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The Jewish Clause: Putting conditions on an inheritance into a will.The Jewish Clause: Putting conditions on an inheritance into a will.

Most estate-planning attorneys come across clients who want to attach some sort of condition on gifts they make to descendants and other beneficiaries. And most estate-planning lawyers know that conditions creating restraints against marriage, religion and family relationships are often void as against public policy.

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John T. Brooks, partner, and Erika A. Alley, associate, Foley & Lardner LLP, Chicago

Most estate-planning attorneys come across clients who want to attach some sort of condition on gifts they make to descendants and other beneficiaries. And most estate-planning lawyers know that conditions creating restraints against marriage, religion and family relationships are often void as against public policy.

But maybe we shouldn’t be so sure. Apparently, not all of these intrusive conditions will get knocked down automatically. Just look at In re Estate of Feinberg, 383 Ill. App. 3d 992 (1st Dist. June 30, 2008). This case is actually going before the Illinois Supreme Court.

Max Feinberg created a trust in which he declared that any descendant of his—that is, any descendant other than his children—“who marries outside the Jewish faith (unless the spouse of such descendant has converted or converts within one year of the marriage to the Jewish faith) and his or her descendants shall be deemed to be deceased for all purposes of this instrument as of the date of such marriage.”

The parties in Feinberg refer to this provision as "the Jewish clause."
An Illinois circuit court held that this Jewish clause was invalid and an appellate court affirmed, both finding it unenforceable as contrary to public policy.But on a three-judge panel of Illinois' First District Appellate Court, one of the justices disagreed. Indeed, Justice Alan J. Greiman dissented passionately, stating: “Max and Erla had a dream. . . to preserve their 4,000 year old heritage.”

Nonsense, countered Presiding Justice Patrick J. Quinn of the Illinois Appellate Court in an opinion concurring with the majority. If Jewishness were Max’s intent, said Justice Quinn, he wouldn’t have excluded his children from the requirement. Also, the Jewish clause says nothing about barring one of the grandchildren from converting to another religion.

This is not a case about preserving Jewish heritage, declared Justice Quinn. This is a case, he said, of a second generation robbing their own children of their inheritance.

Daddy Dearest?
Max Feinberg and his wife, Erla (also deceased), were survived by five grandchildren. All the grandchildren married, but only one married a Jew. Several cases erupted. They were consolidated and the question about the Jewish clause went to the appellate court.

One of the grandchildren who’d married a non-Jew, Michele Trull, sued the co-executors of the estates. Those executors happened to be her father (Michael Feinberg), her aunt (Leila Taylor) and Leila’s husband (Michele’s Uncle Marshall). Michele claimed that the three had engaged in a conspiracy to evade estate taxes and had misappropriated millions of dollars from her grandparents’ estates.

Michael Feinberg with Leila and Marshall Taylor sought to have Michele’s case dismissed because the Jewish clause deemed Michele to be deceased and therefore without an interest in the estate.

Writing for the majority on the appellate panel, Justice Joy V. Cunningham noted that Illinois courts generally have upheld the principle that testamentary provisions are void as against pubic policy if they discourage marriage or encourage divorce.

Things have been different elsewhere (at least in the past), Justice Cunningham noted. Briefly surveying 30- and 50-year-old cases from other states—including Massachusetts, New York, and Ohio—the judge found that most courts did uphold conditions requiring marriage to persons of a certain faith or revoking gifts to beneficiaries who married persons not of a certain faith.

But, Justice Cunningham pointedly observed, the Restatement (Third) of Trusts is consistent with Illinois law. The Restatement provides that trust provisions that are contrary to public policy are void. More specifically, according to the Restatement, a condition is invalid if it encourages disruption of a family relationship, discourages formation or resumption of such a relationship, or seriously interferes with a beneficiary’s freedom to obtain a divorce or exercise his or her freedom to marry.

The court’s majority opinion ends by noting that the clear intent of the Jewish clause was to influence the marriage decisions of Max’s grandchildren based on a religious standard and thereby to discourage them from marrying outside the Jewish faith. As such, the clause seriously interferes with, and limits the right of individuals to marry whom they choose. It is therefore unenforceable.

Anachronistic Clause?
Presiding Justice Quinn took no issue with the majority opinion. Rather, he used his concurrence to make it clear that Justice Greiman’s dissenting position “could just as well result in the courts being required to enforce the worst bigotry imaginable.” Based on Justice Greiman’s logic, said Justice

Quinn, he would uphold the Jewish clause even if it punished the grandchildren for marrying someone who was “Jewish or black or a member of any other group Max did not like.”

Courts are not well suited to decide all the various questions that might arise in the enforcement of such conditions, said Justice Quinn. What would happen, he asked, if one of Max and Erla’s grandchildren initially married a non-Jewish person but subsequently married a Jewish person? Would the grandchild be “resurrected” upon the second marriage?

To support his dissent, Justice Greiman examined a multitude of cases from outside Illinois. But most were decided in the 1950s or earlier. According to Justice Greiman, these cases illustrate that the Illinois appellate court “would be in the minority if [it] failed to uphold Max and Erla’s limitation.” According to these cases, partial restraints on marriage are valid unless they are unreasonable, and therefore conditions on gifts prohibiting a beneficiary from marrying a specific individual have been upheld.

Justice Greiman also cites various secondary sources generally providing that testamentary provisions requiring a beneficiary to renounce or embrace a certain religion are valid and attorneys may advise their clients that, within limits, they may include such provisions in their estate plans.

Given the heated exchange between justices Greiman and Quinn, perhaps it’s not surprising that, on Nov. 26, 2008, the state high court agreed to hear the case.

This article first appeared in the Trusts & Estates e-newsletter Wealth Watch, which is available at www.trustsandesates.com

About the Authors

John T. Brooks

Partner, Foley & Lardner LLP

http://www.foley.com/

John T. Brooks is a partner with Foley & Lardner LLP focusing his practice in the area of estate, trust and fiduciary litigation. He has been Peer Review Rated as AV® Preeminent™, the highest performance rating in Martindale-Hubbell's peer review rating system and was recently re-elected by his peers for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America® 2007-2012 in the field of trusts and estates. He was also selected for inclusion in the 2005-2012 Illinois Super Lawyers® lists and Leading Lawyer in 2003-2009.*

Mr. Brooks began his legal career in estate planning and administration and subsequently transferred the substantive knowledge he acquired in those areas into a successful practice litigating contested estate and trust matters. His practice encompasses all aspects of estate and trust litigation including breach of fiduciary duty issues, judicial constructions of wills and trusts, will and trust contests, tax litigation, contested heirship, adoption and paternity issues, charitable pledge disputes, guardianship matters, estate planning malpractice, and wrongful death actions. He also handles appeals of these matters as well.

Mr. Brooks is a frequent speaker on topics related to estate and trust litigation and fiduciary risk management. He has lectured to the Chicago Bar Association, the Illinois Institute for Continuing Legal Education (IICLE), ALI-ABA, the Heckerling Institute, the American Bankers Association, Chicago Estate Planning Council and the Chicago Council on Planned Giving. Besides the numerous publications listed below, Mr. Brooks is the general editor of IICLE’s 2009 Handbook for Lawyers: Litigating Disputed Estates, Trusts, Guardianships and Charitable Bequests. He also authors a monthly e-mail newsletter for and serves on the Advisory Board to Trusts & Estates magazine.

Mr. Brooks' professional activities include membership in the Chicago Bar Association and the American College of Trust & Estate Counsel.

Mr. Brooks earned both his B.S. (business administration) and law degree (magna cum laude) from the University of Illinois. He is admitted to the bar in both Illinois and Florida and is admitted to practice before the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. He represents individuals as well as banks and trust companies.