Smith v. Henline

51 N.E. 227, 174 Ill. 184
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 51 N.E. 227 (Smith v. Henline) 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
Smith v. Henline, 51 N.E. 227, 174 Ill. 184 (Ill. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

The decree of the court below was in favor of the present appellants, so far as it held the will of the testator to be valid, and against the appellees, who sought to set aside the will, as well as the codicil. The decree was adverse to the appellants in holding the codicil to be invalid, and setting it aside, but in that respect it was in favor of the appellees. The present appeal, prosecuted by the appellants, seeks to reverse the decree in so far as it holds the codicil to be invalid. The appellees assign no cross-errors in relation to that part of the decree which sustains the will, and make no complaint of the same. The only question in the case, therefore, is, whether or not the codicil of the deceased testator, David Henline, was invalid and properly set aside.

The grounds, upon which it is sought to impeach the codicil, are lack of testamentary capacity and the exercise of undue influence. As is usual in cases of this character, there is great conflict in the testimony. The appellants here, proponents of the will below, examined twenty-six witnesses. The appellees here, complainants below, examined twenty-two witnesses. Of these forty-eight witnesses many give it as their opinion that the testator had such mental capacity as that he was able to transact ordinary business, while many of them are of the contrary opinion. In cases of this character the verdict of the jury is to have the same force and effect, as is given to a verdict in a case at law under a like state of facts; and when the verdict in such case is not manifestly against the weight of evidence, the court is bound by it in the same manner and to the same extent, as if it were a case at law. The jury had before them and saw the witnesses. The judge who tried the case was satisfied with the verdict and acted upon it. The evidence, particularly upon the question of mental capacity, is conflicting, but a careful consideration of it does not show, that the finding of the court below is clearly against its weight. Where the testimony is thus conflicting and is not clearly against the weight of the evidence, the finding of the jury must be regarded as conclusive. (Calvert v. Carpenter, 96 Ill. 63; Buchanan v. McLennan, 105 id. 56; Greene v. Greene, 145 id. 264).

There is another rule upon this subject well settled by the decisions of this court; and that rule is, that, where there is an irreconcilable conflict in the testimony touching the facts, upon which the validity of the will depends, the decree of the lower court will not be reversed, if the evidence of the successful party, when considered alone, is clearly sufficient to sustain the verdict. (Calvert v. Carpenter, supra; Moyer v. Swygart, 125 id. 262; Bevelot v. Lestrade, 153 id. 625; Harp v. Parr, 168 id. 459).

A reference, however, will be made to some of the facts, so far as it is necessary to understand the questions of law involved, and the objections made to the admission of evidence and to the instructions given upon the trial of the case in the court below.

The deceased, David Henline, was about seventy-three years of age when he died on May 4, 1895. He was a bachelor, never having been lawfully married. He had two brothers at the time of his decease, named William and John, and several nephews and nieces. He had been eng'aged in business with h is brother, William, many years, and was a partner with him in the ownership of a considerable quantity of land. In 1868, or 1869, the brothers met with reverses in business. David’s mind seemed to have been so seriously affected thereby, that he secluded himself in a • room in the second story of his house for about a year, and during that time declined to do any business. During the remainder of his life he permitted his brother, William, to manage their business, and relied mainly upon his judgment in matters relating" thereto. It is conceded by both parties, that the deceased, for many years prior to his death, perhaps as much as twenty-five years, sustained illicit relations with the appellant, Delilah Smith. Some time after this illicit relationship began, the said Delilah married a man by the name of Smith, with whom she went to Missouri and there lived for some months. During their stay there the appellant, Paulina Smith,- was born. Not long thereafter Delilah Smith and her husband returned to McLean county, where Smith died, and David Hen line and Delilah Smith and Paulina Smith, the latter being called in this record Susie Smith, lived together as one family until the death of David Henline. It is claimed by counsel for the appellants, that Paulina Smith was the daughter of David Henline; but she was born in lawful wedlock, while Delilah Smith and her husband were living together, and the presumption of law is, that she was their child. In 1890 the deceased, David Henline, while living with Delilah Smith and while sick in bed, was induced to buy a hotel in the town of Lexington for the sum of §4000.00. He moved into the hotel with Delilah Smith, who took charge thereof, and he lived there with her and her daughter until his death. While he was sick in the hotel in 1890, he made his will, dated December 24, 1890. In the summer of 1894 the deceased complained of a numb feeling in his right foot, leg and hand, and said that “it divided him up the back of his right side, and, when it got- to his head, he did not know anything, and he felt as if he was cut in two.”

About April 15, 1895, while visiting with one of his brothers, the deceased, David Henline, was taken sick and complained of the numbness in question, and said of it: “When it gets into my head I don’t know anything.” One of his brothers took him to the hotel at Lexington on Monday, April 15,1895. On the afternoon of Tuesday, April 16, 1895, he was obliged to go to bed, and remained there until he died. He was paralyzed. The right side of him and his right hand were numb and dead. He was unable to sit up in bed, and had to be propped up. He lost his power of articulation, and was unable to talk, or to write. He did not recognize bis friends, and, when spoken to, could only answer a part of the time “yes” or “no,” and a part of the time he would mumble out, in reply to questions, some such expressions as “um,” and “ah.” Those waiting upon him were obliged to rub his hands and body in order to promote circulation of the blood. The disease, of which he died, was softening of the brain. This disease progressed and more and more affected his brain from' the time he went to bed, on Tuesday, April 16, up to the day he made his mark to the codicil, which was Monday, April 22. During the week before the codicil was signed, Delilah Smith and her daughter, Paulina Smith, were living in the hotel where the deceased was lying sick, and most of the time were in the same or an adjoining room. The testimony shows, that, at this time and for some time before, the appellant, Paulina Smith, was living at the hotel in a state of adultery with a man named Al. Smith, the son of Shelton Smith, the executor named in the will. Al. Smith lived at the hotel, or was there most of the time, and was the father of an illegitimate child by said Paulina. A man, named William Costello, lived and boarded at the hotel. One of the witnesses says, that one evening, during the sickness of the testator, Delilah Smith and Costello were in the cellar drinking beer; they had a keg of beer there and made such a noise as to seriously disturb deceased.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.E. 227, 174 Ill. 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-henline-ill-1898.