Glinn's Adm'r v. Glinn

1 Va. Dec. 454
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Va. Dec. 454 (Glinn's Adm'r v. Glinn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glinn's Adm'r v. Glinn, 1 Va. Dec. 454 (Va. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

Wingfield, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit by the children of Mary Roads Glinn, deceased, against the administrator with the will annexed, of their father, German R. Glinn, deceased, to recover a sum of money and the hires of certain slaves, which came to the hands of the said German R. Glinn, deceased, in his lifetime from the personal representative of Celia Smith, deceased, in right of his wife, Mary Roads Glinn, under the will of the testatrix.

Celia Smith, by her will, which was dated the 9th of March, 1839, and admitted to probate in November of the same year, disposed of her estate, in the first place, by six distinct bequests to each of her six children, using the same [456]*456exact words in each. It will suffice to cite the terms of the bequest to Mrs. Glinn, which is in the following words, viz.: “I lend to my daughter, Mary Eoads, who intermarried with German E. Glinn, one equal sixth part of my estate during her natural life, ” and after, the other five similar bequests to each of her other five children, she disposes of the remainder as follows : “Now, if either of my children, hereinbefore named, shall die, leaving an heir or heirs of their body, to such heir or heirs, if there be more than one, I give that portion of my estate, hereinbefore loaned, to them and their heirs forever. But if either of my named children shall die leaving no heir of their body, then, in that case, the portion of my estate herein loaned to such child or children shall pass to my surviving children in equal proportions to be held by them during their natural life or lives, and at their death to their heirs in fee simple.”

In the division of the estate of the testatrix, in 1840, German E. Glinn received at the hands of her executor, in right of his wife, $163.79 in money and two slaves, subject to a charge of $16.66 on the slaves in order to equalize the division, and held them until his death, claiming them as his own.

Mrs. Glinn died in August, 1841, and German E. Glinn in August, 1856, and this suit is brought to recover the hires of the slaves and the money, with interest, from the time of her death, and the right of the appellees to recover depends upon the proper construction of the will of Celia Smith.

The circuit court held that Mrs. Glinn took only a life interest in the property bequeathed to her, and at her death it belongs to the appellees, and held that German E. Glinn, their father, should account to them for the money and the hires of the negroes so received by him, with compound interest, as a guardian would be accountable under similar circumstances. From this decision the administrator of German E. Glinn obtained an appeal.

[457]*457The appellants’ counsel assign as error, for which the decision of the circuit court ought to be reversed : First and mainly, That that court put an erroneous construction upon the will of Celia Smith. Because, under it “German B. Glinn, in right of his wife, took a fee simple in the slaves in question, liable to be defeated by her dying without issue ; but as she died with issue, the fee simple never was defeated, and that under the rule in Shelley’s case, the words “heirs of her body, ’ ’ as used by the testatrix, were words of limitation and not words of purchase, and consequently the slaves were his own in right of his wife, and he was not accountable to the appellees for their hires.

2d. But if he only took an estate in them for the life of his wife, he ought not to have been charged with their hires, because he supported and educated the appellees, which he was not of ability to do of himself without those hires, and that the use and profits of the slaves were necessarily expended in the support of his children (the appellees).

There are some other minor objections to the accounts taken in the case which under the view I have taken of it, need not be noticed.

On the other hand, it is contended by the counsel for the appellees that Mrs. Glinn took only a life estate under the will of Celia Smith, with a contingent remainder to her children, and an executory devise over well limited to the surviving children of the testatrix ; or else she took a fee tail by implication converted by the act 1776 into a fee simple, with an executory devise to her children well limited, according to the act of 1819 ; and in either case the appellees took the property upon the death of Celia Smith.

This case again brings up for decision in this court the vexed question in regard to the application of the rule in Shelley’s case, upon which the legal profession have been divided evér since the decision of the celebrated case of Per[458]*458rin v. Blake, in the time of Lord Mansfield, down to the present. All of the authorities, from the time of that decision down to the case of Moore, &c., v. Brooks, in 12 Gratt. 135, and many of the elementary works on real estate, have been cited and commented upon by the counsel on one side or the other in their arguments. I have examined the author ities cited pretty carefully, and I think they very clearly settle, that in a gift to one for life and to the heirs of his body, that the words “heirs of his body” are words of limitation and not words of purchase, and give to the first taker an absolute estate, unless there is something in the instrument creating the estate to shew that the donor or testator did not intend to use them in their technical, primary sense.

But there is another class of cases running down from the case of Read v. Snell, 2d Atk. 642, in the time of Lord Hardwicke, to the case of Wootton v. Wootton’s ex’or, 2d Pat. & Heath 494 (decided two years after the case of Moore, &c., v. Brooks, so much relied on by the counsel for the appellant), which establish the doctrine as laid down by the elementary writers (see 4 Kent’s Com. 241—2, and the other writers referred to by him) that where the testator annexes words of explanation to the word “heirs,” shewing thereby that he meant a mere description of persons or specific definition of certain individuals, or where he superadds words of explanation, or fresh words of limitation, and a new inheritance is grafted on the heirs to whom he gives the estate, shewing that he intended that the heirs should be a new stock' of a new descent — in all such cases it has been held that the word ‘ ‘heirs’ ’ was merely descriptive of the person that he intended to take, and were words of purchase, and not words of limitation.

I think the bequest in this case falls within the' influence of the latter class of cases, and that the appellees, upon the death of Mrs. Glinn, took the property loaned or given her [459]*459for life as purchasers under the will of Celia Smith, dec’d. I think it manifestly appears that the testatrix used the words ‘ ‘heirs of her body’ ’ in the sense of children or descendants. I think no one can read the will without seeing that it was the plain intention of the testatrix to give the use of the property to her daughter (Mrs.

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Related

Moore v. Brooks
12 Gratt. 135 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1855)
Evans v. Pearce
15 Gratt. 513 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1860)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Va. Dec. 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glinns-admr-v-glinn-vactapp-1882.