Congregational Church at Mobile v. Elizabeth Morris

8 Ala. 182
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 Ala. 182 (Congregational Church at Mobile v. Elizabeth Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Congregational Church at Mobile v. Elizabeth Morris, 8 Ala. 182 (Ala. 1845).

Opinion

ORMOND, J.

The principal question in the cause, depends upon the proper construction of the two acts of the Legislature, passed for the relief of the defendant in error. The act of 1836, is to the following effect: “Beit enacted, &c. That Elizabeth Morris, an alien, of Mobile county, be, and she is hereby, authorized to inherit, and have and hold, such of the estate of her late uncle, James D. Wilson, as she might have inherited by law, if she had not been an alien, and that the same shall not escheat to the State.”

The construction put upon this act, in the case of Bartlett & Waring v. Morris, 9 Porter, 269, was, that it merely removed the [188]*188disability of alienage existing in Elizabeth Morris, but did not qualify either her mother or Wilson, her uncle, if aliens, to transmit to her an inheritable estate. In effect, that it merely gave to her the benefit of citizenship. To remedy the omissions of this act, the act of 1841 was passed:

“ An act to amend and explain an act entitled an act for the relief of Elizabeth Morris.

“ Be it enacted, &c. That Elizabeth Morris, an alien of Mobile county, be and she is hereby authorized, and enabled, to have and to hold, such of the estates of her late uncle, James D. Wilson, who died in Mobile county, as she might have inherited by law, had she not been an alien — had her mother, who was the sister of said Wilson, not been an alien — and had the said James D. Wilson not been an alien, but a citizen, capable of transmitting inheritable estates. And that the true intent and meaning of the act, of which this is amendatory, is, that said Elizabeth Morris should have been made capable of inheriting from her said uncle, in the same manner as if the said Elizabeth, her mother, and her said uncle had been natural born citizens of the United States.”

Nothing can well be conceived more explicit than this last act, to remove the obstacles which opposed the assertion, by the defendant in error, of title to the land, as the heir at law of her uncle. The defect, as we have seen, of the former law, was, that whilst she was made capable of taking, her mother, and her uncle, being aliens, were incapable of transmitting the estate. The effect of the act, is, to give to all these persons the attributes of citizens, and the only question upon this part of the case, is, whether she has shown herself to be the sole heir of her uncle.

The uncle, it appears, died without children, and it does not appear that he has any brother or sister alive; his nephews and nieces are therefore his heirs at law. Of these, it seems, there are but two living, the defendant in error and her brother George. It does not appear that the latter was a citizen at the time of his uncle’s death; but if he were, his mother and uncle being aliens, could not transmit to him inheritable blood, and it is therefore the same as if he were not in existence. [Orr v. Hodgson, 4 Wheat. 401; Smith v. Zaner, 4 Ala. Rep. 106.] The act of 1841 removes the disability arising from the alienage of the mother, and uncle, sub modo. It would be a most unreasonable interpretation [189]*189of the act, so to construe it, as to remove the disability as to all the relations of Wilson. The act is for the relief of Elizabeth Morris,, and authorizes her “ to have and to hold” the estates of her uncle, and to have her right to inherit through her mother, in the-same manner as if all the parties had been native born citizens.. The act, in a word, makes her capable of inheriting her uncle’s-estates, and to accomplish this object, it removes out of the way the impediments arising from the alienage of her mother and uncle ; as to all the rest of the world they continue to be, what they died, aliens. This is the plain and obvious intent of the statute ? any other construction, would defeat the object the Legislature have, by two several acts, endeavored to accomplish. We think therefore, that she is shown upon the record to be the sole heir of her uncle, capable of inheriting his estate.

It is further urged, that the power to inherit must exist at the time of the descent cast, and that as no such capacity existed in the plaintiff, at the death of her uncle, it cannot be conferred by the Legislature, which it is said cannot create a fact.'

It was certainly competent for the Legislature, to waive the forfeiture arising from the alienage of the plaintiff’s uncle, and it is wholly unimportant, in the present case, that this is done by an act having a retrospective operation. The power of the Legislature to pass acts of that description, affecting civil rights, cannot be questioned, and has been repeatedly recognized by this Court. The prohibition of the constitution of the United States against the passage, by the States, of ex post facto laws, relates to penal and criminal proceedings. [Watson and others v. Mercer, 8 Peters, 88.] Whether the States can pass -retrospective laws, affecting vested rights, is a question not presented on the record, as no right is shown to have existed, but the right of the the State by escheat.

The case of the People v. Conklin, 2 Hill, 67, is unlike this case, in the important particular, that there the State was enforcing its right of escheat, against the descendant of an alien; and the Court held, that the naturalization of the alien, many years af•ter the descent cast, would not retroact, so as to divest a right which had previously vested in the State. It is obvious that has-tio application to a case, where the State is not only not enforcing its rights, but has, in the most explicit terms, declared that the land shall not escheat.

[190]*190It is farther urged, that at the time of the death of Wilson, the title was incomplete, being then either in Kennedy, from whom he purchased, or in the United States, and that the warranty of Kennedy to Wilson, did not pass with the land. It is stated in Sheppherd’s Touchstone, 200, that “ he that comes into the land, merely by the act of law, in the post, as the Lord by escheat, and the like, shall never take advantage of a warranty.” It is not necessary that we should'enter upon the inquiry, whether the statute of this State, in relation to escheats, has not swept away entirely, the ancient common law doctrine of escheats, with its feudal appendages, by making the State,- the successor to all persons who are intestate, without heirs, whether the property be real or personal; because, from the record, it appears that the fact is not as the argument supposes.

To establish a legal title in Wilson, at the time of his death, the plaintiff offered in evidence a duly certified copy, from the records of Mobile County Court, of the conveyance of the land from Kennedy to Wilson, by which it appeared, that it was a sealed instrument. The defendant, to prove that it was not a deed, produced the original record book, from which the copy offered in evidence was taken, and from that it appeared, that there was no seal or scroll attached to the name of William B. Kennedy, the grantor. The original deed was also in Court, in the possession of the defendant’s counsel, but which he declined to produce 'in evidence. The Court left it to the jury to determine, as a question of fact, whether the instrument was sealed or not, and refused to instruct them, that the appearance of the instrument in the record book was conclusive, that the original was not a deed.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ala. 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/congregational-church-at-mobile-v-elizabeth-morris-ala-1845.