Allen v. Harvey

568 S.W.2d 829, 1978 Tenn. LEXIS 614
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 568 S.W.2d 829 (Allen v. Harvey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Harvey, 568 S.W.2d 829, 1978 Tenn. LEXIS 614 (Tenn. 1978).

Opinion

OPINION

BROCK, Justice.

This is an eminent domain proceeding in which no question is raised as to the right to condemn or the amount of compensation. The sole question is who is entitled to receive the $11,300.00 paid into court as damages for the taking of the land. Specifically, we must decide whether a child born out of wedlock may inherit from and through his father. The trial court concluded that he could not and the Court of Appeals affirmed. We granted certiorari.

The property in question consists of three tracts of land in Humphreys County taken by the plaintiff in 1971 for urban renewal, pursuant to authority granted by Chapters 8 through 11 of Title 13 of Tennessee Code Annotated. One of the tracts of land belonged to Boyd Allen who had two children, Louis Allen and Mary Francis Marable. Louis died in a work-related accident in 1942. His father died at some later date but before the death of his daughter who owned the two remaining tracts of land taken by the housing authority. Mary Frances, who had no children, apparently died shortly before the property in question was condemned. 1 All three died intestate.

In its suit condemning the three tracts of land, the Waverly Housing Authority stated that it had been “unable to ascertain exactly who were the lawful heirs of the late Mary Frances Marable.” Five first cousins and an uncle of the deceased were listed as possible heirs-at-law. Plaintiff also stated that “one David Lee Allen may be some relation, adopted or otherwise, to the late Mrs. Marable. It is believed that he is incompetent.” In answer, the cousins of Mrs. Marable accepted the valuation of the property assessed by the jury of view, stated that they were unaware of the whereabouts of Mrs. Marable’s uncle, and further stated that they believed “that David Lee Allen was the son of Loui[e] (or Louis) Allen, the deceased brother of Mary Frances Marable, but [did] not believe that said *831 Louie Allen was married to the mother of David Lee Allen, [and did] not know if he was ever adopted by Louie Allen.”

The trial judge appointed a guardian ad litem for David Lee Allen, for Mrs. Mara-ble’s uncle, and for any unknown heirs of the late Mary Frances Marable.

Three years later, in 1974, David Lee Allen by his retained counsel filed an answer to the original complaint, denying that he was incompetent and also denying that the cousins of Mrs. Marable were entitled to inherit from her since, under our laws of descent and distribution, he alone was her lawful heir. Concurrently, Allen filed a cross-complaint for a declaratory judgment that he was the son of Louis Allen and that, on the death of Mary Frances Marable, he was entitled to inherit from her under our laws of intestate succession.

The evidence considered by the trial judge showed that Louis Allen married a woman named Jenny Mays in 1924 and that, while they lived together only two or three years before separating, they had never divorced. Sometime prior to his death in 1942, Louis began to live with Mary Lou Howard. Mary Lou gave birth to a son, David Lee Allen, whom Louis claimed as his own child and supported until his death some six months after the child was born. David’s birth certificate showed Louis Allen to be his father and also showed that his parents were married. In an earlier court proceeding awarding workmen’s compensation benefits to David after Louis’s death, the doctor who delivered David testified that the information recorded on the child’s birth certificate had been supplied by both parents.

After his son’s death, Boyd Allen took Mary Lou and her young son into his home for a short while until Mary Lou married another man. At that time or shortly thereafter, David was taken into the home of his aunt, Mary Frances Marable. In 1955 Mrs. Marable applied for letters of guardianship for David, stating to the county court clerk that David was “one of her kin” and “a minor heir in her family” and that she “felt obligated to take care of him.” The guardian bond referred to David as a “minor heir” of Mrs. Marable. David lived with his aunt until 1956 when he was committed to the Vocational School for Colored Boys. His commitment papers stated that David was the son of Louis Allen and Mary Lou Howard and that he had lived with his aunt, Mary Francis Mar-able, for most of his life.

From all of the evidence the trial judge concluded that “the record fully supports the claim that David L. Allen is the natural son of Louis Allen but the evidence is that his parents were never married . . . .” He therefore concluded that, under our law, David “would not have inherited property from his father and therefore did not inherit the property in question from his natural aunt under the statutes of desent [sic] and distribution,” and ordered that further proof be taken to determine the next of kin of Mary Frances Marable.

David Lee Allen appealed the trial court’s decision to the Court of Appeals on several legal theories, including denial of the equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution as well as by Article I, Section 8 and Article XI, Section 8 of the Tennessee Constitution. The Court of Appeals, however, affirmed the findings and conclusions of the trial court and we granted Allen’s petition for certiorari.

At common law a child born out of wedlock 2 was nullius filius — the child of nobody. Without parents in the eyes of the law, it followed that the child had no right to inherit from either of his natural parents. He was considered to have no “heritable blood.” Not only was the child incapable of inheritance but he could have no heirs except those of his own body. J. Kent, 2 Commentaries on American Law 212 (9th ed. 1858); 5 American Law of *832 Property § 22.33 (A. J. Casner ed. 1952). See Brown v. Kerby, 28 Tenn. 460 (1848); R. Pritchard, 2 The Law of Wills and Administration of Estates § 779 (H. Phillips ed. 1955). See generally H. Krause, Illegitimacy: Law and Social Policy (1971).

In this country, however, state legislatures gradually enacted statutes recognizing children born out of wedlock as children of their mother, thus ameliorating somewhat the harsh rule of the common law. See C. Vernier, American Family Laws § 249, Table CXVIII (1936).

As early as 1805 our statutory law provided for judicial legitimation of a child born out of wedlock, 3 a proceeding “remov[ing] the taint of bastardy, and givfing] such children the same inheritable blood as if they had been born legitimately.” Scott v. Wilson, 110 Tenn. 175, 179, 75 S.W. 1091, 1092 (1902). The commonlaw rule precluding inheritance by “illegitimates,” however, was not altered until 1819 when it was provided:

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Bluebook (online)
568 S.W.2d 829, 1978 Tenn. LEXIS 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-harvey-tenn-1978.