Miller's Adm'r v. Potterfield

11 S.E. 486, 86 Va. 876, 1890 Va. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 8, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 11 S.E. 486 (Miller's Adm'r v. Potterfield) 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's Adm'r v. Potterfield, 11 S.E. 486, 86 Va. 876, 1890 Va. LEXIS 55 (Va. 1890).

Opinion

Lewis, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was begun in the circuit court of Loudoun county by the administrator of Elizabeth Miller, deceased, for a construction of the will of Frederick Miller, the deceased husband of the plaintiff’s intestate, and to have the estate administered under the direction and supervision of the court.

Frederick Miller died in the county of Loudoun in the year 1877, seized and possessed of a house and lot containing about one and a half acres of land, .situate near the village of Lovettsville, in that county, and a small amount of personalty. His will, which was duly admitted to probate, bears date July 3, 1876, and contains the following clause:

“ I give and bequeath to my beloved wife, Elizabeth Miller, all my property, both real and personal, to have and to hold the same for her own use and benefit, and also to make such disposition of the same that she in her judgment may deem best, should it become necessary that a part or all should become necessary for the support of herself and William Garrett, wdio I desire should remain with her during her lifetime, and have such care and attention given him as he may need. After the death of said Elizabeth Miller, I will and devise that any and all property remaining unused shall be given to said William Garrett, to have and to use for his own benefit, or to make such disposition of as may be deemed best for his interests.”

The question to be determined is, whether, under this clause of the will, Elizabeth Miller, wdio survived her husband, took a fee simple in the real estate, and an absolute title to the personalty, as the circuit court- held, or whether she took a life estate only. The latter view is, we think, the correct one.

In support of the decree, the appellees rely upon the ease of May v. Joynes, 20 Gratt., 692, and other familiar cases in this [878]*878court of tliat class, beginning with Shermer v. Shermer, 1 Wash., 266, and coming down to Cole v. Cole, 79 Va., 251. But, without meaning to question the authority of those cases, we are of opinion they do not apply, and that the present case must be govered by its own circumstances. In each of those cases an absolute power of disposal was given to the first taker, which necessarily, according to a well settled and undisputed rule of law, rendered the limitation over repugnant and void. Thus, in May v. Joynes the testator gave the estate to his wife for life, but “ with full power to make sale of any part thereof, and to convey absolute titles to the purchasers, and use the purchase money for investment, or any purpose that she pleases, with only this restriction, that whatever remains at her death shall” be divided, etc. It was held that these words manifested a clear intent to give to the wife an absolute control over the estate, and consequently enlarged the life estate into an absolute estate. But no such power is given by the will under consideration in this case, and hence there is an obvious distinction between this case and the cases just referred to.

The will, as is by no means uncommon in cases of wills, is in artificially drawn; but, taking the whole of it together, it shows very clearly the intention of the testator. Like as was said by Judge Carr of the will construed in Madden v. Madden, 2 Leigh, 377, “there are no technical words or forms of expression iii it. It is evidently the production of a plain man, who, though he understood vei’y well what he meant to say, and was able to express himself quite intelligently, knew nothing of legal forms or phrases. To ascertain his meaning, we must not look to treatises on wills or to adjudged cases, but to the words he has used.”

In addition to the words, however, we may look to the surrounding circumstances—as, for example, the situation of the parties, the ties which connected the testator with the objects of his bounty, and the motives which probably influenced him in disposing of his property. Colton v. Colton, 127 U. S., 300; [879]*879Hatcher v. Hatcher, 80 Va., 169. And if we construe the will before us in this light, the intention of the testator, which has not inaptly been termed “the polar star of construction,” becomes too plain to be misunderstood.

As appears from the record, the testator died at an advanced age, leaving an aged widow, but- no child or descendant. William Garrett, was a person of weak mind, about forty years of age, and, as the will discloses, was an object of the testator’s anxious solicitude. In his early infancy h^had been taken by the testator and his wife, and reared in their family; and they not only furnished him with a home and supplied his moderate wants, but they bestowed upon him,, as the evidence shows, parental care .and affection as well. Although weak in mind,' he was strong in body, and capable of doing hard manual labor. He worked.the garden, cut wood, cultivated the lot, and did much other work about the house, such as cooking, washing, etc., and was occasionally employed as a farm hand in the neighborhood. In this way, independently of his services at home, he. earned from fifty to seventy-five dollars a year, which was received by the testator in his lifetime, and after his death by the widow. In fact, he was for years “ the main support” of the family, as he unquestionably was of the widow until her death.

It does not appear that the testator had any relatives of his own, or that there was any motive or reason on his ¡tart for wishing his property, under any circumstances, to go to his wife’s relations. If the latter ever rendered any service or showed any attention to the aged couple, the record does not disclose the fact. It does show, however, that the old people “would have gone to the poor-house” but for the help of Garrett, as their income from other sources was altogether inadequate for their maintenance and support. What, then, more natural than that the testator, in disposing of his property, should have selected, as an object of his bounty, the unfortunate, faithful and well-beloved Garrett? Indeed, the dictates [880]*880of humauity ancl justice alike required tliat lie should ;■ and we think he has effectually done so. The estate, however, was too small to be divided, so he left a life estate to the wife and a remainder to Garrett, making provision also for the latter during the lifetime of the former, and thus in all respects seeming to have been influenced by motives which may very reasonably be supposed to have operated with him.

At all events, his intention is too clearly manifested to be mistaken. The language of the will is, “I give and bequeath to my beloved wife all my property, both real and personal, to have and to hold the same for her own use and benefit.” blow, if the testator had stopped here, the widow, undoubtedly, would have taken an absolute estate. But the will proceeds as follows: “ and also to make such disposition of the same that she in her judgment may deem best, should it become necessary that a part or all should become necessary for the support of herself and William Garrett,’who I desire should remain with her during her lifetime, and have such care and attention given him as he may need.” This language restrains and qualifies that which precedes it, and confines, as it was obviously intended to confine, the power of disposal to the single ease mentioned—that is to say, it was intended the widow should have the use

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.E. 486, 86 Va. 876, 1890 Va. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millers-admr-v-potterfield-va-1890.