Lucy v. Kelly

84 S.E. 661, 117 Va. 318, 1915 Va. LEXIS 39
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 11, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 84 S.E. 661 (Lucy v. Kelly) 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
Lucy v. Kelly, 84 S.E. 661, 117 Va. 318, 1915 Va. LEXIS 39 (Va. 1915).

Opinion

Kelly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The will of John S. Kelly gave to his wife, Indiana M. Kelly, one-half of all his real and personal estate, “as her. absolute property,” and the other half for and during her natural life, with remainder to his heirs and distributees in accordance with the provisions of the statute of descents and distributions. The real estate consisted of two separate tracts, one known as the home tract, estimated to contain 345 acres, and the other known as the Vaden tract, estimated to contain 481 acres.

This suit, which was brought by the widow against the heirs of John S. Kelly, involves, so far as we are concerned with it, a partition of the aforesaid lands. The [320]*320bill prays for partition in kind, if the lands be. susceptible of that sort of partition, and if not, then for a sale and proper division and disposition of the proceeds.

The decrees complained of resulted in an assignment of the home tract to Mrs. Kelly in fee, a salé of the Vaden tract and an allotment to her of a part of the proceeds as her- own money to make up her one-half absolute interest in the real estate; and the decrees contemplate further proceedings not as yet had under which she will be. secured a life estate or its equivalent in the balance of the purchase price of the Vaden tract, with remainder to the heirs. The other facts, so-far as necessary to an understanding of the questions arising on this appeal, will appear as we proceed.

The first error assigned is that the decree in the cause directing a sale of a portion of the real estate was premature and erroneous. The argument here made is that the shares of each of the parties to the suit should have been ascertained before any sale was ordered, and that a failure to have this done tended to sacrifice the property by discouraging bids which the parties would probably have made if they had known in advance what their interests were. A number of authorities were cited to support this contention, most of them, typified by Cole v. McRae, 6 Rand. (27 Va.) 644, and Horton v. Bond, 28 Gratt. (69 Va.) 815, dealing merely with the well established principle that a sale is premature if made before the liens on the property to be sold are ascertained and the order of their priority established. This principle is not' involved in the present case. The will fixed the interests of the parties, namely, one-half in fee to the widow and the other half to her for life, with the remainder to the heirs according to the statute of descents. The bill sets out in full the names of all the heirs and makes them parties defendant. There is no dispute as to the title or the interest of any party to the suit. Hence, it is clear that the case of Stevens v. [321]*321McCormick, 90 Va. 735, 19 S. E. 742, so strongly relied upon by counsel for appellants, which holds that a sale for partition is premature if made before the parties know how they stand with reference to the estate, has no application here. In that case there was a dispute as to the interests of the parties which the lower court reserved, and, with that question open, ordered a sale, which was held to be error. The distinction between the two cases is manifest.

The second and fourth assignments of error may be considered together. They embody in substance three propositions—first, that the report does not properly respond to the directions of the decree of reference; second, that from the record it does not satisfactorily appear that both tracts may not be partitioned as a whole and divided in kind; and, third, that the assignment to Mrs. Kelly of the home tract, and a sale of the Vaden tract and payment of part of the proceeds to her is a violation of the provisions of section 2564 of the Code, as that section is construed by this court in Jackson v. Jackson, 110 Va. 393, 69 S. E. 721.

Neither of these propositions can be sustained.

The pertinent directions of the decree appointing the commissioners were, “that the commissioners do proceed to go upon the lands, taking with them a competent surveyor, if necessary, and lay off and divide the said two tracts of land, having regard to quality and quantity, and assign one-half thereof to Indiana M. Kelly, to be held in fee simple, and the other half to her to be held by her for life; but if the said commissioners should find it impracticable to so divide the said land and should be of the opinion that the interest of all parties would be more prompted by a sale, they are to report the facts upon which their opinion is based to the court, and also what, in their opinion, is the fee simple value of each of said tracts.”

In response to this decree the commissioners reported that after a careful examination of the lands they fixed the [322]*322value of the home tract at $4,312.50, and of the Vaden tract at $9,620.00, a total of $13,932.50; that, therefore, they were required by the decree to assign Mrs. Kelly in fee simple land of the value of $6,966.25; that they assigned the home tract, valued as above, to Mrs. Kelly, leaving her entitled to land of the value of $2,653.75 from the Vaden tract; that they undertook to assign the same to her but came to the conclusion that this could not be done with justice to her and to the other parties interested, and therefore reported that it was best for all parties to sell the Vaden tract, pay Mrs. Kelly $2,653.75 out of the proceeds and invest the residue for her benefit for life. The report then proceeds to enumerate the reasons based upon facts stated by them which led the commissioners to their conclusions. Those reasons or reported facts need not be repeated here. It may be conceded that they are not entirely convincing in the absence of any actual knowledge of the lands, but supplemented by the actual.view and examination on the part of the commissioners who were the representatives of the court, they must, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, be taken as sustaining the conclusions reached in the report. This report was filed on October 28, 1913, and not confirmed until March 3, 1914; but the appellants did not offer any proof whatever to negative the findings of the commissioners, or to support the assertion that partition could be made in kind. The court followed the usual practice in partition suits. The report of the commissioners was, in all substantial respects, a compliance with the decree, and its findings, especially in the absence of evidence to the contrary, must be sustained. See McClanahan v. Hockman, 96 Va. 392, 31 S. E. 516, in which this court said: “Nor is the report of the commissioners defective for failure to place a valuation in money upon the lands, or any portion of them; nor will the court presume that partition of the respective tracts could have [323]*323been made separately, but, in the absence of evidence to the contrary will presume that the conclusions reached by the commissioners, and by them reported to the court, are true, and sufficient to warrant a decree in accordance with them.”

Nor do we think the report and decree confirming the same are in conflict with the decision in Jackson V. Jackson, supra. The estates of the parties and the action of the trial court in the case cited were quite different from those in the case on trial. The case cited merely held that in a per capita

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.E. 661, 117 Va. 318, 1915 Va. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucy-v-kelly-va-1915.