Bryan v. Nash

66 S.E. 69, 110 Va. 329, 1909 Va. LEXIS 147
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 18, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 S.E. 69 (Bryan v. Nash) 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
Bryan v. Nash, 66 S.E. 69, 110 Va. 329, 1909 Va. LEXIS 147 (Va. 1909).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Archie Ranson owned, together with a sister, Alice Ranson, about twelve acres of land in Rockbridge county, with a small house thereon. Alice Ranson died in the fall of 1901 intestate,, unmarried and without issue, leaving her brother her only heir at law. Archie Ranson lived the last years of his life in Washington, D. C., and died there April 18, 1902, leaving a will,, which was probated in the probate division of the Supreme-Court of the District of Columbia within a few months thereafter.

By said will the testator, Archie Ranson, devised his land in Rockbridge county to Addie Rash, to whom he was engaged to-be married. A copy of the will was probated in the Circuit Court of Rockbridge county, and the order of probate is as-follows:

“State of Virginia,
“At Rockbridge ¡Circuit Court, December 21, 1906.
“The last will and testament of Archie Lewis Ranson, deceased, having been heretofore proved and admitted to probate and recorded in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, as appears from an authenticated copy thereof, together with a copy of the proof of the will and copies of orders of probate thereof thereto attached, was this day produced in court. And it appearing that the said will was duly executed as a will of [331]*331personalty in the District of Columbia, the testator’s domicile, and was so executed as to he a valid will of lands in the State of Virginia by the laws thereof, on motion of Addie Hash, one of the beneficiaries under said will, it is ordered that the said copy of Archie Lewis Hanson, deceased’s, will, proved and admitted to probate and certified as aforesaid, be admitted to probate in this court as the last will and testament of the said Archie Lewis Hanson, deceased, both as a will of real and personal estate, and be recorded in the clerk’s office of this court. And it is further ordered to be entered of record that the value of the estate passing by the said will in the State of Virginia was estimated at $500.00, and that $1.00 State tax was paid on the probate thereof.
“Teste: A. T. Shields, Clerk.”

This probate proceeding was had pursuant to section 2536, Code, 1904, which is in this language:

“Sec. 2536. Probate of copy of will proved without the State; to what extent admitted to probate.—Where a will relative to estate within this State has been proved without the same, an authenticated copy thereof, and the certificate of probate thereof, may he offered for probate in this State. When such copy is so offered, the court to which it is offered shall presume, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that the will was duly executed and admitted to probate as a will of personalty in the State or county of the testator’s domicile, and shall admit such copy to probate as a will of personalty in this State. And if it appear from such copy that the will was proved in the foreign court of probate to have been so executed as to he a valid will of lands in this State by the law thereof, such copy may be admitted to probate as a will of real estate.”

It appears that soon after the death of Archie Hanson, W. L. Bryan, whose lands adjoined, desired to purchase the 12 acres of which Hanson died seised, and to that end he, on May 14, 1902, addressed a letter to the “Heirs of Archie Hanson” at Washington, D. C., which letter fell into the hands of a colored [332]*332lawyer, Fountain Peyton, counsel for Addie Nash, and who answered Bryan’s letter on July 21, and Peyton’s letter was replied to by Bryan August 14, 1902. The purpose of this correspondence on the part of Bryan, which was kept up till in April, 1903, was doubtless two-fold—first to ascertain if Archie Hanson had left a will; and, second, to purchase at private sale the 12 acres of land from the rightful owners thereof. A part of this correspondence was conducted by Bryan, claiming to be the next of kin of Archie Hanson residing in Rockbridge county, in which it was represented to Addie Nash that there were debts being asserted against the interest of Alice Hanson in the land, and that unless they were satisfied the land would he sold, etc. At all events, the efforts of Bryan to purchase the land privately. having failed, and the will of Archie Hanson not having been up to that time produced and probated in Rock-bridge county, a chancery suit was instituted in the Circuit Court of Rockbridge county in August, 1903, by one John A. Hanson, the purpose of which was to have sold the 12 acres of land in question for partition among the plaintiff in that suit and certain defendants, named as the heirs at law of Alice Hanson, deceased, claiming that she had survived Archie Hanson, etc.; and in that suit the said land was sold by a commissioner of the court to W. L. Bryan at public auction, the sale confirmed, the purchase money, $255.00, paid, and a deed of conveyance made and delivered to Bryan, bearing date June 5, 1905.

At the second August rules, 1907, this action of ejectment was brought in the Circuit Court of Rockbridge county by the said Addie Nash against the said W. L. Bryan, to recover the said tract of 12 acres of land claimed by her under and by virtue of the said will of Archie Hanson, deceased, and upon a trial of the cause upon the defendant’s plea of the general issue and a special plea of setoffs for improvements to the land, the jury rendered its verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the land, allowing nothing for the defendant upon his plea of set-[333]*333offs, and the court entered its judgment upon the verdict, to which judgment this writ of error was awarded the defendant.

The first assignment of error presents the question whether the copy of the will of Archie Banson, deceased, was properly admitted to prohate by the Circuit Court of Bockbridge county on December 21, 1906; the contention being that the copy of the will admitted to probate was never duly authenticated.

There is no merit in this assignment of error. The order of the Circuit Court admitting the will to probate recites every fact prescribed by the statute (section 2536, supra) necessary to the court’s jurisdiction to enter it, and, being a court of general jurisdiction for the probate of wills, its judgment is final, and cannot he collaterally attacked.

In an elaborate argument, citing a great number of authorities, it is urged that there are irregularities in the certification of the execution of the will and of its probate in the probate court of the District of Columbia; hut to follow up the argument and to review the authorities cited in support of it would he hut going over the same ground that this court has gone over again and again to the conclusion repeatedly announced, that “a sentence pronounced by a court having jurisdiction, whether it he a sentence admitting a paper to probate or excluding it from probate, as long as it remains in force, binds conclusively not only the immediate parties to the proceeding in which the sentence is had, hut all other persons, and all other courts.” That was announced as the state of the law in Connolly v. Connolly, 32 Gratt. 657, and has since been adhered to. Many of the decided cases that had gone before the case of Connolly v. Connolly were cited, and we shall refer to a few of them.

In Lancaster v. Wilson,

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.E. 69, 110 Va. 329, 1909 Va. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-v-nash-va-1909.