McNeill v. McNeill

166 Iowa 680
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 30, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 166 Iowa 680 (McNeill v. McNeill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNeill v. McNeill, 166 Iowa 680 (iowa 1914).

Opinion

Peeston, J.

The issue is one almost entirely of fact whether Edwin R. McNeill was the father of plaintiff, and [681]*681whether he recognized her as such, and, if so, whether the recognition was general and notorious, as provided in section 3385 of the Code. There is no claim that there was recognition in writing.

There were sixteen witnesses for plaintiff and sixty-one for the defendants. Manifestly it would not he practicable to detail all or any considerable part of the evidence contained in the large record. We have examined the record carefully and scrutinized closely all the circumstances shown in the record, as it is our duty to do in such a case. There is much hearsay evidence in the record in the evidence of both plaintiff and defendants, as to rumors, reports, and the like, as to the relations of different parties with others, but it all went in without objection.

Edwin R. McNeill died intestate in October, 1907. He left surviving a widow and seven children who were born to him and his wife after marriage. Por convenience, we may in the opinion refer to Edwin R. McNeill,- at least a part of the time, as the deceased.

The record discloses, without any substantial dispute in the evidence, that plaintiff is an unmarried woman now about forty-six years of age. She is the daughter of one Adeline MeClintoek, then an unmarried woman, and was b,orn in Lower Turkey Foot township, Somerset county, Pa., February 4, 1868, at the home of James McNeill; the latter being an older brother of deceased, Edwin R. McNeill. Plaintiff came to Iowa when about eight years of age, and resides with an unmarried uncle, Marcellus MeClintoek, on a farm a few miles from Le Mars, Iowa. For nearly forty years, or since coming to Iowa, she has resided within a distance of fifty or sixty miles from the home of deceased, Edwin R. McNeill, who resided near Onawa, in Monona county, Iowa. For about a year she lived with Neal McNeill, a brother of deceased, and about four or five miles from the home of Edwin.

Deceased came to Iowa about July 1,1868, from Somerset county, Pa. This was about two months after his marriage [682]*682to the lady who is now his widow, and was about five months after the birth of plaintiff. The lady he so married resided in Somerset county, and they were married within a few miles of the home of Adeline. Deceased was younger than Adeline; she was twenty-nine years old at the date of the birth of plaintiff, and lived with her father and some of her brothers on the side of a mountain not far from the home of James McNeill. While Adeline and Edwin were cousins, the record shows that the families were not of the same set or class; her father and some of her brothers are shown to have been rough, drinking, fighting people. The families lived several miles apart. Deceased had been away in the far West for some time and until about a year before plaintiff was born. Some of the witnesses for plaintiff; and others for defendants, testified that the mother, Adeline, was a woman of loose morals and bad character prior to the. birth of plaintiff. Some of the witnesses say she was good looking and sporty. There is evidence tending to show that it was common report that she was maintaining illicit relations with different young men of the neighborhood, and also with her own father; that plaintiff was a home child. It is shown that at about that time Edwin kept a horse and buggy, or sleigh, and went with the girls, and, while some of them say he was inclined to be sporty, they testify that he was a young man of good character. There is no word from any witness that he ever kept company with or waited upon Adeline, the mother of plaintiff. Adeline was married, after plaintiff was born, to one Barron or Barnes; some of the witnesses say his name was Barron, and others say Barnes. She died in 1897. All of her brothers had moved to Northwestern Iowa prior to her coming, and her father and mother had died several years before. The brothers lived in Monona, Plymouth, and Lyon counties.

Somerset county, Pa., is a rough mountainous district. It had no railways at the time plaintiff was born, and was sparsely settled.

[683]*683We shall refer to the evidence of plaintiff somewhat in detail, and some of the circumstances tending to discredit it, after which we shall refer in a general way to the evidence introduced on behalf of the defendants. It will he observed, at the outset, that substantially all the evidence for plaintiff comes from close relatives of her mother, the MeClintoeks, except James McNeill, a brother of deceased, and Ella Draney, a daughter of James, and one or two others.

Ella Draney testifies that plaintiff was bom at the home of James McNeill and wife; that Adeline McClintock stated, soon after plaintiff was born, that Edwin R. McNeill was the father; that such statements were put in the form of an affidavit or information in bastardy proceedings, charging deceased with being the father; that one Hanna, a justice of the peace, was present when the same was made; and that it was drawn at her father’s house. The witness was a thirteen year old girl at that time. Hanna is dead. The affidavit or information was not produced; no record of such a proceeding has been found; no bond or record of the giving of a bond, as the law of Pennsylvania then required, has been shown. The mere fact that such an information was filed, if it was filed, is not proof that deceased was guilty. The witness came to Iowa thirty-eight years ago and lived a part of the time in Monona county, two miles from the home of deceased. Plaintiff and her mother then lived about three miles from him. She says she never had any conversation with Edwin with reference to the paternity of plaintiff, and that deceased never visited at the home of her father, James McNeill, after plaintiff was bom and before deceased came to Iowa.

. James McNeill, a 'brother of Edwin, came to Monona county, Iowa, in 1872. He lived there twenty-seven years, and then moved to Macy, Nebraska, twelve years ago. He testifies that his daughter, Mrs. Draney, was living at his home when plaintiff was born; that deceased was about there at that time; that the evening before plaintiff was bom [684]*684deceased asked Mm how Adeline was; that deceased came back after plaintiff was horn to see how they were getting along, and went into the room and stayed until he got tii-ed and came out and went home; that deceased said they were getting along all right, and that he was the father of the child; that he heard deceased say that frequently; that he worked for deceased a year after coming to Iowa, and that they talked about it in Iowa; that after the birth of plaintiff, and before deceased came to Iowa, he (deceased) came nearly every Sunday and talked about plaintiff and her mother and said he would like to have the girl at home; that deceased came there and made an arrangement with the wife of the witness, under which Adeline came to their home to give birth to her child; said he guessed he was the father of the child. He testifies to the making of an affidavit or information; but he does not think she signed any papers.

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Bluebook (online)
166 Iowa 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneill-v-mcneill-iowa-1914.