Powell v. Bechtel

172 N.E. 785, 340 Ill. 330
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1930
DocketNo. 19988. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 172 N.E. 785 (Powell v. Bechtel) 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
Powell v. Bechtel, 172 N.E. 785, 340 Ill. 330 (Ill. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

James Powell executed a document purporting to be his will in compliance with all required legal formalities, on July 26, 1927, and died about two months later, on September 19. He was eighty-three years old and was ill with intestinal nephritis and chronic myocarditis and confined to his bed for several months before his death. His heirs were his son and daughter, Charles H. Powell and Anna L. Christman, and he had several grandchildren, the children of Charles and Anna. By his will, after directing the payment of all his debts and funeral expenses, he disposed of his property by giving it all to Dan Seybert and Anna E. Bechtel in equal shares, reciting that they had taken care of him for years and were to take care of him for the rest of his life, to pay his funeral expenses, have charge of his funeral and have a gravestone placed on his grave, and he was to be buried beside his deceased wife. Miss Bechtel was nominated as executrix without bond. The will was admitted to probate in the county court of Kankakee county, and the son and daughter of the testator on December 21, 1927, filed a bill to contest the will on the ground of the lack of testamentary capacity of the testator and of undue influence by the devisees, Seybert and Miss Bechtel, in the execution of the will. The cause was tried at the June term, 1929, and the jury disagreed. At the second trial, at the October term, 1929, the court directed the jury at the close of the evidence to return a verdict in favor of the proponents. The complainants have appealed from the decree dismissing the bill.

During the trial the issue as to the testamentary capacity of the testator was withdrawn by the appellants. The principal question arises on the instruction of the court to the jury directing the verdict.

The will disinherits both the testator’s children and devises the whole of his estate to two strangers to his blood. Dan Seybert, the devisee of one-half of the estate, was at one time the husband of the complainant Anna L. Christ-man, the testator’s daughter, and they have a son, Bert Seybert, who is forty-two years old and was a witness. However, they were divorced many years ago and Seybert married and has another son, Franklin, with whom he was engaged in the draying business. For twenty years before the testator’s death Seybert and his co-defendant, Anna Bechtel, the devisee of the other half of the testator’s estate, lived with the testator. The record does not disclose what was the relation of the three. They lived for seven or eight years before the trial in a house rented of Frank Snyder. Seybert first inquired about renting it, and Miss Bechtel paid the rent by check signed by both of them. Whether they were occupying the house in which they lived at the time of Powell’s death as owners or tenants, or who was the owner, does not appear. The evidence shows that Powell had nine certificates of deposit which were issued to him by the City Trust and Savings Bank between October 24, 1925, and June 27, 1927, for the aggregate amount of $9533.87, which were paid between July 20, 1927, and October 1, 1927, all bearing Powell’s indorsement, four of them followed by Seybert’s indorsement, the aggregate amount of these four certificates being $1132.20, and five of them, amounting to $8401.67, having Miss Bechtel’s indorsement.

The circumstances connected with the preparation and execution of the will were shown by the testimony of W. H. Savary, attorney at law who had practiced in Kankakee from 1895 to 1917 and had known the testator for thirty years and been his attorney for twenty years or more; Louis N. Legris, another attorney, who wrote the will; and Mrs. A. J. Henkel, who with Legris was an attesting witness. In the latter part of June, 1927, Seybert told Savary that Powell would enjoy a visit from him, and Savary and his wife then called upon Powell but there was no talk about business. On July 22 Seybert told Savary that Powell would like to see him on business. Savary was preparing to leave for Canada and he asked Legris to go with him to Powell’s. He did so and Savary introduced him to Powell. Powell said he wanted to transfer all his property to Miss Bechtel and Seybert and asked how to do it. He said he had given enough to his children. Savary told him he could transfer it by a conditional deed or will; that Savary was going away but Legris would do the work. Savary and Legris were there ten or fifteen minutes and left the house together. Powell wanted Legris to examine the condition of a suit which he had brought against his son, Charles, as affecting the title of 120 acres of land which he had conveyed to Charles and was seeking to recover, and after an investigation of the record Legris went back to Powell and reported that the case was still in court and he could not advise Powell how the title would come out. Powell said he wanted to dispose of that property. Legris had no blanks with him at the time. A short time after Seybert came to Legris’ office, and afterward Miss Bechtel called him and asked him to come over, saying that Powell wanted to fix up some papers and to see him. Legris called upon Powell, who said that he was ready to fix up the papers and wanted to transfer all his property to Miss Bechtel and Seybert. 'Legris went to his office, got a blank form of will and returned to Powell’s house, where he drew the will as directed by Powell, no one else being present, and read it to Powell, who stopped him after the clause providing for the payment of debts and funeral expenses and disposing of all his property to Miss Bechtel and Seybert, and told him to put in that they had taken care of him for years and were to take care of him for the rest of his life, pay for his funeral expenses, have charge of his funeral, bury him alongside of his wife and have a gravestone placed on his grave. Legris read the will to Powell twice while they were alone in the room. After he had read it the second time Powell wanted to sign it, and Legris called Miss Bechtel, who was in another room, and told her that he needed another witness, and soon after Mrs. Henkel came in. Powell was propped up in bed, given a book or a little board, and signed his name. Mrs. Henkel signed hers and Legris his as witnesses. The persons in the room beside the testator were Mrs. Henkel, Miss Bechtel and Legris. Powell asked Legris how much it was for drawing the will. He had a pocket-book under his pillow which Miss Bechtel got and took out the money. Powell asked Legris to take the will. He placed it in his safety deposit box, where it remained until Powell’s death. Seybert was not present on the occasion of any of these visits of Legris except that one when the will was executed, when he came to the door of the room in which Powell was, with Mrs. Henkel, who came at his request to witness the execution of the will'. Miss Bechtel was at the house each time when Savary or Legris was there but was not in the testator’s room with them.

On January 24, 1921, Powell had executed two deeds to his children, the one to his son conveying 180 acres and the one to his daughter conveying 137 acres, each of which was subject to a condition subsequent of the payment of $250 on the first day of November and first day of March of each year, beginning with the first day of November, 1922, and upon the failure to make any of such payments the title was to revert to the grantor. (Powell v. Powell, 335 Ill.

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172 N.E. 785, 340 Ill. 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-bechtel-ill-1930.