Rutherford v. Mayo

76 Va. 117, 1882 Va. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 19, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 76 Va. 117 (Rutherford v. Mayo) 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
Rutherford v. Mayo, 76 Va. 117, 1882 Va. LEXIS 9 (Va. 1882).

Opinion

Anderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The bill was brought by Mrs. Mayo, the widow of George W. Mayo, to have dower assigned her in the undivided moiety of a tract of land and mill, which was the joint property of her husband in his lifetime, and Thomas Ruth[121]*121erford, the appellant; which undivided moiety was devised by her husband to his son-in-law, James M. Siddons, and his daughter, Calisa J., the wife of said Siddons.

Two principal questions arise in the case: “ First. Did Mrs. Mayo receive a bequest from her husband which was-in lieu of dower? And, second, Has she been lawfully deprived of it, or of a part of it ? and of how much of the real estate should she be endowed to be of equal value to that of which she has been deprived ?

The testator directs his executors to pay whatever debts he may leave unpaid at his decease, and his personal expenses. And after making bequests to his five children of the value of §1,000 to each, he gives to his wife “ all the balance of his estate, both real and personal,” while she continues his widow, but if she marries, then only half of the same; and if any of the servants are troublesome, and she requests it, he directs his executors to sell such, and arrange for her to have the interest on the money in the place of such slave, or slaves.

He wishes his wife to take care of his aged mother, and if she should live longer than his wife, he requests his executors to take charge and care of her.

He wishes his son John to remain with his mother, and hopes she can reasonably remunerate him.

He then provides for the equal division of all his estate amongst his heirs, after the death of his wife, with restrictions as to George’s part, which he afterwards removes by a clause in a codicil.

He authorizes his executors, if they think it best, to sell the land without a decree of the court. And he wishes the comfort of the slaves to be consulted, as far as practicable, and if some are obliged to be sold to make an equal division, he wishes them to be put where they are disposed to go, even at a loss of one-fourth of their value. And he [122]*122appoints Ms son John W. Mayo and his son-in-law Daniel Carter his executors.

What was the value of the property he bequeathed to his wife ? The bill asserts that, as will be seen by his will, the said George W. Mayo was seized and possessed of a considerable estate, real and personal, at the time of his death. Of his bequests to his children of $5,000, they are charged by the will with upwards of $1,600, which was paid them before his death—leaving only $3,400 to be paid them in land and money—which would seem to be a very small part of a considerable estate, real and personal. •

The answer avers that the provision made for his wife was given and intended as a jointure, and in lieu of dower. That it embraced the homestead on which the testator resided, consisting of thirty-ñve acres, with a good, comfortable dwelling and the necessary out-houses in good repair—such as stable, wheat and tobacco barns, servants’ quarters, &c., worth at least $800 or $1,000; also, a tract of land in Missouri, which, he is informed and believes, consisted of 60 acres, near a village, and was very valuable— its value not known to him—and a considerable amount of personal property, consisting of household and kitchen furniture, farming implements, live stock, farm produce, eleven slaves, and outstanding debts due him, amounting in the aggregate to $7,005.16, after deducting the special pecuniary legacies, which amounted to $1,198.89; and he makes an exhibit of the inventory of appraisement of the personal estate rendered on the 27th of March, 1862, as part of his answer in support of his averment. Said inventory and appraisement bill shows that eleven slaves were appraised, and that the whole inventory summed up $8,204.05. The said appraisement was signed and sworn to by three of the appraisers appointed by the county court of Goochland, and John W. Mayo, executor of George Mayo, deceased, underwrites over his signature“ I return the fore[123]*123going as a true inventory of the estate of George Mayo, deceased.”

It is true that affirmative averments, when unsupported by evidence, do not establish the facts averred, and they are adverted to, and others will be, as important averments, which the court below should have allowed the defendant time to take depositions to prove.

But there is enough proved to show that a liberal provision was made by the testator out of his estate for his widow, and that it was ample for her support, and that it would have been judicious in her to take it in preference to dower in his lands and her distributive share of the personal estate.

Was it intended to be in lien of dower, and accepted by her as such ?

In Dixon v. McCue and als., 14 Gratt. 548, Judge Daniel says the general principles in reference to this question are few and well ascertained, notwithstanding much apparent conflict in the application by judges of those principles to particular cases. “ The cardinal doctrines upon the subject (he says) are clearly and concisely stated by Vice-Chancellor Kindersley in the case of Gibson v. Gibson, 17 E. L. and E. R. 349. The first principle (he says) is, that the doctrine of election is founded on the same reasons and governed by the same rules when applied to a widow claiming dower as when applied to any other case. The second proposition, as applicable to all cases, is, that a person who is entitled to any benefit under a will or other instrument must, if he claims that benefit, abandon every right or interest, the assertion of which would defeat, even partially, any of the provisions of that instrument. . And applying this to the case of dower, the doctrine is, that if the testator has made such a disposition of his real estate as that the assertion by the widow of her right to dower would prevent that disposition taking effect as the testator [124]*124intended, then she must elect to abandon either her dower or the benefit given her by the will.” He adds a third proposition, “that in no case is a person to be put to an election unless it is clear that the provisions of the instrument under which he is entitled to any benefit would be in some degree defeated by the assertion of his other rights,” which principle he applies also to the particular case of dower.

The application of these principles to our case is easy and apposite. It was the manifest intention of the testator to make his children equal, and his purpose was to give each of them in money, or in land and money, or in land to the value of $1,000. To George he gave land and money to the value of $1,000; to Daniel Carter and Godfry Isbell, his sons-in-law, he gave each $1,000 in money, charging them with what they respectively owed him; to John he gave, at his option, a negro man valued at $1,000, or land valued at $700 and $300 in money, or a negro girl valued at $300, at his election; and to his son-in-law James M. Sid-dons, and his daughter Calista, the wife of Siddons, $1,000, wholly in land. How, it is manifest that the assertion-by the widow of her right of dower would prevent that disposition taking effect as the testator intended; consequently, according to the rule as laid down, she must elect to abandon either her dower or the benefit given her by the will. She did elect to take the benefit given her by the will, and has had the use and enjoyment of it for many years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 Va. 117, 1882 Va. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rutherford-v-mayo-va-1882.