Dayton v. Adkisson

45 N.J. Eq. 603
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 45 N.J. Eq. 603 (Dayton v. Adkisson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dayton v. Adkisson, 45 N.J. Eq. 603 (N.J. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The question is, to whom shall the trustee convey the lot which by the will he was directed to convey to John Wesley Adkisson. The sister, Margaret Ann Adkisson (now, by marriage, Gibson). claims it on three grounds.

First She claims that the proofs show that her father and. mother were married, and that she and her brother were born in wedlock; and she accounts for the language in her father’s will by the fact that her mother was entitled to a pension during her widowhood, and desired the marriage to be concealed in order to-enable her to continue to draw her pension.

Second. She insists that, if the proof fails to show a marriage before the birth of the twins, it is yet ample to show one to have-taken place at some period during the cohabitation, and that, as her father and mother were domiciled in Pennsylvania, and the twins were born there, such marriage, though it may have taken place subsequent to the birth of the children, was sufficient, under the statute of Pennsylvania of May 4th, 1857 (P. L. of 1857 p. 507, Brightley’s Purdon’s Digest 1873 § 9 p. 1004), which provides that

“ In any and every case where the father and mother of an illegitimate child shall enter into the bonds of holy wedlock and cohabit, such child or children shall thereby become legitimated, and enjoy all the rights and privileges as if they had been born during the wedlock of their parents,”

to render the twins legitimate; and if legitimate in Pennsylvania, they are also legitimate in Yew Jersey, and competent to inherit from each other.

[606]*606Third. That, as she is the twin sister of her deceased brother, she is his sister of the whole blood, and, as such, answers the description of the heir of a person dying without descendants, under the second section of our statute of descents.

The evidence, though somewhat conflicting, satisfies me that a marriage ceremony actually took place at some time between the testator and the woman he names in his will as “one Eliza C. Price, widow.” The only difficulty I have is as to when it took place, whether before or after the birth of the children. But for the language of the will, I should have concluded that they were married at' the time they went to live in the house in the court at the rear of No. 825 Carpenter street, Philadelphia, where they lived when the twins were born, and continued to live until their respective deaths. The evidence is clear 'that they lived there together as a man and wife would do. The woman- went by the name of Mrs. Adkisson. The testator directed a neighboring groceryman to give her credit as his wife during his absence on his periodical voyages to sea. He supported his family in the ordinary way, including two of her children by her former connections. He frequently expressed regret that he had married her, and one witness (Harmon) swears that he saw a marriage certificate framed and hung up in the room occupied by the parties. He says it was an ordinary printed blank marriage certificate filled up, and that it contained the names, in writing, of Perry Adkisson and Elizabeth Price, and was signed by one “ Hardy [or Harding], minister of the Gospel,” and that there was such a minister at that time, in the neighborhood, who is since deceased.

Criticism was made on this man’s evidence on the ground that other witnesses who visited the house did not see the certificate, especially the sister and relatives of the woman Price or Adkisson; but it did not appear that these last witnesses could read. They did appear to be illiterate. I observed the witness Harmon carefully while giving his testimony and was impressed with his apparent truthfulness, and I feel constrained to give credit to his evidence in this respect.

[607]*607The non-production of the certificate was accounted for by the circumstance that the surviving twin was only about seven years of age at the time of her mother’s death, and the few household eifects of the family were taken by an older half-sister, the issue of a previous connection of the mother, which half-sister has since died in an almshouse. Margaret herself was taken away from her mother’s friends, brought over into New Jersey, and taken care of by Mr. Dayton by being bound out to a farmer.

It does not appear to how late a date the mother continued to •draw her pension; but Miss Dill swears she went to the pension office after her sister’s death and drew the arrearages of the pension — she did not say how much — due at her death.

Miss Dill, and the other relatives of the mother, lived in a part of the city distant from Carpenter court, and did not often •visit there. They testified that the mother was known in their circle as Mrs. Price, and that she denied her marriage to Adkisson, saying she would not marry and give up her pension. This evidence, however, was given when it was supposed that, if there was no marriage, Miss Dill would acquire the lot in question as the heir of her sister, under the act of 1877.

But I deem it unnecessary to determine the question of fact, whether the marriage, which I am satisfied did take place, was prior or subsequent to the birth of the children, since it is clear from the evidence that the parties were domiciled in Pennsylvania, where the children were born, and continued to live in that State until they died, and that they were there married, and hence the children were rendered legitimate by the Pennsylvania act of 1857, and, being legitimate there, are, in my opinion, legitimate in this State, and therefore the surviving sister, Margaret Ann Adkisson, is entitled to the lot in question, as the heir of her deceased brother.

I do not deem it worth while to state, at any considerable length, the grounds upon which I reach this conclusion. They are stated elsewhere much better than I could state them.

The question involved was elaborately discussed in England in Doe v. Vardill, 5 Barn. & C. 438; S. C. sub nom. Birtwhistle v. Vardill, 2 Cl. & F. 571; S. C., 7 Cl. & F. 895; in New York [608]*608in Miller v. Miller, 91 N. Y. 315; and in Massachusetts in Ross v. Ross, 129 Mass. 243. In the latter case, Chief-Justice Gray cites and comments upon every case up to that date (1880), and,, after an exhaustive discussion of the whole subject, comes to the-conclusion that the particular reasons that influenced the English court in holding, in Doe v. Vardill, that an heir to land in England must be actually born in wedlock, do not apply in this country, and that a person declared to be a legitimate child of another, by the law of the State of the domicile, must be held to have all the-rights of a legitimate child wherever he goes. The court of appeals of New York, in 1883, in the case above cited, came to the same conclusion in a case where a son born out of wedlock in Germany was legitimized by the subsequent marriage and cohabitation of his parents in Pennsylvania, by force of the same statute above quoted, and held such son entitled to inherit lands in New York.

The result in these cases has the support of Judge Story, in his Conflict of Laws, § 93 et seq.; of Dr. Wharton, in his work on the same subject, § 240 et seq.; and of Professor Parsons, in 2 Parsons on Contracts (5th ed.) 600.

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45 N.J. Eq. 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayton-v-adkisson-njch-1889.