Hoskinson v. Lovelette

5 N.E.2d 219, 365 Ill. 21
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1936
DocketNo. 23874. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 N.E.2d 219 (Hoskinson v. Lovelette) 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
Hoskinson v. Lovelette, 5 N.E.2d 219, 365 Ill. 21 (Ill. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farthing

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants, who are some of the heirs-at-law of Zula Seiler, filed a bill in the circuit court of Wabash county to set aside her will. They charged that the testatrix lacked testamentary capacity at the time her will was executed, on August 21, 1928, and that the will was executed under the wrongful influence of her sister, Maude. The issues were presented to a jury, who found that the instrument in question was the last will and testament of Zula Seiler. The chancellor refused to grant a new trial and entered a decree sustaining the will, and this appeal followed.

Eight witnesses testified for appellants and a like number for appellees. Zula Seiler, the testatrix, was one of six daughters who survived their father, Sebastian Seiler. Four of the daughters married and reared families. Zula and Maude were never married. They lived with their mother in the family home in Mount Carmel until she died, in 1900, and remained together until Maude died, on May 13, 1931. Zula was eight years older than Maude, and was sixty-eight years old at the time she executed her will, on August 21, 1928. Both sisters were deaf, but Zula’s hearing was much more impaired. She resorted to writing as a means of communication. Because of Zula’s greater deafness Maude carried on most of their dealings with the public, but the proof shows they consulted each other before decisions were made. The two sisters owned in common their homestead, a majority interest in a building which was rented to the F. W. Woolworth Company, and a near by farm. They also managed a farm of 160 acres owned by their relatives. They had approximately $12,000 worth of personal property. Shortly before August 21, 1928, Maude went to their attorney and instructed him to prepare reciprocal wills for herself and Zula. The wills as drawn were identical in form, substance and phraseology, except that in each will the other sister was made the sole beneficiary and executrix. Each will provided that in case of the death of the sister prior to the testatrix the property should then go to named beneficiaries, who were exactly the same in each will. Maude took the instruments home, and a few days later she and Zula returned to their attorney’s office. This attorney, Dorothy Utter, his secretary, and L. E. McKittrick, cashier of the American National Bank of Mount Carmel, attested both wills. The attorney asked Zula if the instrument was her will, and she replied that it was. The proof shows that she had to be asked three or four times in a loud tone of voice if the instrument was her will, but there is nothing to show that the necessity of repetition was caused by a want of mental capacity. When she finally understood the question she signified that it was her will. The record shows that the execution of the will was regular in every particular. The three attesting witnesses testified at this trial. The attorney who drew the two wills expressed the opinion that Zula was of unsound mind when she executed her will. His stenographer expressed no opinion as to the mental condition of the testatrix, and the bank cashier said he had no reason to believe that at the time she executed her will she was of unsound mind. The county court denied probate, but on appeal the circuit court allowed the petition and admitted the will to record.

The attorney testified that he had been acquainted with Maude and Zula Seiler since 1900. .He lived across the street from them and had represented them many times. He stated that Maude told him that she and Zula had read the wills, and that Zula told him it was her will she was about to execute. He said that Maude suggested that they call the bank cashier as one of the witnesses. He related an instance where the sisters had had trouble with a neighbor about an alley back of their house. He was employed to resist the payment of drainage assessments. Both the sisters always insisted their assessments were too high. They thought that one of the drainage commissioners was making the assessments so high that they would not be able to pay, in order that he might thus get their land. He said that they always had trouble with their farm tenants and changed tenants about every year. Zula took an abusive attitude toward her tenants, insisting that they were dishonest and indifferent about her crops. The testatrix felt superior to her neighbors, and had on occasions referred to them as “low-down trash.” She was suspicious that they were trying to injure her and her property. He said that both women were very strong-willed and inclined to be insistent upon what they thought were their rights.

The court admitted in evidence, over the objection of the contestants, the order of the county court admitting the will of Maude Seiler to probate and appointing Zula Seiler executrix, her oath as such, letters testamentary, and her final report. The attorney admitted that these exhibits were either prepared in his office at his direction or that he knew of their execution. He said he did not tell the other two attesting witnesses that he thought at the time she executed her will that Zula was of unsound mind. He also considered her incompetent at the time he represented her in the administration of Maude’s estate, but said he did not tell the county judge of his opinion or suggest that a guardian ad litem should be appointed, because the court was as well acquainted with Zula as he was. He discussed the competency of Zula with the county judge during the administration of Maude’s estate but did not express an opinion as to her sanity. In settling Maude’s estate Zula signed whatever papers he asked her to sign without any knowledge of their contents, and also verified some of them. He testified that there had been a fire at the store building in 1933, five years after the execution of the will, and that Zula objected to his paying for the repairs to the building, stating that she needed the money for other purposes. He had taken charge of the insurance money and had made these repairs because Zula was then incompetent.

Appellants’ witness Dr. S. W. Schneck testified that in his opinion the testatrix was incompetent at the time she executed her will. He was a physician and surgeon who had been practicing medicine since 1898 but did not qualify as an expert on mental diseases. It is admitted that the testatrix died of senile dementia and that she was committed to the Anna State Hospital for the Insane in 1934. The witness. testified that the first symptoms appeared in 1924, and she became progressively worse until her death. He related nothing that definitely described her condition at the time she executed her will, in 1928, and from all that appears his opinion could well have been based on his observations of Zula in the years immediately preceding her death rather than at the time her will was executed. The facts upon which he based his opinion did not necessarily indicate that the testatrix was of unsound mind. For instance, he testified that she would forget whether she had paid him and would argue over his bills. She would not be able to describe where her pains were when he was called in to treat her and could not concentrate long on any train of thought. Whether her failure to concentrate was due to her deafness rather than to insanity is not disclosed by the testimony of this witness.

Appellants’ witness W. H. Wetzel was of the opinion that the testatrix was not of sound mind and memory. He had known her for twenty-five years and she had been a customer at his bakery.

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Bluebook (online)
5 N.E.2d 219, 365 Ill. 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoskinson-v-lovelette-ill-1936.