Newsome v. Scott

108 S.E.2d 369, 200 Va. 833, 1959 Va. LEXIS 175
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 4, 1959
DocketRecord 4905
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 108 S.E.2d 369 (Newsome v. Scott) 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
Newsome v. Scott, 108 S.E.2d 369, 200 Va. 833, 1959 Va. LEXIS 175 (Va. 1959).

Opinions

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The purpose of this litigation instituted by appellee, Frances J. Scott, and others, against Clarence Rudolph Pearson Newsome, William P. Newsome, and others, is to construe the will of Merritt Johnson, deceased, and determine the ownership of property devised and bequeathed under its fourth clause.

Merritt Johnson, 72 years old, died in 1918 possessed of personal property and real estate. In clause 1 of his will, executed on February 22, 1912, he made provision for his wife, and after bequeathing and devising a specific sum of money and a designated parcel of real estate by clauses 2 and 3, he disposed of the residue of his estate, real and personal, in clause 4 which follows:

“4—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.”

Testator was survived by his wife, Sophronia, now deceased, and two children, Ruth Johnson (at times called Linnie Ruth Johnson), who married William H. Johnson on June 14, 1906,. and Violet Merritt Johnson, who married Wiliam P. Newsome on June 19, 1929, as his heirs at law. Wher estator’s will was executed, the respective ages of his daughters 1 .h and Violet, were twenty-five and eight years, and when he di Ruth was thirty-one and Violet fifteen years old.

[835]*835Ruth Johnson and her husband, William H. Johnson, are both deceased, but they had ten children, including Frances J. Scott, and all of them now survive except William H. Johnson, Jr. The record does not disclose how many of these ten children were bom before the death of testator, but the probabilities are that some were born before and some after his death. William H. Johnson,. Jr., who died in November, 1953, was survived by five children, but it is not stated whether he died testate or intestate.

No children were born to Violet and William P. Newsome, but on the 5th day of September, 1950, thirty-two years after the death of Merritt Johnson, they adopted a child who was then twenty years of age. Violet died intestate on June 7, 1955, survived by her husband, William P. Newsome, and their adopted son, Clarence Rudolph Pearson Newsome.

The dominant questions presented are: (a) upon the death of Violet, did her adopted son become entitled by inheritance from her to the fee in the property bequeathed and devised under the fourth clause of testator’s will, or are the children of Ruth Johnson and her husband, William H. Johnson, now entitled to the fee in the property as devisees under that clause of the will, and (b) whether or not William P. Newsome is entitled to curtesy in the real estate.

The court decreed that “(1) under the fourth clause of the said will providing 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,’ the words ‘without heir’ as used by the testator did not include a child by adoption; (2) Violet Merritt Johnson Newsome took a defeasible fee under the fourth clause of said will which was terminated by her death without issue or heir of her body; (3) upon the death of Violet Merritt Johnson Newsome, the children of William H. Johnson and Ruth Johnson took the gift over, a fee simple estate, as an executory devise, subject to the life estate of William P. Newsome bi the curtesy; and (4) William P. Newsome is entitled to an estate by curtesy in the real estate passing under the said fourth clause of the will except such as has been sold under decree of court or conveyed by William P. Newsome and Violet Merritt Johnson Newsome to third parties.”

Appellant, Clarence Rudolph Pearson Newsome, in asserting that he is now entitled to the property, invokes the broad and inclusive [836]*836language of § 63-357, Code 1950, and § 63-358, 1958 Cum. Supp., Code 1950, (Acts 1954, ch. 489, p. 583) in effect when Violet Merritt Johnson Newsome died. Section 63-357 declares that the adopted child shall “* # * be to all intents and purposes, the child of the person or persons so adopting him. * # *” Under § 63-358 it is provided 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 * #

He insists that as he, the adopted child of Violet, was living when she died, she did not “die without heir” within the meaning and intent of the will and statute which he says must be read and construed together.

In Dickenson v. Buck, 169 Va. 39, 192 S. E. 748, decided in 1937, and relied upon by appellant, the then applicable adoption statute provided that the adopted child shall “be to all intents and purposes, the child and heir at law of the persons so adopting him or her * * * entitled to all the rights and privileges and subject to all the obligations of a child of such person begotten in lawful wedlock * * There, upon construing a provision in the will of Thomas T. Dickenson, which devised certain land “to my son Henry P. Dickenson, for his life, and after his death to his legal heirs * * *,” we held that a child adopted by Henry P. Dickenson after the death of testator, Thomas T. Dickenson, was Henry P. Dickenson’s “legal heir” under the statute and “was the person described in the will and intended by the testator as the remainderman.” (Emphasis added.)

Henry P. Dickenson died without issue and left surviving his adopted son and a sister, and the significance of the use by testator of the words “legal heirs” to identify the remaindermen who were to take under the will is made evident by the opinion. In the course of the opinion it is said:

“We deem it important to emphasize the fact in this particular case that the right to inherit as heirs at law under the statutes of descents and distributions is not involved. * * *
###*###
“# * #[T]he appellant was the sole heir at law or ‘legal heir’ of Henry P. Dickenson, the foster father and life tenant at the time of the latter’s death. Being such, he necessarily was the remainder-[837]*837man intended by the testator to take the estate, if we give effect and meaning to the clear and unambiguous language of the testator, which, of course, we must, do.” (At page 44.)

In McFadden v. McNorton, 193 Va. 455, 69 S. E. 2d 445, (likewise cited by appellant), decided after the 1942 amendment of the adoption statute, which provided that the adopted child shall inherit “according to the statutes of descent and distribution, from and through” the parents by adoption, we held that the right of the child to inherit was determined by the law in effect at the time of the death of the person from whom the inheritance was claimed, and under the phrase “from and through” the adopted child inherited from the sister of his adopting parent.

Here, however, the primary question is not whether an adopted child inherits from collateral relatives of its adopting parents but whether or not by the language used testator intended that the phrase, “but if she should die without heir,” include an adopted child.

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Newsome v. Scott
108 S.E.2d 369 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 S.E.2d 369, 200 Va. 833, 1959 Va. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newsome-v-scott-va-1959.