Pyle v. Pyle

41 N.E. 999, 158 Ill. 289
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 41 N.E. 999 (Pyle v. Pyle) 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
Pyle v. Pyle, 41 N.E. 999, 158 Ill. 289 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a bill in chancery, filed by Mary Pyle and others, against Joseph Pyle and Charles Pyle, executors of Harrison Thompson, deceased, and against the several devisees and legatees under the will of said Thompson, for the purpose of setting aside said will and the probate thereof, and having said will declared void and of no effect, and not to be the last will and testament of the said deceased. The charges in the bill are, a want of mental capacity in said Harrison Thompson to make a will, and undue influence. The issues formed between the parties were submitted to a jury, and the jury returned a verdict that the instrument of writing produced was not the last will and testament of Harrison Thompson, deceased. Motions for a new trial were overruled, and the court rendered a final decree against the validity of the supposed will, and setting aside the same and the probate thereof, and declaring the same to be null and void. Thereupon this appeal was taken. Joseph Pyle and Charles Pyle, the executors, have assigned errors, as have also Millard Thompson, Willard Thompson and Samuel Thompson, infants, by their guardian ad litem.

First—It is objected that Edward Rogers, a minor, was a necessary party to the suit; that although he was made a party to the bill, yet he was not served with process, and that the fact that a guardian ad litem, was appointed and answered for him does not cure the error. In the transcript of the record certified by the clerk of the circuit court of St. Clair county on the 17th day of April, 1894, it does not appear whether the summons dated August 8, 1893, was or was not served on said Edward Rogers, but it appears from the amended or supplemental record certified by said clerk on the seventh day of May, 1894, and filed herein by leave of court, that said summons was duly served on said Edward Rogers on the ninth day of August, 1893. The clerk certifies the summons and return contained in said amended transcript “to be a true and correct copy of the summons issued to the September term, A. D. 1893, and the sheriff’s return thereon, as amended since certifying to the original record in this cause, as the same now appears on file in my office.” It must be presumed that the amendment to the sheriff’s return was properly and lawfully made, and that said Edward Rogers was duly in court when his guardian ad litem was appointed and answered.

Second-^lt is assigned for error both by the appellants Joseph Pyle and Charles Pyle, executors of Harrison Thompson, deceased, and by the appellants Millard Thompson, Willard Thompson and Samuel Thompson, that a final decree was rendered in the cause without any answers being filed by or for the defendants James Thompson and Mamie Thompson, or either of them, and without any default being taken against them or either of them. It is undoubtedly an error of which a defendant may avail himself, that a final decree was entered against him without his having answered the bill, and without entering his default and taking the bill as confessed. (Blair v. Reading, 99 Ill. 600; Wilson v. Spring, 64 id. 14; Crabtree v. Green, 36 id. 278.) But James Thompson and Mamie Thompson are not here assigning errors. They have not appealed, and are not complaining of the decree. The rule is, that appellants cannot allege errors which relate exclusively to parties who are not complaining and are not before the court. (Tibbs v. Allen, 27 Ill. 119; Richards v. Greene, 78 id. 525; Clark v. Marfield, 77 id. 258; Van Valkenburg v. Trustees, 66 id. 103.) At the most, there was simply judicial error", of which James Thompson and Mamie Thompson alone could avail, and they having been duly served with summons, the court had jurisdiction of their persons, and the decree against them was not a nullity. Town of Lyons v. Cooledge, 89 Ill. 529.

Third—James Rogers was examined as a witness for the complainants. This was done over the objections of the solicitors for both the executors and for Millard, Willard and Samuel Thompson, that he was a party to the suit and also the husband of Ellen Rogers, who is one of the heirs and also a devisee under the will. It is suggested that James Rogers had no interest in the suit other than an inchoate right of dower, and that such interest would not disqualify him from testifying as a witness. The first of the objections urged against his competency was not that he was interested in the result of the suit, but that he was a party to the suit. If the only objection to his competency had been his interest in such result, then, since his interest by way of an inchoate. right of dower was uncertain, remote and contingent, and not a present, certain and vested interest, it would seem that such objection would not have been well taken, either at common, law or under the statute. (1 G-reenleaf on Evidence,—15th ed.—sec. 390.) But the rule of the common law is, that a party to the record in a civil suit cannot be a witness, either for himself or for a co-suitor in the cause. (1 G-reenleaf on Evidence, sec. 329.) And under sections 1 and 2 of the act in regard to evidence and depositions in civil cases, no party to a civil suit can be allowed to testify therein when any adverse party sues or defends as the executor, devisee or legatee of any deceased person, unless when called as a witness by such adverse party so suing or defending. It is true that said witness was called by the complainants, and that said complainants, in their bill, made him a party defendant; but all the interest that he had in the subject matter of the suit,—■%. e., an inchoate right of dower,— was on the side of the complainants who were endeavoring to set aside the will of the deceased, and adverse to the rights of the executors and those of Millard, Willard and Samuel Thompson and their guardian ad litem, over whose objections he was permitted to testify. It is immaterial that neither he nor his wife, Ellen Rogers, was joined as a party complainant, and that both were named as parties defendant. Simply naming them as defendants instead of complainants did not make them parties adverse to the complainants. A court of equity will disregard the mere matter. of form as to whether they are named in the pleadings as complainants or defendants, and will look to the substance of the matter and see on which side of the controversy their real interest lies, otherwise it would be easy to evade the law and the force and effect of the statute. That from which section 2 of the statute intends to protect these executors and infant devisees is the testimony of parties to the suit whose interests are adverse to theirs.

But, waiving all question of James Rogers being a party to the suit, Ellen Rogers, his wife, was made a party to the bill, and was a necessary party, she being both an heir of the deceased and a devisee under his will. As an heir she would be entitled to receive in fee one-third of all of the property of which her deceased father died seized, while under the will she would be entitled to only a contingent life estate in ninety-nine acres of land,—and even this, subject to forfeiture in the event she should, “under any circumstances, sell or attempt to sell and convey said land or in any way incumber the same, by mortgage or otherwise.” The rule is, that it is the real and actual interest that disqualifies a witness, and not the belief, understanding or feeling in regard to such interest, as seems to be supposed by appellees. (1 Gre.enleaf on Evidence, sec.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.E. 999, 158 Ill. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pyle-v-pyle-ill-1895.