298 Ill. 75 | Ill. | 1921
The circuit court of Cook county denied the petition of appellant, Noyes F. Waterman, for leave to file a bill of review to review and reverse a decree of that court entered in the case of Waterman v. Hall, and which was later affirmed by this court in 291 Ill. 304. The petition was supported by affidavit and it was based upon the ground of newly discovered evidence. The petitioner seeks by this appeal to review the order of the court denying the petition.
No brief is filed by any appellee except the Chicago Avenue (or Moody) church.
The original proceeding was a bill filed by appellant as. the sole heir-at-law of Arba N. Waterman, deceased, to: contest the will of the latter and to set aside deeds from Judge Waterman to Carleton Hudson purporting to have been executed and acknowledged in June, 1915, conveying substantially all the real estate Judge Waterman owned,— a large amount,—the consideration being Hudson’s unsecured notes for $80,000, due in ten years, which the petition alleges are absolutely worthless. The issues raised by the pleadings in that proceeding were as to the sanity of the testator when he made the will, and also upon the further question whether or not Hudson had procured the execution of the will by the exercise of undue influence. The will admitted to probate was dated July 21, 1909, and the questions of mental incompetency of the testator and of undue influence were determined upon the supposition and the' proof that the will was made on the day of its date, the two subscribing witnesses testifying in the probate court, without contradiction, that the will was executed on said date. A motion for new trial in the lower court was supported by the oral testimony of Sol Rubin before the court, to the effect that he saw the will executed and that it- was executed in August, 1915, and not in July, 1909. Appellant had never had any intimation from Rubin or anyone else, until after the trial had been completed, that the will was not executed on the day of its date. This court in the foregoing decision sustained the lower court in overruling the motion for a new trial. Shortly after the motion for a new trial was overruled the petition for leave to file the bill of review was presented to the court. The petition and the bill clearly set forth the substance of the pleadings in the original cause as aforesaid, and disclose that the newly discovered evidence relied upon had never come to the knowledge of the complainant in the original bill or his solicitor and showed due diligence in seeking and gathering all evidence applicable to the case previous to the trial. They also set forth the findings of the court in the cause that the will in question was the will of the testator, and are duly verified by the petitioner.
There were two other affidavits setting forth newly discovered evidence in support of the bill and filed with the petition. One of these affidavits was made by Louis C. Ehle, who is named in the alleged will of 1909 as executor. He declined to act as executor but acted as attorney at law for the administrator and for the estate of the testator and participated as an attorney in the trial of the original contest of the will.. In his affidavit he states the following: He was associated with Carleton Hudson, a defendant in the will contest, from 1914 to Arba N. Waterman’s death, and that they occupied the same suite of offices in Chicago until May, 1919. He had not become well acquainted with Waterman until about 1912 and was not familiar with his affairs or property and had not discussed with him the making of a will. He did not know that a will had been made by Waterman until the summer of 1915, after the filing in the probate court of Cook county of a petition to have him adjudged incompetent and a conservator appointed for his estate. In the summer of 1915 Hudson informed him that he had been named as executor in Waterman’s will but did not state in what will he was so named. While acting as attorney for the administrator Hudson informed him that he suggested to Waterman the naming of the Moody church as residuary legatee of the will, to receive the bulk of Waterman’s estate. He asked affiant if he did not think that that church would be the most favorable beneficiary he could suggest in view of Hudson’s claim against Waterman’s estate and other controversies growing out of the execution and delivery to Hudson of the deeds which Hudson had procured from Waterman. He knows that Hudson had no controversies with Waterman or his estate in 1909 which he. could be seeking to adjust by a friendly beneficiary in Waterman’s will, and that no such controversies arose until 1915, when Hudson procured from Waterman deeds for property of the value of $100,000 for Hudson’s unsecured note for $8o,ood, payable ten years after date. Hudson had for more than ten years been closely associated and on intimate terms with the most active leaders of the Moody church. He sold to the sister-in-law of Erwin Woolley, acting assistant pastor of the church, certain notes of Caroline N. King totaling over $11,000, payable to Hudson and indorsed by him. He also sold to the trustees of the fresh air fund of the Moody church one or more of Mrs. King’s notes payable to himself and by him indorsed, amounting to $io,ooo. He procured the notes from Mrs. King fraudulently. They have never been paid and are now uncollectible. Hudson gave the holders of the notes certain notes of affiant as security for Hudson’s indorsement of the King notes, the latter notes being given without consideration and which Hudson had fraudulently negotiated by false representations to the effect that affiant was a person of large financial responsibility. Hudson is insolvent and cannot meet his obligations unless he procures by a favorable settlement some part of the real estate of Waterman which he claims under the Waterman deeds. Upon several occasions Hudson “has intimated” to him that he had in his possession a revocation of Waterman’s will of 1909. Prior to the original decree he “admitted to affiant” that he had such a revocation, and said that he could not admit it to the other attorneys for the Moody church. Hudson has several times since the death of Waterman sought to make a settlement with Noyes E. Waterman for a nominal sum and thereby obtain an assignment of all of Waterman’s right, title and interest in said estate, and “intimated” that with such an assignment he could drive a bargain with the Moody church for a settlement of his claims under the Waterman deeds. Waterman from the summer of 1915 to the appointment of his conservator (December, 1915,) was completely under the control and domination of Hudson and would sign anything and do anything that Hudson asked him to do. He verily believes that in the summer of 1915 and up to his death Waterman was mentally incompetent and unable to make a valid will.
The other affidavit was made by Clara Hillman, the former stenographer in Hudson and Waterman’s office from 1914 to 1916. Her affidavit contains the following facts which she swears are true and to which she testified in a certain case entitled, The People vs. Carleton Hudson and Julia Johnston, in the criminal court of Cook county in the summer of 1919: About August, 1915, Hudson asked her to make a copy of a will that he handed her, which was Judge Waterman’s will. There were some corrections in pencil in the will that he handed her and the will was typewritten. The pencil changes were in Hudson’s handwriting. The will was dated 1909. Hudson told her to put the date 1909 in the will, and she wrote the date “......... day of July, 1909.” She wrote it with an Underwood typewriter. She ordinarily used an L. C. Smith machine but Hudson told her to use the Underwood. She gave the copy of the will to Hudson and also the original will. She saw the will next day in Hudson’s hands and asked him if that was the will which she copied. He said, “No; this will dates back to 1909 and is signed by Judge Waterman.” She said it looked like the will she wrote the day before and she thinks it was. She was shown the will which was contested and stated, “It looks very much like the document I wrote; I think it is.” She stated that one thing that refreshed her recollection was, that on the second page of the will she wrote $250 was given to Kate O’Connor, housekeeper of Judge Waterman, while in the original will she was given $500. She remembered this fact because she thought she deserved the amount the first will gave her. She also stated that on page 3 of the will she wrote is mentioned the Chicago Avenue church and that it was not mentioned in the original will. She also stated that she did not examine the papers or will that Hudson had in his hand the next day after she wrote the will. She could see them but she did not read them and did not have hold of them. She saw signatures on the will he had but did not remember how many signatures she saw on it. When he told her it was not the will she wrote he said, “This was signed in 1909; see?”
No affidavit of Sol Rubin embracing his testimony before the court in support of the motion for a new trial was presented in support of the bill or petition, but the petition alleges he testified the will was not executed the day it bears date but was executed in 1915. The bill of review is submitted as an exhibit to the petition. In the bill it is stated that Rubin testified in support of the motion for a new trial,” and that his testimony is to the effect that the purported will dated July 21, 1909, was in fact executed by Judge Waterman in August, 1915, and that he was present when it was so executed.
A bill of review is in the nature of a writ of error, and its object, as indicated" by its name, is to have reviewed a decree in chancery rendered upon a former bill and to procure an alteration or reversal of the decree by another trial of the issues upon which the case was first submitted. (Story’s Eq. Pl. sec. 403; Elzas v. Elzas, 183 Ill. 132.) The newly discovered evidence must be such as relates to a matter in issue upon the hearing where the ground of the petition is for newly discovered evidence. The petition for the bill should be supported by affidavit of the petitioner, and it and the bill should also be supported by proper and competent evidence, and the facts to be testified to by witnesses should be sworn to by the witnesses who are expected to testify to them. The evidence must not be merely cumulative or of an impeaching character. (Elzas v. Elzas, supra; Lewis v. Topsico, 201 Ill. 320.) The original findings of the court are not to be disputed or contested, but the question is, will the newly discovered facts produce a different result or finding? (Turner v. Berry, 3 Gilm. 541.) The new facts to be proved are supposed to be entirely new facts or new evidence of a positive and convincing character,—not merely cumulative or of an impeaching nature. This court, before reversing the order denying the right to file the bill should be able to say from the allegations of the bill and the offered testimony, that if true a different decree would in all probability result in the cause.
A bill to contest a will is a suit in chancery' or in equity. The fact that it is a statutory proceeding and that the statute directs that an issue at law be. made up in such a case whether the writing produced be the will of the testator or not, and which shall be tried by jury, does, not in any other respect distinguish such a case from any other suit or proceeding in chancery in matters of procedure. (Stephens v. Collion, 249 Ill. 225.) A bill for a divorce is also a suit in equity in which either party may have the right of a trial by jury. This court has held that a bill of review will lie in such cases upon a proper showing, and the case of Elzas v. Elzas, supra, is an instance of such a holding. We can see no reason for holding, as contended by appellee the Moody church, that a bill of review will not lie to review á decree in a will contest on a proper showing. The suit being in equity, the same procedure for a review of a decree in a will contest ought to obtain as in any other case in equity. If the petition for such a bill is allowed it simply means that the party so applying is entitled to a new trial on the old bill, and if that bill was filed within the time required by the statute the old bill gives the court jurisdiction for the second trial the same as for the first.
■ Appellee the Moody church contends the record here presented is inadequate because it does not contain the evidence heard on the trial of the original cause. There were filed with the petition affidavits of the newly discovered evidence, except that of Rubin heard orally before the chancellor on the motion for a new trial. Appellant was not required to set out the evidence heard on the trial of the original cause, but affidavits of the newly discovered testimony were necessary, and that was to be considered together with the evidence in the original case. Elzas v. Elzas, supra; Turner v. Berry, supra; Aholtz v. Durfee, 122 Ill. 286; Buffington v. Harvey, 95 U. S. 99.
The appellee church insists the newly discovered evidence raises a new and different issue from the issue tried in the original case, and leave to file the bill of review was properly denied for that reason. The bill in the original case was to contest the will of Judge Waterman admitted to probate and which bore date July 21, 1909, on the ground that he was mentally incompetent to make a will and that he was unduly influenced by Hudson. The appellee church also contends the newly discovered evidence would be incompetent because not on the issue involved in the original case. In a will contest the issue is whether the will produced is the will of the testator. Appellant had no knowledge of any evidence that the will was not, in fact, executed on the day of its date, and the case was tried on the supposition that it was so executed. On the trial the court limited the proof, in point of time, to January 1, 1912. If the will was not executed until July or August, 1915, but was dated back to 1909, a fraud was perpetrated on appellant and the court. It is true the bill did not allege the will was executed in 1915, because appellant had no knowledge of the alleged facts disclosed by the newly discovered testimony. On the question of the date of the execution of the will the only evidence was the certificate of the testimony of the witnesses to the will heard in the probate court,—Hudson and his employee, Miss Johnston. The cause of action and the issue were whether the will produced was Judge Waterman’s will, and, as we have said, the case was tried on the supposition that the will was executed in 1909. It might have been a valid will if executed then and ‘not have been the testator’s will if executed in 1915. Mrs. Waterman, wife of the judge, died in March, 1915. Proceedings were begun in the probate court in August, 1915, to adjudge Waterman a feeble-minded and distracted person and for the appointment of a conservator of both his person and property. In December following he was adjudged a feeble-fninded, distracted person, and the Chicago Title and Trust Company was appointed conservator of his estate and Edwin A. Hunger of his person. The Moody church, residuary legatee, filed a cross-bill in the original suit to set aside the deeds to Hudson for the same reasons they were sought to be set aside by the original bill,—lack of mental capacity of the grantor and undue influence of the grantee. Upon motion of said appellee it was by the decree in that case substituted as a complainant and authorized to prosecute the suit to set aside the deeds. Said appellee therefore agrees that in June, 1915, Judge Waterman was mentally incompetent and under the influence of Hudson. The newly discovered evidence does not raise a new issue but is of facts tending to show the will produced was not the will of Judge Waterman. It is evidence of facts not known to appellant before the trial of the original case.. Had it come to appellant’s knowledge before the trial the bill might properly have been amended and the amendment would not have presented a new cause of action. Sinnet v. Bowman, 151 Ill. 146; Dowlingv. Gilliland, 275 id. 76.
Whatever may be said to discredit the affidavit of Ehle, the newly discovered testimony of Clara Hillman seems to us clear and convincing. It is criticised by the appellee church and is said to be uncertain and contradictory, but it does not so impress us. The chancellor who tried the original case and heard and denied the petition for leave to file the bill of review made an order in which he recited that the evidence in support of the petition, except that of Clara Hillman, was insufficient to justify granting leave to file the bill; that if her testimony had been heard in the original case the court would not have limited the testimony-in that case to January 1, 1912; that without passing on the weight of her testimony or its sufficiency to change the result the court was of opinion an injustice had been done appellant, and for that reason the court would be disposed to grant leave to file the bill of review, but as the opposition contended her testimony would not be sufficient to change the result on another trial, and as it was further contended the court had no jurisdiction to open up the decree and a bill of review would not lie, and that the questions involved must necessarily reach and be dealt with by the Supreme Court, the chancellor was of the opinion that this would be facilitated by denying the petition, and it was accordingly denied.
The testimony of Clara Hillman embraced in her affidavit was given by her in the trial of the case of People vs. Hudson in the criminal court of Cook county. She was cross-examined at length and as abstracted her testimony covers more than ten pages. We have not attempted to set it out in full because of its length, but we see nothing in it to discredit it, and if it is true it would change thé result on another trial. It may be, as the court held, that the testimony of Rubin and Ehle, alone, was not sufficient to justify leave to file the bill of review, but the court’s order shows he did not so regard the affidavit of Clara Hill-man. It cannot be denied that the testimony of Ehle and Rubin tends to corroborate her. If her testimony is true, a will executed in 1915 but purporting to have been executed in 1909 was produced and admitted to probate as the last will and testament of Judge Waterman. The truth of her testimony was not denied by counter-affidavits, which would have been permissible, (Loth v. Loth, 116 Mich. 634,) and unless there is inherent in it something to discredit her testimony or render it unworthy of belief it was amply sufficient to justify granting leave to file the bill. We do not see any such inconsistencies or contradictions in her testimony as would warrant us in saying it should not be believed. If it is true, then justice and fairness require that the case should be again tried and appellant permitted to offer his newly discovered proof on the issue whether the will is the will of Judge Waterman. The newly discovered testimony if true, and if on the trial it shall be believed, will disclose that the will was executed in 1915 and authorize'testimony of Judge Waterman’s mental condition at that time. We think the showing made on the petition for leave to file the bill was sufficient to require that leave be granted and the court erred in denying it. Collateral equities or interests are not to be considered in determining that question. It is a question of legal rights, only.
The decree is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to grant leave to file the bill of review.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.