Allin v. Morris

73 Va. Cir. 202, 2007 Va. Cir. LEXIS 53
CourtRockingham County Circuit Court
DecidedApril 3, 2007
DocketCase No. CL06-00955
StatusPublished

This text of 73 Va. Cir. 202 (Allin v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Rockingham County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allin v. Morris, 73 Va. Cir. 202, 2007 Va. Cir. LEXIS 53 (Va. Super. Ct. 2007).

Opinion

By Judge John J. McGrath, Jr.

This matter is before the Court on Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment pursuant to Rule 3:20 of the Rules of the Supreme Court. Although the Defendant has filed a counterclaim, no Motion for Summary Judgment has been filed on the Counterclaim.

Plaintiff is one of the two surviving children of Melvie M. Dean, who died testate on December 5, 2005. Her will was admitted to probate on January 12, 2006, and Defendant, who was the deceased’s son-in-law, qualified as her Executor. By Clause Fourth of her will, the Testatrix purported to:

devise and bequeath all of my estate, real and personal, including all lapsed or failed bequests or devises (herein referred to as my residuary estate) to my son-in-law, Winford L. Morris.

Plaintiff requests the Court to declare that a particular piece of land which Testatrix and her late husband acquired in 1952 and of which the Testatrix died [203]*203seised does not pass under her will because she, in effect, had only a life estate in the properly with a remainder over to her “heirs.”

The 1952 deed in question which was from J. Wesley McDaniel and Maud McDaniel, husband and wife, conveyed 51.834 acres to Emory C. Dean and Melvie M. Dean, husband and wife, using inter alia, the following words of conveyance:

the said parties of the first part, have bargained and sold and do hereby grant and convey with General Warranty of Title unto the said Emory C. Dean and Melvie M. Dean, husband and wife... as joint tenants with a right of survivorship, and to the survivor of them and to the heirs and assigns of such survivor forever as at common law....

(Emphasis added.) The 1952 conveyance from the McDaniels to the Deans included 51.834 acres. Between the date of acquisition and Melvie Dean’s death, she and/or her husband had made nine out-conveyances. This suit involves the balance of the property, less the out-conveyances, of which she died seised.

The Plaintiff argues that, because of this language, Melvie Dean does not have a fee simple interest which she can convey by will and that, upon her death, her estate in the land terminated and, by the terms of the 1952 deed, the land goes in fee to her heirs.

Plaintiff argues that applying English common law and the “Rule in Shelly’s Case” (a conveyance or devise of a life estate to A with remainder to A’s heirs is a conveyance or devise of a fee simple absolute), Melvie Dean would have had fee simple absolute title. However, Plaintiff correctly points out that the Rule in Shelly’s Case has been abolished in Virginia by Virginia Code § 55-14. (Plaintiff’s Memorandum at pp. 3-4.)

Defendant, on the other hand, argues that it is well established in Virginia law that a grantor by deed is assumed to convey his or her entire estate in land unless clear language in the conveying document indicates that a lesser estate is being conveyed. Section 55-11, Code of Virginia (1950), as amended. See e.g., Goodson v. Capehart, 232 Va. 232 (1986); Waskey v. Lewis, 224 Va. 206 (1982). Therefore, argues Defendant, when the McDaniels, who clearly owned title to the land in fee simple absolute, conveyed the land to the Deans in 1952, they conveyed their entire estate in the land. There is no suggestion in the pleadings or the attached deed that the conveyance was anything other than an arms-length transaction between non-related individuals.

[204]*204There is no question that the language used in the 1952 deed was less than clear and is ambiguous on its face. A careful reading of the deed would seem to indicate that the grantors were attempting to grant their fee simple absolute estate to the Deans. That interpretation is supported by the rule of construction set forth in § 55-11, Code of Virginia, 1950, as amended.

It appears that, at common law, a conveyance to “B and his heirs” were the ritualistic words needed to convey a fee simple interest. Thus, one commentator has noted that:

And from the thirteenth century on, the words “and his heirs” in a conveyance “to B and his heirs” merely indicated that B was given an estate in fee simple; B’s heirs took no interest by virtue of the gift----
Since an estate in fee simple was an estate of general inheritance it was necessary at common law for the creation of such an estate that the conveyance use words of general inheritance. And with the verbal ritualism so characteristic of the period only the words “his heirs” were sufficient for this purpose. As stated by Littleton: “If a man would purchase lands or tenements in fee simple, it behooveth him to have these words in his purchase, To have to hold to him and to his heirs: for these words, his heirs, make the estate of inheritance.” Substitute words were not effective. A conveyance by A “to B and his heirs” gave B a fee simple (assuming, of course, that A had a fee simple to convey); a conveyance “to B forever” or “to B and his assigns” or “to B in fee simple” gave B a life estate.

C. Moynihan, Introduction to the Law of Real Property (West Pub. 1962) at pp. 31-32.

A more recent commentary of the English common law of estates in land makes the same point. In their monumental work, Elements of Land Law (Oxford Univ. Press 2005), Gray and Gray explain that:

The primacy of the fee simple estate is also reinforced by the provision in the Law of Property Act 1925 [the functional equivalent of § 55-11 of the Virginia Code] that all conveyances of freehold land now presumptively invest the grantee with a fee simple estate. . . . The grant of any limited estate in land must, accordingly, be cut back by express “words of limitation.” A conveyance of freehold land without further reference to the estate [205]*205or interest intended to be granted (e.g. Greenacre “to X”) is nowadays effective to invest the grantee with a fee simple estate in the land.1 If the grantor wishes to dispose of some lesser estate in the land, he must actually employ words of limitation in his grant (e.g. Greenacre “to X for life”).

At page 76 (footnote omitted).

Therefore, a strong case can be made that the 1952 deed conveyed a fee simple estate to the grantees and that the words “to their heirs and assigns of such survivor forever as at common law” are words of limitation defining the quantum of interest given to the grantee, and not words of purchase defining who takes the estate.

The Comí, however, need not reach this far to resolve this case. Plaintiff unequivocally states in her Complaint, her Motion for Summary Judgment, and in her Memorandum in Support of Summary Judgment that the McDaniels conveyed ajoint “life estate” to the Deans.2 After alleging a life estate in the Deans, the Plaintiff then argues that this is not an express life estate, but is instead an implied life estate.

Accepting the Plaintiffs allegations for the purpose of argument, the implied life estate existing in Melvie Dean at her death was a life estate over which she had the full power to assign. The deed’s language:

do hereby grant and convey... unto the said Emoiy C. Dean and Melvie M. Dean ... as joint tenants with a right of survivorship and to the survivor of them and to the heirs and assigns of such survivor forever as at common law....

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Trustees of Duncan Memorial Methodist Church v. Ray
80 S.E.2d 601 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1954)
Borum v. National Valley Bank
80 S.E.2d 594 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1954)
Voigt v. Selander
58 S.E.2d 25 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1950)
Pigg v. Haley
294 S.E.2d 851 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1982)
Waskey v. Lewis
294 S.E.2d 879 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1982)
Powell v. Holland
299 S.E.2d 509 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1983)
Robinson v. Caldwell
105 S.E.2d 852 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1958)
Southworth v. Sullivan
173 S.E. 524 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1934)
Horne v. Horne
26 S.E.2d 80 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1943)
Rule v. First Nat'l Bank of Clifton Forge
28 S.E.2d 709 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1944)
Hall v. Hoak
36 S.E.2d 567 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1946)
Walker v. Clements
221 S.E.2d 138 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1976)
Goodson v. Capehart
349 S.E.2d 130 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1986)
Signet Trust Bank v. Fauber
66 Va. Cir. 406 (Nelson County Circuit Court, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 Va. Cir. 202, 2007 Va. Cir. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allin-v-morris-vaccrockingham-2007.