Miller v. Blumenshine

175 N.E. 814, 343 Ill. 531
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1931
DocketNo. 20159. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 175 N.E. 814 (Miller v. Blumenshine) 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
Miller v. Blumenshine, 175 N.E. 814, 343 Ill. 531 (Ill. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants, Eugenie Miller, Edith Thompson and Charles P. Weigand, nieces and nephew and heirs-at-law of Phillip Weigand, deceased, filed a bill in the circuit court of Peoria county to contest the validity of the last will and testament of the deceased, making appellees, the executor and beneficiaries of the will, defendants, and charging a want of testamentary capacity and undue influence on the part of certain of the beneficiaries. Answers of appellees, and a replication thereto, were filed. There was a trial before a jury, which returned a verdict finding in favor of the validity of the will. Appellants’ motion for a new trial was overruled and a decree entered finding that the instrument in question was the will of Weigand and dismissing the bill for want of equity. This appeal followed.

Phillip Weigand died on March 20, 1928. At the time of his death he was the owner of certain real estate situated in the city of Peoria. He had no children and his wife had died about ten months before his death. By the will, which is dated March 10, 1928, he bequeathed to Robert Dingeldine some stock in the Commercial Loan and Homestead Association of Peoria and directed that the rest of his estate should be divided equally among Marguerite King, Hattie Blumenshine, Lulu Blumenshine, Annie Dingeldine, Elmer Frederick and Lulu Graves. Samuel Blumenshine was named as executor. The beneficiaries named in the will, except Robert Dingeldine, are nieces and nephews of Louisa Weigand, the deceased wife of the testator. Robert Dingeldine is the husband of Annie Dingeldine, and Samuel Blumenshine, the executor, is the husband of Lulu Blumenshine. Appellants are the children of a deceased brother of the testator.

At the time of his death testator was about eighty years of age. For many years prior to the death of his wife he and she conducted a small grocery store in the city of Peoria. After the death of his wife the testator lived alone and managed the store by himself until Friday, March 9, 1928, on which date he was taken to the hospital, where he died eleven days later of bronchial pneumonia. The will was written and executed while he was in the hospital. It is the contention of appellants that it was executed on March 15, but it is dated March 10, and according to the claim of appellees that is the date it was executed. The will was admitted to probate by the probate court of Peoria county.

Appellees introduced a transcript of the evidence of the subscribing witnesses to the will, on which the will was admitted to probate in the probate court, and the evidence of sixteen witnesses to prove testamentary capacity. Four of those witnesses were salesmen for wholesale business firms who had known the testator for a number of years before he died and who called on him at his store.and sold him goods and collected from him for goods sold. They saw and did business with him every week or two and all of them had called on him a short time before his death. One of them called on him on the day before, and another of them on the second day before, he was taken to the hospital. The testimony of all four of those witnesses showed that he transacted his business intelligently, paid them in cash for the goods he bought and took receipts therefor. The testimony of some of them showed that they saw him transact business with his customers in the usual and ordinary way that men in his business do and that he discussed the topics of the day intelligently. They all gave it as their opinion that he was of sound mind and memory. Louis Triebel, a resident of Peoria and an acquaintance of the deceased, a salesman of monuments and cemetery memorials, called on the testator on March 3 and 5, 1928, for the purpose of selling him a monument. March 3 was a busy day in the store for the testator and he asked Triebel to come back on the following Monday, March 5, which he did and sold him a monument for his deceased wife. He exercised care in selecting the monument, asked for the lowest cash price, and paid for the same after receiving a cash discount. He informed Triebel that he wanted his wife’s name, the date of her birth and the date of her death, and his own name and the date of his birth, placed on the monument, and he gave to Triebel the dates of her birth and death, as well as her name and the date of his birth. From these conversations and his manner of transacting that sale and purchase Triebel gave it as his .opinion that he was of sound mind and memory on March 3 and 5, 1928.

Christian Seizinger, one of the attesting witnesses, testified in substance as follows: He was sixty years of age and had resided in Peoria for the last forty years. He knew the testator during the last twenty-five years of his life and lived in one of his houses back of his store and residence for fifteen years. During that period he saw him every day, and after his wife’s death witness visited him every day, helped him in the store and ran errands for him. The testator conducted the business of the store, waited on customers, bought goods and collected the rent from his tenants and gave them receipts for the rent. He read the newspaper every day. On several Sundays witness had driven with him out into the country to visit with Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Blumenshine and with another niece of the testator’s wife. Witness never saw any of appellants at the testator’s residence. The testator had a cold for some days before he went to the hospital but was in the store every day. On the morning of Friday, March 9, 1928, witness went over to see him, and he was then standing before a mirror shaving himself. Witness went back to his residence and had breakfast and then returned to the home of the testator. He said he did not feel well and complained of being “tight around the chest.” Witness persuaded him to have a doctor come to see him. When the doctor came he had him taken to the hospital. On the following morning, Saturday, March 10, witness saw the testator at the hospital, and he asked witness to go and get George Jochem, a lawyer, and witness did so. No one besides witness was with the testator when he asked witness to get Jochem. Hattie Blumenshine, Annie Dingeldine and Isaac Graves were at the hospital with the testator when Jochem arrived there. They and witness waited out in the hall while Jochem was in the room with the testator. Jochem came out into the hall and told Mrs. Blumenshine that the testator “wouldn’t make the will; he wouldn’t pay for it because he made one before, and that is enough, he says.” Mrs. Blumenshine told Jochem to go back and make the will and she would see that he was paid. After a little while Jochem came out and said he was going to make the will. Later he came out again and called for witness and a nurse, Thelma Humphrey, to come into the room to be witnesses to the will. Witness and Miss Humphrey went into the room. The testator signed the will in their presence and they signed it as witnesses in his presence and in the presence of each other. The will was not read to the testator in witness’ presence, but the testator answered yes when asked by Jochem if the will had been read to him and if it was as he wanted it. The will was executed before noon on Saturday, March 10.

Thelma Humphrey testified in substance as follows: In March, 1928, she was a student nurse at the Proctor Hospital, in Peoria, being assigned to the second floor. She remembered the execution of the testator’s will. She heard the bell ring and went into the room occupied by him.

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175 N.E. 814, 343 Ill. 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-blumenshine-ill-1931.