127 Va. 341 | Va. | 1920
delivered the opinion of the court.
■ This appeal involves the construction of the second clause of the will of Mrs. Mary A. Hill, which is as follows:
“2nd. I give a,nd bequeath to the children of my son, A. P. Hill, the debts due by him and which are secured by a vendor’s lien retained in the deed of conveyance made to him by Margarette S. Turpén and duly recorded in the proper office of the city of Louisville, Kentucky, conveying to him a lot of land with improvements thereon situated in the said city, which said debts, so secured, amount in the aggregate to the sum of seventeen hundred dollars, $1,700.00,’ principal, and which have been duly assigned and transferred to and are now held by me. I also give and bequeath to the said children the sum of three hundred dollars, $300.00 to be paid by my executor hereinafter named. I do hereby nominate and appoint my sons, John R.Hill and*344 T. P. Hill, testamentary guardians of the said children, and request that no security be required of them on their qualification as such. I authorize and direct said guardian to pay to any of the said children as they come of age, or marry, their respective shares of said bequest to them to which they, or any of them, may be entitled to on their arriving at the age of twenty-one (21) years. Should any of the said children die before reaching twenty-one (21) years, or marriage, then the shares to which they would have been entitled to shall be equally divided among the surviving children.
“I desire and do so direct that the said guardians shall keep the buildings on said lot of land properly insured, the premiums to be paid from the money coming to their hands.”
The will was written in 1907, and the testatrix died in 1913. In the meantime Mrs. Hill foreclosed the lien and collected the $1,700.00 debt mentioned in the above clause, but preserved the proceeds in the form of a bank certificate of deposit. After her death a question arose between the residuary legatees and the children of A. P. Hill as to whether the collection of the debt by the testatrix in her lifetime worked an ademption of the legacy to them as provided in the second clause of the will.
The principal question in the case, and, the one to which the argument before us was exclusively addressed, is whether the $1,700 bequest in the second clause constituted a specific legacy. If it did constitute such a legacy, there may still be some question as to the effect of the collection of the fund. If, on the other hand, the bequest is to be considered as either a general or a demonstrative legacy, then it is clear and is conceded that no ademption resulted.
The circuit court “being of opinion that according to the true construction of the last will and testament of Mary A. Hill, deceased, by the second clause thereof, she be
The testatrix had, when she wrote the will, three sons, four grandchildren (the beneficiaries under the second clause) and three step-children. Her total estate was worth abdut nine thousand dollars. By the third clause of her will she created a trust fund of $2,000 for the benefit of one son; by the fourth clause she gave to the three step-children $175 each, or a total of $525; and by the fifth clause she gave the residue of her estate to the other two sons, one of whom she designated as her executor. It thus appears from the face of the will that she intended to divide the bulk of her estate into practically equal portions of $2,000 each, giving one portion to each of the three living sons and one to the children of the deceased son as a class.
After the execution of the will the testatrix became dissatisfied with the $1,700 lien on the Louisville property. Subsequent to the death of her son, A. P. Hill, in February, 1915, his wife and children had occupied the property as a home for a few months and then moved to Washington, where they were living at the time the will was made. . The
Applying these principles, if we treated the gift in question here as a specific legacy, we might reasonably hold that no ademption was intended and none effected because the testator evidently preserved the original investment, under a mere change of form in the security, and did not intend by the change to divert it from the purpose indicated in the second clause of the will.
But this question does not arise if the gift be treated, as we think it should be, as a general or demonstrative legacy.
In the text last above cited it is said: “Whether a legacy is general, specific or demonstrative, depends entirely on the intention of the testator, and so the expressed purpose of a legacy may indicate its character. In order to ascertain the testator’s true intention it is proper when necessary to look to the other parts of the will and consider evidence of the surrounding circumstances. The presumption being that the testator intended equality among the objects of his bounty, a legacy is presumed to be general unless it clearly appears to be specific, especially where it is of a pecuniary character, and the burden of identification of a specific legacy is upon the legatee.”
This principle and rule of construction was recognized •and applied in Corbin v. Mills, supra, Wherein Judge Joynes used the following language peculiarly applicable here: “The subsequent collection by the testator of a large part of these funds did' not have the effect of diminishing the pro
It is not necessary to hold that if the legacy were clearly specific, the care with which she kept' the fund intact until her death would prevent an ademption because of her intention to the contrary. As we have already stated, the question in this form does not arise. But the fact that she did thus care for and preserve this fund is important, and may properly be considered as throwing light upon her meaning in making the provision for the children under the
With reference to the assignment of error based upon the introduction of certain evidence, including in particular the interesting statements made by the residuary legatees before this litigation arose, that their mother intended these grandchildren to have the fund in question, we need only
We find no error in the decree appealed from, and it will be affirmed.
Affirmed.