Amrine v. Hamer

240 Ill. 572 | Ill. | 1909

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a bill for partition filed by Wyllie Amrine against Thomas R. Hamer for the partition of certain lands located in the village of Vermont, Fulton county, Illinois. The bill recites that the real estate involved was owned by Thomas Hamer, who was the father of the complainant and defendant, and that the said Thomas Hamer died in St. Anthony, Idaho, March 30, 1906, leaving no widow but leaving complainant and defendant as his sole surviving heirs. The bill alleges that the defendant, Thomas R. Hamer, in the year 1907 filed in the recorder’s office of Fulton county, Illinois, an holographic will, together with proper certificates from the probate judge and clerk of the probate court of Fremont county, Idaho, properly authenticating the record of the probate of said will in the county of Fremont, in the State of Idaho. It is also shown by the bill and the probate of the will as set out therein, that the probate court of Fremont county was duly authorized by the laws of the State of Idaho to admit such will and testament to probate, and that the will was duly executed, proved and admitted to record and probate agreeably to the laws and usages of the State of Idaho, and that Thomas Elliott and John Donaldson were, respectively, the clerk and judge of said probate court, whose certificates appear in the bill fully authenticating the record of the probate of said will in accordance with the laws of the United States. The will is not witnessed as required by our statute. The defendant answered the bill, admitting all and singular the allegations thereof, and charged that the said will of the said Thomas Hamer, together with proof of probate thereof and the certificates accompanying the same, was duly recorded by the clerk of the county court of Fulton county, in this State, and that thereby defendant claims that the title to the real estate involved vested in the defendant, as devisee thereof, under the will of his father. By the will of Thomas Hamer, which is set out in full in the bill, the real estate in question was devised to the defendant, Thomas R. Hamer. The cause was heard upon bill and answer, and resulted in a decree dismissing the bill for want of equity; to reverse which complainant below has appealed to this court.

The sole question presented for our consideration is whether a will which is properly executed under the laws of a sister State, upon a duly authenticated copy thereof being recorded, will pass title to real estate located in Illinois when such will is not executed and proven according to the statutes of this State. No point is made in this case as to the validity of the will under the laws of Idaho oías to the certificates by which the record thereof is authenticated for record here. There can be no question as to the common law rule upon this subject. It is, that the validity and construction, as well as the force and effect, of all instruments affecting the title of land depend upon the laws of the State or country where the land is situated. (Harrison v. Weatherby, 180 Ill. 418; Peet v. Peet, 229 id. 341.) This rule applies to wills, and it is necessary, under the general common law rule, that the will conform to the laws of the State both in its execution and proof of the same, in order to affect the title to real estate situated in such State. (Wharton on Conflict of Laws, sec. 587.) But this rule of the common law is changed by section 9 of the Statute of Wills. That section is as follows: “All wills, testaments and codicils, or authenticated copies thereof, proven according 'to the laws of any of the United States, or the territories thereof, or of any country out of the limits of the United States, and touching or concerning estates within this State, accompanied with a certificate of the proper officer or officers that said will, testament, codicil or copy thereof, was duly executed, * * * shall be recorded as aforesaid, and shall be .good and available in law, in like manner as wills made and executed in this State.” Under this section of the statute a will executed and proven according to the laws of a foreign State and recorded in Illinois is “good and available in law in like manner as wills made and executed in this State.” It is not necessary that such foreign wills should be probated in this State in order to pass title to real estate located here to a devisee. The case of Stull v. Veatch, 236 Ill. 207, is conclusive of the only question presented by this record.

The decree of the circuit court of Fulton county is affiimed.

Decree affirmed.