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Childless Widower Leaves Fortune to Waitress, 17, Leaves Sister Chagrined

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Widowed, childless and past 80, Bill Cruxton wanted his $500,000 fortune to make a difference in someone’s life. A 17-year-old waitress who had been kind to him seemed the perfect choice.

When he died in November, he left the bulk of his estate to Cara Wood, the Kenston High School senior who befriended him during the 13 months she worked part-time at Dink’s Restaurant.

Cora Bruck, Cruxton’s 86-year-old sister and his only living relative, has challenged the will, which designated enough money to pay for her funeral. She says it doesn’t represent her brother’s true intentions.

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“Mr. Cruxton’s longtime friends all agree this was not the same guy,” said Mark Fishman, Bruck’s attorney. “The Bill Cruxton that they knew was a very conservative and down-to-earth guy. This is the last thing they would have expected from the true Bill Cruxton.”

But employees and patrons at Dink’s, a diner in this Cleveland suburb, knew Cruxton as a lonely man who appreciated the attention he got from Wood.

“Cara is just a good kid,” said Dennis Zdolshek, co-owner of the restaurant. “She was just a typical junior in high school, yet she took the time to do things for Bill.”

Cruxton’s wife of 40 years, Gertrude, died of cancer in 1989. He soon became a regular at Dink’s, eating lunch and dinner there every day. The employees and customers became his family. If he was late for a meal, Cara would call to make sure that he was OK.

Cruxton was popular among the patrons, and he would often spend the evening visiting table to table, Zdolshek said. But whenever Cara was working, he’d make it a point to sit in her section.

“He knew that Cara’s dad had died,” said Maggie North, 18, a waitress at Dink’s. “I think he felt like he was a father figure. I know he bought her some gifts and things. I think he was lonely.”

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Cara, a self-described tomboy whose greatest passion is playing soccer, quit the restaurant in September because of conflicts with her soccer team’s schedule.

But she kept in touch with Cruxton, running errands for him and helping him around the house. Because of his poor eyesight, she often helped him read his mail and pay his bills.

Cruxton, who was 82, died of a heart attack on Nov. 9. His estate included a $141,000 home, $200,000 in U.S. Treasury notes, $45,000 worth of jewelry, two cars, $21,000 in cash and assorted other valuables.

He accumulated his wealth as the owner of a piano and organ moving company, which he sold in the 1970s. He was active in Republican politics in Moreland Hills, the nearby town where he lived.

A previous will had named another Dink’s waitress as the main beneficiary, but after she left for another job and lost touch with Cruxton, he drew up a new one.

He made no attempt to keep the will secret, often talking about it with his friends at Dink’s. Zdolshek said everyone there knew that Cruxton’s friendship with Cara was important to him, but was strictly that--friendship.

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“It’s sad to think that people would immediately look at it from a negative standpoint,” Zdolshek said. “They should be able to accept it at face value, that somebody was nice to somebody else.”

A hearing on Bruck’s challenge in Cuyahoga County Probate Court is scheduled for February. She lives on Medicaid in a nursing home and the money “would assist her greatly in leading a comfortable lifestyle,” Fishman said.

Meanwhile, Cara is making plans to go to college, regardless of whether she gets the money. She wants to major in business.

“I was working to pay for college, but we weren’t living out of a box or anything,” Cara said. “I still get an allowance from my mom.”

Friends say they’ve noticed no change in Cara since she was named in the will.

“I was happy for her,” said John Cunningham, also a senior at Kenston. “I don’t see the big deal in it. It’s a good start, but it’s not like she’s Donald Trump or something.”

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