146 S.E. 896 | W. Va. | 1929
In February, 1919, the plaintiff (then Mary Smith) and her husband, Perry Smith, executed a joint will which contains the following provision:
"We hereby will and bequeath to Mary Belle Myer all of the land, real estate and appurtenances thereto belonging, of which we, or either of us, *58 may die seized or possessed, but the said real estate and appurtenances thereto shall not pass to the said Mary Belle Myer so long as either of us, the said Perry Smith or Mary Smith, shall live, but after the death of the last survivor of this will the said real estate shall pass to and be held by the said Mary Belle Myer in fee."
Mary Belle Myer, the beneficiary in the will and the defendant here, is the only child of the testators. Perry Smith died in April, 1921, at which time he and his wife were the joint owners of a tract of 30 1/2 acres upon which the defendant Hope Natural Gas Company had a lease. In May, 1921, the will was probated as that of Perry Smith. The defendant was then appointed agent to receive the royalties under the lease and pay them to the plaintiff, which she did until 1925.
In 1926 plaintiff instituted this suit, seeking a construction of the above clause of the will, and the payment to her of accumulated royalties. The defendant tendered an answer which corrected the bill in minor particulars, set up the remarriage of the mother in January, 1925, to Jesse Underwood, alleged the revocation of the will as to the mother for that reason, and prayed for a cancellation of the will. The lower court rejected the answer of defendant, heard the cause upon the bill and exhibits, and decreed that the plaintiff should be paid the accumulated royalties, and should receive during her lifetime all rentals and royalties paid under the lease.
The plaintiff asserts that the will is valid as to Perry Smith and equally valid as to herself because of her acceptance of its benefits.
The defendant contends that the will is not valid because it is joint and mutual, relying upon the case of Walker v. Walker,
A mutual will ordinarily becomes irrevocable after the death of one of the makers if the survivor takes advantage of the provisions made by the other. Frazier v. Patterson, (Ill.)
The decree of the circuit court is accordingly affirmed.
Affirmed.