Atkinson v. Sutton

23 W. Va. 197, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 21
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 23 W. Va. 197 (Atkinson v. Sutton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkinson v. Sutton, 23 W. Va. 197, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 21 (W. Va. 1883).

Opinion

SntdeR, Judge

In January, 1881, John H. Atkinson, executor of the will of John Sutton sr., filed his bill in the circuit court of Hancock county against the widow, legatees and heirs of his testator to have said will construed .by the court and directions given as to his duties as such executor. The said will is dated March 13, 1875, and was admitted to probate in said [198]*198county September 13, 1879. The provisions thereof submitted for construction are as follows :

“First. I will, give, devise and bequeath unto my wife, Eliza A. Sutton, eight hundred dollars to be.paid to her as hereinafter described ; also one bedstead and bedding for the same, eight chairs, one bureau and the personal property my said wife brought to my house when we were married, and one cow.
“Second. It is my will that my farm of land on which I now reside, situated on the waters of ITolbert’s rum, Butler district, Hancock county, West Virginia, containing about one hundred and seventy-four acres, more or less, shall be sold by my executor hereinafter named as soon after my death as convenient and upon such terms as may seem'best for my heirs. And I hereby empower my said executor to-convey said tract of land when sold to the purchaser by deed with general warranty, the same power being given him in this my last will as though I were living.
“Third. I will, give, devise and bequeath unto my children, to-wit, William W. Sutton, Mary Murdock, Rachel A. Long-stroth, Elizabeth Irwin, Margaret Allison, Amanda Jenkins, Emeline Patterson, and John Sutton jr., to be given an equal portion of my estate after the sale of my laud, subject, however,, to certain sums of money advanced to them heretofore and ■which they shall be charged with on final settlement: To William W. Sutton the sum of three hundred dollars, Rachel A. Lougstroth one hundred and twenty dollars, Elizabeth Irwin three hundred and sixty dollars, Margaret Allison three hundred dollars, Amanda Jenkins three hundred dollars and John Sutton one thousand dollars.”

By the fourth clause the testator gives to his - daughter, Martha Jane Applegate, three hundred dollars, and by the fifth he gives to his grand-daughter, Mary E. Chi deste r, one hundred dollars, and the sixth and last clause is as follows:

“Sixth. It is my will that my executor hereinafter named shall before making a distribution of the proceeds of the sale of my real estate pay all my just debts, funeral expenses,, erect a suitable gravestone, and all expenses attending the settlement of my estate.” .

So far as the record shows the only real estate of which [199]*199the testator cliecl seized was the farm of one hundred and seventy-four acres mentioned in his will. This farm’was appraised at six thousand and ninety dollars, and the personal estate at four thousand three hundred and twenty three dollars and twenty cents. Of this latter three thousand four hundred and thirty dollars consists of five notes of five hundred dollars each executed by John Sutton jr. to the testator, his father, all dated May 15,1872, and due at three, four, five, ^ix and seven years, respectively after date. The widow, Eliza A. Sutton, never renounced the provisions made for her by the will. These are all the material facts shown by the record.

The bill avers that the widow claims that she is entitled not only to all the bequests and legacies made to her in said will, but also to dower in said real estate, and that the plaintiff as executor of said will, has only the right and power thereunder to sell the said real estate, subject to her dower right, whilst the said William Sutton and others of the defendants claim that the said real estate is not subject to dower of the said widow, but that the said bequests and legacies to said widow were made by the said testator, and intended by him to be in lieu of dower and for the jointure of the said widow, and that her dower is barred thereby; that the said John Sutton jr. claims that all he is to be charged with as against the bequest made'to him in said will, is the sum of one thousand dollars, mentioned therein as chargeable to him by way of advancement, and that he is not chargeable with the amounts of said notes above referred to, but that the indebtedness therein evidenced, is by said will extinguished; and the said William Sutton and others of the defendants claim that the said indebtedness of John Sutton jr. as well also as the said one thousand dollar advancement, are to be charged to him upon the distribution of the legacies provided for by said will.

Thus two questions are presented for determination: First, was the provision made by the testator in said will for his widow intended to be in lieu of dower and for her joint-ure? And second, should said John Sutton jr. be charged with only the one thousand dollars mentioned in the will as an advancement, or should he be charged with that sum and [200]*200also the amount of the five notes executed by him to his father, and if the latter, was said one thousand dollars mentioned in the will, included in said notes?

if either of these questions can, it seems to me, he properly determined without the ascertainment of material facts which do not appear in the cause, hut which the record discloses must necessarily exist and may have an important bearing on the interpretation of said will. The circuit court undertook to decide these questions without having these facts ascertained and in this, I think, it clearly erred. While it is generally true, that a court can be called upon only to décide ■causes as .the parties present them and cannot be expected to formulate and direct the manner in which they shall be presented, still when from the cause as presented by the parties it is apparent to the court that the real questions sought to be determined are not brought before it either on account of defects in the pleadings or the evidence, it is the duty of the court to require such defects to be removed before proceeding to hear the cause on its merits or rather without having the merits before it. And when an inferior court fails to discharge this duty, the Appellate Court will reverse and remand the cause — Mayers v. Edwards, 13 W. Va. 822, 832.

Extrinsic evidence which is intended to place the court, as nearly as practicable, in the position of the testator at the time of making his will, and also such as will show the state of the testator’s property, has always been regarded as legitimate and entitled to have its just bearing upon the legal import and effect of the will — 1 Redf. Wills 598. To aid in the construction of a will, evidence may be received, and should he sought, of any facts known to the testator which may reasonably be supposed to have influenced him in the disposition of his property, and of all the surrounding circumstances at the time of making his will — Mayers v. Edwards, supra; Wootton v. Redd, 12 Gratt. 196.

Our statute declares that, “If any estate, real or personal, intended to be. in lieu of her dower, shall be conveyed or devised for the jointure of the wife, such conveyance or devise shall bar her dower of the real estate or the residue thereof” — Sec. 4, ch. 65, Code.

[201]*201-The intention of the testator to exclude dower to the wite, within the meaning of this statute, may he either express on the face of the will or implied from a fair construction of it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 W. Va. 197, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkinson-v-sutton-wva-1883.