Schultz v. Schultz

10 Va. 358
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 8, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Va. 358 (Schultz v. Schultz) 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
Schultz v. Schultz, 10 Va. 358 (Va. 1853).

Opinion

Lee, J.

By the thirteenth section of the act of 1819, concerning wills, 1 Rev. Code, ch. 104, p. 378, it is provided that when a will shall have been admitted to probat in the proper court, any person interested may within seven years afterwards appear and by bill in chancery contest its- validity ; and when such bill shall be filed, an issue shall be made up to be tried by a jury, whether the paper in question be the will of the testator or not. But if 'no such party appear within that time, the probat is declared to be “ forever bindingwith a saving in favor of infants, femes covert, and persons absent from the state or non compos mentis, of the like period after the removal of their respective disabilities. In this case it sufficiently appears that the complainants were within the saving in favor of persons absent from the state, they being citizens and residents of the state of New York, and no evidence having been offered to show that either of them had ever been in the state of Virginia until a short time previous to the institution of the suit. But it is contended on the part of the appellant, that by an equitable construction of the act of March 8th, 1826, Sup. Rev. Code, p. 260, the saving in the statute of wills above referred to, so far as it applies to persons absent from the state, must be regarded as repealed, and that such persons, after the passage of that act, could only file a bill to contest the validity of a will which had been admitted to probat within the seven years. I cannot concur in this view of the operation of the act of 1826. It is not difficult to imagine reasons why the legislature, in striking out of the act of [366]*366February 25th, 1819, concerning the limitation of actions and entries into lands, the saving in favor of persons out of the country, may not at all have intended to interfere with the provision in the statute of wills giving to such persons a further period after the expiration of that limited for persons residing in the state, within which to appear and contest a will which might have been admitted to probat by an ex yarte proceeding, to which they were entirely strangers, and of which they might not have been apprised until they chanced to come into the state. But however this maybe, the repealing clause in the act of 1826 is confined in terms to the saving in the act of February 25th, 1819, quoting that act by its title, and declares that the entries and actions embraced by the provisions of that act shall thereafter be made and brought within the same time as if the parties entitled thereto had been within the commonwealth when their right or title accrued; and it would be against every sound rule of construction to extend its operation by implication or otherwise to a provision in a totally different act upon an entirely different subject, and which created a peculiar statutory proceeding for a particular purpose not embraced by the act containing the saving clause intended to be repealed. I think, therefore, the saving in the statute of wills, in favor of persons out of the state, is unaffected by the act of 1826, and that the complainants were not barred from contesting the will of 1818 by the time which had elapsed after it had been admitted to probat before their bill was filed.

The next objection on the part of the appellant to which I will advert is, that the contingent limitation over upon the death of Maria Matilda Schultz in the paper of 1828 under which the appellants claim, is void because too remote ; and that by the operation'of the act concerning estates tail and executory limita[367]*367tions, the whole estate of Christian Schultz would, under the provisions of said paper, be vested in fee in the said Maria, and upon her death childless and unmarried, would descend to the appellant as her heir at law; and so that the appellees had no such interest in the estate of Christian Schultz as would entitle them to maintain a bill calling in question the will of 1818. The words of the act are, that “ any person interested” may appear and contest the validity of a will that has been admitted to probat, by bill in chancery; and a bill filed for such a purpose should show how the complainant has an interest in the subject entitling him to call the validity of the will in question. I think, however, if the right of the appellees to maintain their bill depended upon the validity of the contingent limitation over upon the death of Maria Matilda Schultz contained in the will of 1828, it could not be successfully assailed. Because, if it could be questioned whether such a limitation would be good at common law, there can be no doubt, I apprehend, that it is exactly embraced by the twenty-sixth section of the statute concerning conveyances, 1 Rev. Code 1819, ch. 99, p; 369; which declares that every contingent limitation in a deed thereafter made, or in the will of any person who should thereafter die, made to depend on the dying of any person without heirs, or heirs of the body, or issue, or issue of the body, or without children or offspring, or descendant or other relative, shall be held and interpreted a limitation to take effect when such person shall die not having such heir, or issue, or child, or offspring, or descendant, or other relative, as the case may be, living at the time of his death, or born to him within ten months thereafter, unless the intention of such limitation be otherwise expressly and plainly declared on the face of the deed or will creating if. With this statutory interpretation of the limitation in this will, it cannot [368]*368be regarded as a contingent limitation made to depend on an indefinite failure of issue or children, but as confined to the time of the death of the devisee or the period of ten months thereafter; and is clearly good. The appellees, therefore, would take a certain contingent interest under the will of 1828, which the law fully recognizes, and which would be amply sufficient to bring them within the terms of the statute.

The difficult and important question in this case, however,, is as to the effect of the sentence of the County court of Wood of the 21st of October 1845, rejecting the will of 1828, when first propounded by Michael Schultz; which sentence has ever since remained in its full force and unreversed. It is insisted on behalf of the appellant that that sentence is conclusive upon all the world, and is a complete bar both to the proceeding in chancery to set aside the will of 1818 by setting up that of 1828, and also to the proceeding in the County court of Wood to admit the latter to probat after the decree of the court in the chancery case setting aside the will of 1818; while the appellees contend that it is a bar to neither proceeding, and is in effect under the circumstances attending its rendition, to be regarded as a nullity.

It is unnecessary now to enter into a discussion as to the effect of a sentence of rejection by a court of probat fairly obtained and pronounced on the merits, of a paper propounded as a will by the nominated executor, upon the rights of a legatee named in the paper. For it has been expressly adjudicated by this court that such sentence of rejection, is conclusively binding upon the legatee notwithstanding he was an infant at the time it was pronounced and was no party to the proceeding: And that the paper thus rejected cannot be again propounded for probat by the legatee. Wills v. Spraggins, 3 Gratt. 555. And it can make no difference that the will in this case was propounded by [369]

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Bluebook (online)
10 Va. 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schultz-v-schultz-va-1853.