Guilfoil v. Hayes

194 S.E. 804, 169 Va. 548, 1938 Va. LEXIS 232
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 13, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 194 S.E. 804 (Guilfoil v. Hayes) 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
Guilfoil v. Hayes, 194 S.E. 804, 169 Va. 548, 1938 Va. LEXIS 232 (Va. 1938).

Opinion

Eggleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mary Hayes Guilfoil filed her bill in the court below attacking the validity of the will of William R. Hayes, which had been admitted to probate in the clerk’s office of said court within the preceding two years. The bill alleged that the decedent was at the time of his death domiciled in the State of New York, and had been for many years prior thereto; that the complainant was his sole heir at law and distributee under the laws of that State; that the said William R. Hayes was mentally incompetent to make the said will; and that it had been procured through the undue in[550]*550fluence of the defendant, Adelaide M. Grady Hayes, who was therein named as the executrix and principal beneficiary.

The defendant, Adelaide M. Grady Hayes, filed a plea to the said bill of complaint, in which she averred that the said William R. Hayes was at the date of his death domiciled in the State of Virginia; that she was his lawful wife; that there were no children born of this or of any former marriage of the said decedent, nor had the decedent ever adopted a child; that the said decedent, at the time of his death, owned no real estate, or any interest therein, but that his estate consisted wholly of personal property; that if the said decedent died intestate (as alleged in the bill), the whole of his estate descended to her, the said defendant, under the laws of the State of Virginia; and that the complainant was not a “person interested” in the said will, or in the order admitting the same to probate, as had the right, under Code, section 5259, to institute a suit to impeach the said will.

Issue was joined and the matter proceeded to trial on this plea.

The precise question submitted to the lower court was clarified and restricted by the agreement between the parties as to the following pertinent matters, both of law and fact:

The testator and the appellee (defendant below) were lawfully married and so continued until his death. His estate consisted of personal property only, the distribution of which is determined by the law of his domicile at the date of his death. If the decedent died intestate and domiciled in Virginia, his wife (the defendant below) inherited the entire estate involved in this litigation, and the contestant is not such a “person interested” under Code, section 5259, as may maintain this suit.

The defendant below admitted that prior to the latter part of the year 1933 her husband was domiciled in New York. She also conceded that the burden of establishing a change of domicile was on her as the party alleging it.

[551]*551The sole question, therefore, presented to the court below was whether the preponderance of the evidence showed that there was a change of domicile from New York to Virginia.

Upon a consideration of the whole evidence, taken partly in open court and partly by depositions, the trial court decided the issue in favor of the Virginia domicile, and entered a decree dismissing the bill. Hence this appeal.

The evidence shows these facts: The testator was a Catholic priest. For many years prior to 1932 he had been pastor of a church in the city of Newburgh, New York. He was a man of means, living in a valuable residence, which he owned. In 1931 and 1932 he underwent several operations, which left his health impaired. Consequently, in 1932, he retired from active duty, became pastor emeritus of his church, and thereafter received a monthly salary of $100. He was then sixty-six years of age.

In July, 1932, the will in controversy was drawn and executed at Newburgh. The appellee, to whom he was not then married, was named as the principal beneficiary and executrix.

In September, 1932, Father Hayes and the appellee went to Norfolk and thence to Elizabeth City, North Carolina. At the latter place they were married in a civil ceremony by a justice of the peace on September 12, 1932. They returned at once to Norfolk and from there went to Virginia Beach, stopping at a hotel.

After a brief stay at the hotel Father Hayes rented a cottage at Virginia Beach, where he lived with his wife until the spring of 1933, when he returned to Newburgh. At that time his wife returned to New York City, where she had previously resided.

Upon his return to Newburgh, after having first tried in vain to sell his residence, he converted it into an apartment house and leased it for a term of five years. This property he subsequently conveyed to Mrs. Hayes. He removed his household furniture to New York City, where [552]*552he stored it, telling the warehouseman that he intended to move it to Virginia Beach at a later date.

In the fall of 1933 the couple returned to Virginia Beach and occupied the Stickney cottage. Father Hayes closed his bank account at Newburgh and opened one at the Virginia Beach branch of The National Bank of Commerce at Norfolk. This was the only bank account thereafter maintained by him.

He rented a safe-deposit box in the Norfolk office of that bank and transferred all of his securities thereto from the Newburgh bank. When making this transfer he told Mr. Coleman, the custodian of the vault, that thereafter he intended to make Virginia Beach his home.

Father Hayes had considerable dealings with Mr. W. H. Terry, Jr., who was engaged in the real estate and rental business at Virginia Beach. Through Mr. Terry he rented a cottage in the fall of 1932, and the Stickney cottage in the fall of 1933. He frequently' discussed with Mr. Terry his hopes and plans for a permanent home at Virginia Beach. He stated to Mr. Terry (as well as to others) that his health had been much improved by the climate there.

In the latter part of 1933 he told Mr. Terry that Mrs. Hayes had finally consented to make her permanent home at Virginia Beach, and he requested Mr; Terry to obtain for him a building site in order that he might erect a residence thereon. A satisfactory lot was acquired through Mr. Terry, and the title thereto was taken in the name of Mrs. Hayes. After the lot had been purchased Mr. Terry drew the plans for the house and conferred with the contractor. In discussing the character of the residence to be constructed Father Hayes impressed on Mr. Terry and the contractor that he intended the house as his permanent home.

The building site selected by Father Hayes and his wife was purchased from one W. F. Crockett, after protracted negotiations. When the contract had been signed Father Hayes told Mr. Crockett that Mrs. Hayes had finally agreed to a home at Virginia Beach, and that he would be proud of and glad to live in his own home there.

[553]*553The contract for the erection of the house was let to Conrad Brothers, contractors in the city of Norfolk. Father Hayes had many conferences with Mr. Arthur Conrad of this firm relative to the details of the house. To Conrad’s suggestion that the price might be reduced by substituting cheaper materials, he replied that he was building this house, not for rental purposes, but for his own home, and that he wanted it so constructed that it could be occupied by him throughout the entire year.

The plans finally agreed on contemplated a substantial two-story house and double garage. It was to be heated by hot water with an oil furnace. Downstairs there were a living room, center hall, dining room, breakfast room, kitchen, furnace room, and lavatory.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.E. 804, 169 Va. 548, 1938 Va. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guilfoil-v-hayes-va-1938.