The original bill prays that the executors of Nicholas Mills, deceased, may ’ be required to render an account of all their actings and doings as such executors, and that all questions arising upon the construction of the will of the said testator may be adjudicated and settled by the court; and for general relief, &c.
The bill specifies but one complaint against the conduct of the executors: that is contained in the allegation, that the estate in Caroline has been neglected and mismanaged. This complaint is made the subject of comment in the answer of the executors; but after that, we see no more of it throughout the whole progress of the case. The executors exhibit with their answer accounts of their transactions, which had been duly settled, returned, and recorded according to law. Anticipating, however, as it would seem, what parts of their administration were to be made the subject of complaint, though none of them, with the unimportant exception already mentioned, had been specified in the bill, the executors proceed in their answer to give a minute history of those transactions, and to make a general vindication of their administration.
The executors, however, made no objection in the Circuit court to the decree for an account. In the argument here by one of the executors, he insisted that’
The bill, however, calls upon the executors to render an account of all their actings and doings as executors, and the allegations of' their answer, though affirmative, must be taken as true unless disproved, so far as they relate directly to the account which they are there required to give. Fant v. Miller & Mayhew, 17 Gratt. 187. There are allegations in the answer, however, which relate to matters not directly involved in, or explanatory of, this account, and therefore, perhaps, not within the scope of the discovery sought by the bill, though having a relation to the subject matter of the account, and important to a correct understanding of the motives of the executors and of the circumstances under which they acted. It may be doubtful how far such allegations of collateral matter ought to be received as true, within the rule laid down in Fant v. Miller & Mayhew.
■ But even if we should give credit to any allegation of matter of fact contained in the ansAver, the state of the case will still be deficient in some important particulars. Thus it is important that we should know Avhat was the real value of the Leigh street lots. The appraisement put the value at $68,000 in Confederate money. But obviously, the appraisement cannot be relied upon, for at the sale made about two weeks aftenvards, the lot brought $128,000. The conclusion must be, either that the property sold for a great deal more than it
The purchasers of the Leigh street lots, as well as Morris and Bradford, should also have been made parties to the bill, in the absence of any declaration on the part of the plaintiff that he did not intend to hold them reponsible. It is the policy and practice of courts of equity not to do justice by piecemeal.
The case must, therefore, go back for the purpose of making these parties, and of ascertaining the facts suggested. When the case comes on to be heard, all the allegations of fact in the answer, whether bearing directly upon the matter of the account or not, should be taken to be true, so far as they may not be disproved, unless the plaintiff shall elect to amend his bill, by alleging his objections to the settled accounts, with proper specifications, according to the established course of pleading in such cases. If he does that, the weight due to the answer which may be filed can be easily estimated. If he chooses not to amend his bill by setting out the specific objections, he cannot complain if the answer is taken as true in all its parts unless disproved, or require the court to make nice dis■criminations between those allegations which, by the rules of evidence, are to be taken as true and those which are not. He will have no right to hold the defendants to the rules of pleading, when he has disregarded them himself.
The Circuit court held that the bequests made in the 4th clause of the will in favor of the testator’s daughter,-. Sarah Ann Robinson and her family are to be regarded as demonstrative, and not specific. The distinctions between these two descriptions of legacy are well understood, but it is often very difficult to determine whether a particular case belongs to one class or to the other. The cases present very nice distinctions, but they need not be discussed. It will be sufficient to' refer to them as collected and classified in 1 Roper on Legacies, in 2 Redfield on Wills, and in the notes to Ashburner v. Macguire, 2 Lead. Ca. Eq. Referring to these books for the cases and doctrine laid down by them, I will mention only one rule, which is important to be borne in mind, namely, that a legacy will not be construed to be specific unless it appears clearly to have been so intended.
The first bequest made in this clause is of “the sum of $1,080 per annum, payable semi-annually, being the interest on the purchase money of the real estate on Main street, Richmond, sold by me to Charles Y. Morris.” This language does not import a bequest of the annual interest of a debt due to the testator from Morris. It imports, in express terms, a bequest of a sum of money. It refers to the purchase money of the sale to Morris as a fund whose annual interest will provide for the- annual payment. It could not be discovered from the will that the money was still due from Morris. It was, in point of fact, still due from him at' the date of the will, but if the whole of it had been subsequently collected by the testator, as part of it was, the fund might still have been described as “ the
The deeds show that the consideration of the sale to Hyman, on the 25th day of September 1861, was $8,000, while the sum secured by the deed of trust of the same date is only $3,000; so that $5,000 of the purchase money must have been paid. These deeds were executed only three weeks before the date of the will, and such facts were not likely to escape the memory of the testator. If $3,000 was the whole amount due from Hyman at the date of the will, as seems to have been the case, the fact is conclusive to show that the interest on Hyman’s debt was not the subject of the bequest.
The same observations apply to the bequests, after the death of Mrs. Robinson, of the principal sums of $18,000, $7,500 and $9,000. The legacies of these several sums, therefore, as well as of the several annual sums of $1,080, $450 and $540, during the life of Mrs. Robinson, are not specific, but demonstrative; thatisto say, they are general legacies, with reference to certain
Then, as to the bequest of the “ sum of $300 per annum, payable semi-annually, being the interest on $5,000 of State stock of Virginia,” and the subsequent bequest of “$5,000 in Virginia State stock.”
These bequests do not apply to any particular “$5,000 of State stock,” nor are they made dependent upon the-testator’s being possessed of that amount of State stock at the time of his death. The' bequests are therefore not specific. See the cases collected in 1 Roper on Leg., 205-210. They are general legacies, but they are not demonstrative, because no particular fund is referred to for their satisfaction.
The bequest, after the death of Mrs. Robinson, of “$5,000 in Virginia State stock,” is a little ambiguous, and the question arises whether the testator intended to give $5,000 worth of State stock, or as much State stock as $5,000 would buy, or only to give a quantity of State stock of the nominal value of $5,000. The intention seems to be rendered plain by construing this bequest in connection with the previous bequest of “$300 per annum, being the interest on $5,000 of State stock of Virginia.” The $5,000 in State stock given over after the death of Mrs. Robinson is the same fund referred to in the previous clause as producing $300 per annum interest. This shows that the intention was to give stock of the nominal value of $5,000, according to-
Then a further question arises, whether Mrs. Bobinson.and family are entitled to receive the sum of $300 mr annum for life, whether the $5,000 of State stock will yield it or not.
I infer that the testator had, in the arrangement of his testamentary plans, appropriated in his mind, as the portion of Mrs. Bobinson and her family, the three houses in Bichmond, which he sold shortly before the date of his will to Morris, Hyman and Bradford, together with $5,000 of State stock. In his will, therefore, he appropriates to them $5,000 in stock, and also the funds arising from the sales of three houses. The interest on the stock and the interest on these funds are given to Mrs. Bobinson and family for life, and the stock and funds are to go over after her death. The $5,000 of State stock is the fund which is to produce the $300 per annum. Mrs. Bobinson and her family, therefore, cannot getthe$300_peranwim unless the $5,000 of State stock will yield that sum in interest. They will receive whatever interest the stock may pay, which cannot exceed sixy>er cent., and any arrears unpaid will be due to them,.to be received whenever the State maybe able to pay them. The fund here referred to, though spoken of as stock, consists of bonds or certificates of debt of the State of Virginia, bearing six per cent, interest. It doubtless never entered into the mind of the testator that any contingency would happen in which this interest would not be regularly and fully paid.
In the execution of this clause of the will, therefore, it will be the duty of the executors to invest the sum of $34,500 (being -the aggregate of the several sums of $18,000, $7,500 and $9,000) out of the general assets, and to set apart out of the Virginia State stock left by the testator as much as, on its face, represents the nominal amount of $5,000. This money and stock will
It appears from the report of the commissioner, that Fannie M., a daughter of Mrs. Robinson, intermarried witk Edward T. Robinson after the death of the testator, and has since died without leaving issue, and leavjng ]ier surviving. The Circuit court held that- the children of Mrs. Robinson, living at the death of the testator, did not take vested interests in remainder in the fund provided by the fourth clause, and that Edward T. Robinson in the right of his wife, of whom he is administrator, is not entitled to any interest in the said fund. That is the question raised by the second appeal.
It is a familiar principle, that the law favors the vesting of estates, and where a legacy is given, which is not to be enjoyed in possession until some future period or event, i’t will, where no special intent to the contrary is manifested in the will, be held to be vested in interest immediately on the death of the testator, rather than contingent upon the state of things that may happen to exist at the period of payment or distribution. Catlett & ux v. Marshall & als., 10 Leigh 79; Martin v. Kirby, 11 Gratt. 67; Brent v. Washington’s adm’r, 18 Gratt. 526; Doe v. Considine, 6 Wall. U. S. R. 458. And the question is, whether a special intent is manifested in this will, that the legacy in remainder, after the death of Mrs. Robinson, shall vest only at her death in such children and descendants of deceased children as may happen to he then living.
• I think that no such special intent is manifested in the will, and that the children of Mrs. Robinson, who
The interest of Mrs. Hannie M. Eobinson was not divested in favor of descendants, because sbe left none. It was not divested in favor of the surviving brothers and sisters, because she did not die under age and unmarried, and without issue. An estate once vested will not be divested, except upon the occurrence of the very event described. Harrison v. Foreman, 5 Ves. R. 207; Sturgiss v. Pearson, 4 Madd. R. 411. The provision in favor of the surviving brothers and sisters, imports, according to the natural sense of the words, that all three of the conditions must exist in order to entitle them to take; and such is the settled construction in such cases. Doe v. Cooke & al., 7 East R. 269; Doe v. Rawding, 2 Barn. & Ald. R. 241.
The construction which I put upon the 4th clause is sustained by the 6th clause. This clause provides that, upon the marriage or attaining to the age of twenty-one of any child of Mrs. Eobinson in her lifetime, she may make an advancement to' such child, not exceeding “ such child’s portion of the said trust fund.” This recognizes the title of such child to a portion of the fund, which could not be if the interest is to vest only on the death of Mrs. Eobinson in such of her children as may be then living. The provision authorizing Mrs. Eobinson to prescribe “ terms, trusts, conditions and limitations” to such advancement, only indicates the prudent forecast of the testator, and his desire that such arrangements might be made for the benefit and protection of the child as Mrs. Eobinson should think ne
It follows, therefore, that Edward T. Eobinson, as adm’r of his deceased wife, Nannie M. Eobinson, is entitled to her interest in remainder after the death of her mother, in the fund created by the 4th clause of the will.
The decree should be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
The other judges concurred in the opinion of Joynes, J.
The decree in the first two causes was as follows:
The court is of opinion, for reasons stated in writing, and filed with the record, that the said Circuit court, instead of proceeding to make a decree upon the merits of the said first mentioned cause of Corbin v. Mills’ ex’ors & als., should have required the plaintiff to amend his bill, so as to make Charles Y. Morris and Thomas Bradford, and the purchasers of the Leigh street lot, parties defendant; and after the said parties had been brought before the court, should have allowed all the pai’ties to take new evidence, and should, if the state of evidence made it proper, have directed an enquiry by a commissioner to ascertain what was the true value of the Leigh street lot at the time of the sale thereof by the executors, and what was the average value of said property, in fee simple, in ordinary times, before the commencement of the late war; and also to ascertain what was the value of Confederate treasury notes, as compared with specie, at the several dates at which the executors received from Charles Y. Morris and Thomas Bradford payments in said notes on account of the principal money due from them respectively to the testator at the time of his death; and to what extent said treasury notes were at said several times available, according to the common usages of business in
The court is further of opinion that, according to the true construction of the fourth clause of the will of Nicholas Mills, deceased, the bequest therein of the several sums of $1,080, $450 and $540 per annum to Sarah Ann Robinson for life, were not specific legacies of the interest, payable on certain debts, but were demonstrative legacies; that is to say, they were general legacies, payable out of the general assets, but with an appropriation of certain subjects as the primary fund for their satisfaction; and that the bequest of the several sums of $18,000, $7,500 and $9,000, after the death of said Sarah Ann Robinson, were in like manner demonstrative and not specific legacies.
The court is further of opinion that the bequest, after the death of the said Sarah Ann Robinson, of $5,000 in Virginia State stock is a general legacy of bonds or certificates of debt of the State of Virginia, of the nominal amount of $5,000 on their face, and that the bequest of $300 per annum to said Sarah Ann Robinson for life, is a bequest of the interest payable on said $5,000 of bonds or certificates, and that in case of any failure of the State to pay interest on said bonds or certificates, the said annual sum of $300 is not to be made up out of the general assets.
The court is further of opinion that the children of Sarah Ann Robinson, who were living at the death of the testator, took immediate vested interests in remainder, after the death of the said Sarah Ann- Robinson, in the property mentioned in said clause; and that the share thereof, which so vested in Eannie M.Robinson, who intermarried with Edward T. Robinson, passed on her death to her said husband surviving, as her administrator. Therefore, it is decreed and ordered, that the decree in each of these causes be reversed and an
The decree in the third cause was as follows:
The court is of opinion that, while the court will take judicial notice of the fact, that on the thirtieth day of Api’il 1863, the date of the transaction which is the subject of controversy in this cause, the treasury notes of the United States, and also the treasury notes of the Confederate States, were greatly depreciated in value, as compared with specie, it is not competent for the court to take judicial notice of the rate of depreciation of either currency at any particular time, nor of the extent to which, at any particular time, the treasury notes of the Confederate States were available, according to the common usages of business, for the payment of debts contracted before the war and payable in specie, or in current money of the United States, or for the purchase of property or otherwise.
The court is further of opinion, that inasmuch as the record in this cause contains no evidence upon these points, or either of them, it does not contain sufficient materials to enable the court to make a proper decision upon the questions in controversy. The court is therefore of - opinion that the said Circuit court, instead of proceeding to make a decree upon the merits of the controversy in the existing state of the record, should have directed an enquiry by a commissioner, to ascertain what was, on the thirtieth day of April 1863, the value, as compared with specie, of the treasury notes of the United States, and also of the treasury notes of
Therefore, it is decreed and ordered that the said decree he reversed and annulled, and that the appellees, the executors of Nicholas Mills, dec’d, out of the assets in their hands, pay to the appellants their costs by them expended in the prosecution of their appeal aforesaid here. And the cause is remanded to the said Circuit court for further proceedings to be had therein, in conformity with the foregoing opinion and decree.
Decrees reversed.