Hooper v. Wood

125 S.E. 350, 97 W. Va. 1, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 156
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 125 S.E. 350 (Hooper v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hooper v. Wood, 125 S.E. 350, 97 W. Va. 1, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 156 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

*3 Lively, Judge:

The object of this suit is' to obtain a decree to set aside as invalid the will of John R. Seal, and to distribute his estate as if he had died intestate.

Plaintiff Hooper is trustee in a bankruptcy proceeding in which it was ascertained that Gordon S. Seal, the only child of testator, was a bankrupt; and the trustee and Gordon S. Seal claiming that the latter inherited the estate of his father under the laws of descent and distribution, filed the bill, both joining therein as plaintiffs, to declare the will of J. R. Seal null and void on the ground that it violates the rule against perpetuities.

The appraised value of the estate is $175,433.75, consisting of a house and lot in the city of Charleston valued at $8,500; a one-fifth undivided interest in a tract of land in Payette county appraised at $5,456; and the remainder in stocks, bonds and other personal property. After payment of the debts there appeared to be in the hands of the executors, at the time of the entry of the decree complained of, personal property amounting to $92,579.04, together with the house and lot and the one-fifth interest in the real estate in Payette county. It appears that there are claims of the federal government for income taxes, and obligations of the testator as endorser or surety, all of which if successfully asserted will materially lessen the assets. The annual income derived from the property for the year preceding the entry of the decree was $3,808.97.

Testator left a widow, a second wife, with whom he was married in the year 1916, and his son Gordon S. Seal, a son of his first marriage, who was also married and had two children, John Ridley Seal, ten years of age, and Jane Anne Seal, seven years of age. The wife, Julia W. Seal, the son Gordon S. Seal, his wife Inez, and his two children named, and Mrs. Rosa B. Plournoy, a sister of testator’s first wife, are. the recipients of testator’s bounty under the will Plaintiffs in substance assert that the entire will is invalid because it violates the rule against perpetuities, and all of the bequests therein are a part of the scheme and plan of the testator so intimately interwoven and interdependent that *4 all of the provisions moist fall if the will be violative of the rule against perpetuities. Defendants assert that the will does not violate the rule against perpetuities and is valid in every respect; and they assert that if that portion of the will which puts off the vesting and distribution of the estate to a period which would violate the rule against perpetuities, yet the bequests to the widow Julia, and to Mrs. Flournoy are separable therefrom, are valid, and those provisions and bequests should remain intact and should be carried out as a dominant intent and purpose of the testator.

The will, dated October 2, 1919, devises and bequeaths the entire property of testator to Walter S. Wood and Geo. W. McClintie, Trustees, to hold, use, manage and collect the income therefrom for the purposes: (1) paying taxes, upkeep and expenses of administration; (2) paying to the widow, Julia, $200 a month during her natural life, to cease at her death or if she should marry again; directing that she shall have complete possession, occupancy and control of the Bradford street house and lot, in Charleston, for her natural life and during her widowhood; (3) payment of $100 per month to Gordon S. Seal during his natural life, directing that it shall be paid to him and none other and that the trustees shall not recognize any sale or assignment of this monthly stipend by him. This bequest, in the nature of a spendthrift trust, is directed to> be paid out of any further income from the estate after the payments directed to be made to the widow. (4) Power is given to the trustees to sell any of the property and reinvest the proceeds in securities, the character of which is named; (5) 'out of any further income after the payments above set out the trustees are empowered to educate and support the grandchildren or any other children thereafter bom to Gordon S. Seal; (6) to pay to Rosa B. Flournoy $25 per month during her life, and a reasonable proportion of. her funeral expenses; (7) should Gordon die before the testator the amount to be paid to him is directed to' be paid to his widow during widowhood; and should she die before the death of testator or that of Gordon, then the sums intended for him under the spendthrift trust shall be expended by the trustees for the support and edu *5 cation of Gordon’s children until the youngest shall have attained the age of thirty years; (8) in the .event of the death of Gordon’s children without descendants before Gordon’s death the income not otherwise provided is to be paid to Gordon during his natural life and then to his widow, Inez, should she survive, for the period of her natural life or until her remarriage; and should Gordon’s children die without descendants prior to his death then Gordon is given power to dispose of the estate by will; and if he does not exercise that power then the estate goes to those who would inherit under the laws; providing always that the trustees should retain ample property to pay the bequests provided for. Then follows a disposition of some oil paintings, personal articles and the household furniture, and direction to the trustees to pay $15 a year for the upkeep of two lots in a cemetery at Norfolk, in which are buried the testator’s first wife and parents; and a direction to the trustees to keep the house on Bradford street insured, and have it rebuilt in ease it burned, and keep it in good order and repair and expend such sums of money as may be necessary for that purpose out of his estate.

Item Four of the Will furnishes the basis of the controversy and deals with the devolution of the estate. It is as follows : '

“I, ‘J. R. Seal’, further will, devise and direct that after the death of the said Gordon S. Seal and when thereafter the youngest of his children shall have attained the age of thirty years, then the said trustees shall divide all the property herein devised to them between and among said children or to the survivor of such children or their descendants unless the said Julia W. Seal shall then be living and shall not have remarried and the said Inez Seal shall then be living and shall not have remarried and unless the said Rosa B. Flournoy shall then be living. In such event, the trustees shall retain ample property so as to guarantee to each of said persons the income herein directed to be paid to them for the respective periods herein-before fixed. I further will and direct that the said trustees shall.when the events happen upon which the payment of said sums of money shall cease as *6 herein directed,-divide the amount of property so-retained by them among the said children or the survivors of them as hereinbefore directed as to the other property.”

Do' the provisions of Item, Four above quoted violate the rule against perpetuities and render the will invalid in toto 7 The provisions of the will are not complex. It was the intention and purpose of the testator to amply provide for his wife by giving her the occupancy and control of the dwelling house on Bradford street during her life or until her remarriage, and the sum of $200.00 per month during her natural life • or until her remarriage. • This appears to be the first thought of the testator.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.E. 350, 97 W. Va. 1, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooper-v-wood-wva-1924.