Harp v. Parr

48 N.E. 113, 168 Ill. 459
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 48 N.E. 113 (Harp v. Parr) 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
Harp v. Parr, 48 N.E. 113, 168 Ill. 459 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

First—The first question in the case is, whether or not the testator was of sound mind and memory when he executed the will in question. This was a question of fact to be determined by the jury upon the evidence under the instructions of the court. We have carefully examined the evidence, and find no reason to disturb the verdict and judgment below so far as this question is concerned. It was peculiarly within the province of the jury to decide upon the testamentary capacity of the deceased; and their verdict was clearly correct. Some of the witnesses say, that the testator complained at different times of pain in his head, and this class of testimony is referred to by counsel for plaintiffs in error, as indicating that his mind was affected. The physicians, however, say that, although kidney trouble was the main disease that' caused his death, he was clear in his mind, except during the three or four days before his death, and that the head trouble, of which he complained, was nothing more than headache, or neuralgia. The testimony upon the whole shows very conclusively, that the deceased was a careful, painstaking business man, and that, at the time of the execution of his will, and for some time theretofore and thereafter, up to a few days before his death, he had sufficient mental capacity to knowingly and understandingly transact the ordinary business of life, and also to comprehend the act of disposing of bis property. This being so, the presumption arises, that he was capable of doing any act requiring no greater capacity, and, therefore, capable of making a will. (Craig v. Southard, 148 Ill. 37; Taylor v. Cox, 153 id. 220).

Second—The evidence in the case is as far from showing that any undue influence was exercised over the testator in the matter of making bis will, as it is from showing that he was not of sound mind and memory. Indeed, we do not understand counsel for plaintiffs in error to insist very strenuously in their brief that the charge of undue influence is sustained by the proofs. The deceased, after giving in his will a life estate in all his property to his widow, provided that, after her death, the defendant in error, Thomas A. Parr, should have a life interest in the property, and that the remainder should go to his children, if he had any; if not, to the heirs of the testator and his wife. Thomas A. Parr was the nephew of the testator’s wife, the child of a deceased brother of hers. The testator and his wife took this boy, Thomas, when he was four years old, into their family, and adopted him as their child, though no legal ceremony of adoption was performed. He lived with them for many years, and then went to the far west to make his own fortune. He was absent in the west when the testator died, and had been so absent for two or three years theretofore. It cannot be said, that he, during this time, exerted any influence upon the mind of his aunt’s husband. The testimony tends to show, that the deceased entertained a great affection for this nephew of his wife, and spoke with regret of his absence, and also regretted his silence when he failed to write. The proof also shows, that, for years before he made his will, he made declarations to the effect that he was going to leave his property to this nephew of his wife, as he had no children of his own, and also, that, after he made his will, he very often, in conversation with his neighbors, made the statement, that he had already made a will, devising his property in the manner in which the will disposes of it. The terms of the will are consistent with all of these proven declarations as to' his intentions. When it is charged, that a will has been executed through undue influence, the declarations of the testator made before its execution are admissible, byway of rebuttal, to show his intention as to the disposition of his property; because a will, made in conformity with such declarations, is more likely to have been executed without undue influence, than if its terms are contrary to such declarations. The presumption also is in favor of the validity of the will, when the person, who is provided for therein, is one with whom the testator had maintained intimate and affectionate relations during his life. Again, it is a strong circumstance, tending to show the absence of any undue influence, when the proof fails to connect the beneficiary in the will in any way with the making of the will, either by agency, procurement, suggestion, solicitation or knowledge of its execution. (Goodbar v. Lidikey, 136 Ind. 1; In re Douglass’ Estate, 162 Pa. St. 567).

Third—It is furthermore claimed by plaintiffs in error, that the paper, produced as the will of Samuel D. Winget, deceased, was not the same paper, which he signed as his will. This contention is not sustained by the proofs, and rests more upon suspicion and insinuation than upon real facts. It does appear, that the will was written on one side of two leaves of foolscap paper, pasted together endwise; the upper part of the under and lower leaf being trimmed off a short distance below the unruled top margin, thus affording ruled lines and regular spaces for all the writing on the lower leaf. From this circumstance plaintiffs in error charge, that one leaf was substituted for another; but wé do not think that the manner, in which the two leaves are pasted together, affords any ground for such a suspicion. Warner testifies that, before he wrote the will, which was executed on February 6, 1890, he had written another will for the testator, which, however, the testator was not satisfied with, and did not execute. It is also true, that Nathan J. Parr, one of the subscribing witnesses, makes the following statement: “I do not think the paper was in the same shape as it was when I signed it. It was in different shape. The paper I signed looked like a sheet of foolscap.” It must be remembered, that Parr was not a disinterested witness. He had an interest in overthrowing the will rather than in sustaining it. He was an only brother of Mrs. Winget. As Winget had no children, if he had died intestate, his wife would have inherited one-half of his real property, and all of his personalty. Upon her death, as she left no children, her brother would inherit a portion of the estate, inherited by her from her husband. In view of the fact, that he is thus an interested witness, his statement, to the effect that he thinks this paper, upon which the will was written, was in a different shape from the paper produced as the will, should not be regarded as sustaining a charge of fraud and substitution as against the positive testimony of the two witnesses, Warner and Smith. Warner and Smith both swear, that the paper produced is the paper, which was executed as the will, and that it is now in the same condition as it was on the day when the will was signed. Indeed, it is not necessarily an objection to a will, that it is written on several separate pieces of paper. Such fact is not fatal to the validity of the will. All that is required is, that all the separate sheets of paper should be in the room, and in the presence of the attesting witnesses. (Bond v. Seawell, 3 Burr. 1773; Ela v. Edwards, 16 Gray, 91; Gass v. Gass, 3 Humph. 278; Wikoff’s Appeal, 15 Pa. St. 281). Moreover, the fact already referred to, that the will in its general provisions corresponded with the declarations of the testator as to his intentions in regard to the disposition of his property, is a circumstance which goes to contradict the theory, that there was any forgery of the will now under consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.E. 113, 168 Ill. 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harp-v-parr-ill-1897.