Brewer v. Hamor

22 A. 161, 83 Me. 251, 1891 Me. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 2, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 22 A. 161 (Brewer v. Hamor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brewer v. Hamor, 22 A. 161, 83 Me. 251, 1891 Me. LEXIS 26 (Me. 1891).

Opinion

Foster, J.

The plaintiff, Loren F. Brewer, brings this writ of entry against the defendants, four children of Isephene who was an illegitimate child of the plaintiff’s father and mother, (Otis Brewer and Rebecca Ann Higgins,) who were married on the 21st day of February, 1847.

[253]*253On the 26th day of January, 1847, less than one month prior to said marriage, Isephene, the illegitimate child, was born, and on April 7, 1853, the plaintiff in this suit was born.

The infant child, Isephene, was brought into the room immediately after the ceremony of the marriage of its parents, and was adopted into and brought up in the family of her father, who many times, before witnesses, and at the time of the marriage, verbally acknowledged her to be his daughter. She was never acknowledged in writing by him to be his child. No difference was made by the father in his treatment of the two children, Isephene and this plaintiff.

Isephene was married, and died March 7, 1883, — the defendants being her four children.

The father of Isephene and this plaintiff died April 20, 1884, intestate, leaving the real estate claimed by the plaintiff in this action. The mother died a year later.

This action is brought to test the title to the real estate left by Otis Brewer, and the question involved is vdiether the issue of Isephene can inherit any portion thereof. To do so they must bring themselves within the provisions of same positive statute enactment. At common law an illegitimate child has no inheritable blood, and no rights to property can be traced through him.

In this State, the provisions of statute in force at the time of the decease of a person intestate must determine the rights of the heirs to the inheritance or descent of his real estate. The decision in this case, then, depends upon, and wre must be governed in our determination as to the respective rights of these parties by the proper construction of the statute in relation to the rights of illegitimate children in force at the time of Otis Brewer’s death, or E. S., 1883, c. 75, § 3, which is as follows : "An illegitimate child born after March twenty-fourth, eighteen hundred and sixty-four, is the heir of parents who intermarry; and such child, born at any time, is the heir of his mother, and of any person who acknowledges himself to be his father in a writing signed in the presence of and attested by a competent witness ; and if his parents intermarry and have other children [254]*254before his death, or his father so aoknoAvledges him, or adopts him into his family, he shall inherit from his lineal and collateral kindred, and they from him, as if legitimate; but not otherwise.”

Inasmuch as the illegitimate child in the present case was born prior to 1864, the rights of the defendants must be determined by the construction and meaning of the remaining portion of the section in question. In arriving at the proper construction and the true meaning of this statute we should seek to ascertain the intention of the legislature, and when that is found it should govern. To ascertain this, the court may look not only to the object in view and the remedy intended to be afforded, but to the whole history of legislation on the subject, whether repealed or unrepealed. Com. v. Munson, 127 Mass. 461. It is always to be presumed that the legislature intended the most beneficial construction of their acts when the design of them is not manifestly apparent. Notxvithstancling the xvellestablished doctrine that a statute made in derogation of the common law is to be construed strictly, it is equally well settled that it is to be construed sensibly, and with a viexv to the object aimed to be accomplished by the legislature. These principles are but different illustrations of the rule which courts repeatedly act upon, and which is too familiar to require any citation of authority to sustain it, that the meaning of the legislature may be extended beyond the precise words used in the laxv, from the reason or motive upon which the legislature proceeded, from the end in view, or the purpose XAdrich was designed.

Examining the statute, then, in the light of these principles, and in view of the fact that there is, in this case, no Avritten acknowledgment of the paternity of the child, the rights of these defendants must be determined by the third clause of the section under consideration, which reads thus : "And if his parents intermarry and haxre other children befoi’c his death, or his father so acknowledges him, or adopts him iixto his family, he shall inherit from his lineal and collatex-al kindred, and they from him, as if legitimate.”

The first requisite to enable an illegitimate child to inherit [255]*255under this clause, is, that his parents intermarry. Under the civil la>v this alone was sufficient to enable him to inherit from his father. But under the statute it is not enough, and one of three additional thing’s, equal in importance in determining the heirship, must be shown to have taken place; either (1,) that Ms parents have had other children before his death; or (2,) that his father has acknowledged him in -writing; or (3,) that the father has adopted him into his family.

Intermarriage of the parents being the first requisite, the three additional elements have been made equivalents, and the concurrence of either one of them with intermarriage is legally sufficient to enable the illegitimate to inherit. It is not necessary that, in addition to intermarriage, all these elements should concur before the illegitimate is entitled to inherit.

In the present case, more than the conditions required by the statute have been fulfilled. The parents of Isephene, under whom the defendants claim, intermarried and had another child before her death; and in addition to that her father adopted her into his family. With these conditions fulfilled, the statute expressly provides that she shall inherit from her lineal and collateral kindred, and they from her, as if legitimate. Her lineal kindred are those from whom she traces her descent, and the line must begin with her father. Hardy v. Sprowle, 32 Maine, 312, note. It is not her lineal kindred on her mother’s side. There is no such limitation. Neither does the pronoun "Ms” — or her — refer as its antecedent to the father or mother, but to the illegitimate. By representation she is to inherit from the brothers and sisters of her father, her collateral kindred. It is not to be supposed that the legislature intended to impose a severer condition to enable her to inherit from her own father, than from her uncles or other collateral kindred, nor does the language of the statute support any such inference. A different interpretation of the statute, wffiicb would require stronger evidence of affiliation and a more formal acknowledgment to make a child the heir of his own father, than to make that child the heir of his father’s brothers and sisters, would bo unreasonable.

[256]*256It is unnecessary to wander outside of the statute itself to come to the unavoidable conclusion that she, under whom the.' defendants claim, must inherit from her father. Any other construction would seem incongruous, arbitrary, and an exceptional distortion of language that is plain, consistent and harmonious.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 A. 161, 83 Me. 251, 1891 Me. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-hamor-me-1891.