Robertson v. Breckinbridge

31 S.E. 892, 2 Va. Dec. 615
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 22, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 31 S.E. 892 (Robertson v. Breckinbridge) 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
Robertson v. Breckinbridge, 31 S.E. 892, 2 Va. Dec. 615 (Va. 1898).

Opinion

Keith, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is before us upon an appeal from the circuit court of Botetourt county rendered in a chancery suit brought by Nannie B. Robertson and J. Gilmer Breckinbridge, the only heirs at law of Gilmer Breckinbridge, deceased, a son of Cary Breckinbridge, Sr. The object of the suit is to construe the will of Cary Breckinbridge, to have a settlement of the accounts of his personal representatives, and a division of his estate.

Cary Breckinbridge died in 1867, having first made his will, by which he disposed of a large estate, real and personal. By the first clause of his will ho directs his debts to be paid, and to that end he charges certain mill property, a tract of land known as “Keon’s Place,” and “Thompson’s Ridge,” as the primary fund for their payment, instead of his personal estate.

By the second clause of the will he gives the residue of his estate, real and personal, to his wife, Emma W. Breckinbridge, during her life, and then says : £ ‘It is my wish that she shall, at her discretion, make suitable advancements to my children, as they arrive at the age of twenty-one, or marry, charging-such one with such advancements as he or she may receive at valuation to be made at the time in such manner as my executors may direct. After the death of my wife, I wish all my estate, real and personal, that may be in her possession at the time of her death, equally divided among my children, each one accounting for any advancements received, either from me or from my wife. If any of my children should die during the lifetime of my wife without leaving a child or [617]*617lineal descendant, I wish the portion of my estate to which such decedent would have been entitled divided, as before mentioned, among my surviving children and the children or lineal descendants of such as may have died leaving any; the representatives (as above mentioned) of any of my children who may die taking such part of my estate as my said children would have been entitled to if living. ’ ’

He appoints his wife, Emma W. Breckinbridge, executrix, and his sons, Peachy Gr., James, and Cary Breckinbridge, as they respectively attain lawful age, his executors. The widow and Cary Breckinbridge qualified, and the latter assumed the actual burden of executing the will.

A motion was made in the county court of Botetourt county to have commissioners appointed to divide the lands of Cary Breckinbridge among his devisees, and at the June term, 1868, the commissioners appointed for that purpose made their report. This proceeding, however, was never perfected, and was subsequently dismissed, but those interested appear to have entered into the possession and enjoyment of the shares allotted to them, and by a deed dated the 31st of December, 1883, the devisees of Cary Breckinbridge undertook to carry into effect that report. This deed was signed by all the parties in interest except Mrs. Mary A. Wbodville, a daughter of Cary Breckinbridge, who had removed to West Virginia, who, while she did not sign the deed, appears to have entered into the possession of the share allotted to her by the report of the commissioners. Cary Breckinbridge settled no account until July, 1882. When this suit was brought, and he was called upon to settle his accounts, he says, in his answer, that he is willing to have a commissioner to examine and correct his accounts as executor so far as they need reformation, and admits that in it there are some errors and omissions; and the court entered a decree directing a commissioner to settle ‘ ‘an account of the personal representatives of Cary Breckinbridge, Sr., deceased, and said representatives are hereby directed to render said accounts [618]*618before said commissioner, and especially to lay before him the evidences of debt and vouchers for the disbursements mentioned in the ex parte settlement heretofore made by them, and referred to in the bill. ” When this account came in, exceptions were taken to it, and it is from the decree of the circuit court passing upon these exceptions that this appeal was taken.

In so far as the executor paid taxes due by the testator at his death, and the debts which he then owed, there is, of course, no exception taken to his accounts. The commissioner, however, has given the executor credit for taxes paid by him upon the estate of Cary Brockinbridge which accrued after the testator’s death, and for debts which it is alleged were contracted, not by the testator, but some of them by his widow in the management of the estate as life tenant, by his son C. W. Breckinbridge, and by Cary Breckinbridge, the executor. The account of the executor is make up of a great number of itemsl The evidence upon which the account is based, oral and written, is, chiefly, that furnished by the executor himself, and the account appears to be in conformity with that evidence. From the testimony of the executor it appears that the taxes paid by him upon the life estate in the hands of the widow were paid with the approbation of all parties in interest. Certain it is that there is no evidence of protest or objection from any quarter whatsoever; and, while not strictly within the line of his duty as executor, it would be a harsh ruling which would now hold the executor personally responsible for payments made in good faith 30 years ago, and unobjected to at the time ; and which, as far as the record shows, were not only acquiesced in, but approved, by all who had any interest in the subject.

The powers of the widow under the will were extensive. It is sought to place her now in the position of a mere life tenant of an estate held solely for her own beneflt, and occupying, as it were, an attitude of antagonism to those in remainder. Such was not the fact. She was, while the life tenant in name, [619]*619really a trustee under the will, holding this property for the benefit of her children. She was their mother, and took this property with the trust confided to her by her husband that she would make advancements out of it as their necessities might require, and as her discretion might approve. And so we find at an early date proceedings instituted looking to a division of the estate among those entitled ; and, while that proceeding in the county court was never perfected, it was made the basis upon which the lands were divided among the children in accordance with their respective interest. The will gives to her, subject to the payment of debts, his whole estate, real and personal, during his life, but it is charged with the trust that she should make ‘ ‘suitable advancements to the children as they became twenty-one years of age, or married,” and at the death of his wife — the period fixed by the will at which the estate was to be finally settled — he directs that “all his estate, real and personal, that may be in her possession at the time of his death, be equally divided.”

It was contended in argument that, inasmuch as Mrs. Wood-ville died during the lifetime of her mother, her children took a vested remainder under the will, and that they cannot be affected by any act of the life tenant; but this view leaves wholly out of consideration the power and duty of the widow to make advancements, in her discretion, of the whole estate, and of the fact that the share of Mrs. Woodville was in a large measure advanced to her during her lifetime, which, of course, intercepted any right upon the part of her children.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.E. 892, 2 Va. Dec. 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-breckinbridge-va-1898.