Ector v. Grant

53 L.R.A. 723, 37 S.E. 984, 112 Ga. 557, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 24, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 53 L.R.A. 723 (Ector v. Grant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ector v. Grant, 53 L.R.A. 723, 37 S.E. 984, 112 Ga. 557, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 12 (Ga. 1901).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

E. L. Grant, as administrator of Frank M. Ector, applied to the ordinary for leave to sell land belonging to the estate of his intestate. Benton B. Ector, who claimed to be the sole heir of Frank M. Ector, filed a caveat to this application, upon grounds not necessary to be referred to in the discussion which will follow. The case was appealed to the superior court, and at the trial there it was held that Benton B. Ector was not an heir at law of the intestate, and the caveat was overruled. The claimants to the estate were Benton B. Ector on the one side, and E. L. Grant and his brothers and sisters on the other. According to an agreement which is contained in the record, the relationship of the different claimants to the intestate was as follows: The grandmother of the children of Augustus Grant (the claimants), on their father’s side, was married twice. The first time she married a Grant. By this marriage Augustus Grant, the father of the children now claiming the property in dispute, was born. The husband of their grandmother died, and the widow Grant afterwards married Wñy B. Ector. By this marriage there was born Eleanor Ector, who married her first cousin Richard Ector. By this marriage there was bom Frank M. Ector, the deceased, so that the mother of Frank M. Ector was the half-sister of the father of the Grant claimants. Joseph Ector, the great-grandfather of Frank M. Ector, had three sons, Hugh Ector, Wily B. Ector, and Joseph Ector, Jr. Hugh married, and by this marriage there was issue, Benton B. Ector, the caveator in this case. Wily B. Ector married the widow Grant, who was the grandmother of the Grant children claiming the estate. By this marriage Eleanor Ector was born. Joseph Ector Jr. had a son, Richard Ector. Richard Ector married his first cousin Eleanor Ector, and by this marriage Frank M. Ector, the deceased, was born. It was thus admitted that Benton B. Ector, the caveator, was a first cousin to both the mother and father of Frank M. Ector, the deceased. It was admitted that the deceased, Frank M. Ector, died intestate without wife, children, brothers or sisters, or descendants thereof, and without mother or father, uncle or aunt, surviving him; that on the Grant side there were no other living ldn as near in degree as Ed. L. Grant and his brothers and sisters, and on the Ector side no other living kin as near in degree as Benton B. Ector, unless his nieces and nephews, several of whom were alive, would be entitled to be treated on an equality with him. It will thus be seen that the question to be determined in the pres[559]*559ent case is, when an intestate leaves surviving him no widow, descendant, ascendant, brother or sister, or representative of either, who is entitled to inherit the estate, a second cousin of the whole blood, or a first cousin of the half-blood on the maternal side ?

At common law the half-blood could not inherit land. The rule prevailing at the time Sir William Blackstone wrote is thus stated by him: “ The heir need not he nearest kinsman absolutely, but only sub modo; that is, he must be the nearest kinsman of the whole blood; for, if there he a much nearer kinsman of the half-blood, a distant kinsman of the whole hlood shall he admitted, and the other entirely excluded. Nay the estate shall escheat to the lord sooner than the half-blood shall inherit.” 2 Bl. Com. mar. p. 227. This rule was the outgrowth of the feudal doctrine, that descent must he traced from the first purchaser. “ The half-hlood,” says Chancellor Kent, in his Commentaries, “was, until lately, entirely excluded by the English law, on the very artificial rule of evidence, that the person who is of the whole blood to the person last seized affords the hest presumptive proof that he is of the blood of the first feudatory or purchaser. Our American laws of descent would seem to he founded on more reasonable principles. The English rule of evidence may be well fitted to the case to which it is applied; but the necessity or policy of searching out the first purchaser is to be questioned, so long as the last owner of the estate, and the proximity of blood to him, are ascertained.” 4 Kent’s Com. (Í4th ed.) *403. Dr. Minor, in his Institutes (vol. 2, p. 529), after stating that as a kinsman of the half-blood has but one half his ancestors above the common stock, the same as those of the propositus, and therefore there is not the same probability of that requisite of the common law, that he be derived from the blood of the first purchaser, says: “ This is doubtless the best reason that can he given for this exclusion of the half-blood, but it must be admitted to be very far from satisfactory. In the first place, it does not justify the peremptory and total exclusion of the half-hlood, but only its postponement ; and next, it neglects the obvious consideration, that there is or may he a greater probability that a nearer kinsman of the halfhlood is derived from the blood of the first purchaser, than a more remote kinsman of the whole blood.” Sir William Blackstone admits that the rule has been the subject of many censures, hut declares that this arose out of a misapprehension of the rule, which, [560]*560he says, is not to be regarded so much as a rule of descent but as a rule of evidence; and he enters in his Commentaries.into an elaborate defense of the rule. See 2 Bl. Com. mar. p. 228 et seq. Mr. Hammond, in his notes to the Commentaries of Blackstone, says: “ The exclusion of the half-blood seems to rest upon a notion of relationship quite different from any we now entertain, but which is by no means unreasonable, if we rightly comprehend it.” 2 Hammond’s Black, top p. 374.

As the personal estate of an intestate was not required to descend to one who was of the blood of the first purchaser, it would seem that the rule excluding the half-blood would not be applicable to that character of property. While there are some contradictory decisions on this subject by the English courts, it was definitely settled in Crook v. Watts, 2 Vern. 124, decided in 1690, that brothers and sisters of the half-blood have an equal claim to personal property with those of the whole blood. See 24 Am. & Eng. Ene. L. (1st ed.) 376, and cases cited in note 1. “Prior to the novels of Justinian, the civil law admitted the half-blood to the inheritance equally with the whole blood; but the novel, or ordinance, of Justinian changed the Eoman law, and admitted the half-blood only upon failure of the whole blood.” 4 Kent’s Com. (14th ed.) *406. By the statute 22 and 23 Charles II, chap. 10 (Watkins’ Dig. p. 16), it was enacted that the estates of intestates, except feme coverts, should be distributed in the following manner: One third to the widow, and the residue in equal portions to the children, — if dead, to their descendants. If there were no children or lineal descendants of such, then a moiety to the widow, and a moiety to the next of kin in equal degree. If there were neither wife nor children, then the estate was to be distributed among the next of kin in equal degree and their descendants, but no representation was allowed among collaterals farther than the children of the intestate’s brothers and sisters. The nearness or propinquity of degree was to be reckoned according to the computation of the civilians ; and not of the canonists, which the law of England adopts in the descent of real estates. 2 Bl. Com. 515, 504. The half-blood was not in terms excluded by this act.

It may be safely assumed that at the date the Colony of Georgia was settled the half-blood, under the law of England, could not inherit land, and that there was no law excluding such from a share [561]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 L.R.A. 723, 37 S.E. 984, 112 Ga. 557, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ector-v-grant-ga-1901.