Ball v. Ball

33 Va. Cir. 525, 1984 Va. Cir. LEXIS 165
CourtClarke County Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1984
DocketCase No. (Chancery) 2389
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 Va. Cir. 525 (Ball v. Ball) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Clarke County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ball v. Ball, 33 Va. Cir. 525, 1984 Va. Cir. LEXIS 165 (Va. Super. Ct. 1984).

Opinion

By Judge Robert K. Woltz

This suit is one for declaratory judgment to construe the will of Horace T. Ball. The construction involves to whom did he devise his real estate.

At the time of executing his will November 1, 1961, Horace Ball was unmarried and unsurvived by issue but survived by certain collateral kindred. About ten months later, the testator died still without surviving issue but survived by these same collaterals and survived by a wife, Lena D. Ball, formerly Lena Davis. She died testate in 1981 purporting to devise the real estate mentioned in the testator’s will to the complainant, who is one of testator’s collateral survivors. The defendants are the testator’s remaining surviving collaterals.

After directing payment of debts, etc., the will provides as follows:

SECOND: I give and bequeath all my personal property to my friend, Lena Davis, in fee simple and absolutely, without restriction or limitation of any kind whatsoever.
THIRD'. I give, devise, and bequeath all my real estate and especially that which I acquired from my father, George W. Ball, by deed dated September 27, 1935, and of record in Deed Book 24 at page 64 to my kindred in parcenary, male and female, in accordance with the Virginia Statute of Descent and Distribution [sic], § 64-1 of the Virginia Code as [526]*526amended, subject, however, to a life estate in all the real estate in favor of my friend Lena Davis.

He also appointed “my friend Lena Davis” as executrix, requesting qualification without surety on her bond.

The precise issue therefore is whether the collateral descendants of the testator or his wife constitute his “kindred” under the will. If the former, all the collaterals take as testator’s devisees; if the latter, the complainant takes as devisee of Lena Ball. Resolution of this question requires determination of the testator’s intent.

The common law had a highly developed system of descents with respect to intestate succession to real estate, the principles of which are set out and discussed fully in W. Blackstone, 2 Commentaries on the Laws of England, c. 14 (Fac. ed. 1979). There it is asserted that common law principles of inheritance stem from the feudal system and vary greatly from inheritance under both the Jewish and Roman law. The foundation and heart of common law descents was the concept of kindred, which the author equates with consanguinity and defines as vinculum personarum ab eodem stipite descendentium (the bond of persons descended from the same tree or stock). Id., at page 202. Kindred means relatives by blood. Bonewell v. Smith, 120 Va. 431 (1917).

Nevertheless, it is within the competency of the legislature to change the course of descents, McFadden v. McNorton, 193 Va. 455 (1952), and in this Commonwealth, the subject has been fully determined by the legislature, Williams v. Knowles, 178 Va. 84 (1941), to the extent that the common law course of descent has been wholly superseded and abrogated, Medley v. Medley, 81 Va. 265 (1886). The legislature has exercised its prerogatives numerous times to change the course of descents, and in such events, the settled law is that the statute in force at the time an intestate dies controls the course by which his real estate shall descend and be inherited. Dillard v. Tomlinson, 15 Va. (1 Munf.) 183 (1810); Hauenstein v. Lynham, 69 Va. (28 Gratt.) 62 (1877).

At common law, devolution of real estate was literally by descent and never by ascent. Thus, intestate succession to realty was by devolution to the issue of the decedent (giving preference to the male over the female, and as among males, giving preference to the eldest); but where the decedent left no issue, devolution was by descent to the issue of an ancestor of the decedent, and while it was necessary to [527]*527track back to the ancestor to determine to whom the property should descend, the property never ascended to vest in an ancestor, contrary to Jewish, Greek, and Roman law. See generally, Blackstone, supra, pages 208, et seq.

The first Virginia statute of descents enacted in 1785, the chief architect of which was Thomas Jefferson, radically changed this letter, as well as other common law concepts, such as primogeniture, of descents. See generally, C. Morrisett, “Legislation of 1922,” 8 Va. Law Reg., N.S., 81, 84 (1922). By this statute, real estate of an intestate decedent as at common law did descend first to his lineal descendants. In default of issue, the property “descended,” actually ascended, to the decedent’s father, but if none, in equal shares to the mother, brothers and sisters, and descendants of the last two by representation, and if none, then to the next previous generation up the tree, and so on, but giving preference in each instance to the ascending male line.

Another radical innovation on the common law was with respect to surviving spouses. The common law concept of descents was based on consanguinity, and lands could descend only to the kindred, that is, blood relatives, of the decedent. For that reason, surviving spouses were foreclosed from inheriting, though, of course, they were entitled to an interest in the decedent’s realty by way of curtesy or dower. This new statute radically altered the common law and, by force of legislative will, the meaning of words by making surviving spouse “kindred” of the decedent. Who is to say that the legislature, subject to constitutional inhibitions, when it uses a word cannot, like Lewis Carroll’s Humpty Dumpty, make a word mean exactly what it chooses the word to mean? True, this initial statute made the surviving spouse eligible to inherit only if no lineal, ancestral, or collateral kindred could be found, but at least the concept of a surviving spouse inheriting land and thus of necessity being deemed a blood relative, a kindred, was born.

So the statute remained until Acts 1922, page 861, which raised the status of a surviving spouse from the last category to the fourth category in the line of descent, following children and their descendants, parents, and brothers and sisters and their descendants. (It also abolished the preference to the ascending male line, putting male and female ancestors on the same footing.) Morrisett, supra. Except for certain amendments by Acts 1923, page 166, the statute remained the same until by Acts 1956, c. 109, when the “surviving consort of the intestate” was moved in the line of succession from fourth to second [528]*528place, taking the whole of the realty if there existed none in the first class, being children and their descendants; and there the surviving consort remained in the line of succession and was at the time of the testator’s death, the description being changed by later amendment to “surviving spouse.”

As of decedent’s death in 1961, the statute expressly stated the anomaly of a surviving spouse being a blood relative by providing in its preface that real estate of inheritance as to which one died intestate “should descend and pass in parcenary to such of his kindred, male and female, as are not alien enemies” in a course of descents which included that spouse. § 64-1, Va. Code 1950, Vol. 9, 1956 Cum. Sup.

But more recently the surviving spouse has been advanced conditionally to first place. This history is a classic example of the many evolutions found in Anglo-American jurisprudence.

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Related

In re Estate of Floyd
79 Va. Cir. 187 (Fairfax County Circuit Court, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
33 Va. Cir. 525, 1984 Va. Cir. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-ball-vaccclarke-1984.