Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
In 1917, a tract of land was conveyed to H. C. Miracle for life, with the right to use and sell timber and minerals, and the remainder in fee to his four children, by name. In February, 1924, the life tenant and three of the remaindermen executed a deed to William Green, in consideration of $15,000, with the understanding that the other remainderman, who was an infant, would- execute a deed for her interest when she arrived at her majority. Of the consideration, $8,000 was paid in cash and a note for $7,000 given. Four months thereafter, H. C. Miracle was accidentally killed. Surviving him were his four children named in the deed and his widow (a second wife) and four other children. Of the cash payment, Sampson Miracle demanded and received $3,500. Sol C. Miracle was paid $2,000 and Rhoda Pursiful was paid $1,000. Thus $1,500 and the note remained in the hands of the life tenant. However, he then borrowed $1,010 from Sol C. Miracle and $500 from Rhoda Pursiful, for which he executed his notes. When the fourth remainderman, Myrtle Hurley (nee Miracle), arrived at age, she refused to execute a deed for her interest. Instead, she brought suit against Green for a partition. This was made and one-fourth of the land set apart to her, and the $7,000 note was credited by $3,750. Some years later when suit was brought to collect the balance of the note and to enforce the lien, an issue was raised between Sol O. Miracle and Rhoda Pursiful, on the one side, and the surviving widow and her children on the other, as to their rights, not only in the proceeds of the note, but in the entire consideration paid for the land. The trial court (a special judge presiding) adjudged on the pleadings that when the land was sold the life tenant was entitled to have his interest commuted to its then present worth, based upon his life expectancy. This was equivalent to 49.81 per cent, of the fund, and that proportion of the entire consideration for the land was held to be his in *626 dividual estate, and therefore distributable among his widow and all eight of his children. Adjustments in the amounts received by some of the children were made in the judgment. The appeal challenges that adjudication.
The question, therefore, is: When the entire estate owned by a life tenant and remaindermen is voluntarily sold and reduced to cash, is the life tenant entitled to take in his own right, free from claims of the remaindermen, the value of his life estate, calculated upon the mortality tables according to his age, or should he take only the income from the reinvested corpus of the estate until the termination of his interest by death? It is surprising to find that after nearly 150 years this court has not been called upon to decide the question. Indeed, there are but few cases elsewhere, and those decisions are not in agreement. A pioneer case is Foster v. Hilliard, 9 Fed. Cas. p. 549, No. 4,972,
The Foster Case was followed in Thompson v. Thompson,
In American National Bank v. Taylor, 112 Va.
1,
The conclusion of the court both in respect to the general rule and the exceptions when special conditions require it as a matter of equity, is, in principle, supported by all the authorities except the three cited above; the converse of course, being true, that the remaindermen cannot compel the owner of a life estate to submit to commutation. Herbert v. Wren,
The nature of a life right and its relation to the whole estate, with the prevailing legal and equitable conceptions as to the rights of the owners, would seem to make the general rule in the circumstances the sounder and more equitable. The owner .of a life estate and the owner of the remainder are not tenants in common or joint tenants. The former has only the' right to use the property or its rents, issues, and profits until his death, and no longer. Avey v. Hogancamp,
A life tenant may not have partition of land and an allocation of a part of it in fee in
proportion to
the value of his interest and that of the remaindermen so that a present absolute property in their respective portions would rest in each. Coquillard v. Coquillard,
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supra; Carson v. Hecke,
So where the relation of the parties is unchanged, in the absence of an agreement wherein lies the power of a court to change it and create two separate estates divided in ratio of present worth merely because the parties agreed to substitute money and securities for land? There are legal rights which cannot be disturbed because developments (such as the early decease of the life tenant) indicate a different action should have been voluntarily entered into but was not. As the life tenant could claim only the use of the land while he lived, so could he claim only the use of the proceeds of a sale. If he could demand commutation of his estate into the equivalent of present value based upon his expectancy, might he not also demand the power to devise his life right until the end of that expected term of life and make it effective in case he died at an earlier date? Or *630 could lie not claim the right to the rents for that extended period? When his life terminates, his estate terminates, and the remaindermen come into the enjoyment of their estate whether it was in land or in money and securities.
An analogy is the leasing of land with this status of ownership for oil and gas or other minerals. Such instruments evidence a species of sale of real estate, a separation of minerals in place and the surface. It is all but universally held that in the absence of an agreement, where all parties unite in an oil lease, the life tenant has only the income from the accumulating royalties and has no right to any part of the preserved corpus of the royalties. Meredith v. Meredith,
Our conclusion, therefore, is that where there has been a voluntary sale of property owned by a life tenant and remaindermen without agreement as to the disposition of the proceeds, the same shall be regarded as a substitution and the respective rights continue therein as had existed in the property sold, that is to say, the life tenant will continue to have only the right to the income and use of the converted estate until it is terminated by his death, when the rights of the remaindermen become complete and absolute.
In the case at bar it is shown that the infant remainderman having declined when she became of legal age to ratify the agreement to join the conveyance of the whole estate, she came into her full property and received one-fourth of the land, which resulted in crediting the unpaid purchase-money note by one-fourth of the agreed consideration. One son, on demand, received at the time one-fourth of the entire consideration, less $250. The unequal and lesser payments to the other two remaindermen to each of whom also had been conveyed a one-fourth remainder interest does not indicate any agreement upon their part as to what should be done with the fund; the result of adjudging a commuted life estate is to deprive these two of most of their interest in the property. The situation is like in the Foster Case, supra, where it seemed the parties “proceeded upon a mutual confidence, that the proceeds would ultimately be divided” according to their respective rights. The borrowing back by the father of one-half the sums given to these two further complicates
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any attempt at presumption as to what was the understanding. However that may be, it is manifest there was no agreement that the life tenant should as of the day of the sale receive as his separate and individual estate the equivalent of the present value of his life estate as was adjudged by the trial court. We think his entire interest in the proceeds was extinguished by his death. It should be added that the power granted the life tenant to sell timber and minerals had never been exercised, so it is not material to the decision. McCullough’s Adm’r v. Anderson,
The judgment not being in accordance with these views, it is reversed.
