delivered the opinion of the Court:
Peter Critz, Sr., being possessed of an estate amounting to some §50,000 or §60,000, departed this life, at his residence in Logan county, this State, on the 26th day of June, 1881, leaving an instrument purporting to be his last will and testament, which was subsequently, on the 18th day of July, 1881, filed by Hiram L. Pierce, the executor therein named, in the county court of said county, and asked to be admitted to record as such. The case was heard at the following August term of the county court, resulting in the refusal of that court to admit the instrument to probate as the will of the deceased. On appeal to the circuit court a contrary conclusion was reached, and the instrument in question was ordered by that court to be admitted to record as such will. From this last order the heirs at law of the deceased have appealed to this court.
The instrument, so far as anything appears on its face, seems to have been executed in conformity with the statute. It was properly signed by the testator and two attesting witnesses, both of whom swore, on the trial, they were present, and saw the deceased sign it in their presence, and that they believed that he was of sound mind and memory at the time of executing the same. This, in the absence of proof of “any fraud, compulsion, or other improper conduct, ” was sufficient to make out a prima facie case, and entitle the instrument to probate. To meet this case the appellants examined a large number of witnesses, with the view of showing the deceased was of unsound mind at the time of making the alleged will, and also introduced the records of the county court, from which it appears the deceased, at the July term, 1878, of said court, was adjudged a person of unsound mind, and incapable of transacting his own business or of managing his own estate, and that in pursuance of such adjudication Hiram L. Pierce, the appellee, was appointed conservator of his estate, which office and trust he thereupon assumed, and continued to fill and discharge up to the time of the death of the said Peter Critz. This evidence was heard by the court as indirectly bearing upon the question whether there was “any fraud, compulsion, or other improper conduct, ” connected with the execution of the instrument that would “invalidate or destroy the same” as a will,—which, by the express words of the statute, may always be shown where the proponent of a will is seeking to have it admitted to probate. But the court being of opinion this evidence was not admissible for the purpose of establishing, as a distinct and independent defence to the proceeding, unsoundness of mind or want of testamentary capacity in the testator, refused to consider it for that purpose, and the ruling of the court upon this point presents the most important question in the present controversy, and the only one we deem it necessary to discuss.
The question thus presented is not an entirely new one, and as we understand it, the rule or principle which must control it is settled by the previous decisions of this court. The first ease bearing on the question is that of Walker v. Walker, 2 Scam. 291, which was an appeal by the executrix from an order of the circuit court of Cook county denying probate of a will. A similar order had been made in the probate court, from which an appeal had been taken to the circuit court. It was held in that case, under the statute then in force, which, with certain exceptions hereafter to be noted, was substantially the same as the law governing the present case, that on such an appeal “it is not competent for either party to introduce any testimony in relation to the sanity of the testator, except that of the subscribing witnesses, ” and that if the will is not sustained by these witnesses it should not be probated. Under this construction of the statute, of the correctness of which we have no doubt, it will be perceived that parties interested in sustaining the will were placed completely at the mercy of the subscribing witnesses, so far as the sanity of the testator was concerned. If, where there were but two attesting witnesses, one of them, from corrupt motives, or otherwise, should refuse to swear that he believed the testator was of sound mind at the time of the execution of the will, however palpable it might be that such was the fact, and however many witnesses were present, other than the subscribing witnesses, by whom such fact might be satisfactorily established, the proponents of the will, under the law, as it then existed, were entirely remediless. But not so, however, with those interested in defeating the will, where it had been improperly admitted to probate. Such parties, under the law then in force, were allowed five, and under the present are allowed three years, in which to contest, by bill in chancery, the validity of a will thus admitted to probate, in which proceeding either party is permitted, on the trial, to go into general evidence touching the testator’s sanity, or any other matter or thing which may tend to defeat or establish the will. With a view of remedying this defect in the law, and for the purpose of placing those interested in establishing the will on something like equal terms with those interested in defeating it, the legislature, by act of the 25th of February, 1845, (Rev. Stat. 1845, page 596,) provided, in substance, that upon an appeal from an order of the probate court refusing probate of a will, it should “be competent for the party seeking prohate of the will, to support the same, on hearing in the said circuit court, by any evidence which would be competent” in a proceeding in chancery for the purpose of contesting a will. And it is further provided by this act, that a will thus proved shall be admitted to probate, but subject, however, to be contested in the same manner as “in case of wills admitted to probate in the first instance. ” This provision is the same, in substance, as the present law on that subject, and has been the law of this State ever since it was first adopted.
There are several considerations which repel the idea the legislature intended by this act to authorize parties resisting the probate to avail themselves of its provisions, two of which appear on the face of' the act itself. First, it will be perceived the right to go into general evidence on such an appeal is expressly limited to those “seeking probate” of the will. In the second place, with the view of rebutting the presumption that those interested in defeating the will might, in any manner, be concluded or prejudiced by permitting the proponents of the will to thus go into general evidence in its support, it was expressly provided that its admission to probate upon such general evidence should not affect the former’s right to contest the validity of the will by bill in chancery, as then provided by law. If it had been intended that upon such appeal both parties should go into general evidence upon the subject, what object or purpose could have been subserved by retaining the remedy by bill ? Could it have been intended that the parties resisting the will should have the benefit of a full trial on .the merits, and if defeated, then turn round and • bring their bill in chancery, and relitigate the matter again upon the merits ? Certainly not; yet such would be the case if the view insisted on is the correct one. But, it may be asked, if one resisting a will is a mere looker on upon such an appeal, why is he permitted to become a party to the proceeding at all ? He is not bound to; yet to avoid being driven to his bill in chancery, he is permitted by the statute to do so. He has the right to appear and see the proponent of the will, by proper and legitimate testimony, makes out a prima facie case warranting the admission of the alleged will to probate. When this has been done, and he is unable to produce satisfactory evidence of “fraud, compulsion, or other improper conduct, ” sufficient to invalidate or destroy such will, and it does not otherwise appear from the evidence, he has done all the law permits him to do in that proceeding. If he has countervailing testimony upon the testator’s sanity or capacity to make a will, he must resort to his bill in chancery. The conclusions reached by this court in Andrews et al. v. Black et al. 43 Ill. 256, and Weld, Exr. v. Sweeney, 85 id. 50, fully sustain the view here presented.
It is claimed that Dickie et al. v. Carter, 42 Ill. 376, and Reynolds et al. v. Adams, 90 id. 134, are inconsistent with the view here taken. This is a misapprehension. In the latter case the will was admitted to probate in both the probate and circuit courts, and hence the question could not have arisen. It is true that in the Garter case general evidence touching the testator’s sanity was gone into on both sides, but no question as to its competency was made, and hence this court did not, and could not, have passed upon the question. Here, the question is directly presented for determination. We have been referred to no case, and know of none, laying down a different rule from the one here announced.
The appellants are by no means concluded by the conclusion reached here or in the circuit court. They may to-morrow, or at any time within the limitation of three years, by bill in chancery, contest the validity of said will, in which proceeding they will be permitted to introduce any legitimate testimony tending to show the testator was not of sound mind at the time of executing the same, or any other matter or thing which will establish the fact that the instrument in question is not the will of Peter Critz, Sr.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.