Tusing v. Tusing

194 S.E. 676, 169 Va. 769, 1937 Va. LEXIS 192
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 11, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 194 S.E. 676 (Tusing v. Tusing) 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
Tusing v. Tusing, 194 S.E. 676, 169 Va. 769, 1937 Va. LEXIS 192 (Va. 1937).

Opinion

Browning, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The executor of M. F. Tusing, deceased, filed a bill in equity asking the Circuit Court of Shenandoah county, Virginia, to construe the will of his testator and particularly to instruct him as to the validity of the claim of Annie E. Tusing, widow of M. F. Tusing, and the appellant here. The construction of the will is not a matter of contest in this case and no further comment will be made as to it.

M. F. Tusing and Annie E. Tusing were married in the year 1924. They lived together as husband and wife in the town of New Market, Virginia, for.nearly three years. At the time of their marriage, M. F. Tusing was a widower about 69 years old and Annie E. Tusing was a widow about 35 years old. The husband had one child by his first wife, a son, and the wife had one child, a daughter, by her first husband. About three months after their marriage the husband executed two bonds, each in the sum of $1,000, payable to his wife at six and twelve months after his death, and he also executed a deed of trust conveying real estate, in the town of New Market, to secure them. The bonds and the deed of trust contained the declaration that the consideration for the former was that they were executed in lieu of dower in the estate of the obligor and grantor. Subsequently, the first of the bonds mentioned was assigned, for value, by Annie E. Tusing.

On September 10, 1924, which is the date of the bonds and the deed of trust, Annie E. Tusing executed a deed of [772]*772release, relinquishing to M. F. Tusing all right to dower in any lands then owned and possessed by him or which he might thereafter acquire. In this deed of release, it is stated that M. F. Tusing had executed the two bonds referred to and the consideration for them was that they were in lieu of the dower of Annie E. Tusing in the estate of her husband, and the deed of trust securing the said bonds was recognized and it was further stated in the preamble that it was desired that M. F. Tusing should hold all his real estate, except that conveyed by said deed of trust, and have the right to sell the same free from any right of dower.

In February, 1927, M. F. Tusing instituted a suit for divorce from Annie E. Tusing and, in January, 1931, a decree a mensa, et thoro was awarded him and, by its terms, the marital property rights of each of them were extinguished and annulled.

The said M. F. Tusing died testate in March, 1935, but, as already suggested, we are not concerned with the provisions of his will except inferentially with the last clause of the last codicil, which directed that his real estate in the town of New Market should be sold as soon after his death as could be conveniently done and from the proceeds all.of his debts should be paid. It will be remembered that this real estate was conveyed as the security for the payment of the said bonds.

Much of the matter contained in the briefs is devoted to the question of the validity of the deed of release, of Annie E. Tusing, of her inchoate right of dower to her husband while she was under the legal limitations of coverture and, also, the effect of the provisions of the decree a mensa on the ground of desertion and the absence of any reconciliation of the parties.

It may be pertinent to say that Annie E. Tusing, on October 8, 1929, two years and a half after the institution of the divorce suit referred to, joined in a deed with her husband conveying to a grantee a certain lot, for which he was paid $2,500.

[773]*773Annie E. Tusing demurred to the bill and filed an original and an amended answer thereto. The demurrer was overruled and the answers were stricken out and her claims, based upon the bonds and trust deed, were held to be void and unenforceable on account of failure of consideration, the alleged consideration being illegal.

Among other matters of defense urged in her answer was the contention that the bonds and deed of trust constituted a conveyance of personal estate of the husband intended to be in lieu of dower and, as jointure of the wife, was a bar to her dower rights in his real estate in accordance with the provisions of section 5120 of the Code of Virginia. She further urged that such a settlement, or conveyance, does not require the approval of the wife nor any consideration as its basis.

A very excellent opinion, prepared by the learned trial judge, appears in the record, which accentuates the importance of the existence of the right of dower in the wife at the death of the husband and that there must be a consideration for the creation of jointure. We differ from him in this. The wife’s inchoate right of dower existed when the conveyance was made and the jointure came into being. The husband could not, of his own volition, subsequently abrogate it, and no subsequent divorce proceedings could nullify it. The jointure statute requires no declared consideration. Of course, there is always present the statutory mandate that the intention is that the conveyance is in lieu of dower.

We think the only question which needs to be considered in order to determine the issue is whether the provisions of section 5120 are applicable to the circumstances of the case.

We think the statute is controlling. The conveyance and the bonds constitute a jointure. The statute does not require a consideration, nor is a statement of the intent of the settlement required. If the husband does not intend or desire the conveyance, or settlement, to operate as a jointure he must so declare it in the instrument.

[774]*774The case of Land v. Shipp, 98 Va. 284, 36 S. E. 391, 394, 50 L. R. A. 560, involved the construction of a deed of separation between a husband and wife in which there was a provision for the release of the wife’s dower, in the lands of the husband, to him, and the consideration stated was the premises and $400 to the wife. It was held that the deed contained none of the elements of a jointure; that the wife was without power to make such a contract and, therefore, it was void as to her.

It was said: “At common law the essentials of jointure were: It must consist of an estate or interest in land, to take effect in possession or profit immediately on the death of the husband, and must be made in satisfaction of the dower, and so appear in the deed. It is an absolute bar only when made before marriage; if made after marriage it only puts the wife to her election whether to accept the provision or claim dower.”

It is noted that the Virginia statutory jointure differs from that of the common law in that it may be personal as well as real estate.

The late eminent Dr. W. M. Lile, then editor of the Virginia Law Register, subsequently the Dean of the law school of the University of Virginia, in his editorial note of approval of this decision, said of jointure:

“* * * That under sec. 2270 of the Code, the ‘jointure’ therein referred to as operating to bar dower, does not include property in which a present estate is settled upon the wife, but is confined to settlements to take effect at the death of the husband.”

As has been said, the bonds in the immediate case, which were executed and delivered to the wife, Annie E. Tusing, by her husband, after being secured by a deed of trust on certain real estate, were payable six and twelve months, respectively, after the date of the death of the husband, the obligor.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.E. 676, 169 Va. 769, 1937 Va. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tusing-v-tusing-va-1937.