Fontaine's Adm'r v. Thompson's Adm'r

80 Va. 229, 1885 Va. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 12, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 Va. 229 (Fontaine's Adm'r v. Thompson's Adm'r) 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
Fontaine's Adm'r v. Thompson's Adm'r, 80 Va. 229, 1885 Va. LEXIS 60 (Va. 1885).

Opinion

Lacy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 23rd of Febi’uary, 1882, Thompson’s administrator instituted a chancery suit in the said court, alleging that his testatrix, Tabitha M. Thompson, had departed this life, leaving the following will:

First. I desire my debts to be paid out of such part of my estate as my executor shall think best. Second. I give to my brother, William Fontaine, all the residue of my estate, real and personal, to be held by him in trust, and to be distributed among my next of kin who mag he needy, in such proportions and at such times as in his opinion may be best; and I do authorize him to so dispose of my estate either in kind, or to sell and convert into money. I hereby appoint my brother, William Fontaine, my executor, vesting him with full discretion in the control and disposition of my estate as above directed, and for his trouble he is to be allowed such compensation as he may think reasonable over the usual commission; and I request that he may be allowed to qualify and act without being required to give security.”

That the said executor named in the will died without qualifying, and the estate of the said Tabitha M. Thompson had been committed to the said complainant as sheriff, to be administered with the said will annexed, and submitted to the court the true construction of the said will for his guidance and instruction; that he had no interest in the result of the said construction, but the same was only asked that he might act advisedly as such administrator.

That the testatrix died without issue, leaving as her heirs at law the said William Fontaine, named executor in the will, her brother; the children and grandchildren of her brother, Thomas B. Fontaine; the grandchildren of Bobert Fontaine, a brother of the testatrix; the children and grand[231]*231children of Elizabeth Beavers, deceased, a sister of the testatrix; who were made parties to the suit by themselves or their legal representatives. The adult defendants answered claiming that the provisions of the will were void for uncertainty as to the designated class of the most needy, &c., and that the estate passed as provided by the statute of descents to be distributed among the next kin. The infant defendants answered formally by guardian ad litem.

On the 23rd of February, 1882, one Harvey Terry filed his bill against Thompson’s administrator and the defendants named in the suit of Thompson against Fontaine, claiming to he a judgment creditor of William Fontaine, and claiming that the will was valid, and that the whole estate passed to William Fontaine thereunder; but that if the will was invalid, and so held by the court, then the said William Fontaine was as next of kin entitled to receive one-fourth of the said estate; and praying that the said interest might be subjected to the payment of his debt. To this bill Thompson’s administrator and some of the defendants in the first suit demurred.

On the 22nd of December following the causes came on to be heard together, upon the pleadings stated and the exhibits filed, when the court held that the time construction of the will of Tabitha M. Thompson was to make William Fontaine, the executor named therein, a trustee of the real and personal property in the will devised for the heirs and distributees, according to the Virginia statute of descents and distribution, of the said Tabitha M. Thompson, deceased, excluding therefrom the said William Fontaine, nominated as executor and trustee in the said will — ordered a sale of the property for distribution according to the said decree, and overruled the demurrers to the second bill, but dismissed the same upon the ground that William Fontaine had no interest in the estate of Tabitha M. Thompson, except the right to qualify and receive compensation for his services, and this he had not done, but had died without so doing.

[232]*232From this decree tlie administrator of ’William Fontaine, and the said Harvey Terry, applied for and obtained an appeal to this court.

In this case' the testatrix devised her estate in trust to be distributed among her next of kin who may be needy, in such proportions and at such times as in the opinion of the trustee might be best. The trustee did not qualify, and died; the trust, however, will not be allowed to fail for Avant of a trustee, and as to the beneficiaries Avho are to take under the will, the intention of the testatiix aaíII he effectuated, if it can be done consistently with the rules of law. There is certainly no reason Avhy the detise should be held to he A-oid on the ground of the uncertainty of the class which is to take. The distribution is to be among her next of kin; that much is distinct and clear enough; the persons to be benefitted are the most needy in that class (designated as her next of kin), according to the opinion of the trustee.

If the persons to be selected out of this class cannot be determined for any cause, then the selected persons will not take, because they are unknoAA'n; but the class being clearly and distinctly designated, out of Avhich the selection Avas to be made, there is no reason AA'hy the devise should be declared A'oid as to the class, although it might be void as to the person to be selected out of the class, because of uncertainly. The courts haA’e passed upon these AA'ords, “the most needy/’ or their equivalent, in cases Avhich Ave have examined, and they do not seem to have taken the same view of the question in every case. In Frazier v. Frazier, 2 Leigh 642, this court held the words “to be distributed by the brother among the next of kin, according to their deserts, as he should see at a future time Avhat may turn up,” to pass no estate, and the testator to be regarded intestate as to this subject. This ease was decided in 1831. In 1830, the supreme court of errors of Connecticut, in the case of Bull v. Bulk 8 Conn. 47, took \Arhat seems to be an opposite view, holding that “ it can be ascertained who are the most [233]*233needy of the brothers and sisters-and their children,” so stating a similar devise in that case as in this.

~\Ye have heen referred to Hill. v. Bowman and wife, in 7 Leigh 650, as a decision of this court overruling the decision in Frazier v. Frazier, supra, hut, as opposing counsel argued in this court, Frazier v. Frazier is not mentioned, nor referred to, directly or otherwise, in the latter case, which was decided in the same court live years after the first case; and, as the two cases show, the same counsel represented the appellant and assigned the errors in both cases, and they are reported by the same reporter.

But an inspection of the case shows that the court sustained the trust in that case for the benefit of the testator’s family and other persons who may be in distress, and whom they may think he would have assisted, confiding the execution of the trust entirely to the trustees, upon the ground that “ membera of iiiij fa mil//” were considered words of sufficient certainty: the opinion of the court saying: “No authority in point has heen -produced to show that a declaration of trust, in favor of certain definite objects of the testator’s bounty, is avoided because in the same clause there is a limitation to persons incapable of taking, or because there is a limitation to persons not certain and ascertained.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 Va. 229, 1885 Va. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fontaines-admr-v-thompsons-admr-va-1885.