Whitehead v. Whitehead

6 S.E.2d 624, 174 Va. 379, 1940 Va. LEXIS 218
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 8, 1940
DocketRecord No. 2130
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 6 S.E.2d 624 (Whitehead v. Whitehead) 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
Whitehead v. Whitehead, 6 S.E.2d 624, 174 Va. 379, 1940 Va. LEXIS 218 (Va. 1940).

Opinions

Browning, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case involves the construction of the will of the late E. D. Whitehead, which was probated on August 24, 1938. It is this:

“Since the Death of my Brother J. J. Whitehead I think I shall write a will like I want it.
Two Day’s after the Burial of Cousin J. Hunt Hargrave
[381]*381At Home Glenview Farm Chatham, Va.
April 6th, 1935
I, R. D. Whitehead being of Sound Mind and Disposing Memory do make this My last Will and Testament hearby revoking all previous Wills Made by Me. First of all all of my Just and Honest Debts be paid if there be any by my Wife Minnie G. Whitehead The Balance of my Estate I give to My Wife Minnie G. Whitehead Both real and Personal also Cash, Bond Stocks and Insurance in fee simple. I hearby Nominate and Appoint My Said Wife Minnie G. Whitehead as Administratrix of this My last Will and request the Court not to require any security or Appraisement for her as Such I request Minnie G. Whitehead My Wife to give My Sister Nannie D. Whitehead $150.00 a year as long as She lives and has the Money to give her. Upon the Death or Re-Marriage of My Wife Minnie G. Whitehead I want the balance of My Estate to be Equally divided between My Brothers Joseph Whitehead - J. Hurt Whitehead - Walter M. Whitehead and My Sisters Nannie D. Whitehead - Sallie B. Millner - Ethel M. Crider - Katie G. Watson - I also want my Niece Virginia Rorer and My Nephew Douglas J. Whitehead to Share and Share alike My Brothers & Sisters I also Want My Nephew Richard H. Whitehead and Katie D. Whitehead My Niece Jointly to have as much together as any one of the above Mentioned In event any of the Brothers - Sisters Nephews or Nieces are dead at the time of this distribution I direct that the Shares of the deceased ones be Equally divided between the ones that are liveing.
In Witness Whereof I have hereunto Set my hand and seal this the 6th day of April, 1935 at 10:20 O’clock P.M. at Home.
R. D. Whitehead”

The learned chancellor construed the will to give Minnie G. Whitehead, the testator’s wife, a life estate in his property and upon her death or remarriage the principal to pass to his brothers and sisters and his nieces and nephews in accordance with such relationship, and the life estate [382]*382of Minnie G. Whitehead to be charged with the annual payment of $150.00 for the benefit of the testator’s sister, Nannie D. Whitehead.

Minnie G. Whitehead was granted an appeal from the decision of the chancellor, hence the case is before us.

Mrs. Whitehead’s contention is that she takes a fee simple estate in all of the property of which her husband died, seized and possessed, under the express terms of his will, and that after having thus disposed of his entire estate an attempt, if made, to engraft thereon a limitation over, or to make provision therefrom for an annuity, would be futile because the law does not allow it. The simple proposition, she urges, is that if one devises to another all that he has, in fee simple, it is a complete divestiture of his estate and that is the end of the matter.

This court has so often had before it the task of construing wills, of a similar nature, that the legal principles involved may be said to be settled. It is only their application to varying language and differing conditions that gives trouble.

It has been said before that the key which unlocks the door to every will is the intention of him who makes it. It is the duty of the court to ascertain that intention. Its source is the will itself viewed in the light of environment, relationship, duty and other allowable circumstances and conditions surrounding the testator, which might almost be termed the imponderables of the situation.

Let us examine with care the whole will, including a very peculiar heading at its beginning. It is this: “Since the Death of my Brother J. J. Whitehead I think I shall write a Will like I want it.” This is indented and just opposite are these words: “Two days after the Burial of Cousin J. Hunt Hargrave.”

If these two statements have any significance they seem to indicate a thoughtful and meditative state of mind. The first statement is signed, “K. D. Whitehead.” What effect his brother, J. J. Whitehead, if living, would have had upon his making such a will as he desired, we cannot even con-[383]*383jeeture. That there was something in the nature of a deterrent we cannot doubt. At any rate he was in a position to write a will as he wanted it. The second statement reveals the fact that he was thinking of the uncertainty of life and the certainty of death, for he was mindful of the burial of a relative just two days before. Now how would a natural, normal, just man, with these reflections, want his will to be? Mr. Whitehead was 63 years old at the time of his death and about 60 at the time he wrote his will. He had lived in Pittsylvania county, Virginia, all of his life and had accumulated an estate valued at $63,000. It does not appear when he was married but it is fair to surmise that Mrs. Whitehead had been his wife for a number of years. If so, necessarily, she had helped him accumulate this fortune and had been a devoted and faithful wife. The confidence in which she was held by him, evidenced by the terms of the will, justifies this statement. He named her as his personal representative and requested the court to relieve her of the onus of furnishing security or an appraisement of his estate. He thus shielded her from the burden of the usual and legal requirements, which are intended to safeguard an estate of such nature and value. It would be difficult to conceive how a husband could exhibit a greater degree of confidence, affection and care for a wife than there is shown to have existed in this instance.

Just before the designation of his wife as his personal representative are these significant words: “The Balance of my Estate (after first providing for the payment of his debts) I give to My Wife Minnie G. Whitehead Both real and Personal also Cash, Bond Stocks and Insurance in fee Simple.” If apter words could be employed to express an entire absolute estate we would hardly know how to select them. Following these words, without punctuation, however, are these: “I hearby Nominate and Appoint My Said Wife Minnie G. Whitehead as Administratrix of this My last Will and request the Court not to require any Security or Appraisement of her as Such.” If he had stopped there and signed his name it would have been a [384]*384complete will and a complete disposal of his property, and it was the latter, we think. This was the paramount scheme of disposition of his estate that he had in mind. It was the will of a natural, normal, just man, written like he wanted it to be, as he declared in the statement at the beginning.

But someone may say, you have left out of consideration at least one-half of the wording of .the will. Our observation as to that is that what we have left out of consideration, up to this time, is, in law, a futile effort to en-graft upon a fee simple estate a remainder over and a provision for an annuity, which, if it were mandatory, simply cannot be done. The testator wanted his wife, his companion through the years, his helpmeet, she whom he must keep, “forsaking all others,” to have his property outright and he said so.

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Bluebook (online)
6 S.E.2d 624, 174 Va. 379, 1940 Va. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehead-v-whitehead-va-1940.