78 Va. 248 | Va. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a decree of the corporation court of the city of Norfolk, entered in a suit in chancery, in which the appellant was defendant, and the appellee was plaintiff.
The case is as follows: A. F. Leonard, the late husband of the appellant, Caroline Leonard, died in 1870, and his will was admitted to probate in the corporation court of the city of Norfolk on the 7th day of January, 1871, and E. M. Lows, the executor named in the will, qualified as such, and took possession of-the real and personal estate of the testator.
In May, 1871, the executor filed a bill in chancery for the purpose of obtaining the instructions of the court as to the management and administration of the estate, real and personal, making the appellant (the widow) and the creditors of A. F. Leonard, and his devisees and legatees, parties defendant in this suit. The estate of the testator has been settled, but the question which is involved in this appeal is the true construction and interpretation of the sixth clause of the testator’s will, taken in connection with the
The first codicil is as follows: “ My wife, Caroline Leonard, having derived from her father, Joseph E. Davis (lately ■deceased), a legacy of one thousand dollars per annum for life, since the execution of my said will, I hereby revoke such portions of my said will as give her more than one-third of the net annual income of my estate : provided she shall receive from time to time the said annual legacy from the estate of her said father, or at least one-third thereof.”
The decree of the corporation court of January 19th, 1881, construed the will as to this sixth clause and codicil as follows:
“ That the legacy to Caroline Leonard, the widow of A. F. Leonard, deceased, bequeathed by the sixth clause of*251 the last will and testament of said A. F. Leonard, deceased, is limited by said will to such net income of his estate as is designated in said clause of his said will; that there being no such net income between the periods of December 20th, 1870, and December 20th, Í877, there was nothing for her to take, and that she is therefore not entitled to recover anything of the principal of the estate for that period; that the effect of the codicil to the said will upon the bequest aforesaid is immaterial for the said period during which there was no net annual income from the said estate; that from the 20th December, 1877, the date at which the entire estate of the said A. F. Leonard was sold, the said Caroline Leonard is entitled to receive, in view of the codicil, one-third only of the annual interest on the residue of the estate after payment of debts and costs, annually -during her life as long as she receives from her father’s estate an annual amount equal to three- hundred and thirty-three dollars and thirty-three cents; that for every year she failed to get of her father’s estate an amount equal to "three hundred and thirty-three dollars and thirty-three cents, she will be entitled to receive at least seven hundred and twenty dollars of her said husband’s estate, if the annual interest on said residue be so much, even if it consumes the whole of the annual interest on such residue, and if the one-third of the- said annual interest amount to more than seven hundred and twenty dollars, then she will be entitled to receive the one third of said annual interest, be it what ir may ”
The appellant insists that she is entitled under her husband’s will by the sixth clause and the said codicil to demand and to receive a legacy of seven hundred and twenty •dollars annually; that the estate was indebted to her on the 1st day of January, 1877, by reason of this legacy, $3,275, with interest on each year’s annuity from the time it became due, after giving the executor credit for $1,045 paid
The fourth clause in the will of the father of the appellant under which she claims is as follows: “ I give and devise to my daughter, Caroline Leonard, the tract of land in the parish of Madison, State of Louisiana, containing about 1,100 acres, to have and hold the same in fee simple, with the right to dispose of the same as she may see fit; and further, I desire my executors hereafter appointed to pay her from the proceeds of the property sold as hereafter directed, or from the debts collected,- one thousand dollars' annually during her life.”
Before the foregoing was made and published, the husband of the appellant here wrote the sixth clause of his will, seen above; after the said will of appellant’s father was published, appellant’s husband wrote the codicil cited above.
After the publication of the will of his wife’s father, he provides that this interest of his wife should not ever exceed one-third of the net annual income, whether that was less than $720 or not, unless the legacy from her father should fall under $333.33 annually. If there should be no net annual income from the estate, the widow was to receive nothing, for the will expressly declares that she shall not receive more than the said net annual income, should the said net annual income (entire) fall short of $720 per annum.
The corporation court, as we have seen, so decided, and its decision was in accordance with the provisions of the will of the testator. We think the decision of the court below is plainly right and must be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.