Difference between revisions of "Harrison v. Allen"

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''Harrison v. Allen'', Wythe 291 (1794),<ref>George Wythe, ''[[Decisions of Cases in Virginia by the High Court of Chancery]],'' (Richmond: Printed by Thomas Nicolson, 1795), 291.</ref> is a dispute over an estate that has an early example of statutory interpretation by a Virginia court. .
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''Harrison v. Allen'', Wythe 291 (1794),<ref>George Wythe, ''[[Decisions of Cases in Virginia by the High Court of Chancery]],'' (Richmond: Printed by Thomas Nicolson, 1795), 291.</ref> is a dispute over an estate that has an early example of statutory interpretation by a Virginia court.
 
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==Background==
 
==Background==

Revision as of 16:01, 7 April 2014

Harrison v. Allen, Wythe 291 (1794),[1] is a dispute over an estate that has an early example of statutory interpretation by a Virginia court.

Background

The Virginia Assembly passed a statute that took force in January 1787, allowed people to pass down property using testaments, and stated that without a testament, a person's property would go to all their children, then all their descendants.

On December 8, 1792, the Virginia Assembly created a statute that compiled various earlier acts on the descent of property into one. This statute included the exact language from the 1787 statute. The 1792 statute also said that any previous acts falling under its purview were repealed. On December 28, 1792, the Assembly passed an act that suspended the December 8 statute from taking effect until October 1, 1793.

In November 1789, the Assembly had passed a law stating that if a law repeals an older law, and that law is itself repealed, the older law does not take effect again unless the Assembly expressly says it does.

William Allen (Sr.) wrote a testament in September 1789 that divided his property among his children, including William Allen (Jr.) and Mary Howell (married to the plaintiff, Carter Bassett Harrison). William Sr. did not change or repeal this testament before dying in July 1793, roughly three months before the December 8, 1792, law was to take effect.

William Jr. argued that because the December 28 act did not expressly return the 1787 law to effect when it suspended the the December 8 law, the common law would be in effect. Because the common law did not allow daughters to inherit, William Jr. said, all of William Sr.'s estate should go to him.

The Court's Decision

The High Court of Chancery stated that the important thing to consider was the assembly's will in passing the statutes. Since the December 8 law contained the same language as the 1787 statute, the assembly's will was not to repeal the 1787 act. In addition, the December 28 law only suspended, instead of repealed, the December 8 law. Therefore, the High Court of Chancery concluded that the provision allowing people to give property by testament and allowing all children to inherit was still in effect, and issued a decree in favor of Harrison.

The Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia affirmed the High Court of Chancery's decree.[2].

References

  1. George Wythe, Decisions of Cases in Virginia by the High Court of Chancery, (Richmond: Printed by Thomas Nicolson, 1795), 291.
  2. Allen v. Harrison, 7 Va. (3 Call) 289 (1802).