Minor v. Young

89 So. 757, 149 La. 583, 1920 La. LEXIS 1732
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 3, 1920
DocketNo. 23645
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 89 So. 757 (Minor v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minor v. Young, 89 So. 757, 149 La. 583, 1920 La. LEXIS 1732 (La. 1920).

Opinions

DAWKINS, J.

Alleging themselves to be the natural children of Bachel Clark, deceased, plaintiffs seek to recover of defendants certain real property situated in the town of Houma, La., which belonged at her death to the said Rachel Clark.

Defendants are the transferees of Francis Young, lawful sister of the deceased, who claims, to have inherited as her sole legal heir, and contest the right of plaintiffs to recover upon the ground that they were never legaiiy acknowledged by the said Rachel Clark, so as to entitle them to inherit from her.

The district court gave judgment for defendants, .which was, on first hearing, reversed by the Court of Appeal, and the case decided in favor of plaintiffs. On rehearing the latter court set aside its first judgment, because of the insufficiency of the evidence to show the acknowledgment of pilaintiffs by deceased, and remanded the cause for further proof on this point. It was again tried in the district court, which, in conformity with the views expressed by the Court of Appeal on the question of law involved, found for the plaintiffs, and on the second appeal this latter judgment was affirmed.

The case is before us on certiorari for review.

Opinion.

Defendants claim that the Court of Appeal erred in the following particulars:

(1) In holding that the Legislature had not the right to change the laws of inheritance.

(2) In remanding the case to the district court for the reception of further evidence.

(3) In holding that the answers to leading questions, timely objected to, were sufficient to prove acknowledgment.

(4) In substituting the law of proof of descent for the proof of acknowledgment.

(5) In applying to the case at bar the jurisprudence with reference to acknowledgments other than as provided by the Code.

(6) In holding that the evidence was sufficient to give the plaintiffs the status of natural children.

(7) In holding that laws changing descent and distribution have no retroactive effect.

(8) In not requiring proof of acknowledgment by admissions and conversations of the mother, instead of mere evidence of descent to establish the status of natural children duly acknowledged.

(9) In holding that the law in force at the time of conception, instead of that existing at the opening of the succession, should apply.

[587]*587Boiled down, tlie questions which we are called upon to answer, and the order in which we shall decide them, are as follows:

(1) Did the court err in remanding the case for further proof upon the question of acknowledgment, in the light of its conclusions upon the law?

(2) Conceding that it is legally permissible to prove acknowledgment, for the purpose of giving the status of natural children capable ofo inheriting, in any other form than those provided by article 203 of the Civil Code, is the proof, legally admitted, sufficient to sustain plaintiffs’ case?

(3) There having been no legal impediment to the marriage of plaintiffs* father (a white man) and mother (a colored woman) at the time of conception, did the subsequent passage of Act No. 54 of 1894,- prohibiting the marriage of blacks and whites, give the x>lain-tiffs the status of bastards at the date of their mother’s death on September 13, 1894, after that law had gone into effect?

(4) If the evidence is sufficient to prove maternity, and the act of 1S94 does not affect the case, can there be an acknowledgment, such as will give the right to inherit as a natural child, in any other manner or form than those provided in article 203 of the Code?

The Attorney General and other counsel have filed briefs as amici curiae in support of some of the contentions of defendants, in which they assert that there is another case of considerable importance to the state shortly to come before us, involving the same questions, and asking that we decide those issues adversely to the plaintiffs.

[1] Taking up the first of the four questions propounded by us, counsel for defendants have not pressed it in brief, has cited no law in support thereof, and we know of nothing which prevented the Court of Appeal from remanding the case for further proof as was done. It was but following the example of this court. Scruggs v. Endom, 123 La. 887, 49 South. 630.

[2] The evidence conclusively shows that the plaintiffs were the children of Rachel Clark, a woman of color, by a white man named Stex>hen Minor, for whom the mother worked during the time of their conception and birth, that they were born during the late ’70’s or early ’80’s, and that their said father died prior to the passage of the Act No. 54 of 1894, prohibiting marriage between blacks and whites. Plaintiffs lived with, were raised by, and treated by Rachel Clark as her children until the date of her death. She did not acknowledge them in afiy of the forms provided by article 203 of the Code, but the evidence does establish that she informally-recognized and spoke of them as hers, admitting in conversation that Minor was their father. This also took place prior to the passage of the act of 1894; so that, if this form of acknowledgment be sufficient in law, there being no legal impediment at the time it took place, we can see no more reason for its effects being destroyed by the passage of the act in question thereafter than if plaintiffs had been acknowledged by notarial act, or in either of the other ways provided in article 203 of the Code. In other words, the status would already have been established; the father had died, and it could not be said that by the passage of a subsequent law merely prohibiting the future marriage of persons of different races' the Legislature intended to destroy the legal relations of persons which had already become fixed. To say the least, the intention to do so would have to be plainly disclosed, and such was not done in the present case. In fact, the law does not attempt to deal with the question of inheritance or succession at all, except in so far as that result may follow from acts done in violation thereof in the future.

[3, 4] There is no inherent right in any one to succeed to the estate of a person deceased, [589]*589and the rules of transmission or devolution of property in such eases are left to the wisdom of the lawmaking power of the state. Hyde v. Bank, 8 Rob. 416. That body has, in large measure, sought to vest such rights in those persons and in the order most nearly comporting with the ties of blood and nature, save where, as a matter of public policy, and in aid of the moral precepts of society, it has been found necessary, for the common.good, to change the order of things. The purpose of such restrictions is not to punish the offspring of those contravening these rules of morality, but to raise a warning barrier before the transgressor, prior to the act, of the consequences of his conduct; in other words, like all other penal laws, they seek to prevent rather than avenge. Accordingly our Code in declaratory terms has fixed the status of children born out of wedlock (C. O. art. 180) as “illegitimate! with no right of inheritance, except as the affirmative act of the parent or parents may elevate them from that state to the status of legitimated or acknowledged children. C. C. arts. 198, 200, 202, and 238; Montegut v. Bacas, 42 La. Ann. 158, 7 South. 449; C. C. 921.

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Bluebook (online)
89 So. 757, 149 La. 583, 1920 La. LEXIS 1732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minor-v-young-la-1920.