delivered the opinion of the court.
The controversy in this case, arises under the will of the late Hugh Stewart, of Marshall county, and involves the proper construction of the same.
This will bears date on the 8th of February, 1853, and, it appears from the bill that the testator died about the month of March following. It also appears that the will was duly admitted to probate in the county court of Marshall county, at its March term, 1853, shortly after the death of the testator. That at the same term of the court, on the motion of William Douglas, one of the appellants, commissioners were appointed to assign the widow’s dower in the real estate of the said Hugh Stewart, and that three commissioners reported at the following April term of said court, that they had assigned dower accordingly, in the tracts devised respectively to the appellants and appellees; which report was confirmed by the court without any exceptions taken thereto. It also further appears from the amended bill, and the answer thereto, and the depositions of witnesses taken in the cause, that the widow also appeared before the same court at the March term, 1853, and declared in open court that she renounced the provisions of said will, and that no entry or record of her renunciation was ever made in said court. But whether the widow took and held possession of the land so assigned for her dower, does not distinctly appear.
By this will the testator disposed of the whole of his real estate, which consisted of a house and lot in Triadelphia, in 'Ohio county, and about two hundred acres of land in Marshall county. The house and lot was devised to his daughter Eliza Donally; one hundred of the two hundred acre tract to the appellees, and tire residue, being 99 acres and 63 poles, to the appellants; the latter however subject to cer*31tain legacies and charges laid upon it, as alleged by tlio testator because it was more valuable than any other shares of his estate. One of the charges on the part so devised to the appellants, is a provision for the support of the widow, out of which this litigation has arisen, and will be more particularly adverted to hereafter.
In February, 1856, being about three years after the assignment of dower to the widow, the appellees, Feay and wife, instituted their suit in equity in the circuit court of Marshall county against the appellants, Douglas and wife and others, alleging in their bill, among other things, that the widow had renounced her husband’s will in the county court of Marshall county, and had her dower assigned in the land so devised to them, whereby they had lost the one third of the same for and during the life of the widow; and they claim and insist that the part so devised to said Douglas and wife, and charged with maintenance and support of the widow, and which was as thus claimed released from this charge and burthen by the renunciation aforesaid, is liable and bound in equity to indemnify and malee good to them the loss sustained by reason of the assignment of the widow’s dower in the part devised to them.
The appellant William Douglas answered the bill, controverting their right to recover from him, and insisting that the appellants were then, and always had been, ready and willing and even desirous, that the widow should live with them, according to the provisions of the will.
Subsequently an amended bill was filed by the appellees, alleging that when the original bill was filed, they supposed the renunciation of the will by the widow1-, was duly entered and recorded in the said court, but had since discovered that, owing to the alleged omission or mistake of the clerk, no record in fact was made.
To this amended bill, the said Douglas also filed liis answer admitting that the widow7- had renounced before the court as stated in the amended bill, and that her dower was assigned on his motion, but also insisting that the widow7 was entitled to dower whether she had renounced the will *32or not, and that sbe was entitled to both dower and the provisions of tlie will.
The cause was referred to a master to ascertain the value of the dower interest in the land devised to the appellees and appellants respectively, and also the value of the means of supporting the widow as provided in the will; who reported the value of her dower in each of said tracts, from the time of the assignment up to the date of the report, to be $210; and the cost or value of the maintenance and support of the widow according to the provisions of the will, for a like period, to be worth $714: leaving an excess over and above the value of the dower in both tracts of $294; which the plaintiffs below, claimed should be applied to the discharge of the $210, loss sustained by them by the assignment of dower to the widow. The cause, therefore, coming-on to be heard, the chancellor holding that the provision in the will for the widow was in lieu of dower, and so intended to be, and that the renunciation of the will was valid and binding, decreed accordingly that the appellants should pay to the appellees the said sum of $210, so found by the master: and leave was also reserved to the appellees to come in on the footing of the decree and move for a further decree against the appellants. From this decree the appellants obtained an appeal, to the district court of Virginia, then holden at Fairmont, and by the provisions of the law the ease is brought into this court.
Two points are distinctly made, and fairly arise on the record, which under the mandate of the constitution we are required to decide. First, was the provision in this will for the widow intended to be in lieu of dower? Second, does it appear from the record that the widow has made a valid and binding renunciation of the will in the manner prescribed by law ?
Jointure was not known at the common law, and of course can only result by virtue of the statutory law. I deem it unnecessary to examine the various provisions of the statutes of Virginia previous to the date of the will,-as the law which rules the present case is the fourth section of *33chapter 110 of the Code of Virginia, (1860), page 582. It provides that “if any estate, real or personal, intended to be in lieu of her dower, shall be conveyed or devised for the jointure of the wife, such conveyance or devise shall bar her dower of the real estate or the residue thereof.” From the language here used, it will be seen that it is not every provision for the wife that will defeat her dower, or put her upon her election; but to have this effect it must appear that the provision was intended by the testator to be in lieu of and in exclusion of the dower.
How then is the intention of the testator to be manifested and ascertained? In the investigation of this question, it will be found a much easier task to ascertain the general rule of construction as settled by authorities, than to apply the rule to the various cases, and determine when a particular case is within or excluded from the rule.
In Higginbotham vs. Cornwell, 8 Grattan 83, it was held, that for a provision for a wife in the will of her husband to be held in lieu of her dower, it must be expressed in terms, in the will, or the conclusion from the provisions thereof, ought to be as clear and satisfactory as if it were expressed. And Judge Baldwin, in delivering the opinion of the court in this case, after shewing that the dower provided by law for the widow, is a legal right and paramount to the will of the husband, and that a devise in her favor may be conditional, and in lieu of her dower either by express terms or clear and necessary implication of the testator’s intent to that effect, says: “ But as the exercise of a testator’s testamentary bounty in behalf of his wife beyond or irrespective of the provisions made for her by law, is natural and frequent, it is not allowable to infer an intent on his part to the contrary from other parts of the will by conjecture or probability the conclusion ought to bo as satisfactory as if it were expressed.” And again, that, “amere disappointment of the expectations of others under the ’«dll does not put the widow to her election.”
And in illustration of the rule, he puts the case of a devise by the testator of a moiety of his real estate to the *34widow, and the remaining moiety to his children, and says that in Snell a- ease the widow is not put to her election, but may take the moiety under the will, and one third of tho other moiety for life, under tho law; though (lie adds) it might have been the design of tho testator that sho should have only a moiety, there being no plain and necessary implication that the children were not to take under the will subject to her right of dower.
I have been unable to find any authorities going to modify or relax the rule established in the case above cited, in an}' degree whatever, but on the contrary it is uniformly sustained and confirmed.
Chancellor Kent, in his commentaries, states the -rule thus: cia testamentary provision in lieu of dower in order to render it such even with the acceptance of it, must be declared in express terms to be given in lieu 'of dower; or that intention must be drawn by clear and manifest implication from the will, founded on the fact that the claim of dower would be inconsistent with the will, or so repugnant to its dispositions, as to disturb and defeat them.”
.And the same rule is laid down by Judge Lomax after reviewing all tlie authorities: 1 Lomax Digest 152 to 158.
The case of Craig’s heirs vs. Walthall and wife 14 Grattan, 578, cited and relied on by the counsel for the appellees, we are not to suppose, was intended to he in conflict with the case of Higginbotham vs. Cornwell, and the doctrine therein declared, hut in the opinion of the court it fell within the rule as settled in the latter case.
In expounding the will under consideration we are bound to apply the foregoing rule of construction. The only provision for the wife in the will, is found in the 2d clause of the 2nd section, and is as follows: “2nd, I devise that my wife Sarah Stewart live with roy daughter Mary Ann Douglas and Wdliam Douglas her husband, eating as they oat, sleeping as they sleep and wearing apparel as good as they wear any day.” Does this provision constitute a jointure for the wife, and intended by the testator to be in hen of her dower? If so huemied it must be inferred from the provisions of the will, *35as-it is no where expressed., and no extrinsic facts or proof have been produced in support of the averments on the part of tlie appellees that it was so intended.
Tt not being expressed to be in lieu of dower, can such, intent of the testator be inferred from the will itself, according to the rules of construction to be applied, by implication, as clear and indubitable as if it were expressed? I am unable to discover any such intent, and am of opinion that it cannot ho so inferred, and that the provision for the -wife is not incompatible with her right of dower, nor is such right of dower inconsistent with the manifested inteiit of the testator. This provision, it is true, is a charge on the land devised to Douglas and wife, and provides for the support — and probably a very meagre one — -of the widow, then as it appears quite aged, including only common or everyday fare and clothing. But in a similar case, where the testator devised an annuity or rent-charge out of the dowable lands, to the widow, and expressly devised the same lands to another, subject to the charge in favor of the widow, it was held that- the widow would not he put to her election; but wTa« entitled to the dower in the land, as well as the annuity or rent charged upon it. See 1 Lomax 357, and authorities there cited.
It was insisted by the appellees, in aid of their averments, that the charge on the land devised to the appellants, was ■.intended by the testator to bo in Hou of dower; that the appellants portion of the land was of much greater value ■than the appellees. I do not think, however, that this can help them.. The object of the testator as explained by himself, in the will, was to equalize the devisees of his real estate; and it is plain that this equality would not be defeated by the widow’s right of dower in the whole of the real estate. .And the provision for the widow, was of a contingent nature and might terminate in a day or continue for years.
The widow being thus entitled to her dower, as well as the provision made for her in the will, the question of her election or waiver becomes wholly immaterial; but we are *36still required to consider the remaining question arising on tbe record, namely: Does the record show a valid and binding renunciation of the will, by the widow, in the manner and form required by law? I am of the opinion that it does not. The usual mode of proving the record of a court is by exemplification or production of the record itself; or in the case of the loss or destruction thereof, then I presume parol evidence of the contents of such record would be admissible. But I am aware of no mode of proving or supplying a record, that never did in fact exist, as is,the case here; nor can I conceive that parol proof of what purports to be judicial acts and proceeding’s of a court of record, could be admissible in any case or for any purpose whatever, where no such record of what is proposed to he found was in fact ever made.
The 5th section of chapter 161 of the Code of 1860, page 685, provides that the proceedings of every court shall be entered in a book, read in open court by the clerk, and after being corrected, when it may be necessary, the record shall be signed by the presiding judge or justice. It is therefore very manifest that unless and until the proceedings of a court are recorded and signed as required by the statute, they can have no force or efficacy whatever.
The mode and manner of the renunciation of the will by the wife, is prescribed in the 12 section of chapter 123 of the Code of 1860, page 580. Such renunciation, it will be seen, is required to be made either in person before the court in which the will is recorded, or by a writing recorded, in such court, or the clerk’s office thereof, upon such acknowledgment or proofs as would authorize a deed or writing to be admitted to record. But in whichever mode the renunciation is made, it is very clear I think, that to give it any validity and effect it is indispensable that it should be recorded. It is conceded and settled by authority, that a renunciation by parol in pais, as well as a renunciation by and in writing not recorded, or before any other court than that in which the will is recorded, is absolutely void, (see 8 Leigh, 410), and it is difficult to perceive wherein a renurn *37ciation before a court where no record' of it is made, would differ from a similar renunciation by parol made out of court. For in either case the proof of the renunciation must rest in parol, and could be as readily and satisfactorily made in the one case as in the other, and it seems to me, therefore, ought to have the same effect and the same consequences result in both cases.
I cannot think, therefore, that one act of so much importance as the legal and valid renunciation of a will by the widow, affecting as it does the rights of others, and divesting and transferring even the legal title to land, was ever intended to be made to depend on the uncertain and sometimes conflicting recollections of witnesses, in controversies often arising remote from the time of such renunciation, as would be the ease if the rununciation claimed in this case could be sustained.
For the reasons assigned, I am of opinion to reverse the decree, and remand the cause to the circuit court of Marshall county for farther proceedings to be had therein, in accordance with the principles herein stated*
Decree Reversed.