McNicoll v. Ives

3 Ohio N.P. 6
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedMarch 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. 6 (McNicoll v. Ives) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNicoll v. Ives, 3 Ohio N.P. 6 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

KUMLER, J.

This is an action to partition real estate situate at the southwest corner of Fifth and Sycamore streets, in Cincinnati, O.

The plaintiff alleges in her petition that in the year 1852 her grandfather, Peter McNicoll, died, leaving a will which was duly admitted to probate in this county, in which will testator devised to his son, Henry McNicoll, said real estate for the term of his natural life, and at his decease to go to the “heirs of his body” in fee simple; that on the 19th day of December, 1893, Henry McNicoll died, leaving as the sole heirs of his body, the plaintiff, Margaret C. McNicoll, and the defendant, Claribel Ives; that Claribel Ives is a tenant in common with the plaintiff in said estate, and that she is entitled to the one-half thereof, which she prays may be partitioned.

The defendant, Claribel Ives, in her answer, admits that her grandfather, Peter McNicoll, died, leaving a will devising the estate stated in the petition; but she says it is not true that Peter McNicoll was the grand father of the plaintiff; admits the death of Henry McNicoll; but she avers that at his death he left this defendant, Claribel Ives, as the sole heir of [7]*7his body. She says it is not true and denies that Margaret C. Nicoll is one of the heirs of the body of said Henry MoNicoll, deceased; denies that Margaret C. McNieoll has a legal right to, or is seized in fee-simple of one-half or any part whatsovever of the real estate described; denies that the plaintiff is one of the heirs of the body of Henry MoNicoll, deceased. Defendant says that as the sole daughter and heir of the body of Henry Mc-Nicoll, deceased, she is under the will of her grandfather, Peter MoNicoll, deceased, entitled to and is seized in fee-simple of all and, singular, the real estate described in the petition. She denies that the plaintiff is a tenant in common with her in the estate named in the petition.

The defendant prays that the petition of the plaintiff be dismissed, and that she be decreed to be the sole owner of the premises, and the title be quieted against the claim of the plaintiff.

Under the pleadings, both the plaintiff and the defendant claim the real estate described under the last will of Peter MoNicoll, the plaintiff claiming one-half thereof, and the defendant the whole of it. Both assert that they are the children and heirs of the body of Henry MoNicoll. The plaintiff admits that the defendant is entitled to share the premises equally with her, while the defendant denies that the plaintiff is the daughter of Henry MoNicoll, or that she has any right to any part of the premises in question. This controversy is between one born in, and one born out of wedlock. Henry MoNicoll was married in 1855, to one Mary Galbraith, and the defendant is the only offspring of such marriage. Shortly after the birth of the defendant, Henry and his wife were divorced.

On December 10, 1867, Lizzie Meyer, the plaintiff’s mother, and Samuel P. Reasoner, were married in Newport, Ky., and were afterwards divorced on the 23rd day of April, 1889, his wife filing the petition.

On the 7th day of January, 1&75, without having been divorced from plaintiff’s mother, Samuel P. Reasoner was married to a Miss Gleave in Columbia, S. C., and now resides there with her and their family.

The plaintiff was born September 10, 1876, on German street, in the city of Newport, in the state of Kentucky, where her mother then resided.

On the 27th day of June, 1889, Henry MoNicoll and Elizabeth Reasoner, plaintiff’s mother, were married in Covington, Ky., but both of them at that time were residents of, and domiciled in the state of Ohio, and with the exception of two years of their married life, they thereafter lived in Ohio. With the exception of these two years Henry MoNicoll had always been a resident of, and domiciled in, the state of Ohio. He died on his farm near Amelia, O., December 19, 1893.

Under the title of descent and distribution, section 4175, Revised Statute of Ohio, reads as follows:

“When a man has by a woman one or more children, and afterwards intermarries with her, such issue, if acknowledged by him as his child or children, shall be deemed legitimate; and the issue of parents whose marriage is deemed null in law, shall nevertheless be legitimate”

What does the word “legitimate” mean? It means to make lawful; to place a child born before marriage on the footing of those born in lawful wedlock; to confer a legal status upon, as to legitimate, a bastard. To invest with the rights of a lawful heir. Anderson’s Law Die., page 611; Am. and Eng. Ency. vol. 13, page 226; Black’s Law Die. 702; 26 Vt. 653, 658.

And it has been uniformly held under similar statutes that the child is thereby rendered legitimate for any and all purposes. Loring v. Thorndike, 5 Allen, 257-263; Munson v. Palmner, 8 Allen, 551, 556; McKamie v. Baskerville; 7 S. W. 194; Williams v. Williams, 11 Lea. 652; 13 Am and Eng. Ency., Law, 227, and note.

[8]*8The questions in this c.ase involve the paternity of the plaintiff, and the construction of the will of Peter McNicoll.

When the plaintiff was born, Henry McNicoll was a resident of Cincinnati, and an unmarried man. The plaintiff’s mother was a married woman, and a resident of the state of Kentucky at the time the plaintiff was born.

The evidence in this case is very voluminous, and we cannot detail what was said and done. We will only refer briefly to the. evidence of witnesses.

Where did the plaintiff’s mother (then Mrs. Reasoner), and her then husband, Samuel_P. Reasoner, reside in 1874, 1875, 1876? Five witnesses living in Columbia, S. C., swear that Reasoner lived there in 1874, 1875 and 1876, and was not absent from said place, and one witness, Mr. Jones, swears he thinks he went out West a year or two.

Mrs. Gleave, mother-in-law to Samuel P. Reasoner, testifies that he, Reasoner, married her daughter on January 7, 1875, and has ever since lived with her, at her home, and never was out of the city except one day, when lie went, to Atlanta. Reasoner was a soldier, and a statement taken from the official records of the United States Army shows he enlisted in the, army on the 18th day of July, 1866, at Springfield. 111., for a period of three years; and was discharged July 18, 1869, at Newport Barracks, Ky. He again enlisted December 27. 1869, at Cincinnati, 0., for a period of five years, and served in Company H., 18 United States Infantry, and was discharged December 27, 1874, at Columbia, S. C. This official statement also shows that he was with his regiment in Columbia, Chester and Abbe-ville, B. C., from December 8, 1870, to December 27, 1874, the date of bis discharge, and that lie was present at ¡ill roll calls during the above service.

The Wessling family, in whose house Mrs. Reasoner (now Mrs. Mc-Nicoll), resided in Newport, Ky., and where the plaintiff was born, and also her neighbors, testified that no one came to her hou«e to see Mrs. Reasoner except Mr. McNicoll, prior and subsequent to the birth of the plaintiff, and it also clearly appears that. Mrs. Reasoner was not absent, from Newport., Ky., at any time from July, 1869, until long after the birt h of the plaintiff. And it is equally clear that Samuel P. Reasoner 1ms not. been in the state of Kentucky or the state of Ohio, since January 1870.

The foregoing testimony covers the period of access or non-access between Samuel P. Reasoner and his wife up to the date of (he plaintiff’s birth.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio N.P. 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnicoll-v-ives-ohctcomplhamilt-1895.