Huston v. Bell

103 N.E. 213, 260 Ill. 354
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 103 N.E. 213 (Huston v. Bell) 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
Huston v. Bell, 103 N.E. 213, 260 Ill. 354 (Ill. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered tñe opinion of the court:

Anna Huston, Belle DeDand and Daura Hamilton, appellants, filed a bill in the circuit court of DeWitt county for the purpose of contesting the will of Mrs. Sarah Dickey. An issue at law was formed under the statute and tried by a jury, resulting in a verdict sustaining the will. A motion for a new trial was made and overruled, and from a decree dismissing the bill for want of equity contestants have perfected an appeal to this court.

The bill alleged unsoundness of mind and undue influence as grounds for setting aside the will.' The question of undue influence was taken from the jury by an instruction given at the request of appellees. Appellants contend that the court below erred in withdrawing the issue of undue influence from the jury and in not setting aside the verdict of the jury because it was manifestly against the clear weight of the evidence, and in the rulings upon the evidence and instructions.

The circumstances out of which this controversy arises, as shown by the evidence, are as follows: Henry Bell located in DeWitt county in 1853. His family consisted of himself and wife and four daughters. The names of the daughters were Mary, Sarah C., Martha J. and Alma. Mary, the oldest of the daughters, married Philip Wolfe. She died in the year 1900, leaving three daughters. These three daughters were the contestants below and are appellants here. Martha J. never married. She is the executrix of the last will and testament of Sarah C. Dickey and sole beneficiary under the will. She, as executrix and individually, and her sister Alma, who married a man by the name of Geer, were defendants below and are appellees in this court. Sarah C., whose will is the subject of this contest, married a man by the name of Dickey some twenty-five or thirty years before her death. Her husband lived.only seven weeks after the marriage and the widow never re-married. Neither Mrs. Geer nor Mrs: Dickey ever had any children. Henry Bell, the father, was engaged in business in the city of Clinton for six or eight years next after his remo,val to DeWitt county. He then purchased a farm in the northern part of the county and moved upon it. He did not pay for the farm in full at the time he purchased it. The oldest daughter, Mary, was married and living with her husband at the time the family removed to the farm. The other three daughters went with their parents to the country home. Sarah and Martha were school teachers, and both assisted their father in paying for the farm by giving him a portion of their salaries. Martha only taught school a few years, but Sarah, the testatrix, commenced teaching when she was sixteen years of age and continued her school work for thirty years. There was only about two years’ difference in the ages of Sarah and Martha. They always had a common home, and were never separated except when one or both.of them were away from home, teaching. When their schools were finished they returned to their father’s home, where they remained until the next year’s school work was commenced. Henry Bell died testate in 1893, and by his will appointed his two daughters Sarah and Martha executrices of his will. Their mother having died a few years before their father, after the father’s death Sarah and Martha were the only surviving members of the family left on the farm. They resided on the farm until 1893, when they purchased a home in the city of Clinton and moved to the city. At the time the two sisters moved to Clinton Sarah was about fifty-four years of age and Martha fifty-two. During the next seventeen years they lived together in their home in the city of Clinton and supported themselves by renting their farm of 240 acres, which had come to them under their father’s will. In 1894 Sarah, the testatrix, was taken to a sanitarium, where she remained, for three months, under treatment of Dr. Anna Sharpe, for nervous trouble. With the exception of her nervous trouble she had no other serious illness until she became afflicted with cancer of the stomach, which resulted in her death in February, 1912. The cancer developed in the early spring of 1911, and from that time until her death her health gradually declined. On October 9, 1911, a careful examination was made by the physicians and they reached the conclusion that her case was hopeless, and she was so informed. She received the information that she could not live long with calmness and resignation. The witnesses who were in close association with her testify that she made up her mind that she'was going to die, and that she was composed and even more calm than she had previously been. Some six weeks .after her physicians had given her this information she consulted the attending physician in reference to making a will. She asked him to refer her to some reliable attorney whom she could employ to draw her will. The physician named several attorneys, among others. L.'O. Williams, of Clinton. She wrote a letter to Mr. Williams asking him to come to her home, 315 West Main street, to attend to some business for her. He called the following day and found the testatrix sitting up in her room, and she then told him that she wanted to make a will and that she wanted to give all of the property she had to her sister Martha; that she and her sister had always lived together and had their property in common and all of her other relatives were married and had husbands to take care of them, and she thought it would be right for her to leave her property to her sister Martha. She asked Mr. Williams whéther he thought that would be a proper disposition for her to make of her property, and he told her she would have to decide that question for herself. She told him that she and her sister Martha had always lived together and had their property together and that she did not want it divided at her death; that life was uncertain and she might outlive her sister, and she wanted the property fixed so that the one who- survived the other would get all the property. Mr. Williams suggested that that could be accomplished b-y executing mutual wills. Up to this time Martha had not been in the room. She was then called in and Mr. Williams explained to her what Mrs. Dickey had indicated as her wish, and told her that that purpose could be accomplished by each making a will in favor of the other. The matter was then discussed between the sisters, and it was agreed that wills should be prepared for each of the sisters so that the survivor would receive all the property which belonged to both of them. Mrs. Dickey gave the attorney some deeds to- enable him to describe the real estate, and he went to his office and prepared the wills. When the wills were prepared he took them to the residence and left them there over night. The following morning he and the two attesting witnesses that had previously been agreed upon went to the residence and the two wills were executed. The joint property of the testatrix and her sister consisted of 240 acres of land, worth about $200 per acre, and about $4000 worth of other property. At the time of her death the testatrix was over seventy years of age and her sister Martha was two years younger. By the mutual wills these two sisters each gave the other all her property, of every kind and character, and they each appointed the other sole executrix of her will.

The foregoing is a general outline of the facts and circumstances out of which this controversy grows. There is no evidence whatever in the record that the will in question was the result of undue influence exercised by Martha J. Bell or any other person. The testatrix was a woman of more than ordinary intelligence.

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Bluebook (online)
103 N.E. 213, 260 Ill. 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huston-v-bell-ill-1913.