Merson v. Wood

117 S.E.2d 661, 202 Va. 485, 1961 Va. LEXIS 133
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 16, 1961
DocketRecord 5174
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 117 S.E.2d 661 (Merson v. Wood) 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
Merson v. Wood, 117 S.E.2d 661, 202 Va. 485, 1961 Va. LEXIS 133 (Va. 1961).

Opinions

[486]*486I’Anson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a declaratory judgment proceeding filed by P. M. Wood and J. W. Frazier, appellees herein, against Betty Jane Wood Merson, the appellant, to construe the will of Annie C. Leece, deceased, and determine the ownership of the property devised by the second item of her will, which reads as follows:

“Item, 2nd. I give and bequeath to my son John S. Leece all of my land which I am now in possession of and on which I now live during his lifetime, and if he dies without heirs, I devise that the land be then sold and divided between my three Grandchildren Carrie A. Leece, Geneve A. Wood, and Henry H. Wood, Carrie A. Leece to receive one half of the purchase money and Geneva A. Wood and Henry H. Wood the other half equally between them.”

The court below held: (1) that the phrase “dies without heirs” used by the testatrix did not include a child of John S. Leece by adoption; (2) that John S. Leece took a defeasible fee under “Item, 2nd” of the will which was terminated by his death without issue or heir of the body; (3) that upon the death of John S. Leece, the testatrix’s grandchildren, Carrie A. Leece, Geneva A. Wood and Henry H. Wood, took the gift over, a fee simple estate as executory devisees; and (4) that P. M. Wood and J. W. Frazier were the owners of the property as grantees of the three grandchildren.

The testatrix, Annie C. Leece, died in 1912 after having executed her last will and testament on July 27, 1907. At the time of the execution of the will, and on the date of the death of the testatrix, she had three living children, two of whom were the parents of the three grandchildren named in the second item of the will. John S. Leece, her third child, was married but had no children.

In 1949 John S. Leece, who was then 78 years of age, and Clyde Leece, his wife, adopted Betty Jane Wood, an adult 24 years of age, who was their great niece and the great granddaughter of Annie C. Leece, the testatrix, by an order entered in the County Court of Sullivan County, Tennessee. Betty Jane Wood’s name was not changed by the adoption order, but she later became Betty Jane Wood Merson, presumably through marriage, although the record does not show it. The petition for adoption sets out inter alia that John S. Leece was possessed of a farm (the property referred to in the testatrix’s will) and that he and his wife wished to adopt Betty Jane Wood so she could inherit the property.

[487]*487John S. Leece died intestate on the 26th day of March, 1958, leaving no issue or heir of the body, and his wife predeceased him.

In 1940 Geneva A. Wood and Henry Wood conveyed their contingent remainders in the property devised by the testatrix to P. M. Wood, one of the appellees; and in 1941 Carrie A. Spence (formerly Carrie A. Leece) conveyed her contingent remainder to J. W. Frazier, the other appellee.

The crucial question involved is whether or not the appellant, the adopted daughter of John S. Leece, is an heir of the latter within the meaning of that term as used in Carrie A. Leece’s will. The answer depends on the intent of the testatrix, which must be arrived at from the language used in all of the provisions of her will.

The appellant contends that she is entitled to inherit the property under the broad and inclusive language of § 63-357, Code of 1950, and § 63-358, Code of 1950, as amended, 1960 Cum. Supp., Acts of 1954, ch. 489, p. 58'3, which was the law in force and effect at the death of John S. Leece.

Section 63-357 declares that an adopted child “shall * * # be, to all intents and purposes, the child of the person or persons so adopting him * # #.” Section 63-358, as amended, provides that: “For the purpose of descent and distribution, a legally adopted child shall inherit, according to the statutes of descent and distribution, from and through the parents by adoption * * * and shall not inherit from the natural parents # # *.”

The appellant says that since she is the adopted child of John S. Leece, whom she survived, he did not die “without heirs” within the meaning and language of the will and the statutes, which must be construed together.

In Dickenson v. Buck, 169 Va. 39, 192 S. E. 748, relied on by the appellant, the testator, Thomas T. Dickenson, devised certain lands to his son, Henry Dickenson, for his life, and after his death to his “legal heirs.” This Court held that a child adopted by Henry Dickenson after the death of the testator was the “legal heir” of Henry Dickenson under the adoption statute and was “the person described in the will and intended by the testator as the remainder-man.” It was also emphasized in the opinion that the right to inherit as an heir at law under the statutes of descent and distribution was not involved in this particular case since it is the intention of the testator that controls.

The language of the will in Dickenson v. Buck, supra, shows it [488]*488was the intention of the testator to provide for his son during his lifetime and at his death his “legal heirs”, who were to be ascertained under the effective statute dealing with the succession of property, were to take the remainder, since there was no restriction, limitation or gift over found in the will. While on the other hand, the language in the will of Annie Leece does provide for a contingent remainder or gift over to her three named grandchildren if her son, John S. Leece, “dies without heirs.”

The question before us is not the right of an adopted daughter to inherit under the adoption statute by and through her adoptive parents, but simply a question of the testatrix’s intention as to those who are to share in her estate. What, then, was the testatrix’s intent when she used the phrase “if he [her son] dies without heirs”, construed in the light of the overall context of the will?

Our conclusion in this case is controlled by the recent case of Newsome v. Scott, 200 Va. 833, 108 S. E. 2d 369. There we construed a clause in the will of Merritt Johnson which provided that: “The remainder of my estate I give to Violet Merritt Johnson, but if she should die without heir, then I want it to go to the children of Wm. H. Johnson and Ruth Johnson but to no others except the children of William H. Johnson and Ruth Johnson.” No children were born to Violet Merritt Johnson Newsome and her husband, William P. Newsome, but thirty-two years after the death of the testator the Newsomes adopted a child who was at that time twenty years of age. Upon the death of Violet Merritt Johnson Newsome the adopted son asserted that he was entitled to the property devised as an heir of Violet Merritt Johnson Newsome. We held that the statute of descent and distribution is not a canon of presumptive intent and it cannot be employed for that purpose as a substitute for the testator’s intent; that the term “heir,” when used in a will, is subject to different meanings dependent upon the overall context of the will, and is to be construed so as to give effect to the intent of the testator; and that “the context of the will and use of the phrase ‘die without heir’, with a limitation over upon the happening of the contingency to grandchildren of testator and ‘no others’ by plain implication show intent to employ the words ‘die without heir’ in the sense of ‘heir of the body’ or ‘issue,’ ” and does not include a child by adoption.

In Garber v. Saufley, 131 Va.

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Bluebook (online)
117 S.E.2d 661, 202 Va. 485, 1961 Va. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merson-v-wood-va-1961.