Foster v. Lee

55 So. 125, 172 Ala. 32, 1911 Ala. LEXIS 149
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 20, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 55 So. 125 (Foster v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Lee, 55 So. 125, 172 Ala. 32, 1911 Ala. LEXIS 149 (Ala. 1911).

Opinions

SOMEBVILLE, J.

The land sued for was the property of Nellie Marks, a former slave, who died intestate, and the plaintiffs are the legitimate children and grandchildren of Hiram Sanders, who was the illegitimate son and only child of said Nellie Marks. Plaintiffs’ said father, Hiram Sanders, diéd prior to the death of their said grandmother, Nellie Marks, and the only question presented on the trial was whether the lineal descendants of Hiram Sanders, a bastard, can inherit from his mother as he himself could have done if he had survived her.

On the theory that they could so inherit, judgment was rendered for them against the defendant, who held as purchaser by deed from the widow (and second wife) o-f said Hiram Sanders, and this ruling is now assigned as error.

[34]*34The propriety of the ruling complained of depends upon the meaning and effect of our statutes defining the inheritable status of bastards and regulating the descent of land. The act of 1824 (Laws 1824, p. 49) was as follows:

“Section 1. Bastards shall be capable of inheriting, or of transmitting inheritance, on the part of the mother, in like manner as if they had been lawfully begotten of such mother; and shall also be entitled to a distributive share of the personal estate of any of their kindred on the part of their mother, in like manner as if they had been lawfully begotten of such mother.

‘Sec. 2. The kindred of any bastard, on the part of his mother shall be entitled to the distribution of the personal estate of such bastard, in like manner as if such bastard had been lawfully begotten of his mother.” — Clay’s Digest, p. 168, §§ 4, 5.

The effect of these provisions undoubtedly was to make the mother and her blood relations heirs of the bastard; and, reciprocally, the bastard the heir of the mother and her blood relations. By the Code of 1852 (sections 1578, 1579), these provisions were discarded and the present statutes (Code 1907) adopted, viz.:

“Sec. 3760. Every illegitimate child is considered as the heir of his mother, and inherits her estate in whole or in part, as the case may be, in like manner as if born in lawful wedlock.

“Section 3761. The mother, or kindred of an illegitimate child on the part of the mother, are, in default of children of such illegitimate child, or their descendants, entitled to inherit his estate.”-

Under these later statutes, it seems that bastards are heirs only of their mothers, and of her other bastard children, if any, and not of any kindred on the part of their mothers, as they were under the former law, al[35]*35though all their kindred on the part of their mothers are still made the heirs of bastards. Otherwise the present statutes do not materially differ from the act of 1824. — Butler v. Elyton Land Co., 84 Ala. 384, 4 South. 675. In the briefs of counsel on both sides many authorities from other states are cited and discussed. We have carefully read and considered them, and find that most of them, though pertinent in a general way, either do not deal with the precise question here presented, or are dependent upon and controlled by statutes materially variant in language and meaning from the statutes which govern us. For this reason, we deem a full review of these decisions unnecessary, and indeed useless.

The cases of Curtis v. Hewins, 11 Metc. (Mass.) 294, and StecJcel’s Appeal, 64 Pa. 493, and perhaps two or three others by parity of reasoning, seem to substantially support the contention of appellants; while the cases of McGuire v. Brown, 41 Iowa, 650, Magee’s Estate, 63 Cal. 414, Sutton v. Sutton, 87 Ky. 216, 8 S. W. 337, 12 Am. St. Rep. 476, and Moore v. Moore, 169 Mo. 432, 69 S. W. 278, 58 L. R. A. 451, takes the opposite view, in favor of appellees. Curtis v. Hewins was decided under a statute substantially identical with ours, but does not discuss the question at all; merely affirming the lower court, and the effect of the decision was subseqently remedied by legislation. Steckel’s Appeal was decided under a statute providing that illegitimate children shall take the name of their mother, and “they and their mother shall respectively have capacity to take or inherit from each other.” In support of the decision announced the court says: “The case (Grubb’s Appeal, 8 P. F. Smith [Pa.] 55) certainly establishes that the statute does not legitimatize illegitimate children, even so far as their mothers and nest of kin are [36]*36concerned. The application of this principle requires us to hold that where a bastard dies before his mother, and therefore never has taken or inherited from her, he cannot transmit a right to her descendants which never was in him. The words certainly do not refer to a mere possibility of future inheritance. Had the Legislature intended not merely that illegitimate children but the issue of illegitimate children should inherit, it would have been easy to have said so; but they seem carefully to confine the operation of the enactment to children taking from their mother, so as to exclude the case of grandchildren and grandmothers.” The language of this statute is perhaps materially different from ours; and in neither of the cases just cited does the court seem to consider the statute as part of a system of law's regulating descents, whatever their general statutes may have been. It is worthy of note, also, that Curtis v. Hewins wras decided 65, and Steckel's Appeal 41, years ago, when legislative and especially judicial sentiment was still subject to the spirit of ancient intolerance which reluctantly acknowledged that a bastard was a member of the human family.

The cases of Pratt v. Atwood, 108 Mass. 40, Berry v. Owens, 5 Bush (Ky.) 452, and Edwards v. Gaulding, 38 Miss. 118, cited for appellants, are not in point, since they only hold that a bastard’s legitimate children, he being" dead, cannot inherit from collaterals on the mother’s side under statutes giving their bastard parent the right to inherit from his mother. To such a case the rule of strict construction legitimately applies, since the right of such children to inherit cannot be broader than that of the parent whose share of the inheritance they claim by representation alone. This distinction is so pointedly stated in Edwards v. Gaulding, 38 Miss. 118, 127, supra, as to really make of that case [37]*37an authority against appellants’ contention. As shown by the headnote, the precise point decided is that “the legitimate children of a bastard who died previous to the passage of the act of the 23d February, 1846, are not entitled under the provisions of that act to inherit the estate of their illegitimate uncle or aunt dying after the passage of the act.” We quote from the opinion: “If these parties claim at all, it must be by direct force of the statute, and not by virtue of that provision of the law of descents, which enables a child to take his deceased parent’s share of an estate, because at the time of Joseph Harton’s decease he had no right or capacity of inheritance to transmit to his children. * * * The words of the act of 1846 are ‘ * * * ’ etc. These words can confer no right upon these petitioners, because they are not illegitimate, and therefore they do not take directly by force of the statute, nor, as I have before shown, can they take as representing their father, because at the time of his death he had -nO' capacity or possibility of inheritance.

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Bluebook (online)
55 So. 125, 172 Ala. 32, 1911 Ala. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-lee-ala-1911.