McGovern v. McGovern

118 N.E. 454, 282 Ill. 97
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1917
DocketNo. 11365
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 118 N.E. 454 (McGovern v. McGovern) 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
McGovern v. McGovern, 118 N.E. 454, 282 Ill. 97 (Ill. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Knox county dismissing for want of equity a bill filed to set aside the last will and testament of James McGovern, deceased, and to set aside two deeds executed by him in his lifetime.

James McGovern died at his home in Galesburg, Illinois, on July 15, 1913, leaving surviving him Terrence B. McGovern, Ella Greason and Julia Cavanaugh, complainants in the bill and appellants, and Stephen A. D. McGovern, Mary A. Lahey, Joseph E. McGovern and James W. McGovern, his children, and Frank, James and Edward Dunn and Mamie Marlcey, his grandchildren, as his only heirs-at-law, and also as the only legatees and devisees mentioned in his purported last will and testament. The testator resided in Knox county for more than fifty years. From 1902 until the time of his death he resided in the city of Galesburg. Prior to that time he resided on his farm near the villages of Oneida and Wataga.' His daughter Ella resided with him until she was about fifty years of age. We are unable to find from the record the date of the death of the second wife of the testator, but it appears that for many years, and until the year 1912, the daughter Ella, who was then unmarried, lived with him and managed the home. Prior to the execution of the deeds which will be hereinafter noted, and, as appellants contend, at the time of his death, the testator owned 327 acres of land in Knox county, Illinois, and 240 acres of land in Polk county, Iowa. He • also owned the property upon which he resided in Gales-burg and considerable personal property. On May 24, 1910, he executed the will in question, by which he devised to his son Stephen 127 acres, to his daughter Mary no acres and to his son James W. the remainder of the Knox county lands. He directed that 80 acres of the Iowa land be sold by his executors and that $4000 of the proceeds derived therefrom be paid to his daughter Julia. To his daughter Ella he devised 80 acres of the Iowa land and to his son Joseph he devised the remainder of the Iowa land. To his son Terrence he bequeathed a note for $4000 which Terrence owed him, and the sum of $1000. He directed that the homestead property in the city of Galesburg be sold, and made bequests to the Dunn children, one of whom was Mamie Markey. Stephen and Mary were named as executors to execute the will in the State of Illinois, and Joseph and James W. were named as executors to execute the will in the State of Iowa. In January, 1912, he executed deeds conveying all his farm lands to Stephen, Mary, Joseph, James W. and Ella, and on the same day executed a codicil to his will. Within a few days afterward, according to the testimony of his attorney, these deeds and codicil were burned under the direction of the testator. On July 27, 1912, the testator executed what is now referred to as the first codicil to his will. This codicil simply revoked a codicil not now in existence. On August 26, 1912, he executed four deeds. By one of them he conveyed to Stephen, for the expressed consideration of $7000, 200 acres of the Knox county lands; by another he conveyed to Mary, for the consideration of $2000, the remainder of the Knox county farm; by another he conveyed to Joseph, for the consideration of $3000, 120 acres of the Iowa land; and by another he conveyed to Elizabeth McGovern, the wife of James W., the remainder of the Iowa land. Two days later, on August 28, 1912, he executed the last codicil to his will. In this codicil he recites that he has disposed of all his real estate, except his homestead in Galesbtirg, to his children Mary, Stephen, Joseph and James, and ratifies and confirms the deeds of-conveyance so made. He directs that his homestead in Galesburg be sold at public sale, and 'that the proceeds, together with his personal propert}'-, be equally divided among his heirs then living, after paying $1000 to each of the four Dunn children, who are also to participate in the residue. By this codicil Mary and Stephen were made executors.

On July 16, 1913, appellants filed their bill in the circuit court of Knox county to set aside the four deeds above mentioned on the ground of the mental incapacity of the grantor and because of the exercise upon him of undue influence. Upon a hearing this bill was dismissed for want of equity. On appeal to this court that decree was affirmed upon the express ground that heirs-at-law cannot maintain a bill to set aside deeds of their ancestor upon the ground of mental incapacity and the exercise of undue influence where no attempt is made to set aside a will of the ancestor which by a codicil executed two days after the deeds were made expressly ratifies the deeds, as in such case the setting aside of the will is essential to the determination of the interest of complainants in the land. (McGovern v. McGovern, 268 Ill. 135.) The bill in this case was filed on July 27, 1914, and after the decision in McGovern v. McGovern, supra, it was amended by seeking to have the deeds executed to Stephen and Mary set aside on the ground of mental incapacity and the exercise of undue influence, which were the same charges made in the original bill asking to have the will and the codicils set aside. Appellees answered that part of the bill by which it was sought to have the will and codicil set aside and pleaded the decree in the former case of McGovern v. McGovern, supra, as a bar to the relief prayed for in that portion of the amended bill which sought to have the two deeds set aside. This plea was set down for argument and was held to be good and a bar to that portion of the relief sought. An issue of fact was then made up on that portion of the amended bill which sought to set aside the will and the two codicils, and the cause was submitted to a jury, which found the writings to be the last will and testament, and codicils thereto, of James McGovern. A decree was entered accordingly and this appeal perfected.

It is first contended that the court erred in holding that the former proceedings which resulted in the decision in McGovern v. McGovern, supra, are res judicata of the matters upon which relief was sought in that portion of the bill asking to have the two deeds set aside. It is immaterial upon what ground the trial court entered the decree dismissing the bill to set aside the deeds. In McGovern v. McGovern, supra, we held that appellants were not entitled to litigate the question of the mental capacity of the grantor in those deeds or of the exercise of undue influence upon him in a separate suit attacking the validity of the deeds alone, in view of the fact that by another writing which it was claimed was executed two days later the grantor expressly ratified and confirmed the execution of the deeds. In that case we declined to discuss the question of the validity of the deeds and left the same open in case appellants should see fit to proceed along the lines indicated in the opinion. The court erred in holding that the decree in the suit to set aside the deeds was res judicata of any matter sought to be put in issue in this case.

There was no evidence that the execution of the will, codicils and deeds had been procured by the exercise of undue influence, and the court did not err in withdrawing that issue from the jury.

The chief ground relied upon for reversal is, that the verdict of the jury and decree of the court are palpably against the weight of the evidence. The evidence includes the testimony of more than one hundred witnesses and is very voluminous.

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Bluebook (online)
118 N.E. 454, 282 Ill. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgovern-v-mcgovern-ill-1917.