delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a clear case for affirmance. As the record shows, on the first day of January, 1869, William Beverley Gates, of the county of Chesterfield, died, leaving his wife, the second Mrs. Gates, and five children surviving him. Of these children, three, viz.: Lillie W. (now Mrs. Gregory), Blanche C. (now Mrs. Goode), and Judith F. (now Mrs. Winfree), are the issue of the first marriage. By his will he provided, amongst other things, that his executors, if they believed it would be to the interest of his wife and children, should sell any of the real and personal estate, except the homestead, known as Seguine, and the mill and appurtenances thereto attached.
The Seguine tract of land consisted of 955 acres, two-thirds of which belonged to the- testator in fee, and the other third belonged to his first wife, and at her death, in 1861, passed to her children, subject to the curtesy of their father. After the death of their father these children claimed this undivided third, and in a suit on the former appeal in this suit—for which see 30 Gratt. 84—this'court reversed the decree of the circuit court of Chesterfield, in so far as it declared that the testator, William B. Gates, disposed of the farm known as Seguine by his will, and thereby put his children—Blanche C., Lillie W., and Judith F. Gates, to an election—either to confirm the will as to one-third of Seguine or to claim against the will, but affirmed it in all other respects. In October, 1878, and after *264this decree of the Supreme Court of Appeals had been rem dered, these three children, the issue of the first marriage, filed their petition in this cause, asserting a right to the rents and profits on this one-third of Seguine, owned by them from the death of their father, in 1869, until their purchase of that farm, on the 20th of September, 1878, whereupon such proceedings were had that a final decree dismissing this petition was rendered on the 21st day of December, 1882. Now it seems to the court, without stopping to enquire whether or not this question is not concluded by the former decree of this court, that there is no evidence which would justify us in reversing the decree of the circuit court. It would involve a useless consumption of time to undertake to review the testimony, and it seems to us that all that need be said is that the evidence fails to show that there were any such rents or profits which went to the widow or her children. The probabilities are that both Gregory and Goode, as they are shown by the evidence to have been attending to the renting and cultivation of that part of Seguine outside of the portion which was assigned to the widow as dower, either received their full shares of whatever rents and profits there were, or have themselves alone to blame for their failure to realize them. And certain it is that if there is any balance due for the use of the land by any persons other than Goode and Gregory it must be by the executor, and as to him the commissioner reports that it does not appear by his accounts that anything was due by him not accounted for to the court, and there certainly is no evidence which shows any liability upon him. The answers to the other objections made to the decree of the circuit court are patent upon the face of the record, and need not therefore be noticed.
The decree appealed from seems to us plainly right, and must be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.