Decoster v. Wing

76 Me. 450, 1884 Me. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 7, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 76 Me. 450 (Decoster v. Wing) 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
Decoster v. Wing, 76 Me. 450, 1884 Me. LEXIS 90 (Me. 1884).

Opinion

Yiegin, J.

The decedent died under age, not having been1, married, leaving property for distribution, some of which he-inherited from his father and the remainder from his paternal grandfather. At the time of his decease, he left no parents, brother or sister, but did leave a maternal grandmother, three maternal uncles and one maternal aunt, two paternal aunts and two children of a deceased paternal aunt.

The judge of probate decreed that the maternal grandmother is entitled to the property as next of kin, under the provisions of R. S., c. 75, § 1, rule 5. The paternal aunts claimed that they and the children of their deceased sister should take the [452]*452property under clause 6, and appealed to the supreme court of probate.

Personal property being distributed by the same rules as •regulate the descent of real estate, (subject to certain provisions mot material to the decision of this case) the question is, under which rule of descent does the property in controversy fall.

It is common knowledge among the members of the profession that our statutes of descent were derived substantially (through dhe provincial statutes 4 Wm. and Ma. c. 2; 9 Ann, c. 2, and 'the early statutes of our mother commonwealth) from the English statues of distribution 22 and 23, Car. 2, c. 10, and 1 Jas. 2, and that they apply equally to personal and real estate. Sheffield v. Lovering, 12 Mass. 490; Reeve, Des. xxvi. What 3s now clause 6, under which the appellants claim the property, was, in the Stat. 4, Wm. and Ma. in the form of a proviso to the preceding rule, providing, " if any of the children happen to die before he or she come of age or be married, the portion of such 'children shall be equally divided among the survivors.” An. 'Chart. 231. The mother took nothing. " This term.' survivors,’ ” (say the court in Runey v. Edmunds, 15 Mass. 292) "must have reference to the surviving children, as a distribution among .children is the subject matter of the whole proviso.”

These provisions remained the same until revised and substantially incorporated in Mass. St. 1783, c. 36. But the language haying been somewhat changed and the meaning rendered less clear, "the obscurity in this and other particulars was supposed to have been one of the principal motives for the new statute on this subject, of 1806, c. 90. The chief object of the legislature in this statute (which is understood to have been prepared by the late Ch. J. Parsons) seems to have been, not to establish new rules of descent and distribution, but to adopt and confirm, in clear and explicit language, the legal construction which had been given to the preceding statutes, and which had been considered the law of the country for more than a century.” Sheffield v. Lovering, 12 Mass. 490, 493.

The Mass. st. 1806, c. 90, provided inter alia: "If the intestate leave no issue, father, brother or sister then his estate [453]*453shall descend to his mother, if any; but if there be no mother, then to his next of kin in equal degree,” etc : " Provided however, that when any child shall die under age, not having been married, his share of the inheritance that came from his father or mother, shall descend in equal shares to his father’s or mother’s other children then living respectively, and to the issue of such children as are then dead, if any, by right of representation.”

Our St 1821, c. 38, §■ 1, is a literal transcript of the foregoing; and it remained the same until the revision of 1841, when the legislature with the evident intention of rendering the meaning of the proviso more clear, used a few more words to express it, thereby making it read : " Provided however, that if any person shall die leaving several children, or leaving one child and the issue of one or more others, and any such surviving child shall die under age, not having been married, all the estate which came to the deceased child by inheritance from such deceased parent-, shall descend in equal shares to the other children of the same parent, and to the issue of such other children who shall have died, by right of representation.” E. S., (1841) c. 93, § 1, cl. 6.

" This proviso,” said Ch. J. Shaw, speaking of the same clause in Mass. st. 1806, c. 90, § 1, hereinbefore quoted, "is an exception from the generality of the antecedent rule.” Nash v. Cutler, 16 Pick. 498-9.

It is the only provision in the statute of descent which makes it necessary to inquire from what source an estate is derived in order to settle its descent or distribution. Kelsey v. Hardy, 20 N. H. 479. It relates solely to property inherited, i. e, coming to the decedent by operation of law, as contra distinguished from that acquired by any lawful act, including title by deed and by devise. It relates to the descent and distribution of the inherited property of a child who died under age, never having been married, among other children only, or among the issue of other deceased children, and makes no allusion to any ascending line of descent. Or to repeat the comprehensive language of C. J. Parker, quoted supra, "a distribution among Children is the subject matter of the whole proviso,..”

[454]*454To bring property within this proviso, therefore, it must be inherited from one of the decedent’s parents and not be derived by purchase or inheritance from any other source. Nash v. Cutler, 16 Pick. 491; Sedgwick v. Minot, 6 Allen, 171; Cables v. Prescott, 67 Maine, 583. And to bring a case within the terms of the proviso so far as persons are concerned, there must be (1) several children, one of whom died under age without having been married; or (2) one child who died as above and the issue of one or more others. In other words, if the minor whose estate is to be distributed left at his decease no brother or sister, nor the issue of any, then his estate does not fall within the terms of the proviso, but, although inherited, it must go by the general rule unaffected by the terms of the former.

This same proviso in substance and meaning was incorporated into the revision of 1857 ; although in attempting to condense it, " the language,” said the late Judge Kent in Benson v. Swan, 60 Maine, 160, 163, "got a little mixed,” so much so, that the counsel for the defense in the case last cited, contended that the terms of the clause made it applicable only to cases where there are grandchildren as well as children. But the learned judge, after stating the defendant’s claim, said: "We do not perceive any intention on the part of the legislature to change or limit the provisions clearly set out in the original statute, by the change of phraseology. We should require the most positive and •unmistakeable evidence of such intent, because such a construction as is contended for, would be clearly in contravention of the ¡spirit and intent of the provision.”

It is urged, however, that the effect of this proviso is to place the estate of a deceased unmarried minor in the same situation ¡as if he had died before the parent, or had never existed. 'This was the remark of Jackson, J., in Sheffield v. Lovering, supra. But the statement was based upon the assumption that there were one or more other children and was strictly correct. A like remark was also made by Shaw, C. J., in Nash v. Cutler, supra, and by Kent, J., in Benson v. Swan, supra,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cohens v. Virginia
19 U.S. 264 (Supreme Court, 1821)
Ogden v. Saunders
25 U.S. 213 (Supreme Court, 1827)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 Me. 450, 1884 Me. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decoster-v-wing-me-1884.