Thornton v. Herndon

145 N.E. 603, 314 Ill. 360
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1924
DocketNo. 15800
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 145 N.E. 603 (Thornton v. Herndon) 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
Thornton v. Herndon, 145 N.E. 603, 314 Ill. 360 (Ill. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

Mary F. Wells died on February 6, 1922, and an instrument bearing date January 9, 1922, was presented to the probate court of Cook county for probate as her will. Probate was denied, the executors named in the supposed will appealed to the circuit court, which after a hearing also denied probate, and the executors prosecute a writ of error from this court, the will purporting to devise real estate in fee.

In the preparation of the will a printed form was used, consisting of a sheet of paper folded in the middle so as to make four pages, with the fold at the top. At the top of the first page was printed a formal introduction, declaring the document to be the last will and testament of the maker, leaving appropriate blanks for the name and residence of the maker, followed by a paragraph directing the payment of debts and funeral expenses. Then followed the line: “Second — After the payment of such funeral expenses and debts, I give, devise and bequeath.” In the form the rest of the first page was blank, as was the second page and more than half of the third page, and at the bottom of the third page was printed a paragraph providing for the nomination of executors, followed by the testimonium, with a line for the testator’s signature, and below that an attesting clause reciting a full compliance with the requirements of the statute. The blanks in the will were all filled by a typewriter, and in the second paragraph, following the words “give, devise and bequeath,” appeared in typewriting, in regular succession, ten separate paragraphs making disposition of the testatrix’s estate, providing for the expenses of a minister from Jacksonville, Florida, for coming to Chicago to take charge of her funeral, and directing the erection of a tombstone. The name ■of the testatrix in the attesting clause was written with a pen.

The attesting witnesses were Minerva J. Hawkins and Emma W. Wilson. The former testified that Mrs. Wells called her late on a Saturday night in January and she went to Mrs. Wells’ home. Mrs. Wells told her that she wanted her to sign Mrs. Wells’ will, and she did so. She saw no signature and no writing whatever on the paper when she signed the will. The paper was so folded that it was impossible for her to see anything. This was about eleven or half-past eleven o’clock of the Saturday night before Mrs. Wells first entered St. Luke’s Flospital, and the paper shown Mrs. Hawkins at the trial was Mrs. Wells’ will and bore Mrs. Hawkins’ signature, which she signed at Mrs. Wells’ request.

Emma W. Wilson testified that she signed her name to the paper at the request of Mrs. Wells at Mrs. Wells’ home in Chicago. The signature of Mrs. Wells was not on the will. She didn’t see it when she signed. Mrs. Wells called her up and wanted her to come out and sign her will, and she got there about five o’clock Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Wells presented this paper to her and she signed it. She did not see the signature of Mrs. Wells or of Mrs. Hawkins or anything on the paper when she signed it. When she went out Mrs. Wells said to her that she wanted her to sign this will, and she signed it. Mrs. Wells said to her that she had not finished it, — she would finish it that night. Mrs. Wilson said, “Mrs. Wells, you are awfully late; you don’t know what will happen to you when you go to the hospital,” and Mrs. Wells said, “No, I know I don’t; I am going to finish this to-night if I have to sit up all night to do it.” This was about five o’clock Sunday afternoon, before Mrs. Wells went to the hospital. She told Mrs. Wilson that Mrs. Hawkins had signed it Saturday night and said she was going to the hospital the next day. Mrs. Wilson could not see anything on the paper she signed, because it was so folded that she could not see anything at all except the one line to put her name. Mrs. Wells laid it on a table for her to write on, and she didn’t look at anything except the bottom part, which was folded. She had the paper in her possession long enough to sign it. Mrs. Wells then took it and Mrs. Wilson could not tell what she did with it.

The defendants in error insist that the will was not properly executed because the witnesses did not see the signature of Mary F. Wells on the document and did not see anything on it when they signed it. The probate of wills is governed by the statute, which requires all wills to be in writing and signed by the testator or by some person in his presence and by his direction and attested in the presence of the testator by two credible witnesses, whose declaration, on oath, before the county court that they were present and saw the testator sign the will in their presence or acknowledge it to be his act and deed, and that they believed the testator to be of sound mind and memory at the time of signing and acknowledging the same, shall be sufficient proof of the execution of the will. It is not necessary to the valid execution of a will that the testator sign it personally, that the witnesses see his signature, that he declare it to be his will, or that the witnesses know it to be a will or understand that they are witnessing a will. (Flynn v. Flynn, 283 Ill. 206; Elston v. Montgomery, 242 id. 348; In re Will of Barry, 219 id. 391; Webster v. Yorty, 194 id. 408; Gould v. Theological Seminary, 189 id. 282; Hobart v. Hobart, 154 id. 610.) When the instrument is produced, if it bears the signature of the testator, whether written by himself or by another at his direction, and is attested by two competent witnesses who testify that they saw the testator sign the'instrument in their presence or heard him acknowledge it as his act and deed and that they believed the testator was at the time of sound mind and memory, that is sufficient to entitle the will to probate.

It is argued by the defendants in error that the will was properly denied probate because at the time it was attested by the witnesses it was not completed, and attention is called to the testimony of the witness Mrs. Wilson that Mrs. Wells said to her, "I have not finished this; I will finish it to-night.” Mrs. Wilson replied that Mrs. Wells was awfully late and did not know what would happen to her when she got to the hospital, and the testatrix said, "No, I know I don’t; I am going to finish this tonight if I have to stay up all night to do it.” It is therefore argued that the will had not been reduced to writing at the time the witnesses signed it. Each of the witnesses testified that the testatrix produced the paper and asked them to sign her will; that the paper was folded so that no writing was visible and each signed her name under those circumstances. When the writing was produced for probate it bore the signature of the testatrix and the will itself was complete. Under the statute and the authorities construing it which have been cited, this was sufficient proof to admit the will to record. The testatrix produced the instrument, said it was her will and asked the witnesses to sign it. This was an acknowledgment that it was her act and deed, — that the instrument as it then existed in the presence of the testatrix and the witnesses was her will. Whatever may have been her intention to add to or take from the document, the instrument which she thus acknowledged as her act and deed by her acknowledgment and the attestation of the witnesses became her will then and there. It was necessary that the whole will should be in the presence of the witnesses when they attested it, and there is no evidence that the instrument was not in the same condition when executed as when produced in the court for probate.

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Bluebook (online)
145 N.E. 603, 314 Ill. 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thornton-v-herndon-ill-1924.