East v. Garrett & Wife

9 S.E. 1112, 84 Va. 523, 1888 Va. LEXIS 107
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 2, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 1112 (East v. Garrett & Wife) 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
East v. Garrett & Wife, 9 S.E. 1112, 84 Va. 523, 1888 Va. LEXIS 107 (Va. 1888).

Opinion

Richardson, J.,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

This case turns upon the proper construction to be given to the fifth item of the last will and testament of Dr. Southey S. Satehell, late of Accomac. That item of the testator’s will is for convenience here reproduced:

“ 5th. I give to Edward P. East and his legitimate children forever, the farm which I prarchased of Major John Savage, upon condition that he will pay to Eliza P. Scott, Sr., one [531]*531hundred and thirty dollars annually as long as she lives, and will also pay me what he owes me; but if he will not pay the above annuity to Eliza P. Scott, Sr., and what he owes me, and shall die leaving no legitimate child, I then give the above mentioned farm to Eliza Prances Scott and her children forever; but if she should die leaving no child, I then give the above mentioned farm to my nieces, Mrs. Mary Scarburgli, Mrs. Sarah Duftield, Miss Virginia S. Joynes, and the children of my nephew, Thomas R. Joynes, Jr., and their heirs forever. I also give to Edward P. East forever, all my overcoats, coats, vests, and pantaloons.”

The devisee, Edward P. East, was, it seems, a robust young man of thirty-one years of age at the date of the testator’s death. He was the natural son of the testator by Ailsie East who predeceased the testator by several years. The annuitant, Eliza P. Scott, Sr., was, at the date of the testator’s death, sixty-five years of age. Eliza Frances Scott, who isthe defendant, Eliza F. 0. Garrett, is the natural daughter of the testator, Southey S. Satehell, by said annuitant, Eliza P. Scott, Sr., and she was, at the date of testator’s death, twenty-five years of age. It is a conceded fact that the testator had great regard and consideration for his said daughter, and expended his money and means in her education, maintenance, and support, and also in the support and maintenance of her mother, Eliza P. Scott, Sr. Hpon the death of the testator, the several devisees took possession of the lands devised to them respectively ; and the said Edward P. East held continuous possession of the tract devised to him until his death, which resulted from accident on the 30th of March, 1885. He died intestate,- never having been married, and, of course, left no legitimate child or children; and having met an untimely death, he left surviving him the said annuitant who was greatly his senior—an event that could not have been anticipated by the testator.

Edward P. East accepted under the will, paid the debt due [532]*532by him to the testator, took possession of the land devised to him, and, during his lifetime, paid to Eliza P. Scott, Sr., the annuity which, by the fifth item of the testator’s will, he was required to pay to her, and his administrator, after his death, paid said annuity up to the 1st of January, 1886.

Benjamin Iff. East, the plaintiff below, and the plaintiff in error here, is the half brother of the said Edward P. East, having the same mother, but by a different father, and who, at the death of Edward P. East, was, and now is the sole heir at law of the latter; and as such, he claims the land in controversy.

On behalf of the plaintiff in error, it is insisted that under the fifth item of the testator’s will, Edward P. East took, upon the payment of the debt due the testator, an estate tail, enlarged by our statute into a fee simple; which estate, after having vested, as'alleged, upon the performance of the condition precedent aforesaid, was liable to be divested only by the concurrence of the two events alleged to be conditions subsequent: 1st, The failure of Edward P. East to pay the annuity to Eliza P. Scott, Sr.; and 2d, The death of Edward P. East without leaving any legitimate child or children. And thus it is contended that the sole question for decision is whether the estate, so alleged to have vested, was liable to be defeated by the happening of either one of these events, or whether, in order to defeat the estate, both events must happen.

The case is very fully and ably argued for the plaintiff' in error in the petition,'where it is said, “the words, ‘and his legitimate children forever,’ would not, perhaps, have been sufficient to create this estate if used in a deed; but they are quite sufficient in a will, ‘wherein greater indulgence is allowed ’; for in a will ‘ an estate tail may be created by a devise to a man and his seed; or to a man and his heirs male; or by other irregular mode of expression,’ citing 1 Tuck. Com. Book 2, p. 47. Or it may be created by a devise ‘ to a man and his children, if he has no children at the time of the [533]*533devise—or to a man and his posterity, or by any other words which show an intention to restrain the inheritance to the descendants of the devisee.’ ” Citing 1 Black. Com. Book 2, p. 115 (marg.) note 20; 2 Minor’s Inst., 968, and cases cited.

Doubtless the la'w is thus correctly stated; but it is obvious that the doctrine last above cited to the effect that an estate tail may be created by any “ words which show an intention to restrain the inheritance to the descendants of the devisee,” by no means tends to uphold the contention of the plaintiff in error; for not ouly is there no mention in the will of any person, or class of persons, that could embrace the plaintiff in error, but, on the contrary, the manifest and clearly expressed intention of the testator, as evinced, both in the immediate context and in the general scheme of the will, is that the estate should not vest absolutely except in the event of the death of Edward P. East leaving legitimate children, thereby clearly restraining the inheritance to the descendants of the devisee; failing which, the estate goes over to the testator’s natural daughter, ElizaErances Scott, and her children forever, butuponthe further contingency that, if Eliza Frances Scott should die leaving no child, then over “to my nieces, Mrs. Mary Scarburgh, Mrs. Sarah Duffield, Miss Virginia S. Joynes, and the children of my nephew, Thos. K.. Joynes, Jr., and their heirs forever”; thus making these blood relations the ulterior devisees in fee, upon the happening of the two events specified—first, the death of Edward P. East without leaving any legitimate child; and, second, the death of Eliza Frances Scott leaving no child.

On behalf the plaintiff in error, it is claimed, and it was so held by the court below, that of the three conditions annexed to the devise in question, only one of them, to-wit, the payment of the debt due to the testator, is a condition precedent, and that the other two, namely, the payment of the annuity by Edward P. East, and the event of his death leaving no legitimate child, are conditions subsequent, and that both of these events must concur before the limitation over to Eliza Frances [534]*534Scott can take effect. And the circuit court held with the plaintiff, as to the character of the conditions named; but, at the same time, held that each and all of the conditions must be performed; or, to state it differently, that upon the happening of either one of the events specified, the estate devised, on condition, to Edward P. East failed, and the limitation over took effect, and that this result necessarily followed when Edward P. East died leaving no legitimate child.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E. 1112, 84 Va. 523, 1888 Va. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-v-garrett-wife-va-1888.