Brown v. Brown

26 Va. Cir. 386, 1972 Va. Cir. LEXIS 37
CourtFrederick County Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1972
StatusPublished

This text of 26 Va. Cir. 386 (Brown v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Frederick County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Brown, 26 Va. Cir. 386, 1972 Va. Cir. LEXIS 37 (Va. Super. Ct. 1972).

Opinion

By Judge Robert K. Woltz

In 1962 by the same deed, three parcels of real estate were conveyed “unto John W. Brown, III, and Ruth O. Brown, his wife, jointly for life, with remainder to the survivor in fee simple, as at common law.” In 1969 Brown killed his wife who was survived by five children of their marriage, and about two months thereafter, conveyed one of the parcels to the Loftons, husband and wife, who are also defendants.

Subsequently, three of his infant children by next friend filed their bill of complaint against Brown, his grantees the Loftons, his other two children, also infants who apparently did not wish to be complainants, and three other parties as to two of whom demurrers to the bill have been sustained.

The bill alleges the above two conveyances, the survival of the decedent by the five children, that Brown feloniously killed the decedent, his wife, that she was younger, in better health, and had a longer life expectancy than he, that his grantees, the Loftons, had notice of the fact of his killing the decedent, and that Brown claims title to all personal property which was jointly owned by him and the decedent.

The bill prays for an injunction against further sale of any real or personal property of which Brown and the decedent were possessed as of the date of her death, that all moneys received from the sale of any such real or personal properties sold subsequent to her death be escrowed pending suit, that the Loftons be enjoined from selling or encumbering the realty purchased from Brown and be directed to [387]*387reconvey the same to the children, and finally, that a constructive trust be imposed on that real and personal property which is the subject of the suit for the benefit of decedent’s surviving children and that during the continuance of the constructive trust, Brown be prohibited from selling or encumbering the corpus of that trust. Demurrers were filed thus creating the issue to be decided.

It is now agreed that subsequent to the filing of those pleadings, Brown was convicted of murder in the first degree of the decedent and sentenced to imprisonment. There is no claim by the complainants that he committed the crime with the purpose and intent of acquiring any of the property which is the subject of suit.

The moral problem of a killer acquiring or accelerating his acquisition of property as a result of the felonious homicide of his victim has posed genuine legal difficulties for the courts. In view of the substantial percentage of homicides involving members of a family group and the great variety of situations in which the problem can present itself,1 it is surprising that the body of case law on the subject is not somewhat larger than it is.

In those jurisdictions which, in the absence of specific statute, deny the killer the intended or incidental fruits of his crime, the moral demands of the situation are given effect and judicially elevated to the status of public policy generally by invocation of the legal maxim that no one should be allowed to profit by his own wrong.2 In other jurisdictions, likewise in the absence of statute, the [388]*388courts while recognizing deep moral implications refuse to give them primacy as public policy over firmly established laws of property, succession and the like. In addition, those jurisdictions often state that public policy is satisfied by the execution of the criminal law in such cases, point to constitutional or statutory strictures against attainder, corruption of blood and forfeiture, doubt the common law forbad a murderer taking property as a result of his crime, or declare if a different public policy is to be established, such is the prerogative of the legislature.3

Our only legislative enactment which by its express terms deals with the subject of homicide and a resulting material gain of some sort is § 64.1-18, Code of Virginia 1950.4 Neither inheritance nor will nor life insurance policy being involved in this case, the statute obviously has no application, though its existence is not without importance to a decision as will be mentioned below. All parties agree [389]*389that there is no controlling statute, and, faced, with that, the complainants invoke general equity principles and seek the imposition of a constructive trust over the res.

The complainants also treat the estate in the realty as a tenancy by the entirety in a fee. In view of the words of the granting clause, this is very questionable.5 Some metaphysical exercises and contortions of construction are required to determine under the rules of conveyancing and statutorily altered common law principles of real property just what estate or estates may be created by the granting clause of this deed. Resort to such mental gymnastics is unnecessary in this case as no party questions but that on the death of his wife, John Brown under the language of the deed became the sole owner of the fee in the realty.

This being admitted, it is unavoidable that he became such by virtue of the terms of the deed and as a result of the grant contained therein which became set, binding and effective as of the date of its delivery without regard to the transpiration of subsequent events. The property has not devolved upon him nor has he derived his title and interest from his victim. Though the eventual actuality of his exclusive full legal and equitable ownership of the fee may have been conjectural at the time of deed delivery, his inchoate right to that ownership became fixed at such time to be consummate subject only to his surviving his fellow grantee. The deed attaching no conditions with respect to the circumstances of her death prior to his, that he was the intentional and direct instrument of it is ineffective to alter the purport and legal consequences of the grant.

It is that legal consequence which complainants seek to avoid by use of a constructive trust. This facile tool from equity’s array of such is employed in circumstances where legal title to property has been acquired by one through fraud, misrepresentation, duress, undue influence and like chicane. It is used to deny one, despite his rights under application of strict legal principles, the benefit of his [390]*390unconscionable ownership. This is accomplished by imposition of a trust by operation of law on such property for the benefit of another, thus restoring or bestowing the benefit to or on another whose claim thereto would be pre-eminent to the wrongdoer’s save for the latter’s superior right resulting from the application of inexorable legal principles. It is imposed regardless of the wrongdoer’s intent that a trust be established and in fact contrary to it. See generally, 19 M.J., Trust and Trustees, §§ 48 et seq.; Pair v. Rook, 195 Va. 196 at 213, 77 S.E.2d 402 (1950).

The effect of the constructive trust is to allow the cheat, in deference to strict legality, to retain his bare legal title to the property he had wrongfully acquired; but, in obedience to equity, to separate from that title the use and benefit of the property and vesting them in another who is rightfully entitled thereto and is wrongfully deprived thereof. By use of this device, the complainants in the case at bar would let the legal title remain with the murderer where it is now but bestow the beneficial interest upon the presumptive successors in interest to the victim.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Va. Cir. 386, 1972 Va. Cir. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-brown-vaccfrederick-1972.