81 Va. 724 | Va. | 1886
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 8th day of September, 1875, John T. Evans, senior, of Alexandria, departed this life intestate, seized of a large estate, real and personal, the latter amounting to about $100,000. He left no widow, but did leave three daughters surviving him—namely: Virginia Stewart, Mary O. Watkins,
Administration upon the estate was granted to Isaac C. O’Neal, who duly qualified and partially administered the personal estate which went into his hands, but reserving undistributed one-fourth of said personal estate, the share of said John T. Evans, junior, if alive.
On the 2d day of October, 1879, said Virginia Stewart filed her bill in the corporation court of the city of Alexandria against Isaac O. O’Neal, administrator as raforesaid, and D. S. Watkins and Mary O. Watkins, his wife, and Joshua Ellis and Ann Maria Ellis, his wife, setting forth the death and intestacy of John T. Evans, senior, and the qualification and partial administration of the personal estate by said administrator; that her late father had four children—said oratrix, Mary C., now the wife of D. S. Watkins; Ann Maria, now the wife of Joshua Ellis, and a son, John T. Evans; that the said John T. Evans had not been heard of for more than seven years, and was belieA'ed to be dead; and expressing a willingness on her part, and, as she was informed, a like willingness on the part of the other distributees, to execute the refunding bonds required by law in such cases, prayed that said administrator be required to discover on oath what sum of money he held as the distributable share of John T. Evans, junior, and that said administrator be required to pay over to said oratrix one-third of the same, on the terms prescribed by the statute in such cases, and for general relief.
The administrator did not answer, and the bill was taken for confessed as to him.
An account was ordered and taken, founded upon the depositions of witnesses taken in the progress of the investigation made by the commissioner. Based upon the facts reported by the commissioner, the said corporation court, on the 8th day of September, 1880, entered a decree in the cause, declaring that John T. Evans, junior, left the State of Virginia in the year 1866; that since that time he has not returned to the State, and not having been heard from since, he must be presumed to be dead, and to have died prior to the first day of January, 1874; and that it further appearing to the court from said report that John T. Evans, junior, did not die until the year 1875, and also that the said John T. Evans, junior, left no children, the three surviving children of John T. Evans, senior, to-wit: Mary O. Watkins, Ann M. Ellis, and Virginia Stewart, are entitled in equal shares to the whole of the personalty whereof John T. Evans, senior, died the owner and possessor, and that the widow of the said John T. Evans, junior, is not entitled to share in the distribution of same. And it appearing from said report, by one statement, that the sum retained by the administrator as and for the share of said John T. Evans, junior, is $24,943.34, and by another statement to be $23,043.82, and there being a question raised whether either of said statements were strictly accurate, the court reserved its judgment
Two days later, to-wit: on the 10th day of September, 1880, Mary Jane Evans, by leave of court, filed her petition in the cause, asserting that she was entitled to an interest in the estate as the wife of John T. Evans, junior, when the court partially heard the cause again, and then entered a decree rescinding so much of the decree of the 8th day of September, 1880, as orders the payment of $7,000 to each of the distributees therein named, out of the fund reserved by the administrator as the share of John T. Evans, junior, in the personal estate of John T. Evans, senior, and as declares that the widow of John T. Evans, junior, is not entitled to share in the personalty so reserved, but reserving the question whether there is such widow or whether she is so entitled, and in lieu of so much of said former decree as directed $7,000 to be paid to each of the distributees therein named, ordered the sum of $3,500 to be paid to each of them, out of the fund reserved by the administrator as aforesaid.
The petition is in the name of Mary Jane Evans, wife of John T. Evans, junior, by Robert T. Lucas, her next friend, and sets forth that she is the lawful wife of John T. Evans,
Mrs. Stewart, separately, and Mrs. Watkins and Mrs. Ellis,
On the 12th of April, 1881, an order was made in the cause substituting R. W. Ballinger, instead of R. T. Lucas, as next friend of the petitioner, Mary Jane Evans, and, for cause, removing the case to the circuit court of the. city of Alexandria
The cause was finally heard on the 28th day of September, 1883, when a decree was entered dismissing the petition of Mary Jane Evans, at the costs of her next friend, B. W. Ballinger, and dismissing the said petitioner as a party to the suit, and directing the administrator of John T. Evans, senior, deceased, to proceed to distribute the remainder of the estate in his hands amongst the parties to the suit, according to their respective interests as distributees of John T. Evans, senior, deceased. From that decree the case is here on appeal.
The appellant, as the wife of John T. Evans, junior, asserts her right to alimony out of the estate -of her said husband, inherited, as alleged by her, from his father, John T. Evans, senior, late of the city of Alexandria. Her claim rests upon the theory that her husband survived his father, and is still living, and one of his distributees at law.
With the introduction of the appellant’s claim the casé was presented in an entirely new aspect, and whether the circumstances disclosed by the evidence, brought into the cause in support of that claim, are sufficient to overturn the theory upon which said previous decree was founded, is substantially the question to be now determined by this court. Or, to state it differently, did John T. Evans, junior, survive his father, John T. Evans, senior? If he did not, of course there can be no foundation for the appellant’s claim. Upon this question there is no direct evidence, and we have to be guided by the circumstances disclosed in evidence to conduct us to a conclusion sanctioned by the doctrine of legal presumptions. And we may here remark that for the first time this court is called upon to construe our own statute upon the subject, which provides : “If any person who shall have resided in this State go from, and do not return to the State for seven years successively, he shall be presumed to be dead in any case wherein his death shall come in question, unless proof be made that he was alive
On the other side the contention is that the circumstances disclosed show that, prior to the institution of this suit, John T. Evans, junior, had been absent for seven years without being heard from, and that the presumption of law is that he is dead, and that he died in the lifetime of John T. Evans, senior; that there is no presumption of law as to' the precise time, within the period of seven years, at which he died, that being a matter of evidence; and that seven years having elapsed without his being heard from, and the presumption of death having arisen, and the appellant asserting that he survived John T. Evans, senior, the burden of proof is on her to establish that fact, essential to the establishment of her claim.
That the doctrine contended for by counsel for the appellant once prevailed in England in a somewhat qualified form, is amply attested by the cases of Lambe v. Orton, 6 Jur. N. S. 61; Dunn v. Snowden, 2 Dr. and Sm. 201; and Thomas v. Thomas, 2 Dr. and Sm. 298. These cases were all decided by Vice-Chancellor Kindersley, and in reviewing them in the leading case of in re Phene’s Trusts, L. R. 5 Ch. App. 139, Sir G. M.
All the English cases are reviewed and the subject exhaustively treated in in re Phene’s Trusts, supra, where the doctrine is laid down: “If a person has not been heard of for seven years there is a presumption of law that he is dead ; but at what time within that period he died is not a matter of presumption, but of evidence, and the onus of proving that the death took place at any particular time within the seven years lies upon the person who claims a right to the establishment of which that fact is essential; and that there is no presumption of law in favor of the continuance of life, though an inference of fact”may legitimately be drawn that a person alive and in health on a certain day was alive a short time afterwards.” And the Vice-Chancellor (Giffard) enforcing the justice and propriety of the rule, in the course of his opinion, said: “ Eow, where nothing is heard of a person for seven years, it is obviously a matter of complete uncertainty at what point of time in those seven years he died; of all the points of time the last day is the most improbable and most inconsistent with the ground of presuming the fact of death. The presumption arises from the great lapse of time since the party has been heard of, because it is considered extraordinary, if he was alive, that he should not be beard of. In other words, it is presumed that his not being heard of has been occasioned by his death, which presumption arises from the considerable time that has elapsed. If you assume that he was alive on the last day but one of the seven years, then there is nothing extraordinary in his not having been heard of on the last day; and the pre
And again, at page 151, the learned vice-chancellor says: “It is a general, well founded, rule that a person seeking to recover property must establish his title by affirmative proof. This was one of the grounds of decision in Doe v. Nepean; and to assert as an exception to the rule that the onus of proving death at any particular period, either within the seven years or otherwise, should be with the party alleging death at such particular period, and not with the person to whose title the fact is essential, is not consistent with the judgment of the present lord chancellor, when vice chancellor, in in re Green’s Settlement, Law. Rep. 1 Eq. 288, or with the doctrine of Lord Justice Rolt, when he said, in in re Bucham’s Trusts, that the question was one, not of presumption, but of proof; or with the real substance of the actual decisions, or the sound parts of the reasoning, in Doe v. Nepean, 5 B. & Ad. 86 (E. C. L. R., vol. 27), 2 M. & W. 894; or with the judgments in Rex v. Inhabitants of Harborne, 2 A. & E. 540 (E. C. L. R., vol. 29); Reg v. Lumby, Law. Rep. 1 C. C. 196; or with the principles to be deduced from the judgment in Underwood v. Wing, 4 D. M. & G. 633 (8 H. L. C. 183). The true proposition is, that those who found a right upon a person having survived a particular period, must establish that fact affirmatively by evidence; the evidence will necessary differ in different cases, but sufficient evidence there must be, or the person asserting title will fail.”
Connected with the subject under consideration the question of right or title to property, or of exemption from liability in a criminal prosecution arises under a great variety of circum
In Stephen’s Dig. of the Law of Ev. (Chase’s ed.), chapter fourteen, Article 99, it is said: “A person shown not to have been heard of for seven years by those, if any, who, if he
And in the late case of Davie v. Briggs, 97 U. S. 628, Mr. Justice Harlan, after a careful review of all the authorities, English and American, quotes the above passage from Stephens as the settled law.
Now, how is the question affected by our statute referred to above? The counsel for the appellant contend that the court below erred in not holding that the statute was intended to furnish a legal presumption of the time of the death, as well as of the fact of the death, and in support of this view great reliance is placed upon the decision in Clarke v. Canfield, 15 N. J. Eq. Rep. 119, decided in 1862, in which the doctrine contended for was certainly held, and in construing a statute the same as ours. But we find a later New Jersey case— Hoyt v. Newbold, 45 N. J. Law Rep. (16 Vroom), decided in 1883, which, so far from holding to the construction given to the statute in Clarke v. Canfield, supra, distinctly decides (1), that a person who absents himself from the State for seven successive years is presumed to be dead, and the party asserting that he is living, must prove it; and (2), that after the presumption of death arises, the burden of proof is on the party denying the death to show that the person is alive, and to overcome the presumption by proof. Parker, J., delivering the opinion of the court in that case, said: “This statute declares that there shall be presumption of the death of a person who absents himself from this State for seven successive years,
Our statute is like the New Jersey statute. It is but a legislative declaration of the rule independent of its enactment in the form of a statute. Its very terms forbid the construction contended for by counsel for the appellant. It declares: “If any person who shall have resided in this State go from, and do not return to the State for seven years successively, he shall be presumed to be dead in any case wherein his death shall come in question, unless proof be made that he was alive within that time.” It is undeniably true that John T. Evans, junipr, did reside in this State; that he left the State more than seven years before the institution of this suit, and that, upon the evidence of those most likely to know, if he was living, a decree was entered in the cause on the 8th day of September, 1880; that he was presumed to be dead and that he died prior to the death of his father, John T. Evans, senior. The question is, has the petitioner, the appellant here, since that decree, rebutted and overturned the presumption of death thus raised? The witness, J. W. Plant, a resident of Washington city, says he was present at the marriage of the appellant with John T. Evans, in Washington city, which he thinks took place in 1848; that they lived together some ten years—part of the time in Alexandria and the residue thereof in Washington city; and that the war broke out then and he lost sight of them. Now, the clear preponderance of testimony is that John T. Evans, junior married in 1848, lived, in Washington city until sometime
The witness Davis says he saw John T. Evans, junior, in Washington city in the fall of 1869; says, “I am positive because I know it was the year 1869; I know it was in 1869 anyway.” But this witness gives no satisfactory or plausible reason even for his statement, and looking to all the evidence on both sides, his statement cannot be relied on as proving anything.
The witness James B. Maguire, of Fredericksburg, who had known John T. Evans, junior, in that city, says that, to the
There are other witnesses relied on by the appellant, but the testimony of none of them is sufficiently certain as to dates or circumstances to warrant the inference that John T. Evans, junior, was living later than 1867 or 1868. Certainly there is no testimony that he survived his father, who died in 1874,
We might rest the case here and the decree appealed from would stand fully sustained by the circumstances of the case, but there is more. In the progress of the investigation below a Bible was found and produced in evidence and proved to have been the Bible used and read by John T. Evans, senior. On the first leaf of this Bible is this record: “John T. Evans departed this -life October 28th, 1826; Mrs. Blue died June 26th, 1861; Catherine Philips died August 10th, 1861; Alfred Blue died March 30th, 1869; Mrs. Hough was born January
There is no error in the decree appealed from, and the same must be affirmed.
Decree aeeirmed.