Citizens State Bank of Ripley v. McKown

146 S.E. 876, 106 W. Va. 626, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 18
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1929
Docket6298
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 146 S.E. 876 (Citizens State Bank of Ripley v. McKown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens State Bank of Ripley v. McKown, 146 S.E. 876, 106 W. Va. 626, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 18 (W. Va. 1929).

Opinion

Woods, President:

A creditors’ suit was instituted to subject the real estate of C. H. McKown, deceased, to the payment of his indebtedness. The bill alleges, inter alia, that a $5,000.00 mortgage executed almost six months after the death of C. H. McKown, by his sole devisee, David W. McKown, to the Federal Land Bank Company, was void and inoperative against the debts and claims of the general creditors, and asks that the debts and claims of the general creditors of said C. H. McKown take priority over the said mortgage, and that the real estate be sold for payment of decedent’s debts.

The cause was referred to a commissioner, who found that the mortgage had priority over the general creditors. Numerous exceptions were taken to the report. While the *628 lower court in effect held that the will constituted a charge upon the real estate for the payment of decedent’s debts, yet in view of the fact that the $5,000.00 borrowed by D. W. McKown was applied on the indebtedness of said C. H. Mc-Kown, it decreed that the general creditors’ claims against C. H. McKown, and the $5,000.00 mortgage were of the same standing and dignity, and should share pro rata in the distribution of said estate.

The appellant, Federal Land Bank Company, contends that the will did not charge the real estate, and that the transfer of the real estate under the mortgage by virtue of section 5, Chapter 86, Code, cannot be successfully attacked by creditors. The appellees, however, in addition to asserting that the language of the will creates a charge, contend that the loan by the Federal Land Bank Company was prematurely made; that the time had not yet expired within which period the administrator was empowered to sue, much less had the time arrived when any creditor could have asserted his right of suit.

Because the common law afforded little protection to the creditor in his effort to subject the land of his deceased debtor to the payment of his claim, courts were quick to seize on any words in the will which even by implication might be construed as an intention on the part of the testator to charge his real estate. However, with the enactment of statutes making the real estate liable for debts, the necessity of strained construction ended, and courts now require that the intention to so charge debts be clearly expressed. Woerner, Administration (3rd ed.) p. 1707, sec. 490; Bailey v. Hudkins, 103 W. Va. 556; McGlaughlin v. McGlaughlin, 43 W. Va. 226. In Bailey v. Hudkins, supra, the rule is stated: “The mere statement in a will of the desire of the testator that his debts be paid, is not sufficient to charge his real estate with his indebtedness. In order to so charge, the intention must be clearly expressed.’’ In other words, there must be clear evidence of such an intent in the will; the intention may not be presumed merely from the use of formal words or the presence of commonly employed phrases. 29 R. C. L. 302; 40 Cyc. 2070-1. So, if a testator in this state *629 intends to furnish a greater security to his creditors than is afforded by section 3, 'Chapter 86, Code, making all real estate “assets for the payment of the decedent’s debts,” etc., he must use some expression in Ms will showing in explicit terms, unaided by presumption, his intention so to do. The will in the instant case reads: “I desire and direct that all my just debts, funeral expenses, with costs of administration be paid, after payment thereof, the balance of all real and personal property owned and possessed by me, or to which I may be legally entitled wherever situated, I give, bequeath and devise to my son, Daniel W. McKown, of Ripley, West Virginia. I nominate and appoint said Daniel W. McKown, my executor of this will, and request and require that nó security or bond of any kind shall be required of him as such executor.”

Appellees, while conceding that the expression “I desire and direct that my just debts * * * be paid” is not sufficient in itself, under Bailey v. Hudkins, supra, and McGlaughlin v. McGlaughlin, supra, to charge the real estate, contend that the presence in connection therewith of the words ! ‘ after payment thereof, the balance,” etc., clearly expresses an intention to so charge. True, the word “balance” means after excluding what has been before given. It introduces a residuary clause under which D. W. McKown takes the remainder, or residuum, of the estate. Whatever may be its effect in other residuary clauses, in the instant case it cannot import a charge upon the realty, because the testator contemplates by the residuary clause itself that personalty as well as realty is to pass thereunder. If testator desires to charge his real estate, he must expressly so state. We are not unmindful, however, of the rule that the intention of the devisor is to be sought out by all possible investigation, and observed with strictness, however untechnically expressed. This rule is one of construction, adopted from a very early period, and it has uniformerly been sustained in the courts. But the trend of the modern eases, for reasons hereinbefore explained, is, in applying such rule, to avoid constructing an intention from words which have acquired, from constant use, a mere formal or customary character, and for that reason have ceased to *630 have great import as expressions of the willmaker. The words employed in the will under review express in effect the usual common provisions in a will to pay the debts and provide for a disposition of the residuum of the estate after this is done. It therefore does not contain express directions to charge the real estate for the debts of the testator, nor is the intention thus to charge it plainly implied from the whole will taken together. This is necessary under our decisions.

What is the status of the Federal Land Bank Company’s loan? Before entering into a discussion of this phase of the case it will be necessary to keep in mind the following statutory provisions of Chapter 86 of the Code:

Section 3. “All real estate of any person who may hereafter die, as to which he may die intestate, or which, though he die intestate, shall not by his will be charged with or devised subject to the payment of his debts, or which may remain after satisfying the debts with which it may be so charged^ or subject to which it may be so devised, shall be assets for the payment of the decedent’s debts and all lawful demands against his estate, in the order in which the personal estate of a decedent is directed to be applied. ’ ’
Section 4. ‘ ‘ Such assets, so far as they may be in the hands of the personal representative of the decedent, may be administered by the court in whose clerk’s office there is or may be filed a report of the accounts of such representative, and of the debts and demands against the decedent’s estate, or they may, in any ease, be administered by a court of equity.”
Section 5.

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.E. 876, 106 W. Va. 626, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-state-bank-of-ripley-v-mckown-wva-1929.