Walker v. Webster

28 S.E. 570, 95 Va. 377, 1897 Va. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 2, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 28 S.E. 570 (Walker v. Webster) 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
Walker v. Webster, 28 S.E. 570, 95 Va. 377, 1897 Va. LEXIS 46 (Va. 1897).

Opinion

Riely, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The whole controversy in this case is as to the proper construction of the third clause of the will of the testator, Churchill Doggett, which is in the following words:

“All the rest and residue of my estate, real, personal, and mixed, I desire shall go to, and be divided in equal parts, among those who would be my heirs at law, under the statute of descents and distributions in Virginia, in case I had died intestate.”

The Chancery Court decided that the heirs at law of the testator took the estate given by the above clause per stirpes, and not per capita.

Wills are to be construed- according to the intention of the testator. This is the cardinal rule. And when the court is satisfied as to his intention, it must give effect to it, no matter what may be the disposition he has made of his property, unless it violates some rule of law. We are not to be influenced in the least in the interpretation of the will by what we may think the testator ought in justice to have done. Having a perfect right to the property, his will is the sole law of its disposition.

The first object of the judicial expositor is, therefore, to ascer[379]*379tain the intention of the testator. While extrinsic evidence may be resorted to for the purpose of showing all the circumstances surrounding the testator at the time of making his will, his situation, the state of his family, and of his property, and any facts known to him which may reasonably be supposed to have influenced him in the disposition of his property, and thereby place the expositor, as near as possible, in the situation of the person whose language he is called on to interpret, he must, nevertheless, under the light of the extrinsic facts, ascertain the intention of the testator from the words of the will itself. And in thus ascertaining the intention, effect must be given to every word of the will, if any sensible meaning can be assigned to it, not inconsistent with the general intention apparent on the whole will take together. Words are not to be changed or rejected unless they manifestly conflict with the plain intention of the testator, or unless they are absurd, unintelligible, • or unmeaning, for want of any subject to which they may be applied. Wootten v. Reed, 12 Gratt. 196.

Guided by these simple rules, the intention of the testator, as disclosed in the clause of his will, which has given rise to this controversy, seems to us free from doubt. He has used apt and precise words to describe the objects of his bounty. They are those persons who would be his heirs at law under the Virginia statute of descents and distributions, if he had died intestate. His beneficiaries are thus specifically and definitely described and designated. And his language directing how the division shall be made is no less clear and specific. They are to take the estate comprehended by the gift in “equal parts”; they are to share it equally. His manifest intention was to give an equal share of the residuum of his estate to all those persons whom the statute law of Virginia made his heirs at law; that is, they should take the property per capita. This is the manifest meaning of the words used by the testator. It follows, naturally, from giving effect to his every word, as the rule of interpretation requires.

[380]*380The reference to the statute of descents and distributions was simplyto designate the persons who were to take the residuum of the estate. The testator did not thereby intend to prescribe also the manner of the division. He does not say that the persons designated were to take as if he had died intestate, which would give some color to the contention that they take in the manner prescribed by the statute, but merely that those persous should take who would be his heirs in case he had died intestate. The reference to the statute ascertains who shall take, but not how they shall take. Sow they are to take is otherwise prescribed; they are to take “in equal parts.”

If the testator had meant that both the persons who were to take, and the manner of the division should be in accordance with the statute as if he had died intestate, then this clause in his will was entirely useless, for, in that case, the same persons would take, and in the same manner, as if he had indeed died intesttate. It is to be presumed that he had some object in inserting this clause in his will. That object is, we think, unmistakable. He meant that those persons' who would be his heirs at law under the statute in case of intestacy, should have the residuum of his estate, yet he did not intend that they should take it in the manner prescribed by the statute, but equally. While the fact, that one of two constructions of a provision in a will of doubtful meaning would only accomplish that which the law would do in the absence of such provision may not be entitled to much consideration in construing the provision, yet it is a circumstance to be weighed against that construction of the provision which would make its insertion in the will a useless act, and in favor of a different disposition of the estate manifested by the words of the provision, but which would not have been accomplished by the operation of the law, if the testamentary disposition had not been made. The argument to be drawn from its uselessness under one construction should strengthen the other interpretation.

In order to hold that the beneficiaries take per stirpes, the [381]*381mode of division, prescribed by the testator would have to be disregarded. In that construction, no effect would be given to the direction that the residuum should be divided “in equal parts” among those to whom it was given. If they were held to take per stirpes instead of per capita, then they would take in unequal, instead of “equal parts.” Helen Kemple and Mary E. Webster, sisters of the testator, would each receive, under that construction, one-third of the residuum, while Elenia P. Walker, a daughter of Eliza Brannon, a deceased sister of the testator, would receive one-sixth, and Lena Leadbetter, Mariana Hew-man, and Bessie Eewman, children of Eliza Hewman, deceased, another daughter of Eliza Brannon, would divide the remaining one-sixth between them, making the share of each of them one-eighteenth, in direct violation of the principle of equality of division expressly prescribed by the testator in the clause of his will making the gift.

The construction we have placed on the will is not only the plain and natural meaning of the language used by the testator, but is in conformity with the general rule for construing gifts of this character. “Where a bequest is made to several persons,” said this court in Hoxton v. Griffith, 18 Gratt. 577, “in general terms, indicating that they are to take equally as tenants in common, each individual will, of course, take the same share; in other words, the legatees will take per capita. The same rule applies where a bequest is to one who is living, and to the children of another who is dead, whatever may be the relations of the parties to each other, or however, the statute of distributions might operate upon those relations in case of intestacy. Thus where property is given cto my brother A, and to the children of my brother B,’ A takes a share only equal to that of each of the children of B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 S.E. 570, 95 Va. 377, 1897 Va. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-webster-va-1897.