Smoot v. Bibb
Smoot v. Bibb
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Charles Tucker, the. great-grandfather of the infant plaintiffs, by deed dated August 17, 1866, conveyed a large tract of land to Edmund P. Tucker, his son, in consideration of the love and affection which he bore to his -son. After describing the property, the deed proceeds: “And the said Charles Tucker doth hereby warrant generally the land conveyed in trust for the use and benefit of the said Edmund P. Tucker and his family during the life of the said Edmund P. Tucker, the property to be applied under the control of said Edmund P. Tucker in such manner -and proportion as he may think proper, and if it should hereafter appear that it is to the interest of the family of said Edmund P. Tucker, of which the said Edmund P. Tucker is to be the judge, the said land should be sold, then power and authority is given to the said Edmund.P. Tucker to sell and dispose of the same and to invest the proceeds in other land to be held for like purposes ,and under like limitations and conditions, and in no evexit is the said property to be liable for any debts now due by the said Edmund P. Tucker, contracted individually or as a member of any concern, or that may hereafter be contracted by him, and at the death of the said Edmund P. Tucker the said property is to pass and descend to the children, or the children of such as may die, such children to occupy the place of the deceased parent, and if no child, the share of such child to pass to the other children.”
The determination of the controversy in this case depends upon the construction of the clause of that deed which disposes of the property after the death of Edmund P. Tucker—that is, whether his' children took a vested or contingent remainder thereunder.
At the time of Edmund P. Tucker’s death he left surviving him two children, E. A. Tucker, a son, and Ida L.
On the other hand, if Georgia Tucker Bibb, daughter of Edmund P. Tucker, took a contingent interest and her remainder therein never vested, but on the contrary failed
No attempt will be made to reconcile the cases involving the question of when a remainder is vested or contingent.
In Howbert v. Cauthorn, 100 Va. 649, 43 S. E. 683, it is held that where there was a grant to a trustee for the benefit of Lucy Ann Thomas for life, with remainder in fee simple to the children of the said Lucy Ann living at her death and the descendants of such as may be dead, in equal shares by stocks, and if there be no such child or children, nor descendants of any such, living at the death of the said Lucy Ann, then over, that the children of Lucy Ann Thomas took contingent remainders; and that the interest of each child was too unsubstantial and shadowy to be attached for the payment of debts. .
In Wilson v. Langhorne, 102 Va. 634, 47 S. E. 872, this is said: “The controversy in this case arises over the disposition of the interest of A. A. Langhorne in the property bequeathed by A. H. Armistead to a trustee, for Nannie M. Langhorne during her lifetime, and at her death to her chil
These views are in accord with those of the trial court, and are decisive of this case.
None of the other errors alleged are of sufficient conse
As to the suggestion of adverse possession of their predecessor in title, Ida L. Bibb, it is sufficient to say that the evidence does not sustain this claim.
The alleged error of the court in excluding certain evidence is not harmful because had it been admitted the result would have been the same; and section 2739 of the Code expressly provides that the plaintiff may recover any specific or any undivided share of the premises, though it may be less than he claims in his declaration.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Smoot and Others v. Bibb and Others
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- a. Remainders, Reversions and Executory Interests&emdash;Vested or Contingent Remainders.&emdash;A remainder is vested when it is subject to no condition precedent and is always ready during its continuance to come into the possession of a certain person already existing and ascertained on the determination of the particular estate now or hereafter, in any manner whatsoever. And any'remainder not so ready is contingent. ■2. Remainders, Reversions and Executory Interests&emdash;Vested or Contingent Remainders.&emdash;It will be observed that the definition in the preceding syllabus requires that the remainder-man, at the time the question arises, should already be in existence and ascertained; and it is not enough, in order to consider the remainder now vested, that he will become ascertained at the moment the particular estate ends and the possession becomes vacant. Thus there are cases where the same event that ends the particular estate ascertains the remainderman; and whenever the possession becomes vacant there will then be a certain person ready to take possession; as in the limitation, to A for the life of B, remainder to the heirs of B, or to A and B for life, remainder to the survivor and his heirs. Here the remainder will vest and come into possession eo instanti on the death of B in the one case, or the survivorship of A or B in the other; but meanwhile it remains contingent, because, as yet, there is no “determinate person” in whom “the. estate is invariably fixed;” for nemo est haeres viventis, and who can now tell whether A or B will be the survivor? 3. Remainders, Reversions and Executory Interests&emdash;Vested or Contingent Remainders&emdash;Case at Bar.&emdash;A grantor by deed conveyed a large tract of land to his son, in trust for the use and benefit of the son and his family during the life of the son, and at the death of the son “the said property is to pass and descend to the children, or the children of such as may die, such children to occupy the place of the deceased parent,. and if no child the share of such child to pass to the other children.” At the time of the son’s death he left surviving him two children and one grandchild, the child of his deceased daughter. Held: That the deceased daughter, during her lifetime, had only a contingent remainder in the property conveyed by her grandfather to her father, for life, which never vested; that th® condition precedent upon which her estate depended was that she should survive her father, and that upon the death of her father', the life tenant, her surviving child took under the deed as a purchaser, and upon her death under age th® descent of her Interest was not governed by section 2556 of the Code of 1904, which provides that an infant’s estate derived by gift, “devise or descent” from one of Ms parents, shall descend and pass to Ms kindred on the side of that parent, but was governed by section 2548 of the Code of 1904, and that her father, her surviving parent, took under that section. 4. Remainders, Reversions and Executory Interests—Vested or Contingent Remainders—Ride of Construction.—The law prefers vested to contingent remainders, and courts will always construe remainders to be vested rather than contingent, where the construction is doubtful, but where the language is not doubtful, this rule does not justify the straining of th© language used in order to make the estate created a vested rather than a contingent remainder.