Worthing v. Hall

153 Ill. App. 587, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 1001
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 11, 1910
DocketGen. No. 5,199
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 153 Ill. App. 587 (Worthing v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worthing v. Hall, 153 Ill. App. 587, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 1001 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Henry Minard and Tirzah Minard, his wife, residents of Kendall county, made a joint will on the first day of December, 1883, to which will several codicils were afterwards added, the last codicil being dated November 8,1887. The third clause of this will, which is the only part involved in this case, reads as follows:

“Third. To Tina Worthing of Kendall County, Illinois,—a niece of the said Tirzah Minard—the sum of One Thousand ($1000.00) Dollars in money and the half of our household goods and wearing apparel.”

Henry Minard, one of the testators, died in 1888. Tirzah Minard died in February, 1904. The joint will was probated in the County Court of Kendall county, the appellant was appointed executor, and in due course of time filed his final report, setting out that all of the legatees under the will have been paid and the legacies discharged before the death of Tirzah Minard. To this report Tina Worthing, the appellee, filed exceptions in the County Court, denying that any part of said legacy to her had been paid, either before or after the death of said Tirzah Minard. Her exceptions to the final report of the executor were overruled by the County Court, and appellee prayed and perfected an appeal to the Circuit Court. Upon a trial in that court, before a jury, of the issue whether the legacy to Tina Worthing had been paid, a verdict was returned finding for appellee in the sum of $1,049.31, the amount of the legacy with interest from the date of the approval of the final report except as to said legacy and one other, motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled, and judgment was entered in favor of appellee, finding the legacy unpaid and ordering the executor to pay' Tina Worthing $1,046.31, the amount of the verdict, less $3 interest remitted, from which judgment the executor appeals to this court.

Appellant claims that the legacy to appellee, mentioned in said third clause of this will, was paid by the said Tirzah Minard in her lifetime; that Tirzah Minard had and executed a general and definite scheme for satisfying all of the legacies and for carrying out all of the provisions of her will in her lifetime; and that the trial court erred in rejecting certain testimony offered by appellant, and also erred in refusing to give certain instructions to the jury, asked on behalf of appellant, and in giving certain instructions requested by appellee.

The proofs in this cause showed that the executor had in his possession, after paying all other claims, legacies and costs, a considerable sum of money more than was necessary to pay the legacy to appellee, so that the only question to be determined here is whether appellee was entitled to the legacy. This was not a claim against the estate, such as is provided for in section 60 of the Administration Act, and neither party had a right to a jury. The. settlement of the accounts of executors and administrators proceeds upon equitable principles, and while the court may impanel a jury to try a question of fact, yet the court is not bound by the verdict. It is advisory only, like any other verdict in a purely equitable proceeding, and the court may completely ignore the verdict and enter such an order as equity may require, though it be very different from the verdict returned by the jury. Therefore the question whether the court gave improper or refused proper instructions to the jury is immaterial in this case. Furthermore, if there was sufficient competent evidence to sustain the finding, the rulings of the court upon the evidence are immaterial, unless the court kept out some competent evidence. Schroeder v. Harvey, 75 Ill. 638; Palmer v. Meriden Brittannia Co., 188 Ill. 508; Grand Pacific Hotel Co. v. Pinkerton, 217 Ill. 61.

Appellee lived in California and seems not to have been present at the trial. Her deposition was taken in her behalf in California and filed in the case. At the trial appellee’s attorney assumed the affirmative to sustain the exceptions to the final report, and introduced in evidence the will and its codicils and the order of probate, and proved by the executor that the debts were paid and that he had on hand more than sufficient funds to pay this legacy. Appellee then rested.' Appellant then offered in evidence the deposition of appellee, which largely related to matters occurring in the lifetime of the testatrix. Appellee was not a competent witness in her own behalf on these subjects, but she was a competent witness for appellant if he chosé to make her his witness. By offering her deposition he made it competent. The deposition had been taken on oral interrogatories, and it shows objections by appellant to various questions and answers. As the deposition is given in the bill of exceptions, some of these objections by appellant appear to have been overruled and an exception by appellant preserved. We do not see how appellant could offer a question and its answer and at the same time object to it and except to a ruling upon it. If there was anything in the deposition which appellant did not wish to offer, no ruling of the court compelled him to offer it. Appellee did not offer any part of the deposition. The position was not taken by the court or by appellee that appellant must offer the whole deposition. No part of it went to the jury except what appellant offered and read. No question therefore is saved by these exceptions by appellant to what he himself offered. This deposition and the documentary evidence contain substantially all the material proof in this case.

When the will was executed the testatrix and her husband and appellee, whose full name is Chastina Worthing, all lived in Kendall county, in this state. Afterwards appellee removed to Bedlands, California, and had a home there. The second year after the death of her husband, Mrs. Minard went to California and lived with appellee for two years. While so residing with appellee, Mrs. Minard was poisoned by the bite of a black spider and became suddenly and dangerously ill in consequence thereof. Appellee took prompt and vigorous action before competent medical assistance could be obtained, and the physicians after-wards assured Mrs. Minard that she would have died but for .the exertions of appellee. Appellee cared for Mrs. Minard during that illness. At some time about the middle of that visit, but whether before or after this illness is not clearly shown, though apparently it was afterwards, Mrs. Minard handed to appellee $1,000 and at her request appellee signed the following document:

“Bedland, Calif., June 1st, 1891. I promise to pay Tirzah Minard interest on One Thousand Dollars at 7% during her natural life and if I care for her in her death, it, the thousand dollars, shall be mine aside from what is willed Chastina Worthing in Henry and Tirzah Minard’s will.
Chastina Worthing.”

Mrs. Minard had apparently gone to California with the intention of remaining there the rest of her life, but afterwards her sister, the mother of appellee, died and Mrs. Minard thereupon became desirous of returning to Illinois while she was alive, as she desired to be buried in Kendall county by the side of her husband. WTien she determined to return to this state appellee offered to return with her and to take care of her, but Mrs. Minard declined the offer because of appellee’s ill health. After Mrs.

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Related

Cotton v. Worthing
204 Ill. App. 78 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 Ill. App. 587, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 1001, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worthing-v-hall-illappct-1910.