Hope Natural Gas Co. v. Shriver

83 S.E. 1011, 75 W. Va. 401, 1914 W. Va. LEXIS 279
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 83 S.E. 1011 (Hope Natural Gas Co. v. Shriver) 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
Hope Natural Gas Co. v. Shriver, 83 S.E. 1011, 75 W. Va. 401, 1914 W. Va. LEXIS 279 (W. Va. 1914).

Opinions

POEEENBARGER, JUDGE:

The decree complained of on this appeal was pronounced on a hill in the nature of a bill of interpleader, filed by the holder of leases on valuable gas lands, praying a construction of the will and codicil of -Solomon IT. Shriver, the lessor, who died testate, after the lands had been developed and were yielding large gas rentals. At the time of the. institution of the suit, the operator under the leases held, for distribution, only $750.00 of rentals; hut the properties involved are likely to yield them to the extent of many thousands of dollars. Devisees whose contentions as to the construction of the will were overruled in the decree have appealed from it.

The will was executed, Jany. 12, 1906, and the codicil, Apr. 22, 1907. Being childless, the testator bestowed his estate upon his nephews, Leroy R. Taylor and Henry D. Shriver, the latter of whom he described as his adopted son, and their children. His widow for whom' no provision was made in the will and who seems never to have claimed an,y of the estate, being now dead, the devisees under the will are the only interested persons.

After having provided for payment of his debts and funeral expenses and cost of administration, the testator made the following disposition of his estate: “It is my will that after payment of all debts &e, as provided in the first clause of my will, then all my estate both real and personal shall be taken and held for life by my nephew Leroy R. Taylor and my adopted son Henry D. Shriver in equal portions, that is to say one half thereof shall go for life to the said Leroy R. Taylor for life and the other half to the said Henry D. Shriver for life. At the death of the said Henry D. Shriver the share .of my estate hereby willed and devised to him shall go to his children share and share alike. At the death of the said Leroy R. Taylor the share of my estate hereby willed and devised to him for life shall go to his children if he shall leave a child or children. But if said Leroy R. Taylor shall die without children and the said Henry D. Shriver shall survive him then the share of my estate so [404]*404willed and devised to said Leroy R. Taylor for his life shall go to the said Henry D. Shriver to be taken and held by him along with the estate above willed to him for life the whole to be held by him for and during his lifetime and then to his children, share and share alike.

It is my will that my real estate shall not be sold until after the death of the said Leroy R. Taylor and Henry D. Shriver, but it shall be held by them in manner and form as above and at their deaths respectfully shall descend and pass as above "herein provided to their children.

And I hereby will, devise and bequeath all my estate of which I may die seized or possessed as above. ’7

Formal parts omitted, the codicil reads as follows: "I Solomon H. Shriver of Wadestown, W. Va. do hereby make this my first codicil to my last will and testament, which last will bears date on the 12th day of January, 1906, and is on the same sheet of paper on which this codicil is written. This Codicil to said will is as follows that is to say: Since my said will was made my said nephew Leroy Taylor has had a child born unto him and it is now my will that my estate willed and devised to him and my said nephew Henry D. Shriver shall after my decease be taken and held by them for life and then to their children in manner and form as the same is in and by said will devised and bequeathed, except that after the death of both the said Leroy Taylor and Henry D. Shriver, then all of said estate real and personal shall go to the children of said Leroy Taylor and Henry D. Shriver per capita, or share and share alike, the real estate in fee and the personalty absolutely. In all other respects my said last will and testament is to stand and the same is hereby reaffirmed, as and for my last will except only in so far as the same is herein and hereby changed and altered.7 7

At the date of the will, Leroy Taylor had no children, but a child, Martha Virginia Taylor, was born to him, March 16, 1907. Henry D. Shriver had children at the date of the will, and now has five. Leroy Taylor died, Oct. 11, 1910, and the testator, Oct, 30. 1912, without issue. He had taken Leroy Taylor and Henry D. Shriver into his family in their infancy, and reared them to manhood, but never adopetd either of them in the manner prescribed by the statute. The [405]*405approximate value of his estate, at the time of his death, was $300,000.00. The $750.00 of rental money in the hands of the lessee, at the date of the filing of its bill, was one half of the accumulated rentals, the other half having been' paid to Henry D. Shriver. Upon his claim of title to the remaining half and a like claim of the infant daughter of Leroy Taylor thereto, the lessee refused payment to either, until the right to it should be judicially determined, and brought this suit for that purpose, as well as to determine the question of title to future rentals to arise under the leases. By its decree, the court awarded the $750.00 to Martha Virginia Taylor and adjudged and decreed that she took the title to one-half of all of the estate of which Solomon H. Shriver died seized and possessed, both real and personal.

In behalf of Henry D. Shriver, the doctrine of survivor-ship is invoked. The will and codicil are interpreted as having vested in Leroy Taylor and Henry D. Shriver a joint estate for their lives. If this assumption is well founded, he must prevail and the decree-is wrong. But the will, unaided by the codicil, manifestly did not create such an estate. It gave each of them an estate for life in one-half of the estate and then expressly provided, as to the half given Leroy Taylor, that, at his death, it should go to his child or children if any he should have; and, as to the other half given to Henry D. Shriver, that, at his death, it should go to his children. Though it did, in the first instance, give the whole estate to Taylor and Shriver for life, the gift was immediately qualified and explained thus: “that is to say one half thereof shall go to the said Leroy R. Taylor for life and the other half to the said Henry D. Shriver for life.” Such a gift so explained and limited does not create a joint estate. 2 Min. Inst. 401; Bla. Com. 180n; Hoxton v. Griffith, 18 Gratt. 574. This explanatory matter is not eliminated or nullified by any subsepuent provision of the original will. On the contrary, it is reaffirmed, in the clause inhibiting sale of the property, until after the death of both life tenants, in these words: “it shall be held by them in manner and'form as above and at their deaths respectively shall descend and pass as above herein provided to their children.”

The codicil, however, is the principal substructure of the [406]*406argument. It recites the birth of Taylor’s child and then repeatedly reaffirms the will in general, but makes this exception: “after the death of both the said Leroy Taylor and Henry D. Shriver, then all of said estate real and personal shall go to the children of said Leroy Taylor and Henry D. Shriver per capita, or share and share alike, the real estate in fee and the personalty absolute.”

Whatever the effect of this codicil may be, the occasion of the making thereof is perfectly clear. It was made slightly more than one month after the birth of Leroy Taylor’s child and recites the circumstance as the cause moving the execution thereof. This child had been provided for in the original will and would have taken, under it, just'what the decree complained of has given her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 S.E. 1011, 75 W. Va. 401, 1914 W. Va. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hope-natural-gas-co-v-shriver-wva-1914.