Gwyn v. Gwyn
Gwyn v. Gwyn
Opinion of the Court
The bill is filed to procure a judicial exposition of the will of Littleton A. Gwyn. The testator devises to his wife, the complainant, the tract of land on which he lived, describing the metes and bounds. In the same clause, is the following bequest: “ In addition to what the law gives her, of my personal estate, I will her the bureau, &o.” The will bears date in 1848, and the.testator died in July 1853. By the aót of 1835, ch. 10, s. 1st, where a man died intestate, leaving no issue, his widow was entitled to one-third of Ms personal estate. In 1852, another act was passed upon the subject; therein it is provided, that hereafter, when any person dies intestate, “possessed of personal estate, leaving a widow, but having no child oy children, nor any issue of the same, one-half of said estate shall be allotted to said widow.” The testator has left no doubt as to his intent and wishes in the bequest to his wife: he desired her to have that portion of his personal estate to which she would be entitled under the law regulating the
The only question in the case is, under which act, that of 1835, or of 1852, is her distributive share to be allotted to her ? The will was made in 1848, at which time the rule of distribution, in a caée of intestacy, where there were no children or the issue of such, was one-tbird of the personal property to the widow. The act of 1852, in such ease, gives her one-half. It is common and familiar learning, that a will is ambulatory until the death of the testator, and by the act of 1844-5, ch. 3, s. 3, it is provided, that “every will shall be construed with reference to the real and personal estate comprised in it, to speak -and take effect, as if it had been executed immediately before the death of the testator or testatrix, unless a contrary intention shall appear by the will.”
The will of Mr. Grwyn, then, must be considered as having been executed by him in 1853, immediately before his death, as there is nothing in it to control this legal intent.
It is true, this case does not come within the letter of the act of 1852, because there is no intestacy, but most clearly within its scope. The testator, as before said, in making
It is clear, that the widow, taking the land’under the will, is entitled to the crop growing upon it at the time of the testator’s death. Tayloe v. Bond, Bus. Eq. 5. The proviso in the act of 1852 has no application. The testator could not have contemplated a dissent by the widow, as he has made for her a more ample provision than the law would have allowed her; this is shown by the fact of the bequest of the small articles which she would have lost by a dissent-.
If required, there must be a reference to the Master, to take an account of the personal estate of Littleton A. Gwyn, which has come to the hands of the defendant, and- of its administration, and also of the value of the plaintiff’s year’s provision.
The' case is retained for further directions;
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PAMELA A. GWYN against RICHARD GWYN, EX'R, AND OTHERS
- Status
- Published