Mississippi Drum v. Capps

240 Ill. 524
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 240 Ill. 524 (Mississippi Drum v. Capps) 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
Mississippi Drum v. Capps, 240 Ill. 524 (Ill. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

The evidence shows that the testatrix was an educated woman and interested in church and temperance work. Before her marriage she had been a school teacher. After her appointment as administratrix of her husband’s estate she opened a bank account and successfully managed and controlled the funds and property. The proof in the record indicates that under her management the estate showed a net increase in value from $4000 to $6000, and that this could not be attributed to a rise in real estate. From the death of her husband to her own she practically transacted all her own business and that of her husband’s estate. She drew her own checks, negotiated loans, collected them, took mortgages, made leases on real estate, kept the pass-book furnished by the bank, and entered in her own handwriting the date, amount and payee of each check, with few exceptions, from April 19, 1902, to December 6, 1904. These checks aggregated in number several hundred. About fifty of them were signed and written -from December 29, 1899, to April 14, 1902, and some eighty-one covering a period from April 14, 1902, to December 6, 1904. She was treasurer of the local W. C. T. U. from October, 1896, until her death, the treasurer’s book being kept in her own handwriting. There are 433 entries in this book of small sums collected by her periodically from the local members at Greenfield and items of disbursements and remittances to the central society. The loans that she made ranged from $100 to $1600. She obtained at one time forty acres of land under mortgage foreclosure, which she leased one year and áold the next. All of her loans turned out good with one exception, that being to a merchant in Greenfield, amounting to $200, which after his death paid about seventy-five cents on the dollar. The evidence shows that she was ailing, physically, some time before her death; that she had some trouble with her stomach and one or two attacks of la grippe; that she had heart trouble, which the physicians said was caused by the hardening of the walls of the arteries, and one of the physicians claimed that she had valvular trouble of the heart independently of the arterial trouble; that the latter trouble was progressive in its nature and grew worse towards the close of her life; that she died from the bursting of a blood vessel in the brain, due to this condition of the arteries. She went to the store to do a little trading on December 9, 1904, and on her way home the blood vessel burst and she died a few hours after.

The chief contention in the briefs is whether the testatrix was influenced in executing her will by insane delusions. Counsel for defendants in error in their briefs say: “The evidence tended to show that during a considerable portion of the time, down to the date of her death, Mrs. Cameron could transact her business affairs; but the evidence also tended strongly to show that the result of her malady was to fix in her weakened mind an unnatural hatred for those who were the natural objects of her bounty, and to cause her to be controlled b)r an erroneous idea that she was under some great, overpowering obligation to the Illinois Wesleyan University.” Counsel for plaintiffs in error contend that there is no evidence in the record indicating that the testatrix was subject to insane delusions; that, on the contrary, the great preponderance of the evidence goes to show that she was of sound and disposing mind and memory, not only when the will but also when the codicil was executed.

Naturally, Mrs. Cameron had great affection for her only daughter, Florence. She took a deep interest in her progress and determined to give her a college education. The Illinois Wesleyan University, at Bloomington, Illinois, was selected, and in order to be with her daughter while attending this school she rented a house and established a home there in the fall of 1890. The mother and daughter liked the school very much. Florence attended there one year, but seems to have been in poor health towards the end of the year and died August 1, 1891, aged seventeen, apparently from heart trouble. Testatrix moved her household goods back to Greenfield and resided there until her death. The evidence tends to show that she was much interested in the university from the time her daughter passed away until her own death. About 1895 she gave to the university $1000 to establish a “Florence Cameron scholarship” as a memorial to her daughter. For this the university gave her its note for $1000, bearing six per cent annual interest until the death of testatrix, when the note was to be regarded as canceled and paid. The interest was paid and the note canceled at her death, as agreed. The university authorities in 1896 published a historical sketch of the school, with a record of the alumni and other appropriate matters, and obtained from testatrix a picture of her daug-hter, which was published, along with a short sketch telling about her attending school there and of her sudden death at the close of the first year; also speaking of the $1000 which had been given as a memorial, and referring to Mrs. Cameron as a woman of fine business ability and a firm friend of the university.

We will give a brief synopsis of the evidence upon which counsel for defendants in error base their claim that testatrix was of unsound mind.

Mary D. Strickland, a lady seventy-two years old, who had known testatrix twenty years and lived just across the street from her for seventeen years in Greenfield, testified that the night after Florence’s death Mrs. Cameron acted rather strange; that if anyone sympathized with her she ran into a bed-room and shut the door; that the testatrix thought the Wesleyan University was a great school,—no other like it,—and did not seem to be interested in anything but her daughter and the university; that in talking about her daughter often near the close of her life she would cry; that testatrix had the “grip” some time about December, 1900 or 1901, and thereafter was not the same towards anybody; that testatrix was cross witli her sisters, and would not allow her sister, Mrs. Drum, who lived with her during the last years of her life, to go any place; that she often scolded Mrs. Drum, while the latter always treated testatrix kindly, gave her medicine, nursed and helped to dress and look after her.

Mrs. Chennuth lived four blocks from testatrix at the time of her death and was for several years her next door neighbor. She testified that after Florence’s death Mrs. Cameron grieved greatly and would speak and cry about it often, and that she grieved “more or less the last part of her life;” that she had heard testatrix speak of the university at Bloomington and her daughter’s connection with it, frequently; that testatrix, when melancholy, would be cross to her friends, and especially to her sister, Mrs. Drum, and would tell Mrs. Drum, sometimes when others were there, to keep still, whereupon Mrs. Drum would either say nothing or hang her head and cry; that Mrs. Cameron was a very weak woman during the last four years of her life and Mrs. Drum did most of the housework; that testatrix would sometimes get on her clothing wrong and Mrs. Drum would help her straighten it out; that Mrs.

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240 Ill. 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-drum-v-capps-ill-1909.