Lloyd v. Rush

273 Ill. 489
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 273 Ill. 489 (Lloyd v. Rush) 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
Lloyd v. Rush, 273 Ill. 489 (Ill. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

Milow Lloyd and Luella L. Titterington, two of the heirs-at-law of Emma C. Lloyd, deceased, filed their bill in the circuit court of Rock Island county against Lovina Rush, Walter J. Lloyd, Eunice Laflin, Asenath Baker, Cornelius Baker and Addison Rush, individually and as executor, to contest the validity of ,an instrument which had been admitted to probate by the county court of Rock Island county as and for the last will and testament of Emma C. Lloyd, deceased. The grounds of contest set up in the bill were mental incapacity and undue influence exercised by Addison Rush and Lovina Rush. Lovina Rush and Addison Rush appeared and answered the bill, denying the allegations charging that Emma C. Lloyd was at the time of making her will of unsound mind and memory, and the allegations charging that the will was obtained through undue influence exercised by them. Thereafter all the other persons made defendants to the bill were, upon motion of the complainants, joined as complainants. A replication having been filed to the answer, an issue at law whether the writing produced be the will of Emma C. Lloyd, deceased, was made up and submitted to a jury. The proponents offered all their evidence, including the testimony of numerous witnesses, in chief. The contestants then offered their proof. At the conclusion of the taking of testimony on behalf of the contestants, the court, upon motion of the proponents, instructed the jury to return a verdict finding that the writing produced is the last will and testament of Emma C. Lloyd, deceased. After the proponents had moved the court to give the peremptory instruction, the contestants, by cross-motion, asked leave to amend their bill by adding thereto, immediately preceding the prayer for relief, allegations which, in substance, charged that James M. Beardsley, at the instigation of Lovina Rush and Addison Rush, induced Emma C. Lloyd to make a will; that Emma C. Lloyd directed Beardsley to have a will prepared making certain devises and bequests; that Beardsley prepared or had prepared a will in and by which the directions of Emma C. Lloyd were no.t carried out and which was materially different from that directed by her to be made, and that Beardsley, with the aid and assistance of Lovina Rush and Addison Rush, at a time when Emma C. Lloyd was very ill and debilitated in mind and body, procured the execution of said will without advising her of the provisions therein which were at variance with her declared intention ; that Emma C. Lloyd, therefore, did not know the provisions of the will which she executed and that the same was fraudulently obtained from her. The court refused to permit the proposed amendment to the bill but gave the peremptory instruction requested by the proponents. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the proponents, as directed by the court. After overruling a motion for a new trial the court entered a decree finding the instrument in controversy to be the last will and testament of Emma C. Lloyd, deceased, and dismissing the bill at the complainants’ costs. Erom that decree the complainants have prosecuted this appeal.

The only ground relied upon by appellants for reversal is that the court erred in directing the jury to return a verdict in favor of appellees.

Emma C. Lloyd was at the time of her death, on August 9, 1912, about sixty-seven years of age. She had never been married. The appellants, Milow Lloyd, Luella L. Titterington, Asenath Baker, Walter J. Lloyd and Eunice Lafiin, and the appellee Lovina Rush, are her surviving brothers and sisters and her only heirs-at-law. Appellee Addison Rush is the husband of Lovina Rush. On June 7, 1912, Emma C. Lloyd executed the will in controversy. The first clause of her will provided for the payment of her debts and funeral expenses. The second clause was as follows:

“Second—I give, devise and bequeath unto my sister Lovina Rush the sum of ten thousand (10,000) dollars in consideration of her loving care and kindness to me during the last seven years, and in addition to said bequest I also give, devise and bequeath to her all personal property of every description, excepting moneys, stocks, bonds, mortgages, notes or other interest-bearing securities, to have and to hold unto said Lovina Rush, her heirs and assigns forever. In case of the death of said Lovina Rush prior to my decease, then in that event it is my will that said sum of ten thousand (10,000) dollars and said described personal property, excepting said moneys, stocks, bonds, mortgages, notes and other interest-bearing securities, shall vest in and become the property of Addison Rush, husband of said Lovina Rush.”

By the third clause the testatrix devised to her sister Luella L. Titterington a lot in the city of Rock Island, and by the fourth clause all the rest, residue and remainder of her estate was devised and bequeathed in equal parts to her brothers and sisters named, as follows: Milow J. Lloyd, Walter J. Lloyd, Lovina Rush, Asenath Baker, Eunice Laflin and Luella L- Titterington. By the fifth and last clause of the will the testatrix nominated Addison Rush sole executor of the will without bond, and gave the executor power to sell, dispose of and convey any and all real estate of which she should die seized or possessed, except the lot devised to Luella L. Titterington, at such price and upon such terms as to the executor should seem to be for the best interest of the estate.

The testatrix had resided on a farm in Rock Island county all her life. This farm, consisting of 160 acres, had belonged to her father, Joseph W. Lloyd, in his lifetime, and after the death of her father and mother she claimed to own it. During the latter part of his life Lloyd was blind, and in addition to his wife and daughter Emma, another daughter, Eunice Laflin, and her husband, resided with the Lloyd family, the husband of Eunice .Laflin doing the farm w-ork. After the death of Joseph W. Lloyd, Eunice Laflin and her husband continued to reside with the Lloyd family under the same arrangements as existed before the death of Joseph W. Lloyd until 1906, when the appellees, Lovma Rush and Addison Rush, became members of the Lloyd family, and Eunice Laflin and her husband thereupon left the farm. A few years before her death Mrs. Lloyd became paralyzed and thereafter until her death was unable to walk. About the time Lovina Rush and her husband took up their residence with Emma C. Lloyd and her mother Miss Lloyd became afflicted with rheumatism, which continued to become worse, until during the last year of her life she was practically helpless. During all this period Lovina Rush attended to the household duties and took care of her sister and her mother during their sickness, and Addison Rush, under the direction of Miss Lloyd, attended to the farm. Dr. Allen J. Miller had been the family physician for many years. Beginning on June 4, and continuing for nine consecutive days thereafter, Dr. Miller administered to Miss Lloyd a treatment which he designated the Phylacogen treatment for rheumatism. This treatment, according to the testimony of Dr. 'Miller, consisted of the hypodermic injection of a certain vaccine. He testified that the vaccine contained nothing that would tend to stupefy the brain or affect the mind in any way, and that the only complaint made by Miss Lloyd as a result of this treatment was of soreness for two or three days at the place where the needle had been inserted.

James M. Beardsley, who resided in the city of Rock Island, was an uncle of Emma C.

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Bluebook (online)
273 Ill. 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lloyd-v-rush-ill-1916.