De Campi v. Logan

120 S.E. 915, 95 W. Va. 84, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 223
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 120 S.E. 915 (De Campi v. Logan) 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
De Campi v. Logan, 120 S.E. 915, 95 W. Va. 84, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 223 (W. Va. 1923).

Opinion

MoGinnis, Judge.

This case is an action of ejectment, brought in the Circuit Court of Marshall County, for the recovery of a house and lot situate in the City of Moundsville. After the submission of the evidence, the defendants moved the court to direct a verdict for the defendants which motion the court overruled; whereupon the plaintiffs moved the court to direct a verdict for the plaintiffs, which motion the court sustained and so directed the jury, which verdict the jury rendered and judgment was thereon entered for the land described in the declaration. Exceptions were saved by the defendants to the ruling of the court, in refusing to instruct the jury to find for the defendants and directing a verdict for the plaintiffs. This ruling of the court and other errors, are assigned by the defendants.

Both parties claim title from a common source — Dr. William Boling, who in June 1853, resided in the City of Montgomery, *86 Alabama, where, at that time, he was the owner of considerable property, both real and personal; 'and on the 27th day of June, 1853, he made and duly executed his will, which after his death, which oeeured in February or March 1859, together with its several eodeils, was duly probated in the probate court in the County of Montgomery, Alabama on the 30th day of March, 1859. At the time of the; execution of the will in 1853, Dr. Boling had four children: Amelia B., William, Helen and George, two sons and two daughters, William and Helen died before their father, and George died in infancy, soon after the death of his father. At the time of the testator ’s death he left, to survive him, his wife and two children, Amelia B. and George; his wife died within two years after his death, this left Amelia B. as the only surviving member of the family. She married Blidora de Campi, who was generally known as Elidora Camps. They, as husband and wife, under the name of Camps, on the 22nd day of September 1869, in consideration of five hundred dollars, conveyed the land in controversy in this case to Vincent L. Cockayne with general warranty of title. Amelia B. de Campi died August 2, 1920. The will was introduced by the plaintiffs, and this case rests on the construction of the will of Dr. Boling and a codicil to same bearing date on the 21st day of May, 1857

Plaintiffs claim that, under the will of Dr. Boling, and the codicil above mentioned, Amelia B. took a life estate only in the property with a remainder to her children, and that at her death, her children became vested with the land in fee simple, and that the plaintiffs in this case are the surviving children of Amelia B. de Campi, or Camps. Plaintiffs’ claim of title to the land in controversy is based on the codicil above referred to and on clause eight of the' body of the will, clause eight is as follows:

■ “I hereby direct, that the portion of my estate to which my daughters may be entitled under the provision of this will shall be held by my said executors, or such other person as may be appointed by the proper Court in Trust’’-for the sole and separate use and. benefit of- my said daughters respectively to be free from the control *87 or disposition oí any husband they may marry so long as they may live and at their death then to their children and if they should die or either of them without children or the descendants of children living then such portion as they may have received from my estate shall become the property of my other surviving children and the children of such as may have died if any there be said children to represent his, her or their deceased parents. ’'

In clause ten of his will, the testator bequeathed to his mother, Mrs. Margaret McKee, of Wheeling, Virginia, an annuity of one hundred and fifty dollars for her life to be increased to two hundred dollars in the event of the death of any of his children during the life of his said mother.

The defendants claim title to the land by regular chain from Elidora and Amelia B. Camps, his wife, and under a codicile of said will executed May 21, 1857, which codicile is as follows:

“In addition to the bequest made in the body of this instrument to my mother, Mrs! Margaret McKee, I will and bequeath to her during and for her life my house and lot in Moundsville, Marshall County, Virginia. Said property to revert at her death to my children. ’ ’

The appellees claim that the above codicil should be read and construed with clause eight of the body of the will, and that the expression: “Said property to revert at her death to my children, ’ should be construed to mean, that the property, at the death of. Margaret McKee, passed to the surviving daughter of the testator for life only with remainder to the children of said daughter, and that Amelia B. Camps, being the only surviving child of the testator, took and could convey a life estate only in the property; and that, by said deed from her and her husband to Cockayne, she conveyed a life estate only. While the defendants claim that the said expression gave to the children of the testator a fee simple estate, after the death of the life tenant Mrs. McKee which occured January 1, 1768, and that the deed made by Amelia B. de Campi and her husband Elidora to Vincent L. Cockayne- on the 17th day of September, 1869, granted to him the fee simple title to the land.

*88 ' .■ The evidence introduced by the plaintiffs, shows that at the'time Dr. Boling executed the body of his will, June 27, 3,853, he did not own the land in controversy, that he acquired it from William Kerns and wife by deed bearing date, January- 25, 1856, and so far as the record discloses, this is the only property he owned in the state of Virginia at the time of the execution of the codicil to his will above referred to. This property was not contemplated in the body of his will, he afterwards acquired it, and disposed of it by this codicil. This codicil taken alone could nót be construed in any other way than' to give Mrs. McKee a life estate in the property with remainder in fee to the children of the testator.

The code of Virginia 1849, sec. 8 ch. 116, is as follows: “Where any real estate is .conveyed, devised or granted to any person without any words of limitation, such devise, conveyance or grant shall be construed to pass the fee simple or 'other the whole estate or interest which the testator or grantor had power to dispose- of in such estate, unless a contrary intention shall appear by the will, conveyance'or grant.”

This is our present statute, Code of West Virginia, (Barnes 1923) sec. 8 ch. 71; and this has been the law of Alabama since 1824, sec. 1026 Vol. 1 Civil Code of Alabama.

This codicil is repugnant to and inconsistant with clause eight of the testator’s will. In that clause he does not give to his mother a life estate in any of his real property. He doubtless at that time desired that his mother should have a home during her life, he had provided for her in his will by allowing'her an annuity, and doubtless he acquired this property in Moundsville which was at that time of small value, for the purpose- of providing for her a home during her life and, by this codicil, willed it to her for her life witn remainder over to his children.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.E. 915, 95 W. Va. 84, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-campi-v-logan-wva-1923.