Mostilla v. Ash

176 So. 356, 234 Ala. 626, 1937 Ala. LEXIS 453
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 14, 1937
Docket7 Div. 458.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 176 So. 356 (Mostilla v. Ash) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mostilla v. Ash, 176 So. 356, 234 Ala. 626, 1937 Ala. LEXIS 453 (Ala. 1937).

Opinion

KNIGHT, Justice.

Ashley Byers, a negro, died intestate in St. Clair county, Ala., on or about September 9, 1934, possessed of an estate, which consisted wholly of personal property. He was an illegitimate son of a negro woman by the name of Charlsie Byers.

The decedent left no surviving children or their descendants, no father or mother, no brothers or sisters or their descendants, and no wife.

The administration of the estate of the decedent was by proper order- removed from the probate court to the circuit court, in equity.

After the administration proceedings had been removed to the circuit court, and the estate was ripe for final settlement and distribution, three separate sets of persons asserted claim to the estate, each group contending that they were the next of kin of the intestate and entitled to the entire estate, to the exclusion of the other two groups. Proper and appropriate pleadings were “framed among the three separate sets of claimants” to present their respective claims, and the court, after considering the issues and the proof submitted, rendered a decree holding that all of said claimants were the next of kin of the intestate, and directed that the estate should be distributed one-sixth part to each of the following claimants, viz., Marion Mostilla, Grant Mostilla, Fate Mostilla, Butler Ash, and Alice Beason, and the remaining one-sixth he ordered equally divided among the nine remaining claimants, the children of a predeceased cousin of the said intestate.

Marion Mostilla, Grant Mostilla, and Fate Mostilla, dissatisfied with the decree of the court below, have prosecuted this appeal; and the said Butler Ash and Alice Beason have entered cross-assignment of errors upon the record.

It is the contention of the appellants, Mostillas, that they are uncles of the said Ashley Byers, deceased, and therefore, his next of kin, and entitled to his estate, in priority over the said Butler Ash and Alice Beason, who were first cousins of the deceased; and, of course, in priority over the other claimants, who were his second cousins.

The contention of Butler Ash and Alice Beason, cross-appellants, is that the said Mostillas are not entitled to inherit from the said Ashley Byers; that, inasmuch as the said Ashley Byers was a bastard, and they being his nearest of kin on the part of the mother of said Byers, being his first cousins, they were entitled to inherit his estate.

The appellants, Marion Mostilla, Grant Mostilla, and Fate Mostilla, are the children of one Bill Mostilla by Charlsie Gibbs. It appears from the evidence that both Bill Mostilla and Charlsie Gibbs were slaves, and that prior to the Civil War they went through the form of a marriage ceremony; that they continued to live together as man and wife until the death of Bill, which occurred some years after 1869.

*628 These appellants were horn during the time that their father and mother were living together as man and wife. Therefore, the appellants by the force of ordinance No. 39, adopted by the Constitutional Convention of 1865, were legitimatized, and made capable of inheriting and transmitting property in all respects as if their father and mother had been capable of marriage in the first instance, and had married. Washington v. Washington, 69 Ala. 281; Carter v. Gaines, 204 Ala. 640, 87 So. 109; Johnson v. Shepherd, 143 Ala. 325, 327, 39 So. 223, 224, 5 Ann.Cas. 143; Bell v. Bell, 196 Ala. 465, 71 So. 465; Bell v. Bell, 183 Ala. 645, 651, 62 So. 833. These appellants, at the time of the death of the said Ashley Byers were the only surviving children of Bill and Charlsie Mostilla, all other children of that union having died, leaving no children or descendants.'

It is here contended by appellants, the three Mostillas, that Bill Mostilla, their father, had, prior to his slave marriage and cohabitation with their mother, Charlsie Gibbs, entered into a slave marriage with a woman by the name of Celia, and that thereafter, and up to the time of the death of said Celia, which occurred prior to the Civil War and prior to the slave marriage of their father to their mother, they, the said Bill Mostilla and Celia, lived together as man and wife under such circumstances as would constitute a valid marriage at common law. That, under such circumstances, section 7377 of the Code “ratified that marriage and legitimatized-it and the issue thereof as fully as if they had been white persons.”

It appears from the evidence that said Celia gave birth to a number of children by Bill Mostilla during their cohabitation, but all died, without descendants, except three girls, Victoria, Texas, and Charlsie Byers. These girls grew to womanhood, and each gave birth to one or more illegitimate children. Butler Ash, one of the appellees, and a cross-appellant, is the only surviving child and heir at law of the said Texas; Alice Beason, another appellee, and cross-appellant, is the only surviving child of Victoria. Mary Beason, another child of Victoria, died prior- to the death of said Ashley Byers, leaving her surviving a number of children, and these children, second cousins of Ashley Byers, are also claimants to the estate. Ashley Byers, the intestate, was the only surviving child of said Charlsie Byers, who was, as above stated, one of the surviving daughters of Celia, by Bill Mostilla.

A careful consideration of the evidence, pro and con, leads us to the conclusion that appellants’ contention is sustained by the great preponderance of the testimony. While it is true that the evidence admits of a mere possibility that Bill' and Celia only pursued the custom then prevailing among slaves of temporarily cohabiting for convenience, and for the purpose of gratifying their sexual desires, yet this mere possibility cannot be allowed to determine an issue against the preponderation of other credible testimony.

It must be remembered that Celia died long prior to the Civil War, some 70 or more years before the death of Ashley Byers, and it must also be recognized that it was well nigh impossible to find any person now living who could testify, of his, or her, own knowledge, to the cohabitation ’ of Bill and Celia. In these circumstances, the appellants were forced to make proof of the facts by declarations of the parties in their lifetime, and by common repute in the family. The evidence of the cohabitation of Bill and Celia, as well as the birth and identity of the children of the union, was through traditional family history or reputation.

The evidence of á number of aged witnesses, as to the family history, • tended to show, and we believe as satisfactorily so as could well be expected in view of the fact that the parties were slaves, and long since dead, that Bill and Celia lived together as man and wife up to the death of Celia, under such circumstances as would constitute a valid marriage at common law, and that Victoria, Texas, and Charlsie Byers, the mother of Ashley Byers, the intestate, were products of that cohabitation. That such evidence was competent and admissible has long been an established rule in this state, as well as elsewhere. Reichert v. Sheip, 212 Ala. 300, 102 So. 440; Landers v. Hayes, 196 Ala. 533, 72 So. 106; Duncan v. Watson, 198 Ala. 180, 182-185, 73 So. 448; Bradley v. State, 215 Ala. 140, 110 So. 162; and 1 Greenleaf Ev. (16th Ed.) § 114b.

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Bluebook (online)
176 So. 356, 234 Ala. 626, 1937 Ala. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mostilla-v-ash-ala-1937.