22 W. Va. 130 | W. Va. | 1883
The important and controlling question in this case is': Was Abram M. Beard as the survivor of his wife Martha A. Beard and as her administrator entitled to the whole of her personal estate after the payment of her debts, or was he bound to account therefor to her next of kin, her brothers; sisters a,nd nephews, as her distributees? This must depend upon the construction given to the marriage-settlement made and entered into between Abram M. Beard and Martha A. Clark, formerly Blair, at the time of their marriage dated May 7,1878, a copy of which has been given at length in the statement of the case. If Abram M. Beard was not bound to account to his wife’s next of kin for her personal estate in his hands as administrator, the circuit court ought to have sustained his demurrer to the plaintiffs’ bill and dismissed the same at their costs. And if this be so, we need
At common law on the death of a Avife her real estate descended to her heirs immediately, except where she had had a child by her surviving husband born alive and capable of inheriting her estate, .in which case he had a life-estate in such lands as tenant by courtesy. And at her death, if he survive, and she leaves no children, he will as her administrator be entitled to all her personal estate which continued in action or unrecovered at her death. If she owned a separate estate, which had been bestowed on her by deed or will, or which had arisen from a marriage-settlement made by her with her husband, if there was nothing in the instrument creating the separate estate which otherwise provides, her separate estate both real and personal, if she died intestate leaving her husband surviving and'no children, would pass .in like manner to her husband by statute. See Code, chapter 78, § 9 el. 2, p. 485. He would be tenant by courtesy oí her separate real estate under the same circumstances, as he would be tenant by courtesy of her real estate at common law. See Winkler v. Winkler’s Ex’r, 18 W. Va. 455. And if the husband survives the wife, he will as her administrator and sole distributee be entitled to all her separate personal estate, when she leaves no children, where the instrument creating such separate estate does not otherwise provide. See Code, chapter 78, § 9 cl. 2.
The marriage-settlement- in this case clearly created a separate estate in Mrs. Martha A. Beard after her marriage in all of her property both real and personal, as by the express terms of this settlement “ her property both real and personal was to remain in her own name and under her separate control and to be disposed of, as she may desire either by sale or otherwise,” and “ he agreed, that all the property both real and personal owned by her should remain separate and in her own name, the same as if she had never married.” Upon her death leaving no child her separate personal property by section 9 of chapter 78 clause 2 of Code passed to her surviving husband, unless in this marriage-settlement some provision can be found, which prevents the operation of the general law upon her personal estate.
In Boisseau et al. v. Aldridges, 5 Leigh 222 the testator by his will declared, “that he wished this instrument to prevent either of two sisters, naming them, or their husbands from having one cent of my estate.” It was nevertheless held, that those two sisters, and their husbands were entitled as heirs and distributees to two fifths of his estate, the decedent leaving in all five sisters and their descendants. It seems to me upon the principles laid down in this case, that if the testator had devised real and personal property to these two sisters for their sole and separate use free from the control of their husbands and not subject to their debts and had declared in the most explicit language, that upon the death of these sisters their husbands should .under no circumstances be tenants by courtesy or distributees of or in airy manner re
But if we suppose, that instead of a separate estate in real and personal property being given by a third parson to a wife she while unmarried owned such property, and in contemplation of marriage by a marriage-settlement executed by both the intended wife and husband all her property real and personal is settled upon her in fee simple or absolutely for her sole and separate use free from the control of her intended husband and not liable to his debts, and after the marriage she dies leaving no descendants, would her husband, if she had had a child, be tenant by courtesy of her land, and would he take all her personal property as distributee, in case she made no disposition of either her real or personal property by will or otherwise? It seems to me he would, and that it has been so decided in effect by the court of appeals of Virginia in the case of Pickett and wife et al. v. Chilton, 5 Munf. 467.
The question then to be determined in this case is: Did Abram M. Beard by the marriage-settlement dated May 7, 187&, between him and Martha A. Clark his intended wife either expressly or by necessary .implication agree to release and surrender all his interest in his wife’s separate personal estate, in the event she should die before him leaving no descendant and without disposing of her separate personal estate, which she was authorized to do ? If he did, he as her administrator is bound to account to her next of kin, and the bill filed by them must be regarded as a good bill, which on the demurrer should have been sustained. If on the other hand he did not expressly or by necessary implication make such an agreement to release his interest under such circumstances, he is not bound to render any account to her next of kin but has a right to retain as her sole dis-tributee all her estate in his hands as administrator, and the court should have sustained his demurrer to the bill filed by her next of kin to hold him to a settlement as administrator and should have dismissed their bill.
That he by this marriage-settlement agreed, that she should have a separate estate in all her property and 'might dispose of it in any manner she pleased, is clear. But is there anything in this marriage-settlement, which shows clearly that he intended and agreed expressly or by necessary implication, that he would surrender and release any interest he might have in her separate personal estate as her administrator and sole distributee, if she should die childless and without- disposing of such separate
Do the words “ ho relinquishes all claim, title or interest in her property that might vest in him under the law by reason of their marriage” necessarily mean “all the claim, title
If this be the true meaning of this contract, as it seems to me to be, it is obvious, that under the law, as we have laid it down, her next of kin had no interest of any sort in her personal estate, and the circuit court on his demurrer ought to have dismissed their bill at their costs.
The decree of the circuit court of November 25, 1881, must therefore be set aside, reversed and annulled; and the appellants must recover of the plaintiff below their costs in this Court expended; and this Court proceeding to render such decree, as the court below ought to have rendered, doth sustain the demurrer of Abram M. Beard in his own right and as administrator of Martha A. Beard and doth dismiss the plaintiffs’ bill at their costs.
Heoree Reversed. Bill Dismissed!