124 Va. 114 | Va. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the court.
Thos. W. Wright, a former resident of Pennsylvania, moved to Albemarle county, Virginia, in November, 1915, and took up his residence with his son, Thos. W. Wright, Jr., who, with his wife, was then residing upon a small farm owned by Thos. W. Wright, Sr. There were no children in the family, and the three lived together until the father died in July, 1916. The elder Wright’s wife was dead, and his only children were Thos. W. Wright, Jr., and Edward J. Wright.
The bill, which was filed by Thos. W. Wright, Jr., and his wife, alleges, in addition to the foregoing facts, that the substance of the will was as follows: “I leave my farm and all my personal property and jewelry to Thos. W. Wright, Jr., and Mrs. Thos. W. Wright, Jr., and at their death it is all to go to the Masonic Lodge of Pa., Philadelphia, Pa.;” that the will was written in Pennsylvania, before the testator moved to Virginia; that afterwards, in May, 1916, he showed the writing to Mrs. Wright, read and explained it to her, and declared it to be his last will and testament; and that sometime after his death it “was destroyed by some third person, without the direction or consent of the deceased.”
In Clinch River Mineral Co. v. Harrison, 91 Va. 122, 21 S. E. 660, this court, speaking through Judge Cardwell, said: “In Dangerfield et al. v. Claiborne et al., 2 H. & M. (12 Va.), page 17, the learned chancellor of the Supreme Court of Chancery for the Richmond District, after stating the question to be, whether allegations in the bill not answered shall be considered as admitted, or must be proved by the plaintiff, says: ‘The rule in future will be understood and settled, that where the answer is not responsive to a material allegation of the bill, the plaintiff may except to it as insufficient, or may move to have that part of the bill taken for confessed;*but if he does neither, he shall not, on the trial, avail himself of any implied admission by the defendant; for, where the defendant does not answer at all, the plaintiff cannot take his bill for confessed, without an order of the court to that effect, and having it served upon the defendants; and this is the only evidence of his admission. Of course, if this mode of proceeding as to the confession of the/ whole bill be correct, it must be equally correct as to the confession of any part.’ This rule has been followed in all the cases reported in our State reports where the question has arisen, and maintained by our learned commentators. Argenbright v. Campbell et ux, 3 H. & M. (13 Va.) 165; Coleman v. Lyne, 4 Rand. (25 Va.) 454; Cropper v. Burtons, 5 Leigh (32 Va.) 426, 432; Miller v. Argyle’s Ex’or
“Says Barton: ‘Those allegations of a bill which are not responded to by the answer, although an exception would properly lie on that account, are yet not to be taken as admitted, but must be proved by the plaintiff.’ ” And in a note to this case in 1 Va. Law Reg., page 45, there is the following comment by Judge E. C. Burks: “It seems to the writer that the rule, as stated in the opinion of the court, is clearly established in Virginia by the authorities cited, and that there is no Virginia decision contra. The rule is, however, subject to a qualification not mentioned in the opinion, doubtless, because it was not necessary to the decision of the case in judgment. The qualification is this: that on a motion to dissolve an injunction, the allegations not denied or admitted in the answer must be taken as true, and this for the reasons given by Judge Green in Randolph v. Randolph, 6 Rand. (27 Va.) on page 197. This is an exception to the general rule before stated. The rule as stated prevails in most jurisdictions, certainly in Virginia. In.some of the States it has been changed by statute, as, for instance, in West Virginia. See Code of West Virginia, chapter 125, section 36. The existence of these statutes serves to show that the law was otherwise before their enactment. We have no such statute in Virginia. There can be no higher judicial authority than Chief Justice Marshall, who, in Young v. Grundy, 6 Cranch 51, 3 L. Ed. 149, puts the statement of the rule, with its qualification, in a nut shell, thus: ‘If the answer neither admits nor denies the allegations of the bill, they must be proved upon the final hearing. Upon a question of dissolution of an injunction they are to be taken as true.’ ” See also Lile’s Notes on Equity PI. & Pr. (1916), page 93, section 206, where the learned author says: “That allegations of the bill not denied or noticed in the answer are not to be taken as admitted by the defendant, but, if
The complainants themselves were the only witnesses offered to sustain the allegations of the bill. In view of the peculiar nature of the case, their testimony cannot, with entire fairness to both sides, be reduced to narrative form, and it is, therefore, here set out in full in so far as it relates to the question of the former existence, the contents, and the destruction of the will. Thos. W. Wright, Jr., testified in that regard as follows:
. “Did your father leave a will?
“•A. Yes.
“Did you ever see this will?
“A. It was enclosed in .an envelope to be opened before a lawyer and it was read before a lawyer in Charlottesville. Yes, I saw the will.
“Q. Was the will in the handwriting of your father?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Was it signed by him?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Was it wholly in the hand-writing of your Father?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Was it dated?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Can you give me the date?
“A. I think it was the 1st day, I am not sure, of July, 1914.
*120 “Q. In the bill and. amended bill is set forth, a memorandum of the purport of said will; as well as you can remember. is this substantially correct?
“A. Yes. The copy of the will seems-the same as the original.
“Q. Was. your father a mason?
. . “A. Yes.
• * ❖ sN * * ❖ ❖ *
“Q. When did you see this ¡will?
“A. I saw it the day I carried it to Charlottesville, some days after his death. I could find out the date.
“Q. Do you happen to know whether this will is in existence now?
“A, No.
“Q. Do you know whether your father ever directed that will to be revoked or destroyed?
“A. No.
“Q. Do you know whether the said will is in existence to-day?
"A. No, positively it is not.
“Q. Do you know that it is not?
“A. Yes.
“Q. What happened to it? .
: “A. It was destroyed.
“Q. Do you know that it was destroyed?
“A. -1 do.
“Q. Have you ever found a copy of this will or any other will left by your father?
“A. I have not.
* * # * • * * * *
“Q. Mr. Wright, where did you find this paper that you speak of as a will?
“A. Among my father’s effects.
“Q. Did you open the paper?
.“A.. No.
*121 “Q. How soon after the death of your father was this paper opened?
“A. About the correct date, I am not sure, I think it was the Wednesday after my father’s death.
“Q. Where were the papers opened?
“A. Charlottesville.
“Q. Did you make any copy of that paper?
“A. No.
“Q. Mr. Wright, where did you say this will was first opened ?
“A. It was first opened in Charlottesville.”
Mrs. Thos. W. Wright, Jr., testified, upon the same points, as follows:
“Q. During that time (while he lived in Virginia) did he everv show you a will ?
“A. He did.
“Q. Whose will?
“A. His will.
“Q. Did you see it?
“A. I did.
“Q. Did you read it?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Did he make any comments ?
“A. He read and explained it to me.
“Q. In whose hand-writing was that?
“A. His own hand-writing.
“Q. Can you give me the substance of what he said about it?
“A. He read and explained it to me, and I asked him what lodge he meant and he said he meant his own lodge, Robert Lamberton Lodge No. 4B7.
“Q. Is that all he said about it? .
“A. He said that was his will, and he wanted to show it to me and explain it to me, that was all.
*122 ❖ i’.i $$$$$$
“Q. Where did he get it from?
“A. Out of his trunk.
* * * * * *5* *
“Q. How many times did Mr. Wright read the will to you?
“A. Only once.
“Q. When was the last time you saw the alleged will?
“A. I didn’t see the original will any more. I saw a copy. He sealed it after showing it to me, and I put it back in the trunk.
“Q. Did you ever make a copy of this will?
“A. No.
“Q. Mrs. Wright, if you only heard this paper read once, how does it happen that you remember what the contents of it were?
“A. Well, I remember as near as I could, it wasn’t much to remember.
“Q. Do you-know where this paper was written?
“A. Philadelphia.
“Q. Where were you when the paper was read to you.
“A. Near North Garden, Virginia.
“Q. How long before Mr. Wright’s death was it?
“A. As near as I can recall, it was between the 1st and 5th of May, 1916.
“Q. Mrs. Wright, do you know where this paper that you speak of was found after Mr. Wright’s death?
“A. Among his effects.
“Q. Whereabouts among his effects.
“A. His trunk.
“Q. Who found it?
“A. My husband.
“Q. How do you know that?
"A. Because he told me so. He got it out of the trunk.
*123 “Q. Who did he tell so?
“A. Me.
“Q. Who had the key to the trunk?
“A. I had the keys. The keys were there in the house and keys to other things.
í: * :¡: * * * * *
“Q. Did the paper you speak of mention anything about Mr. Edward Johnston Wright?
“A. No.
“Q. Do you know how that happened, that he cut one of his sons completely in this alleged will?
“A. Yes, I do.
“Q. But he didn’t say anything about him in the paper, did he?
“A. No.
“Q. Where is the copy that you speak of having seen after Mr. Wright’s death?
“A. I saw it; it must be in the Clerk’s office, I guess.
“Q. Is it the copy you speak of, what is written on the bill filed in this cause?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Is the copy written on the bill which I have just shown you with a green back, the only copy of this paper which you have seen?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Do you know whether that copy was made after the destruction or before the destruction of the old will?
“A. It was made afterwards.
“Q. Mrs. Wright, were you present when this will was lost or destroyed?
“A. No.
“Q. Did you have anything to do with the loss or destruction of the will ?
“A. No.
*124 “Q. Did you ever see this paper you refer to, after you say Mr. Wright read it in May, 1915 ?
“A. No, it was sealed then.
.“Q. Did your father-in-law seal the paper up, or did you?
“A. He sealed it and asked me to put it back.
$*$*$*$
“Q. Do you know how long Mr. Wright has been expecting to leave you and your husband all the property?
“A. Well, he always told me that.
“Q. Do you know whether he ever changed his mind or intentions in regard to leaving you and your husband the property or even expressed to other people how he was going to leave the property?
“A. No.
“Q. When did he first tell you that he was going to leave the property all to you and your husband?
“A. After his wife’s death.
“Q. Do you remember what year that was?
“A. 1915.”
The only other witness who testified in the case was A. P. Walker. He was introduced by the defendant, Edward J. Wright, and merely stated that he was the duly appointed curator of the estate of Thos. W. Wright, deceased, had made search among the latter’s effects for a will, and found none.
Upon the evidence, as substantially set out above, the circuit court held that the complainants had not sustained the burden resting upon them, and accordingly entered a decree dismissing their bill. From that decree the complainants have appealed.
Upon the question of the destruction of the will—a question equally as vital to his case as that of its former existence—Thos. W. Wright, who alone undertakes to say that it was destroyed, leaves the matter shrouded in a mystery created by his own testimony. It will be observed that he stated positively and with emphasis that he knew the will was destroyed; and yet he leaves the court to guess as to how he knew that fact, and as to the time, place, manner, and agency of its destruction. So too, as to the existence and contents of the will, he fails to give the court the benefit of information which ought to have either corroborated or clarified his narrative. Who was the lawyer in Charlottesville to whom he took the will, and before whom it was read? Why was he not produced as a witness? What became of the will after it was read to this lawyer? Was it left with him, and if not, where was it taken? When,
In Moses v. Trice, 21 Gratt. (162 Va.) 556, 565 (8 Am. Rep. 609), Judge Staples (speaking of the proof necessary to maintain an action upon a lost negotiable note) said: “The degree of evidence necessary to constitute such proof can never be previously defined. It is impracticable, in the nature of things, to layidown any rule on the subject. The only legal test in this, as in other cases, is the sufficiency of the evidence to satisfy the jury beyond reasonable doubt that the note is no longer in existence.”
In 17 Cyc., p. 778, it is said: “In order to establish a lost instrument on behalf of a party asserting rights under it, the same measure of proof is required as in suits for reformation of instruments or to establish parol trusts; that is to say, the evidence must be of the clearest and most satisfactory character, and according to some authorities beyond reasonable doubt.”
In Fudge v. Payne, 86 Va. 303, 308, 10 S. E. 7, 8, a case in which it was sought to reform a contract, and in which, therefore, the same rule applies as in this case, the court said: “But we must remember that, while courts of equity will in such cases admit parol evidence to establish in truth the real contract between the parties, notwithstanding the erroneous written agreements, the mistake will not be presumed because it is alleged, nor the fraud which may be charged be regarded until it is clearly proved. “The author
“Chapman, J., in the last-named case, said: ‘The ordinary rule of evidence in civil actions, that the fact must be proved by a preponderance of evidence, does not apply to such a case as this. The proof that both parties intended to have the precise agreement set forth inserted in the deed, and omitted to do so by mistake, must be made beyond a reasonable doubt.’ ” (Italics added.)
The recent opinion of this court in Dunnavant v. Dunnavant, 120 Va. 301, 91 S. E. 138, is directly in point, and, in our view of the evidence, is conclusive authority in support of the decree under review. In that case, Judge Prentis, reaffirming the rule as laid down in Thomas v. Ribble, 2 Va. Dec. 321, 24 S. E. 241, said: “That rule is there succinctly stated in these words: ‘Where the instrument rises to the dignity and importance of a muniment of title, every principle of public policy demands that the proof of its former existence, its loss and its contents, should be strong and conclusive, before the courts will establish a title by parol testimony to property which the law requires shall pass only by deed or will. That courts of equity have jurisdiction to set up lost deeds or wills, and to establish titles under them, can certainly not be denied, but it is a dangerous
There is no error in the decree complained of, and it is, therefore affirmed. *
Affirmed.