Davis v. Lynchburg National Bank & Trust Company

92 S.E.2d 278, 198 Va. 14, 1956 Va. LEXIS 169
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 23, 1956
DocketRecord 4522
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 92 S.E.2d 278 (Davis v. Lynchburg National Bank & Trust Company) 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. Lynchburg National Bank & Trust Company, 92 S.E.2d 278, 198 Va. 14, 1956 Va. LEXIS 169 (Va. 1956).

Opinion

Eggleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Creed Wills Davis died on November 8, 1932, leaving a will by which he devised and bequeathed his entire estate, after the payment of his debts, to the Lynchburg National Bank & Trust Company for the benefit of his daughter, Annie Virginia Davis, directing it to pay her the income therefrom as long as she should live. The trustee was given authority in its discretion to encroach upon the principal of the trust fund for the daughter’s maintenance. In the following clause the testator directed that such portion of the trust fund and estate as should remain at the daughter’s death, after the payment of her funeral expenses, should pass as directed in her will. Then followed this provision, the interpretation of which is the subject of the present litigation:

“(E) If my daughter, upon her death, dies intestate or leaves a will wherein the power of appointment is not therein exercised, then my said trust fund estate shall cease to be impressed with a trust and shall revert to and become my estate.”

The bank qualified as executor of the will and later as trustee thereunder and took over and administered an estate valued at about $33,000. During the lifetime of Annie Virginia Davis the trustee paid to her the income from the trust estate and encroached to some extent upon the principal.

*16 On January 10, 1954, Miss Davis died leaving a will by which she did not exercise the power of disposition granted to her under the will of her father. Shortly thereafter the trustee bank filed a bill in the court below alleging the above facts and praying for an interpretation of the will and directions as to whom the corpus of the estate should be paid. It alleged that upon his death Creed Wills Davis left surviving him as his sole heir at law his daughter, Annie Virginia Davis; that upon her death Annie Virginia Davis left surviving her as her heirs at law a cousin, Fred M. Davis, the only son of her father’s brother, Micajah P. Davis; Samuel Lybrook, a brother of her mother, Virginia Lybrook Davis; William M. Lybrook, Jr., the only son of William M. Lybrook, a deceased brother of Virginia Lybrook Davis; and Grace Lybrook Seay and Frances Lybrook Blankenship, the only children of Raymond Lybrook, another deceased brother of Virginia Lybrook Davis.

It was further alleged that the will was ambiguous in that it failed to specify whether the trust fund became a part of the estate of the testator, Creed Wills Davis, as of the time of his death, in which event it passed and descended to his daughter, Annie Virginia Davis, and thence upon her death to her heirs above named, or whether it became a part of testator’s estate as of the time of the death of his daughter, Annie Virginia Davis, in which event it passed to Fred Ad. Davis as the sole heir of testator.

Fred M. Davis filed an answer alleging that under the provisions of the will the testator devised the trust estate “to a class of persons who, under the Virginia Statute(s) of Descent and Distribution, constituted his heirs at the time of the death of his daughter,” and that since he, Fred Ad. Davis, was the sole heir of the testator as of that time, he was entitled to the entire trust estate after the payment of the costs of administration and inheritance taxes.

In the answers filed by or on behalf of the Lybrooks and other maternal kindred of Annie Virginia Davis, it was alleged that under the proper interpretation of the will of Creed Wills Davis the testator retained in himself “the fee simple and absolute reversion in said residuum, subiect to being divested only by the exercise” of the Prwer in the daughter to appoint by will, and that upon the death of the testator “intestate as to the said reversion,” it passed and descended t~ ’fis daughter md sole heir at law, subiect to the aforesaid trust, and upon her death “intestate as to the said residuum,” it passed to *17 her heirs, one-half to her nearest paternal kindred, Fred M. Davis, and one-half to her nearest maternal kindred, the Lybrooks.

These answers further alleged that the will of the testator neither “creates nor attempts to create any remainder interest upon the termination of the trust” established for the use and benefit of the daughter, Annie Virginia Davis.

Depositions were taken on behalf of Fred M. Davis which showed the domestic and occupational situation of the testator and his relations with his Davis kin as contrasted with his wife’s relatives.

The lower court entered a final decree which in substance upheld the contention of the Lybrooks and other maternal kindred of Annie Virginia Davis. It held that there was no ambiguity in the will which justified it in considering the “declarations of the testator or other extrinsic evidence” in interpreting the will; “that the plain intent of the testator, as expressed in his will, was that if his daughter, Annie Virginia Davis, should die without a will or leave a will in which she failed to exercise the power of appointment granted her (which latter contingency did in fact occur), the trust estate mentioned and referred to in said will should revert to and become a part of the decedent’s estate; that the testator thereby retained a reversion in said trust estate, and as the testator did not designate in his will any person or class of persons as ultimate beneficiaries of said reversion, he died intestate as to said reversion and the same upon his death passed and descended” to Annie Virginia Davis, his sole heir at law and distributee as of the date of his death; and that since Annie Virginia Davis in her will “did not dispose of the reversion which she inherited from her father, she died intestate as to the same and accordingly said estate passed to her heirs at law,” one-half thereof to Fred M. Davis, her nearest paternal kindred, and the other half to the Lybrooks, her nearest maternal kindred. From this decree the defendant, Fred M. Davis, has appealed.

The first assignment of error is that the lower court erred in holding that there is no ambiguity in the language used by the testator which justifies or warrants the consideration of the “declarations of the testator or other extrinsic evidence to show surrounding facts, circumstances or the intention of the testator.”

We agree with the concession in appellant’s brief that, “This assignment is entirely subordinate to the second assignment and of itself is hardly of sufficient importance to justify argument.” It is elementary that in construing a will the intention of the testator must *18 be gathered from the language used by him and not from facts and circumstances which tend to show he intended to say something else. Chavis v. Myrick, 190 Va. 875, 878, 58 S. E. 2d 881, 883, and cases there cited.

Here the language of the will is plain and unambiguous. While there may be a difference of opinion as to the true legal consequence of the language used, this must be determined from a consideration of the language itself and the application of proper legal principles.

The main contention of the appellant is that “the trial court erred in concluding that the time

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.E.2d 278, 198 Va. 14, 1956 Va. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-lynchburg-national-bank-trust-company-va-1956.