Nicewander v. Nicewander

151 Ill. 156
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 151 Ill. 156 (Nicewander v. Nicewander) 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
Nicewander v. Nicewander, 151 Ill. 156 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is a bill filed on February 16, 1891, in the Circuit Court of Champaign county, by William F. Nicewander and Sarah J. Lutz against Alice Nicewander and her five minor children to set aside the will of Daniel Nicewander, who died on December 16, 1890, and whose will was executed on November 18, 1890. The complainants are the children of the testator by a former wife, and the defendants are his widow, who was a second wife, and the children of such second wife. The widow is the executrix, or administratrix with the will annexed. The will was admitted tó probate on December 27, 1890. By its terms the testator gave to each of the complainants $600; directed that his wife should have what was allowed her by law, and gave all the rest of his property, real and personal, to be equally divided between his five minor children. The.bill charges, that the testator was not of sound mind and memory at the time of the execution of the will, and that he was induced to make his will by undue influence exercised over him by his wife, the said defendant Alice Nicewander. The widow answered the bill, denying the charges, and a-guardian ad litem was appointed and answered for the five minor defendants. The cause was tried before a jury, who returned a verdict finding the instrument, purporting to be the last will and testament of the deceased, to be such last will and testament. Motion for new trial was overruled, and decree was entered, dismissing the bill for want of equity, and for costs against the complainants.

There is the usual conflict in the testimony upon the-questions of the soundness of the testator’s mind and-memory, and of the exercise over him of undue influence; but we think that the verdict of the jury is sustained by the evidence. For some time before his death, the deceased was afflicted with Bright’s disease, and at times-suffered great pain therefrom, having what the witnesses call “sick spells.” But of the subscribing witnesses to-the will, who were his neighbors and to whom he had previously spoken about being present, one of them swears that, when the testator signed the will, he was competent to do business and understood what he was doing; and the other swears that the will was read over to the testator,, and that he was able to make it, and knew what he was doing, and requested witness to be executor and guardian of his children, and explained that he would make a. difference in the amounts given to his children, proposing to leave most of his property, which did not altogether-amount to more than §30,000.00, to his minor-children, as they were small and had to be educated, while his two older children were “raised and educated, and doing in life.” The attorney, who was sent for to draw his will, says, that he found him “half sitting, half reclining on a lounge,” but that he dictated the manner in which he wished to dispose of his property, and the witness drew, the will from such dictation; that the only matter he hesitated about was as to the person who should be his-executor; that he asked Mr. Anderson, one of the sub■scribing witnesses who was present, to act as executor, but he declined; that, thereupon, witness suggested the appointment of his wife as executor without bond; that he adopted the suggestion, but refused to waive the bond; that no person dictated the terms of the will, the testator alone directing it; that witness had known testator for several years; that “he was perfectly sane at the time he made his will”; and that it was “dictated * * by himself wholly uninfluenced at that time by any person.” A witness, who had seen him almost every day during the last three months of his life, and sat up with him every other night during the two weeks before his death, says that “he was about the same as any man—as good as he ever was,” except while the “sick spells” referred to lasted. He was seen riding out in a buggy with his wife after he made his will, and a week or two before he died. The keeper of a meat market' swore, that he did business with him about ten days before he died, and saw nothing wrong about his mental capacity. Several witnesses who had known him well, speak of having business with him after he made his will, and say that they noticed no change in the condition of his mind. There is testimony, consisting largely of the evidence of the near relations of the complainants, which is of an opposite import from the proof introduced to sustain the will, but not of sufficient strength to overcome it.

There is no evidence of undue influence by the wife over her husband, which would justify us in setting aside the verdict. The wife was with the husband much of the time during his last illness, but not more than proper affection would dictate. She did nothing to produce alienation between him and his older children. He was on good terms with them, and called them by the familiar pet names, by which he was in the habit of addressing them, up to the time of his death. The wife received no more by the will than the law would have given her without the -will. It is true, that the mind; when enfeebled by disease and long sickness, may become -susceptible to influence. (Reynolds v. Adams, 90 Ill. 134.) But we discover nothing in the facts of this case to justify the inference, that the testator, when he made his will, was subject to any such undue influence, either from the effects of sickness or from the pressure of improper persuasion, as deprived him of his free agency, and rendered his act the offspring of his wife’s will, rather than the product of the exercise of his own will. (Francis v. Wilkinson, 147 Ill. 370.) He may have been influenced by affection, to give the five children of his old age, the oldest of whom was only about twelve years old, $5,000 or $6,000 apiece for their education, while he gave the two grown children only $600 apiece; but influence secured through affection is not wrongful, and inequality in the distribution of property is not of itself conclusive evidence of undue influence. (Francis v. Wilkinson, supra.)

Upon the trial, the proponents of the will introduced a certified copy thereof, instead of the original will itself. We held, in Purdy v. Hall, 134 Ill. 298, that, in trials of this kind, “either the original writing should be produced, or good cause shown for not producing it;” but we said in that ease, that we did not “wish to be understood as holding that such introduction would in all cases be reversible error.” We do not regard the failure to produce the original will as reversible error in the case at bar. When the certified copy of the will was offered in evidence by proponents, the original will, according to the admission now made by counsel for plaintiffs in error, was in the possession of the contestants, and not in the “office of the clerk of the county court,” where the eighteenth section of the Statute of Wills requires it to remain. There is nothing in this record to show, that the proponents knew where the original will was, or that they had not looked for it in the office of the clerk of the county court and failed to find it there. There was no charge in the bill that the will was a forgery, or had been changed since it had been signed, or that there was any special circumstance which made the production of the original of the utmost importance. ( Purdy v. Hall, supra.) On the contrary, the bill sets out the will in haec verba, with the signature of the decedent and the attesting clause and.

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151 Ill. 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicewander-v-nicewander-ill-1894.