Smith v. Smith Others

4 R.I. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 6, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 R.I. 1 (Smith v. Smith Others) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Smith Others, 4 R.I. 1 (R.I. 1854).

Opinion

Brayton, J.

The question raised in this case is whether the mother is entitled to the whole of the estate which her deceased daughter inherited from her brother Alfred, or is entitled to a share only with her other children, the brothers and sisters of the deceased.

This depends upon the construction to be put upon the statute directing the descent of intestate estates contained in the digest of 1822, p. 222-3, which énacts—

“ That henceforth when any person having title to any real estate of inheritance shall die intestate as to such estate, it shall descend and pass in equal portions to his or her kindred in the following course:—
“ To his or her children or their descendants, if any there be:
“ If there be no children nor their descendants then to the father of such intestate:
“ If there be no father, then to the mother, brothers, and sisters of such intestate and their descendants or such of 'them as there be:
“ If there be no mother nor brothers nor sisters, nor their descendants, the inheritance shall go in equal moieties to the paternal and maternal kindred each in the following course :
First to the grandfather:
“ If there be no grandfather then to the grandmother, uncles, and aunts on the same side and their descendants or such of them as there be : . And so on.
“ The descendants of any person deceased shall inherit the estate which such person would have inherited had such person survived the intestate.
“ When the title to any real estate of inheritance as to which the person having such title shall die intestate, came by descent, gift, or devise from the parent or other kindred of the intestate, *4 and such intestate die without children, such estate shall go to the kin next to the intestate, of the blood of the person from whom such estate came or descended, if any there be.”

This last clause is that under which the plaintiff claims ; and her counsel contend that this clause is to be treated as a distinct and independent provision of the act, directing the descent of such estates of the intestate as have not been acquired by himself, — that the first clauses of this section relate only to estates acquired by the intestate, and are intended to direct the descent of such estates only, — that the course of descent was intended by the legislature to be different in the one case from the course of descent in the other, — that the term “ next of kin,” in the last clause, is to be taken in the strict sense of those terms as understood by civilians, as connected by blood in the nearest degree, : — that it does not refer to, nor is it governed by the classes and degrees expressed in the first clause, as this would require an interpolation of words; and that if the legislature had so intended they would have used other language, and have said, those not of the blood of the person from whom the estate came should be excluded.

All these provisions are contained in one and the same section of the same act. They all relate to the same subject-matter, the descent of intestate estates, and must be all construed together. All parts of this section are to be given effect to, if it may reasonably be, and we are from a view of the whole to gather the intent of the legislature. That they did not intend the last clause as to ancestral estates as a distinct provision, independent of the course of descent before directed and uncontrolled by it, is sufficiently apparent from a view of all these provisions. The table of descent in the former clauses, provides apparently for all cases of intestate estates. The direction is general, that all estates of inheritance shall pass in the order there settled. No express exception is any where made, and none can fairly be implied from any expression in this entire table of descents. We should not expect after reading this, to meet in the same act, and still less in the same section of the act, with any thing implying that any real estate of inheritance of any description had been omitted. The terms used in the first clause *5 are broad enough to cover every estate- of inheritance. They are, “ or when any person having title to any estate of inheritance,” and, “it shall descend and pass,” as there provided. There is no distinction as to the mode in which the title is acquired, but all and every estate of inheritance is included. And when we come to the last clause, our first impression is that it is designed as a limitation upon the rules preceding, and intended to restrict their application as to ancestral estates there mentioned to individual kindred of the degrees stated in the first clause who shall be of the blood of the person from whom the estate came. Had the words, “ provided, however,” been inserted in the commencement of the clause, no one would doubt that such was the intent. There is no less doubt that this provision was intended as a proviso to the former clause.

But if there could be doubt upon this point, there is another consideration which renders it quite clear that the general table of descents in the first clause was intended to and does include ancestral estates as well as estates acquired by the intestate. The last clause provides for the descent of the ancestral estates of such intestates only as die without children. If they die, leaving children, and estates which came by descent, no direction is there given to whom they shall pass. If such a case is not provided for in the first clause, under the provision that the estate of inheritance of every intestate shall pass, first “ to his or her children or their descendants, if any there be,” it clearly is not in the statutes at all. Yet we must believe that the legislature intended to provide rules of descent for all cases.

The third section of the same act shows very clearly that the legislature understood that they had in the first clause provided for all cases, and especially for this case. The third section provides for the partition of the real estate of intestates by the court of probate upon the application of all persons interested, and that it shall be divided “ amongst the several persons entitled to the same by virtue of this act,” referring to this first section as one system or scheme of descents, and provides, that the commissioners appointed to make partition shall divide the estate “ into shares in the manner and proportion hereinbefore prescribed for the descent of such estates,” referring again to *6 the first section as a rule to guide the commissioners in all cases. The proviso to this section is much stronger and more pointed. It is this: If any of the children or grandchildren

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Related

Fargnoli v. Cianci
397 A.2d 68 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 R.I. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-smith-others-ri-1854.