51 W. Va. 82 | W. Va. | 1902
William Fcrgason of Barbour County made bis will, the first clause of which is as follows: “First: To Jacob Isner and Hardy Isner, sons of my daughter, Caroline Isner, one hundred acres of land of the Southwestern portion of the farm upon which I reside, and adjoining the lands of Aaron Phillips, the heirs of Barnett P. Poling and others, upon the following conditions, viz: The said Jacob and Hardy Isner are to take care of and próvido for all of the reasonable wants of my daughter, Caroline Isner, during her lifetime, provided she resides with them, and the said Jacob and Hardy Isner are required to pay to Thomas Isner and Virginia Isner, children of Caroline Isner, upon their obtaining their maturity, the sum of fifty dollars each. Secondly: To James Isner I give, devise and bequeath
On the 9th day of November, 1881, Hardy Isner and Columbia his wife, “for and in consideration of land claimed by the parties of the first part by will of William Fergason,” conveyed by deed of special warranty to Jacob Isner, forty-four acres, at the east end of the one hundred acre tract so devised to Hardy and Jacob, described by metes and bounds, by which deed “the parties of the first part covenants to and with the party of the second part to warrant and defend the land hereby conveyed by deed of special warranty against all persons claiming under them, and the party of the first’part agrees to furnish rail timber for the line fence.” By deed dated March 21, 1882, Jacob Isner and his wife “for and in consideration of the sum of six hundred dollars, thirty dollars in hand paid the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, and one hundred and ninety against the 15th day of April, 1882, and one hundred and eighty against the first day April, 1883, and two hundred dollars against the first day of April, 1884, for which several amounts the said Lewis K. Pifer has executed his three several single bills payable as aforesaid with even date herewith,” granted and conveyed with general warranty the said forty-four acres of land to Lewis K. Pifer reserving in said deed the vendor’s lien for the deferred payments of the purchase money. On the 28th day of November, 1884, Jacob Isner and wife “in consideration of a tract or parcel of land given in exchange to grantors by the grantee in this deed of the value of twenty dollars, that the grantors doth give in exchange a part or parcel of their land of equal value to the grantee, with general warranty,” by deed of that date conveyed five acres and sixty poles, the residue of said fifty acres, to Benjamin Annon.
At the January rules, 1900, Hardy Isner filed his bill in the circuit court of Barbour County against Caroline Kelley, Jacob Isner, Thomas Isner, Virginia Isner, Belle Pifer, Clarence Pifer, Pearl Pifer and Benjamin Annon, alleging that he had kept, cared and provided for all the reasonable wants of Caroline Kelley, formerly Caroline Isner, since the time of the death of the testator, but that his brother, Jacob Isner, had wholly neglected and refused to perform the obligation imposed upon him in respect to said land by said will although the said Caroline
The infant defendants, Clarence and Pearl Pifer, by their guardian ad litem, Gran.' E. Taft, filed their answer. Defendant, Belle Pifer, also filed her answer admitting the conveyance of the forty-four acres of land to her husband, denying
Depositions were taken and filed on behalf of the plaintiff and of the defendants and the cause was finally heard the 23rd of February, 1901, when the court dismissed the bill. The plaintiff appealed to this Court and says the court erred in not granting to plaintiff the relief prayed for in his bill or to refer the cause to a commissioner for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of relief to which he was entitled, that it was error if not to grant the whole relief prayed for in the bill at least under the same and prayer for general relief to give such relief as in equity he was entitled to have and that it was error for the court to dismiss the cause with costs. It is insisted by counsel for appellant that because the court overruled the demurrer to the bill it raised and settled affirmatively the legal question of the right of plaintiff to maintain this suit, hence, the first assignment of error should be sustained. The language of the will giving to Jacob and Hardy Isner, the grandsons of the testator, the land in question upon the condition stating the same distinctly, that they were to take care of and provide for all the reasonable' wants of his daughter, Caroline Isner, during her lifetime made such support a charge upon the land, which could be enforced as against the land of the party refusing support whenever she was refused such care and maintenance by them or either of them when she should choose to reside with them. In Rivers v. Rivers, 36 S. C. 302, a devise to A. “All the residue of my estate, both real and personal, and to his care the protection of my daughter, C., during her natural life,” was held to create a charge upon the realty which could be enforced in equity even in the hands of a Iona fide holder. In Outland v. Outland, 118 N. C. 138, a gift to E. and C. with a provision, “In
Had Caroline Kelley any cause of complaint? Has she not had all these years from both of her said sons, but concededly principally• from the plaintiff, the maintenance and care pro-, vided for her in the will?’ And has she cause of action against either while the other is properly caring for her? If her two sons were living together and both refused to allow her to live with them or to comply with the conditions of the will, there would be no question about her right to proceed against the land for her support. Under the provisions of the will it is a voluntary matter with Mrs. Kelley whether she lives with the one or the other of her sons, and her going to reside with one or the other is a condition precedent to his taking care of and providing for her reasonable wants under the will, and until he shall refuse to so care' and provide for her she has no cause of action
Affirmed.