Gish v. Moomaw

15 S.E. 868, 89 Va. 345, 1892 Va. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 22, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 15 S.E. 868 (Gish v. Moomaw) 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
Gish v. Moomaw, 15 S.E. 868, 89 Va. 345, 1892 Va. LEXIS 108 (Va. 1892).

Opinion

Richardson, J.,

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

This cause, in the view' taken by this court, turns upon the construction of the will of the testator, W. It. Coon. The will was -written by a plain farmer, and is, in certain respects, as palpably inartificial as any instrument ever -was. Omitting the usual formal commencement and the attestation clause, the body of the instrument is as follows :

“ First—after paying all my just debts, I will and bequeath to my wife, Nancy E., all my personal and real estate so long as she may live; and after her death I will and bequeath my land to my brothers, John Coon, Patterson Coon, and Pobert Coon, to be equally divided between those three brothers, or their heirs, if living; if either of these -would die without heirs, before the division of the estate, the property to go to those living, or their heirs.”

Notwithstanding the inartificial character of the instrument, the testator’s general intent, -which must overrule the [354]*354special intent, if any such there be, is too plain to admit of any reasonable doubt, and that was, as expressed in the will— first, to give the life estate to his wife ; second, to give to his three brothers, whom he mentions by name, if alive at his death, a vested joint remainder in fee, to take effect in possession at the death of the wife ; and, third, that if one of the three brothers should die without heirs (children), before the division of the estate,” then the share of the one so dying to go to the surviving brothers.

Such is clearly the general intent which pervades the entire instrument as a whole, and to the utter exclusion of any possible special intent to the contrary. It is obvious that the testator’s mind was not engaged in devising some elaborate scheme by which to keep his estate unaliened in his family as long as the law allowed. On the contrary, his mind was occupied with the thought and purpose of a natural and just disposition of his estate to those most conspicuous in his mind’s eye—those nearest to him by the ties of affection, association, and blood; those with whom he had lived and knew and loved, and those whose claims on his bounty were natural and obvious. So, in the first place, he provided liberally for his childless wife by giving her a life estate in all he had. The next and natural objects of his love and bounty, and whom he intended to own the remainder in fee of all his real estate, were his three brothers; and this he effected by expressly giving the land to them by name, adding the words “ to be equally divided between those three brothers, or their heirs, if living.” The obvious and only intelligible meaning of this language is that if, when the will takes effect—i. e , at the time of testator’s death—one or more of the brothers be dead, leaving heirs (children), the heirs so living at testator’s death are to take the interest designated for their ancestor. Thus the testator embodied and provided for the carrying out of his wishes so far as lie thought fit to express them, [355]*355except in one single contingency—one subordinate and incidental object—which he anticipated and attempted to provide for. It occurred to him that it was possible that his brothers, or some of them, might pre-decease his wife, and therefore before they came to the enjoyment of the remainder in fee given to them. If one so died, leaving issue, the issue would take by inheritance an absolute, indefeasible fee in that share. He therefore made no provision for that case, doubtless in view of the fact that the law of descents would effect all his purposes in such event. But he also foresaw that one of the brothers might die before the life tenant, without issue, and that contingency he deemed it necessary to provide for, and it was the only case he did provide for, and he made that particular provision in the following terms : “ If either of these would [should] die without heirs, before the division of the estate, the property to go to those living, or their heirs.”

Observe he does not say that share is to go to those living, but the property—the undivided whole of the estate. In this connection it may be remarked that the testator's intention is to be ascertained, not from what we may conjecture he meant to say, but from what he actually did say. “ The true enquiry is not rvhat the testator meant to express, but what the words used by him do express.” Stokes v. Van Wyck, 83 Va. 729, and authorities cited. See also Hatcher v. Hatcher, 80 Va. 171, where Hinton, J., said : “ The intention must be collected from the words of the will, for the object of construction is not to ascertain the presumed or supposed, but the expressed intention of the testator—that is, the meaning which the words of the will, correctly interpreted, convey— the expressed meaning being, in wills, as in other written instruments, in legal contemplation, equivalent to the intention.” So, in Rayfield v. Gaines, 17 Gratt. 1, it was said: “ Olear and unambiguous provisions are not to be controlled by mere influences and arguments derived from other passages of the instrument, themselves uncertain and ambiguous.”

[356]*356In the event of the death of one of the brothers without heirs, before the division of the estate, the only condition the testator expressed in his will is that the survivors, “ those living,” shall take, not the share of the one so dying, but the property—i. e., the land as an undivided whole. What, then, is the effect of the added words, “ or their heirs ” ? On behalf of the appellees it is insisted that this phrase is to be expanded into a limitation of a substitutional fee to the issue of any other brother who may have previously died leaving issue. No such idea seems to have been entertained by the testator, for he does not so express himself, nor can any such idea be deduced from what he does say.

This contention is aptly and most effectually punctured by Mr. Kean, of counsel for the appellants, who, in his note of argument, says : “ The court below and our learned opponents develop these three words, ' or their heirs,’ into something equivalent to this—namely : ' Or if, in such case, one or both of the others of my said brothers shall have died in the lifetime of the one so dying without issue, leaving issue surviving, such issue shall take as purchasers the portion of such share which their deceased parent or ancestor would have taken if alive.’ Surely this is not to construe W. K. Coon’s will, but to make a will for him, such as one may conjecture it would have been advisable for him to have made.”

"What, then, is the effect of these words, “ or their heirs,” in this connection ? Literally and grammatically, they have no effect whatever, because grammatically the word “their” can refer only to “those living”; and as the living can have no heirs, these words must be held to be merely words of limitation, serving to show that the estate given the survivors is absolute and indefeasible. In this way, and only in this way, is it possible to give an effect at once natural and entirely consistent with legal rules to every word of the will, without violence, and without engrafting thereon limitations which are [357]*357not only not expressed, but which in all probability never entered into the mind of the testator.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.E. 868, 89 Va. 345, 1892 Va. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gish-v-moomaw-va-1892.