Johnson v. First Union Trust & Savings Bank

273 Ill. App. 472
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 7, 1934
DocketGen. No. 36,337
StatusPublished

This text of 273 Ill. App. 472 (Johnson v. First Union Trust & Savings Bank) 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
Johnson v. First Union Trust & Savings Bank, 273 Ill. App. 472 (Ill. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court entered upon the verdict of the jury in a will contest case involving the will and two codicils executed and published by the testator, William L. Brown.

The bill charges that the testator was mentally incapable of executing the instruments in question and also that he was in a weakened mental and physical condition as the result of taking drugs and that the will and codicils were executed by the testator under the dominating influence of certain individuals who had entered into a conspiracy to obtain his property.

The will was executed at Chicago, Illinois, May 31, A. D. 1919, shortly after the death of his wife. He left no child nor lineal descendant.

The contestants are:

Helen Louise Brown, a half sister, and a legatee under the will to the amount of..............$25,000 Arthur Hintze, the surviving husband, and Jane Hintze, the daughter of Mary Brown Hintze who was in turn the daughter of Hiram Liberty Brown, a brother' of the testator. Mary Brown Hintze has died since the starting of the litigation and her heirs have been substituted. They are legatees under the will to the extent of...............................$25,000

George Drew Brown, age 83 years, a brother and non compos mentis, appearing by Helen Louise Brown, as guardian, who was to receive the income for life on a trust fund under the will to the amount of... $25,000 Upon the death of George Drew Brown the principal amount of this trust fund was to go to Claribelle Rice, a daughter of the contestant Helen Louise Rice.

Walter H. Brown, a half nephew..........$10,000

Bessie Brown, wife of Walter H. Brown....$10,000

William Brown Winslow, a grandson of Helen

Louise Rice ................................$1,000

Orlean Liston Brown Johnson and Delia Brown Wentz, granddaughters of Henry Martin Brown, a half brother...............................nothing

Kate M. Northcott Graves, daughter of Isabelle Jane (Brown) Northcott, a sister of the testator, concerning whom he said in the codicil of January 30, 1928: “My sister, Isabelle Jane (Brown) Northcott of Luray, Virginia, having died and her heirs having been amply provided for, I hereby revoke, cancel and annul the provisions made in my said will dated May 31, 1919*.” ................................nothing

In addition to the amounts provided in the will, the testator from time to time prior to his death made frequent gifts to his next of kin and provided for and paid the expense of the education of some of the younger members of his collateral family. These gifts appear from the letters of the testator and the diary kept by him during the course of his life. In one of the letters dated July 15, 1919, it appears that he had made loans from time to time to Walter Brown, aggregating approximately $10,000, and was canceling the indebtedness and making him a gift of that amount. It also appears that he gave him money at different times to start in business and from an entry in his diary dated July 18, 1922, testator made a gift to the said Walter Brown in the amount of $7,000 with which to purchase a home. Another entry shows a gift to this legatee of stock of the value of $17,600. For his incompetent brother, George Drew Brown, during his lifetime he created a trust of approximately $40,000 and upon the default of certain bonds belonging to the trust fund, other securities were substituted by the testator and the trust made good. His diary shows a gift in 1921 of stock in the amount of $11,000 to his half sister Helen Rice who took care of his demented brother George Drew Brown, but this care seems to have been provided for out of the trust fund created. After the provisions for the contestants, already referred to, the balance of the estate was distributed among the proponents, as follows:

Presbyterian Hospital ...................$75,000.00

Chicago Memorial Hospital............... 35,000.00

Evanston Hospital Association........... 20,000.00

Glenwood Training School................ 10,000.00

Chicago Orphan Asylum................. 10,000.00

The Home for Destitute Crippled Children. 10,000.00

The Country Home for Convalescent Children ................................. 10,000.00

The Orchestral Association of Chicago.... 10,000.00

Rollin T. Woodyatt “to be used by him in research work or for such other charitable purpose as he may elect”............... 35,000.00

Rollin T. Woodyatt, Individually.......... 10,000.00

Charles D. Ewer, the testator’s secretary.. 5,000.00

Frank Phillips, the testator’s chauffeur.... 5,000.00

Harriet Seymour Carscallen, a niece, of testestator’s wife............All household furniture and personal effects.

First Trust and Savings Bank of Chicago, as Trustee, to pay the income for life to Harriet Seymour Carscallen, and upon her death to divide the principal among the charitable legatees previously mentioned in proportion to the amounts specified in the will, all the rest and residue of the estate.

Prior to the execution of the will in May, 1919, the testator had been in active business in the City of Chicago and had built up a reputation as one of the outstanding men in the Chicago district. He was one of four men who organized the original partnership of Pickands Brown & Company. The other three men were Henry S. Pickands, Samuel Mather, and J. C. Morse, all of Cleveland, Ohio. Subsequently, the Cleveland members of the firm dropped out of the organization and Charles P. Wheeler, and Charles T. Boynton, both of Chicago, became associated with the testator in the company under the name of Pickands Brown & Company. This partnership continued for several years and, on January 1, 1904, an agreement was entered into between the parties to that partnership, under which it was agreed that a corporation was to be organized under the laws of the State of West Virginia to take over the property of the partnership and to distribute the stock. Of this stock the testator received 5,548 shares, Wheeler 5,250 shares and Boynton 4,200 shares. One share each was also allotted to two othér persons whom it is not necessary to mention. It was provided in the agreement that none of the partners should sell or dispose of his stock until he had first offered it to the other parties to the agreement on terms as favorable as it could be sold to other parties, but not to exceed the book value of the stock. It was also mutually agreed that the agreement should extend to and be binding upon the heirs and legal representatives of the parties thereto.

Considerable stress has been laid upon the fact in the argument of counsel for contestants that Wheeler was instrumental with others in procuring and bringing about the making of the will in the manner in which it was done, because of his interest in the stock and his efforts to procure the same.

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273 Ill. App. 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-first-union-trust-savings-bank-illappct-1934.