Healea v. Healea

254 Ill. App. 334, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 210
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 17, 1929
DocketGen. No. 8,276
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 254 Ill. App. 334 (Healea v. Healea) 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
Healea v. Healea, 254 Ill. App. 334, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 210 (Ill. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shurtleff

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by Nellie D. Verne, appellant, from an order of the circuit court of McLean county, Illinois, finding- that John Healea and others, brother, nephews' and nieces of William H. Healea, deceased, appellees, are heirs at law of the said William H. Healea, and that Nellie D. Verne, appellant, is not William H. Healea’s daughter.

The case was tried in the circuit court on appeal from the probate court. The probate court had originally granted letters of administration to Nellie D. Verne upon the estate of the said William H. Healea, deceased, and entered an order finding that Nellie D. Verne was his only heir at law. John Healea, a brother, and Obe S. Healea, a nephew of the deceased, filed a petition asking the court to set aside the orders appointing Nellie D. Verne as administratrix and finding her to be the heir at law. The probate court, after a hearing upon that petition, granted the prayer thereof and set aside its previous orders and the respondent, in that petition, appellant here, appealed to the circuit court of McLean county, Illinois.

The testimony of a great many witnesses was heard in the circuit court and some documentary evidence was introduced. There were no propositions of law submitted to or found by the trial court and at the conclusion of the trial the court aErmed the decree of heirship found and entered in the probate court and the order of that court removing appellant, Nellie D. Verne, from the oEce of administratrix, from which orders she has appealed.

The facts in this case as presented by the proofs are somewhat more involved in obscurity than in some of the cases passed upon by the courts, but nevertheless must be passed upon in this case.

The evidence shows without controversy that Mary Catherine Livingston taught school at the Healea schoolhouse near Empire, Illinois, during the fall and winter of 1875 and 1876; that William H. Healea, the deceased, who was then about 13 or 14 years old, was one of her pupils at that time; that Mary Livingston, while she taught there in 1875, stayed at the home of Ed.- Healea, the father of William H. Healea and that the latter was at home at that time. This was the beginning of the acquaintanceship between William Healea and Mary Livingstno who were married in 1889, and we find that Mary Livingston again taught the Healea school in 1887 and 1888, when she also stayed at the Ed. Healea home. Mary Livingston was the daughter of Durham Livingston, was born in 1852 and became a school-teacher at the age of 14. She had two sisters, Sarah, also called Sadie, who married William Williams, and Julia, who married Taylor Goddard, and one brother, Johnny Livingston. Mary Livingston married William H. Healea in 1889 at Peoria, Hlinois, and later she and her husband moved to Bloomington. She died in 1916 and her husband died in 1927. Sarah Williams also died several years ago. The evidence is also undisputed that Nellie, the appellant, when about 4 weeks old, on May 12, 1884, was left on the doorstep of the home of Sarah and William Williams, who proceeded to adopt her at the May term, 1884, of the county court of McLean county and that appellant lived with the Williams family until she was approximately 16 years of age.

The fact that Mary Livingston was the mother of appellant was shown by the following: Charles Razor testified that he first saw Nellie when she was 4 or 5 years old with Mary Livingston Healea, who was showing the child the store windows on the west side of the courthouse in Bloomington; that Mary Livingston, after her marriage to William H. Healea, told witness frequently that appellant was her child and always spoke of Nellie as her daughter; that William Healea told him in 1917 or 1918 that Mary Livingston (when she returned to Bloomington in 1884) got off the train, heavily veiled, and had a hack driver drive her to the Williams home to leave the baby, but that it did not suit her to leave appellant that night and so they went to the St. Joseph’s Hospital in Bloomington and stayed and then the next night she left Nellie in a basket on the Williams porch. The witness also tallied with Mary Healea at different times about the' parentage of appellant in the presence of her husband.

Charles Razor also testified that Johnny Livingston, the brother of Mary Livingston Healea, told him once in 1914 that he had to spend $500 for his sister Mary to go to have an operation for a kid; that the witness then said to Johnny, “Now you have told me all this, is she Mary and Will’s child?” and he said, “It is absolutely their child, nobody else’s. ”

Dr. John W. Fulwiler testified that he was the attending physician for Mrs. Mary Healea at the time of her death in 1916; that she died of cancer of the uterus; that witness first saw appellant in 1906 or 1907 in the poormaster’s office in the courthouse with her mother, Mrs. Healea; that Mrs. Healea always spoke of Nellie as her daughter.

Grace Deane testified that she worked at Sarah Williams’ dressmaking shop as a dressmaker for 2 or 3 years about 20 years ago; that Mrs. Williams was a half sister of Mary Healea and witness asked Sarah, while working there, why she was interested in appellant, and she said because Nellie was her half sister’s daughter and also said in response to a question that Nellie’s mother paid for her clothes. She also said that Nellie was left on her doorstep and that she did not fully know whose child she was until Nellie was 12 years old and left home. Mrs. Williams also told witness that the morning after Nellie was left there that Mary Healea came to her house and picked the baby up and kissed it and loved it, that a letter was left in the basket with the baby telling how it should be educated and that money would be furnished the Williams in gold. She also said Nellie was born at St. Joseph’s hospital in Bloomington.

Phil A. Karr testified that while he was superintendent of the county farm, Mrs. Healea filled out the unexpired term of her father as poormaster; that she sent a young woman who was expecting confinement out to the farm and came out to look after her; that on the way back to town Mary Healea said she had sympathy and felt sorry for unfortunate girls because she had had a like experience of her own.

Mrs. Anna Baldwin testified that she was intimately acquainted with Sarah Williams who died in 1922; that the latter stayed at the home of the witness in 1909 and 1910 and during that time told the witness more than once that Mary Healea came and confessed to her that she was appellant’s mother.

Mrs. Mayme Ulbrich testified that before her marriage she was a dressmaker and worked for Sarah Williams in 1903; that the latter wanted to adopt witness and told witness about adopting appellant, and that appellant was left on her doorstep when a baby with a note telling her name and that money would be left to help support her, and she said money was left through the window at different times. She said Mary Healea came to her house and acted surprised to see the baby and tears rolled down her cheeks and she picked it up and said if Sarah would keep it she would help take care of it. Mrs. Williams told witness later that she knew Mary Healea was the mother of appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
254 Ill. App. 334, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/healea-v-healea-illappct-1929.