Fleming v. May

9 S.E.2d 657, 190 Ga. 413, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 493
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 20, 1940
Docket13136.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 S.E.2d 657 (Fleming v. May) 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
Fleming v. May, 9 S.E.2d 657, 190 Ga. 413, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 493 (Ga. 1940).

Opinion

Beid, Chief Justice.

Mrs. Lizzie Baker Bransford, -a widow without children or other heirs nearer in kin than first cousins, died leaving a will which was offered for probate in solemn form. The first cousins surviving her and who had been served with notice of the proceeding made no objection to the probate of the will. Certain second cousins (who, it is explained in the briefs, were at first, when given notice of the proceedings,, thought to be first cousins) *414 filed a caveat in which objection was made to the probate of the will, on various grounds. On the trial in the superior court of an appeal from the court of ordinary, demurrer to the caveat was sustained; and after certain proof was made, a judgment admitting the will to probate was entered. To this judgment Carl Fleming and Lindsay Baker, the second cousins, filed their exceptions.

This case involves a construction and application of the ruléis of inheritance. Code, § 113-903. It is contended that under these rules of inheritance the plaintiffs in error and others of the same class as second cousins, if they could succeed in preventing probate of the will which made no provision for them, would be entitled to participate with first cousins in the estate of the decedent. In sustaining the demurrer to the caveat the court held, that inasmuch a^ first cousins survived the decedent, the second cousins would not be entitled to notice, or to be heard as heirs at law on the question whether the will should be admitted to probate. The argument that the second cousins are entitled to share with first cousins in equal rank as to inheritance is grounded on the proposition that, although of different degrees in relationship or kinship, nevertheless under the particular scheme fixed by our Code they stand in equal degree of inheritance with first cousins. The Code, § 113-903, states:

“The following rules shall determine who are the heirs at law of a deceased person:
“1. Upon the death of the husband without lineal descendants¡, the wife is his sole heir, and upon the payment of his debts, if any, may take possession of his estate without administration.
“2. Whenever the husband or widow of a deceased person shall be under the g,ge of 21 years and entitled to a share in the estate of such deceased husband or wife, he or she shall be entitled to take and hold such share without the intervention of a guardian or other trustee.
"8. If, upon death of the husband, there are children or representatives of deceased children, the wife shall home a child’s part, unless the shares exceed five in number, in which case the wife shall have one-fifth pari of the estate. If the wife shall elect to take her^ dower, she shall have no further interest in the realty.
“I. Children shall stand in the 'first degree from the intestate and inherit equally all property of every description, accounting *415 for advancements as hereinafter provided. Posthumous children shall stand upon the same footing with children in being upon all questions of inheritance. The lineal descendants of children shall stand in the place of their deceased parents, but in all cases of inheritance from a lineal ancestor the distribution is per stirpes and not per capita.
“5. Brothers and sisters of the intestate shall stand in the second degree and shall inherit, if there is no widow, child, or representative of a child. The half-blood, both on the paternal and maternal side, shall inherit equally with the whole-blood. The children or grandchildren of brothers and sisters deceased shall represent and stand in the place of their deceased parents; but there shall be no representation further than this among collaterals. If all the brothers and sisters be dead at the death of the intestate, then the distribution is between the nephews and nieces per capita; and if any of the nephews and nieces be dead, leaving children, distribution is to be made as though the nephews and nieces were all alive, the children of the deceased nephew or niece standing in place of the parent.
“6. The father and mother inherit equally with brothers and sisters cund stand vn the same degree.
“7. In all degrees more remote than the foregoing the paternal and maternal next of kin shall stand on an equal footing.
"8. First cousins stand next in degree; uncles and aunts inherit equally with cousins.
"9. The more remote degrees shall be determined by the rules of the canon law as adopted and enforced in the English courts prior to the fourth day of July, A.D. 1776.”

It will be noted that after making provision in the other subsections for the various degrees of kin, both as to lineal descendants and as to collaterals, and having provided in subsection 5 that brothers and sisters shall stand in the ’second degree, and for representation in certain circumstances, and in subsection 6 that the father and mother shall inherit equally with brothers and sisters and “stand in the same degree,” subsection 8 provides that first cousins, “stand next in degree,” this subsection also providing that uncles and aunts shall inherit equally with cousins, there is no further enumeration or specific classification of relatives who may inherit the estate or property of a deceased person, except the provi *416 sions contained in subsection 9 hereinabove set forth. An ingenious and somewhat plausible argument is made, to the effect that all these separate provisions of the Code section taken together go to set up a general scheme or pattern of inheritance, and that as to all of the various degrees of relationship specifically dealt with in the first eight subdivisions, being nearer in kinship than second cousins, they take the degree of inheritance to which they are there expressly assigned, and that under the language of subsection 9 all “more' remote degrees” shall be determined by the rules of the canon law in the manner set forth in that subdivision; and that since uñder the rules of the canon law second cousins would stand in the third degree, and since first cousins, expressly dealt with in subsection 8,- are-made to stand next in-degree’'to brothers and; sisters, specified' as in second degree, then an equal rank of inheritance is thereby attained as among first and second cousins.

In Ector v. Grant, 112 Ga. 557 (37 S. E. 984, 53 L. R. A. 723), the court was dealing with a contest between a first cousin of the half-blood on the maternal side and a second cousin of the whole-blood, each claiming the right to inherit to the exclusion of the other; and it was held: “In the distribution of the- estate of an intestate a first cousin of the half-blood on the maternal side will take the estate in preference to a second cousin of the whole-blood.” While it is- contended that the precise point here made was not ruled in Ector v. Grant,

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17 S.E.2d 545 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E.2d 657, 190 Ga. 413, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleming-v-may-ga-1940.