Richmond v. Taylor

139 N.W. 435, 151 Wis. 633, 1913 Wisc. LEXIS 27
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 139 N.W. 435 (Richmond v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richmond v. Taylor, 139 N.W. 435, 151 Wis. 633, 1913 Wisc. LEXIS 27 (Wis. 1913).

Opinion

Vinje, J.

Appellants contend the evidence shows (1) that Martha was born in wedlock; (2) if not, that she is the illegitimate child of Thomas Richmond; and (3) that he sufficiently acknowledged her in writing to be his child to entitle her to- inherit.

It appears from the evidence that Thomas Richmond was born a slave in Randolph county, Missouri, near College [636]*636Mound, on the farm of Samuel Richmond, who owned his parents, John and Queen Richmond. They lived together in a separate cabin and continued to be the slaves of Samuel Richmond until slavery was abolished in Missouri about January 1, 1865. Thomas was upon the Richmond place as a slave from the time of his birth until he left, about January 30, 1864. Margaret, a daughter of Samuel Richmond, married one Caswell Smith, and they lived upon a farm adjoining the Richmond place. One of the slaves owned by Caswell Smith was Sarah, who was known by the name of Sarah Smith. Caswell Smith inherited her from his father, who lived in Horth Carolina, and she was brought to Missouri some ten years before the war. She was then grown and had a child who afterwards died. After coming to Caswell Smith’s place she had a girl child, a mulatto, who died when three or four months old. Her next' child was a boy, colored, named William, who died about 1870; her next child was a girl, colored, named Adeline, who died about 1890; and her next child, was a girl, Martha,, colored, who is one of the appellants in this case. The date of her birth is in dispute, and is variously testified to as having been as early as 1863 and as late as 1865. About January 30, 1864, Thomas Richmond ran away from the Samuel Richmond place and went' to Macon, about fwenty miles distant, and on January 31st enlisted for three years in the Union army. He was mustered into service at Benton Barracks, St. Louis, on February 8, 1864, and was discharged June 14, 1865. According to his discharge he was then twenty-five years of age. Thomas Richmond frequently visited Sarah Smith and had intercourse with her, certainly as late as January 30, 1864. Sarah, however, never assumed the name of Richmond, but up to the time of her death at Macon, Missouri, about 1886, was known only by the name of Sarah Smith. Martha, now called Richmond, up to the time she came to Wisconsin in 1891 was known by the name of Martha Smith. After Thomas Richmond’s discharge from the Union army he worked in St. [637]*637Louis and in Illinois, and came to Grant county, Wisconsin, in 1866 or 1867, and continued to reside there until bis death in 1909. Most of the time he lived on a small farm in the town of Beetown, near Lancaster, but some of the time he lived in Lancaster. A few years after Thomas settled in Grant county, and about 1871 or 1873, he went back to Missouri to bring his father and mother to Wisconsin, and did so. From statements he made before he went it seems he contemplated bringing with him Sarah Smith also. When he went into the army she had two children living, William and Adeline, of whom Thomas spoke as his own; he also spoke of Sarah as his wife. He found, however, when he returned to Missouri that, besides Martha, there had been born to Sarah two other children, one known as Sam Oliver and the other called Bob. He did not bring Sarah with him to Wisconsin. From the time the parents of Thomás came to Wisconsin they lived with him on his farm near Lancaster. In 1891, his mother becoming feeble and desiring to have assistance for her in the house, he, through others, as he could neither read nor write, sent several letters to Martha requesting her to come to Wisconsin and live with them. Only one of these letters, which was written by Mr. John Oarthew, has been preserved. It reads as follows:

“LANCASTER, Wis., Sept. 19 — 91.
"My Dear Daughter: Your letter of the 2nd of this month duly came to hand. I have been so very busy could not answer before. I am first rate but mother is not so very well. You speak of coming on railroad. You had better come on to Oassville, Grant Co., Wis., on the O. B. and Northern and I will meet you there if you will send me a letter a week ahead what day you will start or when you will arrive at Oass-ville. Hoping you are all well and will come all safe soon, I am, Your affectionate father,
“Thomas Richmond.”

The envelope in which this letter was sent has not been preserved, and Mr. Oarthew cannot swear positively to what ap[638]*638peared thereon. Mr. John Mankel and Mr. N. H. Suttle also wrote letters to Martha, for Thomas about the same time. Each testifies that he cannot remember the contents of the letters except that they concerned Martha's coming to Wisconsin. The recollection of the witnesses is that said letters began “Dear Daughter” or “Dear Daughter Martha” and that they were signed “Tour father, Thomas Richmond.”

" Martha came to Grant county in 1891 and lived upon the Richmond place with Thomas for eight or nine years, when a difference between them arose and she went to Lancaster and worked out for a while, during which time she occasionally visited him on his farm. She then went back to the farm for a short time, but afterwards went to South Dakota, and from there to Phoenix, Arizona. Some weeks before Thomas died, and while he was sick, he sent money to her to pay for her return to Wisconsin, and she came back and was with him during the last two weeks of his life. He died June 22, 1909, leaving an estate inventoried at about $5,000. He left surviving him two brothers, Henry Richmond, the respondent, and Peter Richmond.

Thomas Richmond was a pensioner of the United States. Under date of January 15,1898, the pension bureau at Washington sent to him certain' questions to be answered and to be returned with his next quarterly voucher to the pension agents at Milwaukee. He signed the paper by mark under date of July 5, 1898, and answered some of the questions. To the question, “Are you married ? If so, please state your wife’s full name and her maiden name,” the answer given was, “No. Wife is dead. Maiden name was Sairih Smith. Died in Macon City, Missouri, in the year 1868, as near as I can remember.” • To the question, “When, where, and by whom were you married ?” no answer was given. To the question, “Have you any children living? If so, please state their names and the dates of their birth,” the reply was “Yes, Martha Richmond. I think she was born in the year 1865.” [639]*639These statements were made out for Richmond by one W. E. Webb, in whose presence they were signed. The date of Sarah Smith’s death should have been given as 1886 instead of 1868. How the mistake occurred does not appear.

The trial court found that Martha Richmond is not the child of Thomas Richmond, and that any acknowledgment of her as his daughter made by Thomas was made through his mistake as to her paternity. The trial judge evidently based his findings upon the truth of the testimony contained in the depositions .of Margaret Smith and Margaret E. Terry, both of whom testified that Martha was bom in December, 1864. It is a verity in the case that Thomas Richmond left the Samuel Richmond place about the last of January, 1864; that he joined the service at Macon, Missouri, January 31st, and was mustered in February 8th at Benton Barracks, St. Louis. If it be a fact that Martha

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Bluebook (online)
139 N.W. 435, 151 Wis. 633, 1913 Wisc. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richmond-v-taylor-wis-1913.