Donovan v. St. Joseph's Home

129 N.E. 1, 295 Ill. 125
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1920
DocketNo. 13301
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 129 N.E. 1 (Donovan v. St. Joseph's Home) 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
Donovan v. St. Joseph's Home, 129 N.E. 1, 295 Ill. 125 (Ill. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellant, John Donovan, son and heir-at-law of Patrick Donovan, deceased, filed his bill in this case in the circuit court of Peoria county to set aside the probate of the will of Patrick Donovan, making the beneficiaries of the will defendants and charging a want of testamentary capacity and undue influence of certain beneficiaries of the will. Upon a trial the court withdrew the issue of undue influence from the jury and the remaining issue was found for the defendants. A motion for a new trial having been overruled, a decree was entered finding that the instrument in question was the last will and testament of Patrick Donovan and dismissing the bill for want of equity.

Patrick Donovan was the owner of a small farm of 54.97 acres near Mansfield and a house and lot in Rantoul. By the will he directed his executor to sell all his real estate and "personal property and after the payment of funeral expenses and the costs of a suitable monument, to distribute the same, one-seventh to each of his two sons and two daughters, one-seventh to the St. Joseph’s Home at Peoria and one-seventh to each of two occupants of the home, who were husband and wife and one of them a distant relative. He was an occupant of St. Joseph’s Home, which was maintained for aged people, and he lived there from about 1907 until the execution of the will, on February 21, 1916, and until his death, on October 30, 19x7, but during that time spent some time up to the summer of 1915 at Rantoul or Urbana with members of his family. His age at the time of executing the will is somewhat uncertain but he was' about ninety-seven years old. The defendants, who are proponents of the will, proved its due execution in accordance with the statute and offered testimony of a number of witnesses, nearly all of whom., were occupants of St. Joseph’s Home and had observed the testator during all or a part of his residence there. These witnesses testified that the testator went about the city, bought tobacco and minor supplies, cleaned spittoons, shaved himself most of the time and played forty-five, seven-up and euchre, and that they did not observe any want of intelligent understanding. Their opinion was that he was of sound mind and memory at the time the will was made. There was no contradiction of this testimony nor of the testimony introduced by the complainant, who produced a considerable number of witnesses who had known the testator at Rantoul and Urbana. These witnesses detailed facts from which a fair inference would be that he was not possessed of testamentary capacity, among other things that he did not know the house where he lived in Urbana in the spring of 1915; that about that time he went into an adjoining house with a bucket of water and thought he .was at home but finally concluded that he was lost and was taken home; that he engaged a workman to replace a foundation under his house at Rantoul in 1914, and when the man came with two loads of brick and a load of sand to do the work he had other men doing it and had forgotten his contract; that, he went to a bank and wanted to draw $2000 to buy a farm when he had but little money in the bank and was satisfied to take $10 or $20 to make a first payment on the farm, and that on account of his condition an inmate of the county house, called “The Dutchman,” was employed in the spring of 1915 to watch him and follow him about during the day when his son was not at home. There was also testimony that what he' had said about his treatment by the wife of Mike Donovan and profanity by her was untrue. One of the witnesses for the defendants testified that the testator told him that he had five children when in fact he had only four. Among the witnesses for the complainant was a physician who treated the testator at Urbana late in the summer of 1914 and afterward and knew and observed him until the following June of 1915. He testified that Donovan was about ninety-four years of age when he treated him and was in an advanced stage of senility; that his mental condition was in an advanced stage of impairment; that he wandered away and got lost, and the witness, with others, had a man appointed to look after him; that the city officers were engaged at one time in hunting him and found him outside the town, in a field; that he was incoherent and unable to finish sentences, not able to answer questions and mentally incompetent and irresponsible; that he did not realize the nature and extent of his property; that his condition would gradually become worse and his mental condition become more impaired as the result of degenerations in his body; that the cause of his mental condition was senile dementia and his condition was permanent and progressive. It was his opinion, as well as that of the other witnesses for the complainant, that the testator was not of sound mind and memory or possessed of testamentary capacity up to and including the spring of 1915.

Based on the testimony of the witnesses for the complainant, and particularly that of the physician, the court was asked by the complainant to instruct the jury that if they believed that at any time before the execution of the will Patrick Donovan was afflicted, by senile dementia, and that said affliction rendered him of unsound mind and memory at that time, and that said unsoundness of mind was then of a permanent nature, then in.that state of tire proof the law presumed that unsoundness of mind continued until the contrary was proved, but the court refused to give the instruction. If the testimony of the physician was believed by the jury the mental condition of the testator was permanent and progressive in* its nature, and the presumption of law is that such a mental condition, not occasional or intermittent, continues to exist until the contrary is shown. (Trish v. Newell, 62 Ill. 196; Todd v. Todd, 221 id. 410; 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sec. 42.) The instruction contained in the hypothesis all the elements required by the law, and the complainant was entitled to have the jury informed of the presumption to enable them to determine whether there had been a change in the mental condition of the testator.

The court gave to the jury, at the instance of the defendants, the following instruction:

“You are instructed that the law presumes that every person of legal age has sufficient mind and memory to make a valid will, and casts upon those who contest a will the burden of establishing by the greater weight of evidence that the person seeking to make the will was not at the time of a sufficiently sound mind to make a valid will.”

This instruction stated, without qualification and without reference to the rule that the proponents of the will must first make a prima facie case of testamentary capacity, that the law presumed the testator to be of- sufficiently sound mind to make a valid will, and it virtually told the jury that the law settled that question in favor of the validity of the will. There is no view of the law that would justify the giving of such an instruction. It is not a requirement of the system for advising juries of the rules of law that a single instruction should contain a full and complete statement of the law as applied to an issue, and the theory is that jurors will piece together the separate instructions so as to make such a complete statement. Instructions may supplement each other in some particulars, but it is error to give to a jury a partial statement of the law, which is likely to mislead.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 N.E. 1, 295 Ill. 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donovan-v-st-josephs-home-ill-1920.