(760 ILCS 100/1) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.1) Sec. 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Cemetery Care Act. (Source: P.A. 90-47, eff. 1-1-98.)
(760 ILCS 100/2) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.2) Sec. 2. Definitions. The following words, terms and phrases used in this Act, for the purpose of this Act, have the following meanings: "Person" means any person, partnership, association, corporation, or other entity. "Trustee" means any person authorized to hold funds under this Act. "Comptroller" means the Comptroller of the State of Illinois. "Care" means the maintenance of a cemetery and of the lots, graves, crypts, niches, family mausoleums, memorials, and markers therein; including: (i) the cutting and trimming of lawn, shrubs, and trees at reasonable intervals; (ii) keeping in repair the drains, water lines, roads, buildings, fences, and other structures, in keeping with a well maintained cemetery; (iii) maintenance of machinery, tools, and equipment for such care; (iv) compensation of employees, payment of insurance premiums, and reasonable payments for employees pension and other benefits plans; and (v) to the extent surplus income from the care fund is available, the payment of overhead expenses necessary for such purposes and for maintaining necessary records of lot ownership, transfers, and burials. "Care funds" as distinguished from receipts from annual charges or gifts for current or annual care, means any realty or personalty impressed with a trust by the terms of any gift, grant, contribution, payment, legacy, or pursuant to contract, accepted by any cemetery authority owning, operating, controlling or managing a privately operated cemetery, or by any trustee or licensee, agent or custodian for the same, under Section 3 of this Act, and the amounts set aside under Section 4 of this Act, and any income accumulated therefrom, where legally so directed by the terms of the transaction by which the principal was established. "Cemetery" means any land or structure in this State dedicated to and used, or intended to be used, for the interment of human remains. "Cemetery authority" means any person, firm, corporation, trustee, partnership, association or municipality owning, operating, controlling or managing a cemetery or holding lands for burial grounds or burial purposes in this State. "Mausoleum crypt" means a space in a mausoleum used or intended to be used, above or under ground, to entomb human remains. "Family burying ground" means a cemetery in which no lots are sold to the public and in which interments are restricted to a group of persons related to each other by blood or marriage. "Fraternal cemetery" means a cemetery owned, operated, controlled, or managed by any fraternal organization or auxiliary organizations thereof, in which the sale of lots, graves, crypts or niches is restricted principally to its members. "Grave" means a space of ground in a cemetery, used, or intended to be used, for burial. "Investment Company Act of 1940" means Title 15, of the United States Code, Sections 80a-1 to 80a-51, inclusive, as amended. "Investment Company" means any issuer (a) whose securities are purchasable only with care funds or trust funds, or both; and (b) which is an open and diversified management company as defined in and registered under the "Investment Company Act of 1940"; and (c) which has entered into an agreement with the Comptroller containing such provisions as the Comptroller by regulation reasonably requires for the proper administration of this Act. "Municipal cemetery" means a cemetery owned, operated, controlled or managed by any city, village, incorporated town, township, county, or other municipal corporation, political subdivision, or instrumentality thereof authorized by law to own, operate, or manage a cemetery. "Niche" means a space in a columbarium used or intended to be used, for inurnment of cremated human remains. "Privately operated cemetery" means any entity that offers interment rights, entombment rights, or inurnment rights, other than a fraternal, municipal, State, federal or religious cemetery or a family burying ground. "Religious cemetery" means a cemetery owned, operated, controlled, or managed by any recognized church, religious society, association or denomination, or by any cemetery authority or any corporation administering, or through which is administered, the temporalities of any recognized church, religious society, association or denomination. "State or federal cemetery" means a cemetery owned, operated, controlled, or managed by any State or the federal government or any political subdivision or instrumentality thereof. "Entombment right" means the right to place individual human remains or individual cremated human remains in a specific mausoleum crypt or lawn crypt selected by the consumer for use as a final resting place. "Interment right" means the right to place individual human remains or cremated human remains in a specific underground location selected by the consumer for use as a final resting place. "Inurnment right" means the right to place individual cremated human remains in a specific niche selected by the consumer for use as a final resting place. "Lawn crypt" means a permanent underground crypt usually constructed of reinforced concrete or similar material installed in multiple units for the entombment of human remains. "Imputed value" means the retail price of comparable rights within the same or similar area of the cemetery. (Source: P.A. 92-651, eff. 7-11-02.)
(760 ILCS 100/2a) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.2a) Sec. 2a. Powers and duties of cemetery authorities; cemetery property maintained by cemetery care funds. (a) With respect to cemetery property maintained by cemetery care funds, a cemetery authority shall be responsible for the performance of: (1) the care and maintenance of the cemetery property
it owns; and
(2) the opening and closing of all graves, crypts, or
niches for human remains in any cemetery property it owns.
(b) A cemetery authority owning, operating, controlling or managing a privately operated cemetery shall make available for inspection, and upon reasonable request provide a copy of, its rules and regulations and its current prices of interment, inurnment, or entombment rights. (c) A cemetery authority owning, operating, controlling or managing a privately operated cemetery may, from time to time as land in its cemetery may be required for burial purposes, survey and subdivide those lands and make and file in its office a map thereof delineating the lots or plots, avenues, paths, alleys, and walks and their respective designations. The cemetery authority shall open the map to public inspection. The cemetery authority may make available a copy of the overall map upon written request and payment of reasonable photocopy fees. Any unsold lots, plots or parts thereof, in which there are not human remains, may be resurveyed and altered in shape or size, and properly designated on such map. Nothing contained in this subsection, however, shall prevent the cemetery authority from enlarging an interment right by selling to the owner thereof the excess space next to such interment right and permitting interments therein, provided reasonable access to such interment right and to adjoining interment rights is not thereby eliminated. The Comptroller may waive any or all of the requirements of this subsection (c) for good cause shown. (d) A cemetery authority owning, operating, controlling, or managing a privately operated cemetery shall keep a record of every interment, entombment, and inurnment in the cemetery. The record shall include the deceased's name, age, and date of burial, when these particulars can be conveniently obtained, and the lot, plot, or section where the human remains are interred, entombed, or inurned. The record shall be open to public inspection consistent with State and federal law. The cemetery authority shall make available, consistent with State and federal law, a true copy of the record upon written request and payment of reasonable copy costs. (e) A cemetery authority owning, operating, controlling, or managing a privately operated cemetery shall provide access to the cemetery under the cemetery authority's reasonable rules and regulations. (Source: P.A. 92-419, eff. 1-1-02.)
(760 ILCS 100/3) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.3) Sec. 3. Gifts and contributions - Trust funds. Any cemetery authority is hereby authorized and empowered to accept any gift, grant, contribution, payment, legacy, or pursuant to contract, any sum of money, funds, securities or property of any kind, or the income or avails thereof, and to establish a trust fund to hold the same in perpetuity for the care of its cemetery, or for the care of any lot, grave, crypt or niche in its cemetery; or for the special care of any lot, grave, crypt or niche or of any family mausoleum or memorial, marker, or monument in its cemetery. The cemetery authority shall act as trustee of all amounts received for care until they have been deposited into the trust fund established under this Section. The cemetery authority may continue to be the trustee of up to $500,000 of care funds that have been deposited into the trust fund, but the cemetery authority must retain an independent trustee for any amount of care funds held in trust in excess of that $500,000. A cemetery authority holding care funds in excess of $500,000 on the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1996 shall have 36 months to retain an independent trustee for the excess amounts held in trust; any other cemetery authority must retain an independent trustee for its care funds in excess of $500,000 as soon as may be practical. No gift, grant, legacy, payment or other contribution shall be invalid by reason of any indefiniteness or uncertainty as to the beneficiary designated in the instrument creating the gift, grant, legacy, payment or other contribution. If any gift, grant, legacy, payment or other contribution consists of non-income producing property, the cemetery authority accepting it is authorized and empowered to sell such property and to invest the funds obtained in accordance with the provisions of the next succeeding paragraph. The care funds authorized by this Section and provided for in Section 4 of this Act shall be held intact and, unless otherwise restricted by the terms of the gift, grant, legacy, contribution, payment, contract or other payment, as to investments made after June 11, 1951 the trustee of the care funds of the cemetery authority, in acquiring, investing, reinvesting, exchanging, retaining, selling and managing property for any such trust, shall exercise the judgment and care under the circumstances then prevailing, which persons of prudence, discretion and intelligence exercise in the management of their own affairs, not in regard to speculation but in regard to the permanent disposition of their funds, considering the probable income as well as the probable safety of their capital. Within the limitations of the foregoing standard, the trustee of the care funds of the cemetery authority is authorized to acquire and retain every kind of property, real, personal or mixed, and every kind of investment, including specifically but without limiting the generality of the foregoing, bonds, debentures and other corporate obligations, preferred or common stocks and real estate mortgages, which persons of prudence, discretion and intelligence acquire or retain for their own account. Within the limitations of the foregoing standard, the trustee is authorized to retain property properly acquired, without limitation as to time and without regard to its suitability for original purchase. The care funds authorized by this Section may be commingled with other trust funds received by such cemetery authority for the care of its cemetery or for the care or special care of any lot, grave, crypt, niche, private mausoleum, memorial, marker, or monument in its cemetery, whether received by gift, grant, legacy, contribution, payment, contract or other conveyance heretofore or hereafter made to such cemetery authority. Such care funds may be invested with common trust funds as provided in The Common Trust Fund Act. The net income only from the investment of such care funds shall be allocated and used for the purposes specified in the transaction by which the principal was established in the proportion that each contribution bears to the entire sum invested. (Source: P.A. 89-615, eff. 8-9-96.)
(760 ILCS 100/3a) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.3a) Sec. 3a. Loans to private cemeteries. Except upon written approval of the Comptroller, no loan or investment of any care funds by any cemetery authority owning, operating, controlling or managing a privately operated cemetery, or by any trustee or licensee under this Act shall be made: (1) To any officer, director, trustee, or party
owning 10% or more of such cemetery authority, or to any firm, corporation, association or partnership in which any officer, director, trustee, or party owning 10% or more of such cemetery authority or licensee has a controlling interest.
(2) On or in any real estate, or in any note, bond,
mortgage or deed of trust in which any officer, director trustee, or party owning 10% or more of such cemetery authority or licensee has any financial interest.
(3) On or in any unproductive real estate or real
estate outside of this state or in permanent improvements of the cemetery or any of its facilities, unless specifically authorized by the instrument whereby the principal fund was created. And no commission or brokerage fee for the purchase or sale of any property shall be paid in excess of that usual and customary at the time and in the locality where such purchase or sale is made and all such commissions and brokerage fees shall be fully reported in the next annual statement of such cemetery authority, trustee or licensee.
Before a loan or investment request is submitted to the Comptroller for approval, the loan or investment request must be duly approved by resolution of the board of directors of the cemetery authority and by the trustee of the care fund. (Source: P.A. 88-477; 89-615, eff. 8-9-96.)
(760 ILCS 100/4) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.4) Sec. 4. Care funds; deposits; investments. Whenever a cemetery authority owning, operating, controlling or managing a privately operated cemetery accepts care funds, either in connection with the sale or giving away at an imputed value of an interment right, entombment right or inurnment right, or in pursuance of a contract, or whenever, as a condition precedent to the purchase or acceptance of an interment right, entombment right or inurnment right, such cemetery authority requires the establishment of a care fund or a deposit in an already existing care fund, then such cemetery authority shall execute and deliver to the person from whom received an instrument in writing which shall specifically state: (a) the nature and extent of the care to be furnished, and (b) that such care shall be furnished only in so far as the net income derived from the amount deposited in trust will permit (the income from the amount so deposited, less necessary expenditures of administering the trust, shall be deemed the net income), and (c) that not less than the following amounts will be set aside and deposited in trust: 1. For interment rights, $1 per square foot of the
space sold or 15% of the sales price or imputed value, whichever is the greater, with a minimum of $25 for each individual interment right.
2. For entombment rights, not less than 10% of the
sales price or imputed value with a minimum of $25 for each individual entombment right.
3. For inurnment rights, not less than 10% of the
sales price or imputed value with a minimum of $15 for each individual inurnment right.
4. For any transfer of interment rights, entombment
rights, or inurnment rights recorded in the records of the cemetery authority, excepting only transfers between members of the immediate family of the transferor, a minimum of $25 for each such right transferred. For the purposes of this paragraph "immediate family of the transferor" means the spouse, parents, grandparents, children, grandchildren, and siblings of the transferor.
5. Upon an interment, entombment, or inurnment in a
grave, crypt, or niche in which rights of interment, entombment, or inurnment were originally acquired from a cemetery authority prior to January 1, 1948, a minimum of $25 for each such right exercised.
6. For the special care of any lot, grave, crypt, or
niche or of a family mausoleum, memorial, marker, or monument, the full amount received.
Such setting aside and deposit shall be made by such cemetery authority not later than 30 days after the close of the month in which the cemetery authority gave away for an imputed value or received the final payment on the purchase price of interment rights, entombment rights, or inurnment rights, or received the final payment for the general or special care of a lot, grave, crypt or niche or of a family mausoleum, memorial, marker or monument; and such amounts shall be held by the trustee of the care funds of such cemetery authority in trust in perpetuity for the specific purposes stated in said written instrument. For all care funds received by a cemetery authority, except for care funds received by a cemetery authority pursuant to a specific gift, grant, contribution, payment, legacy, or contract that are subject to investment restrictions more restrictive than the investment provisions set forth in this Act, and except for care funds otherwise subject to a trust agreement executed by a person or persons responsible for transferring the specific gift, grant, contribution, payment, or legacy to the cemetery authority that contains investment restrictions more restrictive than the investment provisions set forth in this Act, the cemetery authority may, without the necessity of having to obtain prior approval from any court in this State, designate a new trustee in accordance with this Act and invest the care funds in accordance with this Section, notwithstanding any contrary limitation contained in the trust agreement. Any such cemetery authority engaged in selling or giving away at an imputed value interment rights, entombment rights or inurnment rights, in conjunction with the selling or giving away at an imputed value any other merchandise or services not covered by this Act, shall be prohibited from increasing the sales price or imputed value of those items not requiring a care fund deposit under this Act with the purpose of allocating a lesser sales price or imputed value to items that require a care fund deposit. In the event any sale that would require a deposit to such cemetery authority's care fund is made by a cemetery authority on an installment basis, and the installment contract is factored, discounted, or sold to a third party, the cemetery authority shall deposit the amount due to the care fund within 30 days after the close of the month in which the installment contract was factored, discounted, or sold. If, subsequent to such deposit, the purchaser defaults on the contract such that no care fund deposit on that contract would have been required, the cemetery authority may apply the amount deposited as a credit against future required deposits. The trust authorized by this Section shall be a single purpose trust fund. In the event of the seller's bankruptcy, insolvency, or assignment for the benefit of creditors, or an adverse judgment, the trust funds shall not be available to any creditor as assets of the cemetery authority or to pay any expenses of any bankruptcy or similar proceeding, but shall be retained intact to provide for the future maintenance of the cemetery. Except in an action by the Comptroller to revoke a license issued pursuant to this Act and for creation of a receivership as provided in this Act, the trust shall not be subject to judgment, execution, garnishment, attachment, or other seizure by process in bankruptcy or otherwise, nor to sale, pledge, mortgage, or other alienation, and shall not be assignable except as approved by the Comptroller. The changes made by this amendatory Act of the 91st General Assembly are intended to clarify existing law regarding the inability of licensees to pledge the trust. (Source: P.A. 91-7, eff. 6-1-99.)
(760 ILCS 100/5) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.5) Sec. 5. No cemetery authority, nor any agent, servant, or employee of it, nor any other person, shall advertise, represent, guarantee, promise, or contract that perpetual care, permanent care, perpetual or permanent maintenance, care forever, continuous care, eternal care, everlasting care, or any similar or equivalent care, or care for any number of years of any cemetery or of any lot, grave, crypt or niche, or of any family mausoleum, memorial, marker, or monument, will be furnished: Provided, however, that any cemetery authority may advertise, represent, guarantee, promise or contract that care will be furnished from the net income only derived from funds held in trust as provided in Section 3 of this Act; and may advertise, represent, guarantee, promise or contract that care will be given any lot, grave, crypt, or niche, or any family mausoleum, memorial, marker, or monument for any definite number of years, such care to be furnished under a contract providing that the principal of the amount paid under the contract shall be used to furnish the care and further providing specifically the care to be given and the number of years for which it is to be given. (Source: Laws 1947, p. 338.)
(760 ILCS 100/6) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.6) Sec. 6. The trust funds authorized by Section 3 of this Act, and the income therefrom, and any funds received under a contract to furnish care of a burial space for a definite number of years, shall be held for the general benefit of the lot owners and are exempt from taxation. The trust funds authorized by the provisions of Section 3 of this Act, and the income therefrom, are exempt from the operation of all laws of mortmain and the laws against perpetuities and accumulations. (Source: Laws 1967, p. 1188.)
(760 ILCS 100/7) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.7) Sec. 7. License to hold care funds. No cemetery authority owning, operating, controlling or managing a privately operated cemetery may accept the care funds authorized by the provisions of Section 3 of this Act without securing from the Comptroller a license to hold the funds. The license shall be secured by the cemetery authority whether the cemetery authority is serving as trustee of the care funds or whether the care funds are held by an independent trustee. All licenses issued under the provisions of this Act by the Department of Financial Institutions prior to the time the administration of this Act was transferred to the Comptroller shall remain valid for all purposes unless such license is terminated, surrendered or revoked as provided in this Act. (Source: P.A. 89-615, eff. 8-9-96.)
(760 ILCS 100/8) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.8) Sec. 8. Every cemetery authority shall register with the Comptroller upon forms furnished by him or her. Such registration statement shall state whether the cemetery authority claims that the cemetery owned, operated, controlled, or managed by it is a fraternal cemetery, municipal, State, or federal cemetery, or religious cemetery, or a family burying ground, as the case may be, as defined in Section 2 of this Act, and shall state the date of incorporation if a corporation and whether incorporated under general or private act of the legislature. Such registration statement shall be accompanied by a fee of $5. Such fee shall be paid to the Comptroller and no registration statement shall be accepted by him without the payment of such fee. Every cemetery authority that is not required to file an annual report under this Act shall bear the responsibility of informing the Comptroller whenever a change takes place regarding status of cemetery, name of contact person, and that person's address and telephone number. Upon receipt of a registration statement, if a claim is made that a cemetery is a fraternal cemetery, municipal cemetery, or religious cemetery, or a family burying ground, as the case may be, as defined in Section 2 of this Act, and the Comptroller shall determine that such cemetery is not a fraternal cemetery, a municipal cemetery, or a religious cemetery, or a family burying ground, as the case may be, as defined in Section 2 of this Act, the Comptroller shall notify the cemetery authority making the claim of such determination; provided, however, that no such claim shall be denied until the cemetery authority making such claim has had at least 10 days' notice of a hearing thereon and an opportunity to be heard. When any such claim is denied, the Comptroller shall within 20 days thereafter prepare and keep on file in his office the transcript of the evidence taken and a written order or decision of denial of such claim and shall send by United States mail a copy of such order or decision of denial to the cemetery authority making such claim within 5 days after the filing in his office of such order, finding or decision. A review of any such order, finding or decision may be had as provided in the Administrative Review Law, as now or hereafter amended. Where no claim is made that a cemetery is a fraternal cemetery, municipal cemetery or religious cemetery or family burying ground, as the case may be, as defined in Section 2 of this Act, the registration statement shall be accompanied by a fidelity bond in the amount required by Section 9 of this Act. Upon receipt of such application, statement and bond, the Comptroller shall issue a license to accept the care funds authorized by the provisions of Section 3 of this Act to each cemetery authority owning, operating, controlling or managing a privately operated cemetery. However, the Comptroller shall issue a license without the filing of a bond where the filing of a bond is excused by Section 18 of this Act. The license issued by the Comptroller shall remain in full force and effect until it is surrendered by the licensee or revoked by the Comptroller as hereinafter provided. (Source: P.A. 88-477.)
(760 ILCS 100/8.1) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.8a) Sec. 8.1. Any cemetery authority operating a fraternal cemetery, municipal cemetery, State or federal cemetery, religious cemetery or family burying ground which has been licensed under the provisions of this Act may have such license terminated and may cease to be governed by the licensing provisions of this Act if such cemetery authority: (1) applies in writing to the Comptroller setting out
facts to show the kind of cemetery operated;
(2) sets out facts in such written application
identifying the license under which such authority is operating;
(3) requests that such license be relinquished and
terminated by the Comptroller.
Upon receipt of such statement, the Comptroller shall determine whether to grant such request. If the Comptroller grants the request to terminate, the license shall be relinquished and such cemetery authority shall cease to be governed by the licensing provisions of this Act. The Comptroller shall not deny such request without first granting a hearing to the cemetery authority. The hearing and review provisions of Sections 8 and 20 of this Act shall apply to the hearing provided for in this Section. (Source: P.A. 88-477.)
(760 ILCS 100/9) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.9) Sec. 9. Application for license. (a) Prior to the acceptance of care funds authorized by Section 3 of this Act or the sale or transfer of the controlling interest of a licensed cemetery authority, a cemetery authority owning, operating, controlling, or managing a privately operated cemetery shall make application to the Comptroller for a license to hold the funds. In the case of a sale or transfer of the controlling interest of the cemetery authority, the prior license shall remain in effect until the Comptroller issues a new license to the newly-controlled cemetery authority as provided in Section 15b. Upon issuance of the new license, the prior license shall be deemed surrendered if the licensee has agreed to the sale and transfer and has consented to the surrender of the license. A sale or transfer of the controlling interest of a cemetery authority to an immediate family member is not considered a transfer of the controlling interest for purposes of this Section. (b) Applications for license shall be filed with the Comptroller. Applications shall be in writing under oath, signed by the applicant, and in the form furnished by the Comptroller. The form furnished by the Comptroller shall enable a cemetery authority to apply for license of multiple cemetery locations within a single license application. A check or money order in the amount of $25 per license seeking to be issued under the application, payable to: Comptroller, State of Illinois, shall be included. Each application shall contain the following: (1) the full name and address (both of residence and
of place of business) of the applicant, if an individual; of every member, if the applicant is a partnership or association; of every officer or director, if the applicant is a corporation; and of any party owning 10% or more of the cemetery authority, and the full name and address of the parent company, if any;
(2) a detailed statement of the applicant's assets
and liabilities;
(2.1) the name, address, and legal boundaries of each
cemetery for which the care funds shall be entrusted and at which books, accounts, and records shall be available for examination by the Comptroller as required by Section 13 of this Act;
(3) as to the name of each individual person listed
under (1) above, a detailed statement of each person's business experience for the 10 years immediately preceding the application; the present and previous connection, if any, of each person with any other cemetery or cemetery authority; whether each person has ever been convicted of any felony or has ever been convicted of any misdemeanor of which an essential element is fraud or has been involved in any civil litigation in which a judgment has been entered against him or her based on fraud; whether each person is currently a defendant in any lawsuit in which the complaint against the person is based upon fraud; whether such person has failed to satisfy any enforceable judgment entered by a court of competent jurisdiction in any civil proceedings against such individual;
(4) the total amount in trust and now available from
sales of lots, graves, crypts or niches where part of the sale price has been placed in trust; the amount of money placed in the care funds of each applicant; the amount set aside in care funds from the sale of lots, graves, crypts and niches for the general care of the cemetery and the amount available for that purpose; the amount received in trust by special agreement for special care and the amount available for that purpose; the amount of principal applicable to trust funds received by the applicant; and
(5) any other information that the Comptroller may
reasonably require in order to determine the qualifications of the applicant to be licensed under this Act.
Such information shall be furnished whether the care funds are held by the applicant as trustee or by an independent trustee. If the funds are not held by the applicant, the name of the independent trustee holding them is also to be furnished by the applicant. (c) Applications for license shall also be accompanied by a fidelity bond issued by a bonding company or insurance company authorized to do business in this State or by an irrevocable, unconditional letter of credit issued by a bank or trust company authorized to do business in the State of Illinois, as approved by the State Comptroller, where such care funds exceed the sum of $15,000. Such bond or letter of credit shall run to the Comptroller and his or her successor for the benefit of the care funds held by such cemetery authority or by the trustee of the care funds of such cemetery authority. Such bonds or letters of credit shall be in an amount equal to 1/10 of such care funds. However, such bond or letter of credit shall not be in an amount less than $1,000; the first $15,000 of such care funds shall not be considered in computing the amount of such bond or letter of credit. No application shall be accepted by the Comptroller unless accompanied by such bond or letter of credit. Applications for license by newly organized cemetery authorities after January 1, 1960 shall also be accompanied by evidence of a minimum care fund deposit in an amount to be determined as follows: if the number of inhabitants, either in the county in which the cemetery is to be located or in the area included within a 10 mile radius from the cemetery if the number of inhabitants therein is greater, is 25,000 or less the deposit shall be $7,500; if the number of inhabitants is 25,001 to 50,000, the deposit shall be $10,000; if the number of inhabitants is 50,001 to 125,000, the deposit shall be $15,000; if the number of inhabitants is over 125,000, the deposit shall be $25,000. After an amount equal to and in addition to the required minimum care fund deposit has been deposited in trust, the cemetery authority may withhold 50% of all future care funds until it has recovered the amount of the minimum care fund deposit. (d) (Blank). (e) All bonds and bonding deposits made by any cemetery authority may be returned to the cemetery authority or cancelled as to care funds invested with an investment company. (Source: P.A. 92-419, eff. 1-1-02.)
(760 ILCS 100/10) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.10) Sec. 10. Upon receipt of such application for license, the Comptroller shall issue a license to the applicant unless the Comptroller determines that: (a) The applicant has made any misrepresentations or false statements or has concealed any essential or material fact, or (b) The applicant is insolvent; or (c) The applicant is or has been using practices in the conducting of the cemetery business that work or tend to work a fraud; or (d) The applicant has refused to furnish or give pertinent data to the Comptroller; or (e) The applicant has failed to notify the Comptroller with respect to any material facts required in the application for license under the provisions of this Act; or (f) The applicant has failed to satisfy any enforceable judgment entered by the circuit court in any civil proceedings against such applicant; or (g) The applicant has conducted or is about to conduct its business in a fraudulent manner; or (h) The applicant or any individual listed in the license application has conducted or is about to conduct any business on behalf of the applicant in a fraudulent manner; or has been convicted of a felony or any misdemeanor of which an essential element is fraud; or has been involved in any civil litigation in which a judgment has been entered against him or her based on fraud; or has failed to satisfy any enforceable judgment entered by the circuit court in any civil proceedings against such individual; or has been convicted of any felony of which fraud is an essential element; or has been convicted of any theft-related offense; or has failed to comply with the requirements of this Act; or has demonstrated a pattern of improperly failing to honor a contract with a consumer; or (i) The applicant has ever had a license involving cemeteries or funeral homes revoked, suspended, or refused to be issued in Illinois or elsewhere. If the Comptroller so determines, then he or she shall conduct a hearing to determine whether to deny the application. However, no application shall be denied unless the applicant has had at least 10 days' notice of a hearing on the application and an opportunity to be heard thereon. If the application is denied, the Comptroller shall within 20 days thereafter prepare and keep on file in his or her office the transcript of the evidence taken and a written order of denial thereof, which shall contain his or her findings with respect thereto and the reasons supporting the denial, and shall send by United States mail a copy of the written order of denial to the applicant at the address set forth in the application, within 5 days after the filing of such order. A review of such decision may be had as provided in Section 20 of this Act. The license issued by the Comptroller shall remain in full force and effect until it is surrendered by the licensee or revoked by the Comptroller as hereinafter provided. (Source: P.A. 92-419, eff. 1-1-02.)
(760 ILCS 100/11) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.11) Sec. 11. Issuance and display of license. A license issued under this Act authorizes the cemetery authority to accept care funds for the cemetery identified in the license. If a license application seeks licensure to accept care funds on behalf of more than one cemetery location, the Comptroller, upon approval of the license application, shall issue to the cemetery authority a separate license for each cemetery location indicated on the application. Each license issued by the Comptroller under this Act is independent of any other license that may be issued to a cemetery authority under a single license application. Every license issued by the Comptroller shall state the number of the license and the address at which the business is to be conducted. Such license shall be kept conspicuously posted in the place of business of the licensee and shall not be transferable or assignable. No more than one place of business shall be maintained under the same license, but the Comptroller may issue more than one license to the same licensee upon compliance with the provisions of this Act governing an original issuance of a license, for each new license. Whenever a licensee shall wish to change the name as originally set forth in his license, he shall give written notice thereof to the Comptroller together with the reasons for the change and if the change is approved by the Comptroller he shall issue a new license. A license issued by the Comptroller shall remain in full force and effect until it is surrendered by the licensee or suspended or revoked by the Comptroller as provided in this Act. (Source: P.A. 92-419, eff. 1-1-02.)
(760 ILCS 100/11.1) Sec. 11.1. Investigation of unlawful practices. If it appears to the Comptroller that a person has engaged in, is engaging in, or is about to engage in any practice declared to be unlawful by this Act, the Comptroller may: (1) require that person to file on such terms as the
Comptroller prescribes a statement or report in writing, under oath or otherwise, containing all information the Comptroller may consider necessary to ascertain whether a licensee is in compliance with this Act, or whether an unlicensed person is engaging in activities for which a license is required;
(2) examine under oath any person in connection with
the books and records pertaining to or having an impact upon the trust funds required to be maintained pursuant to this Act;
(3) examine any books and records of the licensee,
trustee, or investment advisor that the Comptroller may consider necessary to ascertain compliance with this Act; and
(4) require the production of a copy of any record,
book, document, account, or paper that is produced in accordance with this Act and retain it in his or her possession until the completion of all proceedings in connection with which it is produced.
(Source: P.A. 89-615, eff. 8-9-96.)
(760 ILCS 100/11.2) Sec. 11.2. Service. Service by the Comptroller of any notice requiring a person to file a statement or report shall be made: (1) personally by delivery of a duly executed copy
thereof to the person to be served or, if that person is not a natural person, in the manner provided in the Civil Practice Law when a complaint is filed; or
(2) by mailing by certified mail a duly executed copy
thereof to the person to be served at his or her last known abode or principal place of business within this State.
(Source: P.A. 89-615, eff. 8-9-96.)
(760 ILCS 100/12) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.12) Sec. 12. Annual reports. Every licensee shall prepare a written report as of the end of the preceding calendar year or fiscal year, as the case may be, showing: (a) The amount of the principal of the care funds held in trust by the trustee of the care funds at the beginning of such year and in addition thereto all moneys or property received during such year (1) under and by virtue of the sale of a lot, grave, crypt or niche; (2) under or by virtue of the terms of the contract authorized by the provisions of Section 3 of this Act; (3) under or by virtue of any gift, grant, legacy, payment or other contribution made either prior to or subsequent to the effective date of this Act, and (4) under or by virtue of any contract or conveyance made either prior to or subsequent to the effective date of this Act; (b) The securities in which such care funds are invested and the cash on hand as of the date of the report; (c) The income received from such care funds during the preceding calendar year, or fiscal year, as the case may be; (d) The expenditures made from said income during the preceding calendar year, or fiscal year, as the case may be; and (e) The number of interments made during the preceding calendar year, or fiscal year, as the case may be. Where any of the care funds of a licensee are held by an independent trustee, the report filed by the licensee shall contain a certificate signed by the trustee of the care funds of such licensee certifying to the truthfulness of the statements in the report as to (1) the total amount of principal of the care funds held by the trustee, (2) the securities in which such care funds are invested and the cash on hand as of the date of the report and (3) the income received from such care funds during the preceding calendar year, or fiscal year, as the case may be. Such report shall be filed by such licensee on or before March 15 of each calendar year, in the office of the Comptroller. If the fiscal year of such licensee is other than on a calendar year basis, then such licensee shall file the report required by this Section within 2 1/2 months of the end of its fiscal year. The Comptroller shall for good cause shown grant an extension for the filing of the annual report upon the written request of the licensee. Such extension shall not exceed 60 days. If a licensee fails to submit an annual report to the Comptroller within the time specified in this Section, the Comptroller shall impose upon the licensee a penalty of $5 for each and every day the licensee remains delinquent in submitting the annual report. The Comptroller may abate all or part of the $5 daily penalty for good cause shown. Such report shall be made under oath and shall be in the form furnished by the Comptroller. Each report shall be accompanied by a check or money order in the amount of $10, payable to: Comptroller, State of Illinois. If any annual report shows that the amount of the care funds held in trust at the end of the preceding calendar year or fiscal year, as the case may be, has increased in amount over that shown by the next preceding report, then the fidelity bond theretofore filed shall be increased to the amount required by Section 9 of this Act. Such increased fidelity bond shall accompany the report and no report shall be accepted by the Comptroller unless accompanied by such bond, except where the filing of a bond is excused by Section 18 of this Act. (Source: P.A. 92-419, eff. 1-1-02.)
(760 ILCS 100/13) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.13) Sec. 13. Books, accounts, and records. Every licensee and the trustee of the care funds of every licensee shall be a resident of this State and shall keep in this State and use in its business such books, accounts and records as will enable the Comptroller to determine whether such licensee or trustee is complying with the provisions of this Act and with the rules, regulations and directions made by the Comptroller hereunder. The licensee shall keep the books, accounts, and records at the location identified in the license issued by the Comptroller or as otherwise agreed by the Comptroller in writing. The books, accounts, and records shall be accessible for review upon demand of the Comptroller. (Source: P.A. 92-419, eff. 1-1-02.)
(760 ILCS 100/14) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.14) Sec. 14. The Comptroller may at any time investigate the cemetery business of every licensee with respect to its care funds. The Comptroller shall examine at least annually every licensee who holds $250,000 or more in its care funds. For that purpose, the Comptroller shall have free access to the office and places of business and to such records of all licensees and of all trustees of the care funds of all licensees as shall relate to the acceptance, use and investment of care funds. The Comptroller may require the attendance of and examine under oath all persons whose testimony he may require relative to such business and in such cases the Comptroller or any qualified representative of the Comptroller whom the Comptroller may designate, may administer oaths to all such persons called as witnesses, and the Comptroller, or any such qualified representative of the Comptroller, may conduct such examinations. The cost of an initial examination shall be borne by the cemetery authority if it has $10,000 or more in such fund; otherwise, by the Comptroller. The charge made by the Comptroller for such examination shall be based upon the total amount of care funds held by the cemetery authority as of the end of the calendar or fiscal year for which a report is required by Section 12 of this Act and shall be in accordance with the following schedule: less than $10,000...............................no charge;$10,000 or more but less than$50,000...................................................$10;$50,000 or more but less than$100,000..................................................$40;$100,000 or more but less than$250,000..................................................$80;$250,000 or more.....................................$100. Any licensee which is not required to be examined annually shall submit an annual report to the Comptroller containing such information as the Comptroller reasonably may request. The Comptroller may order additional audits or examinations as he or she may deem necessary or advisable to ensure the safety and stability of the trust funds and to ensure compliance with this Act. These additional audits or examinations shall only be made after good cause is established by the Comptroller in the written order. The grounds for ordering these additional audits or examinations may include, but shall not be limited to: (1) material and unverified changes or fluctuations
in trust balances;
(2) the licensee changing trustees more than twice in
any 12-month period;
(3) any withdrawals or attempted withdrawals from the
trusts in violation of this Act; or
(4) failure to maintain or produce documentation
required by this Act for deposits into trust accounts or trust investment activities.
Prior to ordering an additional audit or examination, the Comptroller shall request the licensee to respond and comment upon the factors identified by the Comptroller as warranting the subsequent examination or audit. The licensee shall have 30 days to provide a response to the Comptroller. If the Comptroller decides to proceed with the additional examination or audit, the licensee shall bear the full cost of that examination or audit, up to a maximum of $7,500. The Comptroller may elect to pay for the examination or audit and receive reimbursement from the licensee. Payment of the costs of the examination or audit by a licensee shall be a condition of receiving or maintaining a license under this Act. All moneys received by the Comptroller for examination or audit fees shall be maintained in a separate account to be known as the Comptroller's Administrative Fund. This Fund, subject to appropriation by the General Assembly, may be utilized by the Comptroller for enforcing this Act and other purposes that may be authorized by law. (Source: P.A. 89-615, eff. 8-9-96.)
(760 ILCS 100/15) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.15) Sec. 15. The Comptroller may, upon 10 days' notice to the licensee, by United States mail directed to the licensee at the address set forth in the license, stating the contemplated action and, in general, the grounds therefor, and upon reasonable opportunity to be heard prior to such action, revoke any license issued hereunder if he finds that: (a) The licensee has failed to make the annual report or to maintain in effect the required bond or to comply with an order, decision, or finding of the Comptroller made pursuant to this Act; or that (b) The licensee has violated any provision of this Act or any regulation or direction made by the Comptroller under this Act; or that (c) Any fact or condition exists which would constitute grounds for denying an application for a new license. (Source: P.A. 91-7, eff. 6-1-99.)
(760 ILCS 100/15.1) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.15-1) Sec. 15.1. The Comptroller may, in accordance with Section 15, revoke only the particular license with respect to which grounds for revocation may occur or exist, or if he finds that such grounds for revocation are of general application to all offices or to more than one office operated by such licensee, he may revoke all of the licenses issued to such licensee or such number of licenses to which grounds apply, as the case may be. Whenever a license is revoked by the Comptroller he shall apply to the Circuit Court of the county wherein such licensee is located for a receiver to administer the care funds of such licensee. (Source: P.A. 78-592.)
(760 ILCS 100/15.2) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.15-2) Sec. 15.2. A licensee may surrender any license by delivering to the Comptroller written notice that he thereby surrenders such license but such surrender shall not affect such licensee's civil or criminal liability for acts committed prior to such surrender, or affect his bond. The Comptroller shall not permit a license to be surrendered by a licensee unless and until such licensee has furnished to the Comptroller satisfactory evidence of his release and discharge from all trust liabilities and obligations and unless and until the care funds of such licensee have been transferred to a successor licensee who shall be licensed by the Comptroller in conformity with the provisions of this Act. However, the Comptroller shall accept the surrender of a license held by a cemetery authority that is a cemetery association or corporation owning, operating or controlling a cemetery not for profit, whose cemetery has been conveyed to and accepted by any city, village, incorporated town, township or county, upon: (a) the licensee submitting to the Comptroller a copy of the act, resolution or ordinance under which the political subdivision accepted or is charged with the responsibility of operating and controlling the cemetery; (b) the making and filing with and approval by the Comptroller of a final account for care funds from the date of last report made by the licensee to the Comptroller to the date of transfer to the successor cemetery authority; (c) the furnishing of a copy of the instrument of appointment or certificate of election of trustees of the public graveyard or managers of the municipal cemetery authorized to hold care funds or trust funds for care, and the receipt of such trustees of the public graveyard or managers of the municipal cemetery for the care funds investments listed in the final account; and (d) the return of the Cemetery Authority License to the Comptroller for cancellation. Upon satisfactory performance of the foregoing by a licensee, the same shall be deemed satisfactory evidence of the licensee's release and discharge from all trust liabilities and obligations and transfer of the licensee's care funds to an authorized successor within the meaning and intent of this Act. (Source: P.A. 78-592.)
(760 ILCS 100/15.3) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.15-3) Sec. 15.3. Every license issued hereunder shall remain in force until the same has been surrendered or revoked in accordance with this Act, but the Comptroller may on his own motion, issue new licenses to a licensee whose license or licenses have been revoked if no fact or condition then exists which clearly would have warranted the Comptroller in refusing originally the issuance of such license under this Act. (Source: P.A. 78-592.)
(760 ILCS 100/15.4) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.15-4) Sec. 15.4. No license shall be revoked until the licensee has had at least 10 days' notice of a hearing thereon and an opportunity to be heard. When any license is so revoked, the Comptroller shall within 20 days thereafter, prepare and keep on file in his office the transcript of the evidence taken and a written order or decision of revocation, and shall send by United States mail a copy of such order or decision of revocation to the licensee at the address set forth in the license within 5 days after the filing in his office of such order, finding or decision. A review of any such order, finding or decision may be had as provided in Section 19 of this Act. (Source: P.A. 83-333.)
(760 ILCS 100/15a) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.15a) Sec. 15a. Where any cemetery authority owning, operating, controlling or managing a privately operated cemetery or any trustee for the same has accepted care funds within the meaning of this Act, and dissolution is sought by such cemetery authority in any manner, by resolution of such cemetery authority, or the trustees thereof, notice shall be given to the Comptroller of such intention to dissolve, and proper disposition shall be made of the care funds so held for the general benefit of such lot owners by or for the benefit of such cemetery authority, as provided by law, or in accordance with the trust provisions of any gift, grant, contribution, payment, legacy or pursuant to any contract whereby such funds were created. The Comptroller represented by the Attorney General may apply to the circuit court for the appointment of a receiver, trustee, successor in trust, or for directions of such court as to the proper disposition to be made of such care funds, to the end that the uses and purposes for which such trust or care funds were created may be accomplished. (Source: P.A. 87-747; 88-477.)
(760 ILCS 100/15b) Sec. 15b. Sales; liability of purchaser for shortage. In the case of a sale of any privately operated cemetery or any part thereof or of any related personal property by a cemetery authority to a purchaser or pursuant to foreclosure proceedings, except the sale of burial rights, services, or merchandise to a person for his or her personal or family burial or interment, the purchaser is liable for any shortages existing before or after the sale in the care funds required to be maintained in a trust pursuant to this Act and shall honor all instruments issued under Section 4 for that cemetery. Any shortages existing in the care funds constitute a prior lien in favor of the trust for the total value of the shortages, and notice of such lien shall be provided in all sales instruments. In the event of a sale or transfer of all or substantially all of the assets of the cemetery authority, the sale or transfer of the controlling interest of the corporate stock of the cemetery authority if the cemetery authority is a corporation, or the sale or transfer of the controlling of the partnership if the cemetery authority is a partnership, the cemetery authority shall, at least 21 days prior to the sale or transfer, notify the Comptroller, in writing, of the pending date of sale or transfer so as to permit the Comptroller to audit the books and records of the cemetery authority. The audit must be commenced within 10 business days of the receipt of the notification and completed within the 21 day notification period unless the Comptroller notifies the cemetery authority during that period that there is a basis for determining a deficiency which will require additional time to finalize. The sale or transfer may not be completed by the cemetery authority unless and until: (a) The Comptroller has completed the audit of the
cemetery authority's books and records;
(b) Any delinquency existing in the care funds has
been paid by the cemetery authority, or arrangements satisfactory to the Comptroller have been made by the cemetery authority on the sale or transfer for the payment of any delinquency;
(c) The Comptroller issues a new cemetery care
license upon application of the newly controlled corporation or partnership, which license must be applied for within 30 days of the anticipated date of the sale or transfer, subject to the payment of any delinquencies, if any, as stated in item (b) above.
For purposes of this Section, a person, firm, corporation, partnership, or institution that acquires the cemetery through a real estate foreclosure shall be subject to the provisions of this Section. The sale or transfer of the controlling interest of a cemetery authority to an immediate family member is not subject to the license application process required in item (c) of this Section. In the event of a sale or transfer of any cemetery land, including any portion of cemetery land in which no human remains have been interred, a licensee shall, at least 21 days prior to the sale or transfer, notify the Comptroller, in writing, of the pending sale or transfer. (Source: P.A. 92-419, eff. 1-1-02.)
(760 ILCS 100/16) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.16) Sec. 16. Whenever a licensee refuses or neglects to make a required report or whenever it appears to the Comptroller from any report or examination that such licensee has committed a violation of law or that the care funds have not been administered properly or that it is unsafe or inexpedient for such licensee or the trustee of the care funds of such cemetery authority to continue to administer such funds or that any officer of such licensee or of the trustee of the care funds of such licensee has abused his trust or has been guilty of misconduct or malversation in his official position injurious to such licensee or that such licensee has suffered as to its care funds a serious loss by larceny, embezzlement, burglary, repudiation or otherwise, the Comptroller shall by an order direct the discontinuance of such illegal, unsafe or unauthorized practices and shall direct strict conformity with the requirements of the law and safety and security in its transactions, shall order all funds returned, and may apply to the Circuit Court of the county wherein such licensee is located to prevent any disbursements or expenditures by such licensee until the care funds are in such condition that it would not be jeopardized thereby and the Comptroller shall communicate the facts to the Attorney General of the State of Illinois who shall thereupon institute such proceedings against the licensee or its trustee or the officers of either or both as the nature of the case may require. (Source: P.A. 88-477.)
(760 ILCS 100/17) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.17) Sec. 17. If the Comptroller finds at any time that the bond is insecure or exhausted or otherwise doubtful, an additional bond in like amount to be approved by the Comptroller shall be filed by the licensee within 30 days after written demand therefor upon the licensee by the Comptroller. (Source: P.A. 78-592.)
(760 ILCS 100/18) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.18) Sec. 18. Application; when bond is unnecessary. The provisions of this Act as to the (a) registration, (b) application for license, (c) filing of a fidelity bond, (d) filing of an annual report, and (e) examination by the Comptroller, apply to a cemetery authority owning, operating, controlling or managing a privately operated cemetery whether the care funds are held by such cemetery authority as trustee or by any independent trustee for the same. However, no bond need be filed with the Comptroller as to care funds of such cemetery authority held as trustee by a bank or trust company authorized to do business in this State as a trust company in accordance with Section 2-10 of the Corporate Fiduciary Act or held by an investment company. Upon application by such cemetery authority to the Comptroller, and upon a showing that all of the care funds of such cemetery authority are held by such bank or trust company as trustee for such cemetery authority pursuant to an agreement in writing approved from time to time by the Comptroller for the handling and management of all of the care funds of such cemetery authority, or are held by an investment company, the Comptroller in writing may permit the licensee to operate without the filing of any bond as to such care funds except such fidelity bond as he or she may require for the protection of such cemetery authority against defaults by its employees engaged in the handling and collection of funds. (Source: P.A. 88-477; 89-615, eff. 8-9-96.)
(760 ILCS 100/19) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.19) Sec. 19. The Comptroller may make, amend, rescind and enforce such rules and regulations and amendments thereto, as may be necessary for the purpose of carrying out this Act. However, the Comptroller may not make or amend any rule or regulation without holding a hearing thereon and without first giving all cemetery authorities licensed to hold care funds at least 10 days' notice of such hearing, the notice to set forth the proposed rules, regulations or the proposed amendments thereof. Among other things, the Comptroller may, for the purposes of this Act, prescribe the form or forms in which required information shall be set forth, the items or details to be shown in any statement or report, and the methods to be followed in the preparation of accounts and in the appraisal or evaluation of assets and liabilities. When any regulations or amendments thereto are made after such hearing, a written order setting forth the regulations or amendments shall be prepared by the Comptroller and kept on file in his office and a copy of each such order shall be sent by the Comptroller by United States mail to all cemetery authorities within 5 days after the filing in his office of such order. No regulations or amendments shall become effective until 10 days after the mailing of such order. Copies of all other orders, decisions and findings shall be mailed to the cemetery authorities affected thereby by United States mail within 5 days of such filing. All regulations and all amendments thereto and all orders, decisions and findings shall be filed and entered by the Comptroller in an indexed permanent book or record, with the effective date thereof suitably indicated, and such book or record is a public document. A review of all orders, decisions and findings, including orders making regulations or amendments, may be had under the Administrative Review Law, as now or hereafter amended. (Source: P.A. 82-783.)
(760 ILCS 100/21) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.21) Sec. 21. Except as otherwise provided for in this Act, whenever the Comptroller is required to give notice to any applicant or licensee, such requirement shall be considered complied with if, within the time fixed herein, such notice is enclosed in an envelope plainly addressed to such applicant or licensee, as the case may be, United States postage fully prepaid, and deposited, registered, in the United States mail. (Source: P.A. 78-592.)
(760 ILCS 100/22) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.22) Sec. 22. Nothing in this Act shall be construed to impair the obligation of any existing contract. (Source: Laws 1947, p. 338.)
(760 ILCS 100/23) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.23) Sec. 23. Every person having taken an oath or affirmation in any proceeding or matter wherein an oath is required by this Act, who shall swear wilfully, corruptly and falsely in a matter material to the issue or point in question, or shall suborn any other person to swear as aforesaid, shall be guilty of perjury or subornation of perjury, as the case may be and shall be punished as provided in the Statute relative to perjury and subornation of perjury. (Source: Laws 1947, p. 338.)
(760 ILCS 100/24) (from Ch. 21, par. 64.24) Sec. 24. Whoever intentionally fails to deposit the required amounts into a trust provided for in this Act, intentionally and improperly withdraws or uses trust funds for his or her own benefit, or otherwise intentionally violates any provision of this Act (other than the provisions of Section 23 and subsections (b), (c), (d), and (e) of Section 2a) shall be guilty of a Class 4 felony, and each day such provisions are violated shall constitute a separate offense. If any person intentionally violates this Act or fails or refuses to comply with any order of the Comptroller or any part of an order that has become final to such person and is still in effect, the Comptroller may, after notice and hearing at which it is determined that a violation of this Act or such order has been committed, further order that such person shall forfeit and pay to the State of Illinois a sum not to exceed $5,000 for each violation. Such liability shall be enforced in an action brought in any court of competent jurisdiction by the Comptroller in the name of the People of the State of Illinois. In addition to the other penalties and remedies provided in this Act, the Comptroller may bring a civil action in the county of residence of the licensee or any person accepting care funds to enjoin any violation or threatened violation of this Act. The powers vested in the Comptroller by this Section are additional to any and all other powers and remedies vested in the Comptroller by law. (Source: P.A. 92-419, eff. 1-1-02.)
(760 ILCS 100/25) Sec. 25. Use of care funds. When a township or multi-township cemetery district takes over a cemetery or cemetery authority, the care fund and care fund expenditures continue to be subject to the provisions of this Act, and the township or multi-township cemetery district must continue to use the care fund exclusively for the care and maintenance of the cemetery in accordance with this Act. (Source: P.A. 91-181, eff. 1-1-00.)
(760 ILCS 100/26) Sec. 26. Abandoned or neglected cemeteries; clean-up. The Comptroller may administer a program for the purpose of cleaning up abandoned or neglected cemeteries located in Illinois. Administration of this program may include the Comptroller's issuance of grants for that purpose to units of local government, school districts, and not-for-profit associations. If an abandoned or neglected cemetery has been dedicated as an Illinois nature preserve under the Illinois Natural Areas Preservation Act, any action to cause the clean up of the cemetery under the provisions of this Section shall be consistent with the rules and master plan governing the dedicated nature preserve. (Source: P.A. 92-419, eff. 1-1-02.)