Gallagher v. Kilkeary

29 Ill. App. 415, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 146
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 19, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 Ill. App. 415 (Gallagher v. Kilkeary) 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
Gallagher v. Kilkeary, 29 Ill. App. 415, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 146 (Ill. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

Phillips, J,

This bill is filed under Section 7, Chapter 148, Starr & C. Ill. Stat, the proviso to which authorizes this procedure, and is as follows:

“ Provided, however, that if any person interested shall, within three years after the probate of any such will, testament or codicil in the County Court as aforesaid, appear and by his or her bill in chancery contest the validity of the same, an issue at law shall be made up, whether the writing produced be the will of the testator or testatrix or not, which shall be tried by a jury in the Circuit Court of the county wherein such will,'testament or codicil shall have been proven and recorded as aforesaid, according to the practice in courts of chancery in similar cases; but if no such person shall appear within the time aforesaid the probate as aforesaid shall be forever binding and conclusive on all the parties concerned, saving to infants, femes covert, persons absent from tlm State, or non compos mentis, the like period after the removal of their respective disabilities. And in all such trials by jury as aforesaid, the certificate of the oath of the witnesses at the time of the first probate shall be admitted as evidence, and to have such weight as the jury shall think it may deserve.”

The probate of the will was, on the trial, produced and read. The witnesses to the instrument were Thomas L. Fekete and John Friess. The original instrument was then offered, and the defendants then called as witness Alexander Flannigan, an attorney, who testified he was called to the house of John Kilkeary to write the will, and took with him Thomas L. Fekete; that he made memoranda dictated by John Kilkeary, and then went into an adjoining room and dictated the will produced to Thomas L. Fekete, who wrote at his dictation; that the will so written was read to Kilkeary, who said it was all right. He further states that “ the witnesses were in his (Kilkeary’s) presence when they signed it, and in the presence of each other and in my presence.”

Thomas L. Fekete, one of attesting witnesses, testified that he signed the will as such witness in the presence of the testator. John Friess testifies “that he signed the will as a witness; Fekete and Flannigan were present; John Kilkeary, the man who made the will, was not present; he was in a different room.” This is substantially all the testimony as to the attestation of the will.

Under Sec. 2, Chap. 148, R. S., “All wills, testaments and codicils by which any lands * * * are devised, shall be reduced to writing and signed by the testator, or testatrix, or by some person in his or her presence, and by his or her direction, and attested in the presence of the testator, or testatrix, by two or more credible witnesses.”

Under this provision, where an issue is made under See. 7 of that chapter, it was held by the Supreme Court of this State that, “ The party who relies on the will is called upon to prove anew its execution and validity. And what he is required to prove to sustain the instrument, the other party is permitted to disprove in order to defeat it. There are some indispensable requisites to the due execution of a will. It must be signed by the testator, or by some one in his presence and by his direction, and attested in his presence by two or more witnesses.

“A paper that has not thus been subscribed and witnessed has no force or effect as a will under our statute.” Rigg v. Wilton, 13 Ill. 15.

In Potter v. Potter, 41 Ill. 80, the court holds: “ The ninth (instruction),in specifying the statutory requirements necessary to a valid execution of a will, omits to inform the jury that it was requisite that the witnesses should attest the will in the presence of the testator. To render this instruction precisely accurate this should have been stated.”

In Ambre v. Weishaar, 74 Ill. 109, a case where the attestation of the will by subscribing witnesses was in a different room from where the testatrix was, the only question presented by the record was whether the will was attested in the presence of the testatrix; and on the facts the court holds: “We regard it as sufficiently established by the authorities that if witnesses to a will, while signing their names thereto as such witnesses, are in such a place that the testator can see them if he chooses, they are to be regarded as within his ¡wesence within the meaning of the statute; that it is not necessary that they should be in the same room with the testator, or that he should actually see them sign.” But in that case the court further holds: “Without further dwelling upon this conflicting testimony, we will say that, after a consideration of the entire testimony and the surrounding circumstances, we can come to no other conclusion than that the testatrix was in such a situation that she might have seen the attestation.”

We can not hold that by the language just above quoted from Ambre v. Weishaar it was intended by the Supreme Court to reverse what was said in Rigg v. Wilton, or in Potter v. Potter, that it must, on the trial of the issue where a bill is filed under Sec. 7 of the statute, be shown that the instrument produced as the last will of a testator was attested in his presence by the subscribing witnesses, but that, as applicable to the state of facts shown by the evidence in Ambre v. Weishaar, if the testator and the witnesses were at the time of the attestat’on in such relative positions that the testator could see the attesting witnesses sign, it is sufficient.

In this case the two attesting witnesses and the attorney who was called to write the will are sworn in behalf of proponents. One attesting witness and the attorney testify that the will "was, by the attesting witnesses, signed in the presence of the testator. The other attesting witness testifies it was signed by him as attesting witness in another room than the one in which the testator was, and there is no testimony in the record to show the relative positions of the attesting witness and testator, or whether the testator could have seen the signing by the attesting witness. There was this conflict in the evidence, and the proponents were called upon anew to prove its execution and validity; and of the indispensable requisites to the due execution of a will, it must be signed by the testator or by some one for him in his presence and by his direction and attested in his presence by two or more witnesses. But notwithstanding this conflict in the evidence and this absence of evidence the court assumed to determine the question of fact, although the jury were required to determine other questions of fact.

On the allegation of undue influence of Mary Kilkeary exercised over the testator, and the delirious condition of John Kilkeary at the time of the execution of the will, there was the evidence of Flannigan, Freels, Fekete, and four other witnesses called by the proponents, most of whom substantially testified that his mental condition was such that he was conscious of the effect of his acts and was in his right mind, and several of these witnesses state acts done and directions given by Kilkeary with reference to the execution of the instrument.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Ill. App. 415, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallagher-v-kilkeary-illappct-1888.