Bower v. McCormick

23 Va. 310
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 2, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 23 Va. 310 (Bower v. McCormick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bower v. McCormick, 23 Va. 310 (Va. 1873).

Opinion

Christian, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit court of Loudoun county. The plaintiffs in the court below, who aré the appellants in this court, are the children and the grand-children of George W. Carter and Mary B, his wife, who was Mai’y B. "Wormley. They seek to recover a tract of land, held by the defendants, which the plaintiffs claimed was settled upon their mother by a certain ante-nuptial deed, executed in the year 1812, which conferred upon their mother a life estate in said land, with remainder in fee to the children of the marriage.

Mrs. Carter died in December in the year 1865, and in March 1868 the bill of the plaintiffs was filed in the clerk’s office of the Circuit court of Loudoun. It is necessary to refer somewhat in detail to the allegations in the bill. It alleges that in August 1810, “a division of the real estate derived from John ’Wormley” (the father of said MaryB. Carter) “was made between his [312]*312said children and widow, whereby along with other property, three hundred acres, part of the Cool Spring ' tract, was allotted to the said Mary B. Wormley, subject to the life estate therein of her said mother; the said Mary Wormley, the mother and guardian of the said Mary B. Wormley, giving her consent to said division, and executing deeds of partition on behalf of her ward; which partition has ever since been acquiesced in by all the parties.* * * That in the year 1812, the said Mary B-. Wormley being still under the age of twenty-one years, and a marriage being about to be solemnized between the said Mary B. Wormley and George W. Carter, a deed of marriage settlement was duly executed, whereby the said Mary B. Womley, with the consent of the said George W. Carter and Mary Wormley her mother and guardian, conveyed all her property, real and personal, including the said three hundred acres of land, in strict marriage settlement, to the said Mary Wormley, in trust for the said Mary B. during her life, and after her death for the benefit of her children by the said George W. Carter; and in case she died without children, for the benefit of (her brothers) Hugh W. Wormley and John C. Wormley. Shortly after the execution of said deed of marriage settlement, the marriage between the said George W. Carter and Mary B. Wormley was duly solemnized.”

The bill further alleges that “no copy of said deed of marriage settlement is filed, because it was never recorded ; nor is said original deed of marriage settlement filed; because, after the said marriage, it was destroyed with the privity and by the procurement of David Castleman, jr., and Charles McCormick, purchasers of said tract of three hundred acres, as hereinafter set out. But said Castleman and McCormick had full notice of the [313]*313existence and contents of said deed of marriage settlement, as will presently be ¡drown.”

Then follows tbe allegation “ that some time after the said marriage the said Castleman and McCormick procured the said Geo. W. Carter and Mary B. his wife, and the said Mary Wormley, in her own right, and as trustee aforesaid, and Hugh W. Wormley, to enter into written articles of agreement, bearing dote tbe 13th day of September 1813, for the sale to them (Castleman and McCormick) of tbe said ihree hundred acres of land; * * * * that this agreement set out at length the manner in which the said Mary B. acquired title to said three hundred acres of land in fee simple, subject to the life estate therein of her mid. mother; as also the exist ence and contents of said ante-nuptial deed of marriage settlement. * * * * It also sets out an agreement between all the parties thereto, that the said marriage settlement should he annulled, rescinded, and rendered void; and that the said George W. Carter and his wife should enter into another marriage contract, whereby her estate should be settled upon her and him during their joint lives, with remainder to their children; and upon failure of issue, to mch uses as she by her will should appoint; that the . '.id tract-of three hundred acres of land should he a Id by the said Ma,ry Wormley, Geo. W. Carter and Mary B. his wife; and in lien thereof the said Guorge TM. Carter should settle the lands he had acquired from his i". tlier, Charles Carter, lying in the county of Culpeper, hi rhe manner agreed upon in relation to the estate of t! ■. said Mary B. Carter. By the said articles it was briber agreed, that'the said Mary Wormley, in her own right, and as trustee as aforesaid, should execute a deed, conveying said three hundred acres of land to Castleman and McCormick, with general warranty of tifio of her life estate therein, [314]*314and a warranty against all claim under said original deed ■ of marriage settlement; and that George W. Carter and MaryB. his wife, should join in said deed, with a general warranty of the remainder in fee simple; and should also give or procure approved real security for the title to be conveyed hy them.” That under this agreement, Castleman and McCormick were to pay forty-one dollars per acre, upon certain credits, and certain parts of which were to he paid to Mary Wormley, for her life estate. That in execution of this agreement, the land was conveyed by deed executed by Mary Wormley in her own right and as trustee, Geo. W. Carter and Mary B., his wife, together with Hugh and John C. Wormley, and was duly recorded, and Castleman and McCormick put in possession of the land.

The bill, after charging that the lands acquired from Charles Carter, lying in Culpeper county, were never settled upon Mrs. Carter, and no other real or personal estate, in lieu of the three hundred acres conveyed to Castleman and McCormick, alleges that “ Castleman and McCormick well knew of the existence and terms of said original deed of marriage settlement, and that they procured, or at least were privy to its destructionand that the said agreement and deed above referred to, were in fraud of the rights of the plaintiffs.” The bill further alleging,that in a division of property held in partnership by Castleman an d McCormick,- the said three hundred acres, known as Cool Spring, was allotted to McCormick, and upon his death was divided between his devisees, Francis McCormick and Hannah Taylor, who are now in possession of said three hundred acres; then insists “that the said Francis McCormick and Hannah Taylor are trustees, holding the legal title for the benefit of complainants; and that they are chargeable with the rents and profits of said land, since the death of the [315]*315said Mary B. Carter.” And the prayer of the hill is, “that they may respectively be decreed to account for the rents and profits of said land in their possession since the death of the said Mary B. Carter; and that they may be decreed to convey to complainants the legal title, and surrender the possession of said three hundred acres of land.” Then follows the usual prayer for general re-, lief, &c.

This bill is answered by Francis McCormick and Hannah Taylor, the defendants. They both deny all the material allegations of the plaintiffs’ bill, and call for strict proof of the same. They deny the existence of the ante-nuptial deed of settlement, as set up in the bill, and call for its production. They deny that Castleman and McCormick either procured or were privy to the annulling or destruction of any deed of marriage settlement between George ~W. Carter and Mary B. Carter.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Va. 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bower-v-mccormick-va-1873.