154 N.E. 156 | Ill. | 1926
William Nelson McClintock died at his home in Cook county on December 4, 1924, leaving what purported to be a last will and testament. A petition to probate such will was filed in the probate court of that county and upon a hearing probate was refused. An appeal was taken from that order to the circuit court of Cook county, and upon a hearing in that court the will was admitted to probate. The heirs of deceased and his fiancee have prosecuted an appeal to this court.
The testator, called throughout the record "Billy" McClintock, lived in Kenilworth, Illinois. At the time of his death he left surviving him no parent, brother or sister but did leave ten cousins, seven of whom were half-cousins, as his only heirs-at-law. His estate is valued at about one million dollars. He was twenty-one years of age on April 3, 1924, the day the will was executed. The home where he resided was owned by him but controlled by appellee, William D. Shepherd, and his wife, who employed the servants *330 and stood in the relation of foster parents to McClintock. Appellee is a practicing attorney, with offices in the First National Bank building, in Chicago. McClintock was a student in an eastern college. On the morning of his twenty-first birthday he was served with breakfast in his room. Shortly after, Shepherd and his wife, accompanied by a minister of the church which Shepherd attended, came to the room and engaged in a religious ceremony, including the offering of prayer. Later in the day the testator prepared to leave his home and return to college. Before leaving the house he called two maids who were employed there into the drawing room and upon his request they attested his will. Shepherd and his wife were not in the drawing room at the time but stood in the adjoining hall, with the door open between the two rooms. Upon McClintock's death the will was offered for probate by Shepherd, who was named in the will as executor. Under its provisions an annuity of $8000 was bequeathed to Isabelle Pope, named by the testator as his "affianced wife." The manner of making the payments of this bequest was left to the discretion of the executor. The remainder of the estate was willed and bequeathed to appellee, who is denominated by the testator in his will as "my foster father." The clause making the bequest is in part as follows: "I make this bequest for the benefit of my foster parents as a token of my love and affection for them and as a mark of appreciation of the years of care that they have given me, during which time they have in all manners been all that parents could be to me. I do not make a special bequest to my beloved foster mother, Julie M. Shepherd, knowing full well that through this bequest she will obtain all the benefits thereof without the worry and care incident to possession of the property itself." When the will was offered for probate it was enclosed in a cover such as is frequently used by attorneys, and this cover bore the name and office address of appellee. *331
It is the contention of appellants, whom we shall call contestants, that a fiduciary relationship existed between Shepherd and the testator, in which Shepherd was the dominant party; that Shepherd prepared the will, was present at its execution and is the chief beneficiary under its provisions; that these facts and circumstances, entirely elicited from an examination of the subscribing witnesses, raise a presumption of undue influence on the part of appellee in procuring the execution of the will, and that it was not entitled to probate. Appellee insists that under the statutes of this State pertaining to the probate of wills the subject of undue influence is not a pertinent one to the inquiry, and that the only method of raising that issue is by bill in chancery to contest the will; that whatever may be the law in this regard, the record in the case does not present facts from which a presumption of undue influence can arise, and that even though the facts were sufficient to raise such a presumption, still that presumption was rebutted and overcome by the competent evidence in the case.
Counsel for contestants have quite succinctly presented the question here involved, as follows: If the evidence offered by the proponent of a will in its support raises the presumption that the will was executed as a result of undue influence, and if such presumption is not overcome by other evidence offered by the proponent as authorized under section 13 of the Wills act, do such facts justify the court in refusing to probate the will, or must the court permit the will to be probated in the face of such showing? The probate court of Cook county held that on the proof of such facts probate should be refused, while the circuit court held that probate should be allowed. It is therefore a matter of first importance to determine whether or not undue influence is a pertinent matter for the consideration of a court upon an application to probate a will. It is obvious that if it is not a cognizable question in such a proceeding *332 the order of the circuit court allowing probate was correct, for the only ground urged against admitting the will to probate is that it was the product of undue influence of appellee.
Section 1 of the Wills act gives to every male person of the age of twenty-one years, and every female person of the age of eighteen years, who are of sound mind and memory, the power to make a will. Section 2 provides that "all wills, testaments and codicils * * * shall be reduced to writing, and signed by the testator or testatrix, * * * attested in the presence of the testator or testatrix, by two or more credible witnesses, two of whom, declaring an oath or affirmation, before the county court of the proper county, that they were present and saw the testator or testatrix sign said will, testament or codicil, in their presence, or acknowledged the same to be his or her act and deed, and that they believed the testator or testatrix to be of sound mind and memory at the time of signing or acknowledging the same, shall be sufficient proof of the execution of said will, testament or codicil, to admit the same to record: Provided, that no proof of fraud, forgery, compulsion or other improper conduct be exhibited, which, in the opinion of said county court, shall be deemed sufficient to invalidate or destroy the same."
The probate of wills is governed entirely by the statute, and when the statutory requirements are complied with, no others can be prescribed. (Thornton v. Herndon,
In the absence of proof of fraud, forgery, compulsion or other improper conduct both the probate court and the circuit court are required to admit a will to probate upon proof that the requirements of the statute have been complied with. There must be proof that the will was executed with the formalities mentioned in the statute and that *334 the testator was of sufficient age, but the question of his mental capacity is not altogether an open one. The court is not required to find from the testimony of the witnesses that the testator was, in fact, of sound mind and memory when he executed the will. It is enough if it finds that the witnesses believed he was of sound mind and memory at the time he executed the will. What they may have believed afterwards is a matter of no consequence and would not affect the right to have the will probated. If the subscribing witnesses testify that they believed the testator was of sound mind and memory when he executed the will the probate court must accept their view, even though it may be of the opinion that their belief was not well founded or was erroneous. The probate court has no power to weigh the evidence further than to determine if a primafacie case has been made out. It was not intended by the legislature that all things which will invalidate a will should be cognizable by the court to which an application for probate is addressed.
Contestants make no claim of any right to prevent tile probate of the will by affirmatively introducing evidence to prove that it had been executed as the result of undue influence. They concede that if they wish to introduce such evidence, they must, under the statute, file a bill in chancery to test the validity of the will upon that ground; but they insist that the duty is incumbent upon the proponent to make aprima facie case showing that the will is valid, and if the proof as offered by the proponent in his effort to make out aprima facie case shows that the will was executed as a result of undue influence, then no prima facie case has been made and the will is not entitled to probate. The chief criticism to be made against this contention is that it assumes an incorrect premise. It is not the duty of a proponent to show that the will is valid in all respects. It is only his duty to make proof of the essentials mentioned *335
in the statute. When he has done this a prima facie case entitling the will to probate has been made out. Neither the probate court, nor the circuit court on appeal, has power to refuse a will to probate upon any ground whatsoever other than a failure of the proponent to make proper proof of the requirements mentioned in section 2, or because proof of fraud, forgery, compulsion or other improper conduct appears which is deemed sufficient to invalidate or destroy the will. (Hill v.Chicago Title and Trust Co.
If one seeks to defeat a will on the ground of undue influence he has his remedy in chancery by a bill to contest and not in a proceeding to probate it. In Claussenius v.Claussenius,
While admitting that a contestant in a proceeding to probate a will cannot offer witnesses to show that the will is the product of undue influence, counsel for appellants insist that if testimony be adduced from the subscribing witnesses showing that the will was actually or presumptively the result of undue influence, the cases herein cited have no proper application and the will ought not to be admitted. The substance of this contention is, that undue influence cannot be considered by the probate court, or the circuit court on appeal, if evidence of it comes from an outside witness, but if it comes from a subscribing witness it may be considered in either court. We cannot see how the situation is affected by procuring the evidence from the subscribing witnesses. It is not a question of who the witnesses are or in what capacity they testify, but whether *337 undue influence is cognizable by the court in such a proceeding. It has been repeatedly held that the proceeding is statutory and the inquiry is limited. Undue influence is not within the realm of the inquiry. Evidence concerning it can establish no fact. The court is empowered to make no finding with respect to it and consequently can enter no judgment concerning it.
It is claimed that the views here expressed are inconsistent with the holding of this court in Wunderlich v. Buerger,
The circuit court was right in admitting the will to probate, and its order is therefore affirmed.
Order affirmed.