ELIZABETH H. HYMAN, ET AL. v. MARY ELIZABETH GLOVER
Record No. 830529
Supreme Court of Virginia
September 5, 1986
Present: All the Justices
David R. Clarke for appellee.
THOMAS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this аppeal, we must construe the will of Janet McClymont Hannan who made certain bequests using the word “issue.” The question for decision is whether the word “issue,” as used by the testatrix, includes an adopted child.
The will was executed on March 13, 1977. It provided in pertinent part as follows:
I direct my Executrix to divide [my estate] into as many equal shares as there shаll be children, me surviving, plus the number of my children predeceasing me but leaving issue me surviving, and I give, devise and bequeath one of such shares to each of my children me surviving and one share to the issue of each deceased child of mine, such issue to take, collectively, per stirpes, the share of their deceased ancestor.
The testatrix died on April 2, 1982, survived by four children, Elizabeth H. Hyman, William Everett Hannan, Jr., Kenneth Heron Hannan, and Isabella Hannan Pfeil (hereinafter collectively referred to as “Hyman“). Her fifth child, James M. Hannan, had died of cancer in May 1977. Under a decree entered in January 1977 by the Probate Court of Cumberland County, Maine, James had adopted Mary Elizabeth Glоver, his wife‘s 35-year-old daughter by a former marriage.
Mrs. Glover filed a petition asking the court below to declare that “petitioner is the issue of decedent‘s son James Hannan, and
On appeal, Hyman contends that the trial court erred in its construction of the statute. We agree. Thеrefore, we will reverse the judgment of the trial court.
The trial court based its ruling upon
In the interpretation of wills and trusts, adopted persons and persons born out of wedlock are included in class gift terminology and terms of relationship in accordance with rules for determining relationships for purposes of intestate succession unless a contrary intent shall appear on the face of the will or trust.
The rules for determining relationships for purposes of intestate succession, referred to in
If, for purposes of Title 64.1, a relationship of parent and child must be established to determine succession by, through or from a person:
1. An adopted person is the child of an adopting parent and not of the biological parents. . . .
The trial court was persuaded that
Our analysis begins with an examination of the common law meaning of the word “issue.” Since the infancy of the legal
Given the common law meaning of the word “issue,” any statute enacted to change that meaning would necessarily be in derogation of the common law. Two important rules of construction come into play where a statute is in derogation of the common law. First, “[t]he common law is not to bе considered as altered or changed by statute unless the legislative intent be plainly manifested.” Hannabass v. Ryan, 164 Va. 519, 525, 180 S.E. 416, 418 (1935). Second, “[s]tatutes in derogation of the common law are to be strictly construed and not to be enlarged in their operation by construction beyond their express terms.” C. & O. Railway v. Kinzer, 206 Va. 175, 181, 142 S.E.2d 514, 518 (1965).
Further, since this case involves the construction of a will, at least оne other important rule of construction applies. We stated the rule in Driskill v. Carwile, 145 Va. 116, 120, 133 S.E. 773, 774 (1926), where we wrote that “words having a definite legal significance are to be understood as used in their definite legal sense. . . .”
Absent the statute relied upon by Glover, the rule set forth in Driskill would make this an “open and shut” case. We would give “issue” its definite legal meaning and simply сonclude that “issue” does not include adopted children and, therefore, Glover cannot take under the will.
Moreover, the terms of the applicable statute itself do not lead to thе conclusion advanced by Glover. There are two things that must occur before
More specifically, the first part of the statute says, in part, that “adopted persons and persons born out of wedlock are included in class gift terminology and terms of relationship in accordance with rules for determining relationships for purposes of intestate succession. . . .” There is no dispute in this case that a gift to “issue” is a class gift. But Glover argues that the rules on determining relationships help еstablish that adopted children are included in the word “issue.” According to Glover, since the rules set forth in
An almost identical argument was made and rejected in Munday, 164 Va. 145, 178 S.E. 917. In that case, a provision of the adoption statute provided that an adopted child was “to all intents and purposes the child and heir at law of the person so adopting him or her. . . .”
By the same token, when
Further,
Also significant is the fact that the parties agree that
The problem presented by section 64.1-64 is that its operative word, “issue,” has the absolute biological meaning, “issue of the body” of the deceased beneficiary. It is a matter of settled law and biology that while an adopted person can become one‘s child, he can nevеr become one‘s issue, and thus an adopted child is precluded from taking under section 64.1-64.
Inheritance Rights, 12 U. Rich. L. Rev. at 289 (emphasis added) (footnote omitted). Professor Johnson‘s concern with the 1968 version of
Glover argues that the deletion of the word “issue” in the anti-lapse statute has no bearing on whether
Glover‘s argument does not answer the critical question raised by the General Assembly‘s actions in promulgating
Reversed and remanded.
POFF, J., dissenting.
I cannot join the majority in this opinion. Ancient notions of primogeniture and estatеs tail and the Statute de Donis have long since been abandoned in this Commonwealth. See Orndoff v. Turman, 29 Va. (2 Leigh) 200 (1830). Left surviving, however, was the case-law rule that a testator is presumed to have employed such words as “issue” to exclude “persons who qualify as such only by or through adoption“. Langhorne v. Langhorne, 212 Va. 577, 578, 186 S.E.2d 50, 51 (1972). That presumption was rooted in medieval England‘s obsession with bloodlines in thе devolution of property. See generally T. Bergin & P. Haskell, Preface to Estates in Land and Future Interests 9 (1966). As I read Acts 1978, c. 647, the General Assembly intended to reverse the presumption enunciated in Langhorne.
The 1978 Act, a comprehensive revision of statutory and case law, was patterned after statutory drafts recommended in a law review article authored by Professor J. Rodney Johnson, Inheritance Rights of Children in Virginia, 12 U. Rich. L. Rev. 275 (1978). Thе legislature repealed four sections in Title 64.1, entitled “Wills and Decedents’ Estates“, amended and reenacted four sections in that Title, added five new sections to that Title, and made certain conforming changes in related titles.
This new canon must be applied in the interpretation of a will “unless a contrary intent shall appear on the face of the will“. Id. The majority holds that the word “issue” must be given its common-law meaning and that the testatrix‘s use of that word evinces an intent to restrict her class gift to her biological grandchildren or their biological descendants. But a gift to “issue” is archetypically “class gift terminology“, and courts of this Commonwealth, including the Supreme Court, are commanded by statute to interpret such language to connote testamentary intent to include adopted persons in the class eligible for the gift. Yet the majority construes this very language as proof of intent to exclude them.3 Other courts, applying statutes similar to thosе enacted by our General Assembly in 1978, have felt bound by the statutory mandate. See Wheeling Dollar Sav. & Trust Co. v. Hanes, 160 W. Va. 711, 719, 237 S.E.2d 499, 504 (1977); accord Wielert v. Larson, 84 Ill. App. 3d 151, 154, 404 N.E.2d 1111, 1113 (1980). See also Scribner v. Berry, 489 A.2d 8 (Me. 1985); Lewis v. Green,
In effect, the majority has disinterred and applied a case-law rule of construction buried by the General Assembly. As I perceive the public-policy standards imposed by the 1978 Act, adopted persons now stand on the same footing as biological childrеn for purposes of both testate and intestate inheritance, provided, of course, that a testator may expressly confine the beneficiaries of a class gift to those related by blood or expressly exclude those who are not.
Applying the statutory canons of construction in effect in Virginia on the date of the testatrix‘s death, see
CARRICO, C.J., and COCHRAN, J., join in dissent.
Notes
The version of the statute discussed by Professor Johnson provided as follows:
When issue of devisee or legatee to take estate. - If a devisee or legatеe die before the testator, leaving issue who survive the testator, such issue shall take the estate devised or bequeathed, as the devisee or legatee would have done if he had survived the testator, unless a different disposition thereof be made or required by the will. This rule shall also apply to a devise or bequest to several jointly, one or more of whom die in the lifetime of the testator.
