Court Opinion

ID: 6328162
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-03-30 16:03:29.19546+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:22:36.766002
License: Public Domain

2022 IL App (1st) 210741
                                              No. 1-21-0741
                                                                       Third Division
                                                                      March 30, 2022
     ______________________________________________________________________________

                                         IN THE
                             APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
                                     FIRST DISTRICT
     ______________________________________________________________________________

                                                          )
     CHICAGO TRUST COMPANY, as Trustee of the             )
     Brierton Family Trust,                               )
                                                          )
             Plaintiff and Counterdefendant-Appellee,     )
                                                          )
     v.                                                   )
                                                          )
     ROBIN ANN BRIERTON, PATRICK LUKE                     ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
     BRIERTON, MARK JOSEPH BRIERTON, CYNTHIA )              of Cook County.
     BRIERTON DeLONG, JOHN THOMAS BRIERTON, )
     and THOMAS DAVID BRIERTON, as Beneficiaries          ) No. 18 CH 07512
     of the Brierton Family Trust,                        )
                                                          ) The Honorable
             Defendants                                   ) Raymond W. Mitchell,
                                                          ) Judge Presiding.
     (John Thomas Brierton and Thomas David Brierton,     )
     as Beneficiaries of the Brierton Family Trust,       )
             Defendants and Counterplaintiffs-Appellants; )
                                                          )
     Patrick Luke Brierton, Mark Joseph Brierton, and     )
     Cynthia Brierton DeLong, as Beneficiaries of the     )
     Brierton Family Trust,                               )
             Defendants-Appellees).                       )
     ______________________________________________________________________________

              PRESIDING JUSTICE GORDON delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
              Justices Ellis and Burke concurred in the judgment and opinion.

                                              OPINION

¶1        The instant appeal represents the second time the instant dispute has been before this court.

       In 2018, plaintiff Chicago Trust Company, the trustee of the Brierton Family Trust, filed a
     No. 1-21-0741

        complaint for declaratory judgment, seeking a declaration of the terms of the trust in order to

        distribute the trust’s assets. Defendants John Thomas Brierton and Thomas David Brierton,

        two of the beneficiaries under the trust, filed an answer and countercomplaint, alleging that

        plaintiff’s interpretation of the trust was incorrect, given the existence of an operating

        agreement governing a limited liability company, where the proceeds of the sale of a

        manufactured home community owned by the company served as the trust’s sole asset. The

        trial court granted judgment on plaintiff’s complaint, finding that plaintiff’s interpretation of

        the trust documents was correct. Defendants appealed, and we affirmed in a Rule 23(b) order.

        Chicago Trust Co. v. Brierton, 2020 IL App (1st) 191769-U; see Ill. S. Ct. R. 23(b) (eff. Apr.

        1, 2018).

¶2         After this court’s decision, in 2020, plaintiff filed a “Petition for Further Declaratory

        Relief” in the trial court, alleging that the other trust beneficiaries—defendants’ siblings—

        sought enforcement of an in terrorem clause contained in the trust agreement. The petition

        alleged that, under the clause, defendants were entitled to only $1 each from the trust estate

        because they had contested the terms of the trust in the prior litigation. After considering the

        parties’ arguments, the trial court found that the in terrorem clause should apply, effectively

        disinheriting defendants. Defendants appeal, and for the reasons that follow, we reverse.

¶3                                            BACKGROUND

¶4         As noted, the instant appeal represents the second time this dispute has been before this

        court. The details of the prior litigation are discussed in depth in our prior order. To the extent

        that they are relevant to the instant appeal, we set forth certain facts and analysis from our prior

        decision to provide context for the issue currently before us.

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     No. 1-21-0741

¶5           On June 15, 2018, plaintiff filed a complaint for declaratory judgment, seeking a

         declaration of the terms of the trust, which was created by John Brierton Sr. (John Sr.) and

         Jeanne Brierton 1 in 1996; both are deceased, with John Sr. having passed away in March 2016

         and Jeanne having passed away in March 2017. Plaintiff named as defendants the couple’s six

         children, who were all named as beneficiaries of the trust: Robin Ann Brierton, Patrick Luke

         Brierton, Mark Joseph Brierton, Cynthia Brierton DeLong, John Thomas Brierton, and

         Thomas David Brierton. The trust owned 100% of the membership interest in Picture Ranch,

         LLC (LLC), a limited liability company that owned a manufactured home community in

         Colorado. Under the terms of the trust agreement, plaintiff as trustee was directed to distribute

         the trust’s membership interest in the LLC to the six beneficiaries in individually identified

         percentages. After Jeanne’s death, plaintiff sold the manufactured home community that served

         as the LLC’s sole noncash asset, paid off the mortgage encumbering the property, then alleged

         that it was ready to distribute the membership interests as directed by the trust agreement.

¶6           However, defendants John and Thomas 2 took the position that the trust was prohibited from

         transferring the membership interests because the LLC was in the process of liquidation.

         Instead, defendants claimed that the membership interests must be distributed pursuant to the

         residuary clause of the trust, which provided for an equal distribution to all six beneficiaries.

         Consequently, plaintiff sought a declaration from the court with respect to the proper

         distribution of the membership interests to the beneficiaries.

             1
                Since many of the individuals involved with the case share the same last name, we refer to them
     by their first names for clarity.
              2
                As we did in our earlier decision, because John and Thomas were the only beneficiaries to take a
     position adverse to plaintiff’s position, we refer to them as “defendants,” while we refer to the
     beneficiaries collectively as either the “beneficiaries” or the “children.”
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¶7         Defendants filed an answer and a two-count countercomplaint. Count I of defendants’

        countercomplaint was for declaratory relief and sought a declaration concerning the

        distribution of the LLC’s assets, again based on the position that an LLC that was in the

        winding-up process could not issue new membership interests. Count II was for breach of

        contract and alleged that John Sr. and Jeanne, and the trust as their successor, breached the

        terms of the operating agreement by failing to make provisions to bequeath their membership

        interests in the LLC to their surviving children per stirpes, as required under the operating

        agreement.

¶8         On March 11, 2019, defendants filed a motion for summary judgment on both plaintiff’s

        complaint and on their countercomplaint. Plaintiff filed a response to defendants’ motion for

        summary judgment and a request for declaratory judgment on its complaint. On July 30, 2019,

        the trial court entered an order on the parties’ motions, finding that the terms of the trust

        agreement controlled and ordering plaintiff to distribute the proceeds from the sale of the

        LLC’s assets pursuant to the schedule of contingent beneficiaries set forth in the trust

        agreement.

¶9         Defendants appealed, and we affirmed the trial court’s judgment. Brierton, 2020 IL App

        (1st) 191769-U, ¶ 2. In framing the issue before us, we noted that “[t]he instant appeal arises

        from a declaratory judgment lawsuit concerning the interplay between two documents: a

        limited liability company’s operating agreement and a trust agreement.” Brierton, 2020 IL App

        (1st) 191769-U, ¶ 2. In our analysis, we found that (1) the terms of the trust agreement

        governed the distribution of membership interests, (2) plaintiff had the authority to issue

        membership interests to the beneficiaries even while the LLC was in the process of winding

        up its affairs, and (3) defendants had no breach of contract claim because John Sr. and Jeanne

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       No. 1-21-0741

          were no longer members of the LLC at the time of their deaths. Brierton, 2020 IL App (1st)

          191769-U, ¶ 48.

¶ 10         On August 27, 2020, plaintiff filed a “Petition for Further Declaratory Relief Pursuant to

          735 ILCS 5/2-701(c),” seeking further interpretation of the trust documents. Plaintiff alleged

          that it was prepared to make final distribution of the trust assets to the beneficiaries. However,

          plaintiff alleged that the trust agreement contained an in terrorem clause, which “Certain

          Beneficiaries” asserted was triggered by defendants’ actions in contesting the distribution of

          the trust’s membership interests in the LLC.

¶ 11         The clause at issue provided:

                 “It is the specific intention of the Trustors that none of the Trustors’ heirs-at-law or any

                 other persons shall receive anything from the Trustors’ probate estate or from this trust,

                 except to the extent specifically provided under the Trustors’ will or under the terms of

                 this Declaration of Trust. If any person, whether or not named as a contingent

                 beneficiary under this Declaration of Trust or any amendments hereto, shall in any

                 manner oppose, contest, or attack this Declaration of Trust or any amendments hereto,

                 or the distribution of the Trust estate thereunder, then and in that event any such person

                 or persons shall be given the sum of One Dollar ($1.00) each, in lieu of any other share

                 or interest in the trust estate.”

¶ 12         In response to plaintiff’s petition, defendants denied that they had triggered the in terrorem

          clause and further alleged that, even if they had, the clause was unenforceable as against public

          policy. The trial court ordered defendants to file a memorandum in support of their answer and

          permitted any party to file a reply if they wished to do so. In their memorandum, defendants

          noted that the litigation was not initiated by defendants; plaintiffs filed the original complaint

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       No. 1-21-0741

          and named defendants as parties. Defendants further claimed that the issues raised by them had

          “nothing whatsoever to do with the validity of the Trust or any of its amendments or

          provisions.” Instead, the issues concerned the rights that existed under the LLC’s operating

          agreement and the Trust agreement, with legitimate questions regarding the interplay between

          them. Defendants also claimed that enforcing the in terrorem clause under the circumstances

          of the instant case would violate public policy and would run counter to the narrow

          interpretation that such clauses were given under the law.

¶ 13          The remaining beneficiaries filed a reply, arguing that “this litigation is entirely

          [defendants’] doing” and that defendants sought to rewrite their parents’ entire estate plan. The

          remaining beneficiaries further claimed that defendants’ challenges constituted an attack on

          distributions under the trust, which was specifically prohibited under the in terrorem clause.

          Plaintiff also filed a reply, similarly claiming that defendants repeatedly challenged the

          distribution of the trust assets pursuant to the schedule of contingent beneficiaries contained in

          the trust agreement and noting that defendants had accused plaintiff of breaching its fiduciary

          duties in seeking to distribute the trust assets pursuant to the trust agreement. Plaintiff asserted

          that it was taking no position as to whether the in terrorem clause should be enforced but

          claimed that “on their face, in their tone, and in their effect on any Trust distributions, the

          actions and pleadings of [defendants] unquestionably challenged [plaintiff’s] distribution of

          assets as directed by the Trust instruments.”

¶ 14          On May 28, 2021, the trial court entered an order on plaintiff’s petition for further

          interpretation of the trust. The court found that the in terrorem clause was “definitive and clear

          in its terms” in prohibiting any attacks on the trust or trust distributions. The court noted that

          defendants characterized their objection to the trust distribution as having sought the court’s

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       No. 1-21-0741

          approval of their proposed trust construction but found that “what they have interposed in the

          underlying dispute was beyond a mere proposal of construction or expression of concern for

          the trustee’s potential breach of fiduciary duty.” The court found that defendants, in essence,

          contested the distribution of the LLC’s assets under the terms of the trust and instead sought

          to receive the proceeds as part of the residuary estate, which “unambiguously constitutes a

          contest of the distribution of trust assets under the in terrorem clause.” The court found that

          this result was consistent with the intent of the settlors and, therefore, the in terrorem clause

          should be applied against defendants.

¶ 15          Defendants timely filed a notice of appeal, and this appeal follows.

¶ 16                                                ANALYSIS

¶ 17          On appeal, we are asked to consider one question: does the in terrorem clause contained in

          the trust agreement apply to effectively disinherit defendants based on their conduct in the prior

          litigation? In construing a trust, we apply the same rules as in the construction of a will. Harris

          Trust & Savings Bank v. Donovan, 145 Ill. 2d 166, 172 (1991). “The first purpose in construing

          a trust is to discover the settlor’s intent from the trust as a whole, which the court will effectuate

          if it is not contrary to public policy.” Donovan, 145 Ill. 2d at 172. The intention of the settlor

          is to be ascertained by examining the entire trust and by giving the words employed their plain

          and ordinary meaning. Donovan, 145 Ill. 2d at 172. Where the language of the document is

          clear, the court should not modify the document or create new terms. Schroeder v. Sullivan,

          2018 IL App (1st) 163210, ¶ 27. However, where a term is ambiguous, we may rely upon rules

          of construction to ascertain the settlor’s intent. Schroeder, 2018 IL App (1st) 163210, ¶ 27.

          The construction of a trust presents an issue of law that we review de novo. Schroeder, 2018

          IL App (1st) 163210, ¶ 25; Spencer v. Di Cola, 2014 IL App (1st) 121585, ¶ 19. De novo

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       No. 1-21-0741

          consideration means we perform the same analysis that a trial judge would perform. XL

          Specialty Insurance Co. v. Performance Aircraft Leasing, Inc., 2019 IL App (1st) 181031,

          ¶ 62.

¶ 18         “Generally, conditions in a clause against contesting the will or attempting to set it aside

          are valid.” In re Estate of Wojtalewicz, 93 Ill. App. 3d 1061, 1063 (1981). However, even

          where they are valid, “conditions against contests are so disfavored by the courts that they are

          construed very strictly.” Wojtalewicz, 93 Ill. App. 3d at 1063. Courts are further guided by “the

          well-established rule that equity does not favor forfeitures, and in construing conditions, both

          precedent and subsequent, a reasonable construction must be given in favor of the beneficiary.”

          Clark v. Bentley, 398 Ill. 535, 540 (1947). In interpreting an in terrorem clause such as in the

          case at bar, our supreme court has cautioned against “a purely lexicographical approach,”

          instead noting that the proper interpretation of such a clause requires consideration of the

          particular circumstances present at the time of the purported challenge. Oglesby v. Springfield

          Marine Bank, 25 Ill. 2d 280, 288 (1962); In re Estate of Mank, 298 Ill. App. 3d 821, 826 (1998).

          Accordingly, “our analysis does not begin and end with the language of the clause and the

          conduct at issue. Rather, we must consider whether, under the particular facts and

          circumstances of this case, application of the clause to the conduct would be contrary to the

          law or to the public policy of Illinois.” Mank, 298 Ill. App. 3d at 826.

¶ 19         In the case at bar, the in terrorem clause contained in the trust agreement prohibits any

          person from “in any manner oppos[ing], contest[ing], or attack[ing] this Declaration of Trust

          or any amendments hereto, or the distribution of the Trust estate thereunder.” We must

          determine whether defendants’ conduct in the prior litigation falls within the language of this

          clause. We note that all of the beneficiaries—defendants on one side, and the remaining

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       No. 1-21-0741

          siblings on the other—ascribe particular motivations to each other’s conduct, both in the earlier

          proceedings and in the instant dispute regarding the in terrorem clause. However, we are

          concerned with what defendants did previously, not why they did it. Consequently, whether

          defendants were behaving altruistically for the good of the trust or were simply seeking to

          increase their share of the trust’s assets is largely irrelevant to the question of whether their

          conduct falls within the scope of the in terrorem clause. After closely examining that conduct

          and construing the in terrorem clause strictly, we find that it does not.

¶ 20         The parties appear to agree that defendants were not contesting the trust agreement itself;

          the dispute arises as to whether defendants were “oppos[ing], contest[ing], or attack[ing] ***

          the distribution of the Trust estate thereunder.” Accordingly, it is helpful to examine exactly

          what positions defendants took with respect to those distributions.

¶ 21         As noted, the trust agreement provided that, upon the death of both John Sr. and Jeanne,

          any trust assets were to be distributed according to a schedule of contingent beneficiaries.

¶ 22         Paragraph (1)(a) of section V provided that, upon assuming the administration of the trust

          after the surviving spouse’s death, “[t]he Successor Trustee shall forthwith, transfer all right,

          title and interest in and to the Trust Property unto the contingent beneficiaries, *** as specified

          by the attached Schedule of Contingent Beneficiaries.” Paragraph (1)(d) of the same section

          provided that, on the death of the surviving spouse, the successor trustee “shall divide the Trust

          estate, including undistributed income and any subsequent additions, into such proportion as

          indicated for such contingent beneficiaries as specified, in the Declaration of Trust, *** and as

          specified by the attached Schedule of Contingent Beneficiaries.” The schedule of contingent

          beneficiaries provided (1) that each of the children was to receive a membership interest in the

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       No. 1-21-0741

           LLC in individually identified percentages, ranging from 10% to 40%, and (2) that the residue

           of the trust estate would pass to the then-living children in equal shares.

¶ 23           According to plaintiff’s complaint, plaintiff sold the manufactured home community

           owned by the LLC and sought to distribute the LLC’s membership interests as instructed by

           the trust agreement. However, defendants took the position that, because the LLC had sold its

           assets, the trust was prohibited from transferring the membership interests. Therefore, the

           proceeds from the sale would fall within the trust agreement’s residuary clause. This led to the

           filing of plaintiff’s complaint in order to determine the proper distribution of the trust’s assets.

¶ 24           Defendants filed a countercomplaint, containing two counts. Count I was for declaratory

           relief and alleged that, under Colorado law, no new members could be admitted into the LLC

           since the LLC was in the process of liquidation. Count II was for breach of contract and alleged

           that, under the terms of the LLC’s operating agreement, John Sr. and Jeanne were required to

           make provisions to bequeath their membership interests in the LLC to their children per stirpes,

           which they failed to do. 3

¶ 25           Defendants later filed a motion for summary judgment, in which they again contended that

           Colorado law did not permit the admission of new members while an LLC was in the process

           of liquidation. Defendants also claimed that the LLC’s operating agreement, which contained

           a provision requiring John Sr. and Jeanne to bequeath their membership interests per stirpes,

           controlled over any inconsistent provisions in the trust agreement.

¶ 26           After the trial court found in plaintiff’s favor, defendants appealed to this court. Before this

           court, they framed the issues as (1) whether the operating agreement or trust agreement

               3
               As noted, in our prior decision, we found that defendants’ breach of contract claim failed,
       because neither John Sr. nor Jeanne remained members of the LLC at the time of their deaths.
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       No. 1-21-0741

          controlled with respect to the disposition of membership interests in the LLC, (2) whether the

          proceeds from the sale of the manufactured home community could be substituted for the

          trust’s specific bequests of membership interests, and (3) whether defendants could be

          considered third-party beneficiaries of the operating agreement.

¶ 27          Examining defendants’ pleadings and filings closely, we cannot find that defendants

          “oppos[ed], contest[ed], or attack[ed] *** the distribution of the Trust estate.” Defendants’

          position, as set forth in plaintiff’s complaint and in their countercomplaint, was that Colorado

          law prohibited the issuance of new membership interests in an LLC that was in the process of

          liquidation. Consequently, the proceeds from the sale of the LLC’s assets would necessarily

          fall within part II of the schedule of contingent beneficiaries—the residuary clause—and not

          part I. In other words, defendants’ position was not contesting the distributions under the

          schedule of contingent beneficiaries but was challenging which part of the schedule applied.

          This was not a frivolous position but an issue that required interpretation of Colorado statutes

          and case law in order to determine the permissible activity of the company. We cannot find

          that asking whether a proposed action violates the law constitutes an “attack” on the

          distribution of the trust so as to trigger the in terrorem clause.

¶ 28          We recognize that some of defendants’ later actions, such as claiming that the operating

          agreement controlled over the trust agreement, could be construed as such an “attack” on the

          distribution of the trust. However, these claims appeared for the first time in defendants’

          motion for summary judgment and in their arguments on appeal—they were not part of any of

          defendants’ pleadings, and there is no indication that they were a basis for defendants’ initial

          disagreement with plaintiff’s interpretation of the trust agreement. Given the “very strict[ ]”

          construction of in terrorem clauses (Wojtalewicz, 93 Ill. App. 3d at 1063), we decline to hold

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       No. 1-21-0741

          defendants’ later arguments against them and instead focus solely on the claims raised in their

          pleadings. Consequently, we cannot find that defendants’ conduct triggered the application of

          the in terrorem clause and must reverse the trial court’s order finding otherwise.

¶ 29                                            CONCLUSION

¶ 30         For the reasons set forth above, defendants’ conduct in the prior litigation did not constitute

          an attack on the distributions under the trust agreement, as their pleadings raised the issue of

          whether plaintiff’s proposed actions violated Colorado law. Consequently, the trust

          agreement’s in terrorem clause does not apply to effectively disinherit them.

¶ 31         Reversed.

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No. 1-21-0741

                                 No. 1-21-0741

Cite as:                 Chicago Trust Co. v. Brierton, 2022 IL App (1st) 210741

Decision Under Review:   Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 18-CH-
                         07512; the Hon. Raymond W. Mitchell, Judge, presiding.

Attorneys                Alan R. Dolinko, of Robinson Curley P.C., of Chicago, for
for                      appellants.
Appellant:

Attorneys                Caren A. Lederer and Katherine M. Oswald, of Golan Christie
for                      Taglia LLP, of Chicago, for appellee Chicago Trust Company.
Appellee:
                         Christopher M. Heintskill, of Levenfeld Pearlstein, LLC, of
                         Chicago, for other appellees.

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