Witt v. Gardiner

41 N.E. 781, 158 Ill. 176
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 41 N.E. 781 (Witt v. Gardiner) 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
Witt v. Gardiner, 41 N.E. 781, 158 Ill. 176 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a bill in chancery, brought by Freddie T. Witt, by his guardian, against Christopher J. Gardiner and others, to contest the will of Elizabeth Gardiner, deceased. The will was executed January 23, 1892, and the testatrix died March 1, 1894, leaving the complainant, her grandson and only heir-at-law, and being at the time of her death the owner and in possession of certain parcels of real estate, and also owning other property of the aggregate value of several thousand dollars. After the death of the testatrix the will was filed in the county court for probate, but probate thereof was there denied. On appeal by the proponents to the circuit court a hearing was had de novo, resulting in an order admitting the will to probate, and the complainant thereupon filed this bill.

No question is raised by the bill as to the testamentary capacity of the testatrix, nor is there any charge that the execution of the will was procured by undue influence, the grounds upon which its validity is called in question being, first, that it was not signed by the attesting witnesses in the presence of the testatrix; and second, that the testatrix did not know the contents of the will at the time she executed it.

The facts appearing from the record are briefly these: Elizabeth Gardiner, at the time the will was executed, was a woman about eighty years of age, was partially deaf, and was then confined to her bed by sickness and under a physician’s care, and had been so for about a month. During that time her physician had been visiting her twice a day, and her condition had required the attendance of watchers each night. On the day the paper was executed, Christopher J, Gardiner called upon her, and after having her attendants all leave the room, held a consultation with her and then left the house. Later the same day he returned, bringing with him the will drawn up, and also bringing E. W. Greene and L. L. Eoberts to serve as attesting witnesses. When they entered her room she was informed that the persons named were there to witness her will, and to that she assented. Christopher J. Gardiner then produced the draft of the will, with the testatrix’s name already written at the bottom of it, and she, being propped up on pillows on her bed for the purpose, executed the instrument by making her mark, whereupon the two witnesses and Christopher J. Gardiner left the bed-room, which was situated in the rear of the northerly part of the house, and went into the front room, situated on the southerly side of the house, adjoining the bed-room and communicating with it by a door, which was left standing open, and went to a table standing in the front room and there signed their names to the will as attesting witnesses.

There is very considerable conflict in the evidence as to the place in the front room where the table was standing when the will was attested, the testimony of some of the witnesses tending to show that it was standing near the center of the room,—a place which was within the range of the testatrix’s vision as she was lying on her bed,—while the testimony of other witnesses tends to show that it was standing at the east side of the room, near a window, and where, as much of the testimony tends to show, it could not be seen from the place where the testatrix was lying, the partition between the two rooms intervening.

The proponents of the will attempted to show that the attestation, though made in another room than the one in which the testatrix was lying at the time, was in fact made in her presence, by attempting to show (1) that the table on which the attestation occurred stood in the center of the front room, or (2) that even if it stood on the east side of the room she could have seen the act of attestation by changing her position and leaning over out of the bed, or (3) if she could not have seen the act by so leaning over it was possible for her to have arisen from her bed and gone to the door leading to the front room and viewed the act from that position, and this being true, that the attestation was good without proof that she did get out of her bed and saw it. Each of these several positions seems to have been urged to the jury by the proponents of the will, and evidence was given tending to show that the testatrix had sufficient strength to have made it physically possible for her, though very sick, to have arisen from her bed and gone to the door leading to the adjoining room. There was no evidence, however, that she in fact got. out of bed or changed her position in the least during the time the will was being attested.

Such being the evidence, the court, at the instance of the proponents, gave to the jury, among other instructions, the following:

25. “The court instructs the jury, for the proponents, that although the jury may believe, from the evidence, that the attesting witnesses went to an adjoining room to a table to sign their names as attesting witnesses, and that the testatrix did not actually see them sign the same, yet if the jury believe, from all the evidence and circumstances proven, that it was within the physical power of the testatrix to have seen them sign the same if she had so desired, then, in law, the attesting would be in compliance with the law, although the testatrix may not have actually witnessed the signing of the names of the witnesses.”

10. “You are further instructed, that if you believe, from the evidence, that at the time the witnesses signed the will in evidence the said Elizabeth Gardiner, if she had desired to do so, was physically able, by turning her head or changing her position, to have seen them sign, then you are instructed that the attestation of the will in evidence was legally accomplished in the presence of the testatrix, as the law requires.”

8. “The jury are instructed, that if you find, from the evidence, that the witnesses signed the will in such a place that the testatrix could have seen them sign if she so desired, then you are instructed that the said will was, under the law, attested in the presence of the testatrix, and it makes no difference whether she actually saw them sign or not.”

By the provisions of the statute all wills, to be entitled to probate, must be “attested, in the presence of the testator or testatrix, by two or more credible witnesses.” (Rev. Stat. chap. 148, sec. 2.) The issue of fact submitted to the jury in this case was whether the attestation was in the presence of the testatrix.

What constitutes the “presence” of a testator or testatrix, within the meaning of the statute, has been made the subject of much discussion by the courts, but the rule supported by the weight of authority may be stated substantially in the language of a distinguished modern law writer as follows: Contiguity, with an uninterrupted view between testator and subscribing witnesses, is the indispensable element to the physical signing in the testator’s presence.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.E. 781, 158 Ill. 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/witt-v-gardiner-ill-1895.