Dutterer v. Logan

137 S.E. 1, 103 W. Va. 216, 52 A.L.R. 83, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 43
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1927
Docket5821 & 5821-A
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 137 S.E. 1 (Dutterer 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
Dutterer v. Logan, 137 S.E. 1, 103 W. Va. 216, 52 A.L.R. 83, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 43 (W. Va. 1927).

Opinion

Miller, Judge:

The purposes of both suits are substantially the same: the first to enforce a forfeiture of all estate, rights and interests, of defendants Bessie M. Royer, Virginia F. Zinn, S. Alberta Flynn, and R. Stanley Dutterer, as devisees of the several tracts of land and interests therein devised to them by the will of the late Jacob H. Dutterer, in favor of the plaintiff J. Henry Dutterer and the defendant Flora K. Logan, the other devisees under the will, pursuant to a provision thereof, and to divide and partition said lands between them; the second, to enforce said forfeiture as to the personal estate of said decedent, in favor of the same parties, on the same ground, and for guidance and direction to said J. Henry *218 Dutterer, as one of tbe executors of said will, tbe defendant R. Stanley Dutterer being the other executor thereof.

The testator, a prosperous farmer, by the eighth paragraph of his will, relied on as the basis for the relief prayed for, after making certain specific devises and bequests of real and personal property to his widow and to- his two sons and four daughters, provided:

“VIII. Direct that all the rest and residue of my estate, real, personal and mixed, of whatsoever kind and character, and wheresoever located, shall be equally divided among my six children, Virginia F. Zinn, Bessie M. Royer, Sarah A. Flynn, Flora K. Logan, J. Henry Dutterer and Robert S. Dutterer. I further direct, in case that any of my children shall be inclined to be dissatisfied and cause any trouble in the administration of my estate, I direct that they shall be cut off of the provisions of my will, and direct that my executors pay them the sum of $10.00 in lieu, of all interestThe last clause, italicised, is the forfeiture provision sought to have enforced.

As ground for the alleged forfeiture, the bills allege that in December 1922, after the death of the testator in November 1921, and the probate of his will in December following, disregarding said forfeiture clause, the defendants Zinn, Royer, Flynn and R. Stanley Dutterer, who were inclined to be dissatisfied and to cause trouble in the administration of said estate, instituted a suit in equity in the circrdt court for the purpose of contesting and having adjudged as no part of said will paragraph three thereof in favor of J. Henry Dut-terer, on the alleged ground that the testator had been induced to execute the same and make the same a part of his will by the fraud and undue influence of the said J. Henry Dutterer and others; that said contest suit was instituted without probabiUs causa litigandi, and that on the trial of the cause in the circuit court, a verdict had been directed for the defendants, and the bill dismissed, and that on appeal from that decree had been subsequently denied by this court; that plaintiff and Mrs. Logan were in possession of the lands forfeited; and the prayers of the bills were that the lands be *219 partitioned, and that the personal estate be divided in accordance with the alleged rights of the plaintiff and his sister, Mrs. Logan. The decrees appealed from and now before us for review granting the relief prayed for, were pronounced on August 2, 1926.

Demurrers and answers to the bills challenge jurisdiction in equity to enforce the alleged forfeitures; and the answers set up by way of relief; (1) that the alleged forfeiture clause is too indefinite and uncertain to constitute the basis of forfeiture of the vested estates of defendants in the land and personal property devised and bequeathed to them respectively; (2) that the institution of the contest suit was not within the terms of the will against “giving trouble in the administration of the estate,” but amounted simply to the asserting of a right, for probable cause charged, to test the validity of the specific provision of the will in favor of J. Henry Dutterer, on the grounds alleged in their bill; (3) that the alleged forfeiture clause containing no devise or bequest over, should be construed as merely an in terrorem provision, not enforceable in equity; (4) that there was probabilis causa litigandi, and the contest was instituted in good faith, and not for vexatious purposes, and the forfeiture clause should not be construed as intending to or to in fact cut off the devisees from appealing to the courts for a vindication of their' rights and to prevent fraud and imposition upon them by the undue influence of other ambitious heirs or devisees.

It is quite manifest that if we adopt the principle of the fourth proposition, and find it applicable to the facts pleaded and proven in this ease, we need not further consider the other questions so ably and elaborately discussed in briefs and oral arguments of counsel, for its affirmance and application here will be decisive of the rights of the parties to the present litigation.

It is well settled in those jurisdictions where the rule of probabilis causa litigandi prevails, that an unsuccessful contest will not be conclusive of the rights of the contestants *220 "on tbe question of probable cause for instituting tbe congest. Stewart v. Sonneborn, 98 U. S. 187.

In one of tbe leading cases on tbe subject, In Re Friend’s Estate, 209 Pa. St. 442, 449, it is said: "In view of this, we are now asked to say that the prior findings and conclusions of tbe court below are conclusive that there was not probable cause for this contest. Tbe answer to this is, that the court, on the application for an issue devisavit vel non, made its findings and drew its conclusion after it had fully heard both sides, the contestant and the proponents of the will, and it is not to be assumed that they would have been the same if only the contestant and bis witnesses had been beard. ’ ’

And generally, in suits for malicious prosecution, the advice of counsel constitutes a complete defense to an action for damages, if based on facts honestly obtained and fully disclosed. Sud nick v. Kohn, 81 W. Va. 492; Turner v. Brenner, 138 Va. 323; Staunton v. Goshorn, 94 Fed. 52, 60, (C. C. A. Fourth Ct.); Stewart v. Sonneborn, supra; 18 R. C. L. p. 45. If such advice be a defense against a suit for criminal prosecution, it seems to us it ought to be equally so against the forfeiture of vested rights in property, which the law looks upon with the greatest disfavor, and equity will not enforce.

Of course to avoid the consequences of a forfeiture, one claiming the benefits of a devise or bequest made subject to such a condition should be required to put himself clearly within the exception to the general rule. Tie should indeed have probable cause for instituting the contest. But on the other hand, before a court should deprive one of his right to litigate a just, or an apparent just, cause of action, it" should in our opinion be satisfied that his complaint was not for the vindication of what he really believed a substantial right, but for vexatious purposes. Radochio v. Katzen, 92 W. Va. 342; Bailey

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 S.E. 1, 103 W. Va. 216, 52 A.L.R. 83, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dutterer-v-logan-wva-1927.