Metheny v. Bohn

43 N.E. 380, 160 Ill. 263
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 43 N.E. 380 (Metheny v. Bohn) 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
Metheny v. Bohn, 43 N.E. 380, 160 Ill. 263 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Phillips

delivered the opinion of the court:

Complainant filed his bill for partition of certain real estate of and the assignment of dower to the widow in the estate of Samuel Bohn, the intestate from whom the land descended. Leonnetta C. Metheny and husband, and Lucinda Bohn, the widow, are made defendants. No controversy arises on the pleadings, nor in the ownership of the land alleged to be owned by the intestate, Samuel Bohn, nor the rights of the widow to dower. The contention is, whether the complainant is the child and heir-at-law of Lucinda Bohn and Samuel Bohn. The bill alleges that Samuel Bohn died November 12, 1891, leaving surviving Lucinda Bohn, his widow, Charles D. Bohn, his son, (the complainant,), and Leonnetta C. Metheny, his daughter by adoption, (one of the defendants,) as his sole heirs-at-law, and at the time of his death was seized and in possession of the lands in the bill described. The answer of Leonnetta C. Metheny, by her guardian ad litem, denies that Charles D. Bohn was or is the legitimate son or heir-at-law of Samuel Bohn, deceased, and denies he became seized of said lands as such heir, as in the bill alleged. Samuel Metheny, the husband of Leonnetta, in his answer sets up the same allegations as are set up in her answer. Replication was filed. Depositions of witnesses were submitted on hearing, and numerous witnesses examined orally. We will not take up and analyze the testimony of each witness, but will discuss the nature of the evidence in general terms.

It is alleged by appellants that as the complainant filed this bill for partition against the defendant Leonnetta C. Metheny, who is a minor, the burden of proof is upon him to make out and prove his case on the point of his heirship by a preponderance of the evidence. The complainant was a minor, and, as is abundantly shown by competent testimony, was brought up in the family of Samuel Bohn and Lucinda Bohn as their lawful offspring, they living together as husband and wife. He was always treated and recognized as their child by them and others. This affords prima facie evidence of his parentage and right to inherit, and the burden of disproving parentage and right to inherit is thus cast upon defendants. (Illinois Land, and Loan Co. v. Bonner, 75 Ill. 315.) Of certain excep5 , tions in which hearsay evidence is admissible the question of pedigree is one. Tradition is proper evidence in such case, as are also the declarations of parents who are deceased. Goodright v. Moss, Cowp. 591; The Berkley Peerage case, 4 Camp. 418; Jackson v. Browner, 18 Johns. 37; Cuddy v. Brown, 78 Ill. 415; Harland v. Eastman, 107 id. 535.

Counsel for appellants does not seek to contradict this proposition, but urges that if a controversy had arisen, in the lifetime of Samuel Bohn, as to Charles D. being a son and heir of said Samuel, then the declarations of the father could not be received when referring to a date subsequent to the beginning of the controversy. The general rule is, that declarations made after a controversy originates are excluded. By the term “controversy,” as thus used, are not meant mere idle rumors, or doubts of curious scandal-mongers whose discussion of the family matters of their neighbors is made without reverence for sanctity, morality, privacy or religion. At the time of the appearance of Charles D. Bohn, the father, Samuel Bohn, was about sixty-three years of age, and the mother, Lucinda, was about forty-nine. They had previously adopted a daughter and had proposed to adopt a son. They had taken a male infant from a foundling asylum with such purpose in view in September previous, and after retaining it for some three weeks returned it to the asylum. Certain neighbors who were not taken into the confidence of the family seemed to doubt the paternity of the child, Charles D., when he appeared. Appellants’ counsel sought to show these doubts, rumors, etc., which sprang up with the appearance of the infant, which evidence was excluded by the court. That evidence was not admissible, and such suspicions, doubts and rumors do not rise to the dignity of a controversy that would exclude declarations made thereafter by the father. Idle speculations of those whose curiosity may be aroused as to the possible paternity of a child cannot make an issue as to legitimacy or heirship, nor furnish a basis of an evidentiary fact that requires disproval or affects the question of the burden of proof. This being a chancery cause, the inquiry here is whether or not the competent evidence in the record, taken in connection with the pleadings, sustains the decree that was entered. Sawyer v. Campbell, 130 Ill. 186.

The testimony of the physician who examined and prescribed for Lucinda Bohn, mother of complainant, for a time preceding complainant’s birth, and who occasionally saw the mother at a few rods distance during the three months prior to complainant’s birth as well as subsequently thereto, is in this record, with the testimony of witnesses who knew and observed Mrs. Bohn prior to the 23d of February, 1883.. This testimony is to the effect that Mrs. Bohn had the appearance of pregnancy. The testimony of several witnesses who saw Mrs. Bohn within two weeks following the said 23d of February was, that when they saw her she was in bed with the appearance of illness, and the child was with her with the appearance of a recently born infant. The evidence shows that on the morning following the appearance of the infant, the father, Samuel' Bohn, stated to many different persons that a son was born to him, and it further appears that on frequent occasions in conversation with friends, in the home circle, and on all occasions and wherever he was, when he had occasion to speak of Charles D. he spoke of him as his son,—as his heir,—and hoped he (the father) would live long enough to give him a good education, and expressed the utmost pride and affection for the child. Samuel Bohn for more than eight years thus spoke of and evidenced affection for his son. He spoke of his children, saying he had an adopted daughter and a son,—his own son. With a right of disposition of his property by will it is difficult to conceive a purpose or motive for such declarations and expressions if they were untrue. It is incomprehensible, when all the facts are considered, that such declarations were untrue. That falsehood, deception and feigned afiection were indulged in by Samuel Bohn for years, without motive, necessity or reason, must be found if the claims of appellants are sustained. The deduction can be fairly drawn from this evidence that Samuel Bohn was a man of probity and morality, and as applicable here we cite Gaines v. New Orleans, 6 Wall. 642, where the court said, in passing on a somewhat similar question: “The inquiry naturally arises, what motive had he to declare his child legitimate if he knew the facts were otherwise? He was a man of superior intelligence and long residence in Louisiana, and necessarily knew by the laws of the State he could secure to his child enough of his property to make her rich if she was illegitimate. It is inconceivable that such a man would risk a declaration of legitimacy which he knew to be false, and thus jeopard the estate which he insisted with so much confidence he had secured to his child, and in the security of which he said ‘he would die contented.”’

Lucinda Bohn testifies the child, Charles D. Bohn, was born to her on the 23d day of February, 1883, and at the time her husband, Samuel Bohn, and a woman servant, were present, and that she cared for and raised the child. Her testimony is explicit and positive.

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.E. 380, 160 Ill. 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metheny-v-bohn-ill-1895.