Orchardson v. Cofield

40 L.R.A. 256, 171 Ill. 14
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 40 L.R.A. 256 (Orchardson v. Cofield) 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
Orchardson v. Cofield, 40 L.R.A. 256, 171 Ill. 14 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the .op ini on of the court:

To the October term, 1894, of the circuit court of Adams county, appellees, two of the heirs of Minerva Orchard-son, (or, as appellees insist, Minerva Merrick,) deceased, filed their bill in chancery against appellant and others, to contest the validity of the last will and testament of said Minerva upon the ground of mental incapacity, and that its execution was procured by the said Charles Orchardson through fraud and undue influence, and also to set aside and have declared null and void a marriage which appellant, Orchardson, claimed existed between 'himself and the said Minerva at the date of her death, on the ground of her mental incapacity to enter into a marriage contract at the time of the alleged marriage, and the fraud of said Orchardson. The defendants, except Orchardson and one William H. Boyd, were also heirs of the testatrix. Orchardson alone answered the bill, and he denied each of its material allegations. Replication being duly filed, the trial and hearing below were upon the issue thus formed. On that branch of the case involving the validity of the will an issue at law was made up whether the writing produced was the will of the testatrix or not, and tried by a jury, resulting in a verdict that it was not. The court also submitted to the jury certain interrogatories for special findings,'which they returned with a general verdict, as follows:

First—“Did Minerva Merrick Orchardson, at the time said will purports to have been signed, possess sufficient mentahcapacity to transact ordinary business ?”—Yes.

Second—“Did said Minerva Merrick Orchardson, at the time said will was signed by her, (if it was so signed,) have sufficient mental capacity to know and understand the business in which she was then engaged?”—Yes.

Third—“Was there any undue influence exercised over Minerva Merrick Orchardson, connected with or operating upon her at the feme she executed the will in question, if she did execute it?”—Yes.

A motion for new trial was overruled and a decree entered upon the general verdict, setting aside the will and probate thereof. By agreement of the parties the issue as to the validity of the marriage was submitted to the chancellor on the same evidence produced before the jury, with such additional testimony as either party saw fit to introduce, and that issue was also found for the complainant, and a decree entered that the “alleged marriage of Minerva Merrick to the said Charles Orchardson, of date April 9, 1893, was, and remained at and from the time thereof, and is, null and void.” From both these decrees Orchardson has prosecuted this appeal.

Several errors are assigned upon the record, but the only grounds of reversal insisted upon are, that the evidence is insufficient to authorize either decree, and that on the issue as to the will the special findings of the jury are conclusive.

The facts found by the chancellor material to a consideration of the first position are as follows: That Minerva Merrick, at the time of her alleged marriage with Charles Orchardson of date April 12,1893, was of age about eighty-three years; that she had been for several years afflicted with cancer, and her physical health had become poor; that her mind and memory had become greatly weakened and impaired; that she had been a widow since 1876, and lived in her own home, with her servants, in Quincy, Illinois; that she was possessed of a considerable fortune; that from a time shortly after her husband’s death, in 1876, she had believed in what was commonly known as “spiritualism,” and her views concerning spiritualism had grown upon her in later years, and she had been for some time last preceding her alleged marriage to Charles Orchard-son, and was at the time of such alleged marriage, and remained continuously thereafter until her death, on June 11,1894, a monomaniac on the subject of spiritualism, and insane upon all matters into which the subject of spiritualism entered or which were connected therewith, and was, and remained during all that time, wholly dominated and controlled by insane delusions, among other things believing she could receive, and did receive, through the intervention of other persons as mediums—not claiming to be in any sense a medium herself—communications, advice and directions concerning the conduct of her affairs and business from disembodied spirits generally, and par-. ticularly from the spirit of her deceased husband, Dr. Marcus Merrick, and was and remained so controlled thereby and by such communications, advice and directions, and insanely believed it to be her religious and conscientious duty to obey such directions, without heeding the advice of her formerly trusted friends or her counsel, and without consulting or relying upon her own mind and will she followed, obeyed and acted upon such supposed spirit communications, advice and directions concerning any matter or matters, and in all matters requiring her attention and action during that time she first submitted, and considered it her duty to submit, to the same, through medium or mediums, for the advice and direction of such supposed spirits as to what her actions should be as to such supposed advice which had been received by her; that preceding said alleged marriage, and during the month of October, 1892, the said Charles Orchardson, then about the age of fifty-seven years,—a person substantially without means or property, and a stranger to Mrs. Merrick and to the community in which she lived in Quincy,—appeared in Quincy, and within a few days of his arrival inquired for Mrs. Merrick’s place of residence, and evinced a knowledge that she was a spiritualist and the wealthy widow of Dr. Marcus Merrick, deceased; that the said Orchard-son was then a married man, having a wife living in the State of Michigan, and who, some two months thereafter, procured a divorce from the said Charles Orchardson on account of cruelty; that the said Minerva Merrick was informed of these facts concerning' said Charles Orchard-son, and also informed that such application had been made also upon the charg*e that said Orchardson had consorted with a woman notoriously lewd, which woman came with said Orchardson to Quincy, Illinois, and that said information came to said Minerva Merrick some time preceding* her alleged marriage to him, and at said time she was also informed that he had consorted in a lewd manner with women after coming to Quincy, and during the time, as hereafter mentioned, in which he was engaged in writing a book at said Mrs.

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40 L.R.A. 256, 171 Ill. 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orchardson-v-cofield-ill-1897.