Garland v. Rowan

10 Miss. 617
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Miss. 617 (Garland v. Rowan) 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
Garland v. Rowan, 10 Miss. 617 (Mich. 1844).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Clayton

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is the case of a will made by a citizen of Virginia, domi-ciliated in that state at the time of his death, which occurred there, but owning lands and slaves in this state. The will was admitted to probate in Virginia, and subsequently in this state. The appellee, who is the widow of the testator, renounced the provisions of the will made in her favor, and claimed her dower in the realty and her share of the personalty according to law. That renunciation was made and recorded in Virginia, and in this state, as appears from the record. The point presented for determination, is, whether, as to the property in this state, the widow is entitled to participate according to our own laws, or according to the laws of Virginia, the place of domicil of herself and her late husband. It is admitted that by the laws of Virginia, the wife is entitled to only one third of the personalty for her life, whilst by the laws of this state, when as in this instance there are no children, she is entitled to one half in fee [629]*629simple. To the parties therefore, the decision is of much importance.

It may be as well to remark in the commencement, that as to the real estate, there is no diversity of opinion ; it is universally conceded, that such estate is governed, in its transmission and descent, by the laws of the country in which it is situated. In relation to the distribution of personalty, the law, though formerly the subject of much controversy, appears to be well settled, that the law of the domicil of the decedent is in general to give the rule. It is not universal in its application, nor without some exception, yet as a general rule it has been established with great unanimity. The courts of England and America, the commentators upon their law, and the foreign continental jurists unite in propounding the rule as we have cited it. Story’s Conflict Laws, 403. Toller Ex. 387. 2 Kent Com. 2 Lomax on Exec. 222, and the numerous cases which they quote. The supreme court of the United States, and the highest tribunals of Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Yirginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Louisiana, North and South Carolina, have all either decided it, or referred to it as án indisputable maxim, which is incorporated into the law as one of its fundamental principles. In scarcely one has it been questioned. A rule, which has met with such general approbation, must have its foundations laid deep in the sense of natural justice of mankind, or address'itself with peculiar force to their feelings of propriety.

Indeed the counsel for the appellee does not contend against the rule, when applied to the distribution of personalty, but they attempt to draw a distinction between a claim for dower, and for a distributive share, and they rely upon the case of Duncan v. Dick, Walker’s Rep. 281, to sustain the distinction, ajad as having settled the principle in this state. They also endeavor to make slaves constitute an exception to the rule.

No authority is cited in support of the attempted distinction between a claim on a share of the personal estate made by the wife, or by a distributee. We have not been able to find any, unless it be the case in Walker, which - will presently be ad[630]*630verted to. The various statutes of distribution seem to place the rights of the two classes on the same footing, and the elementary writers regard them in the same light, so far as the nature and character of their respective interests are concerned. The extent of the interest is another matter. Toller, 370. 2 Lomax on Exec. 201. We find one case, in a court of high character for learning and ability, in which the law of the domi-cil was applied to the share of a widow in the personal estate of her husband. Smith v. Monroe, 1 Iredell, 346. This too was a case in which slaves formed a part of the estate, and the law of Mississippi, in which state the husbandffiad his residence, governed the disposition.

The case of Stegall v. Stegall, 2 Brock. 256, places the right of the wife to a distributive share of the personalty, on a ground totally distinct from dower, holding that by adultery and elopement, her right to dower is forfeited, but that her right to a distributive share is not thereby affected. We see no reason to draw a line between the widow and the distributee, in this respect, and we cannot lend it our sanction.

Neither do we find any authority which, in states where slaves are deemed and treated as personalty, justifies the attempted distinction as to them. Wheeler’s Law of Slavery, 184. We find various cases in which they have been subjected to the rule, in North and South Carolina, and in Kentucky. 1 Iredell, 346. Latimer v. Elgin, 4 Dy. 26. Sneed v. Ewing, 5 J. J. Marshall, 460, a very elaborate case. We shall not lead the way in the introduction of an exception in this particular.

We come next to the consideration of the case in Walker’s reports. If taken in the broad sense in which it is pressed upon us, by the counsel for the appellee, it stands alone in its exposition of the law upon this subject among the modern authorities, unsustained by any other court. We are fully sensible that the stability of jurisprudence requires an adherence to the decisions of our courts. If solemn judgments, once made, are lightly departed from, it shakes the public confidence in the law, and throws doubt and distrust upon its administration. Yet even this backwardness to interfere with previous adjudications, does [631]*631not require ns to shut our eyes upon all the improvements in the science of law, or require us to be stationary when all around us is in progression.

When a single case stands unsupported, and rests upon an unsound basis or an erroneous application of principles, it is better, in the language of an eminent judge, “ to abandon it, than attempt to build upon it.” This court has heretofore felt constrained to depart from former decisions of its predecessors. Perhaps no genenal rule can be laid down on the subject. The circumstances of each particular case, the extent of influence upon contracts and interests which the decision may have had, whether it be only doubtful or clearly against principle, whether sustained by some authority, or opposed to all; these are all matters to be judged of, whenever the court is called on to depart from a prior determination. When all this has been done, if no particular mischief is likely to ensue, we believe it to be our duty to decide according to our own convictions of the law.

- With feelings of this kind, and with high respect for the judges who made the decision referred to, we have given it a very careful examination.

Questions upon the conflict of laws, were but a few years ago, comparatively little understood. Cases seldom arose, and whén they did, they were not examined with the benefit of those lights, which the researches and labors of modern jurists have thrown upon them. The first work on this subject in the English language, was written since this case in Walker was decided. Of late years, from the enlarged and easy intercourse among the communities which constitute the great family of civilized nations, they have greatly increased. But nowhere has this increase been greater than in the United States, because of the nature of our confederacy, the enterprising character of our citizens, and the general diffusion of wealth through the community. A fine writer has said,

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Bluebook (online)
10 Miss. 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garland-v-rowan-miss-1844.