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Public Act 099-0763 |
HB3898 Enrolled | LRB099 09535 HEP 29743 b |
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AN ACT concerning civil law.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of |
Marriage Act is amended by changing Sections 452, 501, 501.1, |
502, 503, 504, 505, 508, 513, 600, 602.9, 602.10, 602.11, |
604.10, 606.5, 607.5, and 610.5 and by adding Section 607.6 as |
follows:
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(750 ILCS 5/452)
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Sec. 452. Petition. The parties to a dissolution proceeding |
may file a
joint petition for simplified dissolution if they |
certify that all of the
following conditions exist when the |
proceeding is commenced:
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(a) Neither party is dependent on the other party for |
support or each
party is willing to waive the right to |
support; and the parties understand
that consultation with |
attorneys may help them determine eligibility for
spousal |
support.
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(b) Either party has met the residency or military |
presence requirement of Section 401 of this
Act.
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(c) The requirements of Section 401 regarding |
residence or military presence and proof of irreconcilable |
differences have been met.
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(d) No children were born of the relationship of the |
parties or
adopted by the parties during the marriage, and |
the wife, to her knowledge,
is not pregnant by the husband.
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(e) The duration of the marriage does not exceed 8 |
years.
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(f) Neither party has any interest in real property or |
retirement benefits unless the retirement benefits are |
exclusively held in individual retirement accounts and the |
combined value of the accounts is less than $10,000.
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(g) The parties waive any rights to maintenance.
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(h) The total fair market value of all marital |
property, after
deducting all encumbrances, is less than |
$50,000, the
combined gross annualized income from all |
sources is less than
$60,000, and neither party has a gross |
annualized income from all sources
in excess of $30,000.
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(i) The parties have disclosed to each other all assets |
and liabilities and their tax
returns for all years of the |
marriage.
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(j) The parties have executed a written agreement |
dividing all assets
in excess of $100 in value and |
allocating responsibility for debts and
liabilities |
between the parties.
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(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .)
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(750 ILCS 5/501) (from Ch. 40, par. 501)
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Sec. 501. Temporary Relief. In all proceedings under this |
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Act,
temporary relief shall be as follows:
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(a) Either party may petition or move for:
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(1) temporary maintenance or temporary support of a |
child of the
marriage entitled to support, accompanied by |
an affidavit as to the
factual basis for the relief |
requested. One form of financial affidavit, as determined |
by the Supreme Court, shall be used statewide. The |
financial affidavit shall be supported by documentary |
evidence including, but not limited to, income tax returns, |
pay stubs, and banking statements. Unless the court |
otherwise directs, any affidavit or supporting documentary |
evidence submitted pursuant
to this paragraph shall not be |
made
part of the public record of the proceedings but shall |
be available to
the court or an appellate court in which |
the proceedings are subject to
review, to the parties, |
their
attorneys, and such other persons as the court
may |
direct. Upon motion of a party, a court may hold a hearing |
to determine whether and why there is a disparity between a |
party's sworn affidavit and the supporting documentation. |
If a party intentionally or recklessly files an inaccurate |
or misleading financial affidavit, the court shall impose |
significant penalties and sanctions including, but not |
limited to, costs and attorney's fees;
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(2) a temporary restraining order or preliminary |
injunction, accompanied
by affidavit showing a
factual |
basis for any of the following relief:
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(i) restraining any person from transferring, |
encumbering,
concealing or otherwise disposing of any |
property except in the usual
course of business or for |
the necessities of life, and, if so
restrained, |
requiring him to notify the moving party and his |
attorney of
any proposed extraordinary expenditures |
made after the order is issued; however, an order need |
not include an exception for transferring, |
encumbering,
or otherwise disposing of property in the |
usual course of business or for the necessities of life |
if the court enters appropriate orders that enable the |
parties to pay their necessary
personal and business |
expenses including, but not limited to, appropriate |
professionals to assist the court pursuant to |
subsection (l) of Section 503 to administer the payment |
and accounting of such living and business expenses;
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(ii) enjoining a party from removing a child from |
the jurisdiction
of the court for more than 14 days ;
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(iii) enjoining a party from striking or |
interfering with the
personal liberty of the other |
party or of any child; or
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(iv) providing other injunctive relief proper in |
the circumstances;
or
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(3) other appropriate temporary relief including, in |
the discretion of the court, ordering the purchase or sale |
of assets and requiring that a party or parties borrow |
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funds in the appropriate circumstances.
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Issues concerning temporary maintenance or temporary |
support of a child entitled to support shall be dealt with on a |
summary basis based on allocated parenting time, financial |
affidavits, tax returns, pay stubs, banking statements, and |
other
relevant documentation, except an evidentiary hearing |
may be held upon a showing of good cause. If a party |
intentionally or recklessly files an inaccurate or misleading |
financial affidavit, the court shall impose significant |
penalties and sanctions including, but not limited to, costs |
and attorney's fees resulting from the improper |
representation. |
(b) The court may issue a temporary restraining order |
without
requiring notice to the other party only if it finds, |
on the basis of
the moving affidavit or other evidence, that |
irreparable injury will
result to the moving party if no order |
is issued until the time for
responding has elapsed.
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(c) A response hereunder may be filed within 21 days after |
service
of notice of motion or at the time specified in the |
temporary
restraining order.
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(c-1) As used in this subsection (c-1), "interim attorney's |
fees and
costs" means attorney's fees and costs
assessed
from |
time to time while a case is pending, in favor of the |
petitioning party's
current counsel, for reasonable fees and |
costs either already incurred or to be
incurred, and "interim |
award" means an award of interim attorney's fees and
costs. |
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Interim awards shall be governed by the following:
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(1) Except for good cause shown, a proceeding for (or |
relating to) interim
attorney's fees and costs in a |
pre-judgment dissolution proceeding shall be |
nonevidentiary and summary in nature. All hearings for or |
relating to interim attorney's fees and costs under this |
subsection shall be scheduled expeditiously by the court. |
When a party files a petition for interim attorney's fees |
and
costs supported by one or more
affidavits that |
delineate relevant factors, the court (or a hearing |
officer)
shall assess an interim award after affording the |
opposing party a reasonable
opportunity to file a |
responsive pleading. A responsive pleading shall set out
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the amount of each retainer or other payment or payments, |
or both, previously
paid to the responding party's counsel |
by or on behalf of the responding party. A responsive |
pleading shall include costs incurred, and shall indicate |
whether the costs are paid or unpaid.
In assessing an
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interim award, the court shall consider all relevant |
factors, as presented,
that appear reasonable and |
necessary, including to the extent applicable:
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(A) the income and property of each party, |
including alleged marital
property within the sole |
control of one party and alleged non-marital property
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within access to a party;
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(B) the needs of each party;
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(C) the realistic earning capacity of each party;
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(D) any impairment to present earning capacity of |
either party,
including
age and physical and emotional |
health;
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(E) the standard of living established during the |
marriage;
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(F) the degree of complexity of the issues, |
including allocation of parental responsibility, |
valuation
or division (or both) of closely held |
businesses, and tax planning, as well as
reasonable |
needs for expert investigations or expert witnesses, |
or both;
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(G) each party's access to relevant information;
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(H) the amount of the payment or payments made or |
reasonably expected to
be made to the attorney for the |
other party; and
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(I) any other factor that the court expressly finds |
to be just and
equitable.
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(2) Any assessment of an interim award (including one |
pursuant to an
agreed
order) shall be without prejudice to |
any final allocation and without prejudice
as to any claim |
or right of either party or any counsel of record at the |
time
of the award. Any such claim or right may be presented |
by the appropriate
party or counsel at a hearing on |
contribution under subsection (j) of Section
503 or a |
hearing on counsel's fees under subsection (c) of Section |
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508. Unless
otherwise ordered by the court at the final |
hearing between the parties or in a
hearing under |
subsection (j) of Section 503 or subsection (c) of
Section |
508, interim awards, as well as the aggregate of all other |
payments
by each party
to
counsel and related payments to |
third parties, shall be deemed to have been
advances from |
the parties' marital estate. Any portion of any interim |
award
constituting an overpayment shall be remitted back to |
the appropriate party or
parties, or, alternatively, to |
successor counsel, as the court determines and
directs, |
after notice in a form designated by the Supreme Court. An |
order for the award of interim attorney's fees shall be a |
standardized form order and labeled "Interim Fee Award |
Order".
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(3) In any proceeding under this subsection (c-1), the |
court (or hearing
officer) shall assess an interim award |
against an opposing party in an
amount necessary to enable |
the petitioning party to participate adequately in
the |
litigation, upon findings that the party from whom |
attorney's fees and
costs are sought has the financial |
ability to pay reasonable amounts and that
the party |
seeking attorney's fees and costs lacks sufficient access |
to assets
or income to pay reasonable amounts. In |
determining an award, the
court shall consider whether |
adequate participation in the litigation requires
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expenditure of more fees and costs for a party that is not |
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in control of assets
or relevant information. Except for |
good cause shown, an interim award shall
not be less than |
payments made or reasonably expected to be made to the |
counsel
for the other party. If the court finds that both |
parties
lack financial ability or access to assets or |
income for reasonable attorney's
fees and costs, the court |
(or hearing officer) shall enter an order that
allocates |
available funds for each party's counsel, including |
retainers or
interim payments, or both, previously paid, in |
a manner that achieves
substantial parity between the |
parties.
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(4) The changes to this Section 501 made by this |
amendatory Act of 1996
apply to cases pending on or after |
June 1, 1997, except as otherwise provided
in Section 508.
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(c-2) Allocation of use of marital residence. Where
there |
is on file a verified complaint or verified petition seeking
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temporary eviction from the marital residence, the court may, |
during the
pendency of the proceeding, only in cases where the |
physical or mental well-being of either spouse or
his or her |
children is jeopardized by occupancy of the marital residence |
by both
spouses, and only upon due notice and full hearing, |
unless waived by the
court on good cause shown, enter orders |
granting the exclusive possession of the marital residence to |
either spouse,
by eviction from, or restoration of, the marital |
residence, until the final
determination of the cause pursuant |
to the factors listed in Section 602.7 of this Act. No such |
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order shall in any manner affect any
estate in homestead |
property of either party. In entering orders under this |
subsection (c-2), the court shall balance hardships to the |
parties. |
(d) A temporary order entered under this Section:
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(1) does not prejudice the rights of the parties or the |
child which
are to be adjudicated at subsequent hearings in |
the proceeding;
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(2) may be revoked or modified before final judgment, |
on a showing
by affidavit and upon hearing; and
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(3) terminates when the final judgment is entered or |
when the
petition for dissolution of marriage or legal |
separation or declaration
of invalidity of marriage is |
dismissed.
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(e) The fees or costs of mediation shall
be borne by the |
parties and may be assessed by the court as it deems equitable |
without prejudice and are subject to reallocation at the |
conclusion of the case. |
(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .)
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(750 ILCS 5/501.1) (from Ch. 40, par. 501.1)
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Sec. 501.1. Dissolution action stay.
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(a) Upon service of a summons and petition or praecipe |
filed
under the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage |
Act or upon
the filing of the respondent's appearance in the |
proceeding, whichever first
occurs, a dissolution action stay |
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shall be in effect against both parties, without bond or |
further notice, until a
final judgement is entered, the |
proceeding is dismissed, or until further
order of the court:
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(1) restraining both parties from physically abusing, |
harassing,
intimidating, striking, or interfering with the |
personal liberty of the
other party or the minor children |
of either party; and
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(2) restraining both parties from concealing a minor |
child of either party from the child's other parent |
removing any minor child of either
party from the State of |
Illinois or from concealing any such child from the
other |
party, without the consent of the other party or an order |
of the court .
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The restraint provided in this subsection (a) does not |
operate to make
unavailable any of the remedies provided in the |
Illinois Domestic Violence Act
of 1986.
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(b) (Blank).
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(c) (Blank).
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(d) (Blank).
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(e) In a proceeding filed under this Act, the summons shall |
provide
notice of the entry of the automatic dissolution action |
stay in a form as
required by applicable rules.
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(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .)
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(750 ILCS 5/502) (from Ch. 40, par. 502)
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Sec. 502. Agreement. |
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(a) To promote amicable settlement
of disputes between
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parties to a marriage attendant upon the dissolution of their |
marriage,
the parties may enter
into an agreement containing |
provisions for
disposition of any
property owned by either of |
them, maintenance of either of them, support,
parental |
responsibility allocation
of their children, and support of |
their children as provided in Sections Section 513 and 513.5 |
after
the children attain majority. Any agreement pursuant to |
this Section must be in writing, except for good cause shown |
with the approval of the court, before proceeding to an oral |
prove up.
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(b) The terms of the agreement, except those providing for |
the support and parental responsibility allocation of |
children, are binding upon the court unless it finds, after
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considering the economic circumstances of the parties and any |
other relevant evidence
produced by the parties, on their own |
motion or on request of the court,
that the
agreement is |
unconscionable. The terms of the agreement incorporated into |
the judgment are binding if there is any conflict between the |
terms of the agreement and any testimony made at an uncontested |
prove-up hearing on the grounds or the substance of the |
agreement.
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(c) If the court finds the agreement unconscionable,
it may |
request the parties to submit a revised agreement
or upon |
hearing, may make orders
for the disposition of property, |
maintenance, child support and other matters.
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(d) Unless the agreement provides to the contrary, its
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terms shall be set forth
in the judgment, and the parties shall |
be ordered to perform under such
terms, or if the agreement
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provides that its terms shall not be set forth in the judgment, |
the judgment shall
identify the agreement and state that the |
court has approved its terms.
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(e) Terms of the agreement set forth in the judgment are |
enforceable by
all remedies available for enforcement
of a |
judgment, including contempt, and are enforceable as contract |
terms.
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(f) Child support, support of children as provided in |
Sections Section 513 and 513.5 after
the children attain |
majority, and parental responsibility allocation of children |
may be modified upon a showing of a substantial change in |
circumstances. The parties may provide that maintenance is |
non-modifiable in amount, duration, or both. If the parties do |
not provide that maintenance is non-modifiable in amount, |
duration, or both, then those terms are modifiable upon a |
substantial change of circumstances. Property provisions of an |
agreement are never modifiable. The judgment may expressly |
preclude or limit modification of other terms set forth in the
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judgment if the agreement so provides. Otherwise, terms
of an |
agreement
set forth in the judgment are automatically modified |
by modification of the judgment.
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(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .)
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(750 ILCS 5/503) (from Ch. 40, par. 503)
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Sec. 503. Disposition of property and debts.
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(a) For purposes of this Act, "marital property" means all |
property, including debts and other obligations, acquired
by |
either spouse subsequent to the marriage, except the following, |
which is
known as "non-marital property":
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(1) property acquired by gift, legacy or descent or |
property acquired in exchange for such property;
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(2) property acquired in exchange for property |
acquired before the
marriage;
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(3) property acquired by a spouse after a judgment of |
legal separation;
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(4) property excluded by valid agreement of the |
parties, including
a premarital agreement or a postnuptial |
agreement;
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(5) any judgment or property obtained by judgment |
awarded to a spouse
from the other spouse except, however, |
when a spouse is required to sue the other spouse in order |
to obtain insurance coverage or otherwise recover from a |
third party and the recovery is directly related to amounts |
advanced by the marital estate, the judgment shall be |
considered marital property;
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(6) property acquired before the marriage, except as it |
relates to retirement plans that may have both marital and |
non-marital characteristics;
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(6.5) all property acquired by a spouse by
the sole use |
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of non-marital property as collateral for a loan that then |
is used to acquire property
during the marriage; to the |
extent that the marital estate repays any portion of the |
loan, it shall be considered a contribution from the |
marital estate to the non-marital estate subject to |
reimbursement; |
(7) the increase in value of non-marital property, |
irrespective of whether the
increase results from a |
contribution of marital property, non-marital property,
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the personal effort of a spouse, or otherwise, subject to |
the right of
reimbursement provided in subsection (c) of |
this Section; and
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(8) income from property acquired by a method listed in |
paragraphs (1)
through (7) of this subsection if the income |
is not attributable to the
personal effort of a spouse.
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Property acquired prior to a marriage that would otherwise |
be non-marital property shall not be deemed to be marital |
property solely because the property was acquired in |
contemplation of marriage. |
The court shall make specific factual findings as to its |
classification of assets as marital or non-marital property, |
values, and other factual findings supporting its property |
award. |
(b)(1) For purposes of distribution of property, all |
property acquired by either spouse after the marriage and |
before a
judgment of dissolution of marriage or declaration of |
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invalidity of marriage is presumed marital property. This |
presumption includes non-marital property transferred into |
some form of co-ownership
between the spouses, regardless of |
whether
title is held individually or by the spouses in some |
form of co-ownership such
as joint tenancy, tenancy in common, |
tenancy by the entirety, or community
property. The A spouse |
may overcome the presumption of marital property is overcome by |
showing through clear and convincing evidence that
the property |
was acquired by a method listed in subsection (a) of this |
Section or was done for estate or tax planning purposes or for |
other reasons that establish that a transfer between spouses |
the transfer was not intended to be a gift.
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(2) For purposes of distribution of property pursuant to |
this Section,
all pension benefits (including pension benefits |
under the Illinois Pension
Code, defined benefit plans, defined |
contribution plans and accounts, individual retirement |
accounts, and non-qualified plans) acquired by or participated |
in by either spouse after the marriage and before a judgment of
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dissolution of marriage or legal separation or declaration of |
invalidity of the marriage are
presumed to be marital property. |
A spouse may overcome the presumption that these pension |
benefits are marital property
by showing through clear and |
convincing evidence that the pension benefits were acquired by |
a method
listed in subsection (a) of this Section. The right to |
a division of pension
benefits in just proportions under this |
Section is enforceable under Section
1-119 of the Illinois |
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Pension Code.
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The value of pension benefits in a retirement system |
subject to the Illinois
Pension Code shall be determined in |
accordance with the valuation procedures
established by the |
retirement system.
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The recognition of pension benefits as marital property and |
the division of
those benefits pursuant to a Qualified Illinois |
Domestic Relations Order shall
not be deemed to be a |
diminishment, alienation, or impairment of those
benefits. The |
division of pension benefits is an allocation of property in
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which each spouse has a species of common ownership.
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(3) For purposes of distribution of property under this |
Section, all stock
options and restricted stock or similar form |
of benefit granted to either spouse after the marriage and |
before a judgment of
dissolution of marriage or legal |
separation or declaration of invalidity of marriage, whether
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vested or non-vested or whether their value is ascertainable, |
are presumed to
be marital property. This presumption of |
marital property is overcome by a
showing that the stock |
options or restricted stock or similar form of benefit were |
acquired by a method listed in subsection
(a) of this Section. |
The court shall allocate stock options and restricted stock or |
similar form of benefit between the
parties at the time of the |
judgment of dissolution of marriage or declaration
of |
invalidity of marriage recognizing that the value of the stock |
options and restricted stock or similar form of benefit may
not |
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be then determinable and that the actual division of the |
options may not
occur until a future date. In making the |
allocation between the parties, the
court shall consider, in |
addition to the factors set forth in subsection (d) of
this |
Section, the following:
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(i) All circumstances underlying the grant of the stock |
option and restricted stock or similar form of benefit |
including
but not limited to the vesting schedule, whether |
the grant was for past, present, or future efforts, whether |
the grant is designed to promote future performance or |
employment,
or any combination thereof.
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(ii) The length of time from the grant of the option to |
the time the
option is exercisable.
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(b-5) As to any existing policy of life insurance insuring |
the life of either spouse, or any interest in such policy, that |
constitutes marital property, whether whole life, term life, |
group term life, universal life, or other form of life
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insurance policy, and whether or not the value is |
ascertainable, the court shall allocate ownership, death |
benefits or the
right to assign death benefits, and the |
obligation for premium payments, if any, equitably between the |
parties at the
time of the judgment for dissolution or |
declaration of invalidity of marriage. |
(c) Commingled marital and non-marital property shall be |
treated in
the following manner, unless otherwise agreed by the |
spouses:
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(1)(A) If marital and non-marital property are |
commingled by one estate being contributed into the other, |
the following shall apply: |
(i) If the contributed property loses its |
identity, the contributed property transmutes to the |
estate receiving the property, subject to the |
provisions of paragraph (2) of this subsection (c). |
(ii) If the contributed property retains its |
identity, it does not transmute and remains property of |
the contributing estate. |
(B) If marital and non-marital property are commingled |
into newly acquired property resulting in a loss of |
identity of the contributing estates, the commingled |
property shall be deemed transmuted to marital property, |
subject to the provisions of paragraph (2) of this |
subsection (c). |
(2)(A) When one estate of property makes a contribution |
to another estate of property, the contributing estate |
shall be reimbursed from the estate receiving the |
contribution notwithstanding any transmutation. No such |
reimbursement shall be made with respect to a contribution |
that is not traceable by clear and convincing evidence or |
that was a gift. The court may provide for reimbursement |
out of the marital property to be divided or by imposing a |
lien against the non-marital property that received the |
contribution. |
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(B) When a spouse contributes personal effort to |
non-marital property, it shall be deemed a contribution |
from the marital estate, which shall receive reimbursement |
for the efforts if the efforts are significant and result |
in substantial appreciation to the non-marital property |
except that if the marital estate reasonably has been |
compensated for his or her efforts, it shall not be deemed |
a contribution to the marital estate and there shall be no |
reimbursement to the marital estate. The court may provide |
for reimbursement out of the marital property to be divided |
or by imposing a lien against the non-marital property |
which received the contribution.
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(d) In a proceeding for dissolution of marriage or |
declaration of invalidity
of marriage, or in a proceeding for |
disposition of property following
dissolution of marriage by a |
court that lacked personal jurisdiction over the
absent spouse |
or lacked jurisdiction to dispose of the property, the court
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shall assign each spouse's non-marital property to that spouse. |
It also shall
divide the marital property without regard to |
marital misconduct in just
proportions considering all |
relevant factors, including:
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(1) each party's contribution to the acquisition, |
preservation, or
increase or decrease in value of the |
marital or non-marital property, including
(i) any |
decrease attributable to an advance from the parties' |
marital estate under subsection (c-1)(2) of Section 501; |
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(ii) the contribution of a spouse as a homemaker or to the |
family unit; and (iii) whether the contribution is after |
the commencement of a proceeding for dissolution of |
marriage or declaration of invalidity of marriage;
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(2) the dissipation by each party of the marital |
property, provided that a party's claim of dissipation is |
subject to the following conditions:
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(i) a notice of intent to claim dissipation shall |
be given no later than 60 days
before trial or 30 days |
after discovery closes, whichever is later; |
(ii) the notice of intent to claim dissipation |
shall contain, at a minimum, a date or period of time |
during which the marriage began undergoing an |
irretrievable breakdown, an identification of the |
property dissipated, and a date or period of time |
during which the dissipation occurred; |
(iii) a certificate or service of the notice of |
intent to claim dissipation shall be filed with the |
clerk of the court and be served pursuant to applicable |
rules; |
(iv) no dissipation shall be deemed to have |
occurred prior to 3 years after the party claiming |
dissipation knew or should have known of the |
dissipation, but in no event prior to 5 years before |
the filing of the petition for dissolution of marriage; |
(3) the value of the property assigned to each spouse;
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(4) the duration of the marriage;
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(5) the relevant economic circumstances of each spouse |
when the division
of property is to become effective, |
including the desirability of awarding
the family home, or |
the right to live therein for reasonable periods, to the
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spouse having the primary residence of the children;
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(6) any obligations and rights arising from a prior |
marriage
of either party;
|
(7) any prenuptial or postnuptial agreement of the |
parties;
|
(8) the age, health, station, occupation, amount and |
sources of income,
vocational skills, employability, |
estate, liabilities, and needs of each of the
parties;
|
(9) the custodial provisions for any children;
|
(10) whether the apportionment is in lieu of or in |
addition to
maintenance;
|
(11) the reasonable opportunity of each spouse for |
future acquisition
of capital assets and income; and
|
(12) the tax consequences of the property division upon |
the
respective economic circumstances of the parties.
|
(e) Each spouse has a species of common ownership in the |
marital property
which vests at the time dissolution |
proceedings are commenced and continues
only during the |
pendency of the action. Any such interest in marital property
|
shall not encumber that property so as to restrict its |
transfer, assignment
or conveyance by the title holder unless |
|
such title holder is specifically
enjoined from making such |
transfer, assignment or conveyance.
|
(f) In a proceeding for dissolution of marriage or |
declaration of
invalidity of marriage or in a proceeding for |
disposition of property
following dissolution of marriage by a |
court that lacked personal
jurisdiction over the absent spouse |
or lacked jurisdiction to dispose of
the property, the court, |
in determining the value of the marital and
non-marital |
property for purposes of dividing the property, has the |
discretion to use the date of the trial or such other date as |
agreed upon by the parties, or ordered by the court within its |
discretion, for purposes of determining the value of assets or |
property.
|
(g) The court if necessary to protect and promote the best |
interests of the
children may set aside a portion of the |
jointly or separately held
estates of the parties in a separate |
fund or trust for the support,
maintenance, education, physical |
and mental health, and general welfare of any minor, dependent,
|
or incompetent child of the parties. In making a determination |
under this
subsection, the court may consider, among other |
things, the conviction of a
party of any of the offenses set |
forth in Section 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, |
12-3.3, 12-4, 12-4.1,
12-4.2, 12-4.3,
12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, |
12-15, or 12-16, or Section 12-3.05 except for subdivision |
(a)(4) or (g)(1), of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal |
Code of 2012 if the
victim is a
child of one or both of the |
|
parties, and there is a need for, and cost of,
care, healing |
and counseling for the child who is the victim of the crime.
|
(h) Unless specifically directed by a reviewing court, or |
upon good
cause shown, the court shall not on remand consider |
any increase or
decrease in the value of any "marital" or |
"non-marital" property occurring
since the assessment of such |
property at the original trial or hearing, but
shall use only |
that assessment made at the original trial or hearing.
|
(i) The court may make such judgments affecting the marital |
property
as may be just and may enforce such judgments by |
ordering a sale of marital
property, with proceeds therefrom to |
be applied as determined by the court.
|
(j) After proofs have closed in the final hearing on all |
other issues
between the parties (or in conjunction with the |
final hearing, if all parties
so stipulate) and before judgment |
is entered, a party's petition for
contribution to fees and |
costs incurred in the proceeding shall be heard and
decided, in |
accordance with the following provisions:
|
(1) A petition for contribution, if not filed before |
the final hearing
on other issues between the parties, |
shall be filed no later than 14 days after
the closing of |
proofs in the final hearing or within such other period as |
the
court orders.
|
(2) Any award of contribution to one party from the |
other party shall be
based on the criteria for division of |
marital property under this Section 503
and, if maintenance |
|
has been awarded, on the criteria for an award of
|
maintenance under Section 504.
|
(3) The filing of a petition for contribution shall not |
be deemed to
constitute a waiver of the attorney-client |
privilege between the petitioning
party and current or |
former counsel; and such a waiver shall not constitute a
|
prerequisite to a hearing for contribution. If either |
party's presentation on
contribution, however, includes |
evidence within the scope of the
attorney-client |
privilege, the disclosure or disclosures shall be narrowly
|
construed and shall not be deemed by the court to |
constitute a general waiver
of the privilege as to matters |
beyond the scope of the presentation.
|
(4) No finding on which a contribution award is based |
or denied shall be
asserted against counsel or former |
counsel for purposes of any hearing under
subsection (c) or |
(e) of Section 508.
|
(5) A contribution award (payable to either the |
petitioning
party or the party's counsel, or jointly, as |
the court determines) may be in
the form of either a set |
dollar amount or a percentage of fees and costs (or a
|
portion of fees and costs) to be subsequently agreed upon |
by the petitioning
party and counsel or, alternatively, |
thereafter determined in a hearing
pursuant to subsection |
(c) of Section 508 or previously or thereafter
determined |
in an independent proceeding under subsection (e) of |
|
Section
508.
|
(6) The changes to this Section 503 made by this |
amendatory Act of 1996
apply to cases pending on or after |
June 1, 1997, except as otherwise provided
in Section 508.
|
(k) In determining the value of assets or property under |
this Section, the court shall employ a fair market value |
standard. The date of valuation for the purposes of division of |
assets shall be the date of trial or such other date as agreed |
by the parties or ordered by the court, within its discretion. |
If the court grants a petition brought under Section 2-1401 of |
the Code of Civil Procedure, then the court has the discretion |
to use the date of the trial or such other date as agreed upon |
by the parties, or ordered by the court within its discretion, |
for purposes of determining the value of assets or property. |
(l) The court may seek the advice of financial experts or |
other professionals, whether or not employed by the court on a |
regular basis. The advice given shall be in writing and made |
available by the court to counsel. Counsel may examine as a |
witness any professional consulted by the court designated as |
the court's witness. Professional personnel consulted by the |
court are subject to subpoena for the purposes of discovery, |
trial, or both. The court shall allocate the costs and fees of |
those professional personnel between the parties based upon the |
financial ability of each party and any other criteria the |
court considers appropriate, and the allocation is subject to |
reallocation under subsection (a) of Section 508. Upon the |
|
request of any party or upon the court's own motion, the court |
may conduct a hearing as to the reasonableness of those fees |
and costs. |
(m) The changes made to this Section by Public Act 97-941 |
apply only to petitions for dissolution of marriage filed on or |
after January 1, 2013 (the effective date of Public Act |
97-941). |
(Source: P.A. 99-78, eff. 7-20-15; 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .)
|
(750 ILCS 5/504) (from Ch. 40, par. 504)
|
Sec. 504. Maintenance.
|
(a) Entitlement to maintenance. In a proceeding for |
dissolution of marriage or legal separation or
declaration of |
invalidity of marriage, or a proceeding for maintenance
|
following dissolution of the marriage by a court which lacked |
personal
jurisdiction over the absent spouse, the court may |
grant a maintenance award for either spouse in amounts and for |
periods of
time as the court deems just, without regard to |
marital misconduct, and the maintenance may
be paid from the |
income or property of the other spouse. The court shall first |
determine whether a maintenance award is appropriate, after |
consideration
of all relevant factors, including:
|
(1) the income and property of each party, including |
marital property
apportioned and non-marital property |
assigned to the party seeking maintenance as well as all |
financial obligations imposed on the parties as a result of |
|
the dissolution of marriage;
|
(2) the needs of each party;
|
(3) the realistic present and future earning capacity |
of each party;
|
(4) any impairment of the present and future earning |
capacity of the
party seeking maintenance due to that party |
devoting time to domestic
duties or having forgone or |
delayed education, training,
employment, or
career |
opportunities due to the marriage;
|
(5) any impairment of the realistic present or future |
earning capacity of the party against whom maintenance is |
sought; |
(6) the time necessary to enable the party seeking |
maintenance to
acquire appropriate education, training, |
and employment, and whether that
party is able to support |
himself or herself through appropriate employment
or any |
parental responsibility arrangements and its effect on the |
party seeking employment;
|
(7) the standard of living established during the |
marriage;
|
(8) the duration of the marriage;
|
(9) the age, health, station, occupation, amount and |
sources of income, vocational skills, employability, |
estate, liabilities, and the needs of each of the parties;
|
(10) all sources of public and private income |
including, without limitation, disability and retirement |
|
income; |
(11) the tax consequences of the property division upon |
the respective
economic circumstances of the parties;
|
(12) contributions and services by the party seeking |
maintenance to
the education, training, career or career |
potential, or license of the
other spouse;
|
(13) any valid agreement of the parties; and
|
(14) any other factor that the court expressly finds to |
be just and
equitable.
|
(b) (Blank).
|
(b-1) Amount and duration of maintenance. If the court |
determines that a maintenance award is appropriate, the court |
shall order maintenance in accordance with either paragraph (1) |
or (2) of this subsection (b-1): |
(1) Maintenance award in accordance with guidelines. |
In situations when the combined gross income of the parties |
is less than $250,000 and the payor has no obligation to |
pay child support or maintenance or both from a prior |
relationship, maintenance payable after the date the |
parties' marriage is dissolved shall be in accordance with |
subparagraphs (A) and (B) of this paragraph (1), unless the |
court makes a finding that the application of the |
guidelines would be inappropriate. |
(A) The amount of maintenance under this paragraph |
(1) shall be calculated by taking 30% of the payor's |
gross income minus 20% of the payee's gross income. The
|
|
amount calculated as maintenance, however, when added |
to the gross income of the payee, may not result in the |
payee receiving an amount that is in excess of 40% of |
the combined gross income
of the parties. |
(B) The duration of an award under this paragraph |
(1) shall be calculated by multiplying the length of |
the marriage at the time the action was commenced by |
whichever of
the following factors applies: 5 years or |
less (.20); more than 5 years but less than 10 years |
(.40); 10 years or more but less than 15
years (.60); |
or 15 years or more but less than 20 years (.80). For a |
marriage of 20 or more years, the court, in its |
discretion, shall order either permanent maintenance |
or maintenance for a period equal to the length of the
|
marriage. |
(2) Maintenance award not in accordance with |
guidelines. Any non-guidelines award of maintenance shall |
be made after the court's consideration of all relevant |
factors set forth in subsection (a) of this Section. |
(b-2) Findings. In each case involving the issue of |
maintenance, the court shall make specific findings of fact, as |
follows: |
(1) the court shall state its reasoning for awarding or |
not awarding maintenance and shall include references to |
each relevant factor set forth in subsection (a) of this |
Section; and |
|
(2) if the court deviates from otherwise applicable |
guidelines under paragraph (1) of subsection (b-1), it |
shall state in its findings the amount of maintenance (if |
determinable) or duration that would have been required |
under the guidelines and the reasoning for any variance |
from the guidelines. |
(b-3) Gross income. For purposes of this Section, the term |
"gross income" means all income from all sources, within the |
scope of that phrase phase in Section 505 of this Act. |
(b-4) Unallocated maintenance. Unless the parties |
otherwise agree, the court may not order unallocated |
maintenance and child support in any dissolution judgment or in |
any post-dissolution order. In its discretion, the court may |
order unallocated maintenance and child support in any |
pre-dissolution temporary order. |
(b-4.5) Fixed-term maintenance in marriages of less than 10 |
years. If a court grants maintenance for a fixed period under |
subsection (a) of this Section at the conclusion of a case |
commenced before the tenth anniversary of the marriage, the |
court may also designate the termination of the period during |
which this maintenance is to be paid as a "permanent |
termination". The effect of this designation is that |
maintenance is barred after the ending date of the period |
during which maintenance is to be paid. |
(b-5) Interest on maintenance. Any maintenance obligation |
including any unallocated maintenance and child support |
|
obligation, or any portion of any support obligation, that |
becomes due and remains unpaid shall accrue simple interest as |
set forth in Section 505 of this Act.
|
(b-7) Maintenance judgments. Any new or existing |
maintenance order including any unallocated maintenance and |
child support order entered by the court under this Section |
shall be deemed to be a series of judgments against the person |
obligated to pay support thereunder. Each such judgment to be |
in the amount of each payment or installment of support and |
each such judgment to be deemed entered as of the date the |
corresponding payment or installment becomes due under the |
terms of the support order, except no judgment shall arise as |
to any installment coming due after the termination of |
maintenance as provided by Section 510 of the Illinois Marriage |
and Dissolution of Marriage Act or the provisions of any order |
for maintenance. Each such judgment shall have the full force, |
effect and attributes of any other judgment of this State, |
including the ability to be enforced. Notwithstanding any other |
State or local law to the contrary, a lien arises by operation |
of law against the real and personal property of the obligor |
for each installment of overdue support owed by the obligor. |
(b-8) Upon review of any previously ordered maintenance |
award, the court may extend maintenance for further review, |
extend maintenance for a fixed non-modifiable term, extend |
maintenance for an indefinite term, or permanently terminate |
maintenance in accordance with subdivision (b-1)(1)(A) of this |
|
Section. |
(c) Maintenance during an appeal. The court may grant and |
enforce the payment of maintenance during
the pendency of an |
appeal as the court shall deem reasonable and proper.
|
(d) Maintenance during imprisonment. No maintenance shall |
accrue during the period in which a party is
imprisoned for |
failure to comply with the court's order for the payment of
|
such maintenance.
|
(e) Fees when maintenance is paid through the clerk. When |
maintenance is to be paid through the clerk of the court in a
|
county of 1,000,000 inhabitants or less, the order shall direct |
the obligor
to pay to the clerk, in addition to the maintenance |
payments, all fees
imposed by the county board under paragraph |
(3) of subsection (u) of
Section 27.1 of the Clerks of Courts |
Act. Unless paid in cash or pursuant
to an order for |
withholding, the payment of the fee shall be by a separate
|
instrument from the support payment and shall be made to the |
order of
the Clerk.
|
(f) Maintenance secured by life insurance. An award ordered |
by a court upon entry of a dissolution judgment or upon entry |
of an award of maintenance following a reservation of |
maintenance in a dissolution judgment may be reasonably |
secured, in whole or in part, by life insurance on the
payor's |
life on terms as to which the parties agree, or, if they do not |
agree, on such terms determined by the court,
subject to the |
following: |
|
(1) With respect to existing life insurance, provided |
the court is apprised through evidence,
stipulation, or |
otherwise as to level of death benefits, premium, and other |
relevant
data and makes findings relative thereto, the |
court may allocate death benefits, the right
to assign |
death benefits, or the obligation for future premium |
payments between the
parties as it deems just. |
(2) To the extent the court determines that its award |
should be secured, in whole or in part,
by new life |
insurance on the payor's life, the court may only order: |
(i) that the payor cooperate on all appropriate |
steps for the payee to obtain
such new life insurance; |
and |
(ii) that the payee, at his or her sole option and |
expense, may obtain such new life
insurance on the |
payor's life up to a maximum level of death benefit |
coverage,
or descending death benefit coverage, as is |
set by the court, such level not to exceed a reasonable
|
amount in light of the court's award, with the payee or |
the
payee's designee being the beneficiary of such life |
insurance. |
In determining the maximum level of death benefit coverage, |
the court shall take into account all relevant facts and |
circumstances, including the impact on access to life |
insurance by the maintenance payor. If in resolving any |
issues under paragraph (2) of this subsection (f) a court |
|
reviews any submitted or proposed application for new |
insurance on the life of a maintenance payor, the review |
shall be in camera. |
(3) A judgment shall expressly set forth that all death |
benefits paid under life insurance on
a payor's life |
maintained or obtained pursuant to this subsection to |
secure
maintenance are designated as excludable from the |
gross income of the
maintenance payee under Section |
71(b)(1)(B) of the Internal Revenue Code, unless an
|
agreement or stipulation of the parties otherwise |
provides. |
(Source: P.A. 98-961, eff. 1-1-15; 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .)
|
(750 ILCS 5/505) (from Ch. 40, par. 505)
|
Sec. 505. Child support; contempt; penalties.
|
(a) In a proceeding for dissolution of marriage, legal |
separation,
declaration of invalidity of marriage, a |
proceeding for child support
following dissolution of the |
marriage by a court that lacked personal
jurisdiction over the |
absent spouse, a proceeding for modification of a
previous |
order for child support under Section 510 of this Act, or any
|
proceeding authorized under Section 501 or 601 of this Act, the |
court may
order either or both parents owing a duty of support |
to a child of the
marriage to pay an amount reasonable and |
necessary for the support of the child, without
regard to |
marital misconduct. The duty of support owed to a child
|
|
includes the obligation to provide for the reasonable and |
necessary
educational, physical, mental and emotional health |
needs of the child.
For purposes of this Section, the term |
"child" shall include any child under
age 18 and
any child |
under age 19 who is still attending high school. For purposes |
of this Section, the term "supporting parent" means the parent |
obligated to pay support to the other parent.
|
(1) The Court shall determine the minimum amount of |
support by using the
following guidelines:
|
|
Number of Children |
Percent of Supporting Party's |
|
|
Net Income |
|
1 |
20% |
|
2 |
28% |
|
3 |
32% |
|
4 |
40% |
|
5 |
45% |
|
6 or more |
50% |
|
(2) The above guidelines shall be applied in each case |
unless the court
finds that a deviation from the guidelines |
is appropriate after considering the best interest of the |
child in light of the evidence, including, but not limited |
to, one or more of the following relevant
factors:
|
(a) the financial resources and needs of the child;
|
(b) the financial resources and needs of the |
parents;
|
(c) the standard of living the child would have |
|
enjoyed had the
marriage not been dissolved;
|
(d) the physical, mental, and emotional needs of |
the child; and
|
(d-5) the educational needs of the child.
|
If the court deviates from the guidelines, the court's |
finding
shall state the amount of support that would have |
been required under the
guidelines, if determinable. The |
court shall include the reason or reasons for
the variance |
from the
guidelines.
|
(2.5) The court, in its discretion, in addition to |
setting child support pursuant to the guidelines and |
factors, may order either or both parents owing a duty of |
support to a child of the marriage to contribute to the |
following expenses, if determined by the court to be |
reasonable: |
(a) health needs not covered by insurance; |
(b) child care; |
(c) education; and |
(d) extracurricular activities. |
(3) "Net income" is defined as the total of all income |
from all
sources, minus the following deductions:
|
(a) Federal income tax (properly calculated |
withholding or estimated
payments);
|
(b) State income tax (properly calculated |
withholding or estimated
payments);
|
(c) Social Security (FICA payments);
|
|
(d) Mandatory retirement contributions required by |
law or as a
condition of employment;
|
(e) Union dues;
|
(f) Dependent and individual |
health/hospitalization insurance premiums and premiums |
for life insurance ordered by the court to reasonably |
secure payment of ordered child support;
|
(g) Prior obligations of support or maintenance |
actually paid pursuant
to a court order;
|
(g-5) Obligations pursuant to a court order for |
maintenance in the pending proceeding actually paid or |
payable under Section 504 to the same party to whom |
child support is to be payable; |
(h) Expenditures for repayment of debts that |
represent reasonable and
necessary expenses for the |
production of income including, but not limited to, |
student loans, medical expenditures
necessary to |
preserve life or health, reasonable expenditures for |
the
benefit of the child and the other parent, |
exclusive of gifts. The court
shall reduce net income |
in determining the minimum amount of support to be
|
ordered only for the period that such payments are due |
and shall enter an
order containing provisions for its |
self-executing modification upon
termination of such |
payment period;
|
(i) Foster care payments paid by the Department of |
|
Children and Family Services for providing licensed |
foster care to a foster child. |
(4) In cases where the court order provides for
|
health/hospitalization insurance coverage pursuant to |
Section 505.2 of
this Act, the premiums for that insurance, |
or that portion of the premiums
for which the supporting |
party is responsible in the case of insurance
provided |
through an employer's health insurance plan where
the |
employer pays a portion of the premiums, shall be |
subtracted
from net income in determining the minimum |
amount of support to be ordered.
|
(4.5) In a proceeding for child support following |
dissolution of the
marriage by a court that lacked personal |
jurisdiction over the absent spouse,
and in which the court |
is requiring payment of support for the period before
the |
date an order for current support is entered, there is a |
rebuttable
presumption
that the supporting party's net |
income for the prior period was the same as his
or her net |
income at the time the order for current support is |
entered.
|
(5) If the net income cannot be determined because of |
default or any
other reason, the court shall order support |
in an amount considered
reasonable in the particular case. |
The final order in all cases shall
state the support level |
in dollar amounts.
However, if the
court finds that the |
child support amount cannot be expressed exclusively as a
|
|
dollar amount because all or a portion of the supporting |
parent's net income is uncertain
as to source, time of |
payment, or amount, the court may order a percentage
amount |
of support in addition to a specific dollar amount and |
enter
such other orders as may be necessary to determine |
and enforce, on a timely
basis, the applicable support |
ordered.
|
(6) If (i) the supporting parent was properly served |
with a request
for
discovery of financial information |
relating to the supporting parent's
ability to
provide |
child support, (ii) the supporting parent failed to comply |
with the
request,
despite having been ordered to do so by |
the court, and (iii) the supporting
parent is not present |
at the hearing to determine support despite having
received
|
proper notice, then any relevant financial information |
concerning the supporting
parent's ability to provide |
child support that was obtained
pursuant to
subpoena and |
proper notice shall be admitted into evidence without the |
need to
establish any further foundation for its admission.
|
(a-5) In an action to enforce an order for support based on |
the respondent's failure of the supporting parent
to make |
support payments as required by the order, notice of |
proceedings to
hold the supporting parent respondent in |
contempt for that failure may be served on the
supporting |
parent respondent by personal service or by regular mail |
addressed to the respondent's
last known address of the |
|
supporting parent . The respondent's last known address of the |
supporting parent may be determined from
records of the clerk |
of the court, from the Federal Case Registry of Child
Support |
Orders, or by any other reasonable means.
|
(b) Failure of either parent to comply with an order to pay |
support shall
be punishable as in other cases of contempt. In |
addition to other
penalties provided by law the Court may, |
after finding the parent guilty
of contempt, order that the |
parent be:
|
(1) placed on probation with such conditions of |
probation as the Court
deems advisable;
|
(2) sentenced to periodic imprisonment for a period not |
to exceed 6
months; provided, however, that the Court may |
permit the parent to be
released for periods of time during |
the day or night to:
|
(A) work; or
|
(B) conduct a business or other self-employed |
occupation.
|
The Court may further order any part or all of the earnings |
of a parent
during a sentence of periodic imprisonment paid to |
the Clerk of the Circuit
Court or to the parent receiving the |
support or to the guardian receiving the support
of the |
children of the sentenced parent for the support of said
|
children until further order of the Court.
|
If a parent who is found guilty of contempt for failure to |
comply with an order to pay support is a person who conducts a |
|
business or who is self-employed, the court in addition to |
other penalties provided by law may order that the parent do |
one or more of the following: (i) provide to the court monthly |
financial statements showing income and expenses from the |
business or the self-employment; (ii) seek employment and |
report periodically to the court with a diary, listing, or |
other memorandum of his or her employment search efforts; or |
(iii) report to the Department of Employment Security for job |
search services to find employment that will be subject to |
withholding for child support. |
If there is a unity of interest and ownership sufficient to |
render no
financial separation between a supporting parent and |
another person or
persons or business entity, the court may |
pierce the ownership veil of the
person, persons, or business |
entity to discover assets of the supporting
parent held in the |
name of that person, those persons, or that business entity.
|
The following circumstances are sufficient to authorize a court |
to order
discovery of the assets of a person, persons, or |
business entity and to compel
the application of any discovered |
assets toward payment on the judgment for
support:
|
(1) the supporting parent and the person, persons, or |
business entity
maintain records together.
|
(2) the supporting parent and the person, persons, or |
business entity
fail to maintain an arm's length |
relationship between themselves with regard to
any assets.
|
(3) the supporting parent transfers assets to the |
|
person, persons,
or business entity with the intent to |
perpetrate a fraud on the
parent receiving the support.
|
With respect to assets which
are real property, no order |
entered under this paragraph shall affect the
rights of bona |
fide purchasers, mortgagees, judgment creditors, or other lien
|
holders who acquire their interests in the property prior to |
the time a notice
of lis pendens pursuant to the Code of Civil |
Procedure or a copy of the order
is placed of record in the |
office of the recorder of deeds for the county in
which the |
real property is located.
|
The court may also order in cases where the parent is 90 |
days or more
delinquent in payment of support or has been |
adjudicated in arrears in an
amount equal to 90 days obligation |
or more, that the parent's Illinois driving
privileges be |
suspended until the court
determines that the parent is in |
compliance with the order of support.
The court may also order |
that the parent be issued a family financial
responsibility |
driving permit that would allow limited driving privileges for
|
employment and medical purposes in accordance with Section |
7-702.1 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code. The clerk of the circuit |
court shall certify the order
suspending the driving privileges |
of the parent or granting the issuance of a
family financial |
responsibility driving permit to the Secretary of State on
|
forms prescribed by the Secretary. Upon receipt of the |
authenticated
documents, the Secretary of State shall suspend |
the parent's driving privileges
until further order of the |
|
court and shall, if ordered by the court, subject to
the |
provisions of Section 7-702.1 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, |
issue a family
financial responsibility driving permit to the |
parent.
|
In addition to the penalties or punishment that may be |
imposed under this
Section, any person whose conduct |
constitutes a violation of Section 15 of the
Non-Support |
Punishment Act may be prosecuted under that Act, and a person
|
convicted under that Act may be sentenced in accordance with |
that Act. The
sentence may include but need not be limited to a |
requirement that the person
perform community service under |
Section 50 of that Act or participate in a work
alternative |
program under Section 50 of that Act. A person may not be |
required
to participate in a work alternative program under |
Section 50 of that Act if
the person is currently participating |
in a work program pursuant to Section
505.1 of this Act.
|
A support obligation, or any portion of a support |
obligation, which becomes
due and remains unpaid as of the end |
of each month, excluding the child support that was due for |
that month to the extent that it was not paid in that month, |
shall accrue simple interest as set forth in Section 12-109 of |
the Code of Civil Procedure.
An order for support entered or |
modified on or after January 1, 2006 shall
contain a statement |
that a support obligation required under the order, or any
|
portion of a support obligation required under the order, that |
becomes due and
remains unpaid as of the end of each month, |
|
excluding the child support that was due for that month to the |
extent that it was not paid in that month, shall accrue simple |
interest as set forth in Section 12-109 of the Code of Civil |
Procedure. Failure to include the statement in the order for |
support does
not affect the validity of the order or the |
accrual of interest as provided in
this Section.
|
(c) A one-time charge of 20% is imposable upon the amount |
of
past-due child support owed on July 1, 1988 which has |
accrued under a
support order entered by the court. The charge |
shall be imposed in
accordance with the provisions of Section |
10-21 of the Illinois Public Aid
Code and shall be enforced by |
the court upon petition.
|
(d) Any new or existing support order entered by the court
|
under this Section shall be deemed to be a series of judgments |
against the
person obligated to pay support thereunder, each |
such judgment to be in the
amount of each payment or |
installment of support and each such judgment to
be deemed |
entered as of the date the corresponding payment or installment
|
becomes due under the terms of the support order. Each such |
judgment shall
have the full force, effect and attributes of |
any other judgment of this
State, including the ability to be |
enforced.
Notwithstanding any other State or local law to the |
contrary, a lien arises by operation of law against the real |
and personal property of
the supporting parent for each |
installment of overdue support owed by the supporting
parent.
|
(e) When child support is to be paid through the clerk of |
|
the court in a
county of 1,000,000 inhabitants or less, the |
order shall direct the supporting parent
to pay to the clerk, |
in addition to the child support payments, all fees
imposed by |
the county board under paragraph (3) of subsection (u) of
|
Section 27.1 of the Clerks of Courts Act. Unless paid in cash |
or pursuant to
an order for withholding, the payment of the fee |
shall be by a separate
instrument from the support payment and |
shall be made to the order of the
Clerk.
|
(f) All orders for support, when entered or
modified, shall |
include a provision requiring the supporting parent to notify
|
the court and, in cases in which a party is receiving child and |
spouse
services under Article X of the Illinois Public Aid |
Code, the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services, within |
7 days, (i) of the name and address
of any new employer of the |
obligor, (ii) whether the supporting parent has access to
|
health insurance coverage through the employer or other group |
coverage and,
if so, the policy name and number and the names |
of persons covered under
the policy, except only the initials |
of any covered minors shall be included, and (iii) of any new |
residential or mailing address or telephone
number of the |
supporting parent. In any subsequent action to enforce a
|
support order, upon a sufficient showing that a diligent effort |
has been made
to ascertain the location of the supporting |
parent, service of process or
provision of notice necessary in |
the case may be made at the last known
address of the |
supporting parent in any manner expressly provided by the
Code |
|
of Civil Procedure or this Act, which service shall be |
sufficient for
purposes of due process.
|
(g) An order for support shall include a date on which the |
current
support obligation terminates. The termination date |
shall be no earlier than
the date on which the child covered by |
the order will attain the age of
18. However, if the child will |
not graduate from high school until after
attaining the age of |
18, then the termination date shall be no earlier than the
|
earlier of the date on which the child's high school graduation |
will occur or
the date on which the child will attain the age |
of 19. The order for support
shall state that the termination |
date does not apply to any arrearage that may
remain unpaid on |
that date. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to
|
prevent the court from modifying the order or terminating the |
order in the
event the child is otherwise emancipated.
|
(g-5) If there is an unpaid arrearage or delinquency (as |
those terms are defined in the Income Withholding for Support |
Act) equal to at least one month's support obligation on the |
termination date stated in the order for support or, if there |
is no termination date stated in the order, on the date the |
child attains the age of majority or is otherwise emancipated, |
the periodic amount required to be paid for current support of |
that child immediately prior to that date shall automatically |
continue to be an obligation, not as current support but as |
periodic payment toward satisfaction of the unpaid arrearage or |
delinquency. That periodic payment shall be in addition to any |
|
periodic payment previously required for satisfaction of the |
arrearage or delinquency. The total periodic amount to be paid |
toward satisfaction of the arrearage or delinquency may be |
enforced and collected by any method provided by law for |
enforcement and collection of child support, including but not |
limited to income withholding under the Income Withholding for |
Support Act. Each order for support entered or modified on or |
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd |
General Assembly must contain a statement notifying the parties |
of the requirements of this subsection. Failure to include the |
statement in the order for support does not affect the validity |
of the order or the operation of the provisions of this |
subsection with regard to the order. This subsection shall not |
be construed to prevent or affect the establishment or |
modification of an order for support of a minor child or the |
establishment or modification of an order for support of a |
non-minor child or educational expenses under Section 513 of |
this Act.
|
(h) An order entered under this Section shall include a |
provision requiring
either parent to report to the other parent |
and to the clerk of court within 10 days each time either |
parent obtains new employment, and each time either parent's
|
employment is terminated for any reason. The report shall be in |
writing and
shall, in the case of new employment, include the |
name and address of the new
employer. Failure to report new |
employment or the termination of current
employment, if coupled |
|
with nonpayment of support for a period in excess of 60
days, |
is indirect criminal contempt. For either parent arrested for |
failure to report new employment bond shall be set in the |
amount of the child support that should have been paid during |
the period of unreported employment. An order entered under |
this Section shall also include a provision requiring either |
parent to advise the other of a change in residence within 5 |
days
of the change except when the court finds that the |
physical, mental, or
emotional health of a party or that of a |
child, or both, would be
seriously endangered by disclosure of |
the party's address.
|
(i) The court does not lose the powers of contempt, |
driver's license
suspension, or other child support |
enforcement mechanisms, including, but
not limited to, |
criminal prosecution as set forth in this Act, upon the
|
emancipation of the minor child or children.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 98-961, eff. 1-1-15; 99-90, |
eff. 1-1-16 .)
|
(750 ILCS 5/508) (from Ch. 40, par. 508)
|
Sec. 508. Attorney's Fees; Client's Rights and |
Responsibilities Respecting
Fees and
Costs. |
(a) The court from time to time, after due notice and |
hearing, and after
considering the financial resources of the |
parties, may order any party to
pay a reasonable amount for his |
own or the other party's costs and
attorney's fees. Interim |
|
attorney's fees and costs may be awarded from the
opposing |
party, in a pre-judgment dissolution proceeding in accordance |
with subsection (c-1) of Section 501 and in any other |
proceeding under this subsection. At the
conclusion of any |
pre-judgment dissolution proceeding under this subsection, |
contribution to attorney's fees and costs may be
awarded from |
the opposing party in accordance with subsection (j) of Section
|
503 and in any other proceeding under this subsection. Fees and |
costs may be awarded in any proceeding to counsel from a former |
client in
accordance with subsection (c) of
this Section.
|
Awards may be made in connection with the following:
|
(1) The maintenance or defense of any proceeding under |
this Act.
|
(2) The enforcement or modification of any order or |
judgment
under this Act.
|
(3) The defense of an appeal of any order or judgment |
under
this Act, including the defense of appeals of |
post-judgment orders.
|
(3.1) The prosecution of any claim on appeal (if the |
prosecuting party
has
substantially prevailed).
|
(4) The maintenance or defense of a petition brought |
under
Section 2-1401 of the Code of Civil Procedure seeking |
relief from a
final order or judgment under this Act. Fees |
incurred with respect to motions under
Section 2-1401 of |
the Code of Civil Procedure may be granted only to the |
party who substantially prevails.
|
|
(5) The costs and legal services of an attorney |
rendered in
preparation of the commencement of the |
proceeding brought under this Act.
|
(6) Ancillary litigation incident to, or reasonably |
connected with, a
proceeding under this Act.
|
(7) Costs and attorney's fees incurred in an action |
under the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of |
International Child Abduction. |
All petitions for or relating to interim fees and costs |
under this subsection shall be accompanied by an affidavit as |
to the factual basis for the relief requested and all hearings |
relative to any such petition shall be scheduled expeditiously |
by the court. All provisions for contribution under this |
subsection shall also be subject to paragraphs (3), (4), and |
(5) of subsection (j) of Section 503. |
The court may order that the award of attorney's fees and |
costs
(including an interim or contribution award) shall be |
paid directly to the
attorney, who may enforce the order in his |
or her name, or that it shall be
paid to
the appropriate party. |
Judgment may be entered and enforcement had
accordingly. Except |
as otherwise provided in subdivision (e)(1) of this
Section, |
subsection (c) of this Section
is exclusive as to the right of |
any counsel
(or
former counsel) of record to petition a court |
for an award and judgment for
final fees and costs during the |
pendency of a proceeding under this Act.
|
(a-5) A petition for temporary attorney's fees in a |
|
post-judgment case may be heard on a non-evidentiary,
summary |
basis. |
(b) In every proceeding for the enforcement of an order or |
judgment
when the court finds that the failure to comply with |
the order or judgment
was without compelling cause or |
justification, the court shall order the
party against
whom the |
proceeding is brought to pay promptly the costs and reasonable
|
attorney's
fees of the prevailing party.
If non-compliance is |
with respect to a discovery order, the non-compliance is
|
presumptively without compelling cause or justification, and |
the presumption
may only be rebutted by clear and convincing |
evidence. If at any time a court
finds that a hearing under |
this Act was precipitated or conducted for any
improper |
purpose, the court shall allocate fees and costs of all parties |
for
the hearing to the party or counsel found to have acted |
improperly. Improper
purposes include, but are not limited to, |
harassment, unnecessary
delay, or other acts needlessly |
increasing the cost of litigation.
|
(c) Final hearings for attorney's fees and costs against an |
attorney's own
client, pursuant to a Petition for Setting Final |
Fees and Costs of either a
counsel or a client, shall be |
governed by the following:
|
(1) No petition of a counsel of record may be filed |
against a client
unless the filing counsel previously has |
been granted leave to withdraw as
counsel of record or has |
filed a motion for leave to withdraw as counsel. On
receipt
|
|
of a petition of a client under this subsection (c), the |
counsel of record
shall promptly file a motion for leave to |
withdraw as counsel. If the client
and the counsel of
|
record agree, however, a hearing on the motion for leave to |
withdraw as counsel
filed pursuant to this
subdivision |
(c)(1) may be deferred until completion of any alternative |
dispute
resolution procedure under subdivision (c)(4). As |
to any
Petition for Setting Final Fees and Costs against a |
client or counsel over whom
the court has not obtained
|
jurisdiction, a separate summons shall issue. Whenever a |
separate summons is
not required, original notice as to a |
Petition for Setting Final Fees and Costs
may be given, and |
documents
served, in accordance with Illinois Supreme |
Court Rules 11 and 12.
|
(2) No final hearing under this subsection (c) is |
permitted
unless: (i) the
counsel and the client had |
entered into a written engagement agreement at the
time the |
client retained the counsel (or reasonably soon |
thereafter) and the
agreement
meets the requirements of |
subsection (f); (ii) the written engagement agreement
is |
attached to an affidavit of counsel that is filed with the |
petition or with
the
counsel's response to a client's |
petition; (iii) judgment in any contribution
hearing on |
behalf of the client has been entered or the right to a |
contribution
hearing under subsection (j) of Section 503 |
has been waived; (iv) the counsel
has withdrawn as
counsel |
|
of record; and (v) the petition seeks adjudication of all |
unresolved
claims for fees and costs between the counsel |
and the client. Irrespective of a
Petition for Setting |
Final Fees and Costs being heard in conjunction with an
|
original proceeding under this Act, the relief requested |
under a Petition for
Setting Final Fees and Costs |
constitutes a distinct cause of action. A pending
but |
undetermined
Petition for Setting Final Fees and Costs |
shall not affect appealability or enforceability of
any |
judgment or other adjudication in the original proceeding.
|
(3) The determination of reasonable attorney's fees |
and costs either under
this
subsection (c), whether |
initiated by a counsel or a client, or in an
independent |
proceeding for services within the scope of subdivisions |
(1)
through (5) of subsection (a), is within the sound |
discretion of the trial
court. The court shall first |
consider the written engagement agreement and, if
the court |
finds that the former client and the filing counsel, |
pursuant to
their written engagement agreement, entered |
into a contract which meets
applicable requirements of |
court rules and addresses all material terms, then
the |
contract shall be enforceable in accordance with its terms, |
subject to the
further requirements of this subdivision |
(c)(3). Before ordering enforcement,
however, the court
|
shall consider the performance pursuant to the contract. |
Any amount awarded
by the court must be found to be fair |
|
compensation for the services, pursuant
to the contract, |
that the court finds were reasonable and necessary. Quantum
|
meruit principles shall govern any award for legal services |
performed that is
not based on the terms of the written |
engagement agreement (except that, if a
court expressly |
finds in a particular case that aggregate billings to a |
client
were unconscionably excessive, the court in its |
discretion may reduce the award
otherwise determined |
appropriate or deny fees altogether).
|
(4) No final hearing under this subsection (c) is |
permitted unless any
controversy
over fees and costs (that |
is not otherwise subject to some form of alternative
|
dispute resolution) has first been submitted to mediation, |
arbitration, or any
other court approved alternative |
dispute resolution procedure, except as
follows:
|
(A) In any circuit court for a single county with a |
population in excess
of
1,000,000, the requirement of |
the controversy being submitted to an alternative
|
dispute resolution procedure is mandatory unless the |
client and the counsel
both affirmatively opt out of |
such procedures; or
|
(B) In any other circuit court, the requirement of |
the controversy being
submitted to an alternative |
dispute resolution procedure is mandatory only if
|
neither the client nor the counsel affirmatively opts |
out of such
procedures.
|
|
After completion of any such procedure (or after one or |
both sides has
opted
out of such procedures), if the |
dispute is unresolved, any pending motion
for leave to |
withdraw as counsel shall be promptly granted and a final |
hearing
under this subsection
(c) shall be expeditiously |
set and completed.
|
(5) A petition (or a praecipe for fee hearing without |
the petition) shall
be
filed no later than the end of the |
period in which it is permissible to file a
motion pursuant |
to Section 2-1203 of the Code of Civil Procedure. A |
praecipe
for fee hearing shall be dismissed if a Petition |
for Setting Final Fees and
Costs is not filed within 60 |
days after the filing of the praecipe. A counsel
who |
becomes a party by filing a Petition for Setting Final Fees |
and Costs, or
as a result of the client
filing a Petition |
for Setting Final Fees and Costs, shall not be entitled to
|
exercise the right to a
substitution of a judge without |
cause under subdivision (a)(2) of Section
2-1001 of the |
Code of Civil Procedure. Each of the foregoing deadlines |
for the filing of a praecipe or a petition shall be:
|
(A) tolled if a motion is filed under Section 2-1203 of |
the Code of Civil Procedure, in which instance a petition |
(or a praecipe) shall be filed no later than 30 days |
following disposition of all Section 2-1203 motions; or |
(B) tolled if a notice of appeal is filed, in which |
instance a petition (or praecipe) shall be filed no later |
|
than 30 days following the date jurisdiction on the issue |
appealed is returned to the trial court. |
If a praecipe has been timely filed, then by timely filed |
written stipulation between counsel and client (or former |
client), the deadline for the filing of a petition may be |
extended for a period of up to one year. |
(d) A consent judgment, in favor of a current counsel of |
record against his
or her own client for a specific amount in a |
marital settlement agreement,
dissolution judgment, or any |
other instrument involving the other litigant, is
prohibited. A |
consent judgment between client and counsel, however, is
|
permissible if it is entered pursuant to a verified petition |
for entry of
consent judgment, supported by an affidavit of the |
counsel of record that
includes the counsel's representation |
that the client has been provided an itemization of the billing |
or billings to the client, detailing
hourly costs, time spent, |
and tasks performed, and by an affidavit of the
client |
acknowledging receipt of that documentation, awareness
of the |
right to a hearing, the right to be represented by counsel |
(other than
counsel to whom the consent judgment is in favor), |
and the right to be present
at
the time of presentation of the |
petition, and agreement to the terms of the
judgment. The |
petition may be filed at any time during which it is |
permissible
for counsel of record to file a petition (or a |
praecipe) for a final fee
hearing, except that no such petition |
for entry of consent judgment may be
filed before adjudication |
|
(or waiver) of the client's right to contribution
under |
subsection (j) of Section 503 or filed after the filing of a
|
petition (or a praecipe) by counsel of record for a fee hearing |
under
subsection (c) if the petition (or praecipe) remains |
pending. No consent
security arrangement between a client and a |
counsel of record, pursuant to
which assets of a client are |
collateralized to secure payment of legal fees or
costs, is |
permissible unless approved in advance by the court as being
|
reasonable under the circumstances.
|
(e) Counsel may pursue an award and judgment against a |
former client for
legal
fees and costs in an independent |
proceeding in the following circumstances:
|
(1) While a case under this Act is still pending, a |
former counsel may pursue
such an award and judgment at any |
time subsequent to 90 days after the entry of
an order |
granting counsel leave to withdraw; and
|
(2) After the close of the period during which a |
petition (or praecipe)
may be filed under subdivision |
(c)(5), if no such petition (or praecipe) for
the
counsel |
remains pending, any counsel or former counsel may pursue |
such an award
and judgment in an independent proceeding.
|
In an independent proceeding, the prior applicability of this |
Section
shall in no way be deemed to have diminished any other |
right of any counsel (or
former counsel) to pursue an award and |
judgment for legal fees and costs on the
basis of remedies that |
may otherwise exist under applicable law; and the limitations |
|
period for breach of contract shall apply. In an
independent |
proceeding under subdivision (e)(1) in which the former counsel |
had
represented a former client in a dissolution case that is |
still pending, the former
client may bring
in his or her spouse |
as a third-party defendant, provided on or before the
final |
date for filing a petition (or praecipe) under subsection (c), |
the party
files an appropriate third-party complaint under |
Section 2-406 of the Code of
Civil Procedure. In any such case, |
any judgment later obtained by the
former counsel shall be |
against both spouses or ex-spouses, jointly and
severally |
(except that, if a hearing under subsection (j) of Section 503 |
has
already been concluded and the court hearing the |
contribution issue has imposed
a percentage allocation between |
the parties as to
fees and costs otherwise being adjudicated in |
the independent proceeding, the
allocation
shall be applied |
without deviation by the court in the independent proceeding
|
and a separate judgment shall be entered against each spouse |
for the
appropriate
amount). After the period for the |
commencement of a proceeding under
subsection (c), the |
provisions of this Section (other than the standard set
forth |
in subdivision (c)(3) and the terms respecting consent security
|
arrangements in subsection (d) of this Section 508) shall be |
inapplicable.
|
The changes made by this amendatory Act of the 94th General |
Assembly are declarative of existing law.
|
(f) Unless the Supreme Court by rule addresses the matters |
|
set out in this
subsection (f), a written engagement agreement |
within the scope
of subdivision (c)(2) shall have appended to |
it verbatim the following
Statement:
|
"STATEMENT OF CLIENT'S RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES
|
(1) WRITTEN ENGAGEMENT AGREEMENT. The written engagement |
agreement, prepared
by the counsel, shall clearly address the |
objectives of representation and
detail the fee arrangement, |
including all material terms. If fees are to be
based on |
criteria apart from, or in addition to, hourly rates, such |
criteria
(e.g., unique time demands and/or utilization of |
unique expertise) shall be
delineated. The client shall receive |
a copy of the written engagement
agreement and any additional |
clarification requested and is advised not to
sign any such |
agreement which the client finds to be unsatisfactory or does
|
not understand.
|
(2) REPRESENTATION. Representation will commence upon the |
signing of the
written engagement agreement. The counsel will |
provide competent
representation, which requires legal |
knowledge, skill, thoroughness and
preparation to handle those |
matters set forth in the written engagement
agreement. Once |
employed, the counsel will act with reasonable diligence and
|
promptness, as well as use his best efforts on behalf of the |
client, but he
cannot guarantee results. The counsel will abide |
by the client's decision
concerning the objectives of |
representation, including whether or not to accept
an offer of |
|
settlement, and will endeavor to explain any matter to the |
extent
reasonably necessary to permit the client to make |
informed decisions regarding
representation. During the course |
of representation and afterwards, the
counsel
may not use or |
reveal a client's confidence or secrets, except as required or
|
permitted by law.
|
(3) COMMUNICATION. The counsel will keep the client |
reasonably informed
about the status of representation and will |
promptly respond to reasonable
requests for information, |
including any reasonable request for an estimate
respecting |
future costs of the representation or an appropriate portion of |
it.
The client shall be truthful in all discussions with the |
counsel and provide
all information or documentation required |
to enable the counsel to provide
competent representation. |
During representation, the client is entitled to
receive all |
pleadings and substantive documents prepared on behalf of the
|
client and every document received from any other counsel of |
record. At the
end of the representation and on written request |
from the client, the counsel
will return to the client all |
original documents and exhibits. In the event
that the counsel |
withdraws from representation, or is discharged by the client,
|
the counsel will turn over to the substituting counsel (or, if |
no
substitutions, to the client) all original documents and |
exhibits together with
complete copies of all pleadings and |
discovery within thirty (30) days of the
counsel's withdrawal |
or discharge.
|
|
(4) ETHICAL CONDUCT. The counsel cannot be required to |
engage in conduct
which is illegal, unethical, or fraudulent. |
In matters involving minor
children, the counsel may refuse to |
engage in conduct which, in the counsel's
professional |
judgment, would be contrary to the best interest of the |
client's
minor child or children. A counsel who cannot |
ethically abide by his client's
directions shall be allowed to |
withdraw from representation.
|
(5) FEES. The counsel's fee for services may not be |
contingent upon the
securing of a dissolution of marriage or |
upon being allocated parental responsibility or be based upon
|
the amount of maintenance, child support, or property |
settlement received,
except as specifically permitted under |
Supreme Court rules. The
counsel may not require a |
non-refundable retainer fee, but must remit back any
|
overpayment at the end of the representation. The counsel may |
enter into a
consensual security arrangement with the client |
whereby assets of the client
are pledged to secure payment of |
legal fees or costs, but only if the counsel
first obtains |
approval of the Court. The counsel will prepare and provide the
|
client with an itemized billing statement detailing hourly |
rates (and/or other
criteria), time spent, tasks performed, and |
costs incurred on a regular basis,
at least quarterly. The |
client should review each billing statement promptly
and |
address any objection or error in a timely manner. The client |
will not be
billed for time spent to explain or correct a |
|
billing statement. If an
appropriately detailed written |
estimate is submitted to a client as to future
costs for a |
counsel's representation or a portion of the contemplated |
services
(i.e., relative to specific steps recommended by the |
counsel in the estimate)
and, without objection from the |
client, the counsel then performs the
contemplated services, |
all such services are presumptively reasonable and
necessary, |
as well as to be deemed pursuant to the client's direction. In |
an
appropriate case, the client may pursue contribution to his |
or her fees and
costs from the other party.
|
(6) DISPUTES. The counsel-client relationship is regulated |
by the Illinois
Rules of Professional Conduct (Article VIII of |
the Illinois Supreme Court
Rules), and any dispute shall be |
reviewed under the terms of such Rules."
|
(g) The changes to this Section 508 made by this amendatory |
Act of 1996
apply to cases pending on or after June 1, 1997, |
except as follows:
|
(1) Subdivisions (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this Section 508, |
as well as
provisions of subdivision (c)(3) of this Section |
508 pertaining to written
engagement agreements, apply |
only to
cases filed on or after June 1, 1997.
|
(2) The following do not apply in the case of a hearing |
under this Section
that began before June 1, 1997:
|
(A) Subsection (c-1) of Section 501.
|
(B) Subsection (j) of Section 503.
|
(C) The changes to this Section 508 made by this |
|
amendatory Act of 1996
pertaining to the final setting |
of fees.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .)
|
(750 ILCS 5/513) (from Ch. 40, par. 513)
|
Sec. 513. Educational Expenses for a Non-minor Child.
|
(a) The court may award sums of money out of the property |
and income of
either or both parties or the estate of a |
deceased parent, as equity may
require, for the educational |
expenses of any child of the parties. Unless otherwise agreed |
to by the parties, all educational expenses which are the |
subject of a petition brought pursuant to this Section shall be |
incurred no later than the student's 23rd birthday, except for |
good cause shown, but in no event later than the child's 25th |
birthday. |
(b) Regardless of whether an award has been made under |
subsection (a), the court may require both parties and the |
child to complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid |
(FAFSA) and other financial aid forms and to submit any form of |
that type prior to the designated submission deadline for the |
form. The court may require either or both parties to provide |
funds for the child so as to pay for the cost of up to 5 college |
applications, the cost of 2 standardized college entrance |
examinations, and the cost of one standardized college entrance |
examination preparatory course. |
(c) The authority under this Section to make provision for |
|
educational expenses extends not only to periods of college |
education or vocational or professional or other training after |
graduation from high school, but also to any period during |
which the child of the parties is still attending high school, |
even though he or she attained the age of 19. |
(d) Educational expenses may include, but shall not be |
limited to, the following: |
(1) except for good cause shown, the actual cost of the |
child's post-secondary expenses, including tuition and |
fees, provided that the cost for tuition and fees does not |
exceed the amount of in-state tuition and fees paid by a |
student at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign |
for the same academic year; |
(2) except for good cause shown, the actual costs of |
the child's housing expenses, whether on-campus or |
off-campus, provided that the housing expenses do not |
exceed the cost for the same academic year of a |
double-occupancy student room, with a standard meal plan, |
in a residence hall operated by the University of Illinois |
at Urbana-Champaign; |
(3) the actual costs of the child's medical expenses, |
including medical insurance, and dental expenses; |
(4) the reasonable living expenses of the child during |
the academic year and periods of recess: |
(A) if the child is a resident student attending a |
post-secondary educational program; or |
|
(B) if the child is living with one party at that |
party's home and attending a post-secondary |
educational program as a non-resident student, in |
which case the living expenses include an amount that |
pays for the reasonable cost of the child's food, |
utilities, and transportation; and |
(5) the cost of books and other supplies necessary to |
attend college. |
(e) Sums may be ordered payable to the child, to either |
party, or to the educational institution, directly or through a |
special account or trust created for that purpose, as the court |
sees fit. |
(f) If educational expenses are ordered payable, each party |
and the child shall sign any consent necessary for the |
educational institution to provide a supporting party with |
access to the child's academic transcripts, records, and grade |
reports. The consent shall not apply to any non-academic |
records. Failure to execute the required consent may be a basis |
for a modification or termination of any order entered under |
this Section. Unless the court specifically finds that the |
child's safety would be jeopardized, each party is entitled to |
know the name of the educational institution the child attends. |
(g) The authority under this Section to make provision for |
educational expenses terminates when the child either: fails to |
maintain a cumulative "C" grade point average, except in the |
event of illness or other good cause shown; attains the age of |
|
23; receives a baccalaureate degree; or marries. A child's |
enlisting in the armed forces, being incarcerated, or becoming |
pregnant does not terminate the court's authority to make |
provisions for the educational expenses for the child under |
this Section. |
(h) An account established prior to the dissolution that is |
to be used for the child's post-secondary education, that is an |
account in a state tuition program under Section 529 of the |
Internal Revenue Code, or that is some other college savings |
plan, is to be considered by the court to be a resource of the |
child, provided that any post-judgment contribution made by a |
party to such an account is to be considered a contribution |
from that party. |
(i) The child is not a third party beneficiary to the |
settlement agreement or judgment between the parties after |
trial and is not entitled to file a petition for contribution. |
If the parties' settlement agreement describes the manner in |
which a child's educational expenses will be paid, or if the |
court makes an award pursuant to this Section, then the parties |
are responsible pursuant to that agreement or award for the |
child's educational expenses, but in no event shall the court |
consider the child a third party beneficiary of that provision. |
In the event of the death or legal disability of a party who |
would have the right to file a petition for contribution, the |
child of the party may file a petition for contribution. a |
person with a mental or physical disability a person with a |
|
mental or physical disability
|
(j) In making awards under this Section, or
pursuant to a |
petition or motion to decrease, modify, or terminate any such
|
award, the court shall consider all relevant factors that |
appear reasonable
and necessary, including:
|
(1) The present and future financial resources of both |
parties to meet their needs, including, but not limited to, |
savings for retirement.
|
(2) The standard of living the child would have enjoyed |
had the marriage not been dissolved.
|
(3) The financial resources of the child.
|
(4) The child's academic performance.
|
(k) The establishment of an obligation to pay under this |
Section is retroactive only to the date of filing a petition. |
The right to enforce a prior obligation to pay may be enforced |
either before or after the obligation is incurred. |
(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16; 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; revised |
10-22-15.)
|
(750 ILCS 5/600) |
Sec. 600. Definitions. For purposes of this Part VI: |
(a) "Abuse" has the meaning ascribed to that term in |
Section 103 of the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986. |
(b) "Allocation judgment" means a judgment allocating |
parental responsibilities. |
(c) "Caretaking functions" means tasks that involve |
|
interaction with a child or that direct, arrange, and supervise |
the interaction with and care of a child provided by others, or |
for obtaining the resources allowing for the provision of these |
functions. The term includes, but is not limited to, the |
following: |
(1) satisfying a child's nutritional needs; managing a |
child's bedtime and wake-up routines; caring for a child |
when the child is sick or injured; being attentive to a |
child's personal hygiene needs, including washing, |
grooming, and dressing; playing with a child and ensuring |
the child attends scheduled extracurricular activities; |
protecting a child's physical safety; and providing |
transportation for a child; |
(2) directing a child's various developmental needs, |
including the acquisition of motor and language skills, |
toilet training, self-confidence, and maturation; |
(3) providing discipline, giving instruction in |
manners, assigning and supervising chores, and performing |
other tasks that attend to a child's needs for behavioral |
control and self-restraint; |
(4) ensuring the child attends school, including |
remedial and special services appropriate to the child's |
needs and interests, communicating with teachers and |
counselors, and supervising homework; |
(5) helping a child develop and maintain appropriate |
interpersonal relationships with peers, siblings, and |
|
other family members; |
(6) ensuring the child attends medical appointments |
and is available for medical follow-up and meeting the |
medical needs of the child in the home; |
(7) providing moral and ethical guidance for a child; |
and |
(8) arranging alternative care for a child by a family |
member, babysitter, or other child care provider or |
facility, including investigating such alternatives, |
communicating with providers, and supervising such care. |
(d) "Parental responsibilities" means both parenting time |
and significant decision-making responsibilities with respect |
to a child. |
(e) "Parenting time" means the time during which a parent |
is responsible for exercising caretaking functions and |
non-significant decision-making responsibilities with respect |
to the child. |
(f) "Parenting plan" means a written agreement that |
allocates significant decision-making responsibilities, |
parenting time, or both. |
(g) "Relocation" means: |
(1) a change of residence from the child's current |
primary residence located in the county of Cook, DuPage, |
Kane, Lake, McHenry, or Will to a new residence within this |
State that is more than 25 miles from the child's current |
residence , as measured by an Internet mapping service ; |
|
(2) a change of residence from the child's current |
primary residence located in a county not listed in |
paragraph (1) to a new residence within this State that is |
more than 50 miles from the child's current primary |
residence , as measured by an Internet mapping service ; or |
(3)
a change of residence from the child's current |
primary residence to a residence outside the borders of |
this State that is more than 25 miles from the current |
primary residence , as measured by an Internet mapping |
service . |
(h) "Religious upbringing" means the choice of religion or |
denomination of a religion, religious schooling, religious |
training, or participation in religious customs or practices. |
(i) "Restriction of parenting time" means any limitation or |
condition placed on parenting time, including supervision. |
(j) "Right of first refusal" has the meaning provided in |
subsection (b) of Section 602.3 of this Act. |
(k) "Significant decision-making" means deciding issues of |
long-term importance in the life of a child. |
(l) "Step-parent" means a person married to a child's |
parent, including a person married to the child's parent |
immediately prior to the parent's death. |
(m) "Supervision" means the presence of a third party |
during a parent's exercise of parenting time.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .) |
|
(750 ILCS 5/602.9) |
Sec. 602.9. Visitation by certain non-parents. |
(a) As used in this Section: |
(1) "electronic communication" means time that a |
grandparent, great-grandparent, sibling, or step-parent |
spends with a child during which the child is not in the |
person's actual physical custody, but which is facilitated |
by the use of communication tools such as the telephone, |
electronic mail, instant messaging, video conferencing or |
other wired or wireless technologies via the Internet, or |
another medium of communication; |
(2) "sibling" means a brother or sister either of the |
whole blood or the half blood, stepbrother, or stepsister |
of the minor child; |
(3) "step-parent" means a person married to a child's |
parent, including a person married to the child's parent |
immediately prior to the parent's death; and |
(4) "visitation" means in-person time spent between a |
child and the child's grandparent, great-grandparent, |
sibling, step-parent, or any person designated under |
subsection (d) of Section 602.7. In appropriate |
circumstances, visitation may include electronic |
communication under conditions and at times determined by |
the court. |
(b) General provisions. |
(1) An appropriate person, as identified in subsection |
|
(c) of this Section, may bring an action in circuit court |
by petition, or by filing a petition in a pending |
dissolution proceeding or any other proceeding that |
involves parental responsibilities or visitation issues |
regarding the child, requesting visitation with the child |
pursuant to this Section. If there is not a pending |
proceeding involving parental responsibilities or |
visitation with the child, the petition for visitation with |
the child must be filed in the county in which the child |
resides. Notice of the petition shall be given as provided |
in subsection (c) of Section 601.2 of this Act. |
(2) This Section does not apply to a child: |
(A) in whose interests a petition is pending under |
Section 2-13 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987; or |
(B) in whose interests a petition to adopt by an |
unrelated person is pending under the Adoption Act; or |
(C) who has been voluntarily surrendered by the |
parent or parents, except for a surrender to the |
Department of Children and Family Services or a foster |
care facility; or |
(D) who has been previously adopted by an |
individual or individuals who are not related to the |
biological parents of the child or who is the subject |
of a pending adoption petition by an individual or |
individuals who are not related to the biological |
parents of the child; or |
|
(E) who has been relinquished pursuant to the |
Abandoned Newborn Infant Protection Act. |
(3) A petition for visitation may be filed under this |
Section only if there has been an unreasonable denial of |
visitation by a parent and the denial has caused the child |
undue mental, physical, or emotional harm. |
(4) There is a rebuttable presumption that a fit |
parent's actions and decisions regarding grandparent, |
great-grandparent, sibling, or step-parent visitation are |
not harmful to the child's mental, physical, or emotional |
health. The burden is on the party filing a petition under |
this Section to prove that the parent's actions and |
decisions regarding visitation will cause undue harm to the |
child's mental, physical, or emotional health. |
(5) In determining whether to grant visitation, the |
court shall consider the following: |
(A) the wishes of the child, taking into account |
the child's maturity and ability to express reasoned |
and independent preferences as to visitation; |
(B) the mental and physical health of the child; |
(C) the mental and physical health of the |
grandparent, great-grandparent, sibling, or |
step-parent; |
(D) the length and quality of the prior |
relationship between the child and the grandparent, |
great-grandparent, sibling, or step-parent; |
|
(E) the good faith of the party in filing the |
petition; |
(F) the good faith of the person denying |
visitation; |
(G) the quantity of the visitation time requested |
and the potential adverse impact that visitation would |
have on the child's customary activities; |
(H) any other fact that establishes that the loss |
of the relationship between the petitioner and the |
child is likely to unduly harm the child's mental, |
physical, or emotional health; and |
(I) whether visitation can be structured in a way |
to minimize the child's exposure to conflicts between |
the adults. |
(6) Any visitation rights granted under this Section |
before the filing of a petition for adoption of the child |
shall automatically terminate by operation of law upon the |
entry of an order terminating parental rights or granting |
the adoption of the child, whichever is earlier. If the |
person or persons who adopted the child are related to the |
child, as defined by Section 1 of the Adoption Act, any |
person who was related to the child as grandparent, |
great-grandparent, or sibling prior to the adoption shall |
have standing to bring an action under this Section |
requesting visitation with the child. |
(7) The court may order visitation rights for the |
|
grandparent, great-grandparent, sibling, or step-parent |
that include reasonable access without requiring overnight |
or possessory visitation. |
(c) Visitation by grandparents, great-grandparents, |
step-parents, and siblings. |
(1) Grandparents, great-grandparents, step-parents, |
and siblings of a minor child who is one year old or older |
may bring a petition for visitation and electronic |
communication under this Section if there is an |
unreasonable denial of visitation by a parent that causes |
undue mental, physical, or emotional harm to the child and |
if at least one of the following conditions exists: |
(A) the child's other parent is deceased or has |
been missing for at least 90 days. For the purposes of |
this subsection a parent is considered to be missing if |
the parent's location has not been determined and the |
parent has been reported as missing to a law |
enforcement agency; or |
(B) a parent of the child is incompetent as a |
matter of law; or |
(C) a parent has been incarcerated in jail or |
prison for a period in excess of 90 days immediately |
prior to the filing of the petition; or |
(D) the child's parents have been granted a |
dissolution of marriage or have been legally separated |
from each other or there is pending a dissolution |
|
proceeding involving a parent of the child or another |
court proceeding involving parental responsibilities |
or visitation of the child (other than an adoption |
proceeding of an unrelated child, a proceeding under |
Article II of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, or an |
action for an order of protection under the Illinois |
Domestic Violence Act of 1986 or Article 112A of the |
Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963) and at least one |
parent does not object to the grandparent, |
great-grandparent, step-parent, or sibling having |
visitation with the child. The visitation of the |
grandparent, great-grandparent, step-parent, or |
sibling must not diminish the parenting time of the |
parent who is not related to the grandparent, |
great-grandparent, step-parent, or sibling seeking |
visitation; or |
(E) the child is born to parents who are not |
married to each other, the parents are not living |
together, and the petitioner is a grandparent, |
great-grandparent, step-parent, or sibling of the |
child, and parentage has been established by a court of |
competent jurisdiction. |
(2) In addition to the factors set forth in subdivision |
(b)(5) of this Section, the court should consider: |
(A) whether the child resided with the petitioner |
for at least 6 consecutive months with or without a |
|
parent present; |
(B) whether the child had frequent and regular |
contact or visitation with the petitioner for at least |
12 consecutive months; and |
(C) whether the grandparent, great-grandparent, |
sibling, or step-parent was a primary caretaker of the |
child for a period of not less than 6 consecutive |
months within the 24-month period immediately |
preceding the commencement of the proceeding. |
(3) An order granting visitation privileges under this |
Section is subject to subsections (c) and (d) of Section |
603.10. |
(4) A petition for visitation privileges may not be |
filed pursuant to this subsection (c) by the parents or |
grandparents of a parent of the child if parentage between |
the child and the related parent has not been legally |
established. |
(d) Modification of visitation orders. |
(1) Unless by stipulation of the parties, no motion to |
modify a grandparent, great-grandparent, sibling, or |
step-parent visitation order may be made earlier than 2 |
years after the date the order was filed, unless the court |
permits it to be made on the basis of affidavits that there |
is reason to believe the child's present environment may |
endanger seriously the child's mental, physical, or |
emotional health. |
|
(2) The court shall not modify an order that grants |
visitation to a grandparent, great-grandparent, sibling, |
or step-parent unless it finds by clear and convincing |
evidence, upon the basis of facts that have arisen since |
the prior visitation order or that were unknown to the |
court at the time of entry of the prior visitation order, |
that a change has occurred in the circumstances of the |
child or his or her parent, and that the modification is |
necessary to protect the mental, physical, or emotional |
health of the child. The court shall state in its decision |
specific findings of fact in support of its modification or |
termination of the grandparent, great-grandparent, |
sibling, or step-parent visitation. A child's parent may |
always petition to modify visitation upon changed |
circumstances when necessary to promote the child's best |
interests. |
(3) Notice of a motion requesting modification of a |
visitation order shall be provided as set forth in |
subsection (c) of Section 601.2 of this Act. |
(4) Attorney's fees and costs shall be assessed against |
a party seeking modification of the visitation order if the |
court finds that the modification action is vexatious and |
constitutes harassment. |
(e) No child's grandparent, great-grandparent, sibling, or |
step-parent, or any person to whom the court is considering |
granting visitation privileges pursuant to subsection (d) of |
|
Section 602.7, who was convicted of any offense involving an |
illegal sex act perpetrated upon a victim less than 18 years of |
age including, but not limited to, offenses for violations of |
Section 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 11-1.70, |
or Article 12 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code |
of 2012, is entitled to visitation while incarcerated or while |
on parole, probation, conditional discharge, periodic |
imprisonment, or mandatory supervised release for that |
offense, and upon discharge from incarceration for a |
misdemeanor offense or upon discharge from parole, probation, |
conditional discharge, periodic imprisonment, or mandatory |
supervised release for a felony offense. Visitation shall be |
denied until the person successfully completes a treatment |
program approved by the court. Upon completion of treatment, |
the court may deny visitation based on the factors listed in |
subdivision (b)(5) of this Section 607 of this Act . |
(f) No child's grandparent, great-grandparent, sibling, or |
step-parent, or any person to whom the court is considering |
granting visitation privileges pursuant to subsection (d) of |
Section 602.7, may be granted visitation if he or she has been |
convicted of first degree murder of a parent, grandparent, |
great-grandparent, or sibling of the child who is the subject |
of the visitation request. Pursuant to a motion to modify |
visitation, the court shall revoke visitation rights |
previously granted to any person who would otherwise be |
entitled to petition for visitation rights under this Section |
|
or granted visitation under subsection (d) of Section 602.7, if |
the person has been convicted of first degree murder of a |
parent, grandparent, great-grandparent, or sibling of the |
child who is the subject of the visitation order. Until an |
order is entered pursuant to this subsection, no person may |
visit, with the child present, a person who has been convicted |
of first degree murder of the parent, grandparent, |
great-grandparent, or sibling of the child without the consent |
of the child's parent, other than a parent convicted of first |
degree murder as set forth herein, or legal guardian.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .) |
(750 ILCS 5/602.10) |
Sec. 602.10. Parenting plan. |
(a) Filing of parenting plan. All parents, within 120 days |
after service or filing of any petition for allocation of |
parental responsibilities, must file with the court, either |
jointly or separately, a proposed parenting plan. The time |
period for filing a parenting plan may be extended by the court |
for good cause shown. If no appearance has been filed by the |
respondent, no parenting plan is required unless ordered by the |
court. |
(b) No parenting plan filed. In the absence of filing of |
one or more parenting plans, the court must conduct an |
evidentiary hearing to allocate parental responsibilities.
|
(c) Mediation. The court shall order mediation to assist |
|
the parents in formulating or modifying a parenting plan or in |
implementing a parenting plan unless the court determines that |
impediments to mediation exist. Costs under this subsection |
shall be allocated between the parties pursuant to the |
applicable statute or Supreme Court Rule.
|
(d) Parents' agreement on parenting plan. The parenting |
plan must be in writing and signed by both parents. The parents |
must submit the parenting plan to the court for approval within |
120 days after service of a petition for allocation of parental |
responsibilities or the filing of an appearance, except for |
good cause shown. Notwithstanding the provisions above, the |
parents may agree upon and submit a parenting plan at any time |
after the commencement of a proceeding until prior to the entry |
of a judgment of dissolution of marriage. The agreement is |
binding upon the court unless it finds, after considering the |
circumstances of the parties and any other relevant evidence |
produced by the parties, that the agreement is not in the best |
interests of the child unconscionable . If the court does not |
approve the parenting plan, the court shall make express |
findings of the reason or reasons for its refusal to approve |
the plan. The court, on its own motion, may conduct an |
evidentiary hearing to determine whether the parenting plan is |
in the child's best interests.
|
(e) Parents cannot agree on parenting plan. When parents |
fail to submit an agreed parenting plan, each parent must file |
and submit a written, signed parenting plan to the court within |
|
120 days after the filing of an appearance, except for good |
cause shown. The court's determination of parenting time should |
be based on the child's best interests. The filing of the plan |
may be excused by the court if: |
(1) the parties have commenced mediation for the |
purpose of formulating a parenting plan; or |
(2) the parents have agreed in writing to extend the |
time for filing a proposed plan and the court has approved |
such an extension; or |
(3) the court orders otherwise for good cause shown.
|
(f) Parenting plan contents. At a minimum, a parenting plan |
must set forth the following: |
(1) an allocation of significant decision-making |
responsibilities; |
(2) provisions for the child's living arrangements and |
for each parent's parenting time, including either: |
(A) a schedule that designates in which parent's |
home the minor child will reside on given days; or |
(B) a formula or method for determining such a |
schedule in sufficient detail to be enforced in a |
subsequent proceeding; |
(3) a mediation provision addressing any proposed |
reallocation of parenting time or regarding the terms of |
allocation of parental responsibilities, except that this |
provision is not required if one parent is allocated all |
significant decision-making responsibilities; |
|
(4) each parent's right of access to medical, dental, |
and psychological records (subject to the Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities Confidentiality Act), child |
care records, and school and extracurricular records, |
reports, and schedules, unless expressly denied by a court |
order or denied under Section 602.11 subsection (g) of |
Section 602.5 ; |
(5) a designation of the parent who will be denominated |
as the parent with the majority of parenting time for |
purposes of Section 606.10;
|
(6) the child's residential address for school |
enrollment purposes only; |
(7) each parent's residence address and phone number, |
and each parent's place of employment and employment |
address and phone number; |
(8) a requirement that a parent changing his or her |
residence provide at least 60 days prior written notice of |
the change to any other parent under the parenting plan or |
allocation judgment, unless such notice is impracticable |
or unless otherwise ordered by the court. If such notice is |
impracticable, written notice shall be given at the |
earliest date practicable. At a minimum, the notice shall |
set forth the following: |
(A) the intended date of the change of residence; |
and |
(B) the address of the new residence; |
|
(9) provisions requiring each parent to notify the |
other of emergencies, health care, travel plans, or other |
significant child-related issues; |
(10) transportation arrangements between the parents; |
(11) provisions for communications, including |
electronic communications, with the child during the other |
parent's parenting time; |
(12) provisions for resolving issues arising from a |
parent's future relocation, if applicable; |
(13) provisions for future modifications of the |
parenting plan, if specified events occur; |
(14) provisions for the exercise of the right of first |
refusal, if so desired, that are consistent with the best |
interests of the minor child; provisions in the plan for |
the exercise of the right of first refusal must include: |
(i) the length and kind of child-care requirements |
invoking the right of first refusal; |
(ii) notification to the other parent and for his |
or her response; |
(iii) transportation requirements; and |
(iv) any other provision related to the exercise of |
the right of first refusal necessary to protect and |
promote the best interests of the minor child; and |
(15) any other provision that addresses the child's |
best interests or that will otherwise facilitate |
cooperation between the parents. |
|
The personal information under items (6), (7), and (8) of |
this subsection is not required if there is evidence of or the |
parenting plan states that there is a history of domestic |
violence or abuse, or it is shown that the release of the |
information is not in the child's or parent's best interests. |
(g) The court shall conduct a trial or hearing to determine |
a plan which maximizes the child's relationship and access to |
both parents and shall ensure that the access and the overall |
plan are in the best interests of the child. The court shall |
take the parenting plans into consideration when determining |
parenting time and responsibilities at trial or hearing. |
(h) The court may consider, consistent with the best |
interests of the child as defined in Section 602.7 of this Act, |
whether to award to one or both of the parties the right of |
first refusal in accordance with Section 602.3 of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .) |
(750 ILCS 5/602.11) |
Sec. 602.11. Access to health care, child care, and school |
records by parents. |
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, access to |
records and information pertaining to a child including, but |
not limited to, medical, dental, child care, and school records |
shall not be denied to a parent for the reason that such parent |
has not been allocated parental responsibility ; however, no |
parent shall have access to the school records of a child if |
|
the parent is prohibited by an order of protection from |
inspecting or obtaining such records pursuant to the Domestic |
Violence Act of 1986 or the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 . |
A parent who is not allocated parenting time (not denied |
parental responsibility) is not entitled to access to the |
child's school or health care records unless a court finds that |
it is in the child's best interests to provide those records to |
the parent. |
(b) Health care professionals and health care providers |
shall grant access to health care records and information |
pertaining to a child to both parents, unless the health care |
professional or health care provider receives a court order or |
judgment that denies access to a specific individual. Except as |
may be provided by court order, no parent who is a named |
respondent in an order of protection issued pursuant to the |
Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986 or the Code of Criminal |
Procedure of 1963 shall have access to the health care records |
of a child who is a protected person under the order of |
protection provided the health care professional or health care |
provider has received a copy of the order of protection. Access |
to health care records is denied under this Section for as long |
as the order of protection remains in effect as specified in |
the order of protection or as otherwise determined by court |
order.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .) |
|
(750 ILCS 5/604.10) |
Sec. 604.10. Interviews; evaluations; investigation. |
(a) Court's interview of child. The court may interview the |
child in chambers to ascertain the child's wishes as to the |
allocation of parental responsibilities. Counsel shall be |
present at the interview unless otherwise agreed upon by the |
parties. The entire interview shall be recorded by a court |
reporter. The transcript of the interview shall be filed under |
seal and released only upon order of the court. The cost of the |
court reporter and transcript shall be paid by the court. |
(b) Court's professional. The court may seek the advice of |
any professional, whether or not regularly employed by the |
court, to assist the court in determining the child's best |
interests. The advice to the court shall be in writing and sent |
by the professional to counsel for the parties and to the court |
not later than 60 days before the date on which the trial court |
reasonably anticipates the hearing on the allocation of |
parental
responsibilities will commence. The court may review |
the writing upon receipt , under seal . The writing may be |
admitted into evidence without testimony from its author, |
unless a party objects. A professional consulted by the court |
shall testify as the court's witness and be subject to |
cross-examination. The court shall order all costs and fees of |
the professional to be paid by one or more of the parties, |
subject to reallocation in accordance with subsection (a) of |
Section 508. |
|
The professional's report must, at a minimum, set forth the |
following: |
(1) a description of the procedures employed during the |
evaluation; |
(2) a report of the data collected; |
(3) all test results; |
(4) any conclusions of the professional relating to the |
allocation of parental responsibilities under Sections |
602.5 and 602.7; |
(5) any recommendations of the professional concerning |
the allocation of parental responsibilities or the child's |
relocation; and |
(6) an explanation of any limitations in the evaluation |
or any reservations of the professional regarding the |
resulting recommendations. |
The professional shall send his or her report to all |
attorneys of record, and to any party not represented, at least |
60 days before the hearing on the allocation of parental |
responsibilities. The court shall examine and consider the |
professional's report only after it has been admitted into |
evidence or after the parties have waived their right to |
cross-examine the professional. |
(c) Evaluation by a party's retained professional. In a |
proceeding to allocate parental responsibilities or to |
relocate a child, upon notice and motion made by a parent or |
any party to the litigation within a reasonable time before |
|
trial, the court shall order an evaluation to assist the court |
in determining the child's best interests unless the court |
finds that an evaluation under this Section is untimely or not |
in the best interests of the child. The evaluation may be in |
place of or in addition to any advice given to the court by a |
professional under subsection (b). A motion for an evaluation |
under this subsection must, at a minimum, identify the proposed |
evaluator and the evaluator's specialty or discipline. An order |
for an evaluation under this subsection must set forth the |
evaluator's name, address, and telephone number and the time, |
place, conditions, and scope of the evaluation. No person shall |
be required to travel an unreasonable distance for the |
evaluation. The party requesting the evaluation shall pay the |
evaluator's fees and costs unless otherwise ordered by the |
court. |
The evaluator's report must, at a minimum, set forth the |
following: |
(1) a description of the procedures employed during the |
evaluation; |
(2) a report of the data collected; |
(3) all test results; |
(4) any conclusions of the evaluator relating to the |
allocation of parental responsibilities under Sections |
602.5 and 602.7; |
(5) any recommendations of the evaluator concerning |
the allocation of parental responsibilities or the child's |
|
relocation; and |
(6) an explanation of any limitations in the evaluation |
or any reservations of the evaluator regarding the |
resulting recommendations. |
A party who retains a professional to conduct an evaluation |
under this subsection shall cause the evaluator's written |
report to be sent to the attorneys of record no less than 60 |
days before the hearing on the allocation of parental |
responsibilities, unless otherwise ordered by the court; if a |
party fails to comply with this provision, the court may not |
admit the evaluator's report into evidence and may not allow |
the evaluator to testify. |
The party calling an evaluator to testify at trial shall |
disclose the evaluator as a controlled expert witness in |
accordance with the Supreme Court Rules. |
Any party to the litigation may call the evaluator as a |
witness. That party shall pay the evaluator's fees and costs |
for testifying, unless otherwise ordered by the court. |
(d) Investigation. Upon notice and a motion by a parent or |
any party to the litigation, or upon the court's own motion, |
the court may order an investigation and report to assist the |
court in allocating parental responsibilities. The
|
investigation may be made by any agency, private entity, or |
individual deemed appropriate by the court. The agency, private |
entity, or individual appointed by the court must have |
expertise in the area of allocation of parental |
|
responsibilities. The court shall specify the purpose and scope |
of the investigation. |
The investigator's report must, at a minimum, set forth the |
following: |
(1) a description of the procedures employed during the |
investigation; |
(2) a report of the data collected; |
(3) all test results; |
(4) any conclusions of the investigator relating to the |
allocation of parental responsibilities under Sections |
602.5 and 602.7; |
(5) any recommendations of the investigator concerning |
the allocation of parental responsibilities or the child's |
relocation; and |
(6) an explanation of any limitations in the |
investigation or any reservations of the investigator |
regarding the resulting recommendations. |
The investigator shall send his or her report to all |
attorneys of record, and to any party not represented, at least |
60 days before the hearing on the allocation of parental |
responsibilities. The court shall examine and consider the |
investigator's report only after it has been admitted into |
evidence or after the parties have waived their right to |
cross-examine the investigator. |
The investigator shall make available to all attorneys of |
record, and to any party not represented, the investigator's |
|
file, and the names and addresses of all persons whom the |
investigator has consulted, except that if such disclosure |
would risk abuse to the party or any member of the party's |
immediate family or household or reveal the confidential |
address of a shelter for domestic violence victims, that |
address may be omitted from the report. Any party to the |
proceeding may call the investigator, or any person consulted |
by the investigator as a court's witness, for |
cross-examination. No fees shall be paid for any investigation |
by a governmental agency. The fees incurred by any other |
investigator shall be allocated in accordance with Section 508.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .) |
(750 ILCS 5/606.5) |
Sec. 606.5. Hearings. |
(a) Proceedings to allocate parental responsibilities |
shall receive priority in being set for hearing. |
(a-5) The court may tax as costs the payment of necessary |
travel and other expenses incurred by any person whose presence |
at the hearing the court deems necessary to determine the best |
interest of the child. |
(b) The court, without a jury, shall determine questions of |
law and fact. |
(c) Previous statements made by the child relating to any |
allegations that the child is an abused or neglected child |
within the meaning of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting |
|
Act, or an abused or neglected minor within the meaning of the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987, shall be admissible in evidence in |
a hearing concerning allocation of parental responsibilities |
in accordance with Section 11.1 of the Abused and Neglected |
Child Reporting Act. No such statement, however, if |
uncorroborated and not subject to cross-examination, shall be |
sufficient in itself to support a finding of abuse or neglect.
|
(d) If the court finds that a public hearing may be |
detrimental to the child's best interests, the court shall |
exclude the public from the hearing, but the court may admit |
any person having: |
(1) a direct and legitimate interest in the case; or |
(2) a legitimate educational or research interest in |
the work of the court, but only with the permission of both |
parties and subject to court approval. |
(e) The court may make an appropriate order sealing the |
records of any interview, report, investigation, or testimony.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .) |
(750 ILCS 5/607.5)
|
Sec. 607.5. Abuse of allocated parenting time. |
(a) The court shall provide an expedited procedure for the |
enforcement of allocated parenting time. |
(b) An action for the enforcement of allocated parenting |
time may be commenced by a parent or a person appointed under |
Section 506 by filing a petition setting forth: (i) the |
|
petitioner's name and residence address or mailing address, |
except that if the petition states that disclosure of |
petitioner's address would risk abuse of petitioner or any |
member of petitioner's family or household or reveal the |
confidential address of a shelter for domestic violence |
victims, that address may be omitted from the petition; (ii) |
the respondent's name and place of residence, place of |
employment, or mailing address; (iii) the terms of the |
parenting plan or allocation judgment then in effect; (iv) the |
nature of the violation of the allocation of parenting time, |
giving dates and other relevant information; and (v) that a |
reasonable attempt was made to resolve the dispute. |
(c) If the court finds by a preponderance of the evidence |
that a parent has not complied with allocated parenting time |
according to an approved parenting plan or a court order, the |
court, in the child's best interests, shall issue an order that |
may include one or more of the following: |
(1) an imposition of additional terms and conditions |
consistent with the court's previous allocation of |
parenting time or other order; |
(2) a requirement that either or both of the parties |
attend a parental education program at the expense of the |
non-complying parent; |
(3) upon consideration of all relevant factors, |
particularly a history or possibility of domestic |
violence, a requirement that the parties participate in |
|
family or individual counseling, the expense of which shall |
be allocated by the court; if counseling is ordered, all |
counseling sessions shall be confidential, and the |
communications in counseling shall not be used in any |
manner in litigation nor relied upon by an expert appointed |
by the court or retained by any party; |
(4) a requirement that the non-complying parent post a |
cash bond or other security to ensure future compliance, |
including a provision that the bond or other security may |
be forfeited to the other parent for payment of expenses on |
behalf of the child as the court shall direct; |
(5) a requirement that makeup parenting time be |
provided for the aggrieved parent or child under the |
following conditions: |
(A) that the parenting time is of the same type and |
duration as the parenting time that was denied, |
including but not limited to parenting time during |
weekends, on holidays, and on weekdays and during times |
when the child is not in school; |
(B) that the parenting time is made up within 6 |
months after the noncompliance occurs, unless the |
period of time or holiday cannot be made up within 6 |
months, in which case the parenting time shall be made |
up within one year after the noncompliance occurs; |
(6) a finding that the non-complying parent is in |
contempt of court; |
|
(7) an imposition on the non-complying parent of an |
appropriate civil fine per incident of denied parenting |
time; |
(8) a requirement that the non-complying parent |
reimburse the other parent for all reasonable expenses |
incurred as a result of the violation of the parenting plan |
or court order; and |
(9) any other provision that may promote the child's |
best interests. |
(d) In addition to any other order entered under subsection |
(c), except for good cause shown, the court shall order a |
parent who has failed to provide allocated parenting time or to |
exercise allocated parenting time to pay the aggrieved party |
his or her reasonable attorney's fees, court costs, and |
expenses associated with an action brought under this Section. |
If the court finds that the respondent in an action brought |
under this Section has not violated the allocated parenting |
time, the court may order the petitioner to pay the |
respondent's reasonable attorney's fees, court costs, and |
expenses incurred in the action. |
(e) Nothing in this Section precludes a party from |
maintaining any other action as provided by law. |
(f) When the court issues an order holding a party in |
contempt for violation of a parenting time order and finds that |
the party engaged in parenting time abuse, the court may order |
one or more of the following: |
|
(1) Suspension of a party's Illinois driving |
privileges pursuant to Section 7-703 of the Illinois |
Vehicle Code until the court determines that the party is |
in compliance with the parenting time order. The court may |
also order that a party be issued a family financial |
responsibility driving permit that would allow limited |
driving privileges for employment, for medical purposes, |
and to transport a child to or from scheduled parenting |
time in order to comply with a parenting time order in |
accordance with subsection (a-1) of Section 7-702.1 of the |
Illinois Vehicle Code. |
(2) Placement of a party on probation with such |
conditions of probation as the court deems advisable. |
(3) Sentencing of a party to periodic imprisonment for |
a period not to exceed 6 months; provided, that the court |
may permit the party to be released for periods of time |
during the day or night to: |
(A) work; or |
(B) conduct a business or other self-employed |
occupation. |
(4) Find that a party in engaging in parenting time |
abuse is guilty of a petty offense and should be fined an |
amount of no more than $500 for each finding of parenting |
time abuse. |
(g) When the court issues an order holding a party in |
contempt of court for violation of a parenting order, the clerk |
|
shall transmit a copy of the contempt order to the sheriff of |
the county. The sheriff shall furnish a copy of each contempt |
order to the Department of State Police on a daily basis in the |
form and manner required by the Department. The Department |
shall maintain a complete record and index of the contempt |
orders and make this data available to all local law |
enforcement agencies. |
(h) Nothing contained in this Section shall be construed to |
limit the court's contempt power.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .) |
(750 ILCS 5/607.6 new) |
Sec. 607.6. Counseling. |
(a) The court may order individual counseling for the |
child, family counseling for one or more of the parties and the |
child, or parental education for one or more of the parties, if |
it finds one or more of the following: |
(1) both parents or all parties agree to the order; |
(2) the child's physical health is endangered or that |
the child's emotional development is impaired; |
(3) abuse of allocated parenting time under Section |
607.5 has occurred; or |
(4) one or both of the parties have violated the |
allocation judgment with regard to conduct affecting or in |
the presence of the child. |
(b) The court may apportion the costs of counseling between |
|
the parties as appropriate. |
(c) The remedies provided in this Section are in addition |
to, and do not diminish or abridge in any way, the court's |
power to exercise its authority through contempt or other |
proceedings. |
(d) All counseling sessions shall be confidential. The |
communications in counseling shall not be used in any manner in |
litigation nor relied upon by any expert appointed by the court |
or retained by any party. |
(750 ILCS 5/610.5) |
Sec. 610.5. Modification. |
(a) Unless by stipulation of the parties or except as |
provided in subsection (b) of this Section or Section 603.10 of |
this Act, no motion to modify an order allocating parental |
decision-making responsibilities , not including parenting |
time, may be made earlier than 2 years after its date, unless |
the court permits it to be made on the basis of affidavits that |
there is reason to believe the child's present environment may |
endanger seriously his or her mental, moral, or physical health |
or significantly impair the child's emotional development. |
Parenting time may be modified at any time, without a showing |
of serious endangerment, upon a showing of changed |
circumstances that necessitates modification to serve the best |
interests of the child. |
(b) (Blank). A motion to modify an order allocating |
|
parental responsibilities may be made at any time by a party |
who has been informed of the existence of facts requiring |
notice to be given under Section 609.5 of this Act. |
(c) Except in a case concerning the modification of any |
restriction of parental responsibilities under Section 603.10,
|
the court shall modify a parenting plan or allocation judgment |
when necessary to serve the child's best interests if the court |
finds, by a preponderance of the evidence, that on the basis of |
facts that have arisen since the entry of the existing |
parenting plan or allocation judgment or were not anticipated |
therein, a substantial change has occurred in the circumstances |
of the child or of either parent and that a modification is |
necessary to serve the child's best interests. |
(d) The court shall modify a parenting plan or allocation |
judgment in accordance with a parental agreement, unless it |
finds that the modification is not in the child's best |
interests. |
(e) The court may modify a parenting plan or allocation |
judgment without a showing of changed circumstances if (i) the |
modification is in the child's best interests; and (ii) any of |
the following are proven as to the modification: |
(1) the modification reflects the actual arrangement |
under which the child has been receiving care, without |
parental objection, for the 6 months preceding the filing |
of the petition for modification, provided that the |
arrangement is not the result of a parent's acquiescence |
|
resulting from circumstances that negated the parent's |
ability to give meaningful consent; |
(2) the modification constitutes a minor modification |
in the parenting plan or allocation judgment; |
(3) the modification is necessary to modify an agreed |
parenting plan or allocation judgment that the court would |
not have ordered or approved under Section 602.5 or 602.7 |
had the court been aware of the circumstances at the time |
of the order or approval; or |
(4) the parties agree to the modification. |
(f) Attorney's fees and costs shall be assessed against a |
party seeking
modification if the court finds that the |
modification action is vexatious or constitutes harassment. If |
the court finds that a parent has repeatedly filed frivolous |
motions for modification, the court may bar the parent from |
filing a motion for modification for a period of time.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-90, eff. 1-1-16 .) |
Section 10. The Illinois Parentage Act of 2015 is amended |
by changing Section 103 and the heading of Article 7 and by |
adding Sections 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, |
and 710 as follows: |
(750 ILCS 46/103)
|
Sec. 103. Definitions. In this Act: |
(a) "Acknowledged father" means a man who has established a |
|
father-child relationship under Article 3.
|
(b) "Adjudicated father" means a man who has been |
adjudicated by a court of competent jurisdiction, or as |
authorized under Article X of the Illinois Public Aid Code, to |
be the father of a child.
|
(c) "Alleged father" means a man who alleges himself to be, |
or is alleged to be, the biological father or a possible |
biological father of a child, but whose paternity has not been |
established. The term does not include:
|
(1) a presumed parent or acknowledged father; or |
(2) a man whose parental rights have been terminated or
|
declared not to exist.
|
(d) "Assisted reproduction" means a method of achieving a |
pregnancy though an artificial insemination or an embryo |
transfer and includes gamete and embryo donation. "Assisted |
reproduction" does not include any pregnancy achieved through |
sexual intercourse (Reserved) . |
(e) "Child" means an individual of any age whose parentage |
may be established under this Act.
|
(f) "Combined paternity index" means the likelihood of |
paternity calculated by computing the ratio between:
|
(1) the likelihood that the tested man is the father, |
based on the genetic markers of the tested man, mother, and |
child, conditioned on the hypothesis that the tested man is |
the father of the child; and
|
(2) the likelihood that the tested man is not the |
|
father, based on the genetic markers of the tested man, |
mother, and child, conditioned on the hypothesis that the |
tested man is not the father of the child and that the |
father is of the same ethnic or racial group as the tested |
man.
|
(g) "Commence" means to file the initial pleading seeking |
an adjudication of parentage in the circuit court of this |
State.
|
(h) "Determination of parentage" means the establishment |
of the parent-child relationship by the signing of a voluntary |
acknowledgment under Article 3 of this Act or adjudication by |
the court or as authorized under Article X of the Illinois |
Public Aid Code.
|
(i) "Donor" means an individual who participates in an |
assisted reproductive technology
arrangement by providing |
gametes and relinquishes all rights and
responsibilities to the |
gametes so that another individual or individuals may
become |
the legal parent or parents of any resulting child. "Donor" |
does not include a spouse in any
assisted reproductive |
technology arrangement in which his or her spouse will parent |
any
resulting child (Reserved) . |
(j) "Ethnic or racial group" means, for purposes of genetic |
testing, a recognized group that an individual identifies as |
all or part of the individual's ancestry or that is so |
identified by other information.
|
(k) "Gamete" means either a sperm or an egg.
|
|
(l) "Genetic testing" means an analysis of genetic markers |
to exclude or identify a man as the father or a woman as the |
mother of a child as provided in Article 4 of this Act.
|
(m) "Gestational mother" means an adult woman who gives |
birth to a child pursuant to the terms of a valid gestational |
surrogacy contract.
|
(n) "Parent" means an individual who has established a |
parent-child relationship under Section 201 of this Act.
|
(o) "Parent-child relationship" means the legal |
relationship between a child and a parent of the child. |
(p) "Presumed parent" means an individual who, by operation |
of law under Section 204 of this Act, is recognized as the |
parent of a child until that status is rebutted or confirmed in |
a judicial or administrative proceeding.
|
(q) "Probability of paternity" means the measure, for the |
ethnic or racial group to which the alleged father belongs, of |
the probability that the man in question is the father of the |
child, compared with a random, unrelated man of the same ethnic |
or racial group, expressed as a percentage incorporating the |
combined paternity index and a prior probability.
|
(r) "Record" means information that is inscribed on a |
tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other |
medium and is retrievable in perceivable form.
|
(s) "Signatory" means an individual who authenticates a |
record and is bound by its terms.
|
(t) "State" means a state of the United States, the |
|
District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin |
Islands, or any territory or insular possession subject to the |
jurisdiction of the United States.
|
(u) "Substantially similar legal relationship" means a |
relationship recognized in this State under Section 60 of the |
Illinois Religious Freedom Protection and Civil Union Act. |
(v) "Support-enforcement agency" means a public official |
or agency authorized to seek:
|
(1) enforcement of support orders or laws relating to |
the duty of support;
|
(2) establishment or modification of child support;
|
(3) determination of parentage; or
|
(4) location of child-support obligors and their |
income and assets.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16 .) |
(750 ILCS 46/Art. 7 heading) |
ARTICLE 7. CHILD OF ASSISTED REPRODUCTION (RESERVED)
|
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.) |
(750 ILCS 46/701 new) |
Sec. 701. Scope of Article. Except as described in this |
Article, this Article does not apply to the birth of a child |
conceived by means of sexual intercourse or a child born as a |
result of a valid gestational surrogacy arrangement meeting the |
requirements of the Gestational Surrogacy Act. |
|
(750 ILCS 46/702 new) |
Sec. 702. Parental status of donor. Except as provided in |
this Act, a donor is not a parent of a child conceived by means |
of assisted reproduction. |
(750 ILCS 46/703 new) |
Sec. 703. Parentage of child of assisted reproduction. |
(a) Any individual who is an intended parent as defined by |
this Act is the legal parent of any resulting child. If the |
donor and the intended parent have been represented by |
independent counsel and entered into a written legal agreement |
in which the donor relinquishes all rights and responsibilities |
to any resulting child, the intended parent is the parent of |
the child. An agreement under this subsection shall be entered |
into prior to any insemination or embryo transfer. |
(b) If a person makes an anonymous gamete donation without |
a designated intended parent at the time of the gamete |
donation, the intended parent is the parent of any resulting |
child if the anonymous donor relinquished his or her parental |
rights in writing at the time of donation. The written |
relinquishment shall be directed to the entity to which the |
donor donated his or her gametes. |
(c) An intended parent may seek a court order confirming |
the existence of a parent-child relationship prior to or after |
the birth of a child based on compliance with subsection (a) or |
|
(b) of this Section. |
(d) If the requirements of subsection (a) of this Section |
are not met, or subsection (b) of this Section is found by a |
court to be inapplicable, a court of competent jurisdiction |
shall determine parentage based on evidence of the parties' |
intent at the time of donation. |
(750 ILCS 46/704 new) |
Sec. 704. Withdrawal of consent of intended parent or |
donor. An intended parent or donor may withdraw consent to use |
his or her gametes in a writing or legal pleading with notice |
to the other participants. An intended parent who withdraws |
consent under this Section prior to the insemination or embryo |
transfer is not a parent of any resulting child. If a donor |
withdraws consent to his or her donation prior to the |
insemination or the combination of gametes, the intended parent |
is not the parent of any resulting child. |
(750 ILCS 46/705 new) |
Sec. 705. Parental status of deceased individual. If an |
individual consents in a writing to be a parent of any child |
born of his or her gametes posthumously, and dies before the |
insemination of the individual's gametes or embryo transfer, |
the deceased individual is a parent of any resulting child born |
within 36 months of the death of the deceased individual. |
|
(750 ILCS 46/706 new) |
Sec. 706. Inheritance rights of posthumous child. |
Notwithstanding Section 705, the rights of a posthumous child |
to an inheritance or to property under an instrument shall be |
governed by the provisions of the Probate Act of 1975. |
(750 ILCS 46/707 new) |
Sec. 707. Burden of proof. Parentage established under |
Section 703, a withdrawal of consent under Section 704, or a |
proceeding to declare the non-existence of the parent-child |
relationship under Section 708 of this Act must be proven by |
clear and convincing evidence. |
(750 ILCS 46/708 new) |
Sec. 708. Limitation on proceedings to declare the |
non-existence of the parent-child relationship. An action to |
declare the non-existence of the parent-child relationship |
under this Article shall be barred if brought more than 2 years |
following the birth of the child. |
(750 ILCS 46/709 new) |
Sec. 709. Establishment of parentage; requirements of |
Gestational Surrogacy Act. |
(a) In the event of gestational surrogacy, in addition to |
the requirements of the Gestational Surrogacy Act, a |
parent-child relationship is established between a person and a |
|
child if all of the following conditions are met prior to the |
birth of the child: |
(1) The gestational surrogate certifies that she did |
not provide a gamete for the child, and that she is |
carrying the child for the intended parents. |
(2) The spouse, if any, of the gestational surrogate |
certifies that he or she did not provide a gamete for the |
child. |
(3) Each intended parent certifies that the child being |
carried by the gestational surrogate was conceived using at |
least one of the intended parents' gametes. |
(4) A physician certifies that the child being carried |
by the gestational surrogate was conceived using the gamete |
or gametes of at least one of the intended parents, and |
that neither the gestational surrogate nor the gestational |
surrogate's spouse, if any, provided gametes for the child |
being carried by the gestational surrogate. |
(5) The attorneys for the intended parents and the |
gestational surrogate each certify that the parties |
entered into a gestational surrogacy agreement intended to |
satisfy the requirements of the Gestational Surrogacy Act. |
(b) All certifications under this Section shall be in |
writing and witnessed by 2 competent adults who are not the |
gestational surrogate, gestational surrogate's spouse, if any, |
or an intended parent. Certifications shall be on forms |
prescribed by the Illinois Department of Public Health and |
|
shall be executed prior to the birth of the child. All |
certifications shall be provided, prior to the birth of the |
child, to both the hospital where the gestational surrogate |
anticipates the delivery will occur and to the Illinois |
Department of Public Health. |
(c) Parentage established in accordance with this Section |
has the full force and effect of a judgment entered under this |
Act. |
(d) The Illinois Department of Public Health shall adopt |
rules to implement this Section. |
(750 ILCS 46/710 new) |
Sec. 710. Applicability. This Article applies only to |
assisted reproductive arrangements or gestational surrogacy |
contracts entered into after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly. |
Section 12. The Gestational Surrogacy Act is amended by |
changing Sections 20 and 70 as follows: |
(750 ILCS 47/20)
|
Sec. 20. Eligibility. |
(a) A gestational surrogate shall be deemed to have
|
satisfied the requirements of this Act if she has met the
|
following requirements at the time the gestational
surrogacy |
contract is executed: |
|
(1) she is at least 21 years of age; |
(2) she has given birth to at least one child; |
(3) she has completed a medical evaluation; |
(4) she has completed a mental health evaluation; |
(5) she has undergone legal consultation with |
independent legal counsel regarding the terms of the |
gestational surrogacy contract and the potential legal |
consequences of the gestational surrogacy; and |
(6) she has obtained a health insurance policy that |
covers major medical treatments and hospitalization and |
the health insurance policy has a term that extends |
throughout the duration of the expected pregnancy and for 8 |
weeks after the birth of the child; provided, however, that |
the policy may be procured by the intended parents on |
behalf of the gestational surrogate pursuant to the |
gestational surrogacy contract. |
(b) The intended parent or parents shall be deemed to have |
satisfied the requirements of this Act if he, she, or they have |
met the following requirements at the time the gestational |
surrogacy contract is executed: |
(1) he, she, or they contribute at least one of the |
gametes resulting in a pre-embryo that the gestational |
surrogate will attempt to carry to term; |
(2) he, she, or they have a medical need for the |
gestational surrogacy as evidenced by a qualified |
physician's affidavit attached to the gestational |
|
surrogacy contract and as required by the Illinois |
Parentage Act of 2015 1984 ; |
(3) he, she, or they have completed a mental health |
evaluation; and |
(4) he, she, or they have undergone legal consultation |
with independent legal counsel regarding the terms of the |
gestational surrogacy contract and the potential legal |
consequences of the gestational surrogacy.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-921, eff. 1-1-05.) |
(750 ILCS 47/70)
|
Sec. 70. Irrevocability. No action to invalidate a |
gestational surrogacy meeting the requirements of subsection |
(d) of Section 15 of this Act or to challenge the rights of |
parentage established pursuant to Section 15 of this Act and |
the Illinois Parentage Act of 2015 1984 shall be commenced |
after 12 months from the date of birth of the child.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-921, eff. 1-1-05.)
|
(750 ILCS 40/Act rep.)
|
Section 15. The Illinois Parentage Act is repealed.
|