Digitally signed by
Reporter of
Decisions
Reason: I attest to
Illinois Official Reports the accuracy and
integrity of this
document
Appellate Court Date: 2018.12.31
15:18:28 -06'00'
In re Estate of Lay, 2018 IL App (3d) 170378
Appellate Court In re ESTATE OF EUGENE ELWYN LAY, Deceased (Beverly Ann
Caption Bateman Kelton, Petitioner-Appellant, v. Delbert Miller, Executor,
Respondent-Appellee).
District & No. Third District
Docket No. 3-17-0378
Filed September 18, 2018
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Kankakee County, No. 16-P-49; the
Review Hon. Ronald J. Gerts, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Reversed and remanded.
Counsel on Mark R. Steffen, of Kankakee, for appellant.
Appeal
David M. Jaffe, of Kankakee, and Jerome C. Shapiro, of Aroma Park,
for appellee.
Panel JUSTICE McDADE delivered the judgment of the court, with
opinion.
Justices Lytton and Wright concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 The petitioner, Beverly Ann Bateman Kelton, filed a petition to contest the will of the
decedent, Eugene Elwyn Lay. The circuit court dismissed the petition after finding that
Kelton was not an interested person under the Probate Act of 1975 (Probate Act) (755 ILCS
5/1-1 et seq. (West 2016)) and lacked standing to contest the will. Kelton appealed, alleging
that the court’s decision was erroneous. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
¶2 FACTS
¶3 Lay died in Kankakee on January 29, 2016. He executed a will one day prior to his death
in which he left the entirety of his estate to Delbert Miller, who was also nominated as
executor of the estate. The will was signed by two witnesses whose signatures are illegible. A
petition for probate was filed on March 9, 2016. The will was admitted to probate the next
day with letters of office as executor issued to Miller.
¶4 On September 8, 2016, Kelton timely filed a petition to contest the validity of Lay’s 2016
will. Kelton stated that she was the sister of Lay’s wife, Billie, who had predeceased Lay.
The petition alleged that except for a $2000 gift to Miller, Lay’s previous will had left the
entirety of his estate to Kelton and her siblings. The petition questioned the soundness of
Lay’s mind at the time he executed the 2016 will and also alleged that (1) Lay “was suffering
from lung cancer and *** was not receiving medical treatment, but may have received
hospice or other palliative care”; (2) Lay was “suffering from various mental and physical
infirmities and illnesses *** and had been recently administered status altering medication”;
(3) at the time the 2016 will was executed, Miller and his daughter were managing some of
Lay’s financial affairs and were therefore fiduciaries; (4) Kelton had spoken to Lay on
January 27, 2016—two days before his death and one day before the challenged will was
signed—but he was too weak and disoriented to respond; (5) the 2016 will did not provide
for Lay’s family “nor for [Kelton] who [sic] he treated like a sibling and referred to as his
family”; (6) Miller and his daughter improperly influenced Lay to execute the 2016 will; and
(7) the 2016 will was not published nor was it witnessed by two independent persons because
one of the witnesses was Miller.
¶5 Miller filed a motion to dismiss Kelton’s petition pursuant to section 2-619 of the Code
of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-619 (West 2016)), alleging that she lacked standing
because she failed to attach a copy of the prior will and an affidavit stating facts to show that
the original was not accessible to her. The motion also alleged that Kelton was not an
interested person under the Probate Act.
¶6 Kelton requested and received leave to file a copy of Lay’s prior will. This will was dated
July 3, 1979, and left the entirety of his estate to his wife. If she predeceased him, the will
provided, in relevant part, for the following distribution: (1) $2000 to Miller and (2) the
remainder of his estate in equal shares to the brothers and sisters of his wife, which included
Kelton. Lay also nominated his wife to be executrix, with Kelton named as the successor.
¶7 The circuit court heard arguments on May 11, 2017, and issued a written decision four
days later. The court found that Kelton failed to meet her burden of proving that the prior will
was unrevoked at the time of Lay’s death, she was not an interested person under the Probate
Act, and she lacked standing to contest the 2016 will.
-2-
¶8 Kelton appealed.
¶9 ANALYSIS
¶ 10 On appeal, Kelton argues that the circuit court erred when it granted the motion to
dismiss her petition. Specifically, she claims that, as a legatee under the previous will, she is
an interested person under the Probate Act with standing to contest the 2016 will. She also
denies any requirement that she produce the original of the 1979 will or prove that it was still
valid.
¶ 11 This appeal challenges the grant of respondent’s section 2-619 motion to dismiss. Our
review is de novo. In re Estate of Schlenker, 209 Ill. 2d 456, 461 (2004).
¶ 12 In relevant part, section 2-619 of the Code allows a defendant to file a motion for
involuntary dismissal based on an allegation “[t]hat the claim asserted *** is barred by other
affirmative matter avoiding the legal effect of or defeating the claim.” 735 ILCS
5/2-619(a)(9) (West 2016). An allegation that a plaintiff lacks standing to bring his or her
claim constitutes an affirmative matter that can be asserted under section 2-619(a)(9).
Schlenker, 209 Ill. 2d at 461. The burden of pleading and proving an affirmative defense
always rests with the person asserting it. Id. Not only does a plaintiff faced with a standing
challenge have no duty to allege facts or present evidence to establish his or her standing to
sue, “a court must accept as true all well-pleaded facts in plaintiff’s complaint and all
inferences that can reasonably be drawn in plaintiff’s favor.” Id.
¶ 13 Standing to sue requires an injury in fact to a legally cognizable interest. Greer v. Illinois
Housing Development Authority, 122 Ill. 2d 462, 492 (1988). The doctrine of standing
requires that a party assert his or her own legal rights and interests, rather than the rights and
interests of third parties. In re Estate of Schumann, 2016 IL App (4th) 150844, ¶ 15. The
purpose of the standing requirement is to “ensure[ ] that issues are raised only by parties
having a real interest in the outcome of the controversy.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Id.
¶ 14 In the probate context, standing to contest a will comes not from the common law, but
from statute. Id. ¶ 19. Pursuant to section 8-1(a) of the Probate Act, within six months of the
admission of a will to probate, any “interested person” may file a petition to contest the
validity of that will. 755 ILCS 5/8-1(a) (West 2016). Section 1-2.11 of the Probate Act
defines “interested person” as “one who has or represents a financial interest, property right
or fiduciary status at the time of reference which may be affected by the action, power or
proceeding involved, including without limitation an heir, legatee, creditor, person entitled to
a spouse’s or child’s award and the representative.” Id. § 1-2.11.
¶ 15 Prior to our supreme court’s 2004 decision in Schlenker, Illinois law was clear that a
legatee under a previously executed will had standing to contest a subsequently executed will
as long as the legatee had section 1-2.11’s requisite interest in the outcome of the matter.
Schumann, 2016 IL App (4th) 150844, ¶ 21. We do not read Schlenker as affecting the clarity
of that law.
¶ 16 The question presented in Schlenker was whether an heir attempting to challenge a will
could successfully assert a financial interest in a will contest when multiple wills in which
she inherited nothing stood between her and either (1) a will further down the chain in which
she did have an interest or (2) the interest she had by virtue of intestacy if all of the
intervening wills were found invalid. The Schlenker majority held that an heir always has a
-3-
financial interest created by the potential, however tenuous, of the estate eventually passing
by intestacy. Schlenker, 209 Ill. 2d at 466. In reaching its decision, the Schlenker majority
expressly distinguished the situation of an heir from that of a legatee under a previous will.
Id. at 465. Justice Garman’s special concurrence challenged the majority’s ultimate
conclusion as rendering superfluous the portion of section 1-2.11 that required an affected
interest. Id. at 467-68 (Garman, J., specially concurring). However, because she found, citing
well-settled law, that the revocation clause in the most recent will had no effect until the will
contest was complete, she concurred in the finding that the particular heir had an interest
affected by the action. Id. at 468-69. The majority articulated no disagreement with the legal
principles relied upon by Justice Garman.
¶ 17 Schlenker is not our case, and its issue is not our issue. Nor, as the Fourth District
ultimately found in Schumann, was it that case. The facts and procedural history in
Schumann and those in the instant case track one another in all salient respects. See
Schumann, 2016 IL App (4th) 150844, ¶¶ 4-9. The Fourth District noted, as have we, that the
“fundamental” holding of Schlenker was that an heir possesses an unconditional right to
contest a will; that court also concluded that the remainder of the decision constituted dicta.
Id. ¶ 35. Moreover, the Fourth District explained that the Schlenker court’s
presumption—that the probated will’s revocation clause invalidated the previous wills—was
based on the applicable burden of proof, rather than a broad statement of the power of
revocation clauses in probated wills: “[w]e read Schlenker less as establishing a new rule that
all prior revoked wills must be considered void than as reaffirming the well-established rule
that all inferences must be drawn in the plaintiff’s favor when considering a section 2-619
motion to dismiss.” (Emphases omitted.) Id. ¶ 36. We agree. Reading Schlenker as the
respondent proposes would effectively foreclose any legatee under a prior will from
contesting a will, admitted to probate, which disinherits him or her. This is neither the effect
nor the intent of long-settled Illinois law.
¶ 18 In the instant case, the will contest petitioner, Kelton, has alleged that she was a named
beneficiary and successor executor under a will executed by the decedent in 1979 and in
effect until the day before his death when he purportedly executed the will that had been
admitted to probate. She claims that the 2016 will was executed without testamentary
capacity and was the product of undue influence. Miller’s motion to dismiss under section
2-619 challenged the petitioner’s standing to maintain the will contest. The question
presented to us is whether the petitioner has standing as a legatee under the decedent’s
immediately preceding will to pursue a will contest; in other words, whether Kelton had “a
financial interest, property right or fiduciary status at the time of reference which may be
affected by the action, power or proceeding involved.” 755 ILCS 5/1-2.11 (West 2016).
Reduced to its essence, Kelton has standing in this case if she has something financial to gain
if she prevails in the will contest or to lose if she does not.
¶ 19 Respondent was able to convince the circuit court that under Schlenker, the 2016 will
presumptively revoked the 1979 will and that Kelton had the burden of proving that the 1979
will was unrevoked at the time of Lay’s death. However, the circuit court’s ruling—and
Miller’s argument on appeal—are premised on inapposite case law. The circuit court cited to
In re Estate of Koziol, 366 Ill. App. 3d 171, 177 (2006), for the following proposition:
“Where a last will and testament, after its execution, is retained by the testator and
cannot be found upon his death, it is the well-settled rule of this and of the majority of
-4-
jurisdictions that it will be presumed to have been destroyed by him animo revocandi.
[Citations.] The same cases establish that the presumption is subject to being rebutted
by circumstances which tend to show a contrary conclusion, and that the burden is on
one seeking to probate such a will to prove that it was unrevoked at the testator’s
death.” (Emphasis added and internal quotation marks omitted.)
Unlike Koziol, this case does not involve an individual attempting to probate a will that could
not be found. Kelton was not attempting to probate the 1979 will; she was attempting to
challenge a will offered to probate by Miller. Accordingly, Koziol has no application to the
instant case.
¶ 20 As previously stated, when ruling on a section 2-619 motion to dismiss for an alleged
lack of standing, all well pled allegations in the complaint are taken as true, all presumptions
and inferences are drawn in favor of the nonmoving party (Kelton), and it is the burden of the
moving party (Miller) to prove a lack of standing. Schlenker, 209 Ill. 2d at 461. As the
movant, Miller was not entitled to a presumption of the 1979 will’s invalidity. See
Schumann, 2016 IL App (4th) 150844, ¶ 46. Further, Kelton was not required to prove she
had standing to contest the 2016 will. See id. These principles were not followed in this case.
Consequently, the trial court’s ruling runs afoul of long-established legal precedent and
improperly insulates Lay’s suspect will from the legal challenge of a potentially interested
person. See id. ¶ 40.
¶ 21 For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the circuit court erred when it granted Miller’s
section 2-619 motion to dismiss, and we remand the case for further proceedings.
¶ 22 CONCLUSION
¶ 23 The judgment of the circuit court of Kankakee County is reversed, and the cause is
remanded for further proceedings.
¶ 24 Reversed and remanded.
-5-