In Re Gossett's Estate

129 P.2d 56, 46 N.M. 344
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 18, 1942
DocketNo. 4700.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 129 P.2d 56 (In Re Gossett's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Gossett's Estate, 129 P.2d 56, 46 N.M. 344 (N.M. 1942).

Opinions

The question is whether the word child includes in its meaning an illegitimate child, as that word appears in the following statute hereafter referred to as the pretermission statute:

"If any person make his last will and die, leaving a child or children, or descendants of such child or children, in case of their death, not named or provided for in such will, although born after the making of such will, every such testator, so far as shall regard such child or children, or their descendants not provided for, shall be deemed to die intestate; and such child or children, or their descendants, shall be *Page 346 entitled to such proportion of the estate of the testator, real and personal, as if he had died intestate; and the same shall be assigned to them, and all the other heirs, devisees, and legatees shall refund their proportional part." § 154-112, N.M.Sts. 1929.

This question was raised by appellants' demurrer to the appellee's complaint, in which it was alleged in substance that appellee Arthur Gallup, a minor, was the illegitimate son of Arthur H. Gossett, deceased, who died testate, leaving as his legatees and devisees in a purported last will and testament, the appellants Alex E. Gossett and Elizabeth Gossett. That appellee was not named or provided for in the deceased's will; that appellee had been recognized by the deceased Gossett as his child, and that such recognition was general and notorious; that he had been recognized as deceased's child in certain writings signed in the presence of two witnesses, which showed upon their faces that they were signed with the intent of recognizing appellee as the heir of the deceased Gossett. It was stated that by reason of the alleged facts such will was void as to appellee, who was the only heir at law of the deceased. These facts (not the conclusion) were admitted by the demurrer, which the court overruled. Appellants stood upon their demurrer. The court entered judgment for the appellee upon an ex parte hearing.

In State v. Chavez, 42 N.M. 569, 82 P.2d 900, 905, in which the right of an illegitimate child of an illegitimate mother to inherit from his maternal illegitimate uncle was in question, we stated:

"Our statutes, and those of Iowa and Kansas, do not provide in terms that an illegitimate child shall inherit from his mother `the same as if he were legitimate,' or, `as if lawfully begotten,' as do those of a number of states. But how else could he inherit? There is no specific provision for the manner of his inheriting property from his mother or the portion, and if not as a child as provided by the general statutes of descent and distribution, then the statute is too indefinite and uncertain to be the law. When construed with the other sections of the act quoted, it is certain that the legislature meant that an illegitimate child should inherit from his mother as other children mentioned in the act should inherit; that is `as if lawfully begotten,' otherwise the statute is meaningless, and we so hold."

The statutes then being construed were as follows:

"If the intestate leave no issue, the whole of his estate shall go to his wife; if he leaves no wife, the portion which would have gone to her shall go to his parents. If one of his parents be dead, the portion which would have gone to such deceased parent, shall go to the surviving parent." § 38-109, N.M.Sts. 1929.

"If both parents be dead, the portion which would have fallen to their share, by the above rule, shall be disposed of in the *Page 347 same manner as if they had outlived the intestate, and died in the possession and ownership of the portion thus falling to their share; and so on through the ascending ancestors and their issue." § 38-110, N.M.Sts. 1929.

"Illegitimate children shall inherit from the mother and the mother from the children; they shall inherit from the father whenever they have been recognized by him as his children, but such recognition must have been general and notorious, or else in writing, and if such recognition be in writing it must have been signed by the reputed father in the presence of at least two competent witnesses and must be such as to show upon its face that it was so signed with the intent of recognizing such children as heirs." § 38-114, N.M.Sts. 1929.

"Under such circumstances, if the recognition of relationship has been mutual, the father may inherit from his illegitimate children, but in thus inheriting from an illegitimate child, the mother and her heirs take preference of the father and his heirs." § 38-115, N.M.Sts. 1929.

We further stated that while the above statutes were in derogation of the common law that they were remedial and should be liberally construed "if in fact the proper rules for the construction * * * have any relation to the common law"; we held that the rule which holds that illegitimate children have no inheritable blood is a fiction of the common law, and has no application to the New Mexico statutes of descent and distribution, which are of civil law origin.

These statutes were adopted almost verbatim from the laws of Kansas, and Kansas adopted them from Iowa. The courts of these states are authority for our conclusion in the Chavez case that an illegitimate child is a child of the mother in the sense the word is used in the statutes of descent and distribution, the pertinent parts of which we have quoted.

At the common law an illegitimate child, so far as inheritance was concerned, was nullius filius (a child of nobody). He had no inheritable blood. He was cut off completely from his ancestors, including his father and mother. This fiction of the common law is the basis for appellant's contention that the word "child" as used in the pretermission statute means a legitimate child only.

We start with our conclusion in State v. Chavez, supra, that the word "child" as used in the descent and distribution statutes of New Mexico, includes an illegitimate child of his mother; and by the same reasoning we hold that it includes an illegitimate child who has been recognized by his father as his child, as required by § 38-114, N.M.Sts. 1929, supra, to constitute him an heir of his father.

The general statutes of New Mexico providing for the descent and distribution of estates were adopted in 1889 from the laws of Kansas, and the pretermission statute was adopted in 1901 from the laws *Page 348 of Missouri. The subject of all these statutes is the descent of the property of decedents. They are in pari materia and should be construed together (Foster v. Lee, 172 Ala. 32,55 So. 125, Ann.Cas. 1913C, 1335; Morin v. Holliday,39 Ind. App. 201, 77 N.E. 861; Martin v. Claxton, 308 Mo. 314, 274 S.W. 77; Commissioner of Immigration v. Gottlieb, 265 U.S. 310,44 S.Ct. 528, 68 L.Ed. 1031; Black on Interpretation of Laws § 103; Kemp Lbr. Co. v. Howard, 8 Cir., 237 F. 574), and when so construed it is clear that the word "child" in the pretermission statute includes any child that would inherit from an intestate parent.

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Bluebook (online)
129 P.2d 56, 46 N.M. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gossetts-estate-nm-1942.