Cunningham v. Dunn

100 S.E. 410, 84 W. Va. 593, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 77
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 100 S.E. 410 (Cunningham v. Dunn) 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
Cunningham v. Dunn, 100 S.E. 410, 84 W. Va. 593, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 77 (W. Va. 1919).

Opinion

POFFENBARGER, JUDGE :

The correctness of the decree complained of depepds upon 'the construction of sec. 16, of ch. 77, of the Code, reading as 'follows: “If any person die leaving a child, or his wife en-ciente of a child, which shall be born alive, and leaving a ■will made when such person had no children living, wherein any child he might have is not provided for or mentioned, such will, except so far as it provides for the payment of the debts of the testator, shall be construed as if the devise, ¡and bequests therein had been limited to take effect, in the event that the child shall die unmarried and without issue. ’ ’

The will involved'was construed for certain purposes in Cunningham v. Cunningham, 30 W. Va. 599, the court holding that the will and the. circumstances under which it was made brought it within the operation of the statute just quoted, wherefore the husband and devisee of the testatrix took under it only a contingent estate in fee simple. At the •date of the making of the will purporting to give the land ‘to the husband absolutely, his wife, the testatrix, had no chil•dren, but she afterwards had two children both of whom ■■survived her. As both of the children Were then living, the ■court had no occasion to enter upon any inquiry as to what •estate the husband would take, in the event of the death of ene of the children unmarried and without issue. It held that, by operation of the statute, the devise to the husband was limited to take effect only in the event the children ■should die unmarried and without issue. Sometime after ■ the rendition of that decision one of the children died unmarried and without issue, a¿nd the effect this event has upon the •construction of the will is the problem submitted upon this [595]*595•appeal. The other child survives, is married and has children. • She is one of the defendants and the plaintiff was a subsequent wife of her father.

The tract of land involved was conveyed by James Philips •and wife to Jane Cunningham, by a deed dated, November 6, 1878, and originally contained 118 acres. By a deed dated, March 20, 1880, Jane Cunningham and George W. Cunningham, her husband, conveyed 21 acres and 3 poles of it to William H. Dunn. By her will dated, August 19, 1879, the wife devised and bequeathed all of her estate real and personal to her husband, George W. Cunningham. This will was probated May 7, 1883. The character and extent •of the estate of George W.' Cunningham, under the will, Were determined by the court in 1888. Some time after the •death of Jane Cunningham, George W. Cunningham married the plaintiff in this cause, Elvira Cunningham. He died testate in April, 1917, and, by his will, after having made ■certain specific bequests, gave all of the residue of his property of every kind to his wife, for and during her natural life, and the remainder in fee therein to his children.

Claiming á life estate in one-half of the tract of land by virtue of this will, on the theory that her husband had inherited title to one-half of it from his son who died unmarried ■and without issue, or that the devise to him failed as to only one-half of it, this son and Gertrude Dunn having been the two children of Jane Cunningham, born between the •date of the making of her will and her death, Elvira Cunning•ham filed the bill in this cause, praying for partition of the land, to which the defendant Gertrude Dunn\ filed her •demurrer and answer. George W. Cunningham was survived by four other children, issues of his subsequent marriage or marriages, all of whom were made parties defendant. A purchaser of the alleged interest of one of them came into the -cause by petition and filed an answer by which he virtually joined in the prayer of the bill. By a decree entered April '12, 1918, the court adopted the theory of the plaintiff’s bill and awarded her partition of the' land, but, on the next day, this decree was set aside, by an order reciting unauthorized entry thereof. By a decree entered November 19,1918, [596]*596the court adopted, the opposite theory, sustained the demurrer and dismissed the bill.

The origin and purpose of the statute are well defined in Wood v. Tredway, 111 Va., 526. At common law, a will was not revoked by the subsequent birth of a child of the testator. Wood v. Tredway, cited, 2 Min. Inst. 3rd Ed., 1036, 1038; Schouler on Wills, 424. After the enactment of the Statute of Wills in Ejngland, the Chancery Court established a rule of constructive revocation of a will, as to the interest of a child not mentioned therein, nor otherwise provided for, founded upon a presumption that the testator did not intend to disinherit his child. 2 Min. Inst. 4th Ed., 1026, 1027. . This rule was also adopted in Virginia. Yerby v. Yerby, 3 Call. 334; Savage v. Mears, 2 Rob. 570. Deeming it to be wise, equitable and just, the General Assembly of Virginia made it with some modifications, a part of the statutory law of wills, at an early date. In the form in which it was originally passed, it had some defects or imperfections which were eliminated by subsequent amendments. It substantially assumed its present form in the Code of 1849, Secs. 3 and 4, of ch. 104, and has not since been changed in Virginia. With one slight alteration, it was adopted in our Code of 1868. As found in the Code of 1860, it made the will take effect in the event of the death of the child under the age of twenty-one years, unmarried and without issue. Our statute makes it effective in the event of the death of the child unmaried and without issue.

The revocation recognized, and enforced by the Chancery Courts, though equitable and just in the main, sometimes wrought unjust results by reason of its generality and far reaching consequences. It wholly destroyed the devises and bequests made by the will, even though it happened that the child or children were infants and died in infancy; and no doubt sometimes let into the estate, by inheritance, persons to whom the testator never would have given it. In the judgment of the legislature, it was more just and expedient,, to make the devises and bequests conditional, and not wholly void, in such cases. Accordingly, it was provided that they should take effect only in the event of the death of the [597]*597Child unmarried and without issue. While the child lives, the will vests no estate in the donee. At most, he has a mere possibility or expectancy of an estate. His interest is purely and manifestly contingent only. In the event of the death of the child unmarried and without issue, the estate given by the will vests in him, and, in this case, the devisee would have taken an estate in fee simple, if both children had died unmarried and without issue. Whether the death of only one of the two children let him into an estate in one-half of the land, depends partly upon the sense in which the term “child” is used in the statute.

The word “child” in the statute under consideration obviously means child or children, and was adopted for convenience and brevity. It cannot be supposed that the legislature intended the birth of one child to effect a partial revocation of a will, under certain circumstances, and the birth of two or more children not to have such effect, under the same or similar circumstances. The statute deals with a subject in which heirs, actual and prospective, including children, are interested. Wills step in between them and their ancestors, cutting off their inheritances and depriving them of what they otherwise would be entitled to.

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Related

Cunningham v. Cunningham
5 S.E. 139 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1888)
Wood v. Tredway
69 S.E. 445 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1910)
Kyle v. Kyle
18 Ind. 108 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1862)

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.E. 410, 84 W. Va. 593, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunningham-v-dunn-wva-1919.