Wiant v. Lynch

140 S.E. 487, 104 W. Va. 507, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 233
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1927
Docket5947
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 140 S.E. 487 (Wiant v. Lynch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiant v. Lynch, 140 S.E. 487, 104 W. Va. 507, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 233 (W. Va. 1927).

Opinion

llATCHER, PRESIDENT:

This is a suit over the right to personal property between the respective administrators of E. Ii. Elliott and his wife Sarah E. E. H. Elliott died testate; his wife intestate. They had no children. Neither the bill nor the answer ask for a construction of his will; but a determination of this litigation requires that it be construed. After directing payment of his debts the will proceeds as follows:

“SECOND. I will and bequeath to my beloved wife, Sarah E. Elliott, all the residue of my estate, real, personal and mixed, for and during her natural life, and at her death all that remains thereof is to go to my legal living heirs except that Bayard T. Price, my nephew, to whom I hereby bequeath the sum of One Dollar as and for his full share of my estate, -and he shall share no further in the distribution thereof, except further that after the death of my wife, that in the distribution of the remainder of my property or estate left by her that the portion thereof that would legally go to Sarah Prances Elliott, the only heir of my brother, P. M. Elliott, deceased, shall not be paid to her until such time as she shall arrive at the age of 21 years.
*509 “THIRD. I hereby appoint and constitute my said wife Sarah E. Elliott the Executrix of this my last will and testament and direct that she qualify as such without security of any kind, and I further direct that there be no appraisement of my estate or any public sale thereof, and having the utmost confidence in the judgment of my said wife I desire that she shall not be required to make any settlement, as it is my desire that my said wife is to fully enjoy a sufficiency »of the property hereby willed to her so long as she may live to make her contented and happy.”

The appellant contends that Mrs. Elliott was devised an absolute estate, relying on Blake v. Blake, 92 W. Va. 663; National Surety Co. v. Jarrett, 95 W. Va. 420, and kindred cases. The appellee contends that she received only a life estate. He relies on Behrens v. Baumann, 66 W. Va. 56; Woodbridge v. Woodbridge, 88 W. Va. 187, and allied decisions. The tAvo lines of cases advocate the same rules of construction. After allowing for some dissimilarity in the language of the several bequests the variance in the decisions is due to difference in the application of those rules. In the cases cited by appellant phrases conferring on the life tenant the right to use or dispose of the property are regarded with great liberality. In the cases cited by appellee, language claimed to enlarge the life estate is scrutinized Avith some severity. For example, in Blake v. Blake, supra, a devise of money, credits and bonds to the wife “to have and to hold to her for her own individual use during her lifetime”, Avith residue “if any” after paying her just debts, etc., to certain children, Avas construed to give her the unlimited use of the bequest. In Behrens v. Baumann, supra, a devise of property to the Avife “for her OAvn use during her natural life”, with the request that she administer same for the benefit of herself and certain heirs, with remainder to them of “whatsoever what may be left”, was held to confer on her only the life estate. These decisions are difficult to reconcile, and we shall not attempt to do so. The logic which sustains one decision, opposes the other. One is the product of liberal, the other of strict, construction. Further comment on the diver *510 gent cases would be unfruitful as they have been exhaustively discussed in former decisions of this Court. See particularly Milhollen’s Adm’r. v. Rice, 13 W. Va. 510; Morgan v. Morgan, 60 W. Va. 327; National Surety Co. v. Jarrett, supra; Totten v. Dawson, 104 W. Va. ...., (decided by this Court October 11th, 1927).

Both citations concur that where property is willed to a beneficiary for life, but he is given unlimited power of disposal, his estate is absolute. If not expressly stated, the power of disposal must be clearly implied. “Where a life estate is expressly given to convert it into a fee, there must be clear power of disposition given to the devisee for life”. Stout v. Clifford, 70 W. Va. 178 (181). 2 Alexander on Wills, Sec. 977. As the second item in the will limits the -wife to a life estate in express terms, the burden is on appellant to show a superadded power of disposition. He relies on the third item — particularly that part which expresses the desire of the testator that no settlement be required of the wife, and that she fully enjoy a sufficiency of the property to mate her happy and contented. He contends that full enjoyment of the estate means absolute power over it. In order for that contention to prevail the right of full enjoyment must be inconsistent with, or in addition to, her rights as a life tenant.

■ The word “enjoy” has no primary significance of sale or disposal. Its accepted definition is “to have, possess, and use with satisfaction, to occupy or have the benefit of”. That definition conveys the idea of retention rather than disposition. So long as the devisee could pleasantly use the bequest as devised, no implied right of disposal would arise. Before the right to enjoy would imply the right to sell, the bequest would have to be unsuited to enjoyment in the form devised. There is nothing in the will to indicate that the property could not be enjoyed by the wife in the form in Avhich it was devised. If no implied right to consume or dispose of the property is inferable from -the words “fully enjoy”, then the obvious purpose of the testator was that his wife should enjoy the bequest not as an owner, but as a life tenant — that is, by use and occupation. “The words ‘use and *511 •occupation’ properly state the nature of the enjoyment of property by a tenant for life.” Faxon v. Faxon, 174 Mass. 509 (511). The right to use and enjoy the bequest is an ■ordinary incident to a life estate. “The tenant for life is entitled to the full use and enjoyment of the property.” 17 R. C. L. 625. 2 Alexander on Wills, Sec. 962; Thompson on Real Property, Sec. 731. Under the devise for life, the wife had the right to fully enjoy the property without other authority to do so. Therefore the express bestowal of that right did not enlarge the life estate.

A like construction was given the phrase “to be enjoyed by her”, in Englerth et al. v. Kellar, 50 W. Va. 259 (263). After quoting from Judge G-Reen’s opinion in Milhollen v. Rice, supra, to the effect that, when property was given to a devisee to consume, spend, sell or give away at his pleasure, the devisee took the fee, even though the interest were called by the will a life estate, the court said: “Michael Englerth gave all of his property remaining after the payment of his. debts to his wife, ‘to be enjoyed by her during her natural life.’ * * * The holder of a life estate has it for his enjoyment and for the purpose of using it and for no other purpose, except that he has the power to lease or sell it, (i. e. the life estate).

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Bluebook (online)
140 S.E. 487, 104 W. Va. 507, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiant-v-lynch-wva-1927.