Broaddus v. Broaddus

130 S.E. 794, 144 Va. 727, 1925 Va. LEXIS 229
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 17, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 130 S.E. 794 (Broaddus v. Broaddus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broaddus v. Broaddus, 130 S.E. 794, 144 Va. 727, 1925 Va. LEXIS 229 (Va. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Christian, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[732]*732This is an appeal from two decrees of the Hustings Court, Part Two, of the city of Richmond, Virginia, entered respectively November 5, 1917, and December 12, 1923, and adjudicating the principles of a suit in equity for the rescission of a written contract wherein the heirs at law of R. C. Broaddus were complainants, and Jennie L. Broaddus, his widow and executrix and in her own right, was defendant.

The sanctity and obligation of contracts are regarded so essential to the public welfare, that where they are freely and voluntarily made by persons sui juris the impairment of their obligation is forbidden by our organic law. The essential issue therefore in this case is whether the contract was freely and voluntarily made, and its correct decision depends upon the application of the law to the facts of this particular case. The record is very large and the evidence very voluminous, but the disputed facts and circumstances are very few, therefore, a succinct chronological statement of them will greatly facilitate the discussion and decision of the ease.

R. C. Broaddus died at his residence in South Richmond, on the first day of September, 1912, leaving a widow and no children. His next of kin and heirs at law were two sisters, Marietta Broaddus and Nannie E. Richerson, and three children of a deceased brother, namely, R. C. Broaddus, T. A. Broaddus and Nellie B. Villemagne, all of whom were sui juris.

. Two days before his death, R. C. Broaddus sent for his friend H. A. Maurice, an attorney at law and police justice of South Richmond. When he entered the sick room there were present besides Mr. Broaddus, his wife, his sister, Miss Marietta Broaddus, and Miss Ease, the trained nurse. The testator informed Mr. Maurice in the presence of all those present that he [733]*733was sent for to write his will; that he was worth $60,000.00, and that he desired to divide $20,000.00 amongst his next of kin and certain other named legatees, whom he named with the specific amount he desired to give to each, and desired to give the rest to his wife. When the specific legacies he desired to give were added up, it was found that those given his next of kin, varying from $1,500.00 to $4,500.00, amounted to $13,500.00 and with the legacies given others aggregated only $19,000.00. The testator’s attention was called to the fact that only $19,000.00 was given in specific legacies, and he was asked what to do with the extra $1,000.00, and he said divide it among them.

The draughtsman, with this information and instructions, prepared the will, which after providing for the payment of the testator’s debts, gave his wife $40,000.00 “as . her sole property in fee,” and nine other legacies including his next of kin amounting to $19,000.00, in amounts designated by the testator. His wife was nominated as executrix, with request that no bond or security be required of her. This will was read over to the testator, approved by him, as though he was satisfied that he had, by the charges therein contained, exhausted his entire estate, and was properly executed on the 30th day of August, 1912, in the presence of the subscribing witnesses, Mary Thompkins Kase, M. W. Shepherd and D. B. Winfree. Maurice, the draughtsman, took the will and kept it in his possession until the evening of the 15th-day of September, 1912, the day before it was probated in court as hereinafter set forth.

Clarence Vaden, who had been employed in the office of Judge E. H. Wells, called on Mrs. Broaddus, who was without business experience, on the night of [734]*734her husband’s death, and tendered his services to her in the winding up and management of the estate, without compensation, stating as his reason for this service-that the testator had been kind to him on several occasions, and Vaden’s services were accepted.

Two or three days after the testator’s death, and before the will was probated, his valuable business was purchased by T. A. Broaddus, a business man about thirty-four years of age, the favorite nephew of the testator, to whom he left $4,500.00, and who had been in business with his uncle from the age of sixteen up to about two years prior to his death. The purchase price was credited against his legacy.

On the 16th day of September, 1912, it being the first day of the September term of the Hustings court part two, the executrix having secured the will from Maurice the evening before, at the suggestion of- Judge Wells, presented the will for probate in his private office adjoining the court room, and the will having been proven to have been signed and witnessed according to law, was probated as the last will and testament of R. C. Broaddus. Jennie L. Broaddus was appointed executrix as requested in said will without security. The estate of the decedent was valued at sixty thous- and dollars for the purpose of the tax upon its probate.

After the will was probated and Mrs. Broaddus qualified as executrix, before the personal property was appraised or the debts against the estate had been ascertained, Vaden suggested to the executrix that the most direct way to settle up the estate was for her to pay all the legacies, assume the debts and take a deed from the heirs of her deceased husband for all the rest and residue of the estate as her interest therein.

Mrs. Broaddus, so far as the evidence discloses, without any knowledge that the estate was worth [735]*735any more than the value placed upon it by her husband, and without sinister purpose or intent, acquiesced in Vaden’s plan. Whereupon he prepared, under the supervision of Judge Wells, the following very clear and concise deed.

“This deed, made this 23rd day of September, 1912, by and between Jennie L. Broaddus, executrix of Robert Clinton Broaddus, deceased, T. A. Broaddus and Ada P. Broaddus, his wife, Nellie Villemagne and J. E. Villemagne, her husband, R. Clinton Broaddus, Jr., and Bessie V. Broaddus, his wife, Marietta Broaddus (unmarried) and Nannie Rieherson (widow), parties of the first part, and Jennie L. Broaddus, widow of Robert Clinton Broaddus, party of the second part.

“Whereas, Robert Clinton Broaddus departed this life on September 1, 1912, leaving the following heirs at law, to-wit: Jennie L. Broaddus, his wife, T. A. Broaddus, Nellie Villemagne (formerly Nellie Broaddus) and R. Clinton Broaddus Jr., the chi]dren of the deceased brother (the brother and his wife both being dead), Marietta Broaddus, a sister and Nannie Rieherson (formerly Nannie Broaddus) also a sister; and

“Whereas, by the last will and testament of the said Robert Clinton Broaddus, dated August 30, 1912, duly probated September 16, 1912, in the Hustings Court, Part Two, of the city of Richmond, Virginia, all of the heirs at law, together with others, were bequeathed certain amounts therein specified; and

“Whereas, the said Jennie L. Broaddus, executrix of the said will, has paid in full all the devises made in said will, with the exception of herself, and desires that the remainder of the estate be conveyed to her in fee simple as her share, or devise under said will.

“Now, therefore, this deed witnesseth:

[736]

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130 S.E. 794, 144 Va. 727, 1925 Va. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broaddus-v-broaddus-vactapp-1925.