Watson v. Pryor

180 Okla. 28
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 15, 1936
DocketNo. 26599
StatusPublished

This text of 180 Okla. 28 (Watson v. Pryor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson v. Pryor, 180 Okla. 28 (Okla. 1936).

Opinions

PHELPS, J.

This opinion deals primarily with the question whether a predeceased husband is the ancestor of his surviving wife, within the meaning of section 1626, O. S. 1931, sometimes called the half-blood statute.

Jennie Long will hereinafter be called the decedent. She outlived three husbands, from each of whom she inherited property by descent or devise. She then married a fourth hqsband, Frank Long, and died intestate. Frank Long, the surviving- fourth husband, was awarded one-ha'f of her entire estate, which had been acquired by the decedent from many sources. It is conceded that under our statutes governing succession, the distribution of the one-half interest to Frank Long was proper. He is not a party to this appeal.

Left surviving the decedent were also Celia, a full-blood sister, and Joseph, a half-blood nephew, who is the only child of decedent’s predeceased half sister. By reason of our half-blood statute the trial court excluded the half-blood nephew, Joseph, from participating in that part of decedent’s estate derived from her three predeceased husbands. The decree of that court vested in the full sister, OPa, the one-half of that portion of decedent’s estate derived from said husbands, and the other half, as above stated, to Frank Long, the surviving husband. Joseph appeals, contending that he and Celia, tlio full sister, should each have taken a fourth of that portion of decedent’s estate derived from her predeceased husbands. The contention of Celia, which was upheld by the (rial court, is that the property coming to the decedent from her three predeceased husbands was an inheritance from ancestors of 1he decadent; that Joseph, the half-blood nephew of decedent, is not of the Food of said husbands, and is therefore precluded from sharing in the portion of the estate inherited hr decedent from them, by virtue of section 1626. O S. 1931. The plaintiff in error, .Tosenh, contends that the predeceased husbands of the decedent cannot be considered decedent’s ancestors, since she was not related by blood to any of them, and that therefore he should share equally with Celia in that part of the property.

Section 1626 is:

“Kindred of the half-blood inherit equally with those of the whole blood in the same ■degree, unless the inheritance come to the intestate by descent, devise or gift of some one of his ancestors, in which case all those who are not of the blood of such ancestors must be excluded from such inheritance.”

Before entering into the discussion of the particular question, let us first become familiar with some of those factors which determine the applicability of the section, for this prevents confusion. These constructions are either apparent from the section or have become the settled law:

(a) When the section speaks of kindred of the “half Food” or “whole blood” it means the half-blood or whole-blood relationship to the decedent, and not. of the relationship of the contending heirs, to each other or to the ancestor. Thus a father may have a ehi’d by each of two predeceased wives; the children arc half blood to each other but they are full blood to the father, at whose death intestate his property passes under section 1617, and the ha’f-blood statute is not applicable at all. Zweigel v. Lewis, infra.
(b) (1) The half-blood relatives of the decedent inherit in all cases except those in which the decedent derived the property from his or her own ancestor. This is therefore the first question to determine. If it is found that decedent did not by descent, devise or gift derive the property from his or her own ancestor, the problem is finished, there is nothing left to do, the estate descends exactly as if the half Food were whole blood. (2) But if decedent did derive the property from his or her own ancestor, then this is what happens: those half-blood kindred of decedent who are also of some blood kindred to decedent’s ancestor will inherit exactly as if they were whole-blood kindred of decedent, but those half-blood kindred of decedent who are not of any blood kindred to decedent’s ancestor must he excluded. It obviously is immaterial whether the half-blood heirs are related to the person from whom the decedent derived the property unless that person was an ancestor of decedent.
(c) “The inheritance” means that part of decedent’s property which decedent derived from an ancestor by descent, devise, or gift. It reflects the extent of the property rather than its character, the latter being deter[30]*30mined by whether it came (1) from an ancestor, (2) by descent, devise or gift.
(d) The words “in the same degree” preserve the same equality of distribution to half bloods as is provided for full bloods under section 1617. In other words, kindred of the half blood to decedent are in the same position as those whole bloods who are of the same degree of kindred to the decedent. In Re Smith’s Estate, 131 Cal. 433, 63 P. 729, 82 Am. St. Rep. 358, the California court held that these words rendered the section entirely inapplicable between kindred of different degrees, but that construction of the California statute, which is identical with ours, was correctly refused by this court in Thompson v. Smith, 102 Okla. 150, 227 P. 77. This court has taken the position that the right of representation exists in the descendants of half bloods the same as it does in full bloods; that if, say, a half brother inherits at all, he is considered the same as a “brother,” as that word is used in section 1617, and his descendants inherit his part under that section. Zweigel v. Lewis, 139 Okla. 171, 281 P. 787; Thompson v. Smith, supra; annotation 29 L. R. A. 541. Thus if a half blood inherits at all, he inherits as if he were whole blood.
(e) It is important to observe that there is no requirement in the section that- the whole-blood kindred to decedent must, in order to inherit, be of the blood of decedent’s ancestor; for the devolution to those of the whole blood is governed by section 1617 (the second subdivision in this case), which section does not look to the source of decedent’s title. Zweigel v. Lewis, 139 Okla. 171, 281 P. 787.

Applying the section to the present case, the determining factors may be stated in this manner; Joseph inherits under the facts of this case exactly as if he were ,a full-blood nephew or ful1-blood sister of decedent, unless the predeceased husbands of the decedent were her ancestors within the meaning of this section; and then if they were her ancestors, Joseph does not partake in the distribution of the estate received from them, for he is not of their blood. The question has now resolved itself into whether said predeceased husbands were “ancestors” of their surviving wife, and the answer to that question decides this case. We hold that .they were not.

In fairness to her. and so that both sides of the controversy may be fully considered, we approach the solution of this, question first from the viewpoint of Oelia, the full sister, whose theory was adopted by the trial court. Her conclusion that an intestate husband is the ancestor of his widow within the meaning of our laws of succession is reached as the result of a series of successive steps of reasoning, the logical force of which must be given its proper importance.

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Bluebook (online)
180 Okla. 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-pryor-okla-1936.