Hawhe v. Chicago & Western Indiana Railroad

46 N.E. 240, 165 Ill. 561
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 46 N.E. 240 (Hawhe v. Chicago & Western Indiana Railroad) 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
Hawhe v. Chicago & Western Indiana Railroad, 46 N.E. 240, 165 Ill. 561 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the court:

It is first claimed in the argument by complainant’s solicitor, that the court erred in allowing evidence tending' to prove the condition and character of the testator’s estate; evidence of the testator’s testamentary capacity when he executed the will; evidence that he was residing with his family," consisting of his wife and two children; and also evidence of one of the witnesses to the will that the testator “sat up in the bed and read the will deliberately before he signed it,” and that he died that night.

With reference to the character and condition of the testator’s estate, we find no evidence bearing on that question in the record except the inventory filed by the administrator with the will annexed, in the probate court,—and that, as appears from the abstract, was put in evidence by the complainant.

In regard to the capacity of the testator to make a will, that was a question controverted by no one, and proof of the fact could in nowise prejudice complainant.

But it is said, evidence that the testator was residing with his family, consisting of his wife and two children, and evidence of his testamentary capacity and physical condition when he signed the will, tended to prove the testator’s intention outside of the will, and hence was incompetent. The law is well settled that extrinsic evidence cannot be resorted to to show the intention of a testator where there is no latent ambiguity in the will, but the intention is to be determined from the language used by the testator in the will itself. (Hayward v. Loper, 147 Ill. 41.) But we do not think the evidence objected to had any tendency whatever to vary or change the intent of the testator as declared in the will. As we understand the record, the evidence was not offered for that purpose. The object of the evidence was to place before the court the circumstances attending the execution of the will in support of and in aid of the intention of the testator as declared in the will, and the court, in the exercise of its discretion, had the right to hear such evidence. In the discussion of this subject it is said in Schouler on Wills (sec. 579): “But to aid the context of the instrument by extrinsic proof of the circumstances and situation of the testator when it was executed is constantly permitted at the court’s discretion, and this constitutes a proper, indeed, often an indispensable, matter of inquiry when construing a will, for whatever a will may set forth on its face, its application is to persons and things external, and hence is admitted evidence, outside the instrument, of facts and circumstances which have any tendency to give effect and operation to the terms of the will, such as the names, descriptions and designation of beneficiaries named in the will; the relation they occupied to the testator; whether the testator was married or single, and who were his family; what was the state of his property when he made his will and when he died, and other like collateral circumstances. Such evidence, being explanatory and incidental, is admitted, not for the purpose of introducing new words of a new intention into the will, but so as to give an intelligent construction to the words actually used, consistent with the real state of the testator’s family and property, —in short, so as to enable the court to stand in the testator’s place, and read it in the light of those surroundings under which it was written and executed.” (See, also, Little v. Giles, 25 Neb. 313; Doe v. Hiscock, 5 M. & N. 363.) Sere the evidence showed the will was executed on the day of the testator’s death, and doubtless in anticipation of that event,—only a short time before complainant’s birth; that the testator was then residing with his family, composed of his wife, a daughter and a son. The evidence did not in the least modify or change the intention of the testator as expressed in the will, but it gave the court the situation of the testator, so that it might with more ease properly place a construction on the language of the will as it was written.

But the real question presented by the record is, was it the intention of the testator, in view of all the provisions of the will, to disinherit the complainant in the bill. Section 10, chapter 39, of our Statute of Descents, provides: “If, after making a last will and testament, a child shall be born to any testator, and no provision be made in such will for such child, the will shall not on that account be revoked; but unless it shall appear by such will that it was the intention of the testator to disinherit such child, the devises and legacies by such will granted and given shall be abated in equal proportions, to raise a portion for such child equal to that which such child would have been entitled to receive out of the estate of such testator if he had died intestate.” Here, if the testator had died intestate, the complainant would have inherited one-third of the land in question, subject to the dower of his mother, and it is claimed by him that it was not intended by the testator, by the will, to disinherit him, .hence he is entitled to recover in like manner as if the testator had died intestate.

The testator, in his will, made no allusion whatever to any of his children,—those then born or those that might thereafter be born,—but devised all of his property to his wife, and in doing so used language that is very significant, meaning more than a simple devise. The will declares: “I hereby will, devise and bequeath all of my estate, real, personal and mixed, and of every kind whatsoever, to my beloved wife, Mary H. Hawhe, giving my said wife full power and authority to collect all debts and to compromise all debts due me, to pay all my debts, to sell any and all of my estate, both real and personal, and to convey the same by bill of sale and by deed of conveyance as fully, amply and completely as I could have done in my lifetime.” Language could not have been used which would more clearly express an intention that the wife, and she alone, should take and hold the testator’s estate to the exclusion of all others, than the language here employed. If the testator had inserted a clause in his will that no other person should have any portion' of his estate, such a provision would have excluded the two children then born and those that might thereafter be born; and yet such a provision would not have made the intention of the testator more definite and certain that the wife should have his entire estate, as declared in the will. The testator, in drafting his will, did not stop by simply devising all of his estate to his wife, but in order to remove all doubt in regard to his intention he went further, and declared, “giving my said wife full power and authority to sell any and all of my estate, both real and personal, and to convey the same by bill of sale and by deed of conveyance as fully, amply and completely as I could have done in my lifetime.” Why should he insert this language unless he intended that his wife, and she alone, should have his entire estate to the exclusion of all others?

There is another significant fact which has an important bearing on the construction of the will. At the time the will was executed by the testator he had two children then living, one four and the other two years old. These children were excluded from taking any portion of the testator’s estate by the will.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.E. 240, 165 Ill. 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawhe-v-chicago-western-indiana-railroad-ill-1897.