”
Thus, the original trust contemplated that an individual successor would be appointed if no
individual was acting as trustee. We note that the trust did not specifically provide for the
appointment of a corporate successor trustee in the event that no corporation was acting as
trustee.
¶4 Moreover, article VIII(e) stated as follows:
“The Trustees shall have power to appoint any bank or trust company wherever
located as substitute Trustee of any trust, if and as often as the Trustees deem it
advantageous; to give the substitute Trustee such titles, powers and discretions as the
Trustees deem advisable; to remove a substitute Trustee; to accept the resignation of a
substitute Trustee; and to give a full release and discharge to a substitute Trustee,
conclusive and binding on all beneficiaries hereunder, by approving its accounts. A
substitute Trustee, upon its resignation or removal, shall transfer all trust property in
its possession as the Trustees direct. The Trustees’ power to appoint and remove
substitute Trustees may be exercised in their discretion and shall be exercised if
directed in writing by a majority in interest of the beneficiaries of the trust.”
Thus, this provision grants a sitting trustee several distinct powers, one of which must be
exercised at the appropriate direction of the beneficiaries. We further note that while article
VIII(e) provided that a substitute trustee could be removed, no provision in article VIII
expressly provided that the sitting trustee could be removed by the beneficiaries. Cf. Mucci v.
Stobbs, 281 Ill. App. 3d 22, 24, 31 (1996) (the trust expressly provided the beneficiary the
right to “remove” any sitting trustee); see also George G. Bogert et al., The Law of Trusts
and Trustees § 520, at 27 (3d ed. 2000) (“If no provision for removal is made in the trust
instrument or in the statutes of the state, neither the settlor, the beneficiary, nor a co-trustee
has the power of removal.”).
¶5 More than a decade later in 1982, after approximately $1.2 million had been distributed
from the original trust, Harris filed suit asking to resign as the corporate trustee because of
disputes between Harris on one side and Murray and the Settlor’s children on the other
(No. 82 CH 436). Harris wanted to deny distribution requests that Murray wanted to grant.
Murray also requested the court to order that he be the sole trustee, which drew no objection
from Lyle or the other beneficiaries. Murray argued that the trust documents envisioned the
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possibility that there would not be any need for a corporate trustee and, more specifically,
that there was no “requirement that there always be a corporate trustee.” The trial court
agreed and ordered that Murray be the sole trustee of the family trust.
¶6 Two years later, Murray asked the trial court to split the family trust into three individual
trusts to reflect the differing interests of the Settlor’s three remaining sons, including Lyle,
and their descendants (No. 84 CH 2159). All three adult beneficiaries and Murray himself
were in agreement on the various changes. Notable to this appeal, Murray also asked to
modify article VIII(a) because Sidley & Austin, which had originally been charged with
naming successor individual trustees, did not wish to remain in that role. Murray, after
consulting with each of the three adult beneficiaries, suggested a modification that would
allow the appointment of successor trustees in any of the individual trusts if a “majority in
number of the adult income beneficiaries” so desired. The resulting trial court order
specifically held that, “[t]he court reforms the terms of clause (a) of Article VIII *** to
provide for the appointment of one or more successor trustees of any of the three trusts ***
by a majority in the number of the adult income beneficiaries of such trust.” The court’s
order did not, however, recite the modified provision verbatim.
¶7 Over the course of time, individual trustees resigned and individual trustees were
appointed. The last trustee appointed for the trust at issue in this appeal was defendant
Di Cola, a trusts and estates attorney from Boston, Massachusetts. This 1999 appointment
came at the behest of Lyle, who exercised his right under article VIII(a) to designate a
successor individual trustee. Lyle has five children who are beneficiaries of the trust. Some
years later, Lyle’s current wife (notably, a nonbeneficiary) requested funds from Di Cola for
day care and “pre-kindergarten tuition,” which Di Cola denied on the trust’s language and the
fact that several beneficiaries were covered by the trust, which required the trustee to be
careful about how funds were distributed over time. Other conflicts developed over claims
that the beneficiaries were inadequately informed of the performance of investments. These
several disagreements apparently prompted Lyle to file this suit against Di Cola.1
¶8 II. THE 2009 ACTION
¶9 In Lyle’s multicount complaint, he averred that Di Cola should be removed for several
reasons, including for cause. He complained of not receiving requested disbursements, while
admitting that the trust gave the trustee broad discretion in making disbursements from the
trust. He also complained that the trust had not performed well due to a lack of
diversification, even though the trust granted the trustee virtually unfettered power to hire
independent investment advisors along with the power to invest and reinvest in stocks and
other investments. The timing of these alleged performance failures also happened to
coincide with the precipitous 2008-09 stock market slump and the ensuing global recession,
factors which Di Cola subsequently asked the court to take judicial notice of. The trial court
dismissed the counts attempting to remove Di Cola for cause.
¶ 10 Lyle also sought removal of Di Cola pursuant to the terms of the trust. Without reciting
each and every allegation in the several complaints that were filed, the overarching demand
1
Lyle initially filed the complaint on his own behalf along with his minor children. For the sake of
simplicity, we will refer to this family/beneficiary group as Lyle, in deference to his representative
capacity.
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of Lyle was the immediate removal of Di Cola as the trustee, in whose place a corporate
trustee, Attorney’s Title Guaranty Trust (ATG), would be named a “successor” trustee under
article VIII(a) or a “substitute” trustee under article VIII(e). Lyle, along with his adult
daughters, Julia and Emily, had executed agreements to that effect.
¶ 11 III. SUMMARY JUDGMENT
¶ 12 The parties then filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Lyle argued he was entitled
to summary judgment because the trust beneficiaries, through the aforementioned
agreements, appointed ATG as a “substitute” and “successor” trustee. In addition, Lyle
argued that the Settlor deliberately provided the beneficiaries with a method for the removal
of the trustee. Di Cola asserted, however, that she was entitled to summary judgment because
the substitute trustee provision did not authorize the removal of a sitting trustee, as opposed
to the appointment and removal of a fill-in trustee. She also argued that the reformed
successor trustee provision changed only the mechanism for appointing a successor trustee,
leaving intact the requirement that a vacancy first occur. Since Di Cola had been the sole
trustee for a number of years, she simply suggested to the court that there was no available
vacancy.
¶ 13 Lyle abruptly changed course when responding to the motion for summary judgment
filed by Di Cola. He then stated that he was not attempting to remove Di Cola as trustee,
while reluctantly acknowledging that he was requesting that ATG essentially take over any
and all duties previously assumed by Di Cola. He added that the appointment of ATG would
be appropriate because of the vacancy caused by the 1982 resignation of Harris. Thus, Lyle
gave all appearances of attempting to accomplish obliquely what he had been unable to
achieve directly, based on the court’s earlier rulings that struck the counts geared toward
removing Di Cola for cause. This about-face left the court to decide only which party was
entitled to summary judgment on counts I and II of plaintiff’s second-amended complaint.
¶ 14 At a hearing on the cross-motions, the parties each argued that the unambiguous language
of article VIII(a) and (e) controlled the judge’s decision on which party was entitled to
summary judgment. Lyle argued there was no limitation on the authority that can be given to
a substitute trustee and that ATG’s appointment would be “a complete substitution.” In
contrast, Di Cola argued a substitute was a temporary appointment for a discrete act. As to
whether ATG could be a successor trustee, Lyle argued that a vacancy was created when
Harris resigned, whereas Di Cola argued the court’s prior order eliminated any vacancy.
Di Cola further argued that Lyle was bound by the trial court’s prior determination in 1982
that a corporate trustee was unnecessary.
¶ 15 After hearing extensive arguments, our learned colleague in the trial court granted
summary judgment to Di Cola and denied Lyle’s motion for summary judgment. The court
agreed with Di Cola’s analysis of the scope, function and power of a “substitute” trustee
based upon the language of the section itself, along with the normal usage of the term. In
essence, the court found that Lyle’s interpretation of this relatively straightforward language
would effectively neuter the broad discretion afforded to the individual trustee who had been
properly appointed back in 1999. Article VIII(e) did not give the beneficiaries the right to tell
the trustee who to appoint but, rather, gave them the right to tell the trustee to exercise her
discretion to appoint or remove a substitute trustee. In addition, the court rejected the
suggestion that beneficiaries could appoint successors at whim; rather, article VIII(a) was
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merely a mechanism to appoint a new trustee where a vacancy existed. Moreover, the court
found that it had previously eliminated the corporate trustee position and thus, there was no
vacancy. Following the entry of summary judgment, the court awarded fees to Di Cola, over
Lyle’s objection, for her defense of the claims brought against her. Lyle appealed.
¶ 16 We entered our original opinion on May 1, 2014, but Di Cola’s attorneys subsequently
filed a petition for rehearing, arguing that this court overlooked Di Cola’s request for
attorney fees in defense of this appeal. In addition, the petition for rehearing noted that
Di Cola died shortly before our original decision was entered. Following further briefing
from the parties, this court denied the petition but now modifies the previously entered
opinion. With that said, Lyle attempts to raise additional challenges to our prior decision
based on Di Cola’s death. Lyle did not, however, file his own petition for rehearing or a
motion for an extension of time in which to file such petition. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 367(a) (eff.
Dec. 29, 2009). Accordingly, we will not consider his contentions.
¶ 17 IV. ANALYSIS
¶ 18 On appeal, Lyle asserts the trial court erred in granting Di Cola summary judgment.
Specifically, he contends that article VIII(e) of the trust permitted the appointment of a
substitute corporate trustee, or alternatively, article VIII(a) permitted the appointment of a
successor. We begin by considering the former contention.
¶ 19 Summary judgment is warranted where affidavits, pleadings, depositions, admissions and
exhibits, when viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, show that no genuine
issue of material fact exists so that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Ruby v. Ruby, 2012 IL App (1st) 103210, ¶ 13. In addition, where cross-motions for summary
judgment are filed, the parties concede that no genuine issue of material fact exists and invite
the court to determine the issues presented as a matter of law. Alshwaiyat v. American Service
Insurance Co., 2013 IL App (1st) 123222, ¶ 19. Thus, we review the trial court’s ruling on
the parties’ motions for summary judgment de novo. Ruby, 2012 IL App (1st) 103210, ¶ 13.
We also review the construction of a trust de novo. Dunn v. Patterson, 395 Ill. App. 3d 914,
919 (2009).
¶ 20 The same rules apply to the construction of wills and trusts. Harris Trust & Savings Bank
v. Donovan, 145 Ill. 2d 166, 172 (1991). The goal is to determine the settlor’s intent, which
the court will effectuate unless contrary to law or public policy. Fifth Third Bank, N.A. v.
Rosen, 2011 IL App (1st) 093533, ¶ 23. In addition, the intent to be determined is not that
presumed to have been in the testator’s mind but, rather, the intent expressed by the
instrument’s language. In re Estate of Laas, 134 Ill. App. 3d 504, 509 (1985). Thus, courts
consider the plain meaning of the instrument’s words in the context of the entire document
(Ruby, 2012 IL App (1st) 103210, ¶ 19), rather than in isolation (Fifth Third Bank, N.A., 2011
IL App (1st) 093533, ¶ 23). If possible, the court should construe a trust so that no language
is treated as surplusage or rendered insignificant. Ruby, 2012 IL App (1st) 103210, ¶ 19.
Furthermore, courts should avoid constructions which would render language nonsensical.
Stein v. Scott, 252 Ill. App. 3d 611, 615-16 (1993).
¶ 21 A. Substitute Trustee
¶ 22 Here, article VIII(e) stated as follows:
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“The Trustees shall have power to appoint any bank or trust company wherever
located as substitute Trustee of any trust, if and as often as the Trustees deem it
advantageous; to give the substitute Trustee such titles, powers and discretions as the
Trustees deem advisable; to remove a substitute Trustee; to accept the resignation of a
substitute Trustee; and to give a full release and discharge to a substitute Trustee,
conclusive and binding on all beneficiaries hereunder, by approving its accounts. A
substitute Trustee, upon its resignation or removal, shall transfer all trust property in
its possession as the Trustees direct. The Trustees’ power to appoint and remove
substitute Trustees may be exercised in their discretion and shall be exercised if
directed in writing by a majority in interest of the beneficiaries of the trust.”
We agree that article VIII(a) is unambiguous. Espevik v. Kaye, 277 Ill. App. 3d 689, 694
(1996) (A trust provision is not ambiguous solely because the parties do not agree on its
meaning.). That provision is subject to only one reasonable interpretation. Cf. Fifth Third
Bank, N.A., 2011 IL App (1st) 093533, ¶ 24 (Ambiguity exists where the instrument’s
language is reasonably susceptible to multiple interpretations.). The provision is not,
however, reasonably subject to the interpretation forwarded by Lyle, as he disregards what it
means to be a substitute trustee pursuant to this trust and that the power to appoint and
remove is one of several distinct powers granted by article VIII(e).
¶ 23 The trust gave the sitting trustee the power to appoint a trust company, if and as often as
the trustee deemed it advantageous. This eloquently demonstrates that the Settlor intended a
substitute trustee to be appointed for a particular purpose. The trust also gave the sitting
trustee the power to give the substitute trustee whatever titles, powers and discretions that the
sitting trustee, not the beneficiaries, deemed advisable. In addition, the trust gave the trustee
the power to accept the substitute trustee’s resignation, to remove a substitute trustee, and to
release and discharge the trustee. Thus, the plain language of these provisions demonstrate
that the Settlor intended a sitting trustee to continue to exercise whatever powers were not
specifically allocated to the substitute trustee and to remove a substitute trustee at the sitting
trustee’s pleasure. Accordingly, reading this provision in its entirety demonstrates that a
substitute trustee is one appointed for a specific purpose and a limited duration.
¶ 24 While the majority of beneficiaries have the right to require the sitting trustee to exercise
her “power to appoint and remove substitute Trustees,” the plain language does not grant
them the right to name the substitute who will be appointed. In addition, no language in this
provision permits the beneficiaries to require a sitting trustee to exercise her power to give
the substitute trustee specific titles, powers and discretions. Lyle’s assertion that the
beneficiaries have the power to direct “who, what, where, when and how” a substitute is to
be appointed would require us to graft new language onto this provision. Simply put, the trust
does not grant Lyle the right to micromanage the sitting trustee or to appoint someone who
will. Cf. Mucci, 281 Ill. App. 3d at 24 (observing the trust provided that “ ‘[t]he Substitute
Trustee shall have all the powers and discretions of the Trustee,’ ” but that the latter could
remove the former at any time).
¶ 25 We also reject Lyle’s suggestion that “[f]or the Substitute Trustee Clause to have any
real, consequential import to the beneficiaries, the beneficiaries must be able to appoint a
substitute trustee for the scope that they deem fit.” Our construction permits beneficiaries to
protect their interests where a sitting trustee is unable to act to protect the beneficiaries’
interests under particular circumstances, including illness or conflict of interest, but has failed
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to appoint someone who can. In addition, our construction does not foreclose beneficiaries
from requiring the appointment of a substitute trustee for a particular purpose but, rather, it
forecloses the beneficiaries from usurping the sitting trustee’s role in determining what tools
the substitute will need to perform its function and who is best suited to accomplish that task.
Furthermore, a trustee is always bound by its obligation to carry out a trust’s terms with
fidelity and good faith. Farris v. Department of Employment Security, 2014 IL App (4th)
130391, ¶ 30; see also Mucci, 281 Ill. App. 3d at 31 (observing that no trustee has
unrestricted authority). Thus, we do not share Lyle’s concerns that abuses will ensue.
Moreover, this is consistent with the Settlor’s overall intent to give the sitting trustee
immense discretion. Accordingly, the beneficiaries cannot force a sitting trustee to
effectively replace herself by transferring all powers to a substitute.
¶ 26 Here, Lyle contends that he gave Di Cola notice of the “Agreement to Direct the Trustee
Joan Di Cola of the Lyle M. Spencer Jr. Trust to Appoint a Substitute Trustee.” The
agreement between Lyle and his adult children directed Di Cola to appoint ATG as substitute
trustee and “to have all titles, powers and discretions as allowed per the terms of the Will ***
[and] the 1984 Agreed order.” Thus, regardless of how the beneficiaries characterized their
agreement, they did not direct Di Cola to appoint a substitute trustee for a specific purpose
and for a limited duration; rather, they directed her to completely replace herself with a
substitute of their choosing. See George W. Howard III, Removal, in Estate Planning for
Illinois Attorneys: The Basics and Beyond § 8.43 (Ill. Inst. for Cont. Legal Educ. 2012)
(“[A]n unlimited right of removal can have the income beneficiaries shopping for a trustee
who will favor them.”); cf. Mucci, 281 Ill. App. 3d at 31 (the trust expressly provided the
beneficiary the right to “remove” any sitting trustee without stating a reason). While Lyle
complains that Di Cola did not appoint a substitute trustee to act in any capacity, the only
capacity for which Lyle requested a substitute trustee to be appointed was inappropriate.
Accordingly, Lyle attempted to exceed the powers granted him by article VIII(e).
¶ 27 B. Successor Trustee
¶ 28 We also reject Lyle’s contention that article VIII(a) authorizes ATG’s appointment as a
successor trustee. Specifically, he argues that a vacancy was not required to appoint a
successor trustee and that even if it was, a vacancy existed due to Harris’s resignation more
than 30 years ago. As to the first of these related contentions, Lyle primarily relies on the
trial court’s 1984 order stating that “[t]he court reforms the terms of clause (a) of Article VIII
*** to provide for the appointment of one or more successor trustees of any of the three
trusts *** by a majority in the number of the adult income beneficiaries of such trust.”
¶ 29 We find that the court’s order is ambiguous. Reviewing courts generally determine a
court’s intention through an order’s language, but where such language is ambiguous, it is
subject to interpretation. Twardowski v. Holiday Hospitality Franchising, Inc., 321 Ill. App.
3d 509, 512 (2001). The order should then be construed in the context of the record and the
circumstances that existed when the order was entered. Id. While Lyle contends this order
entirely replaced the prior article VIII(a), Di Cola has argued that the order did not replace
the entire provision so that the two must be read together. In reforming article VIII(a), the
court did not recite the new version of that provision verbatim. In addition, while the order
states that it reforms “the terms” of the provision, the order does not specify whether it
purports to reform all or some of those terms. The language of the order considered alone is
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susceptible to either meaning. Accordingly, we consider the relevant procedural
circumstances that led to its entry.
¶ 30 As originally drafted by the Settlor, Bowes was the individual trustee. Harris, or the
entity that would become its legal successor in the future, was appointed as corporate trustee.
While the Settlor created a mechanism to appoint an individual successor trustee, through
Sidley & Austin, the Settlor created no mechanism to appoint a corporate successor trustee.
The trial court subsequently granted Harris’s request to resign, finding that the will “does not
require the appointment of a successor corporate trustee” and ordering that “Murray II is the
sole trustee under the will.” Lyle does not ask this court to directly set aside and disregard
this order; rather, he urges us to adopt a meaning that is simply not supported by the record.
¶ 31 Contrary to Lyle’s disingenuous suggestion, this order clearly eliminated the corporate
trustee position held by Harris. The order did not qualify its determination by stating that a
successor corporate trustee was not required at this time. In addition, Lyle has failed to
articulate why the Settlor would have intended for a successor corporate trustee to be
appointed now when the Settlor had not intended that a successor corporate trustee be
appointed in 1982. The only difference is that in 1982, Lyle preferred the individual trustee’s
decisions over the corporate trustee’s decisions, whereas now, Lyle dislikes the individual
trustee’s decisions. See Gambino v. Boulevard Mortgage Corp., 398 Ill. App. 3d 21, 59
(2009) (finding that the doctrine of judicial estoppel is intended to protect the court system’s
integrity by preventing litigants from deliberately shifting their positions to suit the
immediate circumstances). This is not an attempt to impose a corporate check-and-balance,
as Lyle suggests; rather it is redolent of gamesmanship. Furthermore, Lyle argues the trial
court’s 1982 finding that a successor corporate trustee was not required, did not prohibit one
from being appointed. We find the more appropriate inquiry to be, however, whether the
trust, following that court’s order, authorized the appointment of a successor corporate
trustee. We find that it did not. See Andris v. Biehl, 27 Ill. App. 2d 393, 398-99 (1960)
(finding that the court could not appoint a co-trustee or successor trustee where not provided
for in the instrument creating the trust). The trial court clearly stated, without qualification,
that Murray was the sole trustee and the beneficiaries reaped the benefit of that order.
Following the 1982 order, no vacancy existed. See id. at 395-99 (where the beneficiary failed
to show grounds for removing the individual trustees, the trial court erred by appointing a
corporate trustee to serve alongside the existing ones, as no vacancy existed).
¶ 32 This brings us to the catalyst for the ambiguous 1984 order at issue. As stated, Sidley &
Austin had originally been charged with naming successor individual trustees under article
VIII(a) in the event that “no individual [was] acting as Trustee,” language which indisputably
contemplated a vacancy. See 760 ILCS 5/13 (West 2010) (contemplating that a vacancy
requiring the appointment of a successor trustee by a majority of the beneficiaries occurs
upon the last trustee’s “death, resignation, refusal or inability to act of any trustee”); George
W. Howard III, Successor Trustees and Cotrustees, in Estate Planning for Illinois Attorneys:
The Basics and Beyond § 8.32 (Ill. Inst. for Cont. Legal Educ. 2012) (discussing the
appointment of a successor trustee due to resignation, death or incapacity). No dispute arose
regarding the circumstances in which a successor would be appointed; rather, in 1984, Sidley
& Austin no longer wished to be charged with appointing an individual successor should
circumstances require. Murray suggested a modification that would allow the appointment of
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successor trustees in any of the individual trusts if a “majority in number of the adult income
beneficiaries” so desired.
¶ 33 In the context in which it arose, it is clear that the court’s 1984 order did not intend to
alter article VIII(a)’s proviso that appointing a successor would be appropriate when “no
individual [was] acting as Trustee,” nor did it intend to revive the corporate trustee position.
It was solely intended to satisfy what had previously been Sidley and Austin’s function:
appointing a successor individual trustee upon a vacancy. In addition, we are not persuaded
by Lyle’s suggestion that it would be inappropriate to apply the vacancy qualification to
Lyle’s attempt to appoint a corporate trustee because that language expressly applied to an
individual trustee. The reason for this is clear. As the court essentially found in 1982, the
Settlor did not contemplate the appointment of a successor corporate trustee under any
circumstances. Moreover, although Lyle argues that the order permitted the appointment of
“one or more successor trustees” (emphasis added), the order when read in its entirety
provided for the appointment “of one or more successor trustees of any of the three trusts”
(emphasis added). This merely reflects that multiple trusts may require multiple trustees.
Thus, the order did not authorize the appointment of a successor corporate trustee for Lyle’s
trust. Because Lyle failed to demonstrate the appointment of a substitute or successor trustee
was required, the trial court properly entered summary judgment in favor of Di Cola.
¶ 34 C. Attorney Fees
¶ 35 Finally, Lyle contends the trial court erred in awarding Di Cola attorney fees because she
failed to remain neutral in this action. Whether the court has authority to grant attorney fees
is a question of law we review de novo, whereas a court’s decision to award authorized fees
is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Grate v. Grzetich, 373 Ill. App. 3d 228, 231 (2007).
We find no error.
¶ 36 Generally, a trustee found to be faultless is entitled to reimbursement from the trust fund
for his expenses properly incurred in administering or defending the trust. Jewish Hospital of
St. Louis, Missouri v. Boatmen’s National Bank of Belleville, 261 Ill. App. 3d 750 (1994);
Webbe v. First National Bank & Trust Co. of Barrington, 139 Ill. App. 3d 806, 810 (1985).
Similarly, article VII(b) of the trust specifically authorized Di Cola to employee legal counsel
as deemed advisable and article VII(e) stated that Di Cola “shall be reimbursed out of the
trust for all expenses incurred in its management and conservation.” Lyle asserts, however,
that “a fiduciary’s attorney fees will not be awarded when the fiduciary takes a litigious
position favoring one interpretation of the trust, to the detriment of a beneficiary” (emphasis
added), relying on Northern Trust Co. v. Heuer, 202 Ill. App. 3d 1066, 1071 (1990).
¶ 37 First, we correct Lyle’s misstatement of law. In Northern Trust Co., the reviewing court
stated that where a trustee favors one beneficiary over another, the trustee is not entitled to
attorney fees and costs. Id. This is due to the trustee’s duty to deal impartially with all
beneficiaries. Id. Accordingly, Northern Trust Co. does not prohibit a trustee from
interpreting a trust in a manner that is unfavorable to one beneficiary’s wishes but, rather,
prohibits a trustee from favoring one beneficiary over another. Furthermore, while we
acknowledge this general rule, the specific trust before us authorized the trustee to make
unequal distributions and, thus, favor one beneficiary over another where she sees fit.
¶ 38 Before Lyle filed his complaint, Di Cola attempted to conserve the assets of the trust for
the benefit of all beneficiaries, including Lyle, rather than granting every disbursement
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requested. Lyle then commenced the present action naming Di Cola as a defendant and
raising allegations of misconduct that were never proven. See also Webbe, 139 Ill. App. 3d at
810 (where a beneficiary files a groundless complaint against the trustee, the trustee’s
attorney fees and expenses in defending the charge are to be paid out of the complainant’s
share of the trust estate and not charged against the general fund shared by the
cobeneficiaries, who did not join with the plaintiff in his action). Thus, Di Cola would have
had no need for counsel but for Lyle’s actions. Although the ultimate issue was whether ATG
could be appointed as a second trustee, Lyle has not explained how anything Di Cola has
done with respect to that issue favored one beneficiary over another. Moreover, we cannot
agree with Lyle that Di Cola defending her position as trustee, a position which was
authorized by the trust, was entirely “self-serving.” The trial court properly awarded fees
under these circumstances.
¶ 39 For the same reasons, we grant Di Cola’s request for an award of attorney fees incurred
in defending this appeal. As stated, the trust provided that Di Cola “shall be reimbursed out
of the trust for all expenses incurred in its management and conservation.” We see no reason
why the reimbursement to which Di Cola was entitled should not benefit her estate or the
attorneys to whom she may still owe payment with respect to these proceedings, depending
on their prior fee arrangement. In addition, while the answer to the petition for rehearing,
filed solely on Lyle’s behalf, conceded the amount of appellate attorney fees requested by
Di Cola, we have not been presented with a concession in that regard by all of the
beneficiaries, Accordingly, we remand this case for the trial court to determine not only the
appropriate amount of fees to be awarded, but the appropriate individual or entity to receive
that payment.
¶ 40 In conclusion, the trial court properly granted summary judgment in favor of Di Cola
where the terms of the trust did not grant the beneficiaries the authority to appoint a second
trustee to confiscate Di Cola’s duties and authority. The beneficiaries’ agreements purporting
to accomplish just that were ineffective. Moreover, the award of attorney fees was entirely
appropriate under these circumstances and we similarly order that the trial court enter an
appropriate award of attorney fees for pursuit of this appeal in accordance with our opinion.
¶ 41 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment and remand for further
proceedings consistent with our opinion.
¶ 42 Affirmed and remanded.
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