Gaines v. New Orleans

73 U.S. 642, 18 L. Ed. 950, 6 Wall. 642, 1867 U.S. LEXIS 1015
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 18, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 73 U.S. 642 (Gaines v. New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaines v. New Orleans, 73 U.S. 642, 18 L. Ed. 950, 6 Wall. 642, 1867 U.S. LEXIS 1015 (1868).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DAVIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

It was supposed, after the decision in Gaines v. Hennen,* that the litigation, pursued in one form and another for over thirty years, by the complainant, to vindicate her rights in *698 the estate of her father, was ended. But this reasonable expectation has not been realized; for other cases, involving the same issues and pleadings, and supported by the same evidence, are before'us; and we are asked to review the principles of law and questions of fact, on which the Hennen decision was pronounced, and thus reopen the whole contro-, versy. The legal principles, on which that case was decided, aré no longer open for consideration. They were fully and finally settled, and are controlling in all future disputes relating to the same subject. But these defendants insist they have a right to be heard on the issues of fact presented in this ease, even, if they are the same as those decided in the Hennen ease.

It can serve no useful purpose to discuss the point how far the decision in Gaines v. Hennen is res judicaia, as to the city of New Orleans and others in like position; for we shall examine this ease, as if the questions of fact, decided in the former case, were still open questions to these defendants and others, whose cases are now before the court. Nevertheless, it is proper to say, when this court, in a real contest, has decided questions of fact on the most careful investigation, and after full argument by able counsel, it will be presumed a correct conclusion was reached, and before a decision thus rendered will-be reversed, it must very clearly appear that error was committed.

The legitimacy of Mrs. Gaines is the turning-point of this controversy; for, since the probate of the will of 1813, if legitimate, she cannot be deprived of the estate of her father by any of the .defences interposed in this suit. These defendants claim, as a question of proof, from the record, that she is an illegitimate child — adulterous bastard of Daniel Clark — and cannot take the estate of her father, either as heir or legatee, under the will of 1813. This court decided, iii the Hennen case, that by the law of Louisiana she was entitled to a legal filiation as the child of Daniel Clark and Marie Julie (Zulime) Carriere, begotten in lawful wedlock. Was that a mistaken judgment?

To this question we will first direct our attention, con *699 sidering, afterwards, the objections made to a recovery by her, even if her legal filiation is established. We shall not attempt to give the history of the litigation, which, it is to be hoped, will be closed by this decision; for the profession is familiar with it by the repeated adjudications of this court. It is enough to say it has been pursued by the complainant through a third of a ceutury, with a vigor and energy hardly ever surpassed, in defiance of obstacles -which would have deterred persons of ordinary mind and character, and has enlisted, on both sides, at different periods, the ablest talent of the American bar.

This ease seems to have been defended on the idea, that every presumption was against the legitimacy of Mrs. Gaines, and the inclination of courts would be so to decide. But, as she was declared legitimate by her father in his last will and testament, common justice, not to speak of legal rules, would require that such a declaration should only be overborne by the strongest proof; and yet detached portions of evidence, scattered through the record here and there, are invoked to destroy the dying declarations of an intelligent man, that a beloved child was capable of inheriting his property.

The influence of the probate of the will of 1813, in deciding the civil status of Mrs. Gaines, cannot be over-estimated. Without the evidence which it furnishes, her legitimacy might be questioned; but with it, in connection with the other evidence in the record, it is hard to see how it can longer be doubted. The circumstances under which this will was recognized are peculiar, and entitle the court which pronounced it valid to the tribute of our admiration. It was proved by the memory of witnesses, forty-three years after it was made, in the height of the litigation instituted by Mrs. Gaines to obtain possession of her father’s estate; but, notwithstanding the effect of the probate of it was to recall the will of 1811, and endanger titles acquired -under it, so strong was the proof of its authenticity, and so complete the evidence of its contents, that a court, administering justice in the midst of a people claiming rights hostile to it, did not *700 hesitate to order it to be recorded and executed as the last will and testament of Daniel Clark.

This will, thus allowed to go to probate, contains the fob lowing clause: “I do hereby acknowledge that my beloved Myra, who is now living in the family of Samuel B. Davis, is my legitimate and only daughter; and that I leave and bequeath unto her, the said Myra, all the estate, whether real or personal, of which I may die possessed, subject only to the payment of certain legacies hereinafter named.” The will was made only a short time before the testator died, and is to be taken as his dying testimony that he believed the declarations in it to be true. And no one can read the evidence on which it was established, especially the evidence of Harriet Harper, Boisfontaine, and Bellechasse, without being convinced of the unbounded affection of Daniel Clark for his child, his sensibility as to her being declared legitimate, his pride in the position she would occupy as heir to his large estáte, and his belief that he had secured the estate to her. Nearly his last words, were about this child, and the necessity of taking care of the will on her account.

The inquiry naturally arises, what motive had he to declare his child legitimate if he kuew the fact were otherwise?. He was a man of superior intelligence, and long residence in Louisiana, and necessarily knew by the laws of the State fie could secure to his child enough of his large property to make her rich, if she were illegitimate. Is it conceivable that such a man would risk a declaration of legitimacy, which he kuew to be false, and thus jeopard the estate, which he insisted with so much confidence he had secured to his child, and in the security of which he said “ he would die contented?”

It is argued that the conduct and letters of Clárk, for years before this, are inconsistent with the idea of Myra’s legitimacy. Conceding this is so, and yet it in nowise disproves the good faith and sincerity of Clark when he made his will. The conduct of Clark is susceptible of easy explanation. He bad contracted an unfortunate marriage, and, in many *701 respects, a disreputable one, having married a person with whom he had previously lived improperly, who, without a divorce, had married again.

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Bluebook (online)
73 U.S. 642, 18 L. Ed. 950, 6 Wall. 642, 1867 U.S. LEXIS 1015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaines-v-new-orleans-scotus-1868.