Nicklin v. Downey

132 S.E. 735, 101 W. Va. 320, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 185
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1926
DocketNo. C. C. 368.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 132 S.E. 735 (Nicklin v. Downey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicklin v. Downey, 132 S.E. 735, 101 W. Va. 320, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 185 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

The sufficiency of the bill is the sole question certified. Does the bill state a cause for relief in equity ?

Emma C. Bartgis died testate in 1923, survived by her husband (defendant John E. Bartgis), a brother, plaintiff Charles Ullum, by two nephews, Ward and Lawrence Nicklin, and by two nieces, Lula Shriver and Viola Edwards, the last four (nephews and nieces) being children of a deceased sister of testatrix. Charles Ullum and the four children of the deceased sisters claiming to be heirs at law file the bill claiming an interest in the estate. They exhibit the will in which the testatrix directed her debts to be paid, then gave to her husband, John E. Bartgis, a life estate in all her property, nominated W. M. Downey and her husband as executors, and directed the surviving executor, upon the death of her husband, to reduce the estate to cash and pay certain legacies amounting in all to approximately $2,000.00. The fourth paragraph provides: “All the balance of my residuary estate I give, will and bequeath to the Bank of Martinsburg, a corporation, of Martinsburg, West Virginia, Nelson B. O’Neil and Harry Grove, or survivors, to be held in trust by them and used and applied in accordance with my expressed wish and direction as communicated to them.” The bill designates the real estate to which testatrix had legal and equitable title at the time of her death, but plaintiffs say they are not advised as to the personal estate, if there was any. It is averred that Downey duly qualified as executor, but no appraisal of the personal estate has been made. Plaintiffs assert that because *322 the beneficiaries of the trust created by the fourth paragraph of the will above quoted, are not named, and cannot be ascertained from the will itself, they (plaintiffs) are the beneficiaries of the residuary estate, and are entitled to have the legal title conveyed to them by the executor and trustees. They say that there are three tracts or parcels of real estate any one of which is amply sufficient to pay off the legacies named and all debts and charges of any character against the estate, even if there be no personal estate, and they ask that only enough of the property be converted into cash sufficient to pay the legacies, debts and costs of administration, and the remainder be held in kind for them. The husband, the executor, and the three trustees named are made defendants. They pray for an accounting by the executor; for a construction of the will; application of the personal estate to the discharge of debts, charges and legacies; that plaintiffs be declared beneficiaries of the trust imposed in the three trustees; that the executor be instructed to sell no more of the real estate than is necessary to pay the debts, charges and legacies; and that the legal title to the remainder be transferred to plaintiffs in the proper proportions, as their interests may appear, subject to the life estate of John E. Bartgis; and for general relief.

A supplemental bill was filed, after the demurrer of defendants to the original bill was argued, in which it is averred that in course of the argument and in the brief filed by defendants in support of their demurrer it was intimated, if not actually stated, that the directions referred to in the 4th paragraph of the will, given to the trustees there named, were in writing and of a testamentary character executed with all the formalities of a will and capable of and entitled to be probated; that plaintiffs know nothing of such paper writing, and pray its production in the case, and that it be probated, if it be testamentary. The order overruling the demurrer recites that counsel for defendants stated that the directions of testatrix mentioned in the will and supplemental bill were in writing.

The demurrer is not with the papers certified, and the grounds for the demurrer, if any were stated, do not appear. *323 We gather from the brief for defendants that the principal ground is that the suit is premature; that there is no challenge to plaintiffs’ construction of the will, or that they are not entitled to take under it, or under the law of descent and distribution; that there is no actual litigation in respect to the matter now set up, to give a court of equity jurisdiction.

The principal object of the bill is to obtain a construction of the. will, which construction will give to plaintiffs the residuary fund devised and bequeathed to the trustees to be used and applied in accordance with wishes and directions communicated to them by testatrix; and the bill charges that the trustees named hold the legal title to the residuary fund in trust for plaintiffs, and that they are entitled to have the legal title of both real and personal estate conveyed to them by the executor and trustees. The bill then asks that the fund which belongs to plaintiffs under the will and as heirs and distributees be preserved to them in kind and that the legal title thereto be directed to be conveyed to them.

Equity does not take jurisdiction to construe wills where there is no litigation as to matters which are proper subjects of equitable cognizance. There must be some contest or controversy of which equity will take jurisdiction, which necessitates a construction of a will, before the interpretation will be made. Prichard v. Prichard, 83 W. Va. 652; Buskirk v. Ragland, 65 W. Va. 749; Martin v. Martin, 52 W. Va. 381. And, as was decided in Prichard v. Prichard, supra, and in Callison v. Bricht, 85 W. Va. 700, a bill by an executor or other fiduciary will be entertained for the purpose of construing the will only where the immediate necessities require such construction for his guidance. When the anticipated situation actually arises, or a remote contingency is reached, then there is a present case, and a bill for construction or guidance will be entertained. Jurisdiction in equity to construe wills is incidental to the general jurisdiction pertaining to trusts and administrations. What, therefore, is the relief sought in the original bill which calls for a construction of the will? The bill asks for a settlement of the accounts of the executor; but it is not alleged that any property came into his hands or that there was any indebtedness. The statute, *324 Sec. 8, Chap. 87, Code, provides an expeditious and inexpensive method ’for compelling settlements of fiduciaries. Request from any person interested as legatee, creditor, dis-tributee, or otherwise, made to a commissioner of accounts begins the procedure which results in the settlement.

Then the further prayer is that all, or so much as is necessary, of the personal estate be applied to the payment of the debts and legacies. The bill does not allege any indebtedness'; on the contrary it says there was no indebtedness so far as plaintiffs know; and the legacies do not become due until the death of the life tenant to whom the personal property is given. The application of the personal property, if there be any, in the payment of the legacies cannot now be made. The time for that relief, (presuming that the executor will refuse to apply the proceeds from the personalty to the discharge of the legacies), has not arrived.

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.E. 735, 101 W. Va. 320, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicklin-v-downey-wva-1926.