Murchison v. Wallace

159 S.E. 106, 156 Va. 728, 1931 Va. LEXIS 228
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 18, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 159 S.E. 106 (Murchison v. Wallace) 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
Murchison v. Wallace, 159 S.E. 106, 156 Va. 728, 1931 Va. LEXIS 228 (Va. 1931).

Opinion

Holt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This cause is an indirect sequent of Hentz v. Wallace’s Adm’r, 153 Va. 437, 150 S. E. 389. There a decree, which sustained the will of Mrs. Victoria B. Stevens Wallace and which admitted it to* probate, was approved.

In a codicil of date August '31, 1886, she made these provisions :

“I make this codicil to my will on this thirty-first day of August, 1886, directing; by this paper that should my husband A. Wellington Wallace die before me; the rest and residue of my estate, of which I may die seized, shall be divided into two parts, one part to go to the devisees of my said husband or his heirs at law; and the other half to be divided into two parts; one to go to Mrs. Roberta G. Newbold and her issue; and the other part to go to the devisees or heirs of my said husband; dated York, England.

“Victoria B. S. Wallace..

“I changed the word ‘directed’ to ‘directing’ in the fourth line.

“V. B. S. W.”

In conformity with the power thus given him, Judge Wallace, by will of date December 28, 1918, in item 8, said:

“In the codicil of the will of my wife dated on the 31st day of August, 1886, and executed by her in York, England, on the date thereof, being drawn and executed wholly in her own handwriting, she provided that in case of my death before hers that three-fourths of her estate should go to the devisees of my said husband or his heirs at law. I hereby designate said devisees to be the children of my deceased brothers, J. Gordon Wallace, Samuel Gordon Wallace, Charles Wallace, Howson H. Wallace, and my sister, Lucilla Carmichael, and if she should die before me her interest is to be divided between her son, J. Wallace Carmichael, and his two children, May Car[732]*732michael and George Carmichael. The division under this item 8th to- be in accordance with the statute of descent and distribution of Virginia. This is not nor to be included or referred to in any of my trust deeds, present or future, unless expressly so stated, but is to- be an express devise to- my heirs at law all of which I intend by this provision to include.”

Judge Wallace died on October 23, 1927, and thereafter, on December 14, 1927, Mrs. Wallace died. Neither of them had children.

The four brothers mentioned by Judge Wallace in item 8 of his will were all of his brothers who- died leaving descendants. As indicated, these four brothers were all dead when the will was made. Among them they left thirteen children, either living when Judge Wallace died or having previously died, leaving descendants, as.presently shown. His sister, Lucilla Carmichael, was living when he executed the will, but she predeceased him, and her son, an only child, J. Wallace Carmichael, predeceased her, leaving the petitioners surviving as his only children. Six of Judge Wallace’s nieces and nephews predeceased him, namely, Lucilla W. Yerby, who left two children; Kate Wallace Poindexter, who left two children; Michael Wallace, who left five children; J. Stansbury Wallace, who left two- children; Mary Gordon Wallace, who left one child; and, as already stated, J. Wallace Carmichael, who left two children. Also- one of his great-nieces predeceased him, namely, Bessie Poindexter, daughter of Kate Wallace Poindexter, above mentioned, who- left four children. Judge Wallace thus left surviving him, as the persons entitled to share in the property disposed of under item 8 of his will, either by direct designation therein or as claimants under persons so-designated, but dead when the will took effect, eight nephews and nieces, thirteen great-nephews and nieces and four great-great-nephews and nieces, or twenty-five- persons in all.

The following table shows just who- these heirs and distributees are, and their degree of kinship to- Judge Wallace:

[733]*733I. J. Gordon Wallace, a deceased brother, who left—

(a) Samuel G. Wallace (living), of Richmond, Va.
(b) Gordon Wallace (living), of Richmond, Va.
(c) Lucilla W. Yerby (deceased), who left two children :
(1) Mrs. Victor Pierson (living), Spotsylvania county.
(2) Wallace Yerby (living), North Carolina.
(d) Kate Wallace Poindexter (deceased), leaving two children—
(1) Bessie Poindexter Taylor (deceased), leaving the following children:
a. Catherine Woodruff Taylor;
b. Leonora Taylor, infant twenty years of age;
c. William Woodruff Taylor, infant fifteen years of age;
d. Elizabeth Gordon Taylor, infant eleven years of age; all of whom live in Warren-ton, N. C.
(2) Gordon Poindexter (living), North Carolina.

II. Samuel Gordon Wallace, a deceased brother, who left:

(a) John H. Wallace (living), Stafford county.
(b) A. Hansford Wallace (living), Fredericksburg, Va.
(c) Samuel G. Wallace (living), Fredericksburg, Va.
(d) Bell Wallace Chichester (living), Stafford county.
(e) Michael Wallace (deceased), leaving the following children:
(1) Agnes Wallace, infant seventeen years of age;
(2) Mary Hansford Wallace, infant fifteen years of age;
(3) Katherine Wallace, infant thirteen years of age;
(4) Helene Wallace, infant ten years of age;
(5) Margaret Wallace, infant eight years of age, all of Stafford county, Va.

[734]*734III. Charles Wallace, a deceased brother, who left only one • child:

(a) Stansbury Wallace (deceased), leaving two children:
(1) Charles Wallace (living), Baltimore, Md.;
(2) Lillie Braxton Wallace (living), Fredericksburg, Va.

IV. Howson H. Wallace, a deceased brother, who left three children:

(a) H. Lewis Wallace, (living), Fredericksburg, Va.;
(b) Ellen Wallace Smith (living), Washington, D. C.;
(c) Mary Gordon Wallace Knox (deceased), leaving one child:
(1) Ellen Howson Knox (living), Baltimore, Md.

V. Lucilla Carmichael, a deceased sister, who had one child,

(a) Wallace Carmichael, who predeceased her, leaving two children:
(1) George Carmichael (living), New York city;
(2) May Carmichael Murchison (living), Wilmington, N. C.

In due course this cause came on to be heard on the report of Special Master Commissioner B. P. Willis. That report was approved by Judge Coleman in a written opinion, now a part of this record, and in accordance therewith he directed that this estate be distributed as follows:

(I) One-fourth to Roberta G. Newbold.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

South Carolina National Bank v. Copeland
149 S.E.2d 615 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1966)
SC NAT'L BANK OF CHARLESTON v. Copeland
149 S.E.2d 615 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1966)
Disney v. Wilson
57 S.E.2d 144 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1950)
Horne v. Horne
26 S.E.2d 80 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1943)
Johnson v. Kelly
198 S.E. 474 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1938)
Parrott Estate Co. v. McLaughlin
89 F.2d 188 (Ninth Circuit, 1937)
Ward v. Ottley
186 S.E. 25 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 S.E. 106, 156 Va. 728, 1931 Va. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murchison-v-wallace-va-1931.