Barker v. Barker

92 Misc. 390, 156 N.Y.S. 194
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 92 Misc. 390 (Barker v. Barker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barker v. Barker, 92 Misc. 390, 156 N.Y.S. 194 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Blackmar, J.

This is an action for the partition of real property, and two questions are presented to the court for determination.

First. Is the defendant infant Beatrice Arabelle Barker entitled to share in the property as an “ heir and descendant,” of her grandfather, Samuel P. Barker; and

Second. Do the descendants of Samuel P. Barker and Charles Barker take the property per stirpes or per capital

The first question involves the legitimacy of the infant. Her parents went through a ceremonial marriage on the 28th day of June, 1897. Her father, now dead, was the son of Samuel P. .Barker, and it is [393]*393claimed that she is illegitimate because at the time of the marriage of her parents her mother had another husband living; that, therefore, the marriage of her parents was void, and that she is not in the eye of the law a descendant of her father. The marriage between the parents was a ceremonial one, followed by conjugal cohabitation, and she was the fruit of the connection. Under these circumstances the presumption that she is legitimate is one of the strongest known to the law. It was found by the verdict of a jury on a framed issue in this case that on May 1, 1897, her mother married one Murtha, who was alive at the time of her marriage with the infant’s father about two months later. The verdict established only the fact of the prior ceremonial marriage. This fact alone does not establish the illegitimacy of the infant. It must be shown also that both parties were competent to contract the prior marriage and that the relation so created continued to exist when the second marriage took place. The presumption of legitimacy is so .strong that it cannot be overthrown without directly proving every link in the chain of evidence which destroys the presumption, even though that involves establishing a negative. In this case it may be that the wife was incapable of contracting the first marriage, and it may be that it was annulled or dissolved before the second, was celebrated.

But I have reached the conclusion that in any event the infant is not shown to be illegitimate. Section 1745 of the Code of Civil Procedure authorizes the court, in an action to annul a marriage on the ground that a former husband or wife of one of the parties was living, to determine that a child of the. marriage is the legitimate child of the innocent parent. Legitimacy is a status created by the common law or by statute; and the legislature has unlimited power to [394]*394prescribe the conditions which call it into being. A court cannot by its judgment create a legal status which did not exist before, for that would be legislation. Legislative power prescribes rules of conduct, competency, and status for the future. Judicial power determines and adjudges past conduct and existing conditions and status. The Constitution separates the legislative from the judicial power, conferring one on the legislature and the other on the courts. Although I cannot affirm that such a separation is absolute and complete so that no shred of judicial power can be found in the legislature and no shred of legislative power in the courts, yet a law should not be interpreted as conferring legislative power on the courts if it be capable of any other reasonable construction. Section 1745 can be interpreted as declaring a status of legitimacy upon the child of a void marriage as to the parent who had no knowledge of the prior marriage. The status then exists independent of the judgment which ascertains and declares it. When the legislature authorized the courts to adjudge that the child of a void marriage, under certain conditions, was legitimate as to one of the parents, it performed the legislative act of declaring legitimacy, which exists by virtue of the law making power before the judgment of the court which determines it, as well as after. If the infant’s father were now alive, he could maintain an action to annul the marriage with the infant’s mother and in such action the infant could be adjudged legitimate as to him; but now that he is dead j and the action can no longer be brought, it is asserted that she must remain branded as illegitimate, although the facts'Would require a judgment of legitimacy in an action brought by either father or mother in the lifetime of the other, or by the stranger Murtha. This would be a strange case. She may be adjudged legiti[395]*395mate in an action brought by another, to which she is not a party, but in an action to which she is a party the court on the same facts cannot declare the same judgment. I cannot think that such is the law. Such rule would be so repugnant to every sense of justice and decency, that I shall not assume that such was the intent of the legislature in enacting section 1745 of the Code, when the words of the statute are capable of carrying the intent of declaring the innocent child legitimate as to the innocent parent without regard to the manner in which the question is presented to the eonrt. I shall hold, until otherwise enlightened, that such section of the Code legitimates, as to the innocent parent, a child born of a marriage void because the other parent had a husband or wife living. This- decision is not at variance with Baylis v. Baylis, 146 App. Div. 517; 207 N. Y. 446, for in that case it was found that the plaintiff was not ignorant of the former marriage of the defendant, and that, therefore, the case was not within the purview of the statute. In this case there is no evidence that the father knew of the former marriage of the wife and therefore the presumption of legitimacy is not overcome:

Second. Do the descendants of Samuel P. Barber and John A. Gr. Barker take the property per stirpes or per capital

John A. Gr. Barker died leaving one son, the plaintiff, while Samuel P. Barker died leaving four children, the defendants Maud Archer, Clifford J. Barker, Ethel B. Miller and Samuel P. Barker, Jr. and one granddaughter, the defendant Beatrice Arabelle Barker, the only daughter of a deceased son. If they take per stirpes, the plaintiff takes half and the other named defendants one-fifth each. If they take per capita, the plaintiff and the five defendants each take one-[396]*396sixth part. The clause of the will to be construed is as follows:

‘ ‘ I give, devise and bequeath unto my executrix and executors herein named all of my real and personal estate subject to and upon all the conditions and every one of the legacies and annuities' herein mentioned and chargeable therewith and not to be sold or disposed of while my wife or daughters Frances Elizabeth or Kate Ella shall live.
‘ ‘ In Trust to receive the rents and profits thereof and apply the same to the education, support and maintenance of my sons John A. Gr. Barker and Samuel P. Barker during their lives without the same being subject to alienation or disposal by them or either of them or their or either of their creditors. And on their deaths the same shall belong and descend (the real estate in fee) subject as aforesaid to their heirs and descendants and if none, then to my heirs at law, and in case of the death of either said John A. Gr. Barker or Samuel P. Barker, then his share (one-half) of the income or profits shall be paid to the heirs of such descendant until the death of the survivor of my said two sons- — -it being my will that the same shall remain in trust as aforesaid until the death of both of my said sons.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 Misc. 390, 156 N.Y.S. 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barker-v-barker-nysupct-1915.