Hartrick v. Hartrick

272 Ill. 613
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 272 Ill. 613 (Hartrick v. Hartrick) 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
Hartrick v. Hartrick, 272 Ill. 613 (Ill. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

This writ of error was sued out to review the decree of the circuit court of Champaign county in a suit to contest a will, finding the instrument purporting to be the last will and testament of Henry Hartrick, deceased, to be his will and dismissing the bill.

Henry Hartrick executed the instrument in question on August i, 1911, shortly after the death of his wife. He died in 1913, at the age of about eighty-four years, and the instrument was duly admitted to probate as his will. He left surviving him nine children,—five sons and four daughters,—seven of whom are plaintiffs in error here, and the remaining two, Julius Hartrick and Guy Plartrick, are defendants in error. A few days before he executed his will he conveyed 120 acres of land in Champaign county to his son Julius and 120 acres to his son Guy, reserving a life estate in all of the said land. At that time he owned 325 acres of farm land, and a homestead in the city of Urbana. The record does not disclose how much personal property he had or whether there was any indebtedness. The farm land was shown to be worth from $200 to $225 per acre and the city property to be worth $10,000. Shortly prior to the death of Mrs. Hartrick, in 1911, George M. Hartrick and Minnie E. Black, two of the plaintiffs in error, children of Henry Hartrick, filed their petition in the county court of Champaign county, alleging that Henry Hartrick was insane and praying that the question of his alleged insanity be inquired into. The names of six of the plaintiffs in error were, among others, attached to the petition as witnesses by whom the insanity of Henry Hartrick could be proven. Emma Webster, the remaining plaintiff in error, a daughter, resided in the State of California and took no active part in these proceedings. The county court appointed a commission, consisting of Dr. James M. Bartholow and Dr. W. F. Burres, to examine Henry Hartrick. The examination was made but no formal report was made to the court, as Hartrick employed an attorney and an order was then entered that the cause be tried by a jury. A jury was empaneled and testimony heard, but the cause was continued from time to time during the last illness of Mrs. Hartrick and after her death was dismissed. During these proceedings Julius Hartrick and Guy Hartrick espoused the cause of their father and rendered him such assistance as they could in defending against the charge of insanity. After the proceedings had been dismissed Henry Hartrick made the will in question. Before executing the instrument he employed a number of physicians to examine him with reference to his mental condition and to advise him whether he was of sound or unsound mind. While the proceedings were pending in the county court on the petition to have Hartrick adjudged insane, Dr. Frank P. Norbury, a specialist in mental and nervous diseases who at that time was superintendent of the State Hospital for the Insane at Kankakee, was employed to examine Hartrick. After these proceedings had been dismissed, and before the will was drawn and executed, Hartrick went, unaccompanied, from his home in Urbana to Kankakee, a distance of seventy miles, to submit to a further examination by Dr. Norbury to determine whether he had sufficient mental capacity to transact his business and to make a will disposing of his property. He was examined by Dr. Norbury at that time, and also by Dr. Harold E. Singer, a specialist in mental and nervous diseases, who was also connected with the State Hospital for the Insane at Kankakee.

On the trial thirty-one non-expert witnesses and eight physicians testified on behalf of the proponents that Henry Hartrick, at the time he executed the instrument in question, and at all times, was of sound mind and memory. The non-expert witnesses were from all walks of life. Among them were men and women who were intimately acquainted with the testator and many of them had known him for years. Each physician who testified had had an opportunity to personally examine the testator about the time he made the will with a view of determining his mental condition, and one of them had been the physician who had attended him for at least two years prior to the time of his death.

Eor many years the testator had been afflicted with a cancer. To stop the ravages of the disease surgery was resorted to, and the testator’s right eye and practically the whole of his right cheek had been removed prior to the time the will was executed. It is the contention of contestants that the cancerous growth had invaded and affected the brain tissue, but the record is devoid of proof of any such condition.

The two physicians who were appointed by the county court as a commission to examine the testator at the time the insanity inquiry was pending in the county court testified that at that time they found him to be of unsound mind. One of these physicians testified that he met Hartrick some time afterwards, when he appeared perfectly sane. Another physician who examined him at the same time also testified that at that time he was of unsound mind. Three non-expert witnesses testified that the testator was of unsound mind, one of these being a near neighbor in the city of Urbana, one a sister of Mrs. Hartrick, and one a minister who for five years had been the pastor of the church in Urbana of which the testator had been a member.

The testimony is voluminous and it will serve no good purpose to review it in detail. It is sufficient to say that the testimony on behalf of proponents that the testator was of sound mind and memory is so conclusive that there can be no question of the-correctness of the verdict of the jury so far as the weight of the evidence is concerned.

Proponents offered in evidence the petition of George M. Hartrick and Minnie E. Black, filed in the county court, to have their father adjudged' insane, and the list of witnesses submitted by the petitioners and filed in the county court, to prove the averments of their petition. It is contended that the admission of these files of the county court "was improper. The bill charged lack of testamentary capacity in the testator and also that the execution of the will had been procured by the undue influence of Julius Hartrick and Guy Hartrick. While the issue of undue influence was withdrawn from the jury, it was not until the close of the whole case and after this evidence had been offered and admitted. As a preface to his will the testator recited the fact that he had formerly made a will, reciting the provisions of the same, to which he had added two codicils. He then recited the fact that his son George and his daughter Minnie had filed the aforesaid petition in the county court of Champaign county charging that he was insane; that during the pendency of that proceeding his sons Julius and Guy were the only ones of his children who gave him any comfort or assistance; that all the other children, with the exception of his daughter Emma Webster, who resided in California, assisted in the prosecution of the petition. He then stated that for that reason he desired to make such a disposition of his property as would give a preference to his sons Julius and Guy. By his will he then bequeathed to his three sons other than Julius and Guy the sum of $2000 each and made the same a charge upon his real estate. To his daughter Mrs. Webster he bequeathed the sum of $3000, and to each of his other three daughters he bequeathed the sum of $1000, making all these sums a charge upon the real estate.

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Bluebook (online)
272 Ill. 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartrick-v-hartrick-ill-1916.