Madden v. Madden's Ex'ors

2 Va. 377
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 15, 1830
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Va. 377 (Madden v. Madden's Ex'ors) 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
Madden v. Madden's Ex'ors, 2 Va. 377 (Va. 1830).

Opinion

CARR, J.

Upon these appeals from interlocutory decrees, so much of the cause only is before the court as the chancellor has acted upon: this, I think, has been the constant course of the court. The chancellor, then, has decided, in the first place, that Nancy Madden had no title to or right in the slave Lucinda, but as a legatee of her father and assignee of other legatees ; that Mrs. Madden the testator’s widow, took, under his will, not an absolute prop[366]*366erty in the slaves included in the moveable property thereby bequeathed, but only a life estate. The inquiry is as to the meaning of the bequest: it is a pure question of intention. There are no technical words •or forms of expression used in the will. It is, evidently, the production of a plain man, who, though he understood very well what he meant to say, and was able to express himself quite intelligibly, knew nothing of legal forms or legal phrases. To ascertain his meaning, 'we must not look to treatises on wills, or to adjudged cases, but simply to the words he has used. There were but two slaves included in this bequest of the moveable property, one a man of trivial value, the other a female (the mother of - Lucinda) who died shortly after. the testator. If Lucinda was the property of Mrs. Madden, it is because her mother was given to her byr the will. “I desire the moveable property of every description, after the death of my wife, shall be sold, and the money divided among my five daughters.” This sentence it is impossible to misunderstand, or to have *a doubt about: it expresses the clear will of the testator on two points, 1. that all his personal estate was to be sold for the benefit of his daughters, and 2. that this sale was to take place after the death of his wife. This (as lawyers know) would have given his wife a life estate in the personal property, by implication; but the testator probably had no idea, that a direction to sell after his wife’s death, would imply an estate for life to her; and if he did know it, he chose not to rest it on implication, but to give it to her expressly. He therefore adds, “after all my just debts are paid, my desire is, that all my moveable property, shall be at the intire disposal of my wife.” Now, is there any thing in this provision, incompatible with the first? If the testator had stopped here, does not every one see his meaning at a glance? At my wife’s death this property shall be sold ; but till then, she shall have the intire disposal of it. Is there any thing in these words “intire disposal” which, of necessity, and in the teeth of the preceding sentence, vests the absolute property in the wife? They are not technical words, to which a fixed meaning is attached, and that so well known, that we must suppose the testator so used them. They are such words as may well be explained, and their operation either enlarged or restricted, by the context. Thus, the direction being given to sell the property at the wife’s death, the intire disposition given her, means the free use and enjoyment, the uncontroled possession and ownership, until her death, but such a possession, ownership and disposal, as may leave the property to be sold at her death. This, I say, would seem to me the plain construction, if the testator had stopped at the sentence giving his wife the intire disposal: but he immediately adds, “On her decease, the same to be disposed of as above mentioned;” thus repeating his favorite wish of a sale and division among his daughters, and making, as he no doubt thought, “assurance doubly sure.” Small indeed, would seem to be the worth of language, or the security of wills, if an idea thus clearly expressed, thus solicitously recurred to, and anxiously inculcated, can be ^explained away. It is impossible to suppose, that the testator meant by the gift to the wife, to defeat and destroy the sale directed at her death; and yet he must so have meant, if he meant to give her the intire and absolute interest in the property. Indeed, it is not, I believe, contended that the testator meant to vest in his wife the absolute property, but that he intended to give her a life estate, with an absolute power of disposition, leaving only so much to be sold at her death, as should be undisposed of by her, and that, by consequence, this power of disposal vested in her the absolute interest in the' whole, whether disposed of or not, and rendered the direction to sell at her death void, not by force of the testator’s intention, but by operation of law. This argument concedes, 1. that the testator intended to give his wife only a life estate; and 2. that he intended a sale of the property left at her death. But, it is said, he meant to give her an absolute power of disposal of the property, and this converts the estate for life into an absolute estate, and destroys the intention to give it for life, and the direction to sell after her death. Thus, while we are looking for intention alone, we suffer one doubtful phrase, “intire disposal,” a phrase having nothing technical, no settled meaning, but liable to be enlarged or restricted bj' the context, to overrule and destroy the settled wish and will of the testator, twice expressed in words as clear as light, viz. that his moveable property of every description should be sold at the death of his wife, and the monejr divided among his daughters. To such a construction I can never assent. I am clearly of opinion, that.the testator meant to give his wife, and has given her, a life estate in the moveable property, with a power of disposal commensurate with that estate; and at her death the property to be sold, and the money divided among his daughters. I agree, therefore, with the chancellor, that the testator’s widow Mrs. Madden, had only a life estate in the slaves in question, and could give no more by her deed to the appellant. His other positions, that an executor cannot make a valid gift of his testator’s property, and that the appellant can have no claim *to remuneration for her trouble and expense in rearing this slave, against her co-legatees in remainder, seem to me indisputably correct; indeed, they have hardly been contested. And these are the only principles declared, the only points of law decided, by the decree.

GREEN, J.

The provisions of the will of Mabra Madden the elder, directing that his moveable property of every description, after the death of his wife, should be sold, and the proceeds divided between his daughters, and that, after the payment of his debts, all his moveable property should be at the intire disposal of his wife, and on her decease the same should be disposed of as before mentioned, are so inconsistent, that they would, if taken literally, utterly destroy each other. Such a construction ought not to be admitted, if by anj’- other, [367]*367consistent with the probable intention of the testator, the provisions can be considered as each modifying the other, without destroying their whole effect.

The judgment of the court below upon this will, was 1. that it gave only a life estate to the widow: 2. that such a gift with a power of disposition of articles, such as grain, the use of which consists in its consumption, is absolute, and a limitation over ineffectual: 3. that although money may not, generally, fall within this principle, yet the strong language of this will, that after the debts were paid, all the testator’s moveable property should be at the intire disposal of his wife, excluded the notion of her accountability for money, or for any articles except such as are susceptible of being used and returned in kind.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Va. 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madden-v-maddens-exors-va-1830.