Craig v. Wismar

141 N.E. 766, 310 Ill. 262
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1923
DocketNo. 15465
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 141 N.E. 766 (Craig v. Wismar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Craig v. Wismar, 141 N.E. 766, 310 Ill. 262 (Ill. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

A bill was filed by appellant in the circuit court of Champaign county in December, 1921, to contest the will of Sarah Rice, deceased, which had been admitted to probate December 18, 1920, in the county court of that county. On a hearing in the circuit court the bill was dismissed for want of equity, and this appeal follows.

The only question at issue here is whether the will was duly executed. The will states that it was signed and sealed “this .... day of September, A. D. 1919.” Under the signature of the testatrix, Sarah Rice, was the attestation clause, bearing the names “C. D. Bundy, residing at Sadorus, 111.,” and “Nancy A. Allen, residing at Sadorus, 111.” Underneath the name of the last witness, in longhand, was written: “Owing to unavoidable circumstances couldn’t get the witness until October 10, 1919. — Sarah Rice.” The particular point in dispute is with reference to the signature of Nancy A. Allen as a subscribing witness. The original will has been certified to this court as an exhibit for the purpose of showing the signatures on the attestation clause. The signature of Nancy A. Allen as it appears on that attestation clause has been photographed, and enlarged to four times the original size, and that photographed signature has been certified here. Several receipts and other papers which the proof shows bear the genuine signature of Nancy A. Allen have also been certified as exhibits for the purpose of comparison with the signature to the attestation clause above mentioned. Nancy A. Allen died subsequent to the probate of the will of Sarah Rice.

It appears from the testimony that Sarah Rice made a will in 1916 which was witnessed by Nancy A. Allen and three others. Both that will and the one in question were drawn by Lott R. Herrick, of Farmer City. The evidence shows that Mrs. Rice desired to change the will she had executed in 1916, and for that purpose met Herrick in Champaign on September 2, 1919, and gave him the data for the new will, which the attorney prepared and met Mrs. Rice at Champaign again on September 8, when he explained to her it would be necessary for her to execute it in the presence of two witnesses. He asked her if she wished to execute it in Champaign, and she said she would prefer to take it home with her and would get witnesses there with whom she was acquainted, and the attorney explained the formalities which must be observed in execut-. ing the will.

Arthur Goers, cashier of the Farmers’ State Bank at Sadorus, testified that Mrs. Rice had been to the bank and they turned over to her the old will and that he took her to Champaign on the occasion of the drafting of the new will, and that after the new will had been executed she turned it over to him,» stating that she had taken the will to Dr. Bundy and had him sign as a witness and that she also had Mrs. Allen sign as a witness, and that she desired Goers to seal up the will and instructed him to turn it over to Mr. Wismar, who was named as sole executor and trustee, after her death. Goers testified that he sealed the envelope containing the will and put it in the bank vault, where it remained until Mrs. Rice’s death, no one having access to the vault except the bank officials, and that after her death, when he inspected it, it was in the same condition as when sealed, and he then turned it over to Wismar. Goers also testified that he had seen Mrs. Allen sign her name numerous times and had seen her signature on checks, and in his opinion the signature on the attestation clause of the will in question was in her handwriting; that he had also talked with Mrs. Allen subsequent to Mrs. Rice’s death, and she stated to him that the signature on the will (which was shown her) was her signature, and that she told him she sometimes after writing with a pencil retraced her signature in ink.

Dr. C. D. Bundy, the other attesting witness, testified that he signed the attestation clause in Mrs. Rice’s presence; that Mrs. Allen was not present at that time but Mrs. Rice told him she was going to see Mrs. Allen; that he was familiar with the signature of Mrs. Allen and had seen her sign many times, and that in his opinion the signature on the attestation clause of the will was genuine.

Eleanor M. Compton, a daughter of the testatrix, testified that she was present in the county court when her mother’s will was offered for probate, and that Nancy A. Allen was present and said that her signature was on the will and that she had signed the will at .Mrs. Rice’s request. Six other witnesses, among them a son „of Mrs. Allen, testified that they knew Mrs. Allen’s signature, and that in their opinion the signature on the attestation clause of the will was Mrs. Allen’s genuine signature.

The affidavit to which Nancy A. Allen subscribed and which was submitted in the probate court was introduced in evidence, and was to the effect that she was a subscribing witness to the will in question and that the testatrix acknowledged the will to be her act and deed, and that she (Nancy A. Allen) signed the same as a witness in the presence of the testatrix. Marie F. Denton, deputy county clerk, testified that she read the affidavit last above mentioned to Mrs.” Allen, who then signed it.

Appellant, Carrie Mae Craig, daughter of the testatrix, testified, over objection, that she had a conversation with Nancy A. Allen after the death of her mother in which Mrs. Allen said that she had signed but one will, and that when she testified in the county court she thought she was testifying about the will signed down in the country in 1916, and that then Mrs. Allen detailed to the witness the circumstances of such signing.

Hazel Craig, a daughter of the last witness, corroborated her mother and testified that they asked Mrs. Allen if she had ever signed a will and retraced her signature, and she said she had not, and that when she came to make her affidavit the last page of the will did not look like she remembered it when she signed as a witness; that she did not think Mrs. Rice’s signature was in the same place as when she signed, and she knew there had been four witnesses ; that Mrs. Allen stated that she said, “Where are the other witnesses? — the names of the other witnesses?” and that they said there were only two; that the other two people had signed another piece of paper that was under it but did not sign the will, and that this was the will she signed; that Mrs. Allen said, “I didn’t have my glasses with me and they said it was her will, so I said it was my signature.”

A. M. Allen, the husband of Nancy A. Allen, testified that the two last named witnesses were at his home and talked with Mrs. Allen and had some conversation with her about signing a will; that he heard his wife say she had signed one will, and that was all he ever heard her say she did sign.

The foregoing is the substance of the material testimony offered. There was abundant evidence of various witnesses who had seen Mrs. Allen write, some of wjhcm had been closely associated with her in lodge and school board work and in other matters, who gave it as their opinion that the handwriting on the will was that of Mrs. Allen, and the affidavit of Mrs. Allen was very strong evidence that she attested the will. An inspection of the signature, “Nancy A.

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141 N.E. 766, 310 Ill. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-v-wismar-ill-1923.