Dowie v. Sutton

126 Ill. App. 47, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 449
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 5, 1906
DocketGen. No. 12,349
StatusPublished

This text of 126 Ill. App. 47 (Dowie v. Sutton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dowie v. Sutton, 126 Ill. App. 47, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 449 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bbowe

delivered the opinion of the court.

A question of parties is raised by the argument of the appellants, which we will first dispose of. Because The Christian Catholic Church, an unincorporated voluntary association, numbering approximately 250,000 members scattered throughout the world, was not made a party to the bill, this court, it is insisted, must reverse the decree and remand the cause. To the objection made by appellees that to make all the members parties by name was impracticable and that as they were so very numerous it was enough, under familiar rules, to make John Alexander Dowie defendant as general overseer of the Christian Catholio Church, thus representing, the body of its members, in addition to making him a defendant individually, the appellants argue that this is a very different thing from suing the Christian Catholic Church and obtaining service on the church by delivering a copy of the writ to John Alexander Dowie, overseer thereof. This is not to the point, because the rule which allows one or more representatives of a class to stand for all is not based on any analogy to the statutory methods of service of legal process on corporations, but on entirely different and less technical rules adopted to prevent a failure of justice. But we do not think that either the Christian Catholic Church eo nomine or its membership, represented by one or more of its official leaders, was a necessary party to this bill. The instruments involved did not leave property to the Christian Catholic Church, but left it to J ohn Alexander Dowie (described as the general overseer of that church), and to his successor or successors, as general overseer, absolutely and forever. There is no trust declared in this, unless the limitation to the successor, instead of to the heirs and representatives, makes such a trust. “In order,” the bequeathing clause goes on to say, “ that mv said estate and effects, etc., may be more effectively used for the good and furtherance of the Christian Catholic Church, I hereby authorize said John Alex. Dowie, his successor or successors, to sell, convey, pledge, mortgage, invest and reinvest, use and expend said estate and effects, etc., proceeds and income thereof, in such a way and manner as he or they may deem best.” This clause does not seem to declare a trust in any positive terms; but confirms the previous outright gift by professedly removing any possible doubt as to the full power of disposal and administration of the property bequeathed, without the interference or dictation of the church as an organization, or of any member thereof, in or out of office. Therefore, it seems that no other person or party than Dowie himself, so far as the interest in the property bequeathed is concerned, is necessary to a full disposition of the rights involved.

Still another objection made to appellants’ position as to this question, we deem valid. It is that it was taken too late. The point was not made by them in the court below, it was not incorporated in the motion for a new trial, it is not even mentioned here among the assignments of error.

It is argued by counsel for appellants that it is a matter on which an appellate court should act whenever its attention is called to it. We think the cases cited to this effect go no farther than to state the salutary rule that in the interests of justice any court, nisi prius, intermediate or ultimate, will, if necessary, stop proceedings until parties whose rights are to be disposed of have had an opportunity to be heard. But in this case, with Dr. Dowie, the sole devisee, and Mr. Speicher, the executor, parties defendant to the bill, any other members of the Christian Catholic Church, even if they could be said to be proper parties, which we do not believe, would certainly be “ formal, not indispensable parties,” and it is too late to raise the objection in this court. American Bible Society v. Price, 115 Ill. 623.

Assignments of cross-errors by certain of the appellees challenge the competency of the subscribing witnesses to the instruments involved in this litigation, and the competency of several witnesses called, by the proponents to testify before the jury, by the same proposition urged by appellants to show a lack of proper parties to the bill, namely, that all members of the Christian Catholic Church are pecuniarily interested in sustaining the will. We do not consider the argument valid in either case. A devise or legacy, even independently of the eighth section of our Statute of Wills, must, we think, be beneficial and direct to disqualify a subscribing witness, or to render a person called as a witness in the trial of the contest so “ interested in the event of the suit ” as to be incompetent.

We have already said that in our opinion it would be, under the will in 'question here, Dr. Dowie alone, (and, as to anything left by him, his successor as general overseer) who could enjoy or enforce in any manner the benefit of the bequests. The cross-errors are therefore not well assigned.

We have felt ourselves called on, therefore, to consider this case on its merits. As our conclusions are based on • the evidence in the record, however, we think it desirable to pass first on the questions raised on the admissibility of certain evidence especially bearing on the issue which we deem the most material in the case, and on which we have decided it—the want of testamentary capacity of Frederick Sutton at the time he signed the alleged will and codicil.

One of the most important of the objections made to the admission of evidence proposed by the contestants was the one taken to the admission of a letter in Frederick Sutton’s handwriting and signed by him, to the contents of which we shall hereafter allude. It purported to be dated “ Cape Town, 29th Oct., ’91,” and began “ Dear Nell.” By its contents it showed that it was addressed to his sister. He had but one sister, Ellen Edridge by name, and the letter was plainly addressed to her. It was introduced by counsel representing her and the other contestants, in the course of the cross-examination of a medical witness who had known and treated Frederick Sutton. The objection made to it by appellants is not so much that it was not identified as sent, as that the date, “ Oct. 29th, ’91 ” is evidence that it was written too long before the matters in issue to be material. There is no reason whatever for any such inference. The figures at the top of the letter, while affording a presumption of the date, by'no means make it conclusive. When, as in this case, it is plain to a man of common sense that the letter was written at Cape Town while a war was going on, by a man who was in Cape Town, on the journey he speaks of in the letter, about October 29, 1901, it becomes also plain to him that the date ’91 was a clerical error for 1901. There was no error in admitting the letter in evidence.

It is also claimed that there was improper evidence admitted of the opinion of various witnesses that there was no foundation for the belief entertained and the charges made by Frederick Sutton that John Sutton, his brother, had stolen or poisoned his sheep. Apart from the fact that in but one of the several instances of the admission of this testimony was any objection made or exception taken to it, we do not think it immaterial or incompetent. It does not stand on the ordinary footing of a matter of opinion.

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Bluebook (online)
126 Ill. App. 47, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dowie-v-sutton-illappct-1906.