Voigt v. Selander

58 S.E.2d 25, 190 Va. 638, 1950 Va. LEXIS 157
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 13, 1950
DocketRecord 3603
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 58 S.E.2d 25 (Voigt v. Selander) 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
Voigt v. Selander, 58 S.E.2d 25, 190 Va. 638, 1950 Va. LEXIS 157 (Va. 1950).

Opinion

Staples, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity to obtain a judicial construction of the following provision in the will of Louis Voigt, Jr.:

“After my debts and funeral expenses are paid, I give, devise, will and bequeath all my property, real, personal and mixed, wheresoever situated, which I may possess or have right, title or claim to at the time of my death, to my beloved wife Lena Moser Voigt, during her natural life and widowhood, with full power to her during her widowhood to hold, use, sell or dispose of the same or any part thereof, without any liability on the part of the purchaser to look to the application of the purchase money and for my said wife to apply such part of the proceeds of any such sale for her own and our children’s support and maintenance as she may deem necessary, and, in event my said wife should marry again, then one-third of my remaining estate and the remaining proceeds of such part as she may have sold under the power aforesaid, shall belong to her absolutely and the other two thirds of my remaining estate shall be divided equally among my children, the descendants of any deceased child to take in place and stead of any deceased parents ‘per stirpes’ and not ‘per capita’, and if my wife shall depart this life without having married again, then my said estate shall be equally divided among my children in the manner aforesaid.”

The will was executed June 9, 1904, and was probated February 5, 1932, about twenty-eight years thereafter.

The testator ' was survived by his widow, Lena Moser *641 Voigt, and a son, Louis A. Voight, an infant daughter having predeceased him unmarried and without issue.

The son, Louis A. Voigt, died July 11, 1947, during the lifetime of his mother, Lena Moser Voigt, who died in December, 1947. By his will the son gave and bequeathed one-third of his personal estate to fus widow, Virginia Upson Voigt, and the sum of $100 to his son, the appellant. The remainder of his estate was left in trust. One-third of the income from the real estate, it was provided, should be paid by the trustee to his widow, and the remainder of the income from the real estate and personal property held in trust should be paid to his daughter, the appellee, now nineteen years of age, for her support and maintenance until she becomes thirty years of age, at which time the trust is to be terminated and she shall be entitled to the entire corpus thereof. The will further provided that should his daughter, the appellee, die before the vesting of the corpus of the trust, then the trust shall continue for the benefit of his son, the appellant, now thirteen years of age, subject to the same terms and conditions.

It was contended on behalf of the appellant in the court below, and is contended here, that the widow of the first testator, Lena Moser Voigt, took a fee simple under the doctrine of May v. Joynes, 20 Gratt. (61 Va.) 692, because she had the absolute power to dispose of and consume the corpus of the estate, and hence the limitation over to said testator’s son, Louis A. Voigt, was void for that reason. It is insisted that this case does not come within the provisions of section 5147 of the Code of 1919 because that section applies only to cases where the beneficiary takes a life estate, and since the interest of Lena Moser Voigt was restricted to her widowhood she did not take a life estate within the meaning of that section. Therefore, it is argued, the second testator, the son, Louis A. Voigt, took nothing under his father’s will and none of his father’s estate passes under his will in favor of the appellee, but such property *642 passes by inheritance from their grandmother, Lena Moser Voigt, to the appellant and appellee in equal shares.

The applicable language of section 5147 of the Code of 1919 (Code 1950, section 55-7) is as follows:

“If any interest in or claim to real estate or personal property be disposed of by deed or will for life, with a limitation in remainder over, and in the same instrument there be conferred expressly or by implication a power upon the life tenant in his lifetime or by will to dispose absolutely of said property, the limitation in remainder over, shall not fail, or be defeated, except to the extent that the life tenant shall have lawfully exercised such power of disposal.”

It is contended on behalf of the appellee, Mary Anne Selander, that her grandmother, Lena Moser Voigt, took a life estate under the will of her grandfather, Louis Voigt, Jr., and that her father, Louis A. Voigt, at the time of the death of her grandfather, took a vested remainder in all of the property of his estate, which was not disposed of during her lifetime by the life tenant, Lena Moser Voigt. This position of the appellee was sustained by the able judge of the Hustings Court, who held that “the will of Louis Voigt, Jr., created a life estate in his widow, such estate being subject to be divested by her remarriage, which never occurred, and that Louis A. Voigt took a vested interest thereunder. Consequently, section 5147 of the Code would be applicable and the estate of Louis Voigt, Jr., not disposed of by his widow in her life time passes in accordance with the terms of his (Louis A. Voigt’s) will.”

It is well established by the decisions of this court that, in order for the remainder over to be valid where the first-taker is given the power of complete disposition of the estate, the gift of the first-taker must be an express estate for life as provided in the above quoted section of the Code. See Mowery v. Coffman, 185 Va. 491, 39 S. E. (2d) 285, where our decisions on this question are reviewed at length. That this is the controlling principle here is not disputed, *643 either in the briefs or oral arguments of counsel for the respective parties.

We must determine, therefore, whether the gift to Lena Moser Voigt “during her natural life and widowhood” was a life estate within the meaning of the statute. The will provides that upon her marriage the life estate would terminate and she would receive one-third of the estate in fee simple and the unexpended remainder would be equally divided among the testator’s children. Under these provisions, the life estate could be terminated by the happening of either of two events; first, by the marriage of the life tenant, and, second, by her death. Did the fact that Lena Moser Voigt, by her voluntary act of marriage,, could terminate her estate for life deprive it of the character of a life estate within the meaning of the statute? We think not. It was within the power of the life tenant to enjoy the estate during her entire lifetime. By refraining from a subsequent marriage, she ‘actually did enjoy it for that period. Life estates with limitation over may ordinarily be terminated by the conveyance and transfer of the fife tenant’s interest to the vested remainder-man, thus cutting short the fife estate and vesting said remainder-man with a fee simple title. It cannot be said, therefore, that Lena Moser Voigt’s power to voluntarily terminate her fife estate by marriage had the effect of converting it into a fee simple interest. It follows that, under the provisions of section 5147, the remainder over is a valid one and is not affected by the doctrine of May v.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.E.2d 25, 190 Va. 638, 1950 Va. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voigt-v-selander-va-1950.