OPINION OF THE COURT
(October 11, 2013)
The Estate of Ralph A. George appeals from a July 27, 2012 Order issued by the Appellate Division of the Superior Court, which affirmed a February 17, 2010 Final Adjudication entered by the Magistrate Division of the Superior Court. For the following reasons, we reverse.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Ralph A. George, a resident of St. Croix, died intestate on October 21, 1999. He was survived by his wife, Floretta J. George, and several children, including Lawrence Georgе. Although Floretta and Lawrence both petitioned the Family Division of the Superior Court for appointment
On December 16,1999, Floretta moved the Superior Court for spousal maintenance and support payments in the amount of $1,000 per month, without suggesting any temporal limit on that support. After his appointment аs administrator, Lawrence objected to Floretta’s motion because no inventory had been prepared or filed. Floretta renewed her motion on July 19, 2000, citing chapter 21 of title 15 of the Virgin Islands Code for the proposition that she was entitled “to remain in the house and collect support out of the estate for one year.” (J.A. 24.)
Once the Estate filed an inventory in December 2000, the Family Division held a hearing on Floretta’s renewed motion. In a February 5, 2001 Order, the Family Division directed the Estate to allow Floretta to remain in the marital homestead, and to pay her $700 in support payments each month. However, the February 5, 2001 Order did not specify an end date for these payments. Ultimately, the Estate ceased making payments to Floretta in May 2003, informing her in a June 2, 2003 letter that the relevant statutory provisions limited spousal support only to one year. In its letter, the Estate also informed Floretta that it would seek reimbursement for $11,200 in “excess” payments made from February 2002 to May 2003.
For inexplicable reasons, the probate matter then lay dormant for four years, with neither the parties nor the Family Division taking any further action. The Estate did not file any accountings or inventoriеs, and made no effort to collect the “excess” disbursements; likewise, Floretta took no action to reinstate the suspended spousal support payments. Finally, in June 2007, the Estate filed a “Motion for Declaratory Judgment,” which sought a determination that Floretta was never entitled to the $11,200 in excess payments. The Family Division, in an October 25, 2007 Order, rejected the Estate’s argument, directed the Estate to resume spousal support payments until the Estate was closed, and to pay Floretta $37,700 in back support.
Although the Estate attempted to immediately appeal that decision, this Court dismissed that appeal for lack of jurisdiction because the October 25, 2007 Order did not constitute an appealable final judgment. Estate of George v. George,
At sоme point, for reasons not disclosed in the record, the matter was transferred from the Family Division to the Magistrate Division. See 4 V.I.C. § 123(d). Eventually, the parties negotiated a final accounting, and the Magistrate Division issued a Final Adjudication on February 17, 2010, which explicitly referenced the spousal support payments previously awarded and paid to Floretta.
On February 22, 2010, the Estate appealed thе February 17, 2010 Final Adjudication to the Appellate Division of the Superior Court. In its brief, the Estate argued that the Family Division’s spousal support orders were contrary to title 15. Floretta, in turn, contended that the Final Adjudication did not relate to spousal support and, in any event, that spousal support payments in excess of one year are authorized by Virgin Islands law.
In a July 27, 2012 Order, the Appellate Divisiоn noted that it found the Estate’s appeal “troubling to say the least” because the Final Adjudication had been agreed to by all the parties, including the Estate. (J.A. 292.) The Appellate Division also concluded that it had no authority to review the spousal support orders entered by the Family Division prior to the transfer to the Magistrate Division, because “[tjhere is ... no statutory mechanism in the Virgin Islands Codе that allows for a judge of the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands to review an appeal of another judge of the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands.” (J.A. 293.) Nevertheless, the Appellate Division summarily concluded that, even if it had such authority, the Estate’s argument “has no merit.” (J.A. 294.) The Estate timely filed its notice of appeal on August 23, 2012.
II. JURISDICTION
“The Supreme Court [has] jurisdiction over all appeals arising from final judgments, final decrees or final orders of the Superior Court, or as otherwise provided by law.” V.I. Code Ann. tit. 4, § 32(a). An order by the Appellate Division adjudicating an appeal from a judgment entered by the Magistrate Division is a final appealable order under section 32(a). Lehtonen v. Payne,
The Estate argues that the Appellate Division erred in concluding that it could not review the October 25, 2007 Order or the February 20, 2009 Opinion becаuse they were issued by the Family Division. The Estate also asserts that the Family Division erred in awarding spousal support beyond one year of the filing of the inventory, arguing that this violated the plain language of 15 V.I.C. § 353. We address each argument in turn.
A. The Appellate Division’s Authority to Review the Family Division Orders
The Estate first challenges the Appellate Division’s conclusion that it could not review the October 25, 2007 Order or the February 20, 2009 Opinion because the Estate consented to the February 17, 2010 Final Adjudication, and the opinion and order were signed by a fellow Superior Court judge rather than a Superior Court magistrate. Floretta essentially adopts the Appellate Division’s reasoning as her own, and contends that because the Appellate Division could not review these decisions, this Court should dismiss the Estate’s appeal. We apply plenary review to the Appellate Division’s holding that it had no authority to review the Family Division orders because this is a question of law. Martin v. Martin,
We agree with the Estate that the Appellate Division erred in both respects. It is well established that “prior interlocutory orders merge with the final judgment in a case, and the interlocutory orders . . . may be reviewed on appeal from the final order.” In re Westinghouse Sec. Litig.,
Fikewise, the Appellate Division is mistaken in its belief that “[tjhere is ... no statutory mechanism in the Virgin Islands Code that allows for a judge of the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands to review an appeal of another judge of the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands.” (J.A. 293.) Recently, this Court clarified that “[t]he Virgin Islands Code does not simply provide that all appeals from dеcisions rendered by Superior Court magistrates are appealable to Superior Court judges; rather, it provides that ‘[a]ll appeals from the Magistrate Division ... must be filed in the Superior Court.” Brown v. Brown,
We recognize, of course, that the Appellate Division did not have the benefit of our Brown decision when it issued its July 27, 2012 Order. However, three months earlier, this Court, in considering a case that had been transferred from the Magistrate Division to the Criminal Division after trial but before sentencing, explained that in such a situation “the Superior Court judge simply replaced the magistrate as the trial judge at that time,” and that the judge therefore could exercise plenary review over the matter and this Court — not the Appellate Division — would hear the appeal. Azille v. People,
B. The Spousal Support Orders
Since this Court serves as a second level of appellate review in this case, we would, consistent with traditional appellate practices, ordinarily reverse the July 27, 2012 Order and remand the matter to the Appellate Division so that it may conduct a proper inquiry. But the Appellate Division, by concluding that the Estate’s appeal was “without merit,” (J.A. 294), in effect “adopted or affirmed” the Octobеr 25, 2007 Order and the February 20, 2009 Opinion, albeit in a highly cursory manner. Gardiner v. Diaz,
We conclude that the Family Division — and, by endorsing its reasoning, the Appellate Division — erred in requiring the Estate to provide spousal support for more than one year. The statute which authorizes a court to order spousal support payments provides that
*922 [i]f the property set apart as provided in section 352 of this title is insufficient for the support of the widow and minor children, according to their сircumstances and condition in life, for one year after the filing of the inventory, the court may order that the executor or administrator pay to such widow, if any, and if not, then to the guardian of such minor children, an amount sufficient for that purpose.
15 V.I.C. § 353. Although the Estate argued that the phrase “for one year after the filing of the inventory” precluded any additional payments after the expiration of one year, the Family Division found this language ambiguous, and relied upon its reading of “the chapter as a whole” and policy considerations to interpret it. (J.A. 211.) Because this is an issue of statutory interpretation, we review this holding de novo. Kelley v. Gov’t of the V.I., 59 V.I. 742, 745 (V.I. 2013).
First, we emphasize the longstanding rule that “in construing a statute, if the intent of the Legislature is clear, that is the end of the matter.” In re Infant Sherman,
Nevertheless, even if we were to proceed as if the one-year limitations period is ambiguous, we disagree that a reading of chapter 21 of title 15 “as a whole” authorizes support payments of unlimited duration. The Legislature, in enacting chapter 21, clearly intended not to leave widows destitute during the аdministration of their spouses’ estates. In section 351, it provides for the widow during the period before the inventory is complete: it permits her to remain in her homestead and retain possession of clothes and furniture, and further provides for a “reasonable provision” for her support and that of any minor children. 15 V.I.C. § 351. Once the inventory is filed, section 352 permits the court to set aside for the widow аny property exempt from execution, which can
But while the Family Division correctly recognized that the Legislature intended to provide for widows during the administration of the estate and, in some cases, even after the estate is closed, nonetheless there is nothing in chapter 21 which in any way supports a holding that the language “for one year after the inventory is filed” is meant as anything but a temporal limitation on a spouse’s right to cash payments. The chapter was devised to ensure that the widow had some support before the inventory was filed, see 15 V.I.C. § 351, and could have access to exempted property after the inventory was filed, see 15 V.I.C. § 352. But the “оne year” limitation is repeated in section 356, suggesting that its inclusion in section 353 was no mere accident, but perhaps instead a compromise between the competing interests of preserving the corpus of the estate for all of the heirs and ensuring immediate though limited protection for the widow. See, e.g., Gov’t of the V.I. v. Thomas,
The Family Division alsо suggested that the language “for one year after the inventory is filed” was intended to limit the time during which the court could sua sponte order spousal award payments, but that its power to do so on motion was not limited by the section. However, this interpretation does not have any basis in the language of the statute, which serves as our lodestar. There is no reference to “on motion” or “on its own motion,” language which appears elsewhere in the Code when the Legislature intеnded to distinguish between the two mechanisms. See, e.g., 5 V.I.C. § 860(c)(2) (permitting the court to grant various forms of
In reaching our decision, we recognize that as a matter of policy, the Family Division may have been correct to find that only one year of spousal support is inadequate. That is particularly true in a case such as this, where Lawrence — for no reason clear from the record — delayed the closing of the Estate for a decade, leaving Floretta without her intеstate distribution during that time. However, a court unquestionably lacks authority to disregard a statute duly enacted by the Legislature and instead apply the law it believes would be most fair to the parties. See Simmonds v. People,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the Appellate Division’s July 27, 2012 Order as well as the Family Division’s October 25, 2007 Order and February 20,2009 Opinion, vacate the Magistrate Division’s February 17, 2010 Final Adjudication, and remand the case to the Magistrate Division so that it may issue a new adjudication in light of the fact that Floretta was only entitled to collect spousal support payments for one year from the filing of the inventory.
Notes
In its October 25,2007 Order, the Family Division cited Superior Court Rule 196 as further authority to award spousal support payments. But Rule 196 is silent as to how long such payments may continue and — in any event — the court cannot use a court rule as a mechanism to create or alter a substantive right. Todmann v. People,
