Foster v. Roland

205 S.C. 457
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 11, 1944
Docket15696
StatusPublished

This text of 205 S.C. 457 (Foster v. Roland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Roland, 205 S.C. 457 (S.C. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Associate Justice Oxner

delivered the unanimous opinion of the Court:

The question to be determined in this controversy is whether the appellant, Annie Mae Smith Foster, is the legitimate child of Hosea Smith, who died intestate on January 8, 1944. Claiming to be his daughter and sole heir-at-law and distributee, appellant applied for letters of administration. Respondent, a sister of Hosea Smith, filed with the Probate Court a petition for letters of administration wherein she denied that appellant was the legitimate child of deceased and contested the right of appellant to letters of administration, contending that the sole heirs-at-law and distributees of deceased were his brothers and sisters. The Probate Judge of Spartanburg County, after hearing considerable testimony on the issue thus presented, held that appellant as a legitimate child of deceased and issued to her permanent letters of administration. On exceptions by respondent, the matter was heard by the Circuit Judge, who reversed the order of the Probate Court and directed that letters of administration be issued to respondent. The Circuit Judge held that appellant was an illegitimate child and that the brothers and sisters of the deceased constituted his sole heirs-at-law and distributees. From this order of the Circuit Court appellant has appealed.

Hosea Smith and Sarah Jenkins, both residents of Spar-tanburg County, were duly married in 1921. At the' time of this marriage Sarah Jenkins had two children. The older was a boy approximately eight years of age, who never resided with his mother after this marriage and subsequently died. It is not- contended that Hosea Smith was the father of this boy. The younger was appellant, then a baby about one year old, who was -known as Annie’Mae Smith. Following this marriage appellant lived with Hosea Smith and his wife for approximately a year, when the mother died. After her death, Plosea Smith never remarried and lived with his [460]*460relatives, and appellant lived witli her maternal grand- v mother. Appellant married in 1938.

The Probate Judge found from the evidence that Hosea Smith was the father of appellant, that he recognized and acknowledged her as his daughter, and that fact induced him “in part at least” to marry appellant’s mother. These factual findings were not questioned in the exceptions by respondent to the order of the Probate Judge, and at the hearing before the Circuit-Judge it was agreed that these exceptions only raised legal questions. It seems to be conceded that appellant’s claim of legitimacy depends upon the construction to be given to the following paragraph of Section 255(19) of the Code of 1942; “Warrants in bastardy shall be issued on voluntary complaint by mother or by county commissioners that child is likely to become a county ward. When issue of paternity is tried and found against defendant he shall be fined not more than ten ($10.00) dollars, shall pay the woman two hundred ($200.00) dollars, and give bond that the child not become a public charge, and shall stand charged with the maintenance of the child as the court may order. Action must be brought within three years after birth. If parents subsequently marry, the child becomes legitimate as if born in lawful wedlock. The putative father of any illegitimate child may apply by petition in writing to the children’s court of the county in which the father may reside, praying that such child may be declared legitimate. And if it shall appear that the petitioner is reputed the father of the child, the court may thereupon declare and pronounce the child legitimate; and the clerk shall record the deed. If any person shall willfully abandon his family without providing adequate support for his wife, and the children which he may have begotten upon her, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” (We have italicized a certain portion so that it may be conveniently referred to in discussion.)

[461]*461Before undertaking to construe this statute, it may not be amiss to digress and briefly refer to some phases of the common and statutory law governing the legitimacy of children. Under the common law, legitimate children were those born in lawful wedlock. Children not so born were held illegitimate, even though their parents intermarried after their birth. The power of the Legislature to legitimate or provide for the legitimation of bastard children has long been recognized both in England and in this country. In Davis v. Milford, 85 S. C., 504, 67 S. E., 744, this Court said: “The power of the Legislature to legitimatize a bastard for all purposes as if he were a child of lawful wedlock is plenary, and, by a statute which confers legitimacy without limitation, the bastard becomes a legitimate child for all purposes and in his relations with all persons.”

Many, if not most, of the states have passed statutes abrogating the common-law rule. These statutes vary considerably in their language. Under some an illegitimate child is legitimated where the parents intermarry after the birth of the child, although some of the statutes contain an additional requirement that the paternity of the child be - recognized or acknowledged by the father. Other statutes provide for the legitimation of an illegitimate child by the father’s acknowledgment of such child as his in accordance with certain requirements, even though the father does not intermarry with the mother. An Arizona statute declares that “every child is the legitimate child of its natural parents.” Levy et al. v. Blakely, 41 Ariz., 327, 18 P. (2d), 263, 265.

Turning now to the statute under consideration, if only the italicized portion is considered, we think the meaning is clear, although it is rather briefly expressed. It provides: “If parents subsequently marry, the child becomes legitimate as if born in lawful wedlock.” The [462]*462Probate Court has found as a fact that Hosea Smith was the father of appellant. When the father and mother married after the birth of appellant, under the express terms of the statute she became legitimate “as if born in lawful wedlock.” It is suggested that this construction would make any child had by the woman prior to the marriage legitimate, although the husband was not the father. But.the word “parents” as used in this sentence restricts the meaning to only those children.had by the woman at the time of the marriage of which her husband was the father. To illustrate, at the time of this marriage, Sarah Jenkins had a boy who admittedly was not the son of Hosea Smith, and, therefore, he was not the “parent” of this child.

'North Carolina has a statute which, although differently expressed, has the same meaning as the one under consideration. That statute provides that “when the mother of any bastard child and the reputed father of such.child shall intermarry or .shall have intermarried at any time after the birth of such child,” C. S. N. C. § 279 now G. S. N. C. § 49-12, the child shall be deemed legitimate.

Respondent contends, and the trial Judge held, that when this entire section is considered, two methods of legitimation are provided: '(1) Where the father is unwilling to support the child and denies his páternity, he may be prosecuted within three years after the birth óf the child and if on trial he is found to be the father, the child becomes legitimate provided the “parents subsequently marry.” It is contended that under this method a previous successful prosecution is essential in order to legitimate the child by marriage of its parents.

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Related

Levy v. Blakely
18 P.2d 263 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1933)
Davis v. Milford
67 S.E. 744 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
205 S.C. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-roland-sc-1944.