Edwards v. Gaulding

38 Miss. 118
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 38 Miss. 118 (Edwards v. Gaulding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. Gaulding, 38 Miss. 118 (Mich. 1859).

Opinion

HARRIS, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The nuncupative will of Cecilia Reagen, deceased, was admitted to probate in common form, in the Probate Court of Hinds county, on the testimony of George J. Hulme and William L. Rhodes.

Roderick M. Rutland, claiming tobe the brother of the decedent, and Archibald A. Gaulding et al., claiming to be the nephews and nieces of the said Cecilia, filed their petition in the Court of Probates, as the heirs at law of said Cecilia, seeking to set aside the probate upon the ground of fraud, mental incapacity, and the invalidity of the acts relied on to establish a nuncupative will.

The answer to the petition states that Cecilia Reagen was an illegitimate ; denies that petitioners are her heirs at law and distri-butees ; denies all fraud in the execution of the will, and asserts its validity, both as to the capacity .of the testatrix and the act of nun-cupation.

Upon this petition and answer, the Court of Probates directed two issues to be made up and tried by a jury, to ascertain, 1st, the heirship of petitioners; and, 2d, devisavit vel non. These issues were both submitted at the same time, to the same jury, against the objections of the administrator and appellant, and this constitutes the first ground of error complained of.

It has been certainly a leading object in legal proceedings, especially by the principles of the common law, to avoid duplicity in pleading, or a multiplicity of issues. The great design of the system of special pleading established by the common law, was to reduce the mutual altercation of the parties to a single issue, that the jury might readily comprehend and decide the truth between them. And even under our relaxed system, it has always been the just policy of courts, to avoid all unnecessary issues.

In the case before us, under the provisions of our statute (Hutch. Code, 651, § 29), “ any person interested” had the right to contest the validity of the will in question. If the conscience of the court wras not sufficiently informed by the petition as to the interest-of the petitioners, it certainly had the right to order an issue to be [163]*163ascertain that fact, but in doing so, the rules of law, established for convenience, certainty, and economy, as well as the attainment of justice, require that the preliminary question, upon the determination of which the necessity for further inquiry wholly depends, should bo first disposed of. The'whole merits of the controversy might otherwise be investigated and determined at the suit of mere strangers, having neither right nor interest therein; when, if the single preliminary issue, of the interest of the party petitioning, and his right to file his petition, had been submitted by itself, the expense, delay, and perplexity of such further investigation, might oftentimes be avoided. Another reason why such a practice should not be indulged, is that it must result, as in this ease, in the violation of other important rules of law, securing for just and wise purposes, certain rights to parties to such issues. The party affirming the truth of the facts involved in an issue, taking upon himself the burden of proving those facts, is allowed the opening and conclusion of the argument. But if a multiplicity of issues can be thus' submitted to the same jury, at the same time, by the order of the court, the right thus secured may, without necessity, by such order, be taken from the party entitled thereto, on the main question involved, and transferred to his opponent. We think it, therefore, most safe, just, and consistent with the principles and practice heretofore prevailing, that the Court of Probates in ordering the trial of issues to inform its conscience on disputed facts, should submit but a single issue to the same jury; when that issue more especially, as in this case, involves the ascertainment of a precedent fact, the determination of which may preclude further inquiry.

It is next insisted in argument by counsel for appellants, that the court erred in excluding the record of the former probate of the will in common form. We think there was no error in this. * As a judgment, it could not affect the parties to this proceeding, who were neither parties nor privies, nor in any manner notified of the former probate and judgment; and having no opportunity to contest it, or to be heard in opposition to it, on well-settled principles, it could have no binding force or validity as to them.

The most important point involved in this cause, arises upon the construction of the Act of 23d February, 1846, conferring certain rights upon illegitimate children. By the 4th section of that act, [164]*164Hutch. Code, p. 501, it is provided that “ Hereafter, all illegitimate children shall inherit the property of their mothers, and from each other, as children of the half-blood, according to the Statutes of Descents and Distribution now in force in this State.”

The record shows that the decedent, Cecilia Reagan, was herself an illegitimate child of Jemima Cotton; that Josiah Horton was also an illegitimate child of the said Jemima Cotton; that the petitioners, except Rutland, are the legitimate children of Josiah Horton ; that the said Josiah Horton died before the 23d February, 1846, and that the said Cecilia Reagan died in the year 1852, leaving no heirs or distributees, unless petitioners are to be so regarded; that the said Rutland is the legitimate child of the said Jemima Cotton, born in lawful wedlock, after the birth of the said Cecilia Reagan and the said Josiah Horton.

The question here presented, therefore, is, whether .under the Act of 1846, above quoted, the legitimate children of an illegitimate half-brother, who died before the passage of the act, and before the death of his half-sister, Cecilia Reagan, can inherit from her, she being illegitimate.

It is insisted that the act in question was designed to confer upon bastards, as a class, the right of inheritance, and to prevent escheats, and being a remedial statute, it should be liberally and beneficially expounded, so as to advance the remedy, and suppress the mischief, intended to he remedied.

If the intention of the legislature were obviously to confer inheritable blood, or the right of inheritance generally, upon bastards as a class, our duty would be plain and easy. But the restricted language of the act in question, especially when considered in reference to the policy of the law in all ages and countries, in reference to this unfortunate class, clearly shows that it was not the design of the legislature to destroy the disability of bastards generally, or to confer inheritable blood. Not only the laws of England, but those of all other civil states, formerly excluded bastards from inheritance, unless there' was subsequent legitimation; and this, to discourage illicit commerce between the sexes. 2 Kent (9th edit.), 230.

It seems to have been the design of our legislature to modify the rigor of the ancient law ;■ but, at the same time, not to give too [165]*165much countenance to the indulgence of criminal desire ; while it is designed not to suffer illegitimate children to be cast naked and destitute upon the world, it is certainly not designed to give license to promiscuous concubinage, by destroying the penalties, disabilities) and degradation which the common law has wisely attached, to such unlawful indulgence. 2 Kent, 282.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Miss. 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-gaulding-miss-1859.