Miller v. Citizens Nat. Bank, Covington

60 S.E.2d 868, 191 Va. 297, 1950 Va. LEXIS 220
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 6, 1950
DocketRecord 3661, 3662
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 60 S.E.2d 868 (Miller v. Citizens Nat. Bank, Covington) 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
Miller v. Citizens Nat. Bank, Covington, 60 S.E.2d 868, 191 Va. 297, 1950 Va. LEXIS 220 (Va. 1950).

Opinion

Gregory, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

*299 The first case styled above, presented by record No. 3661, was a suit brought by the bank, executor, etc., against the Millers for the purpose of construing the will of Henry E. Miller, deceased. The second case of Citizens National Bank, etc. v. E. St. Clair Miller and Mildred Miller, presented by record No. 3662, was brought by a petition filed by the Millers against the bank, the purpose of which was to terminate a trust which the trial court held had been set up in said will for the benefit of the Millers.

The facts as outlined in the two records are not in dispute and are gathered from the pleadings and an agreed statement of facts. They are as follows: Henry E. Miller died testate in January, 1938. His will was made in 1931 and admitted to probate on February 4, 1938. The Citizens National Bank of Covington was nominated as executor ’ and duly qualified as such. At the time of the death of the testator his estate was estimated to be of the approximate value of $27,553, and at the time of the institution of this suit it was of the approximate value of. $75,000.

The pertinent portion of the will is as follows:

“SECOND, after the payment of such funeral expenses and debts, I give, devise, and bequeath all of my property both real and personal to my wife, Callie V. Miller for her fife time.
“THIRD, I direct at* the death of my wife, Callie V. Miller, that all of my property both real and personal be converted into cash as soon as practical and the proceeds be invested in sound securities.
“FOURTH, I direct that my executors, hereinafter named, to sell such bonds, so as to enable them to pay to each of my surviving heirs ($600.00) Six hundred dollars a year. This amount to be deducted from the principal sum of my estate.
“FIFTH, I bequeath all of the income derived from all of my property both real and personal to my wife, Callie V. Miller, for her life time.
*300 “SIXTH, At the death of my wife, Callie V. Miller, I direct that all the income, derived from any source, be equally divided among my surviving heirs.”

Callie V. Miller, the widow and life tenant, died on November 30, 1947. She and the testator were survived by two children who are the appellants here in record No. 3661. Soon after the death of the widow the executor exhibited its bill against E. St. Clair Miller and Mildred Miller, the sole surviving heirs and children of the testator, praying that the said will might be construed. The two children answered and joined in the prayer for a construction of the will. In their answer they contended that the will violated the rule against perpetuities and that the manifest intent of the testator was to provide a life estate for his widow with a vested remainder to them, and they also claimed that the fourth and sixth clauses of the will were repugnant, so that the sixth clause, being the later, should be given conclusive effect, and when so done they would take a fee simple estate after the death of the life tenant.

The court held, and we think correctly, that the will did not violate the rule against perpetuities or impose any restraint upon alienation. It also correctly held that the remainder created after the life estate of Callie V. Miller was a vested one in E. St. Clair Miller and Mildred Miller, the two children.

The court held, and we think erroneously, that it was the testator’s'intention by clause four to set up a trust for the benefit of his two children, they being his surviving heirs, and to allot to each of them, to be paid out of the corpus of the estate, the sum of $600 per year. This trust the court directed the executor to execute.

The court held that the sixth clause of the will, when read in connection with the whole will, did not carry a gift of the corpus of the estate, and that the will did not contain any irreconcilable clause.

An opinion was handed down which was made a part of *301 the record and which was carried into effect by the court’s decree.

There are three assignments of error. First, that the court erred in decreeing that the sixth clause of said will did not carry a gift of the corpus of the estate. The appellants insist that it gave to E. St. Clair Miller and Mildred Miller a fee simple absolute estate in the corpus upon the principle that a gift to one of the entire income and interest to be derived from an estate is a gift or grant of the fee, that it amounts to a devise of the property itself.

The second assignment is that the court erred in decreeing that the will did not contain any irreconcilable clauses.

The third assignment is that the fourth' clause is to be construed as a devise or bequest to each 6f the testator’s children of one-half of his estate, with the’ immediate possession and enjoyment thereof. ;

The will discloses that the testator, by clause. No. 2, gave his wife a life estate in all of his property, and that by clause No. 5 he gave her a life estate in all income to be derived from his property. By the third clause he directed that at the death of his wife all of his property should be converted into cash and the cash invested in sound securities, and under clause No. 4 the executors were directed “to sell such bonds so as to enable them to pay to each of my surviving heirs $600 a year” out of the principal of the estate. And clause No. 6, after the death of the life tenant, is a clear devise or bequest of all of the income derived from any source to the two surviving heirs who are the children of the testator.

Counsel for the executor maintains that it is true as an abstract rule of construction, a gift of rents, profits or income, without limitation as to time or duration, is a gift of the corpus. However, he maintains that this rule of construction is not applicable here because the testator directs the payment of $1,200 per year out of the corpus and that this alone fixes the time and duration, to-wit: “For the lifetime of the appellants or until the corpus is *302 extinguished by the annual payments of $1,200.” The difficulty with this contention is that clause No. 4 does not provide that the payments are for the life of E. St. Clair Miller and Mildred Miller, nor does it provide that they shall continue until all of the corpus is extinguished, and we cannot read into the clause such provisions, for under the clause there is no limitation as to time and there is no gift over in case of the death of either of the children of the testator. If death should intervene and take away either one or both of the children of the testator before the corpus should be exhausted what remained would not go to the heirs of the testator because he, by his will, manifests that he did not desire to die intestate as to the corpus of his estate or any part thereof. In such event the residue of the corpus would go to the heirs, distributees or transferees of the child so dying.

It is interesting to note that nowhere in the will is there an express gift over of any remainder.

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.E.2d 868, 191 Va. 297, 1950 Va. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-citizens-nat-bank-covington-va-1950.