Hall v. Gabbert

72 N.E. 806, 213 Ill. 208
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 72 N.E. 806 (Hall v. Gabbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Gabbert, 72 N.E. 806, 213 Ill. 208 (Ill. 1904).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the decree of the circuit court of Peoria county for partition, growing out of a conceded state of facts and involving but two points of law. The principal question is as to the heirship of appellee, Daisy Gabbert. The only other question presented is as to the right to file a bill for partition before the estate of the deceased is settled in the probate court.

The facts in reference to the heirship of appellee are substantially as follows: On November 23, 1873, and some time prior thereto, one Alice Hannahs resided in Cincinnati, Ohio, and on the date last named gave birth to appellee in that State. In July, 1874, the intestate, William C. Hall, was arrested in Cincinnati on the charge of bastardy, upon the complaint of said Alice Hannahs imputing to him the paternity of appellee. This proceeding was settled by the marriage of appellee’s mother and the said Hall on July 9, 1874, and immediately after the marriage said Hall left Cincinnati and never lived or cohabited with the said mother of appellee after the said marriage ceremony. Appellee, when but an infant, was committed to a children’s home in Cincinnati where she remained until she was five years old, when she was adopted by a Mr. and Mrs. Beuhla, who removed to California, taking appellee with them, and appellee continued to reside in that State from that time. So far as appellee could remember.she never saw her father nor heard directly from him until the fall of 1898, when she sent a letter to the chief of police of Pekin, Illinois, the then home of her father, inquiring of his whereabouts. This letter was shown to the father by the chief of police, and thereupon the father admitted the paternity of the child;' told the chief that in 1873, and prior to that time, he was working in the railroad yards in Cincinnati; -that he kept company with appellee’s mother; that they were engaged to be married and that by him appellee’s mother became pregnant; that the marriage was put off from time to time until appellee’s mother had given birth to appellee, when he was arrested upon the charge of bastardy, and that he married appellee’s mother in settlement of that charge and deserted the mother and child, leaving Cincinnati and in the year 1875 settling in Pekin. He further stated that the mother of appellee died in 1878, and that after her death he returned to Cincinnati and went to the old home and endeavored to find appellee; that he traced her to the children’s home and there learned of her adoption but was refused the names or whereabouts of the persons that had adopted her, as the rule was that such information should not be given except with the consent of the persons adopting a child from such' establishment. The father, after the death of the appellee’s mother, again married, and his widow, Vallie R. Plall, and his son by his last marriage, John William Hall, survived him. After receiving the information of the whereabouts of appellee her father immediately began correspondence with her, addressing her as “My dear daughter” and closing his letters with the expression “Your father,” and during the fall of 1898 wrote letters to the children’s home at Cincinnati for the purpose of verifying her history, enclosing the letter of inquiry, and following his signature to the letter with the words, “Her father.” In the fall of 1898 or winter of 1898 and 1899 appellee’s father and his then wife went to California, and visited four weeks with appellee, and he there declared himself the father of appellee and her his child. He brought appellee home with him on that occasion, to Peoria, where he then resided, and introduced her to various and numerous friends as his daughter, stating that he was glad and proud he had found her. Prom the time he first learned of her whereabouts until the time of his death they continuously corresponded. In the fall of 1900 appellee’s father and his said wife went to California for the health of the husband, stopping part of the time with appellee. While in California said Hall died intestate, seized of the real estate in Peoria in controversy.

The original certificate of marriage and duly authenticated copy of the record of marriage of said William C. Hall and Alice Hannahs were admitted in evidence, as were also the letters, declarations and admissions of said William C. Hall as to his paternity of appellee, and the details of the circumstances attending and surrounding her birth and identity as given by Hall. No complaint is made as to the admissibility of this evidence or any of the evidence contained in the record, the principal controversy being, so far as the question of heirship is concerned, that if it be admitted that all the evidence shows or fairly tends to show is true, still appellee cannot take an interest in the real estate in question, because, it is claimed, the evidence fails to show that the father recognized appellee as his child during the existence of the marriage relation between himself and the appellee’s mother, and that the recognition of appellee by her father in 1898 and 1899 did not have the legal effect intended by our statute for the purpose of legitimating children born out of wedlock. It is further contended by appellant that upon this record appellee cannot be held, under our statute, to have been legitimated by the marriage of appellee’s father and mother in Ohio, for the reason that there are certain depositions in the record showing that at the time of the birth of the appellee the domicile of said William C. Hall was at Pierceville, in the State of Indiana, and that the law as applied to illegitimates is, that the domicile of the father at the time of the birth of the child determines its capacity to be legitimated by a subsequent marriage, and that this record contains no evidence showing that at the time of the birth of appellee the laws of Indiana recognized such method, or any method, of the legitimation of bastard children.

In support of the contention of appellant two cases are relied upon: Munro v. Munro, 1 Rob. (Scot. App. H. L.) 492, and Blythe v. Ayres, 96 Cal. 532, (19 L. R. A. 40.) In both of these cases the birth was in England, and by the laws of that country the status of illegitimacy was so indelible it could only be removed and the child be legitimated by an act of parliament. In the Munro case a Scotch gentleman bore illicit relations with an English woman in England, through which a child was born, and the parents subsequently married in England and the father recognized the child as his child. The mother and the child remained in England until after the death of the father. Upon the death of the latter the child claimed heirship by the laws of Scotland. In the Blythe case an illegitimate child was born of the bodies of Thomas H. Blythe and Julia Perry while the mother was a resident of England. The father, after the conception and prior to the birth, left England and came to America and settled in California. The mother and child remained in England until after the death of the father. The latter died possessed of a large estate in California and the child asserted heirship. In the code of California two distinct provisions existed relative to illegitimates. The first, as section' 230, seemed to relate solely to legitimation of such children, and provided that it might be done by the public recognition of the child by the father and receiving the child into his family with the consent of his wife, if married, and otherwise treating the child as his child.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 N.E. 806, 213 Ill. 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-gabbert-ill-1904.