760 ILCS 15/ - Principal and Income Act.

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(760 ILCS 15/1) (from Ch. 30, par. 501) Sec. 1. Short Title. This Act may be cited as the Principal and Income Act. (Source: P.A. 86-1475.)

(760 ILCS 15/2) (from Ch. 30, par. 502) Sec. 2. Definitions. As used in this Act: (a) "income beneficiary" means the person to whom income is presently payable or for whom it is accumulated for distribution as income; (b) "inventory value" means the cost of property purchased by the trustee and the market value of other property at the time it became subject to the trust, but in the case of a property subject to the Federal estate tax, the trustee shall use the value finally determined for the purposes of such tax; (c) "remainderman" means the person entitled to principal, including income which has been accumulated and added to principal; (d) "trustee" means an original trustee and any successor or added trustee. (Source: P.A. 82-390.)

(760 ILCS 15/3) (from Ch. 30, par. 503) Sec. 3. Scope of Act; rules of administration. (a) This Act governs the ascertainment of income and principal and the apportionment of receipts and expenses in all cases where a trust is established unless otherwise stated hereinafter, to the extent not inconsistent with the provisions of the instrument. A person establishing a trust may make provision in the instrument for the manner of ascertainment of income and principal and the apportionment of receipts and expenses or grant discretion to the trustee to do so and such provision, where not otherwise contrary to law, shall control notwithstanding this Act. (b) A trust shall be administered with due regard to the respective interests of income beneficiaries and remaindermen. A trust is so administered with respect to the allocation of receipts and expenses if a receipt is credited or an expense is charged to income or principal or partly to each: (1) in accordance with the terms of the instrument,

notwithstanding contrary provisions of this Act; or

(2) in the absence of any contrary terms of the

instrument, in accordance with the provisions of this Act or, if the trustee in the trustee's discretion determines that application of the provisions of this Act would result in a substantial inequity to either the income beneficiaries or the remaindermen, in accordance with what is reasonable and equitable in view of the interests of those entitled to income as well as those entitled to principal; or

(3) if neither of the preceding rules of

administration is applicable, in accordance with what is reasonable and equitable in view of the interests of those entitled to income as well as of those entitled to principal.

(c) If the instrument or paragraph (2) of subsection (b) gives the trustee discretion in crediting a receipt or charging an expense to income or principal or partly to each, no inference of imprudence or partiality arises from the fact that the trustee makes an allocation other than in accordance with a provision of this Act or determines not to do so. (d) To the extent not otherwise provided in the instrument or this Act, receipts shall be credited when actually received by the trustee and expenses shall be charged when actually made by the trustee, except that the trustee may elect to credit receipts and charge expenses in any other reasonable manner that complies with the provisions of subsection (b) and is not inconsistent with the terms of the instrument. (Source: P.A. 87-714.)

(760 ILCS 15/4) (from Ch. 30, par. 504) Sec. 4. Income and Principal Defined. (a) Income is the return in money or property derived from the use of principal, including return received as: (1) rent of real or personal property, including sums received for cancellation or renewal of a lease; (2) interest received, including sums received as consideration for the privilege of prepayment of principal except as provided in Section 8 on premium and discount; (3) income earned during administration of a decedent's estate, as provided in Section 6; (4) corporate distributions, as provided in Section 7; (5) accrued increment on bonds or other obligations issued at discount, as provided in Section 8; (6) receipts from business and farming operations, as provided in Section 9; (7) receipts from disposition of natural resources, as provided in Sections 10 and 11. (b) Principal is the property which has been set aside by the owner or the person legally empowered so that it is held in trust eventually to be delivered to a remainderman, while the income is in the meantime taken or received by or held for accumulation for an income beneficiary. Principal includes: (1) consideration received by the trustee on the sale or other transfer of principal or on repayment of a loan or as a refund or replacement or change in the form of principal; (2) proceeds of property taken on eminent domain proceedings; (3) proceeds of insurance upon property forming part of the principal except proceeds of insurance upon a separate interest of an income beneficiary; (4) stock dividends, receipts on liquidation of a corporation and other corporate distributions, as provided in Section 7; (5) receipts from the disposition of bonds or other obligations, as provided in Section 8; (6) receipts from disposition of natural resources, as provided in Sections 10 and 11; (7) receipts from other principal subject to depletion, as provided in Section 12; (8) any profit resulting from any change in the form of principal; (9) any allowances for depreciation established under Section 9 and paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of Section 14; (10) receipts from the granting of options. (c) After determining income and principal in accordance with the terms of the instrument or this Act, the trustee shall charge to income or principal expenses and other charges as provided in Section 14. (Source: P.A. 82-390.)

(760 ILCS 15/5) (from Ch. 30, par. 505) Sec. 5. When right to income commences and terminates. (a) An income beneficiary is entitled to income from the date or event specified in the instrument, or, if none is specified, from the date an asset becomes subject to the trust. In the case of an asset becoming subject to the trust by reason of a will, it becomes subject to the trust as of the date of the death of the testator even though there is an intervening period of administration of the testator's estate. (b) In the administration of a decedent's estate or of an asset becoming subject to a trust by reason of a will or by reason of the death of a decedent, income which is earned or accrued to the date of death of the decedent but not yet payable, including, but not limited to, income in respect of a decedent, or which is due but not yet paid, shall be added to principal when received. In all other cases, income earned or accrued in whole or in part before the date when an asset becomes subject to the trust shall be income when received. (c) Subject to subsections (d) and (e), on termination of an income interest, there shall be no apportionment of income as between the income beneficiary whose interest is terminated and the next beneficiary succeeding in interest, and income which has been collected by the trustee prior to the date of termination, or which is then earned or accrued but not yet payable, or which is then due but not yet paid, or which becomes payable to the trustee on or subsequent to the date of the termination, including, but not limited to, payments of interest, rents and annuities, whether periodic or otherwise, shall be paid as income to the next beneficiary succeeding in interest. (d) Income collected by the trustee more than 12 months prior to the termination of an income interest and not disbursed or authorized or directed by the instrument to be added to principal, shall be paid to the income beneficiary whose interest is terminated or to his estate. (e) To the extent necessary to qualify an interest for the marital deduction under the Federal Estate and Gift Tax laws, on termination of an income interest, income which has been collected by the trustee prior to the date of termination, or which is then earned or accrued but not yet payable, or which is then due but not yet paid, shall be paid to the income beneficiary whose interest is terminated or to his estate. (f) Any limitation in an instrument on the income beneficiary in the nature of a spendthrift provision or similar restriction, or providing that income be paid to the beneficiary in person or upon his personal receipt, shall not be considered to provide for the distribution of income in a manner different than that specified in this Section. (g) Corporate distributions to stockholders shall be treated as due on the day fixed by the corporation for the determination of stockholders of record entitled to distribution or, if no such date is fixed, on the date of declaration of the distribution by the corporation. (Source: P.A. 87-714.)

(760 ILCS 15/6) (from Ch. 30, par. 506) Sec. 6. Administration of a decedent's estate. (a) Subject to subsection (b), all expenses incurred in connection with the settlement of a decedent's estate, including debts, funeral expenses, estate taxes, family allowances, fees of attorneys and representatives, and court costs shall be charged against the principal of the estate. (b) After the death of a decedent and before distribution, income from and expenses incurred in connection with the assets of the decedent's estate, including assets used to discharge liabilities, shall, subject to subsection (a) with respect to the charging of expenses incurred in connection with the settlement of the decedent's estate, be determined in accordance with the rules applicable to a trustee under this Act and shall be allocated as follows: (1) to specific legatees, the income from the

property bequeathed to them, respectively, less property taxes, ordinary repairs, interest and other expenses of management and protection of the property, and an appropriate portion of taxes imposed on all estate income, excluding taxes on capital gains, which accrues during the period of administration, and expenses in excess of income to be charged against the property;

(2) to all other legatees, except as provided in

subsection (d), the balance of the income, less the balance of property taxes, ordinary repairs, interest and other expenses of management and protection of all property from which the estate is entitled to income, and taxes imposed on income, excluding taxes on capital gains, which accrue during the period of administration, in proportion to their respective interests from time to time unpaid or undistributed in the principal of the estate, computed on the basis of values as of the decedent's death unless the estate is required to file a Federal estate tax return and then on the basis of values as finally determined for Federal estate tax purposes.

(c) Income received by a trustee under subsection (b) shall be treated as income of the trust. (d) A legatee (other than the testator's surviving spouse) of a pecuniary legacy not in trust shall not be paid interest on the legacy or be entitled to receive any part of the income received by the representative during the period of administration as income on the legacy. A legacy to the testator's surviving spouse of a pecuniary amount shall carry with it a proportionate part of the income of the estate from the testator's death to the date of satisfaction determined in accordance with paragraph (2) of subsection (b). (e) Except to the extent otherwise provided in paragraph (7) of subsection (c) of Section 14, interest and penalties on any tax shall be charged in the same manner as the tax. (f) This Section governs the administration of a decedent's estate whether settled by an executor or administrator or by a trustee under a trust instrument and, if by a trustee, whether the decedent is the person establishing the trust or a beneficiary thereof; and the references to representatives and to legacies shall be read as applying to trustees and to distributions under a trust instrument. (Source: P.A. 83-1362; 87-714.)

(760 ILCS 15/7) (from Ch. 30, par. 507) Sec. 7. Corporate Distributions. (a) Corporate distributions of shares of the distributing corporation, including distributions in the form of a stock split or stock dividend, are principal. A right to subscribe to shares or other securities issued by the distributing corporation accruing on account of the ownership of shares or other securities in such corporation and the proceeds of any sale of the right are principal. (b) Except to the extent that the corporation indicates that some part of a corporate distribution is a settlement of preferred or guaranteed dividends accrued since the trustee became a stockholder or is in lieu of an ordinary cash dividend, a corporate distribution is principal if the distribution is pursuant to: (1) a call of shares; (2) a merger, consolidation or reorganization; (3) a plan by which assets of the corporation are acquired by another corporation; or (4) a total or partial liquidation of the corporation, including (a) any distribution which the corporation indicates is a distribution in total or partial liquidation or (b) any distribution of assets, pursuant to the judgment of a court or final administrative order by a government agency ordering distribution of the particular assets. (c) Distributions made from ordinary income by a regulated investment company or by a trust qualifying and electing to be taxed under federal law as a real estate investment trust are income. All other distributions made by the company or trust, including distributions from capital gains, depreciation or depletion, whether in the form of cash or an option to take new stock or cash or an option to purchase additional shares, are principal. (d) Except as provided in subsections (a), (b) and (c), all corporate distributions are income, including cash dividends, distributions of or rights to subscribe to shares or securities or obligations of corporations other than the distributing corporation, and the proceeds of the rights or property distributions. Except as provided in subsections (b) and (c), if the distributing corporation gives a stockholder an option to receive a distribution either in cash or in its own shares, the distribution chosen is income. (e) The trustee may rely upon any statement of the distributing corporation as to any fact relevant under any provision of this Act concerning the source or character of dividends or distributions of corporate assets. (Source: P.A. 84-545.)

(760 ILCS 15/8) (from Ch. 30, par. 508) Sec. 8. Premium and discount. (a) A bond or other obligation for the payment of money is principal at its inventory value. No provision shall be made for amortization of premiums or for accumulation for discounts. Except as provided in subsection (b), the proceeds of sale, redemption or other disposition of the bond or other obligation are principal. (b) The increment over inventory value of a bond or other obligation for the payment of money that makes no express provision for the payment of interest and (i) that is scheduled to mature not more than one year after its purchase or its otherwise becoming subject to the trust or (ii) that is an issue of the United States and the appreciation in value of which pursuant to a determinable schedule or formula is not required to be included in gross income for federal income tax purposes prior to realization thereof, shall be allocated to income at the time the increment is realized. (Source: P.A. 82-390; 87-714.)

(760 ILCS 15/9) (from Ch. 30, par. 509) Sec. 9. Business and farming operations. (a) If a trustee uses any part of the principal in the operation of a business or, except as provided in subsection (b), an agricultural or farming operation, including the raising of animals or the operation of a nursery, the net profits and losses shall be computed in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, subject to paragraph (8) of subsection (c) of Section 14. Net profits are income; and if a loss results in any fiscal or calendar year, the loss shall be carried into subsequent fiscal or calendar years for purposes of computing income of the business. (b) When, as a part of the principal of an agricultural or farming operation, animals are held partly or wholly because of the offspring or increase which they are expected to produce, all offspring or increase shall be deemed principal to the extent necessary to maintain the original number of such animals and the remainder shall be deemed income, and in all other cases such offspring or increase shall be deemed income. (Source: P.A. 87-714.)

(760 ILCS 15/10) (from Ch. 30, par. 510) Sec. 10. Disposition of natural resources. (a) If any part of the principal consists of a right to receive royalties, overriding or limited royalties, working interests, production payments, net profit interests, or other interest in minerals, oil, gas or other natural resources in, on or under land, except timber, water, soil, sod, dirt, peat, turf or mosses, the receipts from taking the natural resources from the land shall be allocated as follows: (1) if received as rent on a lease or extension

payments on a lease, the receipts are income;

(2) if received from a production payment, the

receipts are income to the extent of any factor for interest or its equivalent provided in the governing instrument. There shall be allocated to principal the fraction of the balance of the receipts which the unrecovered cost of the production payment bears to the balance owed on the production payment, exclusive of any factor for interest or its equivalent. The receipts not allocated to principal are income;

(3) except for oil or gas from non-coal formations

held in nontrust estates and by legal tenants and remaindermen as described in Section 15 of this Act, if received as a royalty, overriding or limited royalty, or bonus, or from a working, net profit, or any other interest in minerals, oil, gas, or other natural resources, receipts not provided for in the preceding paragraphs of this Section shall be apportioned on a yearly basis in accordance with this paragraph whether or not any natural resource was being taken from the land at the time the trust was established. The trustee shall allocate to principal as an allowance for depletion the greater of (i) that portion, if any, of the gross receipts that is allowed as a depletion deduction for federal income tax purposes and (ii) 10% of the gross receipts, except that that allocation shall not exceed 50% of the net receipts remaining after payment of all expenses, direct and indirect, computed without the allowance for depletion. The trustee shall allocate the balance of the gross receipts, after payment therefrom of all expenses, direct and indirect, to income;

(4) Only for oil or gas from non-coal formations held

in nontrust estates and by legal tenants and remaindermen as described in Section 15 of this Act, proceeds from the sale of such minerals produced and received as royalty, overriding royalty, limited royalty, working interest, net profit interest, time-limited interest or term interest, or lease bonus shall be deemed income.

(b) If an item of depletable property of a type specified in this Section is held on the effective date of this Act, receipts from the property shall be allocated in the manner used before the effective date of this Act, but as to all depletable property acquired after the effective date of this Act by an existing or new trust, the method of allocation provided herein shall be used. (c) If any part of the principal consists of timber, water, soil, sod, dirt, peat, turf, or mosses, the receipts from those resources shall be allocated in accordance with Section 3. (Source: P.A. 100-519, eff. 6-1-18; 100-761, eff. 1-1-19.)

(760 ILCS 15/12) (from Ch. 30, par. 512) Sec. 12. Other property subject to depletion. Except as provided in Section 10, if the principal consists of property subject to depletion, including leaseholds, patents, copyrights, trademarks, and royalty rights, the receipts therefrom shall be allocated to principal. (Source: P.A. 82-390; 87-714.)

(760 ILCS 15/12.1) (from Ch. 30, par. 512.1) Sec. 12.1. Employment related periodic payments. (a) Except as provided in subsection (b), if any part of the principal consists of the right to receive periodic payments under an employment related contract or plan or an individual retirement account or annuity, the receipts therefrom shall be allocated to principal. (b) The receipts from any part of the principal consisting of the right to receive periodic payments under an employment related contract or plan or an individual retirement account or annuity shall be allocated to income (i) to the extent designated by the payor as current income for accounting purposes or (ii) if there is no designation by the payor and if the income is directed by the instrument to be paid to the surviving spouse of the participant under the contract or plan or of the owner of the account or annuity, to the extent of the minimum amount necessary each year to qualify the part in full for the federal estate tax marital deduction on the basis of the interest rate generally applicable for the valuation of annuities at the death of the participant or owner (or, if less, the entire receipts from the part for the year). (Source: P.A. 87-714.)

(760 ILCS 15/13) (from Ch. 30, par. 513) Sec. 13. Nonapportionment of proceeds. Except to the extent provided in Section 8 and Section 10, no portion of the net proceeds of the sale or other disposition of property (whether nonproductive, underproductive, or productive) shall be allocated to income. (Source: P.A. 87-714.)

(760 ILCS 15/14) (from Ch. 30, par. 514) Sec. 14. Charges against income and principal. (a) The following charges shall be made against income: (1) ordinary expenses, other than compensation as

provided in paragraph (6) of this subsection (a), incurred by the trustee in connection with the administration or protection of the trust property, including regularly recurring taxes assessed against any portion of the principal, water rates, premiums on insurance taken upon the interests of the income beneficiary, remainderman, or trustee, interest paid by the trustee (except interest on taxes as provided in paragraphs (7) and (8) of this subsection and paragraphs (5), (6), and (7) of subsection (c)), ordinary repairs and maintenance;

(2) (blank); (3) one-half of court costs, attorney's fees and

other expenses and fees on any judicial accounting, unless the court directs otherwise;

(4) court costs, attorney's fees and other expenses

and fees on other judicial proceedings if the matter primarily concerns the income interest, unless the court directs otherwise;

(5) special compensation and expenses of or incurred

by the trustee in connection with income;

(6) one-half of the regular compensation of the

trustee, attorney, investment counsel, custodian or accountant, subject to paragraph (1) of subsection (c);

(7) any tax, including interest and penalties

thereon, levied upon receipts defined as income under this Act or the trust instrument and payable by the trustee;

(8) one-half of the interest on all estate,

inheritance, and generation-skipping transfer taxes apportioned to the trust and one-half of the interest on any penalties on those taxes.

(a-5) A reasonable allowance for depreciation on property that is subject to depreciation under generally accepted accounting principles may be charged by the trustee, but no allowance shall be made for depreciation of that portion of any real property used by a beneficiary as a residence. Such an allowance shall be charged only against the income from the property subject to depreciation and shall not accrue from year to year. (b) If charges against income are of an unusual amount, the trustee may by means of reserves or other reasonable means charge them over a reasonable period of time and withhold from distribution sufficient sums to regularize distributions. (c) The following charges shall be made against principal: (1) one-half of the regular compensation of the

trustee, attorney, investment counsel, custodian or accountant shall be paid out of principal, provided that, if in the judgment of the trustee, the charging of a part or all of that portion of such compensation to principal is impracticable because of the lack of sufficient principal cash and readily marketable intangible personal property, or inadvisable because of the nature of the assets, that part or all of such compensation shall be paid out of income. The decision of the trustee to pay a larger portion or all of such compensation out of income shall be conclusive, and the income of the trust shall not be entitled to reimbursement from principal at any subsequent time or times;

(2) special compensation and expenses of or incurred

by the trustee in connection with principal, trustee's compensation computed on principal as an acceptance, distribution or termination fee, and, unless the court directs otherwise, court costs, attorney's fees and other expenses and fees in judicial proceedings primarily concerning matters of principal or in any action to construe the trust or protect it or the property or assure the title to any trust property;

(3) charges not provided for in subsection (a),

including the cost of investing and reinvesting principal, the payments on principal of an indebtedness (including a mortgage amortized by periodic payments of principal), and expenses for preparation of property for rental or sale;

(4) extraordinary repairs or expenses incurred in

making a capital improvement to principal, including special assessments;

(4.5) costs and disbursements related to

environmental matters, including reclamation, assessing environmental conditions, remedying and removing environmental contamination, monitoring remedial activities and the release of substances, preventing future releases of substances, collecting amounts from persons liable or potentially liable for the costs of those activities, penalties imposed under environmental laws or regulations and other payments made to comply with those laws or regulations, statutory or common law claims by third parties, and defending claims based on environmental matters;

(5) any tax, including interest and penalties

thereon, levied upon profit, gain, or other receipts allocated to principal notwithstanding denomination of the tax as an income tax by the taxing authority;

(6) any tax, including interest and penalties

thereon, levied upon amounts not actually received by the trustee before the date the tax is payable, including extensions, notwithstanding the denomination of the tax as an income tax by the taxing authority, except that if, in the judgment of the trustee, the charging against principal of part or all of the tax is impracticable because of a lack of sufficient principal cash and readily marketable intangible personal property or inadvisable because of the nature of the assets that part or all of the tax shall be charged against income. The decision of the trustee to charge part or all of the tax against income shall be conclusive, and the income of the trust shall not be entitled to reimbursement from principal at any subsequent time or times. If any part or all of the amount on which tax was previously paid and charged against principal is later received by the trustee and if the receipt is otherwise credited to income, then when the amount is received the portion of the tax previously paid and charged against principal attributable to the amount so received shall be deducted from the amount and credited to principal;

(7) all estate, inheritance, and generation-skipping

transfer taxes and any penalties on the taxes apportioned to the trust and one-half of the interest on those taxes and penalties;

(8) a net loss in any fiscal or calendar year from

the operation of a business or an agricultural or farming operation, to be repaid from income as available in the succeeding year or years;

(9) monies paid for the purchase of options. (Source: P.A. 91-923, eff. 7-7-00.)

(760 ILCS 15/15) (from Ch. 30, par. 515) Sec. 15. Non-trust estates. (a) The provisions of this Act, as far as applicable, shall apply to nontrust estates subject to any agreement of the parties or any specific direction by statute or otherwise, and the references to trusts and trustees shall be read as applying to nontrust estates and to legal tenants (including life tenants, tenants for terms of years, or any other period of tenancy) and remaindermen as the context requires; except that if either a legal tenant or a remainderman has incurred a charge for his benefit without the consent or agreement of the other, he shall pay that charge in full. (b) If the costs of an improvement, including special taxes or assessments, representing an addition to value of property forming part of the principal cannot reasonably be expected to outlast the legal tenancy, the costs shall be paid by the legal tenant. If the improvement can reasonably be expected to outlast the legal tenancy, only a portion of the costs shall be paid by the legal tenant and the balance by the remainderman. The portion payable by the legal tenant shall be that fraction of the total found by dividing the present value of the legal tenancy by the present value of an estate of the same form as that of the legal tenancy but limited to a period corresponding to the reasonably expected duration of the improvement. The computation of present value of the legal tenancy shall be computed on the basis of two-thirds of the value determined by use of the tables set forth under Section 7520 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 and the regulations thereunder for the calculation of the values of annuities, life estates, and terms for years, and no other evidence of duration or expectancy shall be considered, except that any legal tenancy or remainder interest acquired for consideration based on those tables shall be computed on the basis of the tables in effect at the time acquired. The method of computing the present value of a legal tenancy established in this subsection shall apply to all legal tenancies and remainders created after January 1, 1992 and to all legal tenancies and remainders which were acquired for consideration if the amount of the consideration was based on the tables set forth under Section 2031 or 7520 of the Internal Revenue Code then in effect. (c) If a legal tenant has leased any lands for agricultural or farming operations and his legal tenancy terminates on or after the day any rent has become due and payable, he or his representative is entitled to recover that rent from the lessee; and if a legal tenancy terminates before the rent under the lease is fully paid, the legal tenant or his representative is entitled to recover from the lessee: (1) that portion of the rent not due which the number

of days from the beginning of the period for which the rent is not due to the date of the termination of the legal tenancy bears to the total number of days in the period for which the rent is unpaid; and

(2) that portion of the landlord's share of actual

expenses paid before the termination of the legal tenancy and not previously recovered by him, which the number of days in the lease period on and after the termination bears to the total number of days in the lease period.

(d) (Blank). (Source: P.A. 100-519, eff. 6-1-18; 100-761, eff. 1-1-19.)

(760 ILCS 15/16) (from Ch. 30, par. 516) Sec. 16. Application of Act. Except as specifically provided in the governing instrument or in this Act, this Act shall apply to any receipt or expense received or incurred on or after the effective date of this Act by any trust, decedent's estate or legal life estate whether established on, before or after the effective date of this Act and whether the asset involved was acquired by the trustee, personal representative or legal life tenant on, before or after the effective date of this Act. (Source: P.A. 82-390.)

(760 ILCS 15/16a) (from Ch. 30, par. 516a) Sec. 16a. Repealer. The "Principal and Income Act", approved July 17, 1941, as amended, is repealed. (Source: P.A. 82-390.)

(760 ILCS 15/17) (from Ch. 30, par. 517) Sec. 17. This Act takes effect January 1, 1982. (Source: P.A. 82-390.)