Jane Cunningham, a married woman, the wife of George W. Cunningham, being the owner of a tract of land and certain personal property, as her separate estate, by will dated August 19th, 1879, devised and bequeathed said land and said personal-property to her husband absolutely. At the time this will was made the testatrix had no children; but-between that time and her death, which occurred in 1883, she had two children, a son and a daughter, who survived her, and are still living. The will was duly admitted to probate in Monroe county, where the parties resided in 1883. The husband took possession of said land and personal property; claimed the same as tenant by curtesy and distri-butee. In November, 1886, the two infant children of the testatrix, by their next friend, instituted this suit in the Circuit Court of Monroe county against their father, the said George W. Cunningham, in which, after stating the foregoing facts, they allege that the defendant, claiming to own the whole of said property absolutely, under said will, has converted the personal estate to his own use, and is selling the timber oil- the land, and has attempted to sell a part of- the land itself. They also aver that the defendant never renounced the provisions of the will, and that therefore he is not entitled to an estate by curtesy in the land, or any distributive share of the personalty. They pray that the defendant be enjoined from selling the land, or any of the timber therefrom, and that he may be required to account for
Our statute provides that if a person die leaving a child, and leaving a will made when such person had no child living, such will shall be construed as if the devises and bequests therein had been limited to take effect in the event that the child shall die unmarried and without issue.” Section 16, ch. 77, Code. The facts here bring this case clearly within the statute. The only question, then, to be determined, is whether or not the failure of the defendant to renounce the will is a bar to his right to take anything under the law as husband. The statute by which it is claimed the bar is effected, provides that a wife may, within a year from the time the same is probated, renounce the provisions made for her in her husband’s will, and then, after pi-escribing the manner in which the renunciation shall be made, it declares : “ If such renunciation be made,, or if no provision be made for her in the will, she shall have such share of her husband’s real estate and personal estate, as she would have had if he had died intestate, leaving children; otherwise, she shall have no more thereof than is given her by the will. A husband may, in like manner, renounce a provision made for him in the will of his wife; and in such case, or if no provision be made for him in the will, he shall have such share of his wife’s estate, real or personal, as he would have had if she had died intestate, leaving children; otherwise, he shall have no more thereof than is given him by the will.” Section 11, ch. 78, Code. It will be observed that this statute does not in
In respect to dower, the provision of the Virginia Code was retained in the Code of 1868, and is still the law of this State. It is in these words : “If any estate, real or personal, intended to be in lieu of her dower, shall be conveyed or devised for the jointure of the wife, such conveyance or devise shall bar her dower of the real estate, or the residue thereof.” Section 4, ch. 70; In this condition of the legislation of this State, this Court, in Shuman v. Shuman, 9 W. Va. 50 decided, that where a husband, during coverture, conveyed
Our statutes in respecj to curtesy are found in chapter 65 of the-Code, — the same chapter which embraces the subjects of dower and jointure. Sections 15 and 16 provides as follows : (15) “If a married woman die seized of an estate of inheritance in lands, her husband shall be tenant by the courtesy in the same.” (16) “If any estate, real or personal, be delivered by the wife to the husband in lieu of his courtesy, and he accepts the same, he shall be barred of his courtesy in
In regal’d to the personal estate of the wife, the law gives the husband no right to a distributive share thereof, except
For these reasons, I am of opinion that so much of the decree of the Circuit Court of March 26,1887, as decides that the defendant, George W. Cunningham, by his failure to renounce, in the manner prescribed by law, the provisions made for him in the will of his wife, and by his' election to take under said will, is barred of his courtesy in the real estate mentioned in said will, is erroneous, and must be reversed, and this cause remanded to said court for further proceedings.
REVERSED. REMANDED.