In re ESTATE OF Stanley CIESIOLKIEWICZ, Deceased.
(Lаwrence E. CECIL, Lorelei Dorgan Elding, and Colleen Dorgan Velszquez, Petitioners-Appellants, Daniel M. CECIL, Individually and as Co-Executor of the instrument purporting to be the Last Will and Testament of Stanley Ciesiolkiewicz, Deceased, and Alfreda F. Farber, as Co-Executor of the instrument purporting to be the Last Will and Testament of Stanley Ciesiolkiewicz, Deceased, Respondents-Appellees.)
Appellate Court of Illinois, First District, Second Division.
*1280 John J. Corbett, Ltd., Chicago (John J. Corbett, Scott M. Annes, of counsel), for petitioners-appellants.
Jenner & Block, Chicago, (Gregory S. Gallopoulos, of counsel), Kamensky & Rubinstein, Lincolnwood (Benton C. Strauss, of counsel), for respondents-appellees.
Justice SCARIANO delivered the opinion of the court:
Petitioners, the sole heirs at law besides co-respondent Daniel M. Cecil (Daniel), brought this action to contest the validity of the last will and testament of the decedent, Stanley Ciesiolkiewicz. Count I of the petition alleges that decedent lacked the testamentary capacity to execute the will. Count II claims that the will is invalid because Daniel, decedent's nephew, the sole beneficiary and co-executor under the will, exerted undue influence over decedent. Petitioners requested a jury trial on both counts; the trial court, however, granted respondents' motion for summary judgment as to both counts, and petitioners appeal from that judgment.
In support of their motion fоr summary judgment, respondents submitted affidavits from Daniel and Alfreda Farber (Farber), co-executors of the will, Herman Beyer (Beyer) and Marianne Brown (Brown), the two witnesses to the will, and Edward Krzyminski (Krzyminski), the attorney who prepared it. These affidavits set forth the following facts. Decedent, suffering from acute leukemia and diabetes mellitus, was brought to the emergenсy room of Mercy Hospital and Medical Center around midnight on May 14, 1987. After examination by hospital personnel, he was admitted as an inpatient and hospitalized until May 22. Decedent returned to the hospital on May 28 and died there on June 2.
In early May 1987, decedent hired Krzyminski to draft a deed conveying a parcel of real estate which hе owned to Daniel. Krzyminski had known decedent socially for about one year before he requested his services. Krzyminski also had performed some legal services for Daniel concerning an accident case in April 1987. In addition, Krzyminski and Daniel worked for the same company; Krzyminski was an officer while Daniel was a salesman.
Krzyminski was in the process of preparing the deed for decedent when Daniel, on either May 15 or 16, informed him that his uncle was hospitalized and wanted to discuss other legal matters with Krzyminski. Krzyminski brought the finished but unsigned deed with him when he visited decedent at the hospital on May 16. When he arrived at the hospital, Krzyminski found Daniel and Farber in the room along with decedent. After decedеnt reviewed and executed the deed, he told Krzyminski that he wanted him to prepare his will; however, before discussing the matter any further decedent asked Daniel to leave the room, *1281 which he did. At decedent's request, Farber remained in the room.
After Daniel left the room, Krzyminski began interviewing decedent, taking notes detailing the provisions decedent asked to have included in his will. Decedent told him that he did not have a prior will and gave him a detailed account of his property, all of which he desired to bequeath to Daniel. At this point, Farber asked decedent if he wanted to leave any of his property to anyone other than Daniel; decedent rejected this suggestion аnd reiterated his desire to bequeath everything to Daniel. Krzyminski stated that he later drafted the will, following decedent's instructions. He did not disclose the terms of the will to anybody except his wife, who also served as his part-time secretary.
On May 18, 1987, Krzyminski returned to the hospital with the completed will for decedent's review. Decedent initially read the will to himsеlf, and then he reviewed it paragraph by paragraph with Krzyminski. After Krzyminski was satisfied that decedent understood the terms of the will, decedent told him that he wanted to sign it. Krzyminski then asked some members of the hospital staff if they would serve as witnesses, but he was informed that hospital policy prohibited employees from attesting to patients' wills. Krzyminski suggested to decedent that two mutual friends, Beyer and Brown, could witness the execution of the will. Decedent concurred, and Krzyminski arranged for Beyer and Brown to come to the hospital.
When the witnesses arrived later that day, they found decedent in good spirits, and they talked about business and social matters. Eventually, the group began to execute the will. Deсedent identified the will, and Beyer and Brown watched him sign each page of it. Thereafter, Beyer and Brown signed the will in decedent's presence and in the presence of each other, and Krzyminski then notarized the will.
Both of the witnesses attested that decedent was mentally alert, that he signed the will with his own hand, that he acted deliberately and withоut prompting, and that he knew exactly what he was doing. Krzyminski, Beyer and Brown all stated that Daniel was not present when the will was executed, and Daniel also stated in his affidavit that he knew nothing of the contents of the will until after his uncle's death.
With their reply to respondents' motion for summary judgment, petitioners submitted affidavits of medical personnel which elicited the following facts. Erica Heit, M.D., stated that when she examined him on May 15, decedent "had an onset of mental confusion [the day before] with progressive confusion and the onset of incontinence." She concluded that based on her examination of decedent, he was, at that time, "mentally impaired and experiencing acutе mental status changes such that he could not make decisions for himself that could be relied upon by others."
Keith Meredith Ashby, M.D., stated that when he examined decedent on May 15, he was "exhibiting acute mental status changes with focal seizure activity * * * [and] experienc[ing] progressive confusion, and a new onset of incontinence." Dr. Ashby concluded that decedent "was mentally impaired and experiencing mental status changes."
Pedro Lopez, M.D., stated that throughout decedent's period of hospitalization between May 15 and May 22, decedent "exhibited varying degrees of mental impairment." Dr. Lopez also related that one of his nurse's notes indicated that decedent had рulled his catheter tube from his bladder through his penis with the inflated balloon still intact. He opined that "this is something a patient who is free of mental impairment would not do." Finally, Dr. Lopez stated that decedent "was mentally impaired and experiencing mental status changes such that he could not competently make decisions for himself that could be relied upon by others."
Susan Mason, R.N., stated that during decedent's week-long stay in the hospital, he was "disoriented from time to time" and that "his mental status was unreliable." She also indicated that during the day on which decedent's will was executed, his "judgment was clouded and he was unable to care for himself." Mason also stated *1282 that about three or four dаys after decedent was hospitalized, Daniel asked her rather adamantly to witness decedent's will. She stated that during some periods during the day on which the will was signed, Daniel was in the room with his uncle; she also stated, however, that a will was never mentioned while she and Daniel were present in the room.
After considering these affidavits and hearing oral argument, the trial court granted respondents' motion for summary judgment on both counts of the petition. Petitioners now appeal that decision.
I.
The purpose of summary judgment is to determine if there are any genuine issues of triable fact. (Purtill v. Hess (1986),
Because it is such a drastic measure, a motion for summary judgment should be granted only when the pleadings, depositions, admissions, and affidаvits on file, if any, show that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. (Ill.Rev.Stat.1991, ch. 110, par. 2-1005(c); Balla v. Gambro, Inc. (1991),
The burden of establishing that there are no genuine issues of material fact is on the moving party. (Becovic v. Harris Trust & Savings Bank (1984),
Count I of the petition claims that decedent lacked the testamentary capacity to execute a valid will. It is well established that the law presumes every person sane until the contrary is proved; thus the burden of proof rests on the рarty who *1283 asserts the lack of testamentary capacity. (Shevlin v. Jackson (1955),
Petitioners assert that the affidavits submitted by hospital personnel who observed decedent shortly before he executed the will illustrate that decedent lacked the mental capacity to do so. They claim that this evidence clearly contradicts the affidavits of those present during the execution of the will in which they stated that decеdent was of sound mind, thus raising a genuine of issue of material fact. Respondents argue that the affidavits submitted by petitioners do not contradict theirs because they do not necessarily indicate that decedent was incompetent to make a will, and that they are irrelevant to decedent's state of mind at the precise time the will was executed.
Respondents' first argument is meritless. The doctors and nurses who treated decedent all opined that decedent was mentally impaired in such a way that he could not competently make decisions for himself that could be relied upon by others. Assuming these facts to be true, as we must at this juncture, if decedent was not mentally competent to make decisions for himself, it is entirely рossible that he did not know the nature of his bounty, the character of his property, or his plan as to how he wanted to dispose of that property. Accordingly, the affidavits of the medical personnel were directly relevant to the question of whether decedent lacked the testamentary capacity to execute а will. See, e.g., In re Estate of Dossett (1987),
The respondents' second assertion is equally baseless. It is well recognized that evidence of the mental condition of the testator a reasonable time before or after the making of a will is relevant to show his mental condition at the time of the execution of the instrument (Butler,
In the case sub judice, the doctors and nurses who submitted affidavits on behalf of the petitioners observed decedent a few days before the execution of the will. In fact, one nurse stated that on the day the will was executed, she noticed that decedent's "judgment was clouded." Therefore, the facts presentеd by the hospital staff were indisputably of sufficient proximity to the execution of the will to be relevant to the question of decedent's testamentary capacity.
In sum, both parties submitted affidavits that contain relevant facts which completely contradict each other concerning the question of decedent's testamentary capacity at the time the will was executed; it is therefore quintessentially a function of the fact finder to resolve this conflict. Consequently, *1284 we reverse the trial court's grant of summary judgment on count I of the petition.
II.
Count II of the petition asserts that the will is invalid because Daniel procured it by exerting undue influence over decedent. For undue influence to invalidate a will, it must operate to prevent a testator from exercising his free will in the disposition of his estate. (Breault v. Feigenholtz (1973),
The party asserting that a will was executed as a result of undue influence must establish the following elements to raise such a presumption: (1) a fiduciary relationship between the testator and a person who receives a substantial benefit under the will; (2) a testator in a dependent situation in which the substantial beneficiaries were in dominant roles; (3) a testator who reposed trust and confidence in such beneficiaries; and (4) a will prepared or procured and executed in circumstances wherein such beneficiaries were instrumental or participated. Redmond v. Steele (1955),
In the case at bar, petitioners claim that the affidavits submitted by both parties, when looked at in the light most favorable to them, establish all four elements necessary for a presumption of undue influence. Respondents reply that the evidence, even when viewed in the light most favorable to petitioners, fails to establish that Daniel was in a fiduciary relationship with decedent or that he procured or participated in the execution of the will. Because we decide the case on the former ground, we have no occasion to reach the latter.
A fiduciary relationship is established in the undue influence context where thеre is a special confidence reposed in one who, by reason of such confidence, must act in good faith and with due regard to the interests of the person reposing that special confidence. (In re Estate of Osborn (1984),
Petitioners assert that respondents concede that a fiduciary relationship existed between Daniel and decedent because they stated in their answer that he "reposed trust and confidence" in Daniel. We disagree. While this admission may satisfy petitiоner's burden to show that decedent reposed trust and confidence in Daniel under the third prong of an undue influence claim espoused above, it is insufficient to establish the fiduciary relationship, or the "special confidence," element of the cause of action. This point was emphasized in Sterling v. Dubin (1955),
In the case at bar, petitioners point to no evidence from which we can deducе that *1285 Daniel was in a relationship of "special confidence" with decedent. That Daniel was his nephew and that decedent trusted him are not enough; there must be a factual basis in the record from which a reasonable inference can be drawn that Daniel was in a special relationship with decedent such that he was requirеd to act with good faith and in the interest of decedent. Since the record here is devoid of such evidence, we hold petitioners could not, as a matter of law, establish that Daniel procured the will by exerting undue influence over decedent.
For all of the foregoing reasons, we reverse the trial court's grant of summary judgment as to count I (testamentary capacity) of the petition, and affirm the court's grant of summary judgment in favor of respondents as to count II (undue influence) of the petition.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, remanded.
McCORMICK, P.J., and DiVITO, J., concur.
