Clements v. Clements

188 S.E. 154, 167 Va. 223, 1936 Va. LEXIS 297
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 12, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 188 S.E. 154 (Clements v. Clements) 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
Clements v. Clements, 188 S.E. 154, 167 Va. 223, 1936 Va. LEXIS 297 (Va. 1936).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The record shows the following case:

[225]*225Charles W. Clements died in the year 1928 seized and possessed of one hundred and fifty-six and one-half acres of land in Amherst county. He was married twice, and left two Sets of children. By his first wife he left eight children, the adult complainants, named John W. Clements, Delilah Patterson, Henry E. Clements, Cammie Thurston, Corbett Clements, Smiley Clements, Margaret Lawhorn and Esther Ogden. He left his second wife surviving and two children by her, Zelda and Charles Z. Clements, who were respectively nine and twelve years old in the year 1929. There seems to have been some antagonism and feeling existing between the second wife and the children of the first wife. There was a contest over an alleged will of Charles W. Clements, and the lower court held, in 1929, that Charles W. Clements died intestate. A suit for partition and assignment of dower was brought in December, 1929, by the eight adult children of the first wife against the second wife, Dora E. Clements, and her two infant children. After a course of litigation and the taking of the usual accounts of debts arid the settlement of the administrative accounts, by decree entered March 12, 1930, commissioners were appointed, whose duty it was to go upon the land, and if it could be partitioned in kind, to make partition thereof. So much of that decree as we are concerned with was in the following language:

“And the court is further of the opinion and doth hereby decree that the dower of the said Dora Clements should be allotted to her, and that of the remaining ten-fifteenths of said land, that two-fifteenths may be allotted to the said infants jointly, and the remaining eight-fifteenths by consent of counsel for the plaintiffs may properly be allotted to them jointly.

“And it is further adjudged, ordered and decreed that the commissioners hereinafter appointed in making partition of said real estate do lay off and assign by proper metes and bounds one-third in value of said real estate as dower, to the said Dora Clements, widow of Charles W. Clements, deceased, to have and to hold the same for and during her natural life as and for the dower of the said Dora Clements in the said land; arid that the same commissioners do, if practical, make [226]*226an equal and fair partition in severalty of the residue, of the said tract, of land among the said. heirs. at law of the. said. Charles W. Clements, and if practical, lay off to the said infant, children, jointly their two-fifteenths adjacent to the dower, and to the plaintiffs,. John W. Clements, .Delilah,Patterson, Henry E. Clements, Cammie Thurston, Corbett Clements,. Smiley .Clements, Margaret Lawhorn and Esther Ogden, jointly their eight-fifteenths interest in said land, having regard to the quantity and quality and value in making such partition, and for the purpose of making said partition, t.he court doth hereby appoint J. H. Massie, F. B. Sandidge, M. W. Davis, H. W. Coffey, and F. H. Higginbotham, any three of whom may act. But if said commissioners find that partition cannot be fairly and conveniently made, of the said real.estate,, after assignment of dower, among the parties as aforesaid, they shall report this fact to the court.

“And it is further adjudged, ordered and decreed that before said commissioners or any of them shall proceed to discharge their duties as such commissioners, that they and each of them shall take an oath to faithfully and impartially assign dower to the said Dora Clements, widow, and make a partition of the remainder of the said real estate in accordance with the terms and requirements of this said decree, and they shall return a report of what they shall do under this decree as such commissioners to this court, accompanying same with a description of said lands by metes and bounds of the respective parcels allotted as aforesaid, for which purpose they may retain the services of a surveyor; and they to return with their said report such plats and surveys as may be made and any evidence taken before them pertaining to the. matter of the said, partition.” • . ..

Thereafter the commissioners made their , report, having had a survey and plat made, which report in part contained the following language:

“(1) That we met on May 1, 1930, on the lands of Charles W. Clements, deceased, and called to our- assistance T. W. Saunders, Surveyor, and we- together viewed the premises and after due consideration, we were of the opinion that it would [227]*227be impracticable to allot to the infant descendants', Zelda Clements and Charles Zedilee Clements, two-fifteenths of said land,' and; we'therefore included the two-fifteenths interest of' the said infant children in the land allotted to Dora E. Clémefits as dower,' arid we accordingly allotted to Dora E. Clémérits arid the said'two: infant children of the said Dora E'. Clements 36% acres of land together with the-mansion house, 'barns, and other out-briildings thereon' and the residue of said land containing 120% acres, we allotted to the adult heirs' of Charles W. Clements, deceased, jointly, nafnely * * : The-plat of said division made by T. W. Saunders, Surveyor, is herewith returned as a part-of this report, and -the said parcel of 36% acres is designated on said plat as Lot No. T, arid the said parcel of 120¡4 acres, is designated on said' plat as Lot No. 2.- Lot No. 1, we estimated to be seven-fifteenths in 'value, that is orie-third in value of said land-, or five-fifteenths thereof to the widow, Dora E. Clements, as and for her dower, and two-fifteenths to her said two infafit children, Zelda Clements and Charles Zedilee Clements. Lot No. 2 is estimated to be ■ eight-fifteénths in’value allotted to the adult heirs of Charles W. Clements as aforesaid. We are of the opinion arid so report that it is impractical to divide iri severalty the eight-fifteenths among the said eight adult children of C. W. Clements, deceased.

' “(2) That as an appurtenance to Lot No. 1, the widow arid minor heirs are to have the use of water from a concreté spring situated on Lot. No.-2, connected with the mansion house Lot No. 1 by pipé line perpetuity, to run with the title to said land, but this with the provision that the owners of Lot No. 1 shall at no time draw the water from said spring below the' depth of ten inches.

“(3) That as an appurtenance to Lot No. 2, there is to be given and granted the use of two roads or fights of way across Lot No. 1, as designated on said plat or partition herewith returned. The said plat or blue print showing said partition is in accordance with our views and is approved and adopted by us.”

This report, to which no exception was taken, after it had [228]*228been returned more than ten days, was duly confirmed by decree entered on August 19, 1930.

The one hundred and twenty acres not being susceptible of partition, were sold and the proceeds properly distributed. Upon a petition filed by O. L. Evans and W. H. Carter, former law partners, and upon their allegation that they were entitled to an interest in the reversion of the land allotted to Dora Clements, as dower, they were admitted as parties to this proceeding.

The circuit court by decree of April 24, 1931, was of the opinion that they were “entitled, as prayed for in their petition, to a one-fourth interest in the reversion of so much of the land allotted said Dora Clements as dower, as otherwise would go to” the adult children of Charles W. Clements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 S.E. 154, 167 Va. 223, 1936 Va. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clements-v-clements-va-1936.