160 Wash. 669 | Wash. | 1931
Cary Beekman, a native of Ohio, some time after reaching manhood, came to this state and settled in Grays Harbor county, where he died, a bachelor, intestate, leaving real and personal property. In the course of the administration of his estate, one Blanch M. Fisher appeared by a petition, alleging that she was an illegitimate daughter of the deceased, Cary Beekman, and that he had, in writing, before a competent witness, acknowledged her to be his daughter; and that she was the only child of the decedent, and was entitled to all his estate, which she asked to be distributed to her. The administrator denied the statements of fact on which the claim of heirship was made. Upon trial of the case, findings and judgment were entered in favor of the petitioner. The administrator has appealed.
The statute, § 1345, Bern. Comp. Stat., provides:
“Every illegitimate child shall be considered as an heir to the person who shall in writing, signed in the presence of a competent witness, have acknowledged himself to be the father of such child, . . .”
Nearly all the testimony in this case related to the understanding of witnesses in the vicinity in Ohio where petitioner was born and still lives, to the effect that Cary Beekman was her father, and oral statements and other conduct on his part, tending to justify that understanding. But the ultimate and controlling question in the case is not whether he was the father of petitioner, but, as the statute puts it, did he ever in writing, signed in the presence of a competent witness, acknowledge himself to be her father. The statute requires an express written acknowledgment of paternity.
“I, Cary Beekman, and Robert Shanks, do hereby agree to pay above costs and acknowledge ourselves responsible for the same to the amount of two dollars.
“R. C. Shanks
‘ ‘ Cary Beekman. ’ ’
The contention on behalf of respondent is that the writing thus signed by Cary Beekman, was an acknowledgment in writing that he was the father of the unborn child, the petitioner in this case.
It is not necessary that the acknowledgment in writing required by the statute be made with the intent and for the purpose, on the part of the father, of admitting the illegitimate child to heirship, In re Rohrer, 22 Wash. 151, 60 Pac. 122, 50 L. R. A. 350; In re Gor-kow’s Estate, 20 Wash. 563, 56 Pac. 385; but, manifestly, a writing of the kind and particularity described in the statute is necessary.
Nebraska and Oklahoma each has a similar statute. The Nebraska cases of Moore v. Flack, 77 Neb. 52, 108 N. W. 143, and Lind v. Burke, 56 Neb. 785, 77 N. W. 444, and the Oklahoma case of Holloway v. McCormick, 41 Okla. 1, 136 Pac. 1111, holding the instruments involved in those cases insufficient, say that the writing, to fulfill the requirements of the law, must be one in which the paternity is directly, unequivocally, and unqualifiedly acknowledged.
Respondent, in our opinion, misconceives the legal effect of the writing relied on. It is a case, in that respect, within the rule of Martin v. State, 62 Ala. 119, viz:
“Parties sued, or against whom a claim is preferred, may purchase their peace, or otherwise compromise such claim; and if in such negotiation they make no admission of fact material to the maintenance of the claim asserted, such offer or promise cannot be received in evidence that the claim made was just. ’ ’
“ . . agree to compromise this cause upon the following terms, to wit: The defendant pays the re-latrix the sum of $50 in cash this day and executes two notes of even date herein, for $125 each, payable in one and two years from date, and payable to Martha Carroll, trustee for Nora Carroll, the relatrix herein being under the age of 21 years, and the said trustee being her mother.’ ”
The supreme court of Indiana in considering that record of the justice of the peace, said:
“There is no admission or acknowledgment of paternity in the record. It may not even be implied from such a record of compromise. Many men would submit to such a wrong as this, if wrong it may be, rather than to submit to the embarrassment of a public trial and the gibes of the rabble who usually gather on such occasions. The acknowledgment must be definite and certain, and must be one in which the paternity of the child is plainly and unequivocally acknowledged.”
Considering the plain language of the statute, and the applicable reasoning of the cases to which attention has been called herein, the writing relied on to constitute acknowledgment of the paternity of Mrs. Blanch M. Fisher, is clearly insufficient.
Reversed.
Tolman, C. J., Holcomb, Main, and Parker, JJ., concur.