Illinois Official Reports
Appellate Court
In re Estate of O’Hare, 2015 IL App (2d) 140073
Appellate Court In re ESTATE OF SARAH O’HARE, a Disabled Person (Virginia
Caption Johnson, Appellant, v. Donald E. Pulchalski, Public Guardian of
Du Page County, as Successor Guardian of the Estate of Sarah
O’Hare, Appellee (Great American Insurance Company, Intervenor)).
District & No. Second District
Docket No. 2-14-0073
Filed June 11, 2015
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Du Page County, No. 07-P-911; the
Review Hon. Thomas C. Dudgeon, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Affirmed.
Counsel on Leon Bordelon III, of Chicago, and Terrence J. Benshoof, of
Appeal Bordelon, Benshoof & Armstead, P.C., of Glen Ellyn, for appellant.
Paul J. Bargiel, of Paul J. Bargiel, P.C., of Chicago, and Donald E.
Puchalski and Jennifer B. Martyn, both of the Office of the Public
Guardian, of Wheaton, for appellee.
Panel JUSTICE SPENCE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices McLaren and Hudson concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Virginia Johnson appeals from a judgment for $421,621.73 in favor of the public guardian
of Du Page County, as guardian of the estate of Virginia’s adult daughter, Sarah O’Hare.
Virginia had served as guardian of Sarah’s estate from November 9, 2007, until June 24, 2010.
The trial court found that Virginia failed to properly account for the use of estate funds and had
spent substantial sums for her own benefit and the benefit of members of her family other than
Sarah.1 For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgment.
¶2 Sarah was born in October 1989 and suffered significant injuries at birth that left her
profoundly disabled. A medical malpractice action resulted in a substantial settlement. When
the proceedings below were initiated, Sarah’s estate included an annuity that paid over $15,000
a month. Sarah lived at home where Virginia served as her primary caregiver. The other
members of the household were Sarah’s brother and her stepfather, Keith Johnson. At times, a
live-in caregiver resided with the family to assist Virginia.
¶3 Although Sarah evidently had ties to Illinois, when Virginia was appointed guardian the
family was residing in California, where Keith was serving as assistant pastor of an Episcopal
church. Keith’s vocation required the family to move frequently. Sometime prior to October
2008, the family moved to Florida. The trial court had not been advised of the move
beforehand. More significantly, Virginia and Keith purchased a house in Florida using funds
from Sarah’s estate for the down payment and monthly mortgage payments. They did so
without the trial court’s prior approval.
¶4 Virginia submitted her first annual report and accounting in October 2008. The trial court
found the accounting both (1) insufficiently detailed and substantiated and (2) rife with
questionable expenditures. Not only had Virginia used estate funds to purchase a family home
in Florida, she reported substantial payments related to vehicles and was drawing a large salary
from the estate without the trial court’s approval. The trial court ordered Virginia to submit a
full accounting and to seek prior approval for any expenditures. On November 26, 2008,
Virginia filed an emergency motion for the release of funds in accordance with a proposed
interim monthly budget that allotted over $1,000 for vehicle expenses (car payments,
insurance, and fuel), $3,875 for mortgage payments, $4,000 to Virginia as a caregiver’s salary,
and $1,500 for a relief caregiver. The motion requested entry of “an Order permitting the
withdrawal from the estate of the sums requested for the remainder of the month of November,
and release of funds in accordance with the interim budget submitted for the month of
December, and the first half of the month of January, proportionately.” The trial court granted
the motion.
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Upon taking office, Virginia executed a surety bond. The surety, the Great American Insurance
Company, was granted leave to intervene in the guardianship proceedings, but is not a party to this
appeal.
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¶5 Dissatisfied with Virginia’s attempts to properly account for the use of the estate’s funds,
on February 2, 2009, the trial court appointed the public guardian to review the accounting,
including receipts and other records that had been tendered to the court in connection with the
accounting. (Robert I. Mork was the public guardian of Du Page County at the time, but he
passed away during the pendency of the proceedings below.) In February 2010, Virginia
submitted her second annual report and accounting. Later that month, the public guardian filed
a preliminary report of his investigation in which he concluded that the estate was apparently
“providing not only for [Sarah’s] support, but for the support of the entire family.”
¶6 In April 2010, the trial court appointed attorney Carl Schroeder to represent Sarah. On June
4, 2010, Schroeder moved to remove Virginia as guardian of Sarah’s estate. On June 24, 2010,
the trial court granted the motion and appointed the public guardian to succeed Virginia. On
July 30, 2010, Virginia filed her final report and inventory of Sarah’s estate. Virginia’s final
report included spreadsheets showing expenditures of estate funds during the following three
periods: October 18, 2007, through September 15, 2008 (first accounting period), September
16, 2008, through September 15, 2009 (second accounting period), and September 16, 2009,
through June 30, 2010 (third accounting period). On August 19, 2010, the public guardian filed
his preliminary report and objection to Virginia’s final report. The public guardian again
concluded that Virginia appeared to be using estate funds not simply for Sarah’s benefit, but
for the support of the whole household.
¶7 The matter ultimately proceeded to an evidentiary hearing that took place from August 13,
2013, to August 15, 2013. In a lengthy memorandum opinion entered on September 20, 2013,
the trial court methodically reviewed the expenditures in various categories during the three
accounting periods, allowing sufficiently documented expenditures for Sarah’s individual
needs and Sarah’s prorated share of expenditures for general household purposes (e.g.,
mortgage payments, real-estate taxes, moving, groceries, and car payments not specifically
related to Sarah’s special needs). The court disallowed various attorney fees paid from the
estate without prior court approval. The court found that Virginia had failed to establish what
legal services had been provided and how the services inured to Sarah’s benefit. (The court
additionally disallowed various other expenditures that do not appear to be at issue in this
appeal.)
¶8 Section 11a-18(a) of the Probate Act of 1975 (755 ILCS 5/11a-18(a) (West 2012))
provides, in pertinent part, that the guardian of the estate of a disabled adult “shall have the
care, management and investment of the estate, shall manage the estate frugally and shall apply
the income and principal of the estate so far as necessary for the comfort and suitable support
and education of the ward, his minor and adult dependent children, and persons related by
blood or marriage who are dependent upon or entitled to support from him, or for any other
purpose which the court deems to be for the best interests of the ward.” In Nonnast v. Northern
Trust Co., 374 Ill. 248, 261 (1940), our supreme court observed that “[c]onservators,
executors, administrators and guardians serve in the same fiduciary capacity as trustees.” As a
trustee of the ward’s estate, a guardian “is bound to keep clear, distinct, and accurate accounts.
If he does not, all presumptions are against him, and all obscurities and doubts are to be taken
adversely to him.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. at 260-61. Prior court approval of
expenditures for the necessaries of the ward is not strictly necessary. In re Estate of Berger,
166 Ill. App. 3d 1045, 1056 (1987). However, because the court may disapprove of the
expenditures (id.), “[t]he guardian should usually petition the court for permission to make
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large expenditures; otherwise, the guardian performs the acts at his own risk” (id.). We may
reverse a disapproval only if the court abused its discretion. In re Estate of Byrd, 227 Ill. App.
3d 632, 640 (1992).
¶9 Virginia argues that the trial court “penalized” her for “an imperfect job of record
keeping.” Virginia insists that in managing Sarah’s estate her “primary goal” was to make
Sarah’s life “as comfortable and pleasurable as possible” and that the trial court’s judgment
was “inequitable.” The argument grossly mischaracterizes the record, which shows that,
although Sarah received excellent care, Virginia’s breach of her fiduciary duty to Sarah went
far beyond sloppy recordkeeping. Rather, Virginia appears to have almost completely
disregarded her obligation to preserve and manage the estate to provide for Sarah’s needs;
instead, Virginia drew upon estate funds for the support and comfort of the family as a whole.
Sarah was not legally responsible for support of the family. Notably, however, the trial court
disallowed expenditures for the family’s support not in their entirety, but only to the extent that
they exceeded Sarah’s fair share of the costs they defrayed. We find no basis upon which the
trial court’s decision, which appears to fully accord with the applicable principles of
guardianship law, can be considered in any way punitive. To the contrary, the trial court
properly exercised its equitable powers to provide a remedy for Virginia’s breach of her
fiduciary duty to Sarah. See Berger, 166 Ill. App. 3d at 1066-67 (“Courts may invoke equitable
powers to *** secure the protection of the ward.”).
¶ 10 More importantly, perhaps, Virginia offers no clear argument why any or all of the
amounts in question should have been allowed. Virginia points out the obvious–that caring for
Sarah at home was an exceptionally expensive undertaking. Clearly, however, that did not
relieve Virginia of the obligation of establishing which expenses were necessary and the extent
to which those expenses related to Sarah’s individual needs as opposed to the needs of the
family as a whole. The record clearly establishes that Virginia treated the estate not as Sarah’s
separate funds to be used for Sarah’s needs, but as a family asset available to pay for food,
housing, and travel.
¶ 11 Virginia also argues that there was sufficient evidence that certain legal fees were
necessary and benefited the estate. The argument is meritless. The “evidence” that Virginia
cites is a fee petition filed nearly a month after the trial court entered its memorandum opinion.
The record supports the trial court’s conclusion that the evidence presented at the August 2013
hearing was insufficient to establish that the particular legal fees at issue were for the benefit of
the estate.
¶ 12 We are likewise unimpressed by Virginia’s suggestion that expenditures of estate funds for
some purposes, such as mortgage payments, should have been allowed to the extent that they
conformed to the interim budget submitted with her November 26, 2008, motion for release of
funds. However, the motion merely requested authority to spend estate money for a defined
period. The trial court’s order granting the motion did not confer spending authority beyond
the period for which the authority was requested. Virginia argues that the trial court should
have ordered her, sua sponte, to submit a new budget. Although a trial court might be obliged
to act on its own initiative when a guardian has been derelict in his or her duties (see Lloyd v.
Kirkwood, 112 Ill. 329, 339 (1884) (“If the guardian *** fails to properly protect the interests
of the ward, it is the duty of the court, sua sponte, to compel him to do so whenever the fact in
any manner is brought to the notice of the court.”)), it does not follow that the trial court’s
failure to do so excuses the guardian’s dereliction.
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¶ 13 Virginia also contends that the trial court erred in barring her from taking the deposition of
Jennifer B. Martyn. Martyn had been an assistant public guardian prior to Mork’s death. On
June 1, 2012, she was appointed acting public guardian of Du Page County. On July 19, 2012,
Virginia served notice of Martyn’s discovery deposition. Martyn moved to quash the
deposition. On July 31, 2012, Donald E. Puchalski was appointed public guardian of Du Page
County. On August 13, 2012, after a hearing, the trial court granted the motion to quash.
Virginia argues that she was entitled to take Martyn’s deposition to question her about the basis
for the public guardian’s objections to the accountings. Virginia notes that the record reflects
some apparent confusion about what documentation Virginia provided to the public guardian’s
office in support of the first accounting. It is not the least bit clear, however, what information
Martyn could have had that was not already known to Virginia. There is nothing in the record
to suggest that the public guardian’s investigation consisted of anything beyond review of
Virginia’s accountings and the various documents supplied by Virginia.
¶ 14 As was observed in Leeson v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., 190 Ill. App.
3d 359, 365-66 (1989):
“The rules regarding discovery were enacted in order to enable attorneys to
effectively prepare, evaluate and present their cases. [Citation.] The objectives of
discovery are to enhance the truth-seeking process. [Citation.] Accordingly, great
latitude is allowed in the scope of discovery, and the concept of relevance for discovery
purposes is broader than the concept of relevance for purposes of the admission of
evidence at trial. [Citation.] Therefore, relevance for discovery purposes includes not
only what is admissible at trial, but also that which leads to what is admissible.
[Citation.] However, the right to discovery is limited to disclosure of matters that will
be relevant to the case at hand in order to protect against abuses and unfairness, and a
court should deny a discovery request where there is insufficient evidence that the
requested discovery is relevant or will lead to such evidence. [Citation.] The rules
governing discovery give great discretion to the trial court, and its exercise of
discretion will not be disturbed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion. [Citation.]”
(Emphasis added.)
Virginia has failed to offer any basis to think that taking Martyn’s deposition would uncover
any relevant evidence. We cannot say that the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to
permit Virginia to take her deposition.
¶ 15 For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is affirmed.
¶ 16 Affirmed.
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