Noone v. Olehy

130 N.E. 476, 297 Ill. 160
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1921
DocketNo. 13597
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 130 N.E. 476 (Noone v. Olehy) 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
Noone v. Olehy, 130 N.E. 476, 297 Ill. 160 (Ill. 1921).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The circuit court of Champaign county entered a decree setting aside the probate of the will of Mary E. Villars on the finding of a jury that she was not of sound mind at the time of its execution and that it was not her will. The proponents of the will have appealed for a reversal of the decree.

Mary E. Villars, the testatrix, executed the instrument in controversy on October 14, 1918. She was a widow, fifty-six years old, without .children, her husband having died a number of years before, and her two daughters, their only children, having died before him. Five months after executing the will she died,' on March 12, 1919, leaving a sister and two brothers her only heirs. Her sister had been married, was divorced, and had one son about fourteen years old. Her brothers, Albert and William D. Olehy, were both married. William had no children and Albert had two sons, who were minors. The estate of the testatrix amounted to more than $100,000, and the will gave it substantially all to Albert and William and Albert’s sons, there being besides the gifts for their benefit only a bequest of one dollar to the sister, $50 to her son and $500 for the care of a cemetery lot. The two brothers and' Matilda Hill, who was a neighbor- of the testatrix but not a relative, were named as executors without bond. The sister, Minnie Noone, filed a bill to contest the will, charging that it was obtained by undue influence and was the result of insane delusions in regard to the complainant, and that the testatrix was not of sound mind. At the close of the evidence the court withdrew the issues of undue influence and insane delusions and the question was submitted only on the issue of the soundness of mind of the testatrix.

The testatrix and her husband lived for many years in St. Joseph, in Champaign county. After his death, which occurred about 1906, she removed to Urbana, where she lived the rest of her life. She had two farms, containing, over tw.o hundred acres of land, which were occupied by tenants. She kept accounts at banks both in St. Joseph and Urbana and transacted all her own business, and with one exception there "is no suggestion by any witness who ever had any business dealing with her, of any mental incapacity prior to the execution of the instrument in controversy. Mrs. Villars’ father, K. M. Olehy, died intestate in the fall of 1917, leaving an estate consisting, in part, of three farms,—one in Champaign county, one in Vermilion county, Illinois, and one in Vermilion county, Indiana. Mrs. Villars, Mrs. Noone and their two brothers inherited the estate equally, but they were unable to agree upon a division. In the negotiations the brothers proposed a division and valuations of the farms which were unsatisfactory to Mrs. Noone. Mrs. Villars, while taking no active part in the negotiations, agreed with her brothers, saying, substantially, that she was willing to do what they said. The result was that Mrs. Noone began three partition suits, under which the lands were sold at higher prices than the values fixed by the brothers. Mrs. Noone also presented a claim against the estate which was at first objected to by the other heirs but was afterward allowed. There was evidence that Mrs. Villars had been on friendly terms with her sister prior to their father’s death, and that she had said that she felt sorry for Minnie; that Minnie had been sick a good deal and had a hard time, and that Mrs. Villars would take care of her and see that she should never want for anything. After her father’s death and after the disagreement about the settlement of his estate she said that her sister had treated her very badly, had talked mean to her, and that she did not want to give her anything in her will. She told her attorney that she did not want to give her sister anything, but that she understood she had to mention her, so she decided to give her one dollar.

During the latter part of the life of Mrs. Villars she was afflicted with arteriosclerosis,—a disease of the arteries which affects the circulation of the blood and the heart,— and nephritis,—a disease of the kidneys which impairs their .excretory functions,—and the effect of the two diseases, by reducing and vitiating the supply of blood to the brain, is to impair the mental powers. The evidence is that while the existence of these diseases does not necessarily, in their incipiency, establish unsoundness of mind, their tendency is to weaken or destroy the mental faculties, and the condition of arteriosclerosis is regarded as progressive and incurable.

The two lawyers who were engaged in the preparation of the will testified fully to the circumstances attending its preparation and execution and to the soundness of mind of the testatrix. They were attesting witnesses, and there was ■a third attesting witness,—a business man of long acquaintance with the testatrix,—who also testified to the circumstances of the execution and the soundness of mind of the testatrix. More than thirty witnesses, including lawyers, bankers, business men, tenants, neighbors and acquaintances of the deceased, after stating their acquaintance with and opportunity to observe and knowledge of her, testified that in their judgment she was of sound mind. Their 'testimony covers a period of a number of years immediately preceding her death. Seven or eight witnesses, after testifying to their association with Mrs. Villars, expressed the opinion that at various times between August, 1918, and her death, in March, 1919, she was not of sound mind. One witness who met and talked with her several times in 1918, the first conversation being in January, expressed the opinion that on each of these occasions she was of unsound mind. One of the witnesses was Dr. Hanmore, a physician who attended her in 1916, when she had sustained a Potts fracture. He testified that she was then suffering from arteriosclerosis and he believed she was of unsound mind. There were no other witnesses who had ever seen Mrs. Villars who expressed the opinion that she was of unsound mind, but two physicians, experts of wide experience in the treatment and care of mental diseases, testified that in their opinion, assuming the facts stated in a hypothetical question put to them by the contestant’s counsel, the person referred to in the question was of unsound mind on October 14, 1918. Aside from the testimony of the two experts the preponderance of the evidence was clearly in favor of the proponents of the will, and it is apparent that the evidence is not such as would justify affirming a decree for the contestant if error was committed on the trial, on the ground that the verdict was clearly right in spite of the error.

. The sixth instruction given to the jury at the request of the appellee was as follows:

“If you believe from the evidence that although Mary Villars had sufficient capacity to attend to the ordinary business affairs of life, yet that with regard to subjects connected with the testamentary disposition and distribution of her property and the natural objects of her bounty she was of unsound mind, and while laboring under such unsoundness of mind she signed the alleged will in question, and that in making and signing it she was so far influenced or controlled by such unsoundness as to be unable rationally to apprehend the nature and effect of the provisions of said alleged will, and was thereby led to make the alleged will as she did, then you must find the alleged will not to be the will of the said Mary Villars.”

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Bluebook (online)
130 N.E. 476, 297 Ill. 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noone-v-olehy-ill-1921.