delivered the opinion of the court:
In this complicated case but two questions arise, which will be considered in their order.
I. Is Mrs. Nelson entitled, under the circumstances, to dower *474in the real estate of which her husband, H. M. Nelson, died seized, known as “Long Branch.” This question first arose some years after Mrs. Nelson administered upon the estate of her testator, when, in response to an inquiry directed upon her petition in the cause, the commissioner reported that she was entitled to dower and ascertained its commuted value, she having signified a willingness to accept the commuted value.
The will in this case was made July 15th, 1860, and must be construed and take effect according to the law then in force. §22, ch. 118, Code 1873, also see §22, ch. 122, Code 1860.
The law then in force and applicable to the question we are now considering, is found mainly in sections 4 and 5 of ch. 110, Code 1860. The only other provision necessary to be referred to in this connection is §12, ch. 123, Code 1860. Said section 4 of chapter 110, Code 1860 reads: “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.”
Said section 5, chapter 110, Code 1860, reads: “But if such conveyance or devise were before the marriage, without the assent, or during the infancy of the feme, or if it were after marriage—in either case the widow may, at her election, waive such jointure and demand her dower. And when she shall demand and receive her dower the estate so conveyed or devised to her shall cease and determine.”.
By an act of the general assembly passed on the 21st day of February, 1866, said sections 4 and 5 were very materially altered and the policy of the law to that extent changed. See Acts 1865-6, ch. 49, which sections, as amended, now appear in sections 4 and 5 of ch. 106, Code 1873. These amendments, it is obvious, have no influence nor anything to do with the question under consideration. Looking, then, to these plain statutory provisions, which were in force when the testator’s will was made and by which effect must be given to that instrument, it is matter of surprise that any one could for a moment question *475Mrs. Nelson’s right to dower under all the circumstances in the land oí which her husband died seized.
There, certainly is not in the will a single expression intimating, in even the slightest degree, an intention on the part of the testator that the provision in his will for his wife was made and intended to he in lieu of her dowér. In fact, the language of the will necessarily repels the idea that there was any such testamentary intention. The last utterance of the testator on the subject is, “and if any portion is left after paying all my just debts, I give and bequeath it to my dearest wife and her heirs forever,” &c.
In the construction of wills the pivotal point always is the testator’s intention, and that to be derived from the will itself. Hence, the legislature, keeping this cardinal principle in view in framing said section 4 of ch. 110, Code 1860, employed the language, “intended to he in lieu of her dower,” &c. So far as concerns the wife’s right to dower in the real estate of which her husband was, at any time during coverture, seized, no duty of election is imposed /under the law then in force) by a provision in her husband’s will for her benefit, unless it be plainly expressed in the will that - such provision is intended to be in lieu of her dower; nor is it allowable to infer such an intent on the testator’s part from other parts of the will by conjecture or probability; there must he (when not so expressed), something from which the clear and necessary implication arises, and this must he as clear and satisfactory as if it were expressed; otherwise no duty of election is imposed. Higginbotham v. Cornwell, 8 Gratt. 83. This contention is attributable solely to a confusion of the widow’s right of dower proper, with her right to her distributive share in the personal estate of her deceased husband. A widow’s dower and her distributive share are very different things. Dower is a widow’s life estate in land; a widow’s distributive share is (as the law was), a third part of the slaves for life, and of the other personal estate absolutely. The statutes regulating these different subjects, call them by different names, *476and prescribe different rules and- incidents about them. Samuels, J., in Findley’s Ex’ors v. Findley, 11 Gratt. 434.
By the law in force, when the will in question was made, the widow, when there was a conveyance or devise intended to be in lieu of her dower, simply had the right of election without restriction as to time. This last clause of said § 5, ch. 110, Code 1860, being in these words : “ And when she shall demand and receive her dower, the estate so conveyed or devised to her shall cease and determine.” By the amendment to this section, before referred to, the language is very different—it is, And when she shall elect and reserve her dower,” &c., &c. This material change of phraseology was rendered necessary in order to conform to the preceding part of said amendment requiring such election to be made within one year after the death of the husband,, or within one year after the admission of his will to probate, when the provision is by will, &c. The necessity for the phraseology employed in this amendment is made more obvious when we look to the amendment of the preceding fourth section by which this provision was added thereto : “ And every such provision, by deed or will, shall be taken to be intended in lieu of dower, unless the contrary intention plainly appear in such deed or will, or in some other writing signed by the party making the provision.”
Thus the policy of the law was reversed, and instead of the expressed intention or clear and necessary implication essential to put a widow to her election in respect to dower in her husband’s real estate, every such provision for her was declared to have the effect of being in lieu of dower unless the contrary intention should plainly appear.
Now, as to the widow’s distributive share of the personal estate, it is only necessary to say that Mrs. Nelson is, as to that, and only as to it, affected by the provision in her husband’s will, that she should have what might be left after the payment of his debts.
By the twelfth section of our chapter on descents and dis*477tributions, chapter 119, Code 1873 (which is identical with § 12, chapter 123, Code 1860), it is provided: “When any provision for a wife is made in her husband’s will, she may, within one year from the time of the admission of the will to probate, renounce such provision. ****** If such renunciation be made, or if no provision be made for her in the will, she shall have such share of her husband’s personal estate as she would have had if he had died intestate, otherwise she shall have no more thereof than is given her by the will.” This provision has reference solely (as the law was) to the wife’s distributive share in the personal estate, and as the law was when this will was made, has no reference to or bearing upon the wife’s dower in the real estate, except when, as the law was, such provision clearly appears to have been intended in lieu of dower. By this provision (as the law was), whether the provision for her in this will was much or little, she could accept it independent of and beyond her dower in the real estate, or at her election renounce the provision made in the will, and take absolutely her distributive share of the personal estate, and in neither event affect her right of dower in the real estate. In other words, in such case, if she renounced the provision made, or if no provision was made, she was thereby placed in precisely the attitude she would have been in had the husband died intestate as to his personal estate. This is illustrated by many decided cases.
Higginbotham v. Cornwell, supra, was a case in many respects strikingly like this. In that case, the husband, during coverture, sold and conveyed land with general warranty, but his wife did not join in the conveyance. By his will he gave his whole estate, real and personal, to his wife for her life, remainder to his children. She was held entitled to take under the will, and also to have her dower in the land sold. It was also held in that case, that in order that a provision for a wife in the will of her husband should be held to be in lieu of her dower, the will must so declare in'terms; or the conclusion from the pro*478visions of the will ought to be as clear and satisfactory as if it was expressed. In that case, like this, it was insisted that the widow was barred of her dower by the provision made for her in the will, which was intended hv the testator to he in lieu of dower, which provision it was averred she had accepted. Then, too, the will of the testator, the acceptance of the widow thereunder, and the deed of the husband, made' upwards of thirty ‘ years prior to the date of the will, were relied on to defeat the widow’s claim to dower, but the defence was unavailing. Referring to the facts, Baldwin, J., delivering the unanimous opinion of the court, said: “And the question presented by the record is, whether the widow is entitled to recover the dower claimed and also to retain the provision made for her by the will? If she is, then her acceptance or refusal of that provision is a matter wholly immaterial.” It was held that she was so entitled; the same learned judge proceeding says: “ The dower provided by law in behalf of a widow by which is secured to her one-third of all the lands of her' husband of which he was at any time seized during the coverture is paramount to all conveyances, encumbrances, contracts, debts or liabilities of the • husband. But as there is no obligation upon him to make a greater provision for her than that which is conferred by law, it is competent for him, in the exercise of his testamentary power in her behalf, to couple it with the condition that it shall he a substitute for and stand in lieu of her legal dower in the whole or any part of his estate, and thus propose to become the purchaser of the latter, and then if she accepts the devise she takes it with .the condition thereto attached, or if she rejects the condition she thereby rejects the devise itself, and so she cannot have both the legal dower and the devise which she accepts as its substitute. And the devise in her faver may he thus made conditional by its express terms or by a clear and necessary implication of the testator’s intent to that effect to he derived from the will. But as the exercise of a testator’s testamentary bounty in behalf of his wife beyond or irrespective of the provision made for her *479by 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 legal meaning of the distinguished judge applies with peculiar force and exactness to the case in hand. Here there is no condition coupled with the devise to Mrs. Nelson, no allusion to any fact or circumstance by the testator from which there could arise a necessary implication of intent to devise in lieu of dower, nor even an intimation of anything of the kind.
To the same end, it is only necessary to refer very briefly to some other authorities.
In Findley’s Ex’ors v. Findley, supra, there was an agreement in contemplation of marriage. The intended husband bound his estate to pay to the intended wife certain sums of money, if she survived him, which were to be in bar of and in full compensation for her dower. It was held: “This agreement barred her. of her dower in her husband’s real estate, but did not deprive her of her distributive share of his personal estate.” So here, Mrs. Nelson having generously forborne to renounce the provision for her, simply loses her distributive share of the personal estate, all of which has gone to the creditors, and that act of simple generosity on her part can, by no possibility, be tortured into a relinquishment or bar of her legal dower in her husband’s real estate.
McReynolds v. Counts, 9 Gratt. 242, is to the same effect. In Blunt & al. v. Gee & al. it was held: “If the widow does not renounce her husband’s will within one year after his death, she loses her distributive share of the personal estate, and is confined to the provision of the will, but is entitled to her dower in the lands.” Many other authorities might be cited to the same effect, but it is deemed unnecessary.
In the face of all these authorities, it is contended on behalf of the appellees that Mrs. Nelson by her bill dedicated the entire tract of land to the payment of her husband’s debts; that she even pledged her own separate estate for any deficiency, *480and afterwards became the purchaser of a portion of the land, and paid a large part of the purchase money, and then filed her petition claiming dower, and that these facts and circumstances bar her claim to dower. There is nothing in the will of the testator, nothing in either the bill or petition filed by Mrs. Nelson, or in the law bearing on the case to warrant any such conclusion. On the contrary, her bill shows that she had largely involved her own separate estate in the payment of her husband’s debts, was in the dark in respect to her own rights, and asked that the trust might be administered by the court, and her interests protected. In her petition for dower, and for leave to make proof of further payments by her, she simply shows that under the guidance of the court enough light had been shed upon the situation to enable her, with some degree of intelligence, to protect her interests. Yet the appellees, standing in this court on this question as parties on cross-appeal, insist that these circumstances are equivalent to a solemn and formal renunciation of her right of dower by Mrs. Nelson. By reason of the principles above stated, the contention on the part of the appellees in this respect must fall to the ground, and Mrs. Nelson’s right to dower, as decreed by the court below, must be upheld.
II. It only remains to consider the errors assigned by the appellant (1) in respect to the rehearing granted by the decree of May 29th, 1818, involving not only a ripping-up and restatement and settlement of the account of Commissioner Louthan of May 21st, 1814, confirmed March 2d, 1815, but going back of that and overhauling, restating and settling the accounts reported by Commissioner White in April, 1868, in obedience to a decree, and, which, without any exception thereto, was confirmed by the decree entered May 15th, 1868; (2) the errors assigned in respect of the decree of June 1st, 1881, in following up the line marked out by the decree of May 29th, 1818, and by going further and first deciding that there are errors apparent on the face of the commissioner’s reports theretofore made in this cause, *481directing the said report of Commissioner White to he overhauled and restated upon principles indicated in paper “ X,” prepared by the court, which paper “X” is an elaborate statement of all the transactions and matters of account from the beginning of the suit, bringing Mrs. Nelson largely in debt, when by the settlements theretofore made and confirmed she was justly a creditor of the estate for a very large amount; and (3) after so deciding and stating the account as the result of the decision, in referring the matter to a commissioner for proof to sustain the result already arrived at by the court in the absence of evidence; and (4) in respect to the alleged error in the decree of February 6th, 1883, in refusing the petition of the appellant for a rehearing of said decrees of June 1st, 1881, and May 29th, 18*78.
These decrees will now be examined in the order in which they were rendered. The decree of May 29th, 1878, presents an anomaly in practice. Under the first decree rendered in the cause (May 16th, 1867), Commissioner White, in strict obedience thereto, stated, settled and reported the accounts directed, showing due Mrs. Nelson, as executrix of her husband, H. M. Nelson, deceased, for debts of the estate paid by her out of her own separate estate, the sum of $11,162.88. This account was taken after protracted publication as required by the decree, and the two creditors, whose personal representatives (the appellees) now assail that report, appeared and proved their debts. No objection was made before the commissioner to the amount reported in favor of Mrs. Nelson. The commissioner returned his report; and the cause having been regularly matured came on to hearing on the 15th day of May, 1868, and there being no exception thereto by any one, and, in the language of the decree then entered, was explained by counsel, the said report was approved and confirmed, and by the same decree, in response to the bill, special commissioner, R. Y. Conrad, was directed to make sale, public or private, as to him might seem best, of the land (Long Branch) in such portions as he might deem best for the interests *482of the widow and children. In his report aforesaid Commissioner White had fixed the value of “ Long Branch ” at $87.50 per acre. In October, 1869, at a sale made by special commissioner, Conrad, Mrs. Nelson became the purchaser of 280J acres of said tract, including the mansion house and out-buildings, at $100 per acre, her purchase amounting to $28,025. This sale was reported and confirmed to her, and she paid a large portion of the money and by subsequent proceedings decrees were entered directing disbursements. Various efforts were made, but a sale of the residue of the land was not for some years effected from the fact, doubtless, of the then great depreciation of values and the unimproved condition of that portion of the land.
Being then in a condition to better understand the situation and protect her rights both as doweress and as a large creditor of the estate she, in February, 1874, filed her petition claiming her dower, expressing her willingness, however, to accept its commuted value if best for the interests of the creditors, and alleging that, in addition to what had been allowed her by Commissioner White, she had paid other large sums or debts due from the estate and asking leave to make proof thereof.
On the 26th of February, 1874, a decree was entered in the cause directing the inquiry prayed for, and the decree recites that, it being suggested that upon certain of the debts paid by Mrs. Nelson as executrix, interest had been improperly paid for the period of the war, the commissioner was directed to inquire into and report as to that matter also. The decree was executed by Commissioner Louthan, who, on the 21st day of May, 1874, reported (1) that the widow was entitled to dower; (2) that the widow’s expectation of life was sixteen years, and the present value of each year, aggregating $10,562.99; and (3) that there was no evidence of interest improperly paid by her for the period of the war. The commissioner (Louthan) also reported additional payments in favor of Mrs. Nelson, amounting to several thousand dollars, saying in reference thereto: “ The *483following are represented by vouchers not presented to Commissioner White, amongst which are also evidences of payments on debts heretofore reported.”
Commissioner Louthan commenced, and properly so, to state his account upon the basis of the former confirmed report of Commissioner White. He first (keeping principal and interest separate) credits Mrs. Nelson with precisely the same items with which Commissioner White had credited her, making said sum of $11,162.88 the basis. Then bringing in said additional payments reported in her favor, ascertains the estate to be indebted to her, as of the first of May, 1814, in the sum of $15,816.68, or, aggregating them, principal and interest, the sum of $21,190.44. Other debts against the estate were also reported, but they need not be noticed here.
To this report several exceptions were taken, viz: 1st. Because Mrs. Nelson was, under the circumstances, allowed dower; 2d. Because she is allowed credit by the whole amount of debts of the estate paid by her, “many of them being payments in full, and thus defeating the right of other creditors, who have not received anything, to a distribution fro rata with those paid; ” 3d. Because commutation of dower was allowed; and 4th. Because too large a sum was allowed as commutation.
The cause was again heard on the 2d of March, 1815, when the said third exception was withdrawn, and the 1st, 2d and 4th of the series were overruled by the decree then entered; and by consent of all parties commutation of dower was by said decree allowed as to so much of the land as had been sold in the suit and purchased by Mrs. Nelson, commissioners appointed to assign by metes and bounds to Mrs. Nelson dower in the land remaining unsold; and the court then, by its commissioner, ascertained the commuted value of the dower in the land purchased by her to be $6,145.13, and directed special commissioner R. Y. Conrad to credit Mrs. Nelson on her said land purchase with that sum, with interest from October 12th, 1869, the date of her purchase. Mrs. Nelson, and also her legal adviser and friend, *484R. Y. Conrad, were then both living. Mrs. Nelson, however, died in 1876 and Mr. Conrad in 1875, and Commissioner White had long since removed from the state. After this decree, overruling this contention of the appellees (who are personal representatives and who raised these questions after the death of the creditors whose estates they represent), we hear nothing more of the matter until 1878, when these same representatives filed their petition to rehear said decree of March 2d, 1875, which overruled their said exceptions and confirmed said report of Commissioner Louthan. The grounds of the petition are the same as said exceptions. In the petition reference to the reports theretofore made in the cause is had in general terms, hut there is not even mention made of the report of Commissioner White, confirmed over ten years before, nor of the decree confirming same; the prayer of the petition being to rehear only the said decree of March 2d, 1875.
On the same day on which the petition was filed (May 29th, 1878), a decree was rendered overruling the petition in other respects, hut granting the rehearing as to the ground therein alleged, to-wit: “That Mrs. Nelson had been given credit as executrix for a very large amount of the debts of the testator paid by her in disregard of the requirement of law that all creditors of the same class shall he paid pro rata.” And the prayer of the petition is not to overhaul the report of Commissioner White, or to rehear and reverse the decree confirming it, but to rehear, review, and reverse the decree of March 2d, 1875, and all subsequent decrees based thereon. This ground of error (the only one here involved) is not in precisely the same language, hut of similar import to the corresponding second exception to Commissioner Louthan’s report. Whether we look to one or the other, or both, the meaning is the same, and amounts to this: while some of the debts were properly paid, “ many” were improperly paid in full. There is no designation of any one or any number of debts that were either properly or improperly paid. It must be borne in mind, too, that there is *485no pretence to any after discovered evidence ; the petition distinctly rests upon alleged errors apparent upon the face of the record.
It is evident that great labor and pains were bestowed upon their respective reports by both Commissioners White and Louthan. The most rigid scrutiny fails to discover any error on the face of either report.
In its decree granting the rehearing the circuit court says: “ The court is of opinion that it does appear from the papers of the cause that certain of the debts of the testator which have been paid by the executrix, and for which credit has been allowed her to the full amount, did constitute liens on the lands of the testator, but it not appearing that other of the debts paid by her, and for which such credit has been allowed her, were liens on said land or otherwise entitled to preference; and it not appearing that the assets of the estate that came into her hands have been applied by her ratably to the debts ascertained to be due by the estáte of the testator,” &c., therefore the rehearing as aforesaid was granted and the cause referred with directions to the commissioner (1) to revise the commissioners’ reports theretofore made in the cause “to the extent of ascertaining by proper proof” which of the debts of Hugh M. Nelson were properly entitled to preference, &c.; (2) to ascertain the ratable share of the assets properly applicable to the claims of said petitioners, and (3) to ascertain any other matters deemed pertinent or required to be stated and reported by any party, and report the proofs to court.
It-is thus apparent that the court in its decree went very far beyond the actual prayer of the petition and at least by necessary implication directed the overhauling and resettlement of accounts reported by Commissioner White and solemnly confirmed by decree more than ten years before. This was wholly unauthorized by any rule of law or practice. If it were permitted, the essential principle which imputes verity to public records would be overturned and no man’s rights, depending *486upon the sacredness of the records, would be secure, and incalculable mischief would be the result.
Commissioner White’s report has never been excepted to by any one. When that report was confirmed in 1868, it was merged in—locked up—so to speak, in the decree of confirmation, and so became a verity of record, a fortress within itself, and must so stand until assailed and reduced by some legally prescribed method. Commissioner White’s report is in no way dependent upon the subsequent report of Commissioner Lou-than, but the reverse; for, of necessity, Commissioner Louthan, under the directions to him, and in pursuance of the well established rule, had to make the report of Commissioner White the basis of his report. It was perfectly legitimate to attack by petition to rehear, as was done, the decree of March 2d, 1815, confirming Commissioner Louthan’s report—i. e., as to matters reported by the latter, not dependent upon the former confirmed report of Commissioner White. But it was not legitimate, as was done, to attack, by the decree of' 1818, the report of White, which, more than ten years before, had passed into decree, for it was then open to no such assault, nor can any such properly prevail. If at the proper time, and under proper circumstances, there had been a petition to rehear the decree of May, 1868, it would have been all right, upon proper cause shown to rehear. But the parties were all present when Commissioner White’s report was made, and offered no objection—-were also present in court, when it was, without exception, confirmed, and have for long years acquiesced in. In the meantime the parties having the most intimate knowledge of all these transactions have gone to the grave, and the vouchers and other evidences lost beyond the hope of recovery. It is too late now to rip up that settlement, especially upon the bare assumption of errors that do not appear. Both the petition asking it, and the decree granting the rehearing, proceed upon the idea that “ many” of the debts paid by the executrix do not appear to have been properly paid. Not one is specified; not a single error is pointed *487out. If the errors were apparent, they could, and should have been pointed out; and then if the proceeding had been regular and in good time, not blurred by staleness, the result of long acquiescence, there would have been little else necessary than a simple calculation, either by its commissioner, or the court itself, to correct and reform the decree. The very fact that the court by its decree expresses the opinion that as to “ many” of the debts there is error apparent, and then refers the matter for proof, is such a contradiction in terms as at once to make it appear that the decree itself is erroneous and should be reversed.
In the printed notes of argument of one of the counsel for the appellant, reference is made, with seeming approbation, to a remark of Staples, J., in Wooding, Ex’x v. Bradley, 76 Va. 614, which is this: “ There is no rule of law or practice which forbids a court, so long as it retains a cause under its consideration, from receiving and entertaining an exception to a commissioner’s report, even after the same has been confirmed, if it he dearly shown that the report, if carried out, would be productive of injustice and wrong.”
The very broad qualification to the proposition (which I italicise) could not make it fall short of an innovation upon the well settled practice, if, indeed, that learned judge could be held to mean (as I think he cannot be) what at first blush his language would seem to import. If the language be interpreted to mean that during the term at which a decree of confirmation is rendered the decree may be set aside for good cause shown, and the exception to the report then entertained, or that a petition to rehear the decree of confirmation is, in some sense, equivalent to an exception to the report which has become merged in the decree, then, in either event, the proposition is not in conflict with the rule as understood, to wit: that a decree once passed, and the term ended, can only be disturbed by petition, bill of review, bill to impeach, or by appeal, as the case may be. But however this may be, no such proposition was decided, for none such was involved in the case, that, like this, *488being a case in which the proceeding was by petition to rehear. In the succeeding paragraph Judge Staples says: “It is, however, unnecessary to consider this point further, because the appellee did not rely upon a mere exception, but filed his petition for a rehearing, which it was competent for the court to entertain so long as the decree was interlocutory.” The case is direct authority, too, for the rule of practice above laid down, it being held in that case that it was not error to grant the rehearing and correct the commissioner’s report. In fact, the practice in the case in hand (being by petition to rehear), however defective the case on its merits, contravenes the practice inaugurated by the court below.
As to the decree of June 1st, 1881, except that while pursuing the line less distinctly marked out by the decree of May 29th, 1818, it goes much further and actually “decides” in terms that there are errors apparent on the face of the reports of Commissioners White and Louthan, ignores or fails to take any notice of the report of Commissioner Louthan, then in and made in obedience to the former decree of May 29th, 1818, unasked, regrants the rehearing granted by said last-named decree, and recommits the cause with express directions to overhaul the settlement of Commissioner White and restate and settle the accounts of Mrs. Nelson as executrix, upon the principles indicated in the paper in the handwriting of the judge of the court, marked “X.”
The paper “ X” is in the usual form, and seems to be a full statement and settlement of the accounts of the executrix in detail, debits and credits, from the commencement of her administration, regardless of the settlements previously made and confirmed. By it, Mrs. Nelson, theretofore a creditor of the estate for a large amount, is brought in debt thereto in the sum of $12,380.62, with interest from January 1st, 1816. Surely this is a startling result, one that should be based on something more substantial than the general statement that “many” of the debts paid in full by the executrix were improperly so paid *489and credited to her, and ought to be arrived at in the regular way.
After deciding that errors did exist, but pointing out none; after directing a restatement and settlement of accounts long since confirmed without any objection from any source, and which even the petition for rehearing did not in terms ask to disturb, and after devising a scheme of settlement, and fully and in detail stating the account accordingly, the court again, by this decree, refers the matter to a commissioner for proof. Proof of what? It is obvious that by this decree the commissioner was made a mere copyist. It is often necessary and proper for courts to direct commissioners as to the principles upon which to settle accounts, but here the details are gone into, the former settlements overturned, all the accounts, in effect, newly settled, and, in numerous particulars, upon wholly .erroneous principles. But it is not necessary to examine these settlements in detail, it is enough to show that the decrees directing them are erroneous.
It would, indeed, be a case of extreme hardship if any rule of law required or authorized what these decrees undertake to do in this case. Mrs. Nelson’s rights decreed to her are, so far as disclosed by the record, founded in strict justice. There is no pretence that every dollar paid by her out of her own funds was not honestly paid on debts of her testator, honestly due. And whilst we may look at the long list of debts and say “ many ” of them seem to have been paid in full, and as but one lien is reported, and that a specific lien, it is possible or even probable that Mrs. Nelson got credits which, if objected to in the proper time and manner, would not have been allowed her; yet as nothing is said in the decree directing the settlement by Commissioner White about reporting any but specific liens, and as he may well have concluded it to be his duty to stop with the directions to him, we are not warranted in inferring that there were not other liens, not specific. Who can say (even granting that some debts have been paid in full while others were not) *490that they were not liabilities upon the estate for debts due to the United States, taxes or liens assessed upon the decedent previous to his death, or debts due as personal representative, trustee for persons under disabilities, guardian or committee, as provided by § 25, ch. 126, Code 1873? How can we say they were not such ? There is certainly nothing in the record to the contrary. The vouchers are all admitted to be lost; the grave has closed over those having the most intimate knowledge of all that transpired; many of the parties to whom these payments were made have doubtless passed away, and Oommissioner White (long since removed from the state, but-whose deposition is in the cause) says, while he cannot recall the proofs in detail, he remembers that he was careful in taking the account and that the evidence was satisfactory as to each item allowed by him. And again: The decree confirming Oommissioner White’s report, in bringing the cause on, does not employ the usual formula—“and was argued by counsel,” but, “and was explained by counsel.” This last circumstance, if standing alone, would be of but little significance, but coupled with the other circumstances named above, it is by no means insignificant.
In view of all these circumstances, and many others disclosed by the record, there being no errors apparent as alleged,.nor any pointed to as such, no exceptions taken when all parties were before the commissioner, when Commissioner White’s report was .confirmed and acquiesced in for many years before this contention was raised, and when by lapse of time, loss of evidence and death of parties, it is impossible to have any new settlement based upon anything other than mere conjecture, it would be nothing less than wrong and oppression to disturb the settled rights of an executrix, long since dead, one against whom the record discloses nothing to her discredit, or against the fairness of all her dealings, and in whose behalf all the presumptions arise.
These principles have the sanction of a long and unbroken *491line of decisions, among them Crawford’s Ex’or v. Patterson, 11 Gratt. 374; Bolling v. Bolling and als , 5 Munf. 340; Harrison and als. v. Gibson and als., 23 Gratt. 223; Tazewell’s Ex’or v. Whittle’s Adm’r, 13 Gratt. 352; 4 Minor’s Institutes, 1249; Newton v. Pool, 12 Leigh, 144; Stamper’s Adm’r v. Garnett, 31 Gratt. 550; and Hill and als. v. Umbarger and al., 77 Va. 653. It follows, from what has been said, that the decree of February 6th, 1883, refusing the prayer of the appellant’s petition to rehear said decrees of June 1st, 1881, and May 29th, 1878, is also erroneous. For the reasons given, the said decree of May 29th, 1878, in so far as it granted the rehearing aforesaid is erroneous, and te that extent all proceedings had thereunder are likewise erroneous, and must to that extent be re versed and annulled, and the said petition for rehearing dismissed; that said decrees of June 1st, 1881, and February 6th, 1883, are, as well as all proceedings had thereunder, wholly erroneous and must be reversed, and the cause remanded to be further proceeded in in conformity with the views herein expressed.