Hesterberg v. Clark

46 N.E. 734, 166 Ill. 241
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 46 N.E. 734 (Hesterberg v. Clark) 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
Hesterberg v. Clark, 46 N.E. 734, 166 Ill. 241 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendants in error filed their bill in chancery in the circuit court of Monroe county to set aside the will, and the probate thereof, of Thomas Mathews, deceased. The bill alleged that the testator was of unsound mind and memory; that the execution of the will was procured by falsehood, misrepresentation and undue influence of the devisees, and that it was not the will as made and executed by the testator as and for his last will, but was fraudulently presented as and for an instrument in writing which he had executed purporting to be his last will and testament.

The facts are briefly these: On February 13, 1895, the testator, desiring to make his will, sent for one Powderly, a school teacher, and Thomas J. Mathews, his grandson, and by the direction of the testator Powderly wrote the will when they were all together, and it was then and there signed by the testator, and, as witnesses, by Powderly and Thomas J. Mathews, as required by the statute. As executed the will contained eight paragraphs, dividing the testator’s estate among his wife, Margaret, and his sons, Francis Mathews, Thomas Mathews, Jr. and Joseph Mathews, with legacies to each of his six daughters. There was also a paragraph numbered “lastly,’’ appointing Henry Hesterberg as executor. Two days after this will was executed the testator again sent for the two witnesses, and Powderly, at his request and in his presence and in the presence of the other witness, inserted in the instrument, after the eighth paragraph, the following:

“Ninth—In addition to what I have already bequeathed to my beloved wife, I give her all the wheat I have in the granary, excepting, however, enough to pay my taxes due in the year 1895.”

The will was not again signed by the testator or the witnesses, and no note or memorandum of the addition was endorsed on the will. Powderly testified that the testator said “we should witness that he wanted to give his wife that much extra in addition to what he gave her beforehand,” but that he did not ask them to sign again. He died a few days thereafter. The plaintiff in error, Hesterberg, as executor, was made one of the defendants to the bill, and he alone has prosecuted this writ. He answered the bill, denying its allegations, but the other defendants, except the infants, suffered default.

When the cause came on for hearing, the defendants, who were the proponents of the will, offered no evidence, but the complainants introduced the original will and probate thereof, with the certificate of proof taken in the county court, and also examined the subscribing witnesses. The witness Powderly was the only one interrogated in the circuit court respecting the testator’s mental capacity. He testified: “His mind was as clear * * * as my mind or your mind. He was as clear as any man was, in my mind.” On motion of the complainants, the court instructed the jury to find that the instrument was not the last will of said Thomas Mathews, deceased. The jury rendered their verdict accordingly, and a decree was entered in conformity therewith, and that the said will and probate thereof be set aside and held for naught.

The first contention of defendants in error is, that the principal defendants below, the widow and two sons, the chief beneficiaries, by their default admitted all the material allegations of the bill, and that the executor has no such interest in the litigation as would authorize him to appeal or prosecute a writ of error, and counsel cite Shaw v. Moderwell, 104 Ill. 64, and Moyer v. Swygart, 125 id. 262. These cases decide that the executor, if pursuing the personal interests of devisees by his appeals to the courts, must look to them for his costs if unsuccessful, and cannot charge the estate. As he was named executor by the will, he was interested in sustaining it. He was made defendant to the bill and issue had been made on his answer, and we see no reason why, subject to the contingency of having to pay the costs like other suitors, he would not ha.ve the right to bring the record here for review. It was his duty, under the statute, to cause the bill to be proved and recorded. (Administration act, sec. 2.) It had been set aside in a suit to which he had been made a defendant. He had the undoubted right to have the error, if any, corrected on appeal or writ of error.

Defendants in error contend that as the defendants below offered no evidence they failed to establish a prima facie case, and, therefore, the instruction of the court to the jury was proper. This contention is without force, for the reason that the complainants themselves furnished the proof which they now claim should have been made by the defendants below. By offering the evidence themselves they waived the advantage which they now seek to take. The complainants put in evidence the will and the certificate of the oaths of the witnesses in the probate court, besides the testimony of the subscribing witnesses, and thereby established a prima facie case for proponents of the will. Holloway v. Galloway, 51 Ill. 159; Carpenter v. Calvert, 83 id. 62; Pendlay v. Eaton, 130 id. 69.

The next contention of defendants in error is, that the decree should be sustained because the will was never legally executed, there having been no re-attestation of the instrument, as it is claimed, after the insertion, by interlineation, of the ninth clause. Under the rule laid down by the authorities the insertion of the ninth clause after the execution and attestation of the will did not work a revocation of the will or render it invalid as originally executed. In Wolf v. Bollinger, 62 Ill. 368, this court said (p. 371): “The power to try and determine whether the writing produced be the will of the testator or not, includes the power to adjudge upon the validity of any part of the instrument, as well as the whole. -» |s the ruie that a valid will, once existing, must continue in force, unless revoked in the mode prescribed by statute. * * * It has been often determined, in the construction of similar statutes, that the mere acts named, of cancellation or obliteration, will not constitute a valid revocation, unless done with the intent to revoke. * * * It is believed to be the doctrine, as laid down in Redfield on Wills, 314, 325, 327, and well settled by the authorities, that when the testator makes an alteration in his will by erasure and interlineation, or in any other mode, without authenticating such alteration by a new attestation in the presence of witnesses or other form required by the statute, it is presumed that the erasure was intended to be dependent upon the alteration going into effect as a substitute, and such alteration not being so made as to take effect, the will, therefore, stands, in legal force, the same as it did before, so far as it is legible after the attempted alteration.”

It is very clear that the court below erred in giving the instruction in question to the jury and in entering the decree setting aside the will, for if it be conceded that the ninth clause interlined was invalid, the whole will was not, for that reason, revoked or rendered invalid-There was no intention on the part of the testator to revoke his will. He simply desired to make a slight alteration by interlining an additional bequest to his wife, which, if it fail for want of proper attestation, leaves the original will in full force. Bringle v. McPherson, 2 Brev. 270; 1 Redfield on Wills, 325, 326; Wright v. Wright, 5 Ind. 389; Jackson v. Holloway, 7 Johns. 394; Greer v.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.E. 734, 166 Ill. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hesterberg-v-clark-ill-1897.