Chicago Trust Co., N.A. v. Vlachos , 2022 IL App (2d) 210074-U ( 2022 )


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    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    No. 2-21-0774
    Order filed September 1, 2022
    NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23(b) and is not precedent
    except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(l).
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    SECOND DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE CHICAGO TRUST COMPANY, N.A.,         ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
    as SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE of the SPYROS       ) of Lake County.
    VLACHOS TRUST Dated July 11, 2005,       )
    as amended,                             )
    )
    Plaintiff,                       )
    )
    v.                                       ) No. 18-CH-811
    )
    KYRIAKI VLACHOS, JOANNE VLACHOS )
    f/k/a Joanne Abboushi, ASHLEY            )
    ABBOUSHI, LINDSEY SAMIR                  )
    ZOUMPOULIAS f/k/a Lindsey                )
    Abboushi, THE ORGANIZATION FOR           )
    THE INTERNATIONALIZATION OF THE )
    LANGUAGE, THE GREEK STATE                )
    SCHOLARSHIP FOUNDATION, and THE          )
    CHARITABLE TRUSTS BUREAU OF THE )
    ILLINOIS ATTORNEY GENERAL OFFICE, )
    )
    Defendants,                      )
    )
    (The Greek State Scholarship Foundation, )
    Defendant-Appellant; Kyriaki Vlachos,    ) Honorable
    Ashley Abboushi, Lindsey Samir           ) Daniel L. Jasica,
    Zoumpoulias, Defendants-Appellees).      ) Judge, Presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE JORGENSEN delivered the judgment of the court.
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    Justices Schostok and Bridges 1 concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    ¶1     Held: The trial court did not err in granting summary judgment to deceased trust settlor’s
    family members and denying summary judgment to purported beneficiary. The
    initial version of the trust contained blanks where any purported gift was to be
    specified. Another document purporting to be an amendment to the trust did not
    satisfy the trust’s requirements for valid amendments. Affirmed.
    ¶2     This case arose when petitioner, The Chicago Trust Company, N.A., as successor trustee,
    petitioned for construction of the Spyros Vlachos Trust dated July 11, 2005, and amended
    thereafter. Chicago Trust asked the trial court to determine which of three competing versions of
    the trust agreement controlled the distribution of certain trust assets, specifically, the amount of
    any gift to respondent-appellant, The Greek State Scholarship Foundation (IKY). 2 IKY appeals
    from the trial court’s ruling denying its cross-motion for summary judgment and granting
    respondents’-appellees’,     Kyriaki    Vlachos’s,   Ashley    Abboushi’s,    and    Linday   Samir
    Zoumpoulias’s, cross-motion for summary judgment. We affirm.
    ¶3                                       I. BACKGROUND
    1
    Justice Bridges participated in this appeal, but has since been assigned to the Fourth
    District Appellate Court. Our supreme court has held that the departure of a judge prior to the
    filing date will not affect the validity of a decision so long as the remaining two judges concur.
    Proctor v. Upjohn Co., 
    175 Ill. 2d 394
    , 396 (1997).
    2
    IKY is not a tax-exempt organization under United States tax laws. Further, at the hearing
    on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, Chicago Trust asserted that IKY is not a
    charitable organization and that its petition was previously amended to remove any description of
    IKY as a charitable organization.
    -2-
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    ¶4         Spyros, an attorney, resided in Athens, Greece. In 2004, he engaged Chicago attorney
    Mark Bischoff to draft a trust.3 The document Bischoff prepared provided that, upon Spyros’s
    death, three gifts would be distributed from the trust estate, specifically, to two foundations (one
    of which was IKY) and the remainder to his family (specifically, his wife and daughter). As Spyros
    had not yet finalized his plans for the gifts to the foundations, Bischoff left blank spaces in the
    draft trust document and instructed Spyros to fill them in and to execute the document and have it
    notarized.
    ¶5         In 2007, Spyros executed, in a separate instrument, an amendment to the trust, changing
    the gift in section 3.1 (not relevant to this appeal) from the American Hellenic Institute Foundation
    to the Organization for the Internationalization of the Greek Language (ODEG). In 2013, he
    executed, in a separate instrument, another amendment, specifying that the gift of the remainder
    to his family, which previously included his wife and daughter, now also included his two
    granddaughters (and with each party to receive equal shares of ¼ each of the balance of the trust
    estate).
    ¶6         Spyros died on May 16, 2016. He was survived by Kyriaki (his spouse), Joanne (his only
    child), and Ashley and Lindsey (his granddaughters).
    ¶7                                        A. Chicago Trust’s Petition
    3
    Spyros acted as the initial trustee of the trust until his death, after which Joanne Vlachos
    and Comerica Bank & Trust, N.A., acted as co-trustees of the trust. On November 26, 2017,
    Comerica was removed as co-trustee and Chicago Trust was appointed as co-trustee of the trust.
    Chicago Trust accepted the appointment on December 19, 2017. On June 27, 2018, Joanne, as co-
    trustee, delegated to Chicago Trust sole authority to resolve any ambiguities in the trust.
    -3-
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    ¶8     In July 2018, Chicago Trust petitioned for construction of the trust. In its third amended
    petition filed in 2021, it asserted that, on or about July 11, 2005, Spyros executed the trust but that
    questions existed as to the condition of the trust at the time he executed it and whether it was
    amended.
    ¶9     Chicago Trust possessed three photocopied versions of the trust agreement, each consisting
    of eight pages: (1) the Blanks version; (2) the Figures version, which an attorney in Greece
    discovered after Spyros’s death and that was ultimately forwarded to Chicago Trust; and (3) the
    Alternate Figures version that Kyriaki found with Spyros’s personal papers about six years after
    his death and that contained alterations in two different colors of ink. All three versions contained
    the same photocopied signature page. 4
    ¶ 10   Section 3 of the trust agreement addressed the distribution of the trust estate upon Spyros’s
    death. Section 3.1 of the trust, as amended by the 2007 amendment, provided for a gift of 5% of
    the trust estate (not to exceed $50,000) to ODEG, which was established in Greece. The gift,
    Chicago Trust asserted, had been paid to and accepted by ODEG.
    ¶ 11   Section 3.2 of the trust differed in each version. However, the core language was identical
    and read as follows:
    “Gift to State Scholarship Foundation. ____________(____%) of the trust estate
    to the Greek STATE SCHOLARSHIP FOUNDATION (hereinafter referred to as the
    ‘I.K.Y.’) located in Athens, Greece for the sole purpose of establishing a scholarship fund
    4
    Initially, Chicago Trust possessed only the Figures version of the trust, and its petition
    asked the court to construe the ambiguity in the terms “700.000 (70%)” in section 3.2 of the Figures
    version.
    -4-
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    titled ‘Scholarship in memory of Nicholas and Georgia Vlachos’ my parents. The proceeds
    (and/or capital) of that fund will be given exclusively to Greek graduates from any law
    school in Greece to assist them (one student per year), to take post-graduates [sic] studies
    in exclusively the following law schools at which I have studied, and have a high opinion
    of their academic standards, and believe that a study in either one of them will be
    exceptionally beneficial for the scholarship recipients, namely the University of Michigan
    Law School at Ann Arbor, Michigan, and the Northwestern University Law School in
    Chicago, Illinois, in that order; provided the recipient has been admitted to one of these
    schools.”
    ¶ 12    Section 3.3, as amended by the 2013 amendment, provided a gift of the balance of the trust
    estate to Kyriaki, Joanne, Ashley, and Lindsey, in shares of equal value (i.e., ¼ each).
    ¶ 13    Again, three versions existed of the trust. The Blanks version in the trustee’s possession
    was a photocopy, and, in section 3.2, it contained the quoted passage above with the underlined
    section left blank. This is the version the family members assert is the valid and operative version.
    ¶ 14    The Figures version in the trustee’s possession, which was discovered after Spyros’s death,
    was also a photocopy. Chicago Trust asserted that, on July 29, 2021, it confirmed with counsel
    for Spyros’s family, Graham Schmidt, that Schmidt possessed a version of the Figures document
    in which the handwritten portions of the instrument (other than the signature page, which was a
    photocopy) appear to have been made in original pencil lead. In section 3.2, the Figures version
    had “$700.000 (70%)” written in the underlined section. This is the version of the trust that IKY
    asserts controls.
    ¶ 15    The Alternate Figures version in the trustee’s possession was a photocopy, and Schmidt
    confirmed to the trustee that he possessed a version of the document in which the handwritten
    -5-
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    portions (other than the signature page, which, again, was a photocopy) appeared to have been
    made in original wet ink. In section 3.2, the Alternate Figures version has “70% or up to $700,000
    (70%)” written in the underlined section. Also, in the margin, in original red ink, there is a
    reference to sections 3.1 and 3.3 of the trust having been repealed in 2007 and 2013. Finally, on
    the first page is a handwritten note in original red ink that reads “Original in safe deposit box #4
    Bank of Piraeus.” It also contains the word “copy” in the top left corner of the first page. No
    version of the trust was located in a safe deposit box in either Greece or the United States after
    Spyros’s death.
    ¶ 16     Chicago Trust also alleged that Kyriaki had testified at her deposition that she recognized
    the Figures and Alternate Figures versions as containing Spyros’s handwriting but did not know
    when he made the writings. Chicago Trust alleged that section 3.2 of the trust agreement gave rise
    to multiple ambiguities that prevented it from distributing the balance of the trust estate and
    required judicial construction. The value of the trust estate, it asserted, as of the date of Spyros’s
    death, was $2,196,508.40, and 70% of that amount was $1,537,555.60. Chicago Trust also
    asserted that it was unclear if the date-of-death value or the date-of-distribution value was to be
    used in calculating any gift to IKY if the percentage of 70% was to be used to calculate the amount
    of its gift.
    ¶ 17     Chicago Trust also attached to its petition two trust amendments that Spyros executed. The
    first, dated May 27, 2007, and notarized, provided that, upon Spyros’s death, the gift in section 3.1
    to the American Hellenic Institute was rescinded and, instead, 5% of the trust estate (not to exceed
    $50,000) was to be gifted to ODEG, which was established in Athens, Greece. The second
    amendment, dated May 1, 2013, and notarized, repealed section 3.3 of the trust and substituted a
    -6-
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    provision that gifted the balance of the estate upon Spyros’s death to Kyriaki, Joanne, Ashley, and
    Lindsey, in equal shares of ¼ each.
    ¶ 18   Section 2.1 of the trust agreement provides that Spyros could “amend or revoke this
    instrument in whole or in part by instrument (other than my Will) signed by me, referring to this
    instrument, and delivered to the trustee during my life.”
    ¶ 19   At his deposition, attorney Bischoff testified that, in 2004, Spyros contacted him to prepare
    a living trust. They met once in 2004 but otherwise communicated in writing. By February 18,
    2005, Bischoff wrote to Spyros that they would “leave the issues as blank in the trust,” which
    included how much would go to IKY. In March 2005, Bischoff mailed Spyros a draft agreement
    and noted that his firm had prepared the document even though Spyros still had to determine the
    percentages to distribute to IKY, his spouse and daughter, and another foundation. Thus, the firm
    “left blanks for [Spyros] to fill in.” The process was “very fluid” for Spyros, and he made
    numerous changes to the trust. Bischoff tried to provide him flexibility. By May 2005, when he
    mailed Spyros another draft, Bischoff still did not know Spyros’s intent concerning the gifts. He
    instructed Spyros that, after he filled in the percentages for the gifts to IKY and the other
    foundation, he execute the trust before a notary at the United States embassy.
    ¶ 20   In January 2017, Bischoff received from Joanne a complete stapled version of the Blanks
    version, along with the two amendments, a death certificate, and a UBS Financial Services, Inc.,
    email. He did not believe that Spyros would have signed in front of a notary a trust document that
    was incomplete or blank. “Based on everything that I knew, and the detail of communication, it’s
    hard for me to believe that he would have signed something that still had blanks. That was a really
    important piece to him, the charities.”
    -7-
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    ¶ 21    Douglas Eaton, first vice president, wealth management, at UBS and Spyros’s financial
    advisor, testified at his deposition that he started working with Spyros in the 1990s and continued
    to have him as a client through his death. On July 11, 2005, Spyros came to Eaton’s office to have
    a trust document notarized. Diane E. Flores, an employee at UBS at the time, notarized the
    document. Eaton walked Spyros to Flores’s desk but did not witness the signing or notarization.
    (Flores is believed to now be deceased.) Spyros took the document with him that day. Prior to
    this time, Spyros told Eaton that the purpose of the trust was to avoid probate and take care of his
    daughter Joanne. A brokerage account was opened for the trust. The application is dated August
    18, 2005; it contains Eaton’s signature on that date. A branch office manager’s final approval
    signature is dated August 25, 2005. When clients open an account, Eaton explained, they fill out
    a form and UBS asks for a copy of the front and last pages of the trust. (The front page is for
    titling purposes, and the last page is to ensure the date is correct.)
    ¶ 22    Sometime in 2005, Eaton had a conversation with Spyros during which Spyros stated that
    he wanted to take care of his daughter and, during another conversation, about his granddaughters
    and daughter. The only copy that UBS had of the trust document contained blanks on the first two
    pages but an executed signature page.
    ¶ 23    Lindsey Abboushi, Spyros’s granddaughter, testified that she learned of his trust after
    Spyros died. She was very close to Spyros. He paid her college tuition and was going to pay for
    her law school tuition but died the summer before Abboushi started law school. Spyros encouraged
    Abboushi to become an attorney and helped her select a law school. He made sure she was taken
    care of and paid the fee for her wisdom teeth removal, Greek school, etc. “[I]f we needed anything,
    he was there financially and emotionally.” While he was alive, Spyros never said anything about
    wanting to make a gift to IKY.
    -8-
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    ¶ 24   Joanne, Spyros’s daughter, testified that she never discussed the trust with Spyros before
    he signed it. She first saw a copy of the trust after Spyros’s death.
    ¶ 25   Kyriaki, Spyros’s wife, resides in Athens. She testified that she was married to Spyros for
    35 years. She and Spyros did not have children together. Spyros kept copies of the trusts at his
    home in Athens. Kyriaki discovered them after his death and gave them to Joanne. Spyros wrote
    in pencil when he worked with drafts. For a final version of a document, he used a pen. “Spyros
    wanted to for certain help his family.”
    ¶ 26                                B. Summary-Judgment Motions
    ¶ 27   On September 30, 2021, IKY moved for summary judgment, arguing that the Figures
    version of the trust was the controlling instrument and that it was entitled to 70% of the trust estate
    as of Spyros’s death. Section 3.2 was never eliminated in any amendment, thus, it asserted, it was
    clear that IKY was to receive money. There was no evidence that the executed and notarized
    document, it maintained, was the same as the August 2005 document/Blanks version. Even if the
    Figures version was executed after 2005, IKY argued, it was a valid amendment because it is
    signed and notarized.       The Alternate Figures version, it argued, contains red ink notations
    referencing the 2007 and 2013 amendments and, therefore, post-dates the amendments and could
    not have existed in 2005. Finally, IKY argued that the gift to it was a charitable gift that should
    be upheld.
    ¶ 28   Spyros’s family members also moved for summary judgment, arguing that the Blanks
    version was executed in 2005, it was the operative agreement, and it showed that Spyros expressed
    no intent to make a gift to IKY.5 The Blanks version, they asserted, was signed on July 11, 2005,
    5
    Joanne did not join in the motion, but, in a separate filing (fashioned as a response to the
    -9-
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    and was the only version of the trust someone (i.e., UBS) received, in this case from Spyros, during
    Spyros’s lifetime. The family members also argued that the Figures and Alternate Figures versions
    must have been created after the date that Spyros signed the Blanks version, because he had to
    have possessed a version of the trust where sections 3.1 and 3.2 were still blank, such as in the
    Blanks version. In other words, they asserted that the Blanks version must be the starting document
    for both subsequently discovered versions. All three versions, they noted, have the identical
    signature page, which is dated July 11, 2005. The family members also argued that the Figures
    and Alternate Figures versions were not valid amendments to the trust as a matter of law, because
    the handwritten markings in the documents are not accompanied by signatures or initialed and,
    thus, do not comply with the trust’s mechanism for amendments.
    ¶ 29                                   C. Trial Court’s Ruling
    ¶ 30   On November 23, 2021, the trial court issued its memorandum opinion and order, granting
    summary judgment to Kyriaki, Ashley, and Lindsay 6 and denying IKY’s summary-judgment
    motion. The court found that the Blanks version of the trust (which it referenced was the version
    Chicago Trust attached to its petition, i.e., the eight-page document with blanks in sections 3.1 and
    family members’ motion), she asserted that she agreed with their position that no gift was due to
    IKY and that summary judgment in the family members’ favor was appropriate. She also filed a
    response to IKY’s motion, arguing that summary judgment in IKY’s favor was not appropriate
    and that IKY was due no money. She is not a party to this appeal.
    6
    The court noted that Joanne did not move for summary judgment but, by filing a response
    to the family members’ motion and explicitly agreeing therein with their arguments and requesting
    that the court grant the family members’ motion, effectively joined the family members’ motion.
    - 10 -
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    3.2) was the operative and controlling trust document. It noted that the limited known facts
    concerning the three competing versions of the trust agreement were largely undisputed. The court
    also noted that no one would be able to testify at a trial that they saw which version of the trust
    Spyros had in his possession and signed on July 11, 2005, at UBS. Also, Spyros took the document
    with him that day. In August 2005, he provided UBS with a photocopy of the July 11, 2005,
    signature page, along with the first two pages of the trust agreement with blanks in the fields in
    sections 3.1 and 3.2.
    ¶ 31   The trial court further noted that it was undisputed that the handwriting on the first two
    pages of the Figures version and the Alternate Figures versions of the trust agreement was Spyros’s
    handwriting. There were no dates or initials next to the dollar amounts or percentages inserted
    into section 3.2 of the Figures or Alternate Figures versions. The margin notes in red ink
    concerning the “repeal” of sections 3.1 and 3.3 that appear in the Alternate Figures version, the
    court noted, “must have been added sometime after the date of the referenced 2007 and 2013
    amendments.” (Emphasis in original.)
    ¶ 32   The trial court noted that there is generally a presumption that blanks are filled in prior to
    execution of a trust document. See Martin v. Martin, 
    334 Ill. 115
    , 125-26 (1929) (interlineations,
    such as filling in of blanks that do not change the sense of the will, are deemed to have been written
    before the will was executed). However, it determined that the presumption was rebutted in this
    case. Referencing the partial copy of the trust provided to UBS in August 2005, the court
    determined that the only version of the trust agreement reasonably known to exist at any time prior
    to Spyros’s death is the Blanks version, which supported a finding that, upon execution in July
    2005, Spyros had not filled in the blank fields in section 3.2. The court noted that it made “little
    sense” that Spyros would have provided UBS with a document that was not the executed trust
    - 11 -
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    agreement or provided a copy of the executed signature page and affixed to it two pages from an
    unexecuted draft of the trust.
    ¶ 33   The trial court also found that there was no way of determining when the Figures version
    was created or when the numbers included in the body of section 3.2 of the Alternate Figures
    version were added. “It could have been years later.” Further, even if they were created at or near
    the time of the Blanks version, the court found, parol evidence could not be used to supply an
    essential term—the amount of the gift to IKY—of the trust agreement.
    ¶ 34   Finally, the court noted that the handwritten additions to the Figures and Alternate Figures
    versions could not be treated as proper amendments to the trust agreement, because the document
    requires that all amendments be signed by Spyros. In the two versions, there is no date, signature,
    initials, or notarization near the notes. In contrast, the 2007 and 2013 amendments, the court noted,
    were signed, dated, and notarized. “Spyros clearly understood how to formally amend the trust
    agreement when that was his intention.” The pencil marking in the Figures version and the ink
    markings in the Alternate Figures version “reflect no such clear intent” and were not consistent
    with the formal amendment requirements. IKY appeals.
    ¶ 35                                      II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 36   IKY argues that the trial court erred in granting the family members’ summary judgment
    motion and denying its own motion. It contends that the factual record does not support voiding
    the gift to IKY and that, at the very least, the Figures version constitutes a valid amendment to the
    trust. For the following reasons, we reject IKY’s arguments.
    ¶ 37   Summary judgment is proper only “if the pleadings, depositions, and admissions on file,
    together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and
    that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1005(c) (West
    - 12 -
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    2020). Since the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, they conceded that no material
    questions of fact existed and that only a question of law was involved that the court could decide
    based on the record. Pielet v. Pielet, 
    2012 IL 112064
    , ¶ 28. We review de novo the trial court’s
    ruling on cross-motions for summary judgment. 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.
    ¶ 38   “Summary judgment is a drastic measure and should only be granted if the movant’s right
    to judgment is clear and free from doubt.” Outboard Marine Corp. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance
    Co., 
    154 Ill. 2d 90
    , 102 (1992). However, “[m]ere speculation, conjecture, or guess is insufficient
    to withstand summary judgment.” Sorce v. Naperville Jeep Eagle, Inc., 
    309 Ill. App. 3d 313
    , 328
    (1999). “ ‘The purpose of summary judgment is not to try an issue of fact but *** to determine
    whether a triable issue of fact exists.’ ” Schrager v. North Community Bank, 
    328 Ill. App. 3d 696
    , 708 (2002) (quoting Luu v. Kim, 
    323 Ill. App. 3d 946
    , 952 (2001)). Summary judgment is
    appropriate in a case involving the construction of a trust, because the ascertainment of the trust’s
    meaning or intent is strictly a matter of law. BMO Harris Bank N.A. v. Towers, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 133351
    , ¶ 27.
    ¶ 39   “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.” Harris Trust & Savings
    Bank v. Donovan, 
    145 Ill. 2d 166
    , 172 (1991). In construing trusts, courts apply the same rules of
    construction that apply in construing wills. 
    Id.
     We give the words employed in a trust their plain
    and ordinary meaning. 
    Id.
     Where trust language is ambiguous and the settlor’s intent cannot be
    determined, we may rely on extrinsic evidence to aid construction. McCarthy v. Taylor, 2014 IL
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    App (1st) 132239, ¶ 58. Language is ambiguous when it is reasonably susceptible to more than
    one meaning. 
    Id.
    ¶ 40                                       A. Gift to IKY
    ¶ 41   IKY argues that this court should give effect to Spyros’s intent in making a gift to IKY and
    that we should reverse the court’s judgment and enter summary judgment in its favor, finding that
    Spyros gifted it in the Figures version 70% of the trust estate, or at the very least $700,000.
    ¶ 42   The family members respond that there is no ambiguous language to be construed, IKY’s
    purported gift was initially blank, and section 3.2 was never validly amended. Thus, the purported
    bequest to IKY in section 3.2 of the trust fails for missing an essential term.
    ¶ 43   “The settlor’s intent is determined as of the time the instrument is executed.” First National
    Bank of Chicago v. Canton Council of Campfire Girls, Inc., 
    85 Ill. 2d 507
    , 513 (1981). “Charitable
    gifts are viewed with peculiar favor by the courts, and every presumption consistent with the
    language contained in the instruments of gift will be employed in order to sustain them.” Village
    of Hinsdale v. Chicago City Missionary Society, 
    375 Ill. 220
    , 231 (1940); see also Stubblefield v.
    Peoples Bank of Bloomington, 
    406 Ill. 374
    , 384 (1950) (“The law looks with favor upon charitable
    trusts, and the courts apply liberal rules of construction to sustain them”). However, “the court
    will generally prefer a construction of the will [that] most closely follows the statutes of descent.”
    Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago v. Llewellyn, 
    67 Ill. App. 2d 171
    , 189
    (1966); see also Cahill v. Cahill, 
    402 Ill. 416
    , 422 (1949) (there is a presumption in favor of the
    heir where there is an ambiguity in a will).
    ¶ 44   IKY argues that the trial court improperly inferred that, at the time Spyros executed and
    had notarized the trust on July 11, 2005, section 3.2 was left blank. It contends that the proper
    presumption was that, at the time he executed the document, the amount and percentage in section
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    3.2 in the Figures version was filled in. Martin, 
    334 Ill. at 125-26
    . IKY also argues that charitable
    gifts are favored by the courts. There is no question, it contends, that Spyros intended to gift IKY
    money, and he never amended the trust to delete section 3.2. The question is, in IKY’s view, how
    much money IKY is to receive.
    ¶ 45   IKY references Martin, asserting that, when markings appear on a preprinted will or trust,
    a presumption arises that those marking were present when the testator executed the document.
    Further, citing Smith v. Tri-R Vending, 
    249 Ill. App. 3d 654
    , 661-62 (1993), it contends that only
    admissible evidence present in the record, not mere inferences drawn from other facts, can
    constitute a basis to rebut that presumption. The trial court, IKY asserts, erred in determining that
    the Martin presumption had been rebutted by an inference it drew, instead of relying on record
    evidence.   Specifically, IKY argues that the Blanks version is irrelevant because (1) it is
    incomplete, and (2) the fact that Spyros sent UBS a partial version of the trust in August 2005 says
    nothing about which version he signed one month earlier. IKY maintains that what Spyros sent to
    UBS was not relevant and does not constitute “undisputed summary judgment evidence,” as the
    court found, to rebut the presumption that Spyros signed the Figures version in July 2005. It also
    characterizes the court’s finding as mere inference and guesswork. On the latter point, it contends
    that there are a number of possibilities as to why Spyros would have sent UBS a page with blanks
    in section 3.2, specifically, he may not have wanted UBS to learn the amount of the gifts he
    intended to make to the recipients or he could have made copies of the signature page and included
    those with the version of the trust stored on his computer that he printed at the time. There is
    nothing in the record, IKY urges, that gives any more credence to the court’s version of the possible
    events than to any of the other possibilities, and there exist no facts that permitted the court to find
    the presumption rebutted that the Figures version was signed in July 2005. Its finding that there
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    is no way to know when the Figures version was created or when the numbers were added in
    section 3.2 was erroneous.
    ¶ 46   The family members respond that the trial court made reasonable inferences from the
    undisputed evidence and found the evidence rebutted the Martin presumption that the
    interlineations 7 of either the Figures or Alternate Figures versions existed as of the trust’s
    execution. The family members contend that the fact there are multiple conflicting versions of the
    same interlineations in section 3.2 raise suspicion that the changes were not made before execution.
    Each of the three versions of the trust, they note, include an identical signature/notarization page
    reciting that Spyros signed the document on July 11, 2005. The trust versions, the family members
    argue, cannot be placed in a timeline by physical examination of the condition of the
    signature/notarization page alone. The trial court, they assert, correctly turned to the chain of
    custody. The family members argue that neither the Figures nor the Alternate Figures versions
    have a chain of custody that begins while Spyros was alive, as does the Blanks version.
    ¶ 47   The family members take the position that the Blanks version was given to UBS in August
    2005, about one month after Spyros signed it. Bischoff testified that he advised Spyros to provide
    a copy to the financial institution in which he planned to deposit the trust funds. In August 2005,
    in order to open a trust brokerage account, UBS required customers to provide either the first and
    last page of a trust instrument or the entire instrument. The trial court found that Spyros gave UBS
    the Blanks version in August 2005 and that UBS maintained the Blanks version in its files from
    August 2005 to a time following Spyros’s death. The Blanks version’s chain of custody, the family
    7
    An interlineation is “[s]omething written between the lines of an earlier writing.”
    INTERLINEATION, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    members argue, is an important fact that rebuts the Martin presumption in favor of both the Figures
    and Alternate Figures versions. Turning to the Figures version, the family members contend that
    there was much less evidence showing that Spyros signed that version in July 2005: it has a
    signature/notarization page attached, and it was discovered after Spyros’s death. They argue that
    the fact that the signature page was attached is not persuasive evidence that the Figures version
    was signed in July 2005 because the same copy was attached to the other versions of the trust.
    ¶ 48    We agree with the trial court’s determination that any presumption that the Figures version
    was the version of the trust that Spyros executed was rebutted by the undisputed evidence
    concerning the documents that Spyros sent UBS in August 2005 that form the core of the Blanks
    version. Contrary to IKY’s assertion, the trial court relied on evidence in the record, specifically
    the temporal proximity of Spyros’s mailing in August 2005 of the portions of the Blanks version
    to UBS to open a brokerage account for the execution of the trust in July 2005, to draw the only
    reasonable inference that the Blanks version was the version of the trust that Spyros executed in
    July 2005. Although the UBS version was a partial version, the relevant pages are identical to the
    eight-page, i.e., complete, Blanks version that Chicago Trust filed with its petition to construe the
    trust. The court did not err in determining that the Blanks version reflected Spyros’s initial intent
    and that no factual questions existed to preclude such a determination. The trial court found, and
    it is undisputed, that no one will be able to testify at a trial that they saw which version of the trust
    Spyros had in his possession and signed on July 11, 2005, at UBS. Further, as the court noted, the
    Blanks version is the only version with a chain of custody that begins during Spyros’s lifetime.
    IKY contends it is irrelevant where and when a document was ultimately found. However, this
    misses the mark. The fact that Spyros sent UBS the Blanks version (or at least the relevant pages
    of it) one month after executing his trust is strong evidence that the Blanks version is the version
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    that he executed and, therefore, rebuts any presumption that the blanks were filled in. Neither the
    Figures nor the Alternative Figures versions have such a link in time to the July 2005 execution
    date (other than the signature page, which is identical in all three versions). IKY’s argument that
    there are several possibilities as to why Spyros would have sent a page with blanks in section 3.2,
    specifically, because he may not have wanted UBS to learn the amount any gifts he intended to
    make or he could have made copies of the blanks pages constitutes pure speculation by IKY.
    Nothing in the record suggests that Spyros either did not want his longtime financial advisor to
    learn of the amount of any gifts (the potential recipients of which were already identified on the
    document) or that, before he filled in the blanks, he photocopied 8 the first two pages of the blank
    document to submit to UBS (along with a copy of the executed signature page).
    ¶ 49   In Smith, upon which IKY relies, the court stated:
    “A presumption ceases to operate once there is enough evidence to support a
    finding of the nonexistence of the presumed fact. Franciscan Sisters Health Care Corp. v.
    Dean, 
    95 Ill. 2d 452
    , 462-63 (1983); Barnes v. Brown, 
    193 Ill. App. 3d 604
    , 611 (1990).
    There is no uniform test of how much evidence is necessary to rebut a presumption. Dean,
    
    95 Ill. 2d at 463
    .
    An inference is a conclusion of fact that the jury may in its discretion draw from
    established facts. However, only under compelling factual circumstances must the fact
    8
    Attorney Bischoff testified that he mailed drafts to Spyros. He did not state that he
    emailed them to his client. Thus, IKY’s assertion that Spyros could have printed the trust version
    stored on his computer is not supported by the record.
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    finder draw a particular inference. M. Graham, Cleary & Graham’s, Handbook of Illinois
    Evidence, § 302.2, at 83-86 (5th ed. 1990).” Smith, 249 Ill. App. 3d at 661.
    ¶ 50   IKY contends that mere inferences drawn from other facts cannot rebut a presumption.
    However, this was not the basis of the trial court’s findings. A material factual issue precluding
    summary judgment exists where reasonable people might draw different inferences from the
    undisputed facts. Adams v. Northern Illinois Gas Co., 
    211 Ill. 2d 32
    , 43 (2004). Here, as we
    discussed above, the only reasonable inference, as the trial court found, was that Spyros signed the
    Blanks version of the trust. See Waite v. Chicago Transit Authority, 
    157 Ill. App. 3d 616
    , 619-20
    (1987) (a fact may be inferred from circumstantial evidence only where the circumstances are such
    that the fact is the only inference that can be drawn and is not a product of speculation or
    conjecture). The trial court correctly rejected IKY’s speculative and unsupported theories that
    Spyros either wanted to hide the gift amounts from his longtime financial advisor or that he
    photocopied a blank version of the document before giving it to UBS and then filled in the gift
    amounts on a different copy of the document.
    ¶ 51   We also reject IKY’s argument that charitable gifts are favored and that this weighs in its
    favor. IKY is not a tax-exempt organization in this country and Chicago Trust removed from its
    petition any allegations that IKY is a charitable organization.
    ¶ 52   IKY also argues that the trial court’s finding that Spyros would not have sent UBS a copy
    of the executed execution page but copies of unexecuted versions of the first two pages of the trust
    was unsupported by the evidence. It also contends that, to the extent that the court analyzed the
    trust in this context, it should have heard evidence on custom and practice regarding how testators
    provide redacted portions of trust agreements to financial institutions. We do not consider this
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    argument, as it appears to not have been raised below and is contrary to IKY’s position that no
    factual questions preclude summary judgment in its favor.
    ¶ 53    IKY next argues that the fact that the gift in section 3.1 was actually paid out
    belies the trial court’s logic. It contends that, if Spyros did not execute the Figures version in 2005,
    then the gift in section 3.1 should also be invalidated. However, it continues, if no gift was made
    in section 3.1 to begin with, there was nothing to amend despite the first amendment (executed in
    2007), changing the gift recipient from the American Hellenic Institute Foundation to ODEG. We
    reject IKY’s argument that the gift in section 3.1 should be invalidated. The issue was not before
    the trial court, and we decline to address it. In any event, we disagree with IKY that there was
    nothing to amend because there was no gift in section 3.1. The amendment changed the gift
    recipient. Even if there was no gift (because the section was left blank), an amendment would
    have been necessary to name a recipient.
    ¶ 54    In summary, the Blanks version of the trust is the operative version of trust.
    ¶ 55                     B. Whether Figures Version is a Valid Amendment
    ¶ 56    Next, IKY argues that, even if the Blanks version is the operative version of the trust, the
    Figures version’s handwritten markings constitute a valid amendment to the trust. It contends that
    the trial court erred in finding that the Figures version could not constitute a valid amendment
    because the markings in section 3.2 are not accompanied by Spyros’s signature, his initials, any
    date, or notarization in proximity to the interlineations. IKY contends that there is no such
    requirement and argues the trust agreement itself does not mandate that Spyros add such markings.
    IKY further suggests that the Figures version is a valid amendment because it contains Spyros’s
    signature, it is dated, and it is notarized.
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    ¶ 57   The family members respond that there is no indication on the Figures version when the
    handwritten markings were added to it. The trial court, they note, stated that it had no way of
    knowing when the Figures version was created or when the numbers in section 3.2 of the Alternate
    Figures version were added. The family members also note that there is no signature at the time
    of the handwritten markings in section 3.2 and that the signature/notarization page cannot be a
    signature for both the original trust instrument and its amendment or else the requirements for a
    signature for an amendment have no meaning. Further, they note that section 2.1 of the trust
    provides that the trust must be amended by an instrument. The plain meaning of this provision,
    they assert, is that it must be amended by a separate instrument from the trust instrument itself.
    Spyros, they argue, understood how to amend his trust by a separate instrument because he did so
    in executing the first and second amendments in 2007 and 2013, respectively. If he had the
    intention to amend the instrument whenever the Figures version’s marking were added, he could
    have created a similar formal amendment to what he had created in 2007 and 2013. The family
    members point to the trial court’s comment that the handwritten markings in the Figures version
    do not contain a date, initials, or notarization in proximity to the markings. They do not meet
    section 2.1’s requirements and, thus, the Figures version does not constitute a valid amendment.
    ¶ 58   We agree with the family members that the marking in the Figures version do not constitute
    valid amendments to Spyros’s trust. “If a method of exercising a power to modify is described in
    the trust instrument, the power can be asserted only in that manner.” Whittaker v. Stables, 
    339 Ill. App. 3d 943
    , 946 (2003). Section 2.1 of the trust provides the Spyros could “amend or revoke this
    instrument in whole or in part by instrument (other than my Will) signed by me, referring to this
    instrument, and delivered to the trustee during my life.” Thus, a valid amendment requires (1) an
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210774-U
    instrument other than Spyros’s will, (2) signed by Spyros, (3) referring to the trust, and (4) be
    delivered to the trustee during Spyros’s life.
    ¶ 59   The Figures version does not meet all the requirements to constitute a valid amendment to
    Spyros’s trust. It does not contain Spyros’s signature. The signature/notarization page does not
    satisfy this requirement because it constitutes the execution page for the initial trust instrument.
    The Figures version also was not delivered to the trustee during Spyros’s life. Rather, an attorney
    in Greece discovered the Figures version after Spyros’s death and the document was ultimately
    forwarded to Chicago Trust. Further, there was no evidence that it was given to any prior trustee
    during Spyros’s life. Although the notations in the Figures version may reflect that, sometime
    after 2005, Spyros was still considering making a gift to IKY, he did not follow section 2.1’s
    requirements for a valid amendment to the trust.
    ¶ 60   In summary, the Figures version does not constitute a valid amendment of Spyros’s trust.
    ¶ 61                                    III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 62   For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Lake County.
    ¶ 63   Affirmed.
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