Davis v. Davis

57 S.E.2d 137, 190 Va. 468, 1950 Va. LEXIS 145
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 16, 1950
DocketRecord 3586
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 57 S.E.2d 137 (Davis v. Davis) 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
Davis v. Davis, 57 S.E.2d 137, 190 Va. 468, 1950 Va. LEXIS 145 (Va. 1950).

Opinion

Staples, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity brought by the appellee, Rosa Davis, against her brother, the appellant, W. F. Davis, to enforce certain rights she asserts under the will of their father, C. H. Davis.

By his will C. H. Davis devised to his son, the appellant, a tract of land situated in Russell County, Virginia, containing 210 acres, more or less. This devise is contained in the second clause of the will and refers to the land as “my home tract of land * * * known as the Stuart or Carter land.”

By the seventh clause of his will, he provided that “My beloved wife, Mary A. Davis, is to have her home at my *472 home place which was herein devised to my son W. F. Davis, and she is also to have her support from same place, * *

With respect to the appellee, the eighth clause of the will provides: “My daughter Rosa Davis is to have her home and support on my home place, as long as she remains single.” She has never married.

At the time of the death of the testator in 1922, appellant, W. F. Davis, took possession of said tract of land and has continued to possess and use it ever since. During the nine years following their father’s death the appellee, the appellant, and their mother, Mary A. Davis, lived at the mansion house on said tract of land until the mother’s death, which occurred in 1931. The appellant was single at the time of his father’s death, but about a year later he married and brought his wife home to live with appellee and her mother. The appellee alleges in her bill of complaint that the treatment accorded to her by appellant’s wife was such as to make it intolerable for her to continue to live in the appellant’s home after her mother’s death, and that a short time thereafter she felt compelled to leave and went to live in the home of her sister, Mrs. Brówning; that subsequently she returned on several occasions to make her home with appellant, but the hostile and insulting attitude of his wife toward her continued and she was compelled to leave each time.

The bill further alleges that the appellee, from her early girlhood, had been afflicted with tuberculosis and her condition continued to grow from bad to worse until it became an undue burden upon her sister, Mrs. Browning, and her family, to give her the care and treatment which her bedridden condition required. Being without adequate funds to provide for such care, she alleges that she brought this suit for the purpose of establishing as a charge or lien upon the appellant’s land her claim against him personally for his failure to provide a home and support in accordance with their father’s will.

The answer of the appellant sets up a number of defenses *473 to the appellee’s demands. To determine the questions thereby raised, the cause was referred to I. M. Quillen, a commissioner in chancery of the Circuit Court.

Appellant contends that the “home place” referred to in the will was intended to include, in addition to the 210 acre tract devised to him, a 170 acre tract devised to O. B. Davis, and a 50 acre tract devised to Homer Creed Davis, and that the burden of supporting appellee should be apportioned between them.

The report of the commissioner, which was confirmed by the court, found, however, that there was no ambiguity on the fact of the will itself, and that it clearly was intended to refer only to the tract devised to the appellant. The excerpts from the will, which we have quoted above, we think clearly sustain this finding. In addition, the evidence abundantly shows that, from the time of the testator’s death, this was the interpretation which both appellant and appellee placed on the will, and that the claim that the “home place” included the other lands was never suggested until after this suit was brought.

The appellant also contends that at the time the appellee left his home in 1931 she took with her certain articles of household furniture and bedclothing, and that, in consideration of his permitting her to do so, she verbally released all claims against the appellant and his tract of land under the will of their father. The appellee, however, denies this, and says that all of the property which she removed was hers and that she had purchased it with her own funds. The appellant also insists that the appellee impliedly agreed to release her rights under the will in consideration of the payment by him of a note of their brother, Jeff Davis, for $400 and interest which she held. Appellee claims that appellant assumed this note when Jeff Davis conveyed certain lands to him. She testified that she never agreed to release her rights and there was no testimony that she expressly agreed to do so and no written release was ever executed.

The commissioner’s findings, which were confirmed *474 by the court, sustain the appellee’s contentions with respect to both of these alleged releases, and these conclusions are abundantly supported by the evidence. It would serve no useful purpose to review the voluminous testimony in detail, for it is clear that the appellant has failed to carry the burden of proof which rests upon him to establish the alleged release of appellee’s rights under the will.

The appellant also asserts that the appellee has been guilty of such gross laches, and other conduct, as would operate as a bar to the prosecution of the suit.

It is true that the appellee delayed many years before she resorted to the court to secure the enforcement of her right of support from the tract of land devised to appellant. In her testimony, however, she gives the following explanation of such delay:

“I didn’t bring suit because I didn’t want to have trouble with my brother. I would not have done it when I did it, but I couldn’t live any longer without it. I had been down sick from May to November, and I had called on him to help me and he wouldn’t, and there was nothing else for me tó do. I was at the end of the way. I was down helpless, and couldn’t do one thing for myself, and no money to pay anyone for waiting on me, then what else could I do. It hurt me to do it, and I was sorry, but I had gone as far as I could go, I couldn’t go another step. As long as I could be on my feet and doing for myself I could make out, but when I got past doing anything for myself, then I had to do something.”

The report of the commissioner has the following to say on the subject of laches:

’“#«=# pfer explanations for her long delay in taking steps to enforce her rights by legal action are entirely logical and understandable. She was naturally reluctant to bring a suit, and up until the time, shortly prior to the bringing of the suit, that the defendant flatly refused to do anything about her support, she was justified in the assumption that the matter might be adjusted without suit. There is nothing *475 in the evidence to indicate any abandonment of her right of support, nor has it been shown that the defendant has been in any wise prejudiced by the delay. The evidence, it might properly be said, shows that Rosa Davis has been upon the charity of her sister and her sister’s family since 1940.

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Bluebook (online)
57 S.E.2d 137, 190 Va. 468, 1950 Va. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-davis-va-1950.