Sullivan v. Burnett

105 U.S. 334, 26 L. Ed. 1124, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2129
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 24, 1882
Docket225
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 105 U.S. 334 (Sullivan v. Burnett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. Burnett, 105 U.S. 334, 26 L. Ed. 1124, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2129 (1882).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

At the death of the'intestate, as well as at the- commence-, men-t of this action, the plaintiffs — his sister and the son of his deceased brother- — were residents; of. Ireland arid subjects of the United Kingdom of Great Britaiii and- Ireland. • The defendants,- it is sufficient to say, hold, whatever title passed to a female-lunatic, foreign born and a'first cousin of the intestate, residing, at his death, in Maryland, but who, so far as the record discloses, never made a declaration of her intention ■to become a citizen of the United’ States; also, whatever title passed to the children of Annie Murta and Mary Murta, foreign-born first cousins, who, like the plaintiffs,-resided, .at his death, in Ireland, and were subjects of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. But their children, also foreign born, were, at 'his death, naturalized citizens'of the United States, one of them a resident of the State of Missouri.

The controlling question relates to the claim of the plaintiffs to an interest in the .property in controversy.

The statutes to which, as bearing upon the ease, our attention has been, called, are chapter 110 of the Revised Statutfes ' of Missouri, 1865, sections 1 and 8 of chapter 129 of the same revision, and an act of the General Assembly of that State, approved- March 30, 1872. The first section of chapter 110 is a reproduction of statutory provisions- which had been in -force from a very early period after tbe admission of Missouri into • the Union. Rev. Stat. Mo., 1825, p. 126; id. T835, p. 66; Rev. Code of Mo., 1845, p. 113. It conferred upon two classes of aliens the same capacity, .of .acquiring by descent or purchase real estate in Missouri, and-of ■ holding and-alienating it, as is enjoyed by citizens of the United States, — those residing in this country who had made a declaration of intention to become citizens of the United States, by taking the required-oath, and those, whether they had made such declaration'or' not, -who resided in that State.' .Aliens not belonging^ to one *338 or the other of those classes were left subject to the operation of the common-law rule — recognized as in force in Missouri — that an alien, for the want, of inheritable blood, could not take land by descent. Wacker v. Wacker, 26 Mo. 426; 2 Bl. Com., 249; Orr v. Hodgson, 4 Wheat. 453. The second and third sections, as to their substantial provisions, are brought forward from an act approved Feb. 22, 1855, which declares it to be “ lawful for every alien who, except for his alienage, would be entitled to any real estate by devise or inheritance from any person hereafter dying, capable at the time of his death of holding real estate situate in this State, to legally sell, for his own use, and convey the title thereof to any person capable of holding real estate situate within this .State: Provided, he make such sale and conveyance within three years next after the death of him from whom he shall claim such devise or inheritance.” When the minor is an alien,. his guardian is authorized to make such sale and conveyance. Sess. Laws Mo., 1855, p. 4.

It is quite clear that, upon the death of Edward Sullivan, neither of the plaintiffs took by descent any interest in his real estate, for the reason suggested by the very words of the statute, and fortified by the policy which dictated its enactment, that they were and are alien non-residents of the United States. This construction must be adopted, unless the object of the act of 1855 was, for purposes of descent, to obliterate all distinction between aliens residing in, and those residing out of, the United States. But no such interpretation is admissible, especially in' view ■ of the fact that the statute of 1855, upon this general subject, as well as that enacted previously thereto, was embodied in the same chapter of the general revision of 1865. The section declaring it lawful for an alien to sell and convey, within a prescribed time, to one capable of holding, real estate which, except for his alienage, he would have been capable of acquiring by devise or descent, has reference to cases not embraced by the first section of chapter 110 ; that is, to cases in which the property would vest at once in the State for the want of some person who could, at common law or under the statute, inherit. Aliens of the class described in the first section of chapter 110 could not *339 inherit at common law, but by statute they were permitted to take by descent or purchase, holding, or selling and conveying, as it suited their convenience to do the one or the other. ■ In all those respects, aliens embraced by that section were placed upon the same footing of equality with citizens of the United States. But to an alien who did not have capacity to inherit by virtue of residence in Missouri, or of residence in the United States accompanied by a formal declaration, under oath, of intention to become a citizen, the right was given by the act of 1855, continued and enlarged in section 2 of chapter 110 (not to inherit and hold, as a native or naturalized citizen could, but), to take and sell and convey to one who could hold. Until the law of 1855 was enacted, the right of the State to take the real estate of one who left no person in existence capable of acquiring it, by descent, accrued immediately upon the death of the owner. Impelled by a sense of justice, or to meet the hardships of cases likely to arise in a new State receiving large accessions to its population from Europe, Missouri, as a partial waiver or suspension of its rights, and for no other purpose, declared by the act of 1855 that an alien who did not reside in Missouri, or in this country with an intention to become a citizen of the United States, and who could not, therefore, inherit, might, within a limited period, sell and convey to one who could take and hold.

That statute, plainly, had no reference to those aliens upon whom had already been conferred, by statute, the capacity to inherit and hold, or to sell and convey, in the same manner as citizens of the United States.

But the contention of counsel for the plaintiffs is, that the children of Annie and Mary Murta could not take .this property, nor any interest in it, because their alien • non-resident mothers, through whom they' traced relationship to the deceased, were alive at his death ; and since- the parents were incapable of taking, for the reasons we have given, their children could not take. Upon the basis of that conclusion, counsel advance to the further proposition, that, if neither the plaintiffs nor the Murta children could take by descent, the property upon the death of the intestate escheated to the State, and the right of the plaintiffs to take as the nearest of kin was subsequently rec *340 ognized and established by the first section of the act of March 30, 1872.

Although that statute was enacted' within three years after the final settlement of Edward Sullivan’s estate, and although its object was, undoubtedly, to remove the disabilities of aliens of every class, whether resident or non-resident, to acquire real estate in Missouri by purchase, descent, or devise, we are of opinion that neither of the propositions just stated can be successfully maintained. The Murta children, we have seen, were naturalized citizens of the United States, one of them being also a resident of Missouri.

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Bluebook (online)
105 U.S. 334, 26 L. Ed. 1124, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-burnett-scotus-1882.