Bird v. Plunkett

17 Conn. Super. Ct. 368, 17 Conn. Supp. 368, 1951 Conn. Super. LEXIS 68
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1951
DocketFile 84398
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 Conn. Super. Ct. 368 (Bird v. Plunkett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bird v. Plunkett, 17 Conn. Super. Ct. 368, 17 Conn. Supp. 368, 1951 Conn. Super. LEXIS 68 (Colo. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

BORDON, J.

The defendant, James Garrett Plunkett, shot and killed his wife on November 1, 1949. He was charged with murder in the second degree and tried to a jury. On March 15, 1950, the jury found him guilty of manslaughter and he was so adjudicated. Under the will of the decedent, dated October 30, 1942, the defendant husband is named sole beneficiary. The will further provides that if the husband predeceases the decedent the estate is to pass to the plaintiff. The plaintiff has brought this action praying for a declaratory judgment to determine whether the husband is barred from deriving any benefit from his deceased wife’s will because of his wrongful act in causing her death. The defendant husband demurred to the complaint as amended, on the ground that the adjudication of manslaughter does not bar him from taking under the will because General Statutes, § 7062, bars only one finally adjudged guilty of murder in the first or second degree. The court is called upon to determine whether the plaintiff’s complaint, as amended, sets up a cause of action.'

Section 7062, which was adopted in 1947, provides as follows: “No person finally adjudged guilty, either as the principal or accessory, of murder in the first or second degree shall be *369 entitled to inherit or take any part of the real or personal estate of the person killed, whether under the provisions of any act relating to intestate succession, or as devisee or legatee, or otherwise under the will of such person; nor shall such person inherit or take any real or personal estate of any other person as to which such homicide terminated an intermediate estate, or hastened the time of enjoyment. With respect to inheritance from or participation under the will of the person killed, the person so finally adjudged guilty of murder in the first or second degree shall be considered to have predeceased the person killed.”

This question is one of first impression in Connecticut. Many jurisdictions have passed upon it with varying results. Many of the decisions interpreted statutes similar to ours and others reached conclusions in the absence of such statutes. The court is, therefore, called upon to chart a course for this state which, when finally reviewed by our Supreme Court, will settle, for this state, the conflict in judicial pronouncements.

A minority of courts hold that notwithstanding there is no express statutory provision denying to one who killed his benefactor the right to inherit from him he is not entitled to so inherit. Perry v. Strawbridge, 209 Mo. 621, 16 L. R. A. (N. S.) 244; In re Tyler’s Estate, 140 Wash. 679; Wall v. Pfanschmidt, 265 Ill. 180; Mackeldey, Roman Law, p. 530-550. These decisions have based such denial on a “reasonable interpretation” of the descent statutes, and read into such statutes the common-law maxim and civil-law rule that benefits of statutes in derogation of the common law will not be enforced where, to do so, would be against public policy. Notes, 51 A. L. R. 1098, 3 L. R. A. (N. S.) 729, 39 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1088.

Many of these decisions disregard legislative enactments by substituting reasoning calculated to superimpose on descent statutes unauthorised and unintended legislative declarations. They hold that no system of jurisprudence can with reason include amongst the rights which it enforces rights directly resulting to the person asserting them from the crime of that person. Hall v. Knight, [1914] P. 1; Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Armstrong, 117 U. S. 591; note 98 A. L. R. 773; Cleaver v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Assn., [1892] 1 Q. B. 147.

Perhaps the leading case adhering to this view is Riggs v. Palmer, 115 N. Y. 506, in which the court said (p. 511): “What could be more unreasonable than to suppose that it was *370 the legislative intention in the general laws passed for the orderly, peaceable and just devolution of property, that they should have operation in favor of one who murdered his ancestor that he might speedily come into possession of his estate? ... No one shall be permitted to profit 'by his own fraud, or to take advantage of his own wrong,' or to found any claim upon his own iniquity, or to acquire property by his own crime.” Ellerson v. Westcott, 148 N. Y. 149; Van Alstyne v. Tuffy, 103 Misc. 455; Matter of Sparks, 172 Misc. 642.

As already indicated, this decision was arrived at in the absence of a statute such as we now have in Connecticut, and in disregard of the statutes of descent, which the majority opinion in the case subordinates to what it calls the common law. This view finds support in the opinions of law writers in law publications of high standing. 30 Am. L. Rev. 130; 4 Harv. L. Rev. 394; Wharton, Homicide (3d Ed.) § 665. Box v. Lanier, 112 Tenn. 393, 64 L. R. A. 458, holds that the common-law rule in force in Tennessee, whereby the surviving husband becomes the owner of his predeceased wife’s dioses in action, does not apply where he makes himself the survivor by murdering his wife. The case of Riggs v. Palmer, supra, was decided by,a divided court, two of the seven judges dissenting on the ground that the statute prescribes the method by which, and by which only, a duly executed will can be revoked: that the provisions of the civil law are not applicable as against the positive enactments of .the legislature, and that it is not the province of the courts to assume functions of the legislative department of the government. The majority view is followed in Missouri and was,at first followed in Nebraska. Perry v. Strawbridge, 209 Mo. 621; Shellenberger v. Ransom, 31 Neb. 61, 74. However, the Shellenberger case was., later reargued'and when it was finally decided, the Supreme Court of Nebraska in a unanimous and emphatic opinion, reversed its former decision and sided with the dissenting judges in Riggs v. Palmer, holding that courts cannot annul the positive enactment of the legislature by reading into it the limitations of the civil law or the promptings of humanity. Shellenberger v. Ransom, 41 Neb. 631.

Many of the cases adhering to the minority view, some of which appear in plaintiff’s brief, are based on wills and contracts and not on statutory rights, and when carefully analysed may be harmonised with the majority view. Hagan v. Cone, *371 21 Ga. App. 416; Wall v. Pfanschmidt, 265 Ill. 180; McAllister v. Fair, 72 Kan. 533; Holloway v. McCormick, 41 Okla. 1; Carpenter’s Estate, 170 Pa. 203. Many of the cases relied on in support of the minority view deal with insurance policies where the usual equitable principles and the law pertaining to fraud are applied to contractual rights.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Conn. Super. Ct. 368, 17 Conn. Supp. 368, 1951 Conn. Super. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bird-v-plunkett-connsuperct-1951.