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Public Act 103-0301 Public Act 0301 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 103-0301 | HB2269 Enrolled | LRB103 27863 LNS 54241 b |
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| AN ACT concerning civil law.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Probate Act of 1975 is amended by changing | Sections 1-2.25, 8-1, and 8-2 as follows: | (755 ILCS 5/1-2.25) | Sec. 1-2.25.
Where this Act requires information to be | "written" or "in writing", or provides for certain | consequences if it is not, an electronic record under the | Electronic Wills , Electronic Estate Planning Documents, and | Remote Witnesses Act satisfies the provisions of this Act. | (Source: P.A. 102-167, eff. 7-26-21.)
| (755 ILCS 5/8-1) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 8-1)
| Sec. 8-1. Contest of
admission of will to probate; notice. | (a) Within 6 months after the admission
to probate of a | domestic will in accordance with the provisions
of Section 6-4 | or Section 20-20 or 20-25 of the Electronic Wills , Electronic | Estate Planning Documents, and Remote Witnesses Act, or of a | foreign will in accordance with the provisions of
Article VII | of this Act, any interested person may file a petition in the | proceeding
for the administration of the testator's estate or, | if no proceeding is
pending,
in the court in which the will was |
| admitted to probate, to contest the validity
of the will.
| (b) The petitioner shall cause a copy of the petition to be | mailed or
delivered
to the representative, to his or her
| attorney of
record, and to each heir and legatee whose name is | listed in the petition to
admit the will to probate and in any | amended petition filed in accordance with
Section 6-11,
at the | address stated in the petition or amended petition. Filing a
| pleading constitutes a waiver of the mailing or delivery of | the notice to the
person filing the pleading. Failure to mail | or deliver a copy of the petition
to an heir or a legatee does | not extend the time within which a petition to
contest
the will | may be filed under subsection (a) of this Section or affect the
| validity of the judgment judgement entered in the proceeding.
| (c) Any contestant or proponent may demand a
trial by | jury. An issue
shall be made whether or not the instrument | produced is
the will of the testator. The contestant shall in | the first instance proceed
with proof to establish the | invalidity of the will. At the close of the
contestant's case, | the proponent may present evidence to sustain the will.
An | authenticated transcript of the testimony of any witness or | other party taken at the
time of the hearing on the admission | of the will to probate, or an affidavit
of any witness or other | party received as evidence under subsection 6-4(b), paragraphs | (c) and (e) of Section 20-20 of the Electronic Wills , | Electronic Estate Planning Documents, and Remote Witnesses | Act, or Section 20-25 of the Electronic Wills , Electronic |
| Estate Planning Documents, and Remote Witnesses Act, is | admissible in
evidence.
| (d) The right to institute or continue a proceeding to | contest the validity
of a will survives and descends to the | heir, legatee, representative, grantee
or assignee of the | person entitled to institute the proceeding.
| (e) It is the duty of the representative to defend a | proceeding to contest
the validity of the will. The court may | order the representative to defend
the proceeding or prosecute | an appeal from the judgment. If the representative
fails or | refuses to do so when ordered by the court, or if there is no
| representative then acting, the court, upon its
motion or on | application of any interested person, may appoint a special
| administrator to defend or appeal in his stead.
| (f) An action to set aside or contest the validity of a | revocable inter
vivos trust agreement or declaration of trust | to which a legacy is provided by
the settlor's will which is | admitted to probate shall be commenced within and
not after | the time to contest the validity of a will as provided in
| subsection (a) of this Section
and Section 13-223 of the Code | of Civil Procedure.
| (g) This amendatory Act of 1995 applies to pending cases | as well as cases
commenced on or after its effective date.
| (Source: P.A. 102-167, eff. 7-26-21.)
| (755 ILCS 5/8-2) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 8-2)
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| Sec. 8-2. Contest of denial of admission of will to | probate.
| (a) Within
6 months after the entry of an order denying | admission to probate of a domestic
will in accordance with the | provisions of Section 6-4 or Section 20-20 or 20-25 of the | Electronic Wills , Electronic Estate Planning Documents, and | Remote Witnesses Act, or of a foreign will
in accordance with | the provisions of Article VII of this Act, any interested | person
desiring to contest the denial of admission may file a | petition to admit
the will to probate in the proceeding for the | administration of the
decedent's estate
or, if no proceeding | is pending, in the court which
denied admission of the
will to | probate. The petition must state the facts required to be | stated
in Section 6-2 or 6-20, whichever is applicable.
| (b) The petitioner shall cause a copy of the petition to be | mailed or
delivered
to the representative, to his or her | attorney of record, and to
each
heir and legatee whose name is | listed in the petition to admit the will to
probate and in any | amended petition filed in accordance with Section 6-11, at
the | address stated in the petition or amended petition. Filing a | pleading
constitutes a waiver of the
mailing or delivery of | the notice to the person
filing the pleading. Failure to mail | or deliver a copy of the petition to an
heir or legatee does | not extend the time within which a petition to admit the
will
| to probate may be filed under subsection (a) of Section 8-1 or
| affect the validity of the judgment entered in the proceeding.
|
| (c) Any proponent or contestant may demand a
trial by | jury. An issue
shall be made whether or not the instrument | produced is the will of the
testator. The proponent shall in | the first instance proceed
with proof to establish the | validity of the will and may introduce any evidence
competent | to establish a will. Any interested person may oppose the | petition
and may introduce any evidence admissible in a will | contest under Section
8-1. At the close of the contestant's | case, the proponent may present further
evidence to sustain | the will.
| (d) The right to institute or continue a proceeding to | contest the denial
of admission of a will to probate survives | and descends to the heir, legatee,
representative, grantee or | assignee of the person entitled to institute
the proceeding.
| (e) The court may order the representative to defend a | proceeding to probate
the will or prosecute an appeal from the | judgment. If the representative
fails or refuses to do so when | ordered by the court, or if there is no
representative then | acting, the court, upon its
motion or on application of any | interested person, may appoint a special
administrator to do | so in his stead.
| (f) A person named as executor in a will that has been | denied admission
to probate has no duty to file or support a | petition under Section 8-2.
| (g) This amendatory Act of 1995 applies to pending cases | as well as cases
commenced on or after its effective date.
|
| (Source: P.A. 102-167, eff. 7-26-21.)
| Section 10. The Electronic Wills and Remote Witnesses Act | is amended by changing Sections 1-1, 1-5, 1-15, and 1-20 and by | adding Article 11 as follows: | (755 ILCS 6/1-1)
| Sec. 1-1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the | Electronic Wills , Electronic Estate Planning Documents, and | Remote Witnesses Act.
| (Source: P.A. 102-167, eff. 7-26-21.) | (755 ILCS 6/1-5)
| Sec. 1-5. Purpose. The purpose of this Act is to provide | for: (1) the valid execution, attestation, self-proving, and | probate of electronic wills, paper copies of electronic wills, | and wills attested to by witnesses through audio-video | communication; (2) the valid execution of electronic | nontestamentary estate planning documents and validation of | electronic signatures on nontestamentary estate planning | documents; and (3) (2) the valid execution, attestation, and | witnessing of documents, other than wills, through audio-video | communication.
| (Source: P.A. 102-167, eff. 7-26-21.) | (755 ILCS 6/1-15)
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| Sec. 1-15. Relation to Probate Act of 1975 , other | statutes, and common law. All electronic wills, paper copies | of electronic wills, and wills attested to under this Act are | subject to all requirements of the Probate Act of 1975 and the | common law, but to the extent the common law or any provision | of the Probate Act of 1975 conflicts with or is modified by | this Act, the requirements of this Act control. | Nontestamentary estate planning documents executed in | accordance with this Act are subject to all requirements of | the various statutes applicable thereto, but to the extent the | common law or any statute conflicts with or is modified by this | Act, the requirements of this Act control.
| (Source: P.A. 102-167, eff. 7-26-21.) | (755 ILCS 6/1-20)
| Sec. 1-20. Definitions. As used in this Act: | "Audio-video communication" means communication by which a | person can hear, see, and communicate with another person in | real time using electronic means. A person's visual or hearing | impairment does not prohibit or limit that person's use of | audio-visual communication under this Act. | "Electronic" means relating to technology having | electrical, digital, magnetic, wireless, optical, | electromagnetic, or similar capabilities. | "Electronic record" means a record generated, | communicated, received, or stored by electronic means for use |
| in an information system or for transmission from one | information system to another. | "Electronic signature" means a signature in electronic | form that uses a security procedure under the Electronic | Commerce Security Act and attached to or logically associated | with an electronic record. | "Electronic will" is a will that is created and maintained | as a tamper-evident electronic record. | "Identity proofing" means a process or service through | which a third person affirms the identity of an individual | through a review of personal information from public and | proprietary data sources, including: (1) by means of dynamic | knowledge-based authentication, including a review of personal | information from public or proprietary data sources; or (2) by | means of an analysis of biometric data, including, but not | limited to, facial recognition, voiceprint analysis, or | fingerprint analysis. | "Information" includes data, text, images, codes, computer | programs, software, and databases. | "Nontestamentary estate planning document" means a record | relating to estate planning that is readable as text at the | time of signing and is not a will or contained in a will. | "Nontestamentary estate planning document" includes a record | readable as text at the time of signing that creates, | exercises, modifies, releases, or revokes: (1) a trust | instrument;
(2) a trust power that under the terms of the trust |
| requires a signed record, such as a power to appoint, remove, | or designate a trustee or other fiduciary or powerholder, a | power to direct a trustee, a power to modify or amend, a power | to withdraw assets, a power to decant, a power to waive notice, | or any other power granted under this Act, any other statute, | the terms of a trust, or any rule of law possessed by a | trustee, a grantor, a beneficiary, or a third party;
(3) a | certification of a trust under Section 1013 of the Illinois | Trust Code;
(4) a power of attorney that is durable under | Article II of the Illinois Power of Attorney Act;
(5) an | agent's certification under Section 2-8 of the Illinois Power | of Attorney Act of the validity of a power of attorney and the | agent's authority;
(6) a power of appointment;
(7) an advance | directive, including a health care power of attorney, | directive to physicians, natural death statement, living will, | and medical or physician order for life-sustaining treatment;
| (8) a record directing the disposition of an individual's body | after death;
(9) a nomination of a guardian for the signing | individual, including a short-term, temporary, or standby | guardian;
(10) a nomination of a guardian for a minor child or | disabled adult child, including a short-term, temporary, or | standby guardian; (11) a supported decision-making agreement | under the Supported Decision-Making Agreement Act; (12) a | mental health treatment declaration; (13) a community property | survivorship agreement;
(14) a disclaimer under Section 2-7 of | the Probate Act of 1975; and
(15) any other record intended to |
| carry out an individual's intent regarding property or health | care while incapacitated or on death. "Nontestamentary estate | planning document" does not include a deed of real property or | a certificate of title for a vehicle, watercraft, or aircraft. | "Paper copy" means a tamper-evident electronic record that | is printed and contains the following: (1) the text of the | document; (2) the electronic signature of the signer; (3) a | readable copy of the evidence of any changes displayed in the | electronic record; and (4) any exhibits, attestation clauses, | affidavits, or other items forming a part of the document or | contained in the electronic record. | "Paper document" means a document that is written or | printed on paper. | "Person" means an individual, estate, business or | nonprofit entity, government or governmental subdivision, | agency, or instrumentality, or other legal entity. | "Physical presence" means being in the same physical | location as another person and close enough to see and know the | other person is signing a document. | "Power of attorney" means a record that grants authority | to an agent to act in place of the principal, even if the term | is not used in the record. | "Presence" includes: (1) physical presence; or (2) being | in a different physical location from another person, but | able, using audio-video communication, to know the person is | signing a document in real time. |
| "Record" means information: (1) inscribed on a tangible | medium; or
(2) stored in an electronic or other medium and | retrievable in a perceivable
form. | "Remote witness" means a person attesting to a document | who is in the presence of the signer or testator through | audio-video communication. | "Rule of law" means any statute, ordinance, common law | rule, court decision, or other rule of law enacted, | established, or promulgated by this State or any agency, | commission, department, court, other authority, or political | subdivision of this State. | "Security procedure" means a procedure to verify that an | electronic signature, record, or performance is that of a | specific person or to detect a change or error in an electronic | record. "Security procedure" includes a procedure that uses an | algorithm, code, identifying word or number, encryption, or | callback or other acknowledgment procedure. | "Settlor" means a person, including a testator, that | creates or contributes property to a trust. | "Signature" includes an electronic signature and an ink | signature. | "Sign" means, with present intent to authenticate or adopt | a record, to:
(1) execute or adopt a tangible symbol; or
(2) | attach to or logically associate with the record an electronic | signature. | "State" means a state of the United States, the District |
| of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, or | other territory or possession subject to the jurisdiction of | the United States. "State" includes a federally recognized | Indian tribe. | "Tamper-evident" means a feature of an electronic record | by which any change to the electronic record is displayed. | "Terms of trust" means: (1) the manifestation of the | settlor's intent regarding a trust's provisions as (i) | expressed in the trust instrument or
(ii) established by other | evidence that would be admissible in a judicial proceeding; or
| (2) the trust's provisions as established, determined, or | amended by (i) a trustee or other person in accordance with | applicable law,
(ii) a court order, or
(iii) a nonjudicial | settlement agreement under Section 111 of the Illinois Trust | Code. | "Trust instrument" means an instrument executed by the | settlor that contains terms of the trust, including any | amendments. | "Will" includes a codicil and a testamentary instrument | that merely appoints an executor, revokes or revises another | will, nominates a guardian, or expressly excludes or limits | the right of an individual or class to succeed to property of | the decedent passing by intestate succession.
| (Source: P.A. 102-167, eff. 7-26-21.) | (755 ILCS 6/Art. 11 heading new) |
| Article 11. Electronic Nontestamentary Estate Planning | Documents | (755 ILCS 6/11-5 new) | Sec. 11-5. Construction. This Article shall be construed | and applied to: | (1) facilitate electronic estate planning documents | and signatures consistent with other law; and | (2) be consistent with reasonable practices concerning | electronic documents and signatures and continued | expansion of those practices. | (755 ILCS 6/11-10 new) | Sec. 11-10. Scope. | (a) Except as provided in subsection (b), this Article | applies to an electronic nontestamentary estate planning | document and an electronic signature on a nontestamentary | estate planning document. | (b) This Article does not apply to a nontestamentary | estate planning document, will, or terms of a trust governing | the document expressly preclude use of an electronic record or | electronic signature. | (c) This Article does not affect the validity of an | electronic record or electronic signature that is valid under: | (1) the Illinois Uniform Electronic Transactions Act; | (2) any other Section of this Act; or |
| (3) any other State law relating to nontestamentary | estate planning documents. | (755 ILCS 6/11-15 new) | Sec. 11-15. Principles of law and equity. The law of this | State and principles of equity applicable to a nontestamentary | estate planning document apply to an electronic | nontestamentary estate planning document except as modified by | this Article. | (755 ILCS 6/11-20 new) | Sec. 11-20. Use of electronic record or signature not | required. | (a) This Article does not require a nontestamentary estate | planning document or signature on a nontestamentary estate | planning document to be created, generated, sent, | communicated, received, stored, or otherwise processed or used | by electronic means or in electronic form. | (b) A person is not required to have a nontestamentary | estate planning document in electronic form or signed | electronically even if the person previously created or signed | a nontestamentary estate planning document by electronic | means. | (c) A person may not waive the provisions of this Section. | (755 ILCS 6/11-25 new) |
| Sec. 11-25. Recognition of electronic nontestamentary | estate planning document and electronic signature. | (a) A nontestamentary estate planning document or a | signature on a nontestamentary estate planning document may | not be denied legal effect or enforceability solely because it | is in electronic form. | (b) If other law of this State or a will or the terms of a | trust governing the nontestamentary estate planning document | require a nontestamentary estate planning document to be in | writing, an electronic record of the document satisfies the | requirement. | (c) If other law of this State requires a signature on a | nontestamentary estate planning document, an electronic | signature satisfies the requirement. | (755 ILCS 6/11-30 new) | Sec. 11-30. Attribution and effect of electronic record | and electronic signature. | (a) An electronic nontestamentary estate planning document | or electronic signature on an electronic nontestamentary | estate planning document is attributable to a person if it was | the act of the person. The act of the person may be shown in | any manner, including by showing the efficacy of a security | procedure applied to determine the person to which the | electronic record or electronic signature was attributable. | (b) The effect of attribution to a person under subsection |
| (a) of a document or signature is determined from the context | and surrounding circumstances at the time of its creation, | execution, or adoption and as provided by other law. | (755 ILCS 6/11-35 new) | Sec. 11-35. Notarization and acknowledgment. If other law | of this State or a will or the terms of a trust require or | permit a signature or record to be notarized, acknowledged, | verified, or made under oath, the requirement is satisfied | with respect to an electronic nontestamentary estate planning | document if an individual authorized to perform the | notarization, acknowledgment, verification, or oath attaches | or logically associates the individual's electronic signature | on the document together with all other information required | to be included under the other law. | (755 ILCS 6/11-40 new) | Sec. 11-40. Witnessing and attestation. | (a) If other law of this State or a will or the terms of a | trust base the validity of a nontestamentary estate planning | document on whether it is signed, witnessed, or attested by | another individual, the signature, witnessing, or attestation | of that individual may be electronic. | (b) As used in this subsection (b), "electronic presence" | means that 2 or more individuals in different locations are | able to communicate in real time to the same extent as if the |
| individuals were physically present in the same location. If | other law of this State bases the validity of a | nontestamentary estate planning document on whether it is | signed, witnessed, or attested by another individual in the | presence of the individual signing the document, the presence | requirement is satisfied if the individuals are in each | other's electronic presence. | (755 ILCS 6/11-45 new) | Sec. 11-45. Retention of electronic record; original. | (a) Except as provided in subsection (b), if other law of | this State requires an electronic nontestamentary estate | planning document to be retained, transmitted, copied, or | filed, the requirement is satisfied by retaining, | transmitting, copying, or filing an electronic record that: | (1) accurately reflects the information in the | document after it was first generated in final form as an | electronic record or under Section 11-30; and | (2) remains accessible to the extent required by the | other law. | (b) A requirement under subsection (a) to retain a record | does not apply to information the sole purpose of which is to | enable the record to be sent, communicated, or received. | (c) A person may satisfy subsection (a) by using the | services of another person. | (d) If other law of this State requires a nontestamentary |
| estate planning document to be presented or retained in its | original form, or provides consequences if a nontestamentary | estate planning document is not presented or retained in its | original form, an electronic record retained in accordance | with subsection (a) satisfies the other law. | (e) This Section does not preclude a governmental agency | from specifying requirements for the retention of a record | subject to the agency's jurisdiction in addition to those in | this Section. In this Section, "governmental agency" means an | executive, legislative, or judicial agency, department, board, | commission, authority, institution, or instrumentality of the | federal government or of a state or of a county, municipality, | or other political subdivision of a state. | (755 ILCS 6/11-50 new) | Sec. 11-50. Certification of paper copy. An individual may | create a certified paper copy of an electronic nontestamentary | estate planning document by affirming under penalty of perjury | that the paper copy is a complete and accurate copy of the | document. | (755 ILCS 6/11-55 new) | Sec. 11-55. Admissibility in evidence. Evidence relating | to an electronic nontestamentary estate planning document or | an electronic signature on the document may not be excluded in | a proceeding solely because it is in electronic form. |
| (755 ILCS 6/11-60 new) | Sec. 11-60. Relation to the Electronic Signatures in | Global and National Commerce Act. This Article modifies, | limits, or supersedes the Electronic Signatures in Global and | National Commerce Act, 15 U.S.C. Section 7001 et seq., but | does not modify, limit, or supersede 15 U.S.C. Section 7001(c) | or authorize electronic delivery of any of the notices | described in 15 U.S.C. Section 7003(b). | (755 ILCS 6/11-65 new) | Sec. 11-65. Application. This Article applies to an | electronic nontestamentary estate planning document created, | signed, generated, sent, communicated, received, or stored | before, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory Act | of the 103rd General Assembly. | (755 ILCS 6/11-70 new) | Sec. 11-70. Severability. If a provision of this Article | or its application to a person or circumstance is held | invalid, the invalidity does not affect another provision or | application that can be given effect without the invalid | provision.
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect January | 1, 2024.
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INDEX
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Statutes amended in order of appearance
| | 755 ILCS 5/1-2.25 | | | 755 ILCS 5/8-1 | from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 8-1 | | 755 ILCS 5/8-2 | from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 8-2 | | 755 ILCS 6/1-1 | | | 755 ILCS 6/1-5 | | | 755 ILCS 6/1-15 | | | 755 ILCS 6/1-20 | | | 755 ILCS 6/Art. 11 heading | new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-5 new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-10 new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-15 new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-20 new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-25 new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-30 new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-35 new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-40 new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-45 new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-50 new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-55 new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-60 new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-65 new | | | 755 ILCS 6/11-70 new | |
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Effective Date: 1/1/2024
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