Court Opinion

ID: 2786959
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-03-17 21:03:04.304167+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:28:41.414337
License: Public Domain

Illinois Official Reports

                                        Appellate Court

                  Bank of America, N.A. v. Judevine, 2015 IL App (1st) 140532

Appellate Court           BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., as Trustee of the Trust Under
Caption                   Agreement of Herbert W. Kochs, f/b/o Phyllis Anderson Picker dated
                          April 23, 1958, Petitioner, v. DONNA MARIE JUDEVINE,
                          THEODORE JUDEVINE, ROBERT SHAW, WILLIAM SHAW,
                          ALEXANDER KOCHS, NELSON SHAW, AND EMILY KOCHS,
                          Respondents-Appellees (William Eugene Judevine, Jr., Robert
                          Judevine, David Kochs, William Kochs, Stephen Kochs, James
                          Shaw II, Kathryn Shaw Kirrish, and Stephanie Kochs, Respondents-
                          Appellants).

District & No.            First District, First Division
                          Docket No. 1-14-0532

Filed                     January 26, 2015
Rehearing denied          February 23, 2015

Held                       In an action involving a dispute as to whether the remainder of the
(Note: This syllabus trust created for the settlor’s third wife should be distributed between 4
constitutes no part of the named grandchildren of the settlor or 15 of his grandchildren, the trial
opinion of the court but court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the 4 named
has been prepared by the grandchildren, since the trust was unambiguous to the extent that it
Reporter of Decisions directed the remainder of the trust to be paid to the settlor’s
for the convenience of grandchildren, it individually named his 4 grandchildren living at the
the reader.)               time, and in view of the fact that the trust became latently ambiguous
                           when additional grandchildren were subsequently born, the preference
                           for equal treatment of descendants of equal degree and for
                           construction of a will or trust that most closely follows the statutes of
                           descent favoring a class gift should be applied; furthermore, the denial
                           of the after-born grandchildren’s motion for reimbursement of their
                           attorney fees was reversed on the ground that the trial court abused its
                           discretion in finding the provision of the trust relied on was
                           unambiguous when it was, in fact, ambiguous, and therefore, the trial
                           court’s judgment was reversed and the cause was remanded for further
                           proceedings.
     Decision Under           Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 11-CH-32109; the
     Review                   Hon. Neil H. Cohen, Judge, presiding.

     Judgment                 Reversed and remanded.

     Counsel on               Levin Schreder & Carey Ltd., of Chicago (James R. Carey and David
     Appeal                   E. Lieberman, of counsel), for appellants.

                              Law Office of William P. O’Keefe, of Chicago (William P. O’Keefe,
                              of counsel), for appellees.

     Panel                    PRESIDING JUSTICE DELORT delivered the judgment of the court,
                              with opinion.
                              Justice Connors concurred in the judgment and opinion.
                              Justice Cunningham dissented in part and concurred in part, with
                              opinion.

                                               OPINION

¶1          This case concerns whether $1.6 million remaining in an irrevocable trust should be
       divided among 4 grandchildren, or among 15. Petitioner-appellee Bank of America, N.A.
       (Bank of America), as trustee under an April 23, 1958, trust agreement of Herbert W. Kochs
       for the benefit of Phyllis Anderson Picker (the Trust), filed a petition to construe the Trust.
       Respondents-appellants William Eugene Judevine, Jr., Robert Judevine, David Kochs,
       William Kochs, Stephen Kochs, James Shaw II, Kathryn Shaw Kirrish, and Stephanie Kochs
       (the “after-born grandchildren”) and respondents-appellees Donna Marie Judevine, Theodore
       Judevine, Robert Shaw, William Shaw, Alexander Kochs, Nelson Shaw, and Emily Kochs
       filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the issue of whether the Trust only provided
       for Donna Marie Judevine, Theodore Judevine, Robert Shaw, and William Shaw, (the
       “named grandchildren”) to be the remainder beneficiaries. The after-born grandchildren also
       sought, in a separate motion for partial summary judgment, reimbursement for their attorney
       fees from the assets of the Trust.
¶2          The trial court found that the Trust unambiguously provided only for the four then-living
       grandchildren (i.e., the named grandchildren) as remainder beneficiaries, and therefore the
       trial court granted the named grandchildren’s motion and denied the after-born
       grandchildren’s motion. The trial court also deferred ruling on the after-born grandchildren’s
       motion for partial summary judgment for attorney fees until Bank of America filed a brief
       addressing the petition.

                                                  -2-
¶3      On appeal, the after-born grandchildren contend the trial court erred in finding that the
     Trust unambiguously excluded them as remainder beneficiaries and in deferring a decision
     with respect to their motion for attorney fees. For the following reasons, we reverse the
     judgment of the trial court and remand this cause for further proceedings.

¶4                                         BACKGROUND
¶5       Herbert W. Kochs, the settlor of the Trust, met his third wife, Phyllis Anderson Picker, in
     1955 when he was 52 years old and the chairman and chief executive officer of the Diversey
     Company corporation, a chemical company founded by the settlor and traded on the
     American Stock Exchange until 1978, when it was acquired for about $55 million. Ms.
     Picker, by contrast, was 23 years old and working in New York as a showgirl. They married
     in Juarez, Mexico, in November 1955, about eight months after Herbert divorced his
     (second) wife of 19 years.
¶6       Herbert and Phyllis, however, divorced childless about two years later, in April 1958,
     following allegations that Herbert was physically violent toward Phyllis. Pursuant to the
     terms of the divorce settlement agreement with Phyllis, Herbert established the Trust to
     provide income to Phyllis for life (and then to Phyllis’s mother, if she survived Phyllis). The
     Trust, which was “irrevocable and not subject to amendment,” was drafted by his divorce
     attorney, rather than his long-time estate planning attorneys, and executed the day before the
     divorce decree was entered. The Trust was funded with 8,450 shares of Diversey Company
     common stock. Paragraph C of the Trust provided in pertinent part as follows:
                  “Upon the death of both Phyllis Anderson and her mother, ***, the Trust Estate
             *** shall be distributed in equal shares to those who are then living of the Settlor’s
             grandchildren, namely:
                  William Shaw and Robert Shaw ***, and
                  Susan Doniphan Hamilton and
                  Oliver Theodore Hamilton, IV, ***,
             provided, however, that if any of such grandchildren are then deceased leaving one or
             more descendants then living, the share which such deceased grandchild would have
             received if then living shall be distributed to his or her then living descendants,
             per stirpes.” (Emphasis added.)
     In addition, the Trust provided in paragraph D that, notwithstanding anything to the contrary
     in the Trust, any portion of the Trust that were to become distributable to a “grandchild” who
     had not reached the age of 35 would vest in that grandchild but would be retained by the
     trustee. The portion would then be distributed either to the grandchild upon reaching that age
     or “if [the grandchild] shall die before attaining such age then upon such death the Trustee
     shall distribute such portion of the estate of such deceased grandchild.”
¶7       When Herbert executed the Trust, his only grandchildren were the named grandchildren:
     William and Robert were Herbert’s grandchildren by his first wife, Elizabeth, whereas Susan
     and Oliver were the grandchildren of his second wife, Mildred.
¶8       Herbert died in 1993, and Phyllis lived another 18 years, dying in 2011. Phyllis’s mother
     was no longer living, so paragraph C of the Trust required the trustee to distribute the corpus

                                                -3-
       of the Trust. By 2011, however, Herbert had 11 additional grandchildren1 (the after-born
       grandchildren), 8 of whom were the grandchildren descended from his second wife, Mildred
       (in addition to the named grandchildren Susan and Oliver). The other three after-born
       grandchildren were descended from his fourth wife, Paula.
¶9          On September 13, 2011, Bank of America petitioned the trial court to construe the Trust,
       alleging that there was a latent ambiguity with respect to whether the settlor’s after-born (but
       unnamed) grandchildren were included as remainder beneficiaries, where the provision at
       issue named the settlor’s “grandchildren” but also specified the four then-living
       grandchildren. Bank of America noted that the residual amount of the trust approximated
       $1.6 million.
¶ 10        The named grandchildren and the after-born grandchildren filed cross-motions for
       summary judgment with respect to the issue of whether the Trust was ambiguous as to the
       remainder beneficiaries. The named grandchildren’s motion included two letters, dated
       August 1972 and August 1975, sent by settlor to “Continental Illinois National Bank and
       Trust Company of Chicago” (the then-trustee of the Trust and the Crispin trust). In these
       letters, the settlor states that the remaindermen of the Trust were his “four” oldest
       grandchildren: William and Robert Shaw, and Donna and Theodore Judevine.2
¶ 11        The after-born grandchildren’s motion included a copy of the May 20, 1955, trust that the
       settlor executed for the benefit of his second wife, Mildred (the Crispin Trust), whom he
       divorced on March 8, 1955. The Crispin Trust was funded with 30,000 shares of Diversey
       Corporation common stock (settlor’s company) and 1,000 shares of Victor Chemical Works
       common stock (settlor’s father’s company). Under the terms of this trust, Mildred received a
       lifetime income, and upon her death, the residuary estate would be paid to either the children
       of settlor and Mildred, or if any child predeceased Mildred and left descendants, the deceased
       child’s grandchildren per stirpes would benefit.
¶ 12        In addition, the after-born grandchildren’s motion included a copy of a 1968 decree
       issued by the trial court that construed the testamentary trusts established by settlor’s parents,
       August and Adelaide Kochs. The trial court’s 1968 decree recounted that Adelaide’s trust
       benefitted settlor’s children only from his first two wives and excluded those he had with his
       fourth wife, Paula, namely, Martin (who died childless) and Justin (whose children,
       Stephanie, Alexander, and Emily Kochs, were born after the distribution of the trust estate).
       Finally, the after-born grandchildren’s motion also had attached a sworn declaration by
       Denise Axtell, settlor’s executive assistant from 1970 until his death, who stated that settlor
       always treated his children and grandchildren “alike,” and had indicated that he wanted to
       “ ‘make things right’ ” for Martin and Justin because of their exclusion from settlor’s
       parents’ trusts.
¶ 13        In a written order, the trial court granted the named grandchildren’s motion and denied
       the after-born grandchildren’s motion. The trial court specifically found that there was no

           1
              Another grandchild had already died, but the record does not indicate whether she produced any
       then-living descendants.
            2
              The named grandchildren also included an affidavit from William Shaw, purportedly attesting
       that settlor’s will gave a disproportionate share of the estate to his two youngest sons whom settlor
       had with his fourth wife. The trial court, however, granted the after-born grandchildren’s motion to
       strike this affidavit and did not consider it.

                                                     -4-
       latent ambiguity because the after-born grandchildren failed to identify any extrinsic
       evidence “from the time the Trust *** was executed” that created the latent ambiguity. The
       trial court further found that, under Illinois case law, where a trust provides for a gift to
       specific individuals and also describes them as a class (and with nothing otherwise to show
       intent), the gift is one to individuals and the class description is mere identification. The trial
       court thus determined that only the named grandchildren were the proper remainder
       beneficiaries under the Trust.
¶ 14        The trial court “entered and continued” the after-born grandchildren’s motion for partial
       summary judgment on the issue of attorney fees so that Bank of America, the trustee, would
       have an opportunity to file a brief (to which the after-born and named grandchildren would
       be able to respond).
¶ 15        This appeal followed.

¶ 16                                            ANALYSIS
¶ 17                            The Remainder Beneficiaries Under the Trust
¶ 18       The after-born grandchildren contend that the trial court erred in denying their motion for
       summary judgment and granting the named grandchildren’s motion. Specifically, they argue
       that the trial court erroneously found that paragraph C of the Trust was unambiguous and that
       it only provided for the named grandchildren to be remainder beneficiaries because the class
       description in paragraph C was merely a descriptor. The after-born grandchildren argue that
       there is a latent ambiguity in paragraph C of the Trust: upon the death of Phyllis and her
       mother, the remaining Trust estate was to be distributed to “settlor’s grandchildren,” but the
       provision then individually names all four of settlor’s grandchildren who were in existence at
       the time the Trust was executed. Therefore, we must first determine whether the provision at
       issue in paragraph C is a latent ambiguity. If so, we then need to determine whether the
       settlor intended to benefit either the entire class of grandchildren or only the named
       grandchildren. The parties do not cite any controlling Illinois authority, and our research has
       revealed none.
¶ 19       Since the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, they conceded that no
       material questions of fact exist and that only a question of law is involved that the court may
       decide based on the record. Pielet v. Pielet, 2012 IL 112064, ¶ 28. The mere filing of
       cross-motions for summary judgment, however, does not establish that there is no issue of
       material fact, nor is a trial court obligated to render summary judgment for either party. Id.
       We review the trial court’s decision as to cross-motions for summary judgment de novo. Id.
       ¶ 30. In addition, this case concerns the construction of a trust, which is a question of law we
       also review de novo. Spencer v. Di Cola, 2014 IL App (1st) 121585, ¶ 19.
¶ 20       It is well established that the same rules of construction used in regard to wills are
       applicable to the construction of trust agreements. Storkan v. Ziska, 406 Ill. 259, 263 (1950).
       A trust is to be interpreted for the purpose of determining the settlor’s intention, which is
       “paramount.” Id. While a settlor or testator is presumed to know the existing law concerning
       the disposition of his property at the time he creates the dispositive instrument (Sennot v.
       Collet-Oser, 36 Ill. App. 3d 928, 933 (1976)), it is important to note that “technical rules of
       construction of trusts and wills are not present in the testator’s mind at the time he is making
       his bequest in a will or trust” (Storkan, 406 Ill. at 263). As such, the intention is to be

                                                    -5-
       gathered from the whole instrument, and if the intention may be gathered from its language
       without reference to rules of construction, there is no occasion to use the latter. Id.
¶ 21        Where, however, there is “an honest difference of opinion,” a term in a trust is typically
       considered ambiguous. Orme v. Northern Trust Co., 25 Ill. 2d 151, 165 (1962). A latent
       ambiguity “does not readily appear in the language of a document, but instead arises from a
       collateral matter when the document’s terms are applied or executed.” Black’s Law
       Dictionary 93 (9th ed. 2009). Where a term is found to be ambiguous, a court may rely upon
       rules of construction to ascertain the donor’s intent. Harris Trust & Savings Bank v. Beach,
       118 Ill. 2d 1, 4 (1987). One of these rules provides that equal treatment of descendants of
       equal degree is preferred, rather than “an excessive share being given to members of one
       group to the partial or total exclusion of members of another, equally meritorious group.”
       Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago v. Llewellyn, 67 Ill. App. 2d 171,
       189 (1966) (citing Jackman v. Kasper, 393 Ill. 496, 511 (1946)). In addition, our supreme
       court generally prefers the construction of a will or trust that most closely follows the statutes
       of descent. Id. (citing Cahill v. Cahill, 402 Ill. 416 (1949), and Condee v. Trout, 379 Ill. 89
       (1942)). Rules of construction, however, are “court created presumptions of what the
       ordinary settlor or testator would have intended the ambiguous terms to mean,” and they may
       not be allowed to defeat what the ordinary settlor would have intended. Beach, 118 Ill. 2d at
       4. Thus, if a rule of construction subverts these intentions, it must be discarded. Id.
¶ 22        With respect to class gifts, although the general rule is that a settlor’s gift to persons
       named is a gift to them individually and not as a class, “ ‘the mere fact that he mentions by
       name the individuals who make up the class is not conclusive.’ ” Strauss v. Strauss, 363 Ill.
       442, 451 (1936) (quoting Stedman v. Priest, 103 Mass. 293, 296 (1869)). As our supreme
       court held long ago, “ ‘The decisive inquiry is whether or not the testator, in making the
       particular gift in question, did so with group-mindedness, whether in other words, he was
       looking to the body of persons in question as a whole or unit rather than to the individual
       members of the group as individuals; if the former, they take as a class.’ ” Krog v. Hafka, 413
       Ill. 290, 299 (1952) (quoting 57 Am. Jur. Wills § 1259, at 831 (1948)). The fact that there is a
       natural class among the beneficiaries “is ofttimes held to be indicative of a class gift.” Id.
       Other factors to be considered in determining whether the settlor intended a class gift are: the
       relation of the testator to the objects of his bounty; the subject matter of the gift; and the skill
       of the draftsman who drew the will. Id. at 299-300. “It is difficult to be more definite than to
       say that a gift is a class gift if, from the entire will and the circumstances surrounding its
       making, one may conclude that the testator intended to treat the takers of the gift as a group
       and not as individuals–that his interest in them was a ‘collective’ interest.” Homer F. Carey
       & Daniel M. Schuyler, Illinois Law of Future Interests 340 (1941).
¶ 23        In this case, the trial court erred in finding that the provision at issue in paragraph C was
       unambiguous. To the contrary, although the provision directed that the remainder of the
       estate was to be distributed to the settlor’s grandchildren, it also individually named his four
       grandchildren living at that time. Prior to the after-born grandchildren’s birth, the terms of
       paragraph C were unambiguous: they simply directed the remainder of the Trust to be paid to
       his grandchildren, who were all individually named. It was when the settlor’s additional
       grandchildren were subsequently born that a latent ambiguity arose. In this respect, the trial
       court further erred in finding (in a footnote) that the after-born grandchildren were alleging a
       patent ambiguity. A patent ambiguity “clearly appears on the face of the document.” Black’s

                                                    -6-
       Law Dictionary 88 (8th ed. 2004). Here, the language of paragraph C was not ambiguous on
       its face–indeed, had the settlor not had any additional grandchildren, paragraph C would not
       have been ambiguous at all. Instead, the ambiguity arose from a collateral matter (i.e., the
       subsequent birth of additional grandchildren) when Bank of America tried to apply the terms
       of paragraph C. See Black’s Law Dictionary 88 (8th ed. 2004). On these facts, and in light of
       Illinois’s strong preference that heirs of equal degree be treated equally, there is at least “an
       honest difference of opinion” with respect to whether the settler intended the remainder of
       the Trust to be distributed to either the named grandchildren only or the named and
       after-born grandchildren (Orme, 25 Ill. 2d at 165). Consequently, paragraph C is latently
       ambiguous, and we must resort to rules of construction to ascertain the settlor’s intent.
¶ 24        The preferences for equal treatment of descendants of equal degree and for the
       construction of a will or trust that most closely follows the statutes of descent (Llewellyn, 67
       Ill. App. 2d at 189) seem to favor construction of paragraph C as providing a class gift. The
       opposing parties are both grandchildren by blood of the settlor, and the statute governing
       intestate descent would provide for a distribution to all grandchildren, not solely the named
       grandchildren. 755 ILCS 5/2-1(b) (West 2012) (“If there is no surviving spouse but a
       descendant of the decedent: the entire estate to the decedent’s descendants per stirpes.”). In
       addition, turning to the other relevant factors, since the claimed beneficiaries are all the
       settlor’s grandchildren, there is a natural class among them, which is “indicative of a class
       gift.” Krog, 413 Ill. at 299. The other remaining relevant factors (see id. at 299-300) also
       appear to indicate that the settlor intended a class gift. The settlor’s relation to all of his
       grandchildren, “the objects of his bounty,” was of the same degree of kinship and there is
       nothing in the record to indicate that settlor intended to cut off any grandchild who had the
       misfortune of being born after the date the Trust was executed. We further note that the
       subject matter of the gift concerned the settlor’s entire remaining Trust estate and not some
       trivial token of appreciation or a gift that would be of particular relevance to only the four
       named grandchildren. Finally, the draftsman here was the settlor’s divorce attorney rather
       than his long-standing estate planning law firm, indicating a likely oversight in failing to
       include the possibility of the after-born grandchildren. Viewed in this light, the rules of
       construction appear to favor a class gift.
¶ 25        As noted above, the parties do not cite controlling authority, and our independent
       research has found no Illinois case on this precise point. We find support, however, in In re
       Estate of Clarke, 331 A.2d 408 (Pa. 1975). There, the settlor created a single trust “ ‘so long
       as any of my grandchildren, EVAN, MARGOT, CLAUDINE and JEAN, shall be under the
       age of twenty-five (25) years,’ ” and when “none of said grandchildren” were under 25, the
       trust would be divided among equal shares among the then-living grandchildren (or the issue
       of a deceased grandchild). Id. at 409. The settlor died in May 1970, but two additional
       grandchildren were born after her death. Id. at 410. The trial court found that the two
       posthumous grandchildren were entitled to a share in the trust estate, and the Pennsylvania
       Supreme Court affirmed. Id. The court noted that the indication of group-mindedness is
       sufficient if the group is capable of either future increase or decrease. Id. at 411. On this
       point, the court observed that the settlor’s trust provided that none of the grandchildren
       would receive a distribution unless there was no grandchild under the age of 25, and then if
       any grandchild died before the age of 25 and had no issue who survived until the time of
       distribution, that grandchild “would be removed from the group of takers,” i.e., that share

                                                   -7-
       would be divided among the surviving grandchildren (or issue of a predeceased grandchild).
       Id. at 412. The court concluded that it was clear that the settlor intended to benefit “a group
       capable of at least downward fluctuation,” and that the requisite group-mindedness to
       indicate an intention to make a class gift was shown. Id.
¶ 26        Here, as in Estate of Clarke, the Trust both referred to settlor’s “grandchildren” as a
       group and also individually named all of the grandchildren alive at the time the Trust was
       executed, but it did not make any specific provision to either include or exclude after-born
       grandchildren. Furthermore, the Trust in this case postponed possession on the part of any
       grandchild who did not reach the age of 35, at which point that grandchild’s share would be
       distributed to that grandchild. If the grandchild did not survive to the age of 35, the trustee
       was to “distribute such portion of the estate” of the deceased grandchild. Viewing the Trust
       as a whole, the settlor here also apparently intended to benefit a group capable of at least
       downward fluctuation, which normally shows the group-mindedness indicative of a class
       gift. Accord In re Trust Under the Last Will & Testament of Hennes, 240 So. 2d 859, 860-61
       (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1970); Cain v. Dunn, 241 So. 2d 650, 652-53 (Miss. 1970). We agree
       with the holding in Estate of Clarke and find it to be persuasive authority, as well.
¶ 27        We recognize that there is nothing in the record that clearly indicates a rationale for the
       settlor to favor only four of his grandchildren to the exclusion of the others, especially given
       that two of the after-born grandchildren shared the same mother and grandmother as two of
       the named grandchildren. Nonetheless, there is some evidence in the record that may indicate
       that the settlor intended only the named grandchildren to be entitled to the remainder of the
       Trust estate under paragraph C. Namely, the settlor’s August 1972 and August 1975 letters to
       the then-trustee of the Trust and the Crispin trust seem to indicate at least an
       acknowledgement that only the named grandchildren were the Trust’s remaindermen
       (although the letters are silent regarding whether the settlor intended that disposition). In
       addition, the trial court’s 1968 decree recounted that settlor’s mother’s trust benefitted
       settlor’s children only from his first two wives and not those he had with his fourth wife. This
       could thus indicate that the Trust was part of a complicated estate plan in which the
       grandchildren were to receive similar shares from various trusts and wills, and which is
       implied by settlor’s purported statement to his long-time administrative assistant to “make
       things right” for the children of his fourth wife, who were excluded from at least settlor’s
       parents’ trusts.
¶ 28        In sum, we hold that there is an unresolved issue of fact concerning the settlor’s intent as
       to paragraph C of the Trust. Consequently, the trial court erred in granting the named
       grandchildren’s motion for summary judgment, and we therefore reverse the trial court’s
       judgment and remand this case for further proceedings.
¶ 29        The named grandchildren, nonetheless, cite numerous cases in support of their claim that
       the Trust was not ambiguous. Those cases, however, are factually distinguishable because the
       omitted beneficiaries were already alive when the documents were executed. See Continental
       Illinois National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago v. Clancy, 18 Ill. 2d 124, 127 (1959) (“The
       settlor knew [the omitted beneficiary] well for about a year and a half prior to the execution
       of the 1928 trust.”); Young v. Whisler, 19 Ill. 2d 501, 504-05 (1960); In re Estate of Hurst,
       329 Ill. App. 3d 326, 339 (2002) (“When Chuck drafted his will to indicate he currently had
       two children, Alicia and Julie, his further references to ‘my children’ were to include them
       and to exclude Lori and Todd, who were alive at the time the will was drafted.”); Leibrandt

                                                   -8-
       v. Adler, 30 Ill. App. 2d 257, 259-60 (1961). Here, the after-born grandchildren had not been
       born at the time the Trust was executed, and there is nothing to indicate that the class
       designation was merely a descriptor, as in the cases relied upon by the named grandchildren.
       Therefore, those cases are factually distinguishable and unavailing.
¶ 30       The named grandchildren also mistakenly rely upon Sennot. There, the settlor established
       trusts for his daughters and his son, Fowler. Sennot, 36 Ill. App. 3d at 929. Fowler died
       childless, and Fowler’s trust provided that, if he died childless, his estate would be
       distributed to the settlor’s surviving issue. Id. The issue on appeal concerned whether the
       Fowler’s adopted nieces and nephews were considered the settlor’s surviving issue. Id. This
       court held they did not because at the time the settlor’s trust was executed, adopted children
       were not the “lawful issue” of the settlor of a trust. Id. at 932. Here, it is undisputed that the
       after-born grandchildren are the settlor’s surviving issue.
¶ 31       In addition, although the Sennot court did not state whether the trust at issue was
       irrevocable, a close reading of the decision strongly suggests it was. The adoptees noted that
       the settlor’s 1941 will disproportionately favored them and argued that this demonstrated the
       settlor’s intent to include them in his trust. Id. This court, however, rejected that argument,
       stating that “it could be argued that the will provision evidences the fact that [the settlor]
       recognized that his later adopted grandchildren were not covered by his earlier trust, and that
       he intended to provide for the adoptees through his will and not through his trusts.”
       (Emphasis added.) Id. By contrast, the Trust in this case was irrevocable, meaning that the
       settlor did not have the option of providing for the after-born grandchildren either in his will
       or the Trust. The named grandchildren’s reliance upon Sennot is therefore unavailing.

¶ 32                  The Motion for Partial Summary Judgment as to Attorney Fees
¶ 33        The after-born grandchildren also challenge the trial court’s refusal to rule on their
       motion for partial summary judgment that sought reimbursement for their attorney fees. The
       trial court stated that it would not decide the matter in the absence of a brief on this issue
       from the trustee, Bank of America. Although we are remanding this case for further
       proceedings based upon the ambiguity in the Trust, we elect to address this issue also
       because it is likely to recur on remand and it will provide guidance to the lower court and
       thereby expedite the ultimate termination of the litigation. See Pielet, 2012 IL 112064, ¶ 56.
¶ 34        It is axiomatic that the costs of litigation to construe a trust in which there are adverse
       claims are generally paid by the trust estate. See Ingraham v. Ingraham, 169 Ill. 432, 471
       (1897) (observing the general rule that, “when the testator has expressed his intention so
       ambiguously as to create a difficulty, which makes it necessary to go into a court of chancery
       to get a construction of the will, *** the costs of litigation must be borne by the estate”). The
       key consideration in determining the existence of an ambiguity is whether there is “an honest
       difference of opinion.” Orme, 25 Ill. 2d at 165. If there is, these legal fees are allowed to a
       party “even though the construction adopted is adverse to his claim.” Id. (citing Ingraham,
       169 Ill. at 471). “The party appealing the construction placed upon a will by the lower court,
       however, does so at his own risk and cost.” Landmark Trust Co. v. Aitken, 224 Ill. App. 3d
       843, 858 (1992) (citing Glaser v. Chicago Title & Trust Co., 401 Ill. 387, 393 (1948)). The
       trial court has discretion in determining the amount of attorney fees and will be reversed only
       if its discretion is abused. Spencer, 2014 IL App (1st) 121585, ¶ 35; Ingraham, 169 Ill. at
       471-72.

                                                   -9-
¶ 35       Here, the trial court abused its discretion in failing to award reasonable attorney fees to
       the after-born grandchildren. The trial court found that paragraph C of the Trust was
       unambiguous and that it solely provided that the named grandchildren were the remainder
       beneficiaries. As we have already held, however, paragraph C was ambiguous because it
       provided for a class of beneficiaries to take as remaindermen (the settlor’s “grandchildren”)
       and also named all of those class members individually without any instruction (either to
       include or exclude) as to the plainly foreseeable event that the settlor would subsequently
       have additional grandchildren. Under well-established controlling precedent, the after-born
       grandchildren were entitled to an allowance for their reasonable attorney fees.
¶ 36       The named grandchildren insist that paragraph C of the Trust is unambiguous, and thus
       no attorney fees are allowable since there can be no difference of opinion. We have already
       rejected that argument, so it does not provide a premise upon which to deny attorney fees.

¶ 37                                         CONCLUSION
¶ 38        The trial court erred in granting the named grandchildren’s motion for summary
       judgment with respect to the construction of paragraph C of the Trust. In addition, the trial
       court improperly denied the after-born grandchildren’s motion for partial summary judgment
       with respect to reimbursement for attorney fees. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the
       trial court and remand this cause for further proceedings.

¶ 39      Reversed and remanded.

¶ 40       JUSTICE CUNNINGHAM, dissenting in part and concurring in part.
¶ 41       There is nothing ambiguous about the trust language by which the settlor identified the
       four individual grandchildren whom he wished to take the remainder of the trust. The fact
       that he specifically named them further supports the interpretation of lack of ambiguity. He
       knew exactly whom he wished to have the remainder of the trust; and that is the four
       grandchildren whom he identified by name. It does not require great imagination to realize
       that the settlor could easily have said “any” of his grandchildren then living, without naming
       them. The fact that he specifically named the four grandchildren shows his intent to pass the
       remainder to any member of that group of four named grandchildren who were living when
       the remainder of the trust was to be distributed. The trial court gave the language its plain
       meaning and reached the conclusion that, in my view, is supported by case law, common
       sense, and the trust document.
¶ 42       An ambiguity does not exist simply because it is advantageous to the litigants to declare a
       document ambiguous. In this case, without an ambiguity, the trial court’s ruling is clearly
       correct. In that scenario, the after-born grandchildren take nothing. I, like the trial court,
       would decline to find an ambiguity where none exists.
¶ 43       Since the settlor could easily have said “my grandchildren” without specifically naming
       them, in such a scenario the after-born grandchildren would clearly be remaindermen and
       entitled to share in the distribution. However, that is not what he did. On the contrary he
       specifically named the four grandchildren whom he wished to benefit from the money
       remaining in the trust. That was done for a reason. The most obvious reason is that he wanted
       those specific, four individuals, to be the persons to whom the remainder of the trust would

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       be distributed. This is the most direct and clear interpretation of the document. It is not
       ambiguous in either a latent or patent sense. This was a family which was sophisticated in the
       use of trusts to benefit their offspring. As such, it is reasonable to conclude that the settlor
       was well aware of exactly how he wished the remainder of the trust to be distributed. There is
       nothing in this record to suggest that the settlor had a sudden burst of generosity toward
       yet-unborn grandchildren. On the contrary, everything points to a carefully crafted trust for
       the specific purpose for which it was created and if there was any money left over, it would
       be distributed to those named and only them.
¶ 44        The named grandchildren point out that the unsworn statement of Denise Axtell may be
       the underpinning of the after-born grandchildren’s argument regarding the supposed latent
       ambiguity. Axtell’s statement is interpreted by the after-born grandchildren to mean that the
       settlor wanted to include all of his grandchildren, including those who were yet unborn and
       unknown to him, in the distribution of his bounty. Of course, this includes themselves.
       However, the same facts relied upon by them to support their argument can also support the
       finding that the settlor was well aware of the fact that some, but not all, of the grandchildren
       were provided for in various family trusts. If that is so, it can hardly be said that, through
       happenstance or oversight, the settlor omitted the after-born grandchildren from the
       distribution list of the trust, when all along he meant to include them. Specifically, Axtell’s
       statement could be interpreted to establish that the settlor was well aware of the fact that not
       all eligible grandchildren were included in family trusts. Accordingly, the settlor found other
       means to make up for the exclusion. The settlor, being sophisticated in the use of trusts and
       giving the document its plain meaning, knew that once he established this particular trust
       with its restrictive language regarding revision, revocation, or amendment of any kind, he
       could never change its terms. It is worth repeating that there was a family history of
       providing for some, but not all, grandchildren via trust distributions. This further supports a
       lack of ambiguity. The settlor’s parents did it as did the settlor on at least two other
       occasions. This would support an inference that because he knew that he could never change
       the trust document he was very specific regarding the grandchildren who were to be the
       remaindermen upon termination of the trust.
¶ 45        While the majority posits that since all the parties claiming to be remaindermen are the
       settlor’s grandchildren, therefore this suggests that he intended to make “a class gift,” this
       overlooks the fact that the only grandchildren that he had at the time of the creation of the
       trust were those whom he identified by name. He could easily have omitted their names and
       just designated his “grandchildren” as the remaindermen, but he chose not to do so. There are
       no cases from Illinois or elsewhere on point with the facts of this case. Accordingly, we
       would be wise to tread lightly and give the trust document its plain and obvious meaning,
       rather than search for a latent ambiguity as the after-born grandchildren have convinced the
       majority to do.
¶ 46        If we attempt to decode what the settlor intended regarding any grandchildren born after
       the trust was established, we must also accept the reasonable inferences that flow from the
       facts. For example, it is a reasonable interpretation to assume that if he knew that he would
       have additional grandchildren, yet specifically named the four grandchildren, it was because
       he wanted those four to be the beneficiaries. If on the other hand he had no way of knowing
       if and when he would have additional grandchildren, it can reasonably be inferred that he
       specifically chose to leave the remainder of the trust to the four who were then a part of his

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       life, rather than speculate about future additions to the group that may or may not ever occur.
       It is a reasonable inference to conclude that that is why he identified them by name rather
       than just saying “my grandchildren.” The settlor specifically said that the remainder of the
       trust should be distributed to those of his four grandchildren who are then living when the
       trust terminates.
                     “[N]amely: William Shaw and Robert Shaw of Newtown, Iowa, and Susan
                Doniphan Hamilton and Oliver Theodore Hamilton, IV, of 70 E. Scott St., Chicago
                Illinois, provided, however, that if any of such grandchildren are then deceased
                leaving one or more descendants then living, the share which such deceased
                grandchild would have received if then living shall be distributed to this or her then
                living descendants, per stirpes.” (Emphasis added.)
       It is clear that the settlor knew that the four grandchildren may themselves have children and
       the trust provided for the four grandchildren’s children to get the distribution in the event of
       the death of the named grandchild. All of this shows a level of sophistication and
       understanding of the uncertainty of the future with respect to who would survive to receive
       the distribution. The settlor chose to keep it simple by naming the intended beneficiaries to
       the exclusion of all others.
¶ 47        The term “those who are then living” refers to any of the four identified grandchildren
       who are alive at the time of distribution. It does not include or contemplate any yet unborn
       grandchildren. Unlike the majority, I do not find that In re Estate of Clarke, a Pennsylvania
       case, supports a conclusion that the language of the trust is ambiguous, nor does it support
       the further leap that the settlor intended a class gift. In the Clarke case, the settlor’s
       instructions were more extensive and suggested the recognition that the group would likely
       expand. Nothing in this case suggests that the settlor considered expansion of the group
       beyond the four named individuals. Further, unless the settlor was clairvoyant, I disagree
       with the majority’s statement that it was a “plainly foreseeable event that the settlor would
       *** have additional grandchildren.” Supra ¶ 35. Simply stating something does not establish
       its truth. No one can say that the birth of children to a specific, defined group is plainly
       foreseeable. It is not.
¶ 48        The finding of a latent ambiguity is separate from the finding of what the settlor intended.
       Upon remand to the trial court, the determination regarding the intent of the settlor in light of
       the majority’s holding of ambiguity will be within the fact-finding province of the trial court.
       Since the majority declares the trust to be latently ambiguous, and if that is so, then the trial
       court is the proper venue to determine what the supposedly ambiguous language really
       means.
¶ 49        Upon remand, the trial court will have the responsibility for reviewing the evidence to
       determine the settlor’s intent. In my view, that evidence will lead the trial court to whatever
       conclusion the evidence establishes and it is not for this court to suggest where that evidence
       will lead. Thus, this court should use caution and refrain from suggesting to the trial court
       what its ultimate finding should be.
¶ 50        I take note of the fact that in its determination, the trial court did not consider the two
       letters drafted by the settlor, dated 1972 and 1975, since the court found no ambiguity in the
       trust document. While I agree with that approach, under the trial court’s ruling that there was
       no ambiguity, I think the letters will be helpful to the court on remand. The letters strongly
       suggest that the settlor was well aware that only the named grandchildren would be the

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       remaindermen of the trust to the exclusion of all others. Thus, although I believe the
       document is unambiguous, upon remand, if the court considers extrinsic evidence such as the
       letters, it will be helpful in determining whether the settlor intended to benefit yet-unborn
       grandchildren who may never have materialized, or whether he intended to benefit his four
       living grandchildren, who were then a part of his life and whom he identified by name.
¶ 51        I do not attach a high level of significance to the fact that the settlor’s divorce attorney
       and not his estate attorney drafted the trust document. Any attorney, whether he practiced
       estate or divorce law, knows the meaning of the word “namely.” When the settlor used that
       word, it was to identify and highlight exactly whom he meant to receive the remainder of the
       trust. Thus, upon remand, the trial court will have the opportunity to consider the evidence
       and reach a conclusion established by the facts.
¶ 52        On the issue of attorney fees, I agree with the majority’s conclusion that the circuit court
       should not have denied attorney fees to the after-born grandchildren. The cases cited in
       support of the denial either allow the trial court discretion to award fees or do not prohibit
       such an award. This court as well as the litigants acknowledge the novelty of the issue
       presented by this case. So, although the trial court has discretion in awarding fees, that
       discretion must be exercised within the bounds of propriety given the facts of each case.
       Accordingly, given the unique nature of this case as well as the general rule regarding
       payment of litigation costs from the trust in question when there is a bona fide dispute, the
       trial court in this case should have allowed the fees. That would have been an appropriate
       exercise of its discretion. Thus, the court abused its discretion in refusing to allow the
       after-born grandchildren attorney fees.
¶ 53        For the reasons stated, I would affirm the trial court on the issue of whether the four
       named grandchildren are the intended beneficiaries of the remainder of the trust. However, I
       would reverse the trial court on the question of whether the after-born grandchildren are
       entitled to attorney fees.

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