Vass v. Phillips

2 Va. Col. Dec. 288
CourtGeneral Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1739
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Va. Col. Dec. 288 (Vass v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering General Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vass v. Phillips, 2 Va. Col. Dec. 288 (Va. Super. Ct. 1739).

Opinion

John Pen by his Will Jan. 13. 1676. devises thus “ I give & “ bequeath to Ann Sharpe my Plantation &c ” (the Premes in Question) And after other Bequests follows this Clause “ And “ for my Land w’ch I have given to Ann Sharpe if it should “ please God to die without Issue I give to my Friend Tho’s “ Harwar Otherwise to she & her Heirs forever”

The Question is What Estate Ann Sharpe took by this Devise Whether an Estate tail or a Fee simple upon the Contingency of leaving Issue at her Death If the former the Pit. has a good Title Otherwise not

It must be agreed that by the first Part of this Devise Ann took only an Estate for Life And it will be further admitted I presume that if the second Clause had gone no further than the Limitation over to Harwar It would have been clearly an Estate tail in Ann The Doubt then & Difficulty if there is any in the Case must arise from these latter Words “ Otherwise to she & her Heirs forever ’’Whether these Words shew an Intention in the Testor to give any other Estate to Ann than would have passed by the first Words if these had not been added And I conceive not but that he intended an Estate tail & no other Estate to Ann

It is a common Doctrine that the Intent of the Testor is the [B311]*B311Rule & Guide for expounding of Wills That this Intention is to be collected not from any particular Sentence or Clause but from the whole Will taken together And that to serve this Intention even Sentences are sometimes transposed

It is also a well known & settled Point that Issue in a Will always [289] imports & is taken to mean Heirs of the Body They are Terms equivalent & indeed are so taken in divers Acts of Parliam’t as Westm. 2. De Donis & 34. H. 8. of Intails settled by the Crown 1 Vent. 229

This being premised I shall proceed to consider the Devise before us The Testor when he first disposes of the Land to Ann limits no Estate And consequently she could take only an Estate for Life by that Part of the Devise as has been observed Then when he comes to enlarge this Estate for Life & give an Estate of Inheritance it is remarkable he makes Use of the Word “ Issue ” If she dies with’t Issue Rem’r over which is the same as if he had sayed with’t Heirs of the Body This I think plainly shews that the first & primary Intention of the Testor was to provide for Ann’s Issue as well as herself for it will be granted me that this Limitation over upon a Dying with’t Issue would make an Estate tail if the Will went no further 3 Danv. 180. 7. 9. 181. 12. 1 Vent. 229. FitzG. 12. 25.

It is indeed an Estate tail by Impl. only but then it is by a plain & necessary Impl. of the Testors Intention that the Issue sho’d have the Land till the Rem’r took Place And in a Will it is not material whether an Estate be given by Impl. or express Lim It is the Intent alone that is to be regarded So that there is really no Difference betw. a Devise to one & his Issue and a Devise to one & if he die with’t Issue Rem’r over Only in the first Case he has an Estate tail by express Lim & in the other by Impl. FitzG. 12.

If then this Devise be considered as a Devise to Ann & the Heirs of her Body or Issue which is the same I would ask whether when the Testor in the latter Part of the Clause comes to speak again of Ann & her Heirs It is not reasonable to suppose he meant the same Heirs he had just mentioned before If he did there is an End of all Doubt & Difficulty in the Case

And that he did mean the same Heirs I think may be fairly collected from the foil. Cons. 1. We know that in common speech Heirs are generally applied to a Persons Children If a Man leaves no Children it is common to say he left no Heirs And [B312]*B312Words in a Will fire to be taken as they are understood in common Speech If then we can suppose that this Testator thought Issue & Heirs imported the same Thing It will account for his making Use of the Words Issue in one Place & Heirs in another For when Men have annexed the same Idea to two different Terms or Words They make Use of those Terms indifferently as they occur to Memory

2. Upon the Face of the Will it appears the Testor had an Intention to provide for Ann’s Issue as well as herself And this as has been observed seems to have been his first & primary Intention

3. There are many Cases in Law'where the Word Heirs in a Will [290] has been construed & interpreted to mean Heirs of the Body Especially where the Word Issue or Heirs of the Body have been likewise made Use of by the Testor in the same Will Some of w’ch Cases I shall briefly mention

Webb & Herring Cro. Ja. 115. 1 Ro. A. 836. 5. A man had a Wife a Son & 3 Daughters Devised Land to his Son after the Death of his Wife And if his 3 Daughters survive the Wife & the Son & his Heirs to them for their Lives This was adjudged an Estate tail in the Son & that Heirs must be intended Heirs of the Body (Because he could not die with’t Heirs gen’l living the Daughters

1 Ro. Ab. 836. 6. If a Man has Issue two Sons & devises Land to the younger and if he dies without Heirs to the elder the younger has an Estate tail for Heirs must be intended Heirs of the Body by Reason of the Rem’r over which would be otherwise idle because the elder would take the Land as Heir to his Brother without it

Nottingham a Jennings 1 Sal. 233. Devise to the younger Son & his Heirs forever And for Want of such Heirs then to his own right Heirs Adj’d an Estate tail in the Son for the Testor must mean Heirs of the Body because the Son could not die with’t Heirs gen’l living Heirs of the Father

King a Remball 1 Ro. A. 836. 7. A man devised Land to his 3 Dau’rs And if either dyed before the other the one to be the others Heir And if they all died with’t Issue Rem’r over Adj’d the Dau’rs had an Estate tail for the latter Clause if they die without Issue explains what Heirs were intended where it is sayed that one sho’d be Heir to the other

These Cases I think serve to prove two Points 1. that the [B313]*B313Word Heirs in the Understanding of People unskilled in the Law or in Cotnon Speech as we say imports the same as Issue or Heirs of the Body and 2. that the Word Heirs in a Will is often taken to mean Heirs of the Body And the last Case proves further that where the two Terms Issue & Heirs are both made Use of in the same Devise It is taken that the same Heirs are meant in both Cases Indeed the common Case of a Devise to a Man & his Heirs & if he die with’t Issue Rem’r over puts this last Point beyond Contradiction for it was never denied but that such a Devise made an Estate tail And that Heirs in the first Part of the Devise sho’d be intended such Heirs as are mentioned afterwards viz. Issue.

And it is not material I take it whether Issue happens to be mentioned first or last. The Intention is collected from the Word more than the Manner of placing it As

A Devise to a Man & the Heirs of his Body And if he die with’t Heirs Rem’r over makes an Estate tail (2 Vern. 281. [291] per Cur.) tho Heirs of the Body are mentioned first & Heirs last for it is suppos’d the same Heirs are intended in both Places

Indeed the first Words in a Will are often taken as the best Expositors of the Testors Meaning and to serve as a Guide to those that follow as in Buck & Frenchmans Case 1. And. 8. (It is Tuck & Frenchman in Dy.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Va. Col. Dec. 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vass-v-phillips-vagensess-1739.