Colemans v. Holladay

6 Va. 47
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 20, 1817
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Va. 47 (Colemans v. Holladay) 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
Colemans v. Holladay, 6 Va. 47 (Va. 1817).

Opinion

Judge Coalter.

Zachariah Lewis made his Will, in which, among others, are the following bequests:

“ I lend unto my daughter, Betty Littlepage, one negro " girl, out of those I last bought, during her natural life; « and immediately after her death, the said negro and her “issue, if any, I give to be equally divided among my “ said daughter’s children then living, and their legal rep“resentatives; but, incase they should all die, without “ issue living, in the life time of my son-in-law James Lit[48]*48“tlepage, then the said slave and her issue to go to the- said James Littlepage. All the rest of my slaves and “ personal estate, not herein before disposed of, to be di- v^e(* *n^° eight equal parts, one part whereof I give to “ each of my children, to wit, John, &c. (naming seven of “them,) and their heirs forever: the other eighth part I “ lend unto my daughter Betty Littlepage during her nat- “ ural life; and, immediately after her death, I give the “said slaves and their increase, and the said personal “ estate, unto her children, then living, and, in case any “ of them are dead, to their legal representatives; but, in “ case all her children should die in the life time of my “ son-in-law James Littlepage, then the said slaves and “ personal estate to go to him.”

Betty Littlepage had two children by James; to wit, Lewis who died in 1802, without issue, and Mary who intermarried with R. S. Coleman, and is yet alive.

Zachariah Lewis, the testator, died about the year 1765; and James Littlepage shortly after.

Betty Littlepage, his widow, intermarried with Lewis Holladay, by whom she had several children, who are the appellees. She survived her son Lewis, and died in the year 1809. After her death, her husband delivered over the slaves (33 in number,) to the Executor of Zachariah Lewis.

The children of Coleman, to whom he has transferred his interest, are appellants, and alledge that the children of Betty by the second marriage, are not entitled under the Will:

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Bluebook (online)
6 Va. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colemans-v-holladay-va-1817.