Wood v. Tredway

69 S.E. 445, 111 Va. 526, 1910 Va. LEXIS 80
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 17, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 445 (Wood v. Tredway) 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
Wood v. Tredway, 69 S.E. 445, 111 Va. 526, 1910 Va. LEXIS 80 (Va. 1910).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question presented on this appeal involves a construction of the statute now section 2527 of the Code, and arises out of the following state of facts: Mrs. Willia B. Tredway, nee Lundy, on or about the 11th of October, 1892, intermarried with E. C. Tredwajq a widower with four children of his first marriage, and within three months, to-wit, on or about January 4, 1893, she executed her holograph will, making no reference to any child of hers that might thereafter be born, which will is as follows:

“I, Willia B. Tredway, being of sound and disposing mind, do make, ordain and appoint this, my last will and testament.
“Item. 1. I give to my husband, E. C. Tredway to be held by him during his life, my property, both real and personal; and he may in his discretion sell any or all of my real estate and reinvest the proceeds in such manner as he may deem best; which investment may be either in real or personal property.
“Item 2. At the death of my husband I direct that my property be equally divided between: Guerrant A. Tredway, Moses Tredway, E. C. Tredway, Jr., and Hampden S. Tredway.
“Item 3. I appoint my husband, E. C. Tredway, executor of this my will, and direct that no security be required of him.
“Written wholly with my own hand, sealed and dated 4th day of January, 1893.”

[528]*528The remaindermen named in the will are the children of E. C. Tredway, and after the execution of the will the testatrix gave birth to two children — one born in August, 1894, and the other in April, 1897, both of whom survived their mother and were the complainants in this suit in the lower court and appellees here. In August, 1900, Mrs. Tredway died, and in .September following her will was presented and probated in the County Court of Greensville county, and her husband, E. C. Tredway, the executor therein named, qualified as such without security, and undertook the settlement of the testatrix’s estate. Subsequently, by various deeds, E. C. Tredway, professing to act in his own right and as executor of his deceased wife’s will, conveyed to various persons portions of the real estate of which she died seized and possessed, but no part of the proceeds of the sales were re-invested or has come to the appellees from the estate of their mother.

In February, 1907, E. C. Tredway died,'and shortly after his death this suit was instituted by the appellees, acting through their aunt as next friend, making the claimants of the said lands conveyed by E. C. Tredway, as aforesaid, parties defendant to their bill; and after setting forth the fact that the will of their mother had been executed by her long prior to their birth, and that said executor had executed deeds to the various parties named, purporting to convey to them the fee simple title to the various portions of land of which their mother died seized and exhibiting copies of said deeds with their bill, the bill proceeds: “All of which before mentioned deeds purporting to convey the lands inherited by your complainants from their mother, E. C. Tredway, under the laws of descent of the Commonwealth of Virginia, they are advised and believe, and now here charge, to be null and void as to your complainants, and passed no further estate than that held by curtesy of their father, E. C. Tredway, and that the title of the grantees therein terminated at the death of said E. C. Tredway,” etc.

[529]*529To this bill the defendants below, appellants here, demurred, and also hied their answer, in which they admitted all the facts set out in the bill and stated that they did not desire to make any other or further answer to the allegations of the bill; whereupon, the circuit court having overruled the demurrer to the bill, entered the decree here complained of, which; adjudged, among other things, that the appellees recover of appellants the several parcels of land claimed by the former and held by the latter, respectively, to be held subject only to the conditions named in the statute.

The assignments of error involve, as stated, a construction of section 2527 of the Code, as applied to Mrs. Tredway’s will. The title of the act is: “Provision for pretermitted children where no child living when will made;” and the language of the statute is as follows: “If any person die leaving a child * * * * and leaving a will, made when such person had' no child living, wherein any child he might have is not provided for or mentioned, such will, except so far as it provides for the payment of the debts of the testator, shall be construed as if the devises and bequests therein had been limited to take effect in the event that the child shall die under the age of tAventy-one years, unmarried and without issue.”

The contention of appellants is that a will made by a testator under the circumstances set out in the statute is operative, except so far as it contains devises and bequests in the strict technical sense of those words; and that a power of sale, connected as it is in the will under consideration with a life estate in land, is not strictly speaking either a devise or a bequest, and therefore its operation is not prevented by the statute, but that a deed made in pursuance of the power conveys the title away from the heirs. In other words, appellants contend that the statute only prescribes a construction to be placed upon devises and Requests, and that a power of sale is not a devise or bequest; therefore, it follows that the sales made by E. C. Tredway were legal, and appellants ac[530]*530quired valid titles to the land conveyed, and the interests or lights of appellees secured by the statute attached only to the proceeds derived from the sales.

On the other hand, appellees contend that the provisions of the statute were incorporated for the benefit of the child, and that the words “devise” and “bequest” as used in the statute were intended to embrace any and all dispositions of the property made in the will, which affected or changed in any way the title of the pretermitted child to that portion of the estate of the parent to which it was entitled under the general law, independently of the will, and covers the case of an alienation under the power given in the will as fully as the •direct devise of the same property by the terms of the will.

At common law birth of a child did not revoke a will, (Schouler on Wills, p. 424, et seq.; 2nd Min. Inst. (3rd ed.), 1036-8), and it was only by a line of decisions that the chancery •courts, following immediately after the enactment of the Statute of Wills in England, established a rule of constructive revocation of a will as to the interest of a child not mentioned in the will or otherwise provided for, founded upon a presumption that the. testator did not intend to disinherit the •child. This principle of constructive revocation the courts of equity derived, notwithstanding the peremptory language of the statutes of fraud (29 Car. H, C. A., sec. 6), from con-, siderations of domestic duty and convenience, and the principle is incorporated into the Code of Virginia with material modifications. 2 Min. 1st. (4th eel.) 1026-7. And the reasons compelling the courts to this implied revocation are very clearly stated by Eoane. J., in the opinion of this court in Yerby v. Yerby, 3 Call 334.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 445, 111 Va. 526, 1910 Va. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-tredway-va-1910.