Public Act 90-0796 of the 90th General Assembly

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Public Act 90-0796

HB2367 Re-Enrolled                            LRB9006820SMpkA

    AN ACT concerning probate, amending named Acts.

    Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

    Section  2.   The  Clerks  of  Courts  Act  is amended by
changing Sections 27.1, 27.1a, 27.2, and 27.2a as follows:

    (705 ILCS 105/27.1) (from Ch. 25, par. 27.1)
    Sec. 27.1.  The fees of the Clerk of the Circuit Court in
all counties having a population of  180,000  inhabitants  or
less  shall be paid in advance, except as otherwise provided,
and shall be as follows:
(a)  Civil Cases
         (1)  All  civil  cases  except  as   otherwise
    provided...........................................   $40
         (2)  Judicial Sales (except Probate)..........   $40
(b)  Family
         (1)  Commitment  petitions  under  the  Mental
    Health  and Developmental Disabilities Code, filing
    transcript  of  commitment  proceedings   held   in
    another  county, and cases under the Juvenile Court
    Act of 1987........................................   $25
         (2)  Petition for Marriage Licenses...........   $10
         (3)  Marriages in Court.......................   $10
         (4)  Paternity................................   $40
(c)  Criminal and Quasi-Criminal
         (1)  Each person convicted of a felony........   $40
         (2)  Each person convicted of  a  misdemeanor,
    leaving   scene   of  an  accident,  driving  while
    intoxicated,  reckless  driving  or  drag   racing,
    driving   when   license   revoked   or  suspended,
    overweight, or no interstate commerce  certificate,
    or when the disposition is court supervision.......   $25
         (3)  Each   person  convicted  of  a  business
    offense............................................   $25
         (4)  Each person convicted of a petty offense.   $25
         (5)  Minor    traffic,    conservation,     or
    ordinance           violation,            including
    without    limitation  when  the   disposition   is
    court  supervision:
              (i)  For each offense....................   $10
              (ii)  For   each   notice   sent  to  the
    defendant's  last   known   address   pursuant   to
    subsection  (c)  of Section 6-306.4 of the Illinois
    Vehicle Code.......................................    $2
              (iii)  For  each  notice  sent   to   the
    Secretary  of  State  pursuant to subsection (c) of
    Section 6-306.4 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.......    $2
         (6)  When Court Appearance required...........   $15
         (7)  Motions to vacate or amend final orders..   $10
         (8)  In ordinance violation  cases  punishable
    by  fine only, the clerk of the circuit court shall
    be entitled to receive, unless the fee  is  excused
    upon  a  finding by the court that the defendant is
    indigent,  in  addition  to  other  fees  or  costs
    allowed or imposed by law, the sum of $50 as a  fee
    for  the services of a jury.  The jury fee shall be
    paid by the defendant at the time of filing his  or
    her  jury demand.  If the fee is not so paid by the
    defendant, no jury shall be called,  and  the  case
    shall be tried by the court without a jury.
(d)  Other Civil Cases
         (1)  Money  or  personal property claimed does
    not exceed $500....................................   $10
         (2)  Exceeds $500 but not more than $10,000...   $25
         (3)  Exceeds $10,000, when relief in  addition
    to  or  supplemental  to recovery of money alone is
    sought in an action to  recover  personal  property
    taxes  or  retailers occupational tax regardless of
    amount claimed.....................................   $45
         (4)  The Clerk of the Circuit Court  shall  be
    entitled  to  receive,  in  addition  to other fees
    allowed by law, the sum of $50, as a  fee  for  the
    services  of  a  jury  in  every  civil  action not
    quasi-criminal in its nature and not  a  proceeding
    for  the  exercise  of the right of eminent domain,
    and in every equitable action wherein the right  of
    trial  by jury is or may be given by law.  The jury
    fee shall be paid by the party demanding a jury  at
    the  time of filing his jury demand.  If such a fee
    is not paid by  either  party,  no  jury  shall  be
    called  in the action, suit, or proceeding, and the
    same shall be tried by the court without a jury.
(e)  Confession of judgment and answer
         (1)  When the amount does not exceed $1,000...   $20
         (2)  Exceeds $1,000...........................   $40
(f)  Auxiliary Proceedings
         Any  auxiliary  proceeding  relating  to   the
    collection   of   a   money   judgment,   including
    garnishment, citation, or wage deduction action....    $5
(g)  Forcible entry and detainer
         (1)  For  possession  only  or  possession and
    rent not in excess of $10,000......................   $10
         (2)  For possession  and  rent  in  excess  of
    $10,000............................................   $40
(h)  Eminent Domain
         (1)  Exercise of Eminent Domain...............   $45
         (2)  For  each  and every lot or tract of land
    or  right  or  interest  therein  subject   to   be
    condemned,  the  damages  in respect to which shall
    require separate assessments by a jury.............   $45
(i)  Reinstatement
         Each case including petition for  modification
    of a judgment or order of Court if filed later than
    30  days  after  the  entry of a judgment or order,
    except in forcible entry  and  detainer  cases  and
    small  claims  and  except  a  petition  to modify,
    terminate, or enforce  a  judgement  or  order  for
    child  or spousal support or to modify, suspend, or
    terminate an order  for  withholding,  petition  to
    vacate   judgment   of   dismissal   for   want  of
    prosecution whenever filed, petition to  reopen  an
    estate, or redocketing of any cause................   $20
(j)  Probate
         (1)  Administration   of  decedent's  estates,
    whether testate or intestate, guardianships of  the
    person  or  estate  or both of a person under legal
    disability, guardianships of the person  or  estate
    or  both of a minor or minors, or petitions to sell
    real estate in the administration of any estate....   $50
         (2)  Small estates in cases where the real and
    personal property of  an  estate  does  not  exceed
    $5,000.............................................   $25
         (3)  At  any time during the administration of
    the estate, however, at the request of  the  Clerk,
    the  Court  shall  examine the record of the estate
    and the personal representative  to  determine  the
    total  value  of  the real and personal property of
    the estate, and if such value exceeds $5,000  shall
    order  the  payment  of  an  additional  fee in the
    amount of..........................................   $40
         (4)  Inheritance tax proceedings..............   $15
         (5)  Issuing  letters  only  for   a   certain
    specific reason other than the administration of an
    estate, including but not limited to the release of
    mortgage;  the  issue of letters of guardianship in
    order that consent to marriage may  be  granted  or
    for  some  other specific reason other than for the
    care of  property  or  person;  proof  of  heirship
    without  administration;  or  when  a will is to be
    admitted to  probate,  but  the  estate  is  to  be
    settled without administration.....................   $10
         (6)  When a separate complaint relating to any
    matter  other  than  a routine claim is filed in an
    estate,  the  required  additional  fee  shall   be
    charged for such filing............................   $45
(k)  Change of Venue
         From a court, the charge is the same amount as
    the  original  filing  fee;  however,  the  fee for
    preparation and certification of record  on  change
    of  venue,  when  original  documents or copies are
    forwarded..........................................   $10
(l)  Answer,   adverse    pleading,    or    appearance
                               In civil cases..........   $15
         With the following exceptions:
         (1)  When the amount does not exceed $500.....    $5
         (2)  When amount exceeds $500 but not $10,000.   $10
         (3)  When amount exceeds $10,000..............   $15
         (4)  Court    appeals   when   documents   are
    forwarded, over 200 pages, additional fee per  page
    over 200...........................................   10¢
(m)  Tax objection complaints
         For  each  tax  objection complaint containing
    one or  more  tax  objections,  regardless  of  the
    number   of  parcels  involved  or  the  number  of
    taxpayers joining the complaint....................   $10
(n)  Tax deed
         (1)  Petition for tax deed, if only one parcel
    is involved........................................   $45
         (2)  For each additional parcel  involved,  an
    additional fee of..................................   $10
(o)  Mailing Notices and Processes
         (1)  All notices that the clerk is required to
    mail as first class mail...........................    $2
         (2)  For all processes or notices the Clerk is
    required  to  mail by certified or registered mail,
    the fee will be $2 plus cost of postage.
(p)  Certification or Authentication
         (1)  Each certification or authentication  for
    taking  the  acknowledgement  of  a  deed  or other
    instrument in writing with seal of office..........    $2
         (2)  Court appeals when original documents are
    forwarded, 100 pages or under, plus delivery costs.   $25
         (3)  Court appeals when original documents are
    forwarded, over 100 pages, plus delivery costs.....   $60
         (4)  Court appeals when original documents are
    forwarded, over 200 pages, additional fee per  page
    over 200...........................................   10¢
(q)  Reproductions
         Each   record  of  proceedings  and  judgment,
    whether  on  appeal,  change  of  venue,  certified
    copies of  orders  and  judgments,  and  all  other
    instruments, documents, records, or papers:
              (1)  First page..........................    $1
              (2)  Next 19 pages, per page.............   50¢
              (3)  All remaining pages, per page.......   25¢
(r)  Counterclaim
         When  any  defendant  files  a counterclaim as
    part of his or her answer or otherwise,   or  joins
    another  party as a third party defendant, or both,
    he  or  she  shall  pay  a  fee   for   each   such
    counterclaim  or  third  party  action in an amount
    equal to the fee he or she would have  had  to  pay
    had  he  or  she  brought a separate action for the
    relief sought in the counterclaim  or  against  the
    third  party  defendant,  less  the  amount  of the
    appearance fee, if that has been paid.
(s)  Transcript of Judgment
         From  a  court,  the  same  fee  as  if   case
    originally filed.
(t)  Publications
         The cost of publication shall be paid directly
    to   the   publisher  by  the  person  seeking  the
    publication, whether the clerk is required  by  law
    to publish, or the parties to the action.
(u)  Collections
         (1)  For  all  collections  made  for  others,
    except   the   State   and  County  and  except  in
    maintenance or child support cases, a sum equal  to
    2% of the amount collected and turned over.
         (2)  In  any  cases  remanded  to  the Circuit
    Court from  the  Supreme  Court  or  the  Appellate
    Court, the Clerk shall file the remanding order and
    reinstate  the case with either its original number
    or a new number.  The Clerk shall  not  charge  any
    new  or additional fee for the reinstatement.  Upon
    reinstatement the Clerk shall advise the parties of
    the reinstatement.  A party  shall  have  the  same
    right  to  a jury trial on remand and reinstatement
    as  he  or  she  had  before  the  appeal,  and  no
    additional or new fee or charge shall be made for a
    jury trial after remand.
         (3)  In maintenance and child support matters,
    the Clerk may deduct from each  payment  an  amount
    equal  to  the  United States postage to be used in
    mailing the maintenance or child support  check  to
    the  recipient.  In  such  cases,  the  Clerk shall
    collect an annual fee of up to $36 from the  person
    making   such   payment   for   administering   the
    collection  and  distribution  of  maintenance  and
    child  support  payments.  Such  sum  shall  be  in
    addition to and separate from amounts ordered to be
    paid  as  maintenance or child support and shall be
    deposited  in  a  separate  Maintenance  and  Child
    Support Collection Fund of which the Clerk shall be
    the custodian, ex officio, to be used by the  Clerk
    to further maintenance and child support collection
    efforts  in  his  office.  Unless  paid  in cash or
    pursuant to an order for withholding,  the  payment
    of  the  fee shall be by a separate instrument from
    the support payment and shall be made to the  order
    of the Clerk. The Clerk may recover from the person
    making the maintenance or child support payment any
    additional  cost incurred in the collection of this
    annual fee.
         The Clerk shall also be entitled to a  fee  of
    $5  for  certifications  made  to  the Secretary of
    State as provided in Section 7-703  of  the  Family
    Financial  Responsibility  Law and these fees shall
    also be deposited into the Separate Maintenance and
    Child Support Collection Fund.
(v)  Correction of Cases
         For correcting the case number or  case  title
    on  any document filed in his office, to be charged
    against the party that filed the document..........   $10
(w)  Record Search
         For searching a record, per year searched.....    $4
(x)  Printed Output
         For each page of hard copy print output,  when
    case records are maintained on an automated medium.    $2
(y)  Alias Summons
         For each alias summons issued.................    $2
(z)  Expungement of Records
         For each expungement petition filed...........   $15
(aa)  Other Fees
         Any fees not covered by this Section shall be set by
    rule  or  administrative order of the Circuit Court, with
    the approval of the Supreme Court.
(bb)  Exemptions
         No fee provided for herein shall be charged  to  any
    unit  of  State  or  local  government or school district
    unless the Court orders another party to pay such fee  on
    its  behalf.  The  fee requirements of this Section shall
    not apply to police departments or other law  enforcement
    agencies.    In  this  Section,  "law enforcement agency"
    means  an  agency  of  the  State  or  a  unit  of  local
    government that is vested by law or  ordinance  with  the
    duty  to  maintain  public  order and to enforce criminal
    laws and ordinances. The fee requirements of this Section
    shall not apply to any action instituted under subsection
    (b) of Section 11-31-1 of the Illinois Municipal Code  by
    a  private  owner  or tenant of real property within 1200
    feet of a dangerous or unsafe building seeking  an  order
    compelling  the  owner  or owners of the building to take
    any of the actions authorized under that subsection.
(cc)  Adoptions
         (1)  For an adoption.............................$65
         (2)  Upon good cause shown, the court may waive  the
    adoption  filing  fee  in  a special needs adoption.  The
    term "special needs  adoption"  shall  have  the  meaning
    ascribed to it by the Illinois Department of Children and
    Family Services.
(dd)  Adoption exemptions
         No  fee other than that set forth in subsection (cc)
    shall be charged to any  person  in  connection  with  an
    adoption proceeding.
(ee)  Additional Services
         Beginning  July  1,  1993,  the clerk of the circuit
    court may provide  such  additional  services  for  which
    there  is  no fee specified by statute in connection with
    the operation of the clerk's office as may  be  requested
    by  the  public  and  agreed  to by the public and by the
    clerk.  Any charges for additional services shall  be  as
    agreed  to  between  the  clerk  and the party making the
    request.  Nothing in this subsection shall be  as  agreed
    to  between  the  clerk and the party making the request.
    Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to  require
    any  clerk  to provide any service not otherwise required
    by law.
(Source:  P.A.  89-92,  eff.  7-1-96;  89-593,  eff.  8-1-96;
90-466, eff. 8-17-97.)

    (705 ILCS 105/27.1a) (from Ch. 25, par. 27.1a)
    Sec. 27.1a.  The fees of the clerks of the circuit  court
in  all counties having a population in excess of 180,000 but
not more than 650,000 inhabitants in the instances  described
in  this  Section  shall be as provided in this Section.  The
fees shall be paid in advance and shall be as follows:
(a)  Civil Cases.
         The fee for filing a complaint, petition,  or  other
    pleading  initiating  a  civil action, with the following
    exceptions, shall be $150.
              (A)  When the amount of money or damages or the
         value of personal property claimed does  not  exceed
         $250, $10.
              (B)  When that amount exceeds $250 but does not
         exceed $500, $20.
              (C)  When that amount exceeds $500 but does not
         exceed $2500, $30.
              (D)  When  that  amount  exceeds $2500 but does
         not exceed $15,000, $75.
              (E)  For the exercise of eminent domain,  $150.
         For each additional lot or tract of land or right or
         interest   therein  subject  to  be  condemned,  the
         damages in respect to which shall  require  separate
         assessment by a jury, $150.
(a-1)  Family.
         For  filing  a petition under the Juvenile Court Act
    of 1987, $25.
         For filing a petition for a marriage license, $10.
         For performing a marriage in court, $10.
         For filing a petition under the  Illinois  Parentage
    Act of 1984, $40.
(b)  Forcible Entry and Detainer.
         In  each  forcible  entry and detainer case when the
    plaintiff seeks possession only or unites with his or her
    claim for possession of the property a claim for rent  or
    damages  or  both  in the amount of $15,000 or less, $40.
    When the plaintiff unites his or her claim for possession
    with a claim  for  rent  or  damages  or  both  exceeding
    $15,000, $150.
(c)  Counterclaim or Joining Third Party Defendant.
         When  any  defendant files a counterclaim as part of
    his or her answer or otherwise or joins another party  as
    a third party defendant, or both, the defendant shall pay
    a  fee  for each counterclaim or third party action in an
    amount equal to the fee he or she would have had  to  pay
    had  he  or  she brought a separate action for the relief
    sought in the counterclaim or  against  the  third  party
    defendant, less the amount of the appearance fee, if that
    has been paid.
(d)  Confession of Judgment.
         In a confession of judgment when the amount does not
    exceed  $1500,  $50.  When  the amount exceeds $1500, but
    does not exceed $15,000, $115. When  the  amount  exceeds
    $15,000, $200.
(e)  Appearance.
         The  fee for filing an appearance in each civil case
    shall be $50, except as follows:
              (A)  When the plaintiff in a forcible entry and
         detainer case seeks possession only, $20.
              (B)  When the  amount  in  the  case  does  not
         exceed $1500, $20.
              (C)  When  that  amount  exceeds $1500 but does
         not exceed $15,000, $40.
(f)  Garnishment, Wage Deduction, and Citation.
         In garnishment affidavit, wage deduction  affidavit,
    and  citation  petition  when  the amount does not exceed
    $1,000, $10; when the amount exceeds $1,000 but does  not
    exceed  $5,000,  $20; and when the amount exceeds $5,000,
    $30.
(g)  Petition to Vacate or Modify.
         (1)  Petition to vacate or modify any final judgment
    or order of court, except in forcible entry and  detainer
    cases  and  small claims cases or a petition to reopen an
    estate, to modify, terminate, or enforce  a  judgment  or
    order  for  child  or  spousal  support,  or  to  modify,
    suspend,  or terminate an order for withholding, if filed
    before 30 days after the entry of the judgment or  order,
    $40.
         (2)  Petition to vacate or modify any final judgment
    or   order   of  court,  except  a  petition  to  modify,
    terminate, or enforce a judgment or order  for  child  or
    spousal  support  or  to modify, suspend, or terminate an
    order for withholding, if filed later than 30 days  after
    the entry of the judgment or order, $60.
         (3)  Petition  to  vacate  order of bond forfeiture,
    $20.
(h)  Mailing.
         When the clerk is required to mail, the fee will  be
    $6, plus the cost of postage.
(i)  Certified Copies.
         Each  certified  copy of a judgment after the first,
    except in small claims and forcible  entry  and  detainer
    cases, $10.
(j)  Habeas Corpus.
         For  filing  a petition for relief by habeas corpus,
    $80.
(k)  Certification, Authentication, and Reproduction.
         (1)  Each certification or authentication for taking
    the acknowledgment of  a  deed  or  other  instrument  in
    writing with the seal of office, $4.
         (2)  Court   appeals  when  original  documents  are
    forwarded, under 100 pages, plus delivery and costs, $50.
         (3)  Court  appeals  when  original  documents   are
    forwarded, over 100 pages, plus delivery and costs, $120.
         (4)  Court   appeals  when  original  documents  are
    forwarded, over 200 pages, an additional fee of 20  cents
    per page.
         (5)  For  reproduction  of any document contained in
    the clerk's files:
              (A)  First page, $2.
              (B)  Next 19 pages, 50 cents per page.
              (C)  All remaining pages, 25 cents per page.
(l)  Remands.
         In any cases remanded to the Circuit Court  from the
    Supreme Court or the Appellate Court for a new trial, the
    clerk shall file the remanding order  and  reinstate  the
    case with either its original number or a new number. The
    Clerk  shall not charge any new or additional fee for the
    reinstatement.  Upon reinstatement the Clerk shall advise
    the parties of the reinstatement.  A party shall have the
    same right to a jury trial on remand and reinstatement as
    he or she had before the appeal, and no additional or new
    fee or charge shall  be  made  for  a  jury  trial  after
    remand.
(m)  Record Search.
         For   each  record  search,  within  a  division  or
    municipal district, the clerk  shall  be  entitled  to  a
    search fee of $4 for each year searched.
(n)  Hard Copy.
         For  each  page of hard copy print output, when case
    records are maintained on an automated medium, the  clerk
    shall be entitled to a fee of $4.
(o)  Index Inquiry and Other Records.
         No    fee    shall   be   charged   for   a   single
    plaintiff/defendant index inquiry or single  case  record
    inquiry  when  this  request  is  made  in person and the
    records are maintained in a current automated medium, and
    when no hard copy print output is requested.  The fees to
    be charged for management records, multiple case records,
    and multiple journal records  may  be  specified  by  the
    Chief  Judge  pursuant  to  the guidelines for access and
    dissemination of  information  approved  by  the  Supreme
    Court.
(p)  Commitment Petitions.
         For  filing  commitment  petitions  under the Mental
    Health and Developmental Disabilities Code and for filing
    a transcript of commitment proceedings  held  in  another
    county, $25.
(q)  Alias Summons.
         For  each  alias  summons  or citation issued by the
    clerk, $4.
(r)  Other Fees.
         Any fees not covered in this Section shall be set by
    rule or administrative order of the  Circuit  Court  with
    the approval of the Administrative Office of the Illinois
    Courts.
         The   clerk   of   the  circuit  court  may  provide
    additional services for which there is no  fee  specified
    by  statute  in  connection  with  the  operation  of the
    clerk's office as may be  requested  by  the  public  and
    agreed to by the clerk and approved by the chief judge of
    the  circuit  court.  Any charges for additional services
    shall be as agreed to between the  clerk  and  the  party
    making the request and approved by the chief judge of the
    circuit  court.   Nothing  in  this  subsection  shall be
    construed to require any clerk to provide any service not
    otherwise required by law.
(s)  Jury Services.
         The clerk shall be entitled to receive, in  addition
    to  other  fees allowed by law, the sum of $180, as a fee
    for the services of a jury  in  every  civil  action  not
    quasi-criminal in its nature and not a proceeding for the
    exercise  of  the  right  of  eminent domain and in every
    other action wherein the right of trial by jury is or may
    be given by law.  The jury fee shall be paid by the party
    demanding a jury at the time of filing the  jury  demand.
    If  the fee is not paid by either party, no jury shall be
    called in the action or proceeding, and the same shall be
    tried by the court without a jury.
(t)  Voluntary Assignment.
         For filing each deed of voluntary  assignment,  $10;
    for   recording   the  same,  25¢  for  each  100  words.
    Exceptions filed to claims presented to an assignee of  a
    debtor  who  has  made  a  voluntary  assignment  for the
    benefit of creditors shall be considered and treated, for
    the purpose of taxing costs therein, as actions in  which
    the  party  or  parties  filing  the  exceptions shall be
    considered  as  party  or  parties  plaintiff,  and   the
    claimant  or claimants as party or parties defendant, and
    those parties respectively shall pay  to  the  clerk  the
    same fees as provided by this Section to be paid in other
    actions.
(u)  Expungement Petition.
         The  clerk shall be entitled to receive a fee of $30
    for each expungement petition filed and an additional fee
    of $2 for  each certified copy of  an  order  to  expunge
    arrest records.
(v)  Probate.
    The  clerk  is  entitled to receive the fees specified in
this subsection (v), which shall be paid in  advance,  except
that, for good cause shown, the court may suspend, reduce, or
release the costs payable under this subsection:
         (1)  For  administration of the estate of a decedent
    (whether testate or intestate) or of  a  missing  person,
    $100,  plus  the  fees  specified  in  subsection (v)(3),
    except:
              (A)  When the value of the  real  and  personal
         property  does  not exceed $15,000, the fee shall be
         $25.
              (B)  When (i) proof of heirship alone is  made,
         (ii)  a  domestic  or  foreign  will  is admitted to
         probate without administration (including  proof  of
         heirship), or (iii) letters of office are issued for
         a  particular  purpose without administration of the
         estate, the fee shall be $25.
         (2)  For administration of the  estate  of  a  ward,
    $50,  plus  the  fees  specified  in  subsection  (v)(3),
    except:
              (A)  When  the  value  of the real and personal
         property does not exceed $15,000, the fee  shall  be
         $25.
              (B)  When (i) letters of office are issued to a
         guardian  of  the  person or persons, but not of the
         estate or (ii) letters of office are issued  in  the
         estate  of  a  ward  without  administration  of the
         estate, including filing or joining in the filing of
         a tax return or releasing a mortgage  or  consenting
         to the marriage of the ward, the fee shall be $10.
         (3)  In   addition   to   the   fees  payable  under
    subsection  (v)(1)  or  (v)(2)  of  this   Section,   the
    following fees are payable:
              (A)  For  each  account  (other  than one final
         account) filed in the estate of a decedent, or ward,
         $15.
              (B)  For filing a claim in an estate  when  the
         amount  claimed  is $150 or more but less than $500,
         $10; when the amount claimed is  $500  or  more  but
         less  than  $10,000, $25; when the amount claimed is
         $10,000 or more, $40; provided  that  the  court  in
         allowing  a  claim may add to the amount allowed the
         filing fee paid by the claimant.
              (C)  For filing in an estate a claim, petition,
         or supplemental  proceeding  based  upon  an  action
         seeking  equitable relief including the construction
         or contest of a will, enforcement of a  contract  to
         make  a will, and proceedings involving testamentary
         trusts or the appointment of testamentary  trustees,
         $40.
              (D)  For filing in an estate (i) the appearance
         of any person for the purpose of consent or (ii) the
         appearance    of    an    executor,   administrator,
         administrator  to  collect,  guardian,  guardian  ad
         litem, or special administrator, no fee.
              (E)  Except   as   provided    in    subsection
         (v)(3)(D),  for  filing the appearance of any person
         or persons, $10.
              (F)  For each jury demand, $90.
              (G)  For disposition of  the  collection  of  a
         judgment  or  settlement  of  an action or claim for
         wrongful death of a decedent  or  of  any  cause  of
         action   of   a   ward,   when  there  is  no  other
         administration of the estate, $30, less  any  amount
         paid  under subsection (v)(1)(B) or (v)(2)(B) except
         that if the amount involved does not exceed  $5,000,
         the  fee, including any amount paid under subsection
         (v)(1)(B) or (v)(2)(B), shall be $10.
              (H)  For each  certified  copy  of  letters  of
         office,  of  court order or other certification, $1,
         plus 50¢ per page in  excess  of  3  pages  for  the
         document certified.
              (I)  For each exemplification, $1, plus the fee
         for certification.
         (4)  The    executor,    administrator,    guardian,
    petitioner,  or  other  interested  person  or his or her
    attorney shall pay the cost of publication by  the  clerk
    directly to the newspaper.
         (5)  The person on whose behalf a charge is incurred
    for   witness,   court   reporter,  appraiser,  or  other
    miscellaneous fee shall pay  the  same  directly  to  the
    person entitled thereto.
         (6)  The    executor,    administrator,    guardian,
    petitioner,  or  other  interested  person  or his or her
    attorney shall pay  to  the  clerk  all  postage  charges
    incurred  by  the  clerk  in  mailing  petitions, orders,
    notices, or other documents pursuant to the provisions of
    the Probate Act of 1975.
(w)  Criminal and Quasi-Criminal Costs and Fees.
         (1)  The clerk shall be entitled  to  costs  in  all
    criminal   and  quasi-criminal  cases  from  each  person
    convicted or sentenced to supervision therein as follows:
              (A)  Felony complaints, $80.
              (B)  Misdemeanor complaints, $50.
              (C)  Business offense complaints, $50.
              (D)  Petty offense complaints, $50.
              (E)  Minor  traffic  or  ordinance  violations,
         $20.
              (F)  When court appearance required, $30.
              (G)  Motions to vacate or amend  final  orders,
         $20.
              (H)  Motions  to vacate bond forfeiture orders,
         $20.
              (I)  Motions  to  vacate  ex  parte  judgments,
         whenever filed, $20.
              (J)  Motions to vacate judgment on forfeitures,
         whenever filed, $20.
              (K)  Motions to vacate "failure to  appear"  or
         "failure to comply" notices sent to the Secretary of
         State, $20.
         (2)  In  counties  having  a population in excess of
    180,000 but not more than 650,000 inhabitants,  when  the
    violation  complaint  is  issued  by  a  municipal police
    department, the clerk shall be  entitled  to  costs  from
    each person convicted therein as follows:
              (A)  Minor  traffic  or  ordinance  violations,
         $10.
              (B)  When court appearance required, $15.
         (3)  In ordinance violation cases punishable by fine
    only, the clerk of the circuit court shall be entitled to
    receive,  unless the fee is excused upon a finding by the
    court that the defendant  is  indigent,  in  addition  to
    other fees or costs allowed or imposed by law, the sum of
    $50  as  a  fee for the services of a jury.  The jury fee
    shall be paid by the defendant at the time of filing  his
    or  her  jury  demand.   If the fee is not so paid by the
    defendant, no jury shall be called, and the case shall be
    tried by the court without a jury.
(x)  Transcripts of Judgment.
         For the filing of  a  transcript  of  judgment,  the
    clerk shall be entitled to the same fee as if it were the
    commencement of a new suit.
(y)  Change of Venue.
         (1)  For  the filing of a change of case on a change
    of venue, the clerk shall be entitled to the same fee  as
    if it were the commencement of a new suit.
         (2)  The  fee  for the preparation and certification
    of a record on a change of venue to another jurisdiction,
    when original documents are forwarded, $25.
(z)  Tax objection complaints.
         For each tax objection complaint containing  one  or
    more  tax objections, regardless of the number of parcels
    involved or  the  number  of  taxpayers  joining  on  the
    complaint, $25.
(aa)  Tax Deeds.
         (1)  Petition  for  tax  deed, if only one parcel is
    involved, $150.
         (2)  For each additional parcel, add a fee of $50.
(bb)  Collections.
         (1)  For all collections made of others, except  the
    State  and  county  and  except  in  maintenance or child
    support  cases,  a  sum  equal  to  2.5%  of  the  amount
    collected and turned over.
         (2)  Interest earned on any funds held by the  clerk
    shall  be  turned  over  to the county general fund as an
    earning of the office.
         (3)  For any check, draft, or other bank  instrument
    returned  to  the clerk for non-sufficient funds, account
    closed, or payment stopped, $25.
         (4)  In child support  and  maintenance  cases,  the
    clerk, if authorized by an ordinance of the county board,
    may  collect  an  annual fee of up to $36 from the person
    making  payment  for  administering  the  collection  and
    distribution of maintenance and child  support  payments.
    This  fee  shall  be  in  addition  to  and separate from
    amounts ordered  to  be  paid  as  maintenance  or  child
    support   and   shall   be   deposited  into  a  Separate
    Maintenance and Child Support Collection Fund,  of  which
    the  clerk shall be the custodian, ex-officio, to be used
    by the clerk to further maintenance and child supports in
    his or her office. The clerk may recover from the  person
    making  the  maintenance  or  child  support payment  any
    additional cost incurred in the collection of this annual
    fee.
         The clerk shall also be entitled to a fee of $5  for
    certifications made to the Secretary of State as provided
    in  Section  7-703 of the Family Financial Responsibility
    Law and these fees  shall  also  be  deposited  into  the
    Separate Maintenance and Child Support Collection Fund.
(cc)  Corrections of Numbers.
         For  correction  of  the case number, case title, or
    attorney computer identification number, if  required  by
    rule  of  court,  on  any  document  filed in the clerk's
    office, to be charged against the party  that  filed  the
    document, $15.
(dd)  Exceptions.
         (1)  The  fee requirements of this Section shall not
    apply to police  departments  or  other  law  enforcement
    agencies.   In  this  Section,  "law  enforcement agency"
    means  an  agency  of  the  State  or  a  unit  of  local
    government which is vested by law or ordinance  with  the
    duty  to  maintain  public  order and to enforce criminal
    laws or ordinances.  "Law enforcement agency" also  means
    the Attorney General or any state's attorney.
         (2)  No  fee provided herein shall be charged to any
    unit of local government or school district.
         (3)  The fee requirements of this Section shall  not
    apply  to  any  action instituted under subsection (b) of
    Section 11-31-1 of  the  Illinois  Municipal  Code  by  a
    private owner or tenant of real property within 1200 feet
    of  a  dangerous  or  unsafe  building  seeking  an order
    compelling the owner or owners of the  building  to  take
    any of the actions authorized under that subsection.
(ee)  Adoptions.
         (1)  For an adoption.............................$65
         (2)  Upon  good cause shown, the court may waive the
    adoption filing fee in a  special  needs  adoption.   The
    term  "special  needs  adoption"  shall  have the meaning
    ascribed to it by the Illinois Department of Children and
    Family Services.
(ff)  Adoption exemptions.
         No fee other than that set forth in subsection  (ee)
    shall  be  charged  to  any  person in connection with an
    adoption proceeding.
(Source: P.A.  89-92,  eff.  7-1-96;  89-593,  eff.   8-1-96;
90-466, eff. 8-17-97.)

    (705 ILCS 105/27.2) (from Ch. 25, par. 27.2)
    Sec.  27.2.  The  fees of the clerks of the circuit court
in all counties having a  population  in  excess  of  650,000
inhabitants  but  less  than  3,000,000  inhabitants  in  the
instances  described  in this Section shall be as provided in
this Section.  In addition, the fees provided in this Section
shall apply to all  units  of  local  government  and  school
districts  in  counties with more than 3,000,000 inhabitants.
The fees shall be paid in advance and shall be as follows:
(a)  Civil Cases.
         The fee for filing a complaint, petition,  or  other
    pleading  initiating  a  civil action, with the following
    exceptions, shall be $150.
              (A)  When the amount of money or damages or the
         value of personal property claimed does  not  exceed
         $250, $10.
              (B)  When that amount exceeds $250 but does not
         exceed $500, $20.
              (C)  When that amount exceeds $500 but does not
         exceed $2500, $30.
              (D)  When  that  amount  exceeds $2500 but does
         not exceed $15,000, $75.
              (E)  For the exercise of eminent domain,  $150.
         For each additional lot or tract of land or right or
         interest   therein  subject  to  be  condemned,  the
         damages in respect to which shall  require  separate
         assessment by a jury, $150.
(b)  Forcible Entry and Detainer.
         In  each  forcible  entry and detainer case when the
    plaintiff seeks possession only or unites with his or her
    claim for possession of the property a claim for rent  or
    damages  or  both  in the amount of $15,000 or less, $40.
    When the plaintiff unites his or her claim for possession
    with a claim  for  rent  or  damages  or  both  exceeding
    $15,000, $150.
(c)  Counterclaim or Joining Third Party Defendant.
         When  any  defendant files a counterclaim as part of
    his or her answer or otherwise or joins another party  as
    a third party defendant, or both, the defendant shall pay
    a  fee  for each counterclaim or third party action in an
    amount equal to the fee he or she would have had  to  pay
    had  he  or  she brought a separate action for the relief
    sought in the counterclaim or  against  the  third  party
    defendant, less the amount of the appearance fee, if that
    has been paid.
(d)  Confession of Judgment.
         In a confession of judgment when the amount does not
    exceed  $1500,  $50.  When  the amount exceeds $1500, but
    does not exceed $15,000, $115. When  the  amount  exceeds
    $15,000, $200.
(e)  Appearance.
         The  fee for filing an appearance in each civil case
    shall be $50, except as follows:
              (A)  When the plaintiff in a forcible entry and
         detainer case seeks possession only; $20.
              (B)  When the  amount  in  the  case  does  not
         exceed $1500, $20.
              (C)  When  that  amount  exceeds $1500 but does
         not exceed $15,000, $40.
(f)  Garnishment, Wage Deduction, and Citation.
         In garnishment affidavit, wage deduction  affidavit,
    and  citation  petition  when  the amount does not exceed
    $1,000, $10; when the amount exceeds $1,000 but does  not
    exceed  $5,000,  $20; and when the amount exceeds $5,000,
    $30.
(g)  Petition to Vacate or Modify.
         (1)  Petition to vacate or modify any final judgment
    or order of court, except in forcible entry and  detainer
    cases  and  small claims cases or a petition to reopen an
    estate, to modify, terminate, or enforce  a  judgment  or
    order  for  child  or  spousal  support,  or  to  modify,
    suspend,  or terminate an order for withholding, if filed
    before 30 days after the entry of the judgment or  order,
    $40.
         (2)  Petition to vacate or modify any final judgment
    or   order   of  court,  except  a  petition  to  modify,
    terminate, or enforce a judgment or order  for  child  or
    spousal  support  or  to modify, suspend, or terminate an
    order for withholding, if filed later than 30 days  after
    the entry of the judgment or order, $60.
         (3)  Petition  to  vacate  order of bond forfeiture,
    $20.
(h)  Mailing.
         When the clerk is required to mail, the fee will  be
    $6, plus the cost of postage.
(i)  Certified Copies.
         Each  certified  copy of a judgment after the first,
    except in small claims and forcible  entry  and  detainer
    cases, $10.
(j)  Habeas Corpus.
         For  filing  a petition for relief by habeas corpus,
    $80.
(k)  Certification, Authentication, and Reproduction.
         (1)  Each certification or authentication for taking
    the acknowledgment of  a  deed  or  other  instrument  in
    writing with the seal of office, $4.
         (2)  Court   appeals  when  original  documents  are
    forwarded, under 100 pages, plus delivery and costs, $50.
         (3)  Court  appeals  when  original  documents   are
    forwarded, over 100 pages, plus delivery and costs, $120.
         (4)  Court   appeals  when  original  documents  are
    forwarded, over 200 pages, an additional fee of 20  cents
    per page.
         (5)  For  reproduction  of any document contained in
    the clerk's files:
              (A)  First page, $2.
              (B)  Next 19 pages, 50 cents per page.
              (C)  All remaining pages, 25 cents per page.
(l)  Remands.
         In any cases remanded to the Circuit Court  from the
    Supreme Court or the Appellate Court for a new trial, the
    clerk shall file the remanding order  and  reinstate  the
    case  with  either  its  original number or a new number.
    The Clerk shall not charge any new or additional fee  for
    the  reinstatement.  Upon  reinstatement  the Clerk shall
    advise the parties of the reinstatement.  A  party  shall
    have  the  same  right  to  a  jury  trial  on remand and
    reinstatement as he or she had before the appeal, and  no
    additional  or new fee or charge shall be made for a jury
    trial after remand.
(m)  Record Search.
         For  each  record  search,  within  a  division   or
    municipal  district,  the  clerk  shall  be entitled to a
    search fee of $4 for each year searched.
(n)  Hard Copy.
         For each page of hard copy print output,  when  case
    records  are maintained on an automated medium, the clerk
    shall be entitled to a fee of $4.
(o)  Index Inquiry and Other Records.
         No   fee   shall   be   charged   for    a    single
    plaintiff/defendant  index  inquiry or single case record
    inquiry when this request  is  made  in  person  and  the
    records are maintained in a current automated medium, and
    when no hard copy print output is requested.  The fees to
    be charged for management records, multiple case records,
    and  multiple  journal  records  may  be specified by the
    Chief Judge pursuant to the  guidelines  for  access  and
    dissemination  of  information  approved  by  the Supreme
    Court.
(p)  Commitment Petitions.
         For filing commitment  petitions  under  the  Mental
    Health and Developmental Disabilities Code, $25.
(q)  Alias Summons.
         For  each  alias  summons  or citation issued by the
    clerk, $4.
(r)  Other Fees.
         Any fees not covered in this Section shall be set by
    rule or administrative order of the  Circuit  Court  with
    the approval of the Administrative Office of the Illinois
    Courts.
         The   clerk   of   the  circuit  court  may  provide
    additional services for which there is no  fee  specified
    by  statute  in  connection  with  the  operation  of the
    clerk's office as may be  requested  by  the  public  and
    agreed to by the clerk and approved by the chief judge of
    the  circuit  court.  Any charges for additional services
    shall be as agreed to between the  clerk  and  the  party
    making the request and approved by the chief judge of the
    circuit  court.   Nothing  in  this  subsection  shall be
    construed to require any clerk to provide any service not
    otherwise required by law.
(s)  Jury Services.
         The clerk shall be entitled to receive, in  addition
    to  other  fees allowed by law, the sum of $180, as a fee
    for the services of a jury  in  every  civil  action  not
    quasi-criminal in its nature and not a proceeding for the
    exercise  of  the  right  of  eminent domain and in every
    other action wherein the right of trial by jury is or may
    be given by law.  The jury fee shall be paid by the party
    demanding a jury at the time of filing the  jury  demand.
    If  the fee is not paid by either party, no jury shall be
    called in the action or proceeding, and the same shall be
    tried by the court without a jury.
(t)  Voluntary Assignment.
         For filing each deed of voluntary  assignment,  $10;
    for   recording   the  same,  25¢  for  each  100  words.
    Exceptions filed to claims presented to an assignee of  a
    debtor  who  has  made  a  voluntary  assignment  for the
    benefit of creditors shall be considered and treated, for
    the purpose of taxing costs therein, as actions in  which
    the  party  or  parties  filing  the  exceptions shall be
    considered  as  party  or  parties  plaintiff,  and   the
    claimant  or claimants as party or parties defendant, and
    those parties respectively shall pay  to  the  clerk  the
    same fees as provided by this Section to be paid in other
    actions.
(u)  Expungement Petition.
         The  clerk shall be entitled to receive a fee of $30
    for each expungement petition filed and an additional fee
    of $2 for  each certified copy of  an  order  to  expunge
    arrest records.
(v)  Probate.
    The  clerk  is  entitled to receive the fees specified in
this subsection (v), which shall be paid in  advance,  except
that, for good cause shown, the court may suspend, reduce, or
release the costs payable under this subsection:
         (1)  For  administration of the estate of a decedent
    (whether testate or intestate) or of  a  missing  person,
    $100,  plus  the  fees  specified  in  subsection (v)(3),
    except:
              (A)  When the value of the  real  and  personal
         property  does  not exceed $15,000, the fee shall be
         $25.
              (B)  When (i) proof of heirship alone is  made,
         (ii)  a  domestic  or  foreign  will  is admitted to
         probate without administration (including  proof  of
         heirship), or (iii) letters of office are issued for
         a  particular  purpose without administration of the
         estate, the fee shall be $25.
         (2)  For administration of the  estate  of  a  ward,
    $50,  plus  the  fees  specified  in  subsection  (v)(3),
    except:
              (A)  When  the  value  of the real and personal
         property does not exceed $15,000, the fee  shall  be
         $25.
              (B)  When (i) letters of office are issued to a
         guardian  of  the  person or persons, but not of the
         estate or (ii) letters of office are issued  in  the
         estate  of  a  ward  without  administration  of the
         estate, including filing or joining in the filing of
         a tax return or releasing a mortgage  or  consenting
         to the marriage of the ward, the fee shall be $10.
         (3)  In   addition   to   the   fees  payable  under
    subsection  (v)(1)  or  (v)(2)  of  this   Section,   the
    following fees are payable:
              (A)  For  each  account  (other  than one final
         account) filed in the estate of a decedent, or ward,
         $15.
              (B)  For filing a claim in an estate  when  the
         amount  claimed  is $150 or more but less than $500,
         $10; when the amount claimed is  $500  or  more  but
         less  than  $10,000, $25; when the amount claimed is
         $10,000 or more, $40; provided  that  the  court  in
         allowing  a  claim may add to the amount allowed the
         filing fee paid by the claimant.
              (C)  For filing in an estate a claim, petition,
         or supplemental proceeding   based  upon  an  action
         seeking  equitable relief including the construction
         or contest of a will, enforcement of a  contract  to
         make  a will, and proceedings involving testamentary
         trusts or the appointment of testamentary  trustees,
         $40.
              (D)  For filing in an estate (i) the appearance
         of any person for the purpose of consent or (ii) the
         appearance    of    an    executor,   administrator,
         administrator  to  collect,  guardian,  guardian  ad
         litem, or special administrator, no fee.
              (E)  Except   as   provided    in    subsection
         (v)(3)(D),  for  filing the appearance of any person
         or persons, $10.
              (F)  For each jury demand, $90.
              (G)  For disposition of  the  collection  of  a
         judgment  or  settlement  of  an action or claim for
         wrongful death of a decedent  or  of  any  cause  of
         action   of   a   ward,   when  there  is  no  other
         administration of the estate, $30, less  any  amount
         paid  under subsection (v)(1)(B) or (v)(2)(B) except
         that if the amount involved does not exceed  $5,000,
         the  fee, including any amount paid under subsection
         (v)(1)(B) or (v)(2)(B), shall be $10.
              (H)  For each  certified  copy  of  letters  of
         office,  of  court order or other certification, $1,
         plus 50¢ per page in  excess  of  3  pages  for  the
         document certified.
              (I)  For each exemplification, $1, plus the fee
         for certification.
         (4)  The    executor,    administrator,    guardian,
    petitioner,  or  other  interested  person  or his or her
    attorney shall pay the cost of publication by  the  clerk
    directly to the newspaper.
         (5)  The person on whose behalf a charge is incurred
    for   witness,   court   reporter,  appraiser,  or  other
    miscellaneous fee shall pay  the  same  directly  to  the
    person entitled thereto.
         (6)  The    executor,    administrator,    guardian,
    petitioner,  or  other  interested person or his attorney
    shall pay to the clerk all postage  charges  incurred  by
    the clerk in mailing petitions, orders, notices, or other
    documents  pursuant  to the provisions of the Probate Act
    of 1975.
(w)  Criminal and Quasi-Criminal Costs and Fees.
         (1)  The clerk shall be entitled  to  costs  in  all
    criminal   and  quasi-criminal  cases  from  each  person
    convicted or sentenced to supervision therein as follows:
              (A)  Felony complaints, $80.
              (B)  Misdemeanor complaints, $50.
              (C)  Business offense complaints, $50.
              (D)  Petty offense complaints, $50.
              (E)  Minor  traffic  or  ordinance  violations,
         $20.
              (F)  When court appearance required, $30.
              (G)  Motions to vacate or amend  final  orders,
         $20.
              (H)  Motions  to vacate bond forfeiture orders,
         $20.
              (I)  Motions  to  vacate  ex  parte  judgments,
         whenever filed, $20.
              (J)  Motions to vacate judgment on forfeitures,
         whenever filed, $20.
              (K)  Motions to vacate "failure to  appear"  or
         "failure to comply" notices sent to the Secretary of
         State, $20.
         (2)  In  counties  having  a population of more than
    650,000 but fewer than 3,000,000  inhabitants,  when  the
    violation  complaint  is  issued  by  a  municipal police
    department, the clerk shall be  entitled  to  costs  from
    each person convicted therein as follows:
              (A)  Minor  traffic  or  ordinance  violations,
         $10.
              (B)  When court appearance required, $15.
         (3)  In ordinance violation cases punishable by fine
    only, the clerk of the circuit court shall be entitled to
    receive,  unless the fee is excused upon a finding by the
    court that the defendant  is  indigent,  in  addition  to
    other fees or costs allowed or imposed by law, the sum of
    $50  as  a  fee for the services of a jury.  The jury fee
    shall be paid by the defendant at the time of filing  his
    or  her  jury  demand.   If the fee is not so paid by the
    defendant, no jury shall be called, and the case shall be
    tried by the court without a jury.
(x)  Transcripts of Judgment.
         For the filing of  a  transcript  of  judgment,  the
    clerk shall be entitled to the same fee as if it were the
    commencement of new suit.
(y)  Change of Venue.
         (1)  For  the filing of a change of case on a change
    of venue, the clerk shall be entitled to the same fee  as
    if it were the commencement of a new suit.
         (2)  The  fee  for the preparation and certification
    of a record on a change of venue to another jurisdiction,
    when original documents are forwarded, $25.
(z)  Tax objection complaints.
         For each tax objection complaint containing  one  or
    more  tax objections, regardless of the number of parcels
    involved or  the  number  of  taxpayers  joining  in  the
    complaint, $25.
(aa)  Tax Deeds.
         (1)  Petition  for  tax  deed, if only one parcel is
    involved, $150.
         (2)  For each additional parcel, add a fee of $50.
(bb)  Collections.
         (1)  For all collections made of others, except  the
    State  and  county  and  except  in  maintenance or child
    support  cases,  a  sum  equal  to  2.5%  of  the  amount
    collected and turned over.
         (2)  Interest earned on any funds held by the  clerk
    shall  be  turned  over  to the county general fund as an
    earning of the office.
         (3)  For any check, draft, or other bank  instrument
    returned  to  the clerk for non-sufficient funds, account
    closed, or payment stopped, $25.
         (4)  In child support  and  maintenance  cases,  the
    clerk, if authorized by an ordinance of the county board,
    may  collect  an  annual fee of up to $36 from the person
    making  payment  for  administering  the  collection  and
    distribution of maintenance and child  support  payments.
    This  fee  shall  be  in  addition  to  and separate from
    amounts ordered  to  be  paid  as  maintenance  or  child
    support   and   shall   be   deposited  into  a  Separate
    Maintenance and Child Support Collection Fund,  of  which
    the  clerk shall be the custodian, ex-officio, to be used
    by the clerk to further maintenance and child supports in
    his or her office. The clerk may recover from the  person
    making  the  maintenance  or  child  support  payment any
    additional cost incurred in the collection of this annual
    fee.
         The clerk shall also be entitled to a fee of $5  for
    certifications made to the Secretary of State as provided
    in  Section  7-703 of the Family Financial Responsibility
    Law and these fees  shall  also  be  deposited  into  the
    Separate Maintenance and Child Support Collection Fund.
(cc)  Corrections of Numbers.
         For  correction  of  the case number, case title, or
    attorney computer identification number, if  required  by
    rule  of  court,  on  any  document  filed in the clerk's
    office, to be charged against the party  that  filed  the
    document, $15.
(dd)  Exceptions.
         The fee requirements of this Section shall not apply
    to  police departments or other law enforcement agencies.
    In this Section, "law enforcement agency" means an agency
    of the State or a  unit  of  local  government  which  is
    vested  by  law  or  ordinance  with the duty to maintain
    public order and to enforce criminal laws or  ordinances.
    "Law  enforcement agency" also means the Attorney General
    or any state's attorney. The  fee  requirements  of  this
    Section  shall  not  apply to any action instituted under
    subsection  (b)  of  Section  11-31-1  of  the   Illinois
    Municipal  Code  by  a  private  owner  or tenant of real
    property within  1200  feet  of  a  dangerous  or  unsafe
    building  seeking an order compelling the owner or owners
    of the building to take any  of  the  actions  authorized
    under that subsection.
(ee)  Adoptions.
         (1)  For an adoption.............................$65
         (2)  Upon  good cause shown, the court may waive the
    adoption filing fee in a  special  needs  adoption.   The
    term  "special  needs  adoption"  shall  have the meaning
    ascribed to it by the Illinois Department of Children and
    Family Services.
(ff)  Adoption exemptions.
         No fee other than that set forth in subsection  (ee)
    shall  be  charged  to  any  person in connection with an
    adoption proceeding.
(Source: P.A.  89-92,  eff.  7-1-96;  89-593,  eff.   8-1-96;
90-466, eff. 8-17-97.)

    (705 ILCS 105/27.2a) (from Ch. 25, par. 27.2a)
    Sec.  27.2a.  The fees of the clerks of the circuit court
in all counties having a  population  of  3,000,000  or  more
inhabitants  in the instances described in this Section shall
be as provided in this Section.  The fees shall  be  paid  in
advance and shall be as follows:
(a)  Civil Cases.
         The  fee  for filing a complaint, petition, or other
    pleading initiating a civil action,  with  the  following
    exceptions, shall be $190.
              (A)  When the amount of money or damages or the
         value  of  personal property claimed does not exceed
         $250, $15.
              (B)  When that amount exceeds $250 but does not
         exceed $1000, $40.
              (C)  When that amount exceeds  $1000  but  does
         not exceed $2500, $50.
              (D)  When  that  amount  exceeds $2500 but does
         not exceed $5000, $100.
              (E)  When that amount exceeds  $5000  but  does
         not exceed $15,000, $150.
              (F)  For  the exercise of eminent domain, $150.
         For each additional lot or tract of land or right or
         interest  therein  subject  to  be  condemned,   the
         damages  in  respect to which shall require separate
         assessment by a jury, $150.
(b)  Forcible Entry and Detainer.
         In each forcible entry and detainer  case  when  the
    plaintiff seeks possession only or unites with his or her
    claim  for possession of the property a claim for rent or
    damages or both in the amount of $15,000  or  less,  $75.
    When the plaintiff unites his or her claim for possession
    with  a  claim  for  rent  or  damages  or both exceeding
    $15,000, $225.
(c)  Counterclaim or Joining Third Party Defendant.
         When any defendant files a counterclaim as  part  of
    his  or her answer or otherwise or joins another party as
    a third party defendant, or both, the defendant shall pay
    a fee for each counterclaim or third party action  in  an
    amount  equal  to the fee he or she would have had to pay
    had he or she brought a separate action  for  the  relief
    sought  in  the  counterclaim  or against the third party
    defendant, less the amount of the appearance fee, if that
    has been paid.
(d)  Confession of Judgment.
         In a confession of judgment when the amount does not
    exceed $1500, $60.  When the amount  exceeds  $1500,  but
    does  not  exceed  $5000,  $75.   When the amount exceeds
    $5000, but does not exceed $15,000, $175. When the amount
    exceeds $15,000, $250.
(e)  Appearance.
         The fee for filing an appearance in each civil  case
    shall be $75, except as follows:
              (A)  When the plaintiff in a forcible entry and
         detainer case seeks possession only, $40.
              (B)  When  the  amount  in  the  case  does not
         exceed $1500, $40.
              (C)  When that amount exceeds  $1500  but  does
         not exceed $15,000, $60.
(f)  Garnishment, Wage Deduction, and Citation.
         In  garnishment affidavit, wage deduction affidavit,
    and citation petition when the  amount  does  not  exceed
    $1,000,  $15; when the amount exceeds $1,000 but does not
    exceed $5,000, $30; and when the amount  exceeds  $5,000,
    $50.
(g)  Petition to Vacate or Modify.
         (1)  Petition to vacate or modify any final judgment
    or  order of court, except in forcible entry and detainer
    cases and small claims cases or a petition to  reopen  an
    estate,  to  modify,  terminate, or enforce a judgment or
    order  for  child  or  spousal  support,  or  to  modify,
    suspend, or terminate an order for withholding, if  filed
    before  30 days after the entry of the judgment or order,
    $50.
         (2)  Petition to vacate or modify any final judgment
    or  order  of  court,  except  a  petition   to   modify,
    terminate,  or  enforce  a judgment or order for child or
    spousal support or to modify, suspend,  or  terminate  an
    order  for withholding, if filed later than 30 days after
    the entry of the judgment or order, $75.
         (3)  Petition to vacate order  of  bond  forfeiture,
    $40.
(h)  Mailing.
         When  the clerk is required to mail, the fee will be
    $10, plus the cost of postage.
(i)  Certified Copies.
         Each certified copy of a judgment after  the  first,
    except  in  small  claims and forcible entry and detainer
    cases, $15.
(j)  Habeas Corpus.
         For filing a petition for relief by  habeas  corpus,
    $125.
(k)  Certification, Authentication, and Reproduction.
         (1)  Each certification or authentication for taking
    the  acknowledgment  of  a  deed  or  other instrument in
    writing with the seal of office, $6.
         (2)  Court  appeals  when  original  documents   are
    forwarded, under 100 pages, plus delivery and costs, $75.
         (3)  Court   appeals  when  original  documents  are
    forwarded, over 100 pages, plus delivery and costs, $150.
         (4)  Court  appeals  when  original  documents   are
    forwarded,  over 200 pages, an additional fee of 25 cents
    per page.
         (5)  For reproduction of any document  contained  in
    the clerk's files:
              (A)  First page, $2.
              (B)  Next 19 pages, 50 cents per page.
              (C)  All remaining pages, 25 cents per page.
(l)  Remands.
         In any cases remanded to the Circuit Court  from the
    Supreme Court or the Appellate Court for a new trial, the
    clerk  shall  file  the remanding order and reinstate the
    case with either its original number  or  a  new  number.
    The  Clerk shall not charge any new or additional fee for
    the reinstatement.  Upon reinstatement  the  Clerk  shall
    advise  the  parties of the reinstatement.  A party shall
    have the same  right  to  a  jury  trial  on  remand  and
    reinstatement  as he or she had before the appeal, and no
    additional or new fee or charge shall be made for a  jury
    trial after remand.
(m)  Record Search.
         For   each  record  search,  within  a  division  or
    municipal district, the clerk  shall  be  entitled  to  a
    search fee of $6 for each year searched.
(n)  Hard Copy.
         For  each  page of hard copy print output, when case
    records are maintained on an automated medium, the  clerk
    shall be entitled to a fee of $6.
(o)  Index Inquiry and Other Records.
         No    fee    shall   be   charged   for   a   single
    plaintiff/defendant index inquiry or single  case  record
    inquiry  when  this  request  is  made  in person and the
    records are maintained in a current automated medium, and
    when no hard copy print output is requested.  The fees to
    be charged for management records, multiple case records,
    and multiple journal records  may  be  specified  by  the
    Chief  Judge  pursuant  to  the guidelines for access and
    dissemination of  information  approved  by  the  Supreme
    Court.
(p)  Commitment Petitions.
         For  filing  commitment  petitions  under the Mental
    Health and Developmental Disabilities Code, $50.
(q)  Alias Summons.
         For each alias summons or  citation  issued  by  the
    clerk, $5.
(r)  Other Fees.
         Any fees not covered in this Section shall be set by
    rule  or  administrative  order of the Circuit Court with
    the approval of the Administrative Office of the Illinois
    Courts.
         The  clerk  of  the  circuit   court   may   provide
    additional  services  for which there is no fee specified
    by statute  in  connection  with  the  operation  of  the
    clerk's  office  as  may  be  requested by the public and
    agreed to by the clerk and approved by the chief judge of
    the circuit court.  Any charges for  additional  services
    shall  be  as  agreed  to between the clerk and the party
    making the request and approved by the chief judge of the
    circuit court.   Nothing  in  this  subsection  shall  be
    construed to require any clerk to provide any service not
    otherwise required by law.
(s)  Jury Services.
         The  clerk shall be entitled to receive, in addition
    to other fees allowed by law, the sum of $200, as  a  fee
    for  the  services  of  a  jury in every civil action not
    quasi-criminal in its nature and not a proceeding for the
    exercise of the right of  eminent  domain  and  in  every
    other action wherein the right of trial by jury is or may
    be given by law.  The jury fee shall be paid by the party
    demanding  a  jury at the time of filing the jury demand.
    If the fee is not paid by either party, no jury shall  be
    called in the action or proceeding, and the same shall be
    tried by the court without a jury.
(t)  Voluntary Assignment.
         For  filing  each deed of voluntary assignment, $20;
    for  recording  the  same,  50¢  for  each   100   words.
    Exceptions  filed to claims presented to an assignee of a
    debtor who  has  made  a  voluntary  assignment  for  the
    benefit of creditors shall be considered and treated, for
    the  purpose of taxing costs therein, as actions in which
    the party or  parties  filing  the  exceptions  shall  be
    considered   as  party  or  parties  plaintiff,  and  the
    claimant or claimants as party or parties defendant,  and
    those  parties  respectively  shall  pay to the clerk the
    same fees as provided by this Section to be paid in other
    actions.
(u)  Expungement Petition.
         The clerk shall be entitled to receive a fee of  $60
    for each expungement petition filed and an additional fee
    of  $4  for   each  certified copy of an order to expunge
    arrest records.
(v)  Probate.
    The clerk is entitled to receive the  fees  specified  in
this  subsection  (v), which shall be paid in advance, except
that, for good cause shown, the court may suspend, reduce, or
release the costs payable under this subsection:
         (1)  For administration of the estate of a  decedent
    (whether  testate  or  intestate) or of a missing person,
    $150, plus  the  fees  specified  in  subsection  (v)(3),
    except:
              (A)  When  the  value  of the real and personal
         property does not exceed $15,000, the fee  shall  be
         $40.
              (B)  When  (i) proof of heirship alone is made,
         (ii) a domestic  or  foreign  will  is  admitted  to
         probate  without  administration (including proof of
         heirship), or (iii) letters of office are issued for
         a particular purpose without administration  of  the
         estate, the fee shall be $40.
         (2)  For  administration  of  the  estate of a ward,
    $75,  plus  the  fees  specified  in  subsection  (v)(3),
    except:
              (A)  When the value of the  real  and  personal
         property  does  not exceed $15,000, the fee shall be
         $40.
              (B)  When (i) letters of office are issued to a
         guardian of the person or persons, but  not  of  the
         estate  or  (ii) letters of office are issued in the
         estate of  a  ward  without  administration  of  the
         estate, including filing or joining in the filing of
         a  tax  return or releasing a mortgage or consenting
         to the marriage of the ward, the fee shall be $20.
         (3)  In  addition  to   the   fees   payable   under
    subsection   (v)(1)   or  (v)(2)  of  this  Section,  the
    following fees are payable:
              (A)  For each account  (other  than  one  final
         account) filed in the estate of a decedent, or ward,
         $25.
              (B)  For  filing  a claim in an estate when the
         amount claimed is $150 or more but less  than  $500,
         $20;  when  the  amount  claimed is $500 or more but
         less than $10,000, $40; when the amount  claimed  is
         $10,000  or  more,  $60;  provided that the court in
         allowing a claim may add to the amount  allowed  the
         filing fee paid by the claimant.
              (C)  For filing in an estate a claim, petition,
         or  supplemental  proceeding  based  upon  an action
         seeking equitable relief including the  construction
         or  contest  of a will, enforcement of a contract to
         make a will, and proceedings involving  testamentary
         trusts  or the appointment of testamentary trustees,
         $60.
              (D)  For filing in an estate (i) the appearance
         of any person for the purpose of consent or (ii) the
         appearance   of    an    executor,    administrator,
         administrator  to  collect,  guardian,  guardian  ad
         litem, or special administrator, no fee.
              (E)  Except    as    provided   in   subsection
         (v)(3)(D), for filing the appearance of  any  person
         or persons, $30.
              (F)  For each jury demand, $125.
              (G)  For  disposition  of  the  collection of a
         judgment or settlement of an  action  or  claim  for
         wrongful  death  of  a  decedent  or of any cause of
         action  of  a  ward,  when   there   is   no   other
         administration  of  the estate, $50, less any amount
         paid under subsection (v)(1)(B) or (v)(2)(B)  except
         that  if the amount involved does not exceed $5,000,
         the fee, including any amount paid under  subsection
         (v)(1)(B) or (v)(2)(B), shall be $20.
              (H)  For  each  certified  copy  of  letters of
         office, of court order or other  certification,  $2,
         plus  $1  per  page  in  excess  of  3 pages for the
         document certified.
              (I)  For each exemplification, $2, plus the fee
         for certification.
         (4)  The    executor,    administrator,    guardian,
    petitioner, or other interested  person  or  his  or  her
    attorney  shall  pay the cost of publication by the clerk
    directly to the newspaper.
         (5)  The person on whose behalf a charge is incurred
    for  witness,  court  reporter,   appraiser,   or   other
    miscellaneous  fee  shall  pay  the  same directly to the
    person entitled thereto.
         (6)  The    executor,    administrator,    guardian,
    petitioner, or other interested  person  or  his  or  her
    attorney  shall  pay  to  the  clerk  all postage charges
    incurred by  the  clerk  in  mailing  petitions,  orders,
    notices, or other documents pursuant to the provisions of
    the Probate Act of 1975.
(w)  Criminal and Quasi-Criminal Costs and Fees.
         (1)  The  clerk  shall  be  entitled to costs in all
    criminal  and  quasi-criminal  cases  from  each   person
    convicted or sentenced to supervision therein as follows:
              (A)  Felony complaints, $125.
              (B)  Misdemeanor complaints, $75.
              (C)  Business offense complaints, $75.
              (D)  Petty offense complaints, $75.
              (E)  Minor  traffic  or  ordinance  violations,
         $30.
              (F)  When court appearance required, $50.
              (G)  Motions  to  vacate or amend final orders,
         $40.
              (H)  Motions to vacate bond forfeiture  orders,
         $30.
              (I)  Motions  to  vacate  ex  parte  judgments,
         whenever filed, $30.
              (J)  Motions to vacate judgment on forfeitures,
         whenever filed, $25.
              (K)  Motions  to  vacate "failure to appear" or
         "failure to comply" notices sent to the Secretary of
         State, $40.
         (2)  In counties having a population of 3,000,000 or
    more,  when  the  violation  complaint  is  issued  by  a
    municipal police department, the clerk shall be  entitled
    to costs from each person convicted therein as follows:
              (A)  Minor  traffic  or  ordinance  violations,
         $30.
              (B)  When court appearance required, $50.
         (3)  In ordinance violation cases punishable by fine
    only, the clerk of the circuit court shall be entitled to
    receive,  unless the fee is excused upon a finding by the
    court that the defendant  is  indigent,  in  addition  to
    other fees or costs allowed or imposed by law, the sum of
    $100  as  a fee for the services of a jury.  The jury fee
    shall be paid by the defendant at the time of filing  his
    or  her  jury  demand.   If the fee is not so paid by the
    defendant, no jury shall be called, and the case shall be
    tried by the court without a jury.
(x)  Transcripts of Judgment.
         For the filing of  a  transcript  of  judgment,  the
    clerk shall be entitled to the same fee as if it were the
    commencement of a new suit.
(y)  Change of Venue.
         (1)  For  the filing of a change of case on a change
    of venue, the clerk shall be entitled to the same fee  as
    if it were the commencement of a new suit.
         (2)  The  fee  for the preparation and certification
    of a record on a change of venue to another jurisdiction,
    when original documents are forwarded, $40.
(z)  Tax objection complaints.
         For each tax objection complaint containing  one  or
    more  tax objections, regardless of the number of parcels
    involved or  the  number  of  taxpayers  joining  in  the
    complaint, $50.
(aa)  Tax Deeds.
         (1)  Petition  for  tax  deed, if only one parcel is
    involved, $250.
         (2)  For each additional parcel, add a fee of $100.
(bb)  Collections.
         (1)  For all collections made of others, except  the
    State  and  county  and  except  in  maintenance or child
    support  cases,  a  sum  equal  to  3.0%  of  the  amount
    collected and turned over.
         (2)  Interest earned on any funds held by the  clerk
    shall  be  turned  over  to the county general fund as an
    earning of the office.
         (3)  For any check, draft, or other bank  instrument
    returned  to  the clerk for non-sufficient funds, account
    closed, or payment stopped, $25.
         (4)  In child support  and  maintenance  cases,  the
    clerk, if authorized by an ordinance of the county board,
    may  collect  an  annual fee of up to $36 from the person
    making  payment  for  administering  the  collection  and
    distribution of maintenance and child  support  payments.
    This  fee  shall  be  in  addition  to  and separate from
    amounts ordered  to  be  paid  as  maintenance  or  child
    support   and   shall   be   deposited  into  a  Separate
    Maintenance and Child Support Collection Fund,  of  which
    the  clerk shall be the custodian, ex-officio, to be used
    by the clerk to further maintenance and child supports in
    his or her office.  The clerk may recover from the person
    making the  maintenance  or  child  support  payment  any
    additional cost incurred in the collection of this annual
    fee.
         The  clerk shall also be entitled to a fee of $5 for
    certifications made to the Secretary of State as provided
    in Section 7-703 of the Family  Financial  Responsibility
    Law  and  these  fees  shall  also  be deposited into the
    Separate Maintenance and Child Support Collection Fund.
(cc)  Corrections of Numbers.
         For correction of the case number,  case  title,  or
    attorney  computer  identification number, if required by
    rule of court, on  any  document  filed  in  the  clerk's
    office,  to  be  charged against the party that filed the
    document, $25.
(dd)  Exceptions.
         (1)  The fee requirements of this Section shall  not
    apply  to  police  departments  or  other law enforcement
    agencies.  In  this  Section,  "law  enforcement  agency"
    means  an  agency  of  the  State  or  a  unit  of  local
    government  which  is vested by law or ordinance with the
    duty to maintain public order  and  to  enforce  criminal
    laws  or ordinances.  "Law enforcement agency" also means
    the Attorney General or any state's attorney.
         (2)  No fee provided herein shall be charged to  any
    unit  of  local  government  or  school district. The fee
    requirements of this  Section  shall  not  apply  to  any
    action instituted under subsection (b) of Section 11-31-1
    of  the  Illinois  Municipal  Code  by a private owner or
    tenant of real property within 1200 feet of  a  dangerous
    or  unsafe building seeking an order compelling the owner
    or owners of the building to  take  any  of  the  actions
    authorized under that subsection.
(ee)  Adoption.
         (1)  For an adoption.............................$65
         (2)  Upon  good cause shown, the court may waive the
    adoption filing fee in a  special  needs  adoption.   The
    term  "special  needs  adoption"  shall  have the meaning
    ascribed to it by the Illinois Department of Children and
    Family Services.
(ff)  Adoption exemptions.
         No fee other than that set forth in subsection  (ee)
    shall  be  charged  to  any  person in connection with an
    adoption proceeding.
(Source: P.A.  89-92,  eff.  7-1-96;  89-593,  eff.   8-1-96;
90-466, eff. 8-17-97.)

    Section  5.   The  Probate  Act  of  1975  is  amended by
changing Sections 1-2.23, 1-2.24, 11-5, 11-5.3, 11-5.4, 11-8,
11-8.1, 11-13.1,  11-14.1,  11a-8,  11a-17,  11a-18,  11a-23,
12-2,  21-2,  21-2.04,  21-2.05,  21-2.07,  21-2.08, 21-2.11,
21-2.12,  and  21-2.13,  and  by  adding  Sections   11a-3.1,
11a-3.2,   11a-8.1,   11a-10.2,  11a-18.2,  and  11a-18.3  as
follows:

    (755 ILCS 5/1-2.23)
    Sec. 1-2.23. "Standby guardian" means: (i) a guardian  of
the  person  or  estate, or both, of a minor, as appointed by
the court under Section 11-5.3,  to  become  effective  at  a
later  date  under  Section 11-13.1 or (ii) a guardian of the
person or estate, or both, of a disabled person, as appointed
by the court under Section 11a-3.1, to become effective at  a
later date under Section 11a-18.2.
(Source: P.A. 88-202; 88-529.)

    (755 ILCS 5/1-2.24)
    Sec.  1-2.24.  "Short-term  guardian" means a guardian of
the person of a minor as appointed by a parent of  the  minor
under  Section  11-5.4  or  a  guardian  of  the  person of a
disabled person as appointed by the guardian of the  disabled
person under Section 11a-3.2.
(Source: P.A. 88-529.)

    (755 ILCS 5/11-5) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 11-5)
    Sec. 11-5. Appointment of guardian.
    (a)  Upon the filing of a petition for the appointment of
a  guardian  or  on  its  own motion, the court may appoint a
guardian of the estate or of both the person and estate, of a
minor, or may appoint a guardian of  the  person  only  of  a
minor or minors, the person or estate, or both, of a minor as
the  court  finds  to be in the best interest of the minor or
minors.
    (a-1)  A parent, adoptive parent or  adjudicated  parent,
whose parental rights have not been terminated, may designate
in  any  writing, including a will, a person qualified to act
under Section 11-3 to be appointed as guardian of the  person
or  estate,  or  both,  of  an  unmarried minor or of a child
likely to be born.  A parent, adoptive parent or  adjudicated
parent,  whose parental rights have not been terminated, or a
guardian or a standby guardian of an unmarried minor or of  a
child  likely  to  be  born  may  designate  in  any writing,
including a will, a person qualified  to  act  under  Section
11-3  to  be  appointed  as successor guardian of the minor's
person or estate, or both.  The designation must be witnessed
by 2 or more credible witnesses at least  18  years  of  age,
neither  of  whom  is  the person designated as the guardian.
The designation may be proved by any competent evidence.   If
the  designation  is executed and attested in the same manner
as  a  will,  it  shall  have  prima  facie   validity.   The
designation  of  a  guardian  or  successor guardian does not
affect the rights of the other parent in the minor.
    (b)  The  court  lacks  jurisdiction  to  proceed  on   a
petition  for the appointment of a guardian of a minor if (i)
the minor has a living parent, adoptive parent or adjudicated
parent, whose parental rights have not been terminated, whose
whereabouts are known, and who is willing and  able  to  make
and  carry out day-to-day child care decisions concerning the
minor,  unless  the  parent  or  parents   consent   to   the
appointment  or,  after receiving notice of the hearing under
Section 11-10.1, fail to object to  the  appointment  at  the
hearing  on  the petition or (ii) there is a guardian for the
minor appointed by a court of competent jurisdiction.   There
shall be a rebuttable presumption that a parent of a minor is
willing  and able to make and carry out day-to-day child care
decisions concerning the minor, but the  presumption  may  be
rebutted by a preponderance of the evidence.
    (b-1)  If  the  court finds the appointment of a guardian
of the minor to be in the best interest of the minor, and  if
a  standby  guardian  has  previously  been appointed for the
minor under Section  11-5.3,  the  court  shall  appoint  the
standby  guardian as the guardian of the person or estate, or
both, of the minor unless the court finds,  upon  good  cause
shown,  that  the  appointment would no longer be in the best
interest of the minor.
    (c)  If the minor is 14 years of age or more,  the  minor
may  nominate  the guardian of the minor's person and estate,
subject to approval of the court. If the minor's  nominee  is
not  approved  by the court or if, after notice to the minor,
the minor fails to nominate a guardian of the minor's  person
or  estate,  the  court  may  appoint  the  guardian  without
nomination.
    (d)  The  court  shall  not  appoint  as  guardian of the
person of the minor any person whom the court has  determined
had caused or substantially contributed to the minor becoming
a  neglected or abused minor as defined in the Juvenile Court
Act of 1987 unless 2 years have elapsed since the last proven
incident of abuse or neglect and the  court  determines  that
appointment  of  such  person  as  guardian  is  in  the best
interests of the minor.
    (e)  Previous statements made by the  minor  relating  to
any  allegations  that  the  minor  is an abused or neglected
child within the meaning of the Abused  and  Neglected  Child
Reporting  Act,  or  an  abused or neglected minor within the
meaning  of  the  Juvenile  Court  Act  of  1987,  shall   be
admissible in evidence in a hearing concerning appointment of
a  guardian  of  the  person or estate of the minor.  No such
statement, however, if  uncorroborated  and  not  subject  to
cross-examination, shall be sufficient in itself to support a
finding of abuse or neglect.
(Source: P.A. 90-430, eff. 8-16-97; 90-472, eff. 8-17-97.)

    (755 ILCS 5/11-5.3)
    Sec. 11-5.3.  Appointment of standby guardian.
    (a)  A  parent,  adoptive  parent, or adjudicated parent,
whose parental  rights  have  not  been  terminated,  or  the
guardian  of  the  person  of  a  minor  may designate in any
writing, including a will, a person qualified  to  act  under
Section  11-3  to  be  appointed  as  standby guardian of the
person or estate, or both, of an  unmarried  minor  or  of  a
child  likely  to  be  born.   A  parent, adoptive parent, or
adjudicated parent,  whose  parental  rights  have  not  been
terminated,  or  the  guardian  of the person of a minor or a
standby guardian of an unmarried minor or of a  child  likely
to  be born may designate in any writing, including a will, a
person qualified to act under Section 11-3 to be appointed as
successor standby guardian of the minor's person  or  estate,
or  both.  The  designation  must  be  witnessed by 2 or more
credible witnesses at least 18 years of age, neither of  whom
is  the  person  designated  as  the  standby  guardian.  The
designation  may be proved by any competent evidence.  If the
designation is executed and attested in the same manner as  a
will,  it shall have prima facie validity. The designation of
a standby guardian or successor  standby  guardian  does  not
affect the rights of the other parent in the minor.
    (b)  Upon the filing of a petition for the appointment of
a  standby guardian, the court may appoint a standby guardian
of the person or estate, or both, of a  minor  as  the  court
finds to be in the best interest of the minor.
    (c)  The   court  lacks  jurisdiction  to  proceed  on  a
petition for the appointment of a standby guardian of a minor
if (i) the minor has a  living  parent,  adoptive  parent  or
adjudicated  parent,  whose  parental  rights  have  not been
terminated, whose whereabouts are known, and who  is  willing
and  able  to  make  and  carry  out  day-to-day  child  care
decisions  concerning the minor, unless the parent or parents
consent to the appointment or, after receiving notice of  the
hearing   under  Section  11-10.1,  fail  to  object  to  the
appointment at the hearing on the petition or (ii) there is a
guardian for the minor appointed  by  a  court  of  competent
jurisdiction.  There shall be a rebuttable presumption that a
parent  of  a minor is willing and able to make and carry out
day-to-day child care decisions concerning the minor, but the
presumption  may  be  rebutted  by  a  preponderance  of  the
evidence.
    (d)  The standby guardian shall take and file an oath  or
affirmation   that   the  standby  guardian  will  faithfully
discharge the  duties  of  the  office  of  standby  guardian
according  to law, and shall file in and have approved by the
court a bond binding the standby guardian so to do, but shall
not be required to file a bond  until  the  standby  guardian
assumes  all  duties  as  guardian of the minor under Section
11-13.1.
    (e)  The designation of a standby guardian may, but  need
not, be in the following form:

               DESIGNATION OF STANDBY GUARDIAN

    [IT IS IMPORTANT TO READ THE FOLLOWING INSTRUCTIONS:
    A  standby  guardian is someone who has been appointed by
the court as the person who will act as guardian of the child
when the child's parents or the guardian of the person of the
child die or are no longer willing or able to make and  carry
out  day-to-day child care decisions concerning the child. By
properly completing this form, a parent or  the  guardian  of
the  person of the child is naming the person that the parent
or the guardian wants to be appointed as the standby guardian
of the child or children of the parent.  Both  parents  of  a
child  may  join  together and co-sign this form. Signing the
form does not appoint the standby guardian; to be  appointed,
a petition must be filed in and approved by the court.]
         1.  Parent  (or  guardian)  and Children. I, (insert
    name  of  designating  parent  or  guardian),   currently
    residing  at  (insert  address  of  designating parent or
    guardian), am a parent (or the guardian of the person) of
    the following child or children (or of a child likely  to
    be  born):  (insert name and date of birth of each child,
    or insert the words "not yet born" to designate a standby
    guardian for a child likely to be born  and  the  child's
    expected date of birth).
         2.  Standby   Guardian.    I  hereby  designate  the
    following person to be appointed as standby guardian  for
    the  my  child  or children listed above (insert name and
    address of person designated).
         3.  Successor Standby Guardian.  If the person named
    in item 2  above  cannot  or  will  not  act  as  standby
    guardian,   I   designate  the  following  person  to  be
    appointed as successor standby guardian for the my  child
    or   children:   (insert   name  and  address  of  person
    designated).
         4.  Date and Signature.  This  designation  is  made
    this (insert day) day of (insert month and year).
              Signed:  (designating parent or guardian)
         5.  Witnesses.  I saw the parent (or the guardian of
    the  person  of  the  child) sign this designation or the
    parent (or the guardian of the person of the child)  told
    me  that  (he or she) the parent signed this designation.
    Then I  signed  the  designation  as  a  witness  in  the
    presence  of  the  parent  (or  the  guardian).  I am not
    designated  in  this  instrument  to  act  as  a  standby
    guardian for the parent's  child  or  children.   (insert
    space   for   names,   addresses,  and  signatures  of  2
    witnesses).
(Source: P.A. 88-529.)

    (755 ILCS 5/11-5.4)
    Sec. 11-5.4.  Short-term guardian.
    (a)  A parent, adoptive parent,  or  adjudicated  parent,
whose  parental  rights  have  not  been  terminated,  or the
guardian of the person of a minor  may  appoint  in  writing,
without court approval, a short-term guardian of an unmarried
minor  or  a child likely to be born.  The written instrument
appointing a short-term guardian shall  be  dated  and  shall
identify  the  appointing  parent or guardian, the minor, and
the person appointed to  be  the  short-term  guardian.   The
written  instrument  shall  be signed by, or at the direction
of, the appointing parent in  the  presence  of  at  least  2
credible  witnesses at least 18 years of age, neither of whom
is the person appointed  as  the  short-term  guardian.   The
person  appointed  as the short-term guardian shall also sign
the written instrument, but need not sign at the same time as
the appointing parent.
    (b)  A parent or guardian shall not appoint a  short-term
guardian  of  a  minor  if  (i)  the minor has another living
parent, adoptive parent or adjudicated parent, whose parental
rights have not been terminated, whose whereabouts are known,
and who is willing and able to make and carry out  day-to-day
child   care  decisions  concerning  the  minor,  unless  the
nonappointing parent consents to the appointment  by  signing
the  written  instrument  of  appointment  or (ii) there is a
guardian for the minor appointed  by  a  court  of  competent
jurisdiction.
    (c)  The   appointment  of  the  short-term  guardian  is
effective immediately upon the date the written instrument is
executed, unless the  written  instrument  provides  for  the
appointment  to  become effective upon a later specified date
or event.  The short-term guardian shall  have  authority  to
act  as  guardian of the minor as provided in Section 11-13.2
for a period of 60 days from  the  date  the  appointment  is
effective,  unless  the  written  instrument provides for the
appointment to terminate upon an earlier  specified  date  or
event.  Only  one  written instrument appointing a short-term
guardian may be in force at any given time.
    (d)  Every appointment of a short-term  guardian  may  be
amended  or  revoked  by  the  appointing  parent  or  by the
appointing guardian of the person of the minor  at  any  time
and  in any manner communicated to the short-term guardian or
to any other person.  Any person other  than  the  short-term
guardian to whom a revocation or amendment is communicated or
delivered  shall  make  all  reasonable efforts to inform the
short-term guardian of that fact as promptly as possible.
    (e)  The  appointment  of  a   short-term   guardian   or
successor  short-term  guardian does not affect the rights of
the other parent in the minor.
    (f)  The  written  instrument  appointing  a   short-term
guardian may, but need not, be in the following form:

             APPOINTMENT OF SHORT-TERM GUARDIAN

      [IT IS IMPORTANT TO READ THE FOLLOWING INSTRUCTIONS:
    By  properly  completing  this  form,  a  parent  or  the
guardian  of the person of the child is appointing a guardian
of a child of the parent (or a minor ward of the guardian, as
the case may be) for a period of up to 60 days.   A  separate
form should be completed for each child. The person appointed
as the guardian must sign the form, but need not do so at the
same time as the parent or parents or guardian.
    This  form may not be used to appoint a guardian if there
is a guardian already appointed for the child, except that if
a guardian of the person of the  child  has  been  appointed,
that  guardian  may  use  this  form  to appoint a short-term
guardian.  Both  living  parents  of  a  child  may  together
appoint  a  guardian  of  the  child,  or the guardian of the
person of the child may appoint a guardian of the child,  for
a  period  of  up to 60 days through the use of this form. If
the short-term guardian is appointed by both  living  parents
of  the child, the parents need not sign the form at the same
time.]
         1.  Parent (or guardian) and Child.  I, (insert name
    of appointing parent or guardian), currently residing  at
    (insert  address  of appointing parent or guardian), am a
    parent (or the guardian of the person) of  the  following
    child  (or  of  a child likely to be born):  (insert name
    and date of birth of child, or insert the words "not  yet
    born" to appoint a short-term guardian for a child likely
    to be born and the child's expected date of birth).
         2.  Guardian.  I hereby appoint the following person
    as the short-term guardian for the my child: (insert name
    and address of appointed person).
         3.  Effective   date.    This   appointment  becomes
    effective: (check one if you wish it to be applicable)
              ( )  On the date that I state in writing that I
         am no longer either willing  or  able  to  make  and
         carry out day-to-day child care decisions concerning
         the my child.
              ( )  On the date that a physician familiar with
         my  condition  certifies  in  writing  that  I am no
         longer  willing  or  able  to  make  and  carry  out
         day-to-day child care decisions  concerning  the  my
         child.
              ( )  On  the  date  that  I  am  admitted as an
         in-patient  to  a  hospital  or  other  health  care
         institution.
              ( )  On the following date: (insert date).
              ( )  Other: (insert other).
[NOTE:  If this item is not  completed,  the  appointment  is
effective  immediately  upon  the date the form is signed and
dated below.]
         4.  Termination.  This appointment  shall  terminate
    60  days  after  the effective date, unless it terminates
    sooner  as  determined  by  the  event  or  date  I  have
    indicated  below:  (check  one  if  you  wish  it  to  be
    applicable)
              ( )  On the date that I state in writing that I
         am willing and able to make and carry out day-to-day
         child care decisions concerning the my child.
              ( )  On the date that a physician familiar with
         my condition certifies in writing that I am  willing
         and able to make and carry out day-to-day child care
         decisions concerning the my child.
              ( )  On  the date that I am discharged from the
         hospital or other health care  institution  where  I
         was admitted as an in-patient, which established the
         effective date.
              ( )  On  the  date  which is (state a number of
         days, but no more  than  60  days)  days  after  the
         effective date.
              ( )  Other: (insert other).
[NOTE:  If  this  item is not completed, the appointment will
be effective for a  period  of  60  days,  beginning  on  the
effective date.]
         5.  Date  and  signature  of  appointing  parent  or
    guardian.  This appointment is made this (insert day) day
    of (insert month and year).
              Signed:  (appointing parent)
         6.  Witnesses.  I saw the parent (or the guardian of
    the  person  of  the child) sign this instrument or I saw
    the parent (or the guardian of the person of  the  child)
    direct someone to sign this instrument for the parent (or
    the guardian). Then I signed this instrument as a witness
    in  the  presence  of the parent (or the guardian).  I am
    not appointed in this instrument to act as the short-term
    guardian for the  parent's  child.    (Insert  space  for
    names, addresses, and signatures of 2 witnesses)
         7.  Acceptance  of  short-term  guardian.   I accept
    this appointment as short-term guardian on  this  (insert
    day) day of (insert month and year).
              Signed:  (short-term guardian)
         8.  Consent  of  child's  other  parent.  I, (insert
    name of  the  child's  other  living  parent),  currently
    residing  at  (insert  address  of  child's  other living
    parent), hereby  consent  to  this  appointment  on  this
    (insert day) day of (insert month and year).
              Signed:  (consenting parent)
[NOTE:  The signature of a consenting parent is not necessary
if one of the following applies: (i) the child's other parent
has died; or (ii) the whereabouts of the child's other parent
are  not  known;  or  (iii)  the  child's other parent is not
willing or able to make and carry out day-to-day  child  care
decisions  concerning  the child; or (iv) the child's parents
were  never  married  and  no  court  has  issued  an   order
establishing parentage.]
(Source: P.A. 88-529; 88-670, eff. 12-2-94.)

    (755 ILCS 5/11-8) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 11-8)
    Sec. 11-8. Petition for guardian of minor.
    (a)  The  petition  for  appointment of a guardian of the
estate, or of both the person and estate, of a minor, or  for
appointment  of the guardian of the person only of a minor or
minors the person or estate, or both, of a minor must  state,
if known:
    (1)  (a)  The  name,  date  of birth and residence of the
minor; (2) (b)  the names and post office  addresses  of  the
nearest  relatives  of  the minor in the following order: (i)
(1) the spouse, if any; if none, (ii)  (2)  the  parents  and
adult  brothers  and  sisters, if any; if none, (iii) (3) the
nearest adult kindred; (3)  (c)  the  name  and  post  office
address  of  the  person having the custody of the minor; (4)
(d) the approximate value of the personal estate; (5) (e) the
amount of the  anticipated  gross  annual  income  and  other
receipts;  (6) (f) the name, post office address and, in case
of an individual, the age  and  occupation  of  the  proposed
guardian;  (7)  (g)  the  facts  concerning  the execution or
admission to  probate  of  the  written  designation  of  the
guardian,  if  any,  a  copy of which shall be attached to or
filed with the petition; and (8) (h) the facts concerning any
juvenile, adoption, parentage, dissolution,  or  guardianship
court  actions pending concerning the minor or the parents of
the minor and whether any guardian is  currently  acting  for
the minor. In addition, if the petition seeks the appointment
of a previously appointed standby guardian as guardian of the
minor,  the  petition  must  also  state:  (9)  (i) the facts
concerning the standby guardian's  previous  appointment  and
(10)  (j)  the date of death of the minor's parent or parents
or the facts concerning the consent of the minor's parent  or
parents  to  the  appointment  of  the  standby  guardian  as
guardian,  or  the  willingness  and  ability  of the minor's
parent or parents to make and carry out day-to-day child care
decisions concerning the minor.
    (b)  A single petition for appointment of only a guardian
of the person of a minor may include  more  than  one  minor.
The  statements  required  in items (1) and (2) of subsection
(a) shall be listed separately for each minor.
(Source: P.A. 88-529.)

    (755 ILCS 5/11-8.1)
    Sec. 11-8.1.  Petition for standby guardian of minor. The
petition for appointment of a standby guardian of the  person
or  the estate, or both, of a minor must state, if known: (a)
the name, date of birth, and residence of the minor; (b)  the
names  and  post office addresses of the nearest relatives of
the minor in the following order: (1) the parents, if any; if
none, (2) the adult brothers and sisters, if  any;  if  none,
(3)  the  nearest adult kindred; (c) the name and post office
address of the person having custody of the  minor;  (d)  the
name,  post  office  address, and, in case of any individual,
the age and occupation of the proposed standby guardian;  (e)
the  facts  concerning  the  consent of the minor's parent or
parents or the guardian of the person of  the  minor  to  the
appointment  of  the standby guardian, or the willingness and
ability of the minor's parent or  parents,  if  any,  or  the
guardian  of  the  person  of the minor to make and carry out
day-to-day child care decisions concerning the minor; (f) the
facts concerning the execution or admission to probate of the
written designation of the standby guardian, if any,  a  copy
of which shall be attached to or filed with the petition; and
(g)  the  facts concerning any juvenile, adoption, parentage,
dissolution, or guardianship court actions pending concerning
the minor or  the  parents  of  the  minor  and  whether  any
guardian is currently acting for the minor.
(Source: P.A. 88-529.)

    (755 ILCS 5/11-13.1)
    Sec. 11-13.1.  Duties of standby guardian of a minor.
    (a)  Before  a  standby  guardian of a minor may act, the
standby guardian must be appointed by the court of the proper
county and, in the case of a standby guardian of the  minor's
estate, the standby guardian must give the bond prescribed in
subsection (d) of Section 11-5.3 and Section 12-2.
    (b)  The  standby  guardian  shall not have any duties or
authority  to  act  until  the  standby   guardian   receives
knowledge  (i)  of the death or consent of the minor's parent
or parents or of the guardian of the person of the minor,  or
(ii) the inability of the minor's parent or parents or of the
guardian  of  the  person  of the minor to make and carry out
day-to-day child care decisions concerning the minor for whom
the standby guardian has been appointed.  This  inability  of
the   minor's  parent  or  parents  to  make  and  carry  out
day-to-day child care decisions may be communicated either by
the parent's or  the  guardian's  own  admission  or  by  the
written certification of the parent's or guardian's attending
physician.   Immediately  upon receipt of that knowledge, the
standby guardian shall assume all duties as guardian  of  the
minor  as  previously  determined by the order appointing the
standby guardian, and as set forth in Section 11-13, and  the
standby  guardian  of  the person shall have the authority to
act as guardian of the person without direction of court  for
a period of up to 60 days, provided that the authority of the
standby  guardian  may be limited or terminated by a court of
competent jurisdiction.
    (c)  Within 60 days of the standby guardian's receipt  of
knowledge  of  (i) the death or consent of the minor's parent
or parents or guardian, or (ii) the inability of the  minor's
parent   or  parents  or  guardian  to  make  and  carry  out
day-to-day child care decisions  concerning  the  minor,  the
standby  guardian  shall file or cause to be filed a petition
for the appointment of a guardian of the person or estate, or
both, of the minor under Section 11-5.
(Source: P.A. 88-529.)

    (755 ILCS 5/11-14.1) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 11-14.1)
    Sec. 11-14.1.  Revocation of  letters.   Upon  the  minor
reaching  the age of majority, the letters of office shall be
revoked only as to that minor and the guardianship over  that
minor  shall  be  terminated.   The letters of office and the
guardianship shall remain as to any other minors included  in
the same letters of office or guardianship order.
(Source: P.A. 80-1415.)

    (755 ILCS 5/11a-3.1 new)
    Sec. 11a-3.1.  Appointment of standby guardian.
    (a)  The  guardian  of a disabled person may designate in
any writing, including a will,  a  person  qualified  to  act
under  Section  11a-5  to be appointed as standby guardian of
the person or estate, or both, of the disabled  person.   The
guardian  may  designate  in any writing, including a will, a
person qualified to act under Section 11a-5 to  be  appointed
as successor standby guardian of the disabled person's person
or estate, or both. The designation must be witnessed by 2 or
more  credible witnesses at least 18 years of age, neither of
whom is the person designated as the  standby  guardian.  The
designation  may be proved by any competent evidence.  If the
designation is executed and attested in the same manner as  a
will,   it   shall   have  prima  facie  validity.  Prior  to
designating a proposed standby guardian, the  guardian  shall
consult  with  the  disabled person to determine the disabled
person's preference as  to  the  person  who  will  serve  as
standby  guardian.  The guardian shall give due consideration
to the preference of  the  disabled  person  in  selecting  a
standby guardian.
    (b)  Upon the filing of a petition for the appointment of
a  standby guardian, the court may appoint a standby guardian
of the person or estate, or both, of the disabled  person  as
the  court  finds  to be in the best interest of the disabled
person. The court shall apply  the  same  standards  used  in
determining  the suitability of a plenary or limited guardian
in determining the suitability of a standby guardian,  giving
due consideration to the preference of the disabled person as
to  a  standby guardian. The court may not appoint the Office
of State Guardian, pursuant to Section 30 of the Guardianship
and Advocacy Act, or a public guardian, pursuant  to  Section
13-5  of this Act, as a standby guardian, without the written
consent of the  State  Guardian  or  public  guardian  or  an
authorized  representative  of  the  State Guardian or public
guardian.
    (c)  The standby guardian shall take and file an oath  or
affirmation   that   the  standby  guardian  will  faithfully
discharge the  duties  of  the  office  of  standby  guardian
according  to law, and shall file in and have approved by the
court a bond binding the standby guardian so to do, but shall
not be required to file a bond  until  the  standby  guardian
assumes  all  duties as guardian of the disabled person under
Section 11a-18.2.
    (d)  The designation of a standby guardian may, but  need
not, be in the following form:
               DESIGNATION OF STANDBY GUARDIAN
    [IT IS IMPORTANT TO READ THE FOLLOWING INSTRUCTIONS:
         A standby guardian is someone who has been appointed
    by  the  court  as the person who will act as guardian of
    the disabled person when the disabled  person's  guardian
    dies  or  is  no longer willing or able to make and carry
    out day-to-day care  decisions  concerning  the  disabled
    person.   By properly completing this form, a guardian is
    naming the person that the guardian wants to be appointed
    as the standby guardian of the disabled  person.  Signing
    the  form  does  not  appoint the standby guardian; to be
    appointed, a petition must be filed in  and  approved  by
    the court.]
         1.  Guardian   and   Ward.   I,   (insert   name  of
    designating  guardian),  currently  residing  at  (insert
    address of designating guardian), am the guardian of  the
    following disabled person:  (insert name of ward).
         2.  Standby   Guardian.    I  hereby  designate  the
    following person to be  appointed as standby guardian for
    my ward listed above: (insert name and address of  person
    designated).
         3.  Successor Standby Guardian.  If the person named
    in  item  2  above    cannot  or  will not act as standby
    guardian,  I  designate  the  following  person   to   be
    appointed  as  successor  standby  guardian  for my ward:
    (insert name and address of person designated).
         4.  Date and Signature.  This  designation  is  made
    this (insert day) day of (insert month and year).
         Signed:   (designating guardian)
         5.  Witnesses.    I   saw  the  guardian  sign  this
    designation or the guardian told  me  that  the  guardian
    signed this designation. Then I signed the designation as
    a  witness  in  the  presence  of the guardian.  I am not
    designated in this  instrument  to    act  as  a  standby
    guardian  for  the  guardian's  ward.   (insert space for
    names,  addresses, and signatures of 2 witnesses)

    (755 ILCS 5/11a-3.2 new)
    Sec. 11a-3.2.  Short-term guardian.
    (a)  The guardian of a disabled  person  may  appoint  in
writing, without court approval, a short-term guardian of the
disabled  person  to  take over the guardian's duties, to the
extent provided in Section 11a-18.3, each time  the  guardian
is  unavailable  or  unable  to  carry out those duties.  The
guardian shall consult with the disabled person to  determine
the  disabled person's preference concerning the person to be
appointed as short-term guardian and the guardian shall  give
due  consideration  to  the  disabled  person's preference in
choosing  a  short-term  guardian.  The  written   instrument
appointing  a  short-term  guardian  shall be dated and shall
identify the appointing guardian, the  disabled  person,  the
person  appointed  to  be  the  short-term  guardian, and the
termination date of the appointment.  The written  instrument
shall  be  signed  by, or at the direction of, the appointing
guardian in the presence of at least 2 credible witnesses  at
least  18  years  of  age,  neither  of  whom  is  the person
appointed as the short-term guardian. The person appointed as
the  short-term  guardian  shall  also   sign   the   written
instrument,  but  need  not  sign  at  the  same  time as the
appointing guardian. A guardian may not appoint the Office of
State Guardian or a public guardian as a short-term guardian,
without the written consent of the State Guardian  or  public
guardian   or  an  authorized  representative  of  the  State
Guardian or public guardian.
    (b)  The  appointment  of  the  short-term  guardian   is
effective immediately upon the date the written instrument is
executed,  unless  the  written  instrument  provides for the
appointment to become effective upon a later  specified  date
or  event.   A  short-term guardian appointed by the guardian
shall have authority to  act  as  guardian  of  the  disabled
person  for a cumulative total of 60 days during any 12 month
period.  Only one written instrument appointing a  short-term
guardian may be in force at any given time.
    (c)  Every  appointment  of  a short-term guardian may be
amended or revoked by the appointing guardian at any time and
in any manner communicated to the short-term guardian  or  to
any  other  person.   Any  person  other  than the short-term
guardian to whom a revocation or amendment is communicated or
delivered shall make all reasonable  efforts  to  inform  the
short-term guardian of that fact as promptly as possible.
    (d)  The   appointment   of   a  short-term  guardian  or
successor short-term guardian does not affect the  rights  in
the disabled person of any guardian other than the appointing
guardian.
    (e)  The   written  instrument  appointing  a  short-term
guardian may, but need not, be in the following form:

             APPOINTMENT OF SHORT-TERM GUARDIAN
    [IT IS IMPORTANT TO READ THE FOLLOWING INSTRUCTIONS:
         By properly completing  this  form,  a  guardian  is
    appointing  a  short-term guardian of the disabled person
    for a cumulative total of up to 60  days  during  any  12
    month  period.   A  separate form shall be completed each
    time  a  short-term  guardian  takes  over   guardianship
    duties.    The   person   or  persons  appointed  as  the
    short-term guardian shall sign the form, but need not  do
    so at the same time as the guardian.]
         1.  Guardian   and   Ward.    I,   (insert  name  of
    appointing guardian),    currently  residing  at  (insert
    address  of  appointing guardian), am the guardian of the
    following disabled person:  (insert name of ward).
         2.  Short-term  Guardian.   I  hereby  appoint   the
    following person as the  short-term guardian for my ward:
    (insert name and address of appointed person).
         3.  Effective   date.    This   appointment  becomes
    effective: (check one if you wish it to be applicable)
         ( )  On the date that I state in writing that  I  am
    no  longer  either  willing or able to make and carry out
    day-to-day care decisions concerning  my ward.
         ( )  On the date that a physician familiar  with  my
    condition  certifies    in  writing  that  I am no longer
    willing or able to make and  carry  out  day-to-day  care
    decisions concerning my ward.
         ( )  On the date that I am admitted as an in-patient
    to a hospital or  other health care institution.
         ( )  On the following date: (insert date).
         ( )  Other: (insert other).
         [NOTE:    If   this   item  is  not  completed,  the
    appointment is effective immediately upon  the  date  the
    form is signed and dated below.]
         4.  Termination.   This  appointment shall terminate
    on: (enter a date  corresponding  to  60  days  from  the
    current  date, less the number of days within the past 12
    months  that  any  short-term  guardian  has  taken  over
    guardianship duties),  unless  it  terminates  sooner  as
    determined  by  the event or date I have indicated below:
    (check one if you wish it to be applicable)
         ( )  On the date that I state in writing that  I  am
    willing  and  able to  make and carry out day-to-day care
    decisions concerning my ward.
         ( )  On the date that a physician familiar  with  my
    condition  certifies    in  writing that I am willing and
    able to make and carry out  day-to-day  care    decisions
    concerning my ward.
         ( )  On  the  date  that  I  am  discharged from the
    hospital or other  health care institution  where  I  was
    admitted   as  an  in-patient,  which    established  the
    effective date.
         ( )  On the date which is (state a number  of  days)
    days after the effective date.
         ( )  Other: (insert other).
         [NOTE:    If   this   item  is  not  completed,  the
    appointment will be effective until the 60th  day  within
    the  past  year during which time any short-term guardian
    of this ward had taken over guardianship duties from  the
    guardian, beginning on the effective date.]
         5.  Date and signature of appointing guardian.  This
    appointment  is  made    this (insert day) day of (insert
    month and year).
         Signed:  (appointing guardian)
         6.  Witnesses.   I  saw  the  guardian   sign   this
    instrument  or I saw the  guardian direct someone to sign
    this instrument for the guardian.   Then  I  signed  this
    instrument  as a witness in the presence of the guardian.
    I am not appointed in  this  instrument  to  act  as  the
    short-term  guardian  for  the  guardian's ward.  (insert
    space  for  names,  addresses,  and   signatures   of   2
    witnesses)
         7.  Acceptance  of  short-term  guardian.   I accept
    this appointment as short-term guardian on  this  (insert
    day) day of (insert month and year).
         Signed:  (short-term guardian)
    (f)  Each   time   the  guardian  appoints  a  short-term
guardian, the guardian shall: (i) provide the disabled person
with  the  name,  address,  and  telephone  number   of   the
short-term  guardian; (ii) advise the disabled person that he



has the right to object to the appointment of the  short-term
guardian  by filing a petition in court; and (iii) notify the
disabled person when the short-term guardian will  be  taking
over  guardianship  duties  and  the  length of time that the
short-term guardian will be acting as guardian.

    (755 ILCS 5/11a-8) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 11a-8)
    Sec. 11a-8.  Petition.)  The petition for adjudication of
disability and for the  appointment  of  a  guardian  of  the
estate  or  the  person or both of an alleged disabled person
must state, if known or  reasonably  ascertainable:  (a)  the
relationship   and   interest   of   the  petitioner  to  the
respondent; (b)  the  name,  date  of  birth,  and  place  of
residence   of  the  respondent;  (c)  the  reasons  for  the
guardianship; (d) the name and post  office  address  of  the
respondent's  guardian,  if any, or of the respondent's agent
or agents appointed under the Illinois Power of Attorney Act,
if any; (e) the name and post office addresses of the nearest
relatives of the respondent in the following order:  (1)  the
spouse  and  adult  children,  parents and adult brothers and
sisters, if any; if none, (2) nearest adult kindred known  to
the  petitioner;  (f) the name and address of the person with
whom or the facility in which the respondent is residing; (g)
the approximate value of the personal and  real  estate;  (h)
the  amount  of the anticipated annual gross income and other
receipts; (i) the name, post office address and in case of an
individual, the  age,  relationship  to  the  respondent  and
occupation  of  the  proposed  guardian.  In addition, if the
petition seeks the  appointment  of  a  previously  appointed
standby  guardian  as  guardian  of  the disabled person, the
petition must  also  state:  (j)  the  facts  concerning  the
standby  guardian's  previous appointment and (k) the date of
death  of  the  disabled  person's  guardian  or  the   facts
concerning  the  consent of the disabled person's guardian to
the appointment of the standby guardian as guardian,  or  the
willingness  and ability of the disabled person's guardian to
make and carry out day-to-day care decisions  concerning  the
disabled  person.  A  petition for adjudication of disability
and the appointment of a guardian of the estate or the person
or both of an alleged disabled person may not be dismissed or
withdrawn without leave of the court.
(Source: P.A. 89-396, eff. 8-20-95.)

    (755 ILCS 5/11a-8.1 new)
    Sec. 11a-8.1.  Petition for standby guardian of  disabled
person.   The  petition for appointment of a standby guardian
of the person or the estate, or both, of  a  disabled  person
must  state,  if  known:  (a)  the  name,  date of birth, and
residence of the disabled person;  (b)  the  names  and  post
office  addresses  of  the  nearest relatives of the disabled
person in the following order:   (1)  the  spouse  and  adult
children,  parents and adult brothers and sisters, if any; if
none, (2) nearest adult kindred known to the petitioner;  (c)
the  name  and  post  office  address  of  the  person having
guardianship of the disabled person, and  of  any  person  or
persons  acting  as  agents  of the disabled person under the
Illinois Power of Attorney Act; (d)  the  name,  post  office
address,  and,  in  case  of  any  individual,  the  age  and
occupation   of   the  proposed  standby  guardian;  (e)  the
preference of the disabled person as to the choice of standby
guardian;  (f)  the  facts  concerning  the  consent  of  the
disabled person's guardian to the appointment of the  standby
guardian,  or  the  willingness  and  ability of the disabled
person's guardian to  make  and  carry  out  day-to-day  care
decisions  concerning  the  disabled  person;  (g)  the facts
concerning the execution  or  admission  to  probate  of  the
written  designation  of the standby guardian, if any, a copy
of which shall be attached to or filed with the petition; (h)
the facts concerning any guardianship court  actions  pending
concerning  the disabled person; and (i) the facts concerning
the willingness of the proposed standby  guardian  to  serve,
and  in  the  case  of  the  Office of State Guardian and any
public guardian, evidence of a written  acceptance  to  serve
signed  by  the  State  Guardian  or  public  guardian  or an
authorized representative of the  State  Guardian  or  public
guardian, consistent with subsection (b) of Section 11a-3.1.

    (755 ILCS 5/11a-10.2 new)
    Sec.  11a-10.2.   Procedure  for appointment of a standby
guardian  or  a  guardian  of  a  disabled  person.   In  any
proceeding for the appointment of a  standby  guardian  or  a
guardian  the  court  may  appoint  a  guardian  ad  litem to
represent the disabled person in the proceeding.

    (755 ILCS 5/11a-17) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 11a-17)
    Sec. 11a-17.  Duties of personal guardian.
    (a)  To the extent ordered by the  court  and  under  the
direction of the court, the guardian of the person shall have
custody  of the ward and the ward's minor and adult dependent
children; shall procure for them and shall make provision for
their  support,  care,   comfort,   health,   education   and
maintenance,  and  professional  services as are appropriate,
but the ward's spouse may not be deprived of the custody  and
education  of  the ward's minor and adult dependent children,
without the consent of the spouse,  unless  the  court  finds
that  the  spouse  is  not a fit and competent person to have
that custody and education. The  guardian  shall  assist  the
ward   in   the  development  of  maximum  self-reliance  and
independence. The guardian of the  person  may  petition  the
court  for  an  order directing the guardian of the estate to
pay an amount periodically for the provision of the  services
specified  by  the  court  order.   If  the  ward's estate is
insufficient to provide for education and the guardian of the
ward's person fails to provide education, the court may award
the custody of the ward to some other person for the  purpose
of  providing education.  If a person makes a settlement upon
or provision for the support or  education  of  a  ward,  the
court may make an order for the visitation of the ward by the
person  making the settlement or provision as the court deems
proper.
    (b)  If the court directs, the  guardian  of  the  person
shall  file  with  the  court  at  intervals indicated by the
court, a report that shall state  briefly:  (1)  the  current
mental,  physical,  and  social condition of the ward and the
ward's minor and adult dependent children; (2) their  present
living  arrangement,  and  a  description  and the address of
every residence where they lived during the reporting  period
and  the  length  of stay at each place; (3) a summary of the
medical,  educational,  vocational,  and  other  professional
services given to them; (4) a resume of the guardian's visits
with and activities on behalf of  the  ward  and  the  ward's
minor  and  adult dependent children; (5) a recommendation as
to  the  need  for  continued  guardianship;  (6)  any  other
information requested by the court or useful in  the  opinion
of  the  guardian.  The  Office  of  the State Guardian shall
assist the guardian in filing the report  when  requested  by
the  guardian.   The  court  may take such action as it deems
appropriate pursuant to the report.
    (c)  Absent court order pursuant to the Illinois Power of
Attorney Act directing a guardian to exercise powers  of  the
principal  under  an  agency  that  survives  disability, the
guardian has no power, duty, or liability with respect to any
personal or health care matters covered by the  agency.  This
subsection (c) applies to all agencies, whenever and wherever
executed.
    (d)  A  guardian  acting  as  a  surrogate decision maker
under the Health Care Surrogate Act shall have all the rights
of a surrogate under that Act without court  order  including
the  right  to  make  medical  treatment  decisions  such  as
decisions to forgo or withdraw life-sustaining treatment. Any
decisions    by   the   guardian   to   forgo   or   withdraw
life-sustaining treatment that are not authorized  under  the
Health  Care  Surrogate  Act  shall  require  a  court order.
Nothing in this Section shall prevent an agent acting under a
power of attorney for health care from exercising his or  her
authority  under  the  Illinois Power of Attorney Act without
further court order, unless a court has acted  under  Section
2-10 of the Illinois Power of Attorney Act.  If a guardian is
also  a health care agent for the ward under a valid power of
attorney for health care, the guardian acting  as  agent  may
execute  his  or her authority under that act without further
court order.
    (e)  Decisions made by a guardian on  behalf  of  a  ward
shall  be made in accordance with the following standards for
decision making. Decisions made by a guardian on behalf of  a
ward may be made by conforming as closely as possible to what
the ward, if competent, would have done or intended under the
circumstances,  taking  into  account evidence that includes,
but is not limited to, the  ward's  personal,  philosophical,
religious  and  moral beliefs, and ethical values relative to
the decision to be made by the guardian. Where possible,  the
guardian  shall  determine  how  the  ward  would have made a
decision   based   on   the   ward's   previously   expressed
preferences,  and  make  decisions  in  accordance  with  the
preferences of the ward. If the ward's wishes are unknown and
remain unknown after reasonable efforts to discern them,  the
decision  shall  be  made  on  the  basis  of the ward's best
interests as determined by the guardian. In  determining  the
ward's  best  interests,  the guardian shall weigh the reason
for and  nature  of  the  proposed  action,  the  benefit  or
necessity  of  the  action,  the  possible  risks  and  other
consequences  of  the  proposed  action,  and  any  available
alternatives  and their risks, consequences and benefits, and
shall take into account any other information, including  the
views  of  family and friends, that the guardian believes the
ward would have considered if able  to  act  for  herself  or
himself.
    (f)  Upon  petition  by  any interested person (including
the standby or short-term  guardian),  with  such  notice  to
interested  persons as the court directs and a finding by the
court that it is in the best interest of the disabled person,
the court may terminate or limit the authority of  a  standby
or  short-term guardian or may enter such other orders as the
court deems necessary to provide for the best interest of the
disabled person.  The petition  for termination or limitation
of the authority of a standby or short-term guardian may, but
need not,  be  combined  with  a  petition  to  have  another
guardian appointed for the disabled person.
(Source: P.A. 90-250, eff. 7-29-97.)

    (755 ILCS 5/11a-18) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 11a-18)
    Sec. 11a-18.  Duties of the estate guardian.
    (a)  To  the  extent  specified in the order establishing
the guardianship, the guardian of the estate shall  have  the
care,  management  and investment of the estate, shall manage
the estate frugally and shall apply the income and  principal
of  the  estate  so  far  as  necessary  for  the comfort and
suitable support and education of the  ward,  his  minor  and
adult  dependent  children,  and  persons related by blood or
marriage who are dependent upon or entitled to  support  from
him, or for any other purpose which the court deems to be for
the best interests of the ward, and the court may approve the
making  on behalf of the ward of such agreements as the court
determines to be for the ward's best interests. The  guardian
may make disbursement of his ward's funds and estate directly
to  the ward or other distributee or in such other manner and
in such amounts as the court directs.  If  the  estate  of  a
ward  is  derived  in  whole  or  in  part  from  payments of
compensation, adjusted compensation,  pension,  insurance  or
other  similar  benefits  made  directly to the estate by the
Veterans Administration, notice of the application for  leave
to invest or expend the ward's funds or estate, together with
a  copy of the petition and proposed order, shall be given to
the Veterans' Administration Regional Office in this State at
least 7 days before the hearing on the application.
    (a-5)  The probate court, upon petition  of  a  guardian,
other  than  the guardian of a minor, and after notice to all
other persons interested as the court directs, may  authorize
the  guardian  to  exercise any or all powers over the estate
and business affairs of the ward that the ward could exercise
if present and not under disability.  The court may authorize
the taking of an action  or  the  application  of  funds  not
required  for  the  ward's current and future maintenance and
support in any manner approved  by  the  court  as  being  in
keeping  with  the  ward's  wishes  so  far  as  they  can be
ascertained. The court must consider the  permanence  of  the
ward's  disabling  condition  and  the natural objects of the
ward's bounty. In ascertaining and carrying  out  the  ward's
wishes  the  court may consider, but shall not be limited to,
minimization  of  State  or  federal   income,   estate,   or
inheritance   taxes;   and   providing  gifts  to  charities,
relatives, and friends that would  be  likely  recipients  of
donations  from the ward.  The ward's wishes as best they can
be ascertained shall be  carried  out,  whether  or  not  tax
savings  are  involved.  Actions or applications of funds may
include, but shall not be limited to, the following:
         (1)  making gifts of income or principal,  or  both,
    of the estate, either outright or in trust;
         (2)  conveying, releasing, or disclaiming his or her
    contingent and expectant interests in property, including
    marital  property  rights  and  any right of survivorship
    incident to joint tenancy or tenancy by the entirety;
         (3)  releasing or disclaiming his or her  powers  as
    trustee,  personal  representative, custodian for minors,
    or guardian;
         (4)  exercising, releasing, or  disclaiming  his  or
    her powers as donee of a power of appointment;
         (5)  entering into contracts;
         (6)  creating for the benefit of the ward or others,
    revocable  or  irrevocable  trusts of his or her property
    that may extend beyond his or her disability or life.
         (7)  exercising options of the ward to  purchase  or
    exchange securities or other property;
         (8)  exercising  the  rights  of  the  ward to elect
    benefit or  payment  options,  to  terminate,  to  change
    beneficiaries  or ownership, to assign rights, to borrow,
    or to receive cash value in return  for  a  surrender  of
    rights under any one or more of the following:
              (i)  Life   insurance   policies,   plans,   or
         benefits.
              (ii)  Annuity policies, plans, or benefits.
              (iii)  Mutual    fund    and   other   dividend
         investment plans.
              (iv)  Retirement, profit sharing, and  employee
         welfare plans and benefits;
         (9)  exercising   his  or  her  right  to  claim  or
    disclaim an elective share in the estate of  his  or  her
    deceased  spouse  and to renounce any interest by testate
    or intestate succession or by inter vivos transfer;
         (10)  changing the ward's residence or domicile; or
         (11)  modifying  by  means  of  codicil   or   trust
    amendment  the  terms of the ward's will or any revocable
    trust created by the ward,  as  the  court  may  consider
    advisable in light of changes in applicable tax laws. The
    guardian in his or her petition shall briefly outline the
    action  or application of funds for which he or she seeks
    approval,  the  results  expected  to   be   accomplished
    thereby, and the tax savings, if any, expected to accrue.
    The  proposed  action or application of funds may include
    gifts of the ward's personal property or real estate, but
    transfers  of  real  estate  shall  be  subject  to   the
    requirements of Section 20 of this Act.  Gifts may be for
    the  benefit  of prospective legatees, devisees, or heirs
    apparent of the ward or may be  made  to  individuals  or
    charities  in  which  the  ward  is  believed  to have an
    interest.   The  guardian  shall  also  indicate  in  the
    petition that any planned disposition is consistent  with
    the  intentions  of  the  ward  insofar  as  they  can be
    ascertained, and  if  the  ward's  intentions  cannot  be
    ascertained, the ward will be presumed to favor reduction
    in  the  incidents  of  various forms of taxation and the
    partial distribution of his or her estate as provided  in
    this  subsection.   The  guardian  shall not, however, be
    required to include as a  beneficiary  or  fiduciary  any
    person  who he has reason to believe would be excluded by
    the ward.  A guardian shall be  required  to  investigate
    and   pursue   a   ward's  eligibility  for  governmental
    benefits.
    (b)  Upon the direction of the  court  which  issued  his
letters,  a  guardian  may  perform the contracts of his ward
which were legally subsisting at the time of the commencement
of the  ward's  disability.   The  court  may  authorize  the
guardian  to  execute  and  deliver any bill of sale, deed or
other instrument.
    (c)  The guardian of the estate of a  ward  shall  appear
for  and  represent  the ward in all legal proceedings unless
another person is appointed for that purpose as  guardian  or
next  friend.  This does not impair the power of any court to
appoint a guardian ad litem or  next  friend  to  defend  the
interests  of  the ward in that court, or to appoint or allow
any person  as  the  next  friend  of  a  ward  to  commence,
prosecute  or  defend  any  proceeding in his behalf. Without
impairing the power of the  court  in  any  respect,  if  the
guardian  of  the estate of a ward and another person as next
friend shall appear for and represent the  ward  in  a  legal
proceeding  in  which  the  compensation  of  the attorney or
attorneys representing the guardian and next friend is solely
determined under a contingent fee arrangement,  the  guardian
of  the  estate  of the ward shall not participate in or have
any  duty  to  review  the  prosecution  of  the  action,  to
participate  in  or  review  the   appropriateness   of   any
settlement  of the action, or to participate in or review any
determination of the appropriateness of any fees  awarded  to
the  attorney or attorneys employed in the prosecution of the
action.
    (d)  Adjudication  of  disability  shall  not  revoke  or
otherwise terminate a trust which is revocable by  the  ward.
A  guardian of the estate shall have no authority to revoke a
trust that is revocable by the ward, except  that  the  court
may  authorize a guardian to revoke a Totten trust or similar
deposit or withdrawable  capital  account  in  trust  to  the
extent  necessary to provide funds for the purposes specified
in paragraph (a) of this Section.   If  the  trustee  of  any
trust  for the benefit of the ward has discretionary power to
apply income or principal for the ward's benefit, the trustee
shall not be required to distribute  any  of  the  income  or
principal  to  the  guardian  of  the  ward's estate, but the
guardian may bring an action on behalf of the ward to  compel
the  trustee  to exercise the trustee's discretion or to seek
relief from an abuse of discretion.  This paragraph shall not
limit the right of  a  guardian  of  the  estate  to  receive
accountings from the trustee on behalf of the ward.
    (e)  Absent  court  order pursuant to the "Illinois Power
of  Attorney  Act"  enacted  by  the  85th  General  Assembly
directing a guardian to  exercise  powers  of  the  principal
under  an  agency that survives disability, the guardian will
have no power, duty or liability with respect to any property
subject to the agency.  This subsection (e)  applies  to  all
agencies, whenever and wherever executed.
    (f)  Upon  petition  by  any interested person (including
the standby or short-term  guardian),  with  such  notice  to
interested  persons as the court directs and a finding by the
court that it is in the best interest of the disabled person,
the court may terminate or limit the authority of  a  standby
or  short-term guardian or may enter such other orders as the
court deems necessary to provide for the best interest of the
disabled person.  The petition for termination or  limitation
of the authority of a standby or short-term guardian may, but
need  not,  be  combined  with  a  petition  to  have another
guardian appointed for the disabled person.
(Source: P.A. 89-672, eff. 8-14-96; 90-345, eff. 8-8-97.)

    (755 ILCS 5/11a-18.2 new)
    Sec. 11a-18.2.  Duties of standby guardian of a  disabled
person.
    (a)  Before  a  standby guardian of a disabled person may
act, the standby guardian must be appointed by the  court  of
the  proper  county and, in the case of a standby guardian of
the disabled person's estate, the standby guardian must  give
the  bond prescribed in subsection (c) of Section 11a-3.1 and
Section 12-2.
    (b)  The standby guardian shall not have  any  duties  or
authority   to   act  until  the  standby  guardian  receives
knowledge of the death or consent of  the  disabled  person's
guardian,  or the inability of the disabled person's guardian
to make and carry out day-to-day  care  decisions  concerning
the  disabled  person  for whom the standby guardian has been
appointed.  This inability of the disabled person's  guardian
to  make  and  carry  out  day-to-day  care  decisions may be
communicated either by the guardian's own admission or by the
written certification of the guardian's attending  physician.
Immediately  upon  receipt  of  that  knowledge,  the standby
guardian shall assume all duties as guardian of the  disabled
person  as  previously determined by the order appointing the
standby guardian, and as set forth  in  Sections  11a-17  and
11a-18, and the standby guardian of the person shall have the
authority  to act as guardian of the person without direction
of court for a period of up to 60  days,  provided  that  the
authority   of   the  standby  guardian  may  be  limited  or
terminated by a court of competent jurisdiction.
    (c)  Within 60 days of the standby guardian's receipt  of
knowledge  of  the  death or consent of the disabled person's
guardian, or the inability of the disabled person's  guardian
to  make  and  carry out day-to-day care decisions concerning
the disabled person, the standby guardian shall file or cause
to be filed a petition for the appointment of a  guardian  of
the  person  or estate, or both, of the disabled person under
Section 11a-3.

    (755 ILCS 5/11a-18.3 new)
    Sec.  11a-18.3.   Duties  of  short-term  guardian  of  a
disabled person.
    (a)  Immediately  upon  the   effective   date   of   the
appointment of a short-term guardian, the short-term guardian
shall  assume  all  duties  as  short-term  guardian  of  the
disabled person as provided in this Section.   The short-term
guardian  of  the  person  shall  have  authority  to  act as
short-term guardian, without direction of the court, for  the
duration  of the appointment, which in no case shall exceed a
cumulative total of 60 days in any 12 month  period  for  all
short-term guardians appointed by the guardian. The authority
of  the short-term guardian may be limited or terminated by a
court of competent jurisdiction.
    (b)  Unless   further   specifically   limited   by   the
instrument appointing the short-term guardian,  a  short-term
guardian shall have the authority to act as a guardian of the
person  of a disabled person as prescribed in Section 11a-17,
but shall not have any authority to act as  guardian  of  the
estate  of  a  disabled  person,  except  that  a  short-term
guardian shall have the authority to apply for and receive on
behalf  of the disabled person benefits to which the disabled
person may be entitled from or under federal, State, or local
organizations or programs.

    (755 ILCS 5/11a-23)
    Sec. 11a-23.  Reliance on authority of guardian,  standby
guardian, short-term guardian.
    (a)  For   the   purpose  of  this  Section,  "guardian",
"standby  guardian",  and  "short-term   guardian"   includes
temporary, plenary, or limited guardians of all wards.
    (b)  Every   health   care   provider  and  other  person
(reliant) has the right to rely on any decision or  direction
made   by  the  guardian,  standby  guardian,  or  short-term
guardian that is not clearly contrary to the law, to the same
extent and with the same effect as  though  the  decision  or
direction  had  been  made  or given by the ward.  Any person
dealing with the guardian, standby  guardian,  or  short-term
guardian  may  presume  in the absence of actual knowledge to
the contrary that the acts of the guardian, standby guardian,
or short-term guardian conform to the provisions of the  law.
A  reliant  shall  not be protected if the reliant has actual
knowledge that the guardian, standby guardian, or  short-term
guardian is not entitled to act or that any particular action
or inaction is contrary to the provisions of the law.
    (c)  A  health care provider (provider) who relies on and
carries out a guardian's, standby guardian's,  or  short-term
guardian's  directions  and  who  acts  with  due care and in
accordance with the law shall not be  subject  to  any  claim
based  on  lack of consent, or to criminal prosecution, or to
discipline  for  unprofessional  conduct.   Nothing  in  this
Section shall be deemed to protect a provider from  liability
for  the  provider's own negligence in the performance of the
provider's duties or in carrying out any instructions of  the
guardian,  standby  guardian,  or  short-term  guardian,  and
nothing  in  this Section shall be deemed to alter the law of
negligence as it applies to  the  acts  of  any  guardian  or
provider.
    (d)  A   guardian,   standby   guardian,  or  short  term
guardian, who acts or refrains from acting is not subject  to
criminal  prosecution  or any claim based upon lack of his or
her authority or failure to act, if the act or failure to act
was with due care and in accordance with law.  The  guardian,
standby guardian, or short term guardian, shall not be liable
merely  because  he  or  she  may  benefit  from the act, has
individual or conflicting interests in relation to  the  care
and  affairs  of the ward, or acts in a different manner with
respect to the guardian's, standby guardian's, or  short-term
guardian's own care or interests.
(Source: P.A. 89-438, eff. 12-15-95.)

    (755 ILCS 5/12-2) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 12-2)
    Sec. 12-2. Individual representative; oath and bond.
    (a)  Except   as   provided  in  subsection  (b),  before
undertaking the  representative's  duties,  every  individual
representative  shall  take  and  file an oath or affirmation
that the individual will faithfully discharge the  duties  of
the  office  of the representative according to law and shall
file in and have approved by the court  a  bond  binding  the
individual  representative  so to do. The court may waive the
filing of a bond of a representative of the person of a  ward
or of a standby guardian of a minor or disabled person.
    (b)  Where  bond or security is excused by the will or as
provided in subsection (b) of Section 12-4, the bond  of  the
representative in the amount from time to time required under
this  Article  shall  be  in  full  force  and effect without
writing, unless the court requires the filing  of  a  written
bond.
(Source: P.A. 88-529.)

    (755 ILCS 5/21-2) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 21-2)
    Sec. 21-2.  Investments; Ward's Estate.)
    (a)  It  is  the duty of the representative to invest the
ward's money.  A representative is chargeable  with  interest
at  a rate equal to the rate on 90-day United States Treasury
Bills  upon  any  money  that  the  representative  which  he
wrongfully or negligently  allows  to  remain  in  his  hands
uninvested  after  it  might  have been invested.  Reasonable
sums of money retained uninvested by  the  representative  in
order to pay for the current or imminent expenses of the ward
shall not be considered wrongfully or negligently uninvested.
    (b)  Upon   receiving   the  approval  of  the  court,  a
representative may hold  any  investments,  or  any  increase
thereof,  received  by  the representative him at the time of
the representative's his appointment or acquired by the ward,
although the investment is  not  otherwise  authorized  under
this   Act,   and   the   court   has  power  to  direct  the
representative in connection therewith.
    (c)  A representative may invest only  in  the  types  of
property specified in Sections 21-2.01 through 21-2.15.
(Source: P.A. 84-494.)
    (755 ILCS 5/21-2.04) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 21-2.04)
    Sec.    21-2.04.    Insured   accounts,   deposits,   and
certificates.    Withdrawable  capital  accounts,   deposits,
investment  certificates  or certificates of deposit of state
and  federal  savings  and  loan  associations  but,   unless
otherwise  authorized  by  a court of competent jurisdiction,
only  to  the  extent  that   the   accounts,   deposits   or
certificates  are  insured by the United States or any of its
agencies Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation,  and
share  accounts  in  federal  and  state credit unions if the
credit unions  are  insured  by  the  National  Credit  Union
Administration.  Amounts  invested  in  a  savings  and  loan
association  in  excess  of  the amount insured by the United
States or any  of  its  agencies  Federal  Savings  and  Loan
Insurance Corporation shall be secured by a surety bond taken
from  a  surety authorized to transact business in this State
in such sum, under such conditions, and  with  such  security
sufficient to save the estate from loss.
(Source: P.A. 81-0391; 81-0403; 81-1509.)

    (755 ILCS 5/21-2.05) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 21-2.05)
    Sec. 21-2.05.  Municipal bonds. Instruments providing for
the payment of money executed by or on behalf of any state of
the  United  States  or  the  District  of  Columbia  or  any
governmental  entity  organized  by  or under the laws of any
state of the United States or the District  of  Columbia,  to
carry  out  a  public  governmental  or proprietary function,
acting  through  its  corporate  authorities,  or  that   any
governmental entity has assumed or agreed to pay and that, at
the  time  of  investment,  have  been given one of the top 4
rating grades by a nationally recognized rating service.  The
direct obligations of any state, county, city, town, village,
school  district,  municipality and any political subdivision
of any of them, located in any state of the United States  or
the  District of Columbia, if the total direct obligations of
that state, county, city,  town,  village,  school  district,
municipality  or  political subdivision does not exceed 5 per
cent of the assessed valuation of property  for  taxation  at
the  time of the investment, but no investment may be made in
obligations of any state, county, city, town, village, school
district, municipality or  political  subdivision  which  has
defaulted in a payment of principal or interest on any of its
bonded  debt during the period of 5 years prior to the making
of the investment.
(Source: P.A. 79-328.)

    (755 ILCS 5/21-2.07) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 21-2.07)
    Sec. 21-2.07.  Notes secured by real estate.  All of  the
notes secured by a first mortgage or trust deed upon improved
or  income  producing  real estate situated in this State and
not exceeding two-thirds 1/2 of the value thereof at the time
of the investment.
(Source: P.A. 79-328.)

    (755 ILCS 5/21-2.08) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 21-2.08)
    Sec. 21-2.08.  Corporate obligations. Obligations of  any
company  incorporated  under the laws of the United States or
of any state of the United States or the District of Columbia
that, at the time of investment, have been given one  of  the
top 4 rating grades by a nationally recognized rating service
which  are  or  have been a part of an issue of not less than
$3,000,000.
(Source: P.A. 79-328.)

    (755 ILCS 5/21-2.11) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 21-2.11)
    Sec. 21-2.11.   Life,  endowment,  or  annuity  policies.
Life,  endowment, or annuity policies on upon the life of the
ward, or on the life of any person in whose life the ward has
an insurable interest, if the ward is the  beneficiary,  when
the   policies   of   insurance   are  issued  by  companies,
associations or fraternal organizations that, at the time  of
investment, have been given one of the top 4 rating grades by
a  nationally recognized rating service licensed to engage in
the business of  insurance  in  this  State.  The  order  may
authorize  the  payment  of  annual  premiums without further
application to the court.
(Source: P.A. 79-328.)

    (755 ILCS 5/21-2.12) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 21-2.12)
    Sec. 21-2.12.  Stock. Preferred and common Shares of  any
corporation with a market capitalization of over $200,000,000
if organized under the laws of the United States or any state
thereof or of the District of Columbia if:
    (a)  in   the  case  of  preferred  shares,  the  issuing
corporation has earned a net profit in 8 of the preceding  10
fiscal  years  as reflected in its statements and during each
of the preceding 10 fiscal years has paid  dividends  in  the
specified  amounts  upon all of its preferred shares, if any,
outstanding during such year and has no  dividend  arrearages
on its preferred shares outstanding at the date of purchase;
    (b)  in   the   case   of   common  shares,  the  issuing
corporation has earned a net profit in 8 of the  preceding 10
fiscal years as reflected in its statements and  during  each
of the preceding 10 years has paid dividends in the specified
amounts  upon  all  its preferred shares, if any, outstanding
during such year and in each of at least 8 of  the  preceding
10  fiscal years, including the preceding 5 fiscal years, has
paid dividends in some amount upon all its common shares,  if
any, outstanding during such years;
    (c)  in  the  case  of  any  shares,  except shares of an
investment company or investment trust, the shares are  fully
listed and registered on upon an exchange registered with the
Securities  and  Exchange Commission as a national securities
exchange  or  an  electronic  securities   quotation   system
regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
    If  a  corporation has acquired a substantial part of its
property within 10 years immediately preceding the investment
by  consolidation  or  merger  or  by  the  purchase   of   a
substantial  part  of  the property of any other corporation,
the earnings of the predecessor or  constituent  corporations
shall be consolidated for the purpose of ascertaining whether
the requirements of this Section have been satisfied.
    As  used  in  this  Section,  "corporation"  includes  an
open-end  or closed-end management type investment company or
investment trust which is registered with, and regulated  by,
the   Securities   and  Exchange  Commission,  which  has  no
preferred shares,  bonds,  loans  or  any  other  outstanding
securities  having  preference  or  priority  as to assets or
earnings over its common shares, and which has net assets  of
not  less  than  $10,000,000  at  the  date  of purchase, and
"common shares" includes shares,  units  or  certificates  of
beneficial   interest  or  trust  participation  certificates
issued by an investment company or investment trust.
    No  investment  in  preferred  or  common  shares  of   a
corporation may be made under this Section that which, at the
time such investment is made, would cause the market value of
all  stock  held  in  the  ward's estate preferred and common
shares to exceed two-thirds 1/2 of the market  value  of  the
estate then held by the representative.
(Source: P.A. 79-328.)

    (755 ILCS 5/21-2.13) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 21-2.13)
    Sec.  21-2.13.   Common trust funds.  Interests in one or
more common trust funds, as defined in and from time to  time
established,  maintained  and  administered  pursuant  to the
Common Trust Fund Act,  the  Investments  of  which  are  not
restricted   to  the  investments  otherwise  authorized  for
representatives  by  Sections  21-2.01  through  21-2.12  and
21-2.14 of this Act, provided that  the  investment  in  such
common  trust fund meets the standard of the prudent investor
person rule for the investment of trust funds.
(Source: P.A. 84-494.)

    (755 ILCS 5/21-2.09 rep.)
    (755 ILCS 5/21-2.13a rep.)
    Section 10.  The  Probate  Act  of  1975  is  amended  by
repealing Sections 21-2.09 and 21-2.13a.

    Section  15.   The  Statute  Concerning  Perpetuities  is
amended by changing Sections 3 and 4 as follows:

    (765 ILCS 305/3) (from Ch. 30, par. 193)
    Sec. 3. Definitions and Terms.
    As   used  in  this  Act  unless  the  context  otherwise
requires:
    (a)  "Trust" means  any  trust  created  by  any  written
instrument, including, without limitation, a trust created by
in the exercise of a power of appointment.
    (a-5)  "Qualified   perpetual   trust"  means  any  trust
created by  any  written  instrument  executed  on  or  after
January  1,  1998, including an amendment to an instrument in
existence prior to that date and the exercise of a  power  of
appointment  granted  by an instrument executed or amended on
or after that date:
         (i)  to which, by the specific terms  governing  the
    trust, the rule against perpetuities does not apply; and
         (ii)  the  power  of  which  the  trustee  (or other
    person  to  whom  the  power  is  properly   granted   or
    delegated)  to  sell  property of which is not limited by
    the governing trust instrument has the power in the trust
    document or under any provision of law to sell, lease, or
    mortgage property for  any  period  of  time  beyond  the
    period of the rule against perpetuities.
    (b)  "Trustee" includes the original trustee of any trust
and also any succeeding or added trustee.
    (c)  "Instrument" means any writing pursuant to which any
legal  or  equitable  interest  in  property or in the income
therefrom is affected, disposed of or created.
    (d)  "Beneficiary"  includes  any  person  to  whom   any
interest,  whether  vested  or  contingent,  is  given  by an
instrument.
    (e)  Any reference in this Act to income to be "paid"  or
to income "payments" or to "receiving" income includes income
payable  or distributable to or applicable for the benefit of
a beneficiary.
    (f)  Words importing the  masculine  gender  include  the
feminine  and neuter, and words importing the singular number
include the plural and  words  importing  the  plural  number
include the singular.
(Source: P.A. 90-472, eff. 8-17-97.)

    (765 ILCS 305/4) (from Ch. 30, par. 194)
    Sec. 4. Application of the Rule Against Perpetuities.
    (a)  The rule against perpetuities shall not apply:
    (1)  to  any  disposition of property or interest therein
which, at the effective date of this Act, does  not  violate,
or  is  exempted by statute from the operation of, the common
law rule against perpetuities;
    (2)  to powers of a trustee to sell,  lease  or  mortgage
property  or  to powers which relate to the administration or
management of trust assets,  including,  without  limitation,
discretionary  powers of a trustee to determine what receipts
constitute principal and what receipts constitute income  and
powers to appoint a successor trustee;
    (3)  to  mandatory  powers  of  a  trustee  to distribute
income, or to discretionary powers of a trustee to distribute
principal prior to termination of a trust, to  a  beneficiary
having  an  interest  in  the  principal which is irrevocably
vested in quality and quantity;
    (4)  to discretionary powers of  a  trustee  to  allocate
income  and principal among beneficiaries, but no exercise of
any such power after the expiration of the period of the rule
against perpetuities is valid;
    (5)  to leases to commence in  the  future  or  upon  the
happening of a future event, but no such lease shall be valid
unless  the  term  thereof  actually  commences in possession
within 40 years from the date of execution of the lease;
    (6)  to commitments (A) by a lessor to enter into a lease
with a subtenant or with the holder of a  leasehold  mortgage
or  (B)  by  a lessee or sublessee to enter into a lease with
the holder of a mortgage;
    (7)  to options in gross or to preemptive rights  in  the
nature  of  a  right of first refusal, but no option in gross
shall be valid for more than 40 years from the  date  of  its
creation; or
    (8)  to  qualified perpetual trusts as defined in Section
3 of this  Act  created  by  will  or  inter-vivos  agreement
executed  or  amended  on  or  after  January  1, 1998, or to
qualified perpetual trusts created by exercise of a power  of
appointment  granted under instruments executed or amended on
or after January 1, 1998.
    (b)  The period of the rule  against  perpetuities  shall
not  commence  to  run  in connection with any disposition of
property or interest therein,  and  no  instrument  shall  be
regarded  as  becoming  effective  for  purposes  of the rule
against perpetuities, and  no  interest  or  power  shall  be
deemed  to  be  created  for  purposes  of  the  rule against
perpetuities as long as, by the terms of the instrument,  the
maker   of  the  instrument  has  the  power  to  revoke  the
instrument or to transfer or  direct  to  be  transferred  to
himself  the  entire  legal  and  equitable  ownership of the
property or interest therein.
    (c)  In determining whether an interest violates the rule
against perpetuities:
    (1)  it shall be  presumed  (A)  that  the  interest  was
intended  to  be  valid,  (B)  in  the  case  of  an interest
conditioned upon the probate of a will, the appointment of an
executor, administrator or trustee,  the  completion  of  the
administration  of  an estate, the payment of debts, the sale
or distribution of property, the determination of federal  or
state  tax liabilities or the happening of any administrative
contingency, that the contingency  must  occur,  if  at  all,
within  the  period of the rule against perpetuities, and (C)
where the instrument creates  an  interest  in  the  "widow",
"widower",  or  "spouse" of another person, that the maker of
the instrument intended to refer to a person who  was  living
at  the date that the period of the rule against perpetuities
commences to run;
    (2)  where any interest, but for  this  subparagraph  (c)
(2),  would  be invalid because it is made to depend upon any
person attaining or failing to attain an age in excess of  21
years,  the  age specified shall be reduced to 21 years as to
every person to whom the age contingency applies;
    (3)  if, notwithstanding the provisions of  subparagraphs
(c) (1) and (2) of this Section, the validity of any interest
depends  upon  the  possibility of the birth or adoption of a
child, (A) no person shall be  deemed  capable  of  having  a
child  until  he  has  attained  the age of 13 years, (B) any
person who has attained the age of 65 years shall  be  deemed
incapable of having a child, (C) evidence shall be admissible
as to the incapacity of having a child by a living person who
has not attained the age of 65 years, and (D) the possibility
of having a child or more remote descendant by adoption shall
be disregarded.
    (d)  Subparagraphs (a) (2), (3) and (6) and paragraph (b)
of  this Section shall be deemed to be declaratory of the law
prevailing in this State at the effective date of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-472, eff. 8-17-97.)

    Section 17.  The Trust Accumulation  Act  is  amended  by
changing Section 1 as follows:

    (765 ILCS 315/1) (from Ch. 30, par. 153)
    Sec. 1. No person shall, after this Act goes into effect,
by  any deed, will, agreement or otherwise, settle or dispose
of any real or personal property,  so  and  in  such  manner,
either  expressly  or by implication, that the income thereof
shall be wholly or partially accumulated for any longer  term
after  the  effective  date of such settlement or disposition
than a life or lives in being  at  that  date  and  21  years
beyond;  and  in  every  case where any accumulation shall be
directed otherwise, such direction shall be  null  and  void,
and   the   income   of  such  property  so  directed  to  be
accumulated, shall, so long as the same shall be directed  to
be  accumulated contrary to the provisions of this Act, go to
and be received by the person in whom the beneficial interest
in the corpus of  the  estate  from  which  such  income  was
derived  is  vested. This Section does not apply to trusts to
which  Section  5  of  the  Statute  Concerning  Perpetuities
applies, to qualified perpetual trusts as defined in  Section
3  of  the Statute Concerning Perpetuities, to trusts created
for the purpose of care of burial places, and  or  to  trusts
created  as  part of a plan for the benefit of some or all of
the employes of one or more employers, including but  without
limitation,   a   stock  bonus,  pension,  disability,  death
benefit, profit sharing, unemployment benefit or other  plan,
for  the  purpose  of  distributing  for  the benefit of such
employes, including their beneficiaries, the earnings or  the
principal,  or  both  earnings  and principal, of the fund so
held in trust. Nothing in this Act shall be deemed to  affect
or  modify  in  any  manner the rule of property known as the
"rule against perpetuities". For  purposes  of  this  Act  no
settlement  or  disposition shall be deemed effective as long
as, by the terms of the instrument creating it, the maker  of
the  instrument  has the power to revoke the instrument or to
transfer or direct to be transferred to  himself  the  entire
legal  and  equitable  ownership of the property which is the
subject matter of the settlement or disposition.
    The amendatory Act of  1953  applies  only  to  deeds  or
agreements  inter  vivos which become legally effective on or
after July 1, 1953, and only to wills of testators  dying  on
or after such date.
    The  amendatory  Act  of 1957 applies only to instruments
which become effective after July 1, 1957.
    This amendatory Act of 1969 applies only  to  instruments
which  become  effective  after  the  effective  date of this
amendatory Act of 1969, but the last sentence  of  the  first
paragraph  of  this amendatory Act of 1969 shall be deemed to
be declaratory of the law prevailing in  this  state  at  the
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1969.
(Source: P.A. 90-472, eff. 8-17-97.)

    Section   20.    The  Uniform  Disposition  of  Unclaimed
Property Act is amended by changing Section 2 as follows:

    (765 ILCS 1025/2) (from Ch. 141, par. 102)
    Sec. 2.  The  following  property  held  or  owing  by  a
banking or financial organization is presumed abandoned:
    (a)  Any  demand, savings, or matured time deposit with a
banking organization, together with any interest or  dividend
thereon, excluding any charges that may lawfully be withheld,
unless the owner has, within 5 years:
         (1)  Increased   or  decreased  the  amount  of  the
    deposit, or  presented  the  passbook  or  other  similar
    evidence of the deposit for the crediting of interest; or
         (2)  Corresponded   in   writing  with  the  banking
    organization concerning the deposit; or
         (3)  Otherwise indicated an interest in the  deposit
    as  evidenced  by  a  memorandum on file with the banking
    organization.
    (b)  Any funds paid toward the purchase  of  withdrawable
shares  or other interest in a financial organization, or any
deposit  made,  and  any  interest  or   dividends   thereon,
excluding  any  charges that may be lawfully withheld, unless
the owner has within 5 years:
         (1)  Increased or decreased the amount of the funds,
    or deposit, or presented an appropriate  record  for  the
    crediting of interest or dividends; or
         (2)  Corresponded  in  writing  with  the  financial
    organization concerning the funds or deposit; or
         (3)  Otherwise indicated an interest in the funds or
    deposit  as  evidenced  by  a memorandum on file with the
    financial organization.
    (c)  Any sum payable on checks or on written  instruments
on  which  a  banking  or  financial organization or business
association  is  directly  liable  including,   by   way   of
illustration  but not of limitation, certificates of deposit,
drafts, money orders and  travelers  checks,  that  with  the
exception  of  travelers checks has been outstanding for more
than 5 years from the date it was payable, or from  the  date
of  its  issuance  if  payable  on demand, or, in the case of
travelers checks, that has been outstanding for more than  15
years  from  the  date  of its issuance, unless the owner has
within 5 years or within 15 years in the  case  of  travelers
checks  corresponded in writing with the banking or financial
organization  or  business  association  concerning  it,   or
otherwise  indicated an interest as evidenced by a memorandum
on  file  with  the  banking  or  financial  organization  or
business association.
    (d)  Any funds or other personal  property,  tangible  or
intangible,  removed  from  a  safe  deposit box or any other
safekeeping repository or agency or collateral deposit box on
which  the  lease  or  rental  period  has  expired  due   to
nonpayment  of rental charges or other reason, or any surplus
amounts arising from the sale thereof pursuant to  law,  that
have  been  unclaimed by the owner for more than 5 years from
the date  on  which  the  lease  or  rental  period  expired,
subject   to  lien  of  the holder for reimbursement of costs
incurred in the opening of a safe deposit box  as  determined
by the holder's regular schedule of charges.
    (e)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section,
no deposit except passbook, checking, NOW accounts, super NOW
accounts,  money market accounts, or such similar accounts as
established by Rule of the Director, held  by  a  banking  or
financial  organization  shall  be presumed abandoned if with
respect to such a deposit which specifies a definite maturity
date, such organization was authorized in writing  to  extend
or  rollover  the  account  for an additional like period and
such organization does  so  extend.  Such  deposits  are  not
presumed abandoned less than 5 years from that final maturity
date.  Property  of any kind held in an individual retirement
account (IRA) is not presumed abandoned earlier than 5  years
after  the  owner attains the age at which distributions from
the account become mandatory under law.
    (f)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section,
money of a minor deposited pursuant to Section 24-21  of  the
Probate  Act  of 1975 shall not be presumed abandoned earlier
than 5 years after the minor attains legal age.   Such  money
shall  be  deposited  in  an account which shall indicate the
birth date of the minor.
(Source: P.A. 89-604, eff. 8-2-96; 90-167, eff. 7-23-97.)

    Section 99.   Effective  date.   This  Act  takes  effect
September 1, 1998.

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