Taylor v. Jackson

12 So. 2d 144, 194 Miss. 441, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 62
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1943
DocketNo. 35202.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 So. 2d 144 (Taylor v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Jackson, 12 So. 2d 144, 194 Miss. 441, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 62 (Mich. 1943).

Opinions

*447 McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a contest among collateral kindred in a partition suit for the sale and division of the proceeds resulting from such sale of a certain house and lot in the City of Jackson which belonged to one Lillie Brown, who died intestate and without leaving any heirs at law surviving her other than the collateral kindred who are the parties to this suit, three of whom, John Henderson, Arm Courtney and Ella Jackson are 'first cousins -of the whole-blood and the remainder of them first cousins of the half-blood, unless it be true that although Minerva Henderson, an illegitimate, the mother of the said John Henderson, Ann Courtney and Ella Jackson, was shown to have had the same father and mother as did George Wright, who predeceased his daughter, the said Lillie Brown, her said children are nevertheless the same kin to the said Lillie Brown as are the children of one Lizzie Rhodes and Amanda Hicks respectively, it being shown that the said Lizzie Rhodes and Amanda Hicks were also illegitimate *448 and had the same mother as did Minerva Henderson and George Wright but not the same father.

In other words, Elza Wright was the mother of George Wright, Minerva Henderson, Lizzie Rhodes and Amanda Hicks, all four of whom were illegitimate, but George Wright, father of the intestate Lillie Brown who owned the property in question, and Minerva Henderson had the same father, one Wesley Wright, whereas Lizzie Rhodes and Amanda Hicks, children of the said Elza Wright, as aforesaid, had a father whose name is unknown, but the proof discloses that Wesley Wright, the father of the said George Wright and Minerva Henderson, was not their father. It appears that Elza Wright and Wesley Wright lived together as slaves in the State of Virginia; that Elza later moved to Mississippi, bringing with her two children, George Wright and Minerva Henderson (nee Minerva Wright); that Wesley Wright, the father of these two children, remained in Virginia, whether voluntarily or involuntarily is neither shown nor material; and it further appears that Lizzie Rhodes and Amanda. Hicks (whose maiden names.are not disclosed, but who did not bear the name of Wright) were born to Elza Wright after she moved to Mississippi. It does not appear that Elza Wright and Wesley Wright ever lived together after the slaves were emancipated, and it is conceded for the purpose of this decision that all of the four children of Elza Wright were illegitimates, whereas all of the parties to this litigation are admitted to be legitimate.

The result of the foregoing facts would mean that if George Wright, Minerva Henderson, Lizzie Rhodes and Amanda Hicks had all been legitimate, that is to say, bom in wedlock to the said Elza Wright, the children of the said Minerva Henderson would unquestionably be entitled to inherit the property in question from the daughter of her full brother, George Wright, to the exclusion of the children of Lizzie Rhodes and Amanda Hicks, on the *449 ground that the said Lizzie Rhodes and Amanda Hicks would have been half-sisters of George Wright, whereas Minerva Henderson would be his whole sister.

The court below awarded the proceeds of the sale of the property in partition to the three children of the said Minerva Henderson to the exclusion of the children of Lizzie Rhodes and Amanda Hicks, as being three full blood first cousins of Lillie Brown, while the children of Lizzie Rhodes and Amanda Hicks were held to be only half first cousins of the said Lillie Brown; that is to say, the court below applied Section 1408, Code of 1930, in the same manner that he would have been required to decree the distribution of such proceeds had the parties to the partition proceeding all been children of legitimates, with George Wright and Minerva Henderson having a common father and mother and the said Lizzie Rhodes and Amanda Hicks having the same- mother but a different father to that of the said George Wright and Minerva Henderson; which, statute provides that: “All illegitimates shall inherit from their mother, and from her other children, and from her kindred, according’ to the statutes of descent and distribution; and the children of illegitimates and their descendants shall inherit from the brothers and sisters of their father or mother, whether legitimate or illegitimate, and from their grandparents.”

It will be noted that the statute says that ‘ ‘ all illegitimates shall inherit from their mother, and from her other children, and from her kindred, according to the statutes of descent and distribution” (italics ours), and that when we look to what the Statutes of Descent and Distribution provide, we find that Section 1403, Code of 1930, reads as follows: “There shall not be, in any case, a distinction between the kindred of the whole and half-blood, except that the kindred of the whole-blood, in equal degree, shall be preferred to the kindred of the half-blood in the same degree.” This statute giving the right of the whole blood to inherit to the exclusion of the half-blood, in equal de *450 gree, has appeared in the Code at least since the Code of 1880 (sec. 1271), and being found in the code chapter on Descent and Distribution along with Section 1408, the question is whether or not the two statutes, being in pari materia, should not be construed together; and whether or not since Section 1403, giving whole-bloods the right to inherit to the exclusion of the. half-blood, in equal degree, was not amended so as to except illegitimates and their children from the operation thereof when the latter statute, Section 1408, was enacted to enlarge the right of illegitimates to inherit property in this state, the children of an illegitimate are entitled to the benefit of said Section 1403 and to inherit through their mother by representation the property of a legitimate child of her whole-blood brother, an illegitimate, to the exclusion of the children of such brother’s illegitimate half sisters.

The court below was of the opinion that kinship is a matter of blood, and in support of the correctness of such decree it should be observed that since Minerva Henderson had in her veins the blood of both the father and mother of George Wright, who was as aforesaid the father of the intestate Lillie Brown, whereas, Lizzie Rhodes and Amanda Hicks had in their veins the blood of the mother of the said George Wright, but not that of his father, it should. follow that the children of Minerva Henderson were by blood closer related to the intestate owner of the property than were the children of the half-sisters of the said George Wright.

In Hutch. Code, p. 501, Act of Feb. 23, 1846, the statute governing the right of illegitimates to inherit property in this state read as follows: “Hereafter, all illegitimates shall inherit the property of their mothers, and from each other, as. children of the half-blood, according to the Statutes of Descent and Distribution now in force in this state.” Later, the words “as children of the half-blood” were eliminated from the statute, and they have not appeared in any of our codes subsequent to the enactment *451

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Bluebook (online)
12 So. 2d 144, 194 Miss. 441, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-jackson-miss-1943.