Yung v. Peloquin

127 N.E.2d 252, 6 Ill. App. 2d 258
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 30, 1955
DocketGen. 46,474
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 127 N.E.2d 252 (Yung v. Peloquin) 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
Yung v. Peloquin, 127 N.E.2d 252, 6 Ill. App. 2d 258 (Ill. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ROBSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff, Henry L. Yung, filed a complaint contesting a portion of the last will and testament of Cora M. Drapier, deceased, and asking .for a construction of her will that would designate him the sole .devisee under the residuary clause of the will. Pierre J. Peloquin, executor under the will, and the sole residuary devisee under the will as finally probated, filed a written motion to dismiss the complaint. The court sustained his motion and dismissed the complaint for want of equity. Plaintiff appealed.

The principal issue raised on the appeal is whether plaintiff was an “interested person” within the meaning of Section 90 of the Probate Act, Ill. Rev. Stat. 1953, ch. 3, par. 242 [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 110.339], and therefore entitled to contest the validity of the will, in whole or in part.

The facts as alleged in plaintiff’s complaint, briefly summarized, in substance are that Cora M. Drapier (alias DuPier and Dupiere), a widow, died on December 9, 1951, at Englewood Hospital, Chicago, Illinois. She died testate and without known heirs, if any. Her will was executed four days before her death, on December 5. A copy of the will is attached to and made a part of the complaint. The will provides for payment by the executor of expenses. It gives and bequeaths $1,000 “to Pearl G-olab, who has been a real and sincere friend in time of need.” Pierre J. Peloquin was the testatrix’s attorney and he personally prepared the will. It is charged that fraudulently, against the instructions of the testatrix and in breach of his fiduciary duty to her and his fiduciary duty as executor, defendant omitted the name of Henry L. Yung from the third or residuary clause of the will, and fraudulently included the word “fifteen” therein and after execution inserted the name “Pierre J. Peloquin” therein. Plaintiff further alleges that he is the only person who fits the description of the devisee in the residuary clause of the will as originally executed and without the word “fifteen” therein. He then prays that the court strike from the clause of the will the words “Pierre J. Peloquin” and “fifteen,” construe the residuary clause then remaining as designating plaintiff the residuary devisee and declare and order distribution of the residue of testatrix’s estate accordingly.

The residuary clause of the typewritten will as finally admitted for probate reads as follows:

“I give, devise and bequeath all the rest of my estate, whether real, personal or mixed, and wheresoever situated to my most sincere friend, Pierre J. Peloquin [this name is written in ink and appears above a caret following the comma as an interlineation] forever. This is done in appreciation of and gratitude to him, who has cared for me and my personal well being for the last fifteen years of my life, especially in my last sicknesses, and who has always refused any compensation.”

Opposite the interlineation, in the left-hand margin and written in ink appears the annotation “O. K.” Neither of these writings, obviously, is testatrix’s, when compared with her signature on the instrument.

Defendant contends that the “interest” required under Section 90 of the Probate Act is jurisdictional and must be established before the court may consider the allegations challenging the will; that the court cannot reform the will to produce a description, which will fit the plaintiff; that without the name “Pierre J. Peloquin” and without the word “fifteen,” the residuary clause of the will would he void for indefiniteness, and that since plaintiff is not an heir of the testatrix, he further lacks the necessary interest to contest the validity of the will, in whole or in part. This, in substance, is the defendant’s theory.

The requirements of the Probate Act dealing with will-contest proceedings are jurisdictional; therefore, the requirement that the contestant be an interested person within the meaning of Section 90 is jurisdictional. McQueen v. Connor, 385 Ill. 455; Selden v. Illinois Trust & Savings Bank, 239 Ill. 67; Storrs v. St. Luke’s Hospital, 180 Ill. 368; Jele v. Lemberger, 163 Ill. 338; Hunt v. Morris, 266 Ill. App. 18. The right to contest a will is not a vested one. Independently of the statute no such right has ever been recognized by the courts of this State. The right, therefore, can be exercised only in the manner and within the limitations prescribed by the statute. McQueen v. Connor, supra; Kessler v. Martinson, 339 Ill. App. 207.

Plaintiff contends that he has established his interest sufficiently to meet the requirements of the statute. He cites and relies upon the case of Wolf v. Bollinger, 62 Ill. 368. In that case, the question before the court, upon the merits, was which one of the two parties was the devisee under the will. In the Wolf case, the contestant’s name, Catharine Bollinger, appeared in the will as the original devisee. Pen lines had been drawn through the name, leaving legible, however, the name of Catharine Bollinger, and written above it appeared the name of Christina Wolf. The will, in its altered form, was admitted to probate. The contestant argued that the alteration had occurred after execution of the will and without the required statutory reattestation. The simple proposition sustained in the case is that, if the insertion of the name of the substituted devisee is invalid, the testamentary-disposition will stand as originally executed with the name of the original devisee.

The defendant objects to the applicability of the Wolf case to the facts in the case at bar because, unlike the Wolf case, the residuary clause of the will in the instant case, without the defendant’s name, is merely descriptive. It is apparent that the applicability of the principle as enunciated and applied in the Wolf case cannot be denied merely because the plaintiff here must prove his identity or interest under the descriptive indicia by resorting to extrinsic evidence. If plaintiff has made a case in his complaint challenging the validity of the name “Pierre J. Peloquin” and the word “fifteen,” and asserting his claim as the intended devisee under the will as originally executed, he has met the demands of the statute as interpreted by the Supreme Court in the Wolf case.

Defendant cites Selden v. Illinois Trust & Savings Bank, 239 Ill. 67, in support of his proposition that, as the court said in the Selden case (at p. 80), “special circumstances . . . existed in Wolf v. Bollinger,” and had the name of Bollinger been obliterated in the Wolf case, the court would in that case have dismissed the bill for want of interest in the contestant. (Cf. however, Cantway v. Cantway, 315 Ill. 244.) First, the Selden case decided a quite different question. It decided that a legatee may not contest the same will and her interest therein given when she would have been without such interest or any interest in the absence of the will; that such a beneficiary is not an “interested person” within the meaning of the Probate Act. Plaintiff in the instant case, on the other hand, seeks not to defeat the will which allegedly gives him his interest, and in the absence of which he would be without any interest, but he seeks to defeat a purported will engrafted upon the face of the alleged original will.

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127 N.E.2d 252, 6 Ill. App. 2d 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yung-v-peloquin-illappct-1955.