52 S.E. 584 | N.C. | 1905
The plaintiff brought this action to recover the tract of land containing 21
The court was of opinion that upon the said facts the plaintiff is the owner of the land, and rendered judgment in her favor, from which the defendant appealed.
The plaintiff's right to recover in this action depends upon the true meaning of our statute of descents in regard to former slaves and illegitimates, and their rights of property and inheritance growing out of their peculiar status. It seems to us that by a reasonable construction of our statute, whether it is based upon the letter or the evident intention of the Legislature, the plaintiff's claim to the land in dispute must fail. She would not have the shadow of a title, if the case were decided according to the principles of the common law. But our statute has superseded those principles, and her right, if any she has, must rest solely on some provision of the statute. The Legislature took early action after the war to fix the marital relations of former slaves, who were living together as man and wife, by passing the Act of 1866, chapter 40, section 5; and providing that those who thus cohabited at the date of the ratification of the act should be deemed to have been lawfully married as man and wife, with the provision for acknowledgment before the clerk or a justice of the peace and for making a record of the fact. This act was construed and held to be valid in Long v. Barnes,
It is apparent that the rule just quoted refers only to a lineal descent from a mother to her illegitimate child and its descendants, and not in any collateral descent from her kindred to the child as her representative. These are the very words of the act, and the language is too clear and unmistakable for any reasonable doubt as to what is meant. Again, we say, bringing our case to the test of this rule, the plaintiff is not claiming as the illegitimate child of her mother, because, first, she is a legitimate, and, second, she is claiming under a collateral kinsman of her mother. So that, in every possible view, she is excluded from any benefit under that rule. Flintham v. Holder,
(190) The plaintiff's counsel, however, strenuously insisted before us that it being admitted Adam Bettis, though illegitimate, was collaterally related to Austin Greenlee, also *143
illegitimate, and there being no other nearer claimant than Malinda Avery, the stepchild of Austin Greenlee, or the child of his deceased widow, if Adam had been white and had survived Austin, he would have been his heir under Rule 10 of the Canons of Descent, giving to illegitimates the rights of legitimates as between themselves and their legal representatives, and the plaintiff consequently would inherit as heir of her deceased father. This was his principal contention, and in support of it he relied uponTucker v. Tucker,
In no view that we can take of the facts and the law, can the plaintiff recover. She can not claim under the Act of 1866, and she does not present any facts which entitle her to claim under Rule 13, as she does not assert title derived directly from either of her parents. She can then only rely on Rule 9 or Rule 10. The reason just given why she can not claim under Rule 13 applies with equal force to any claim under Rule 9, and, besides, she is not an illegitimate child, but has been made legitimate by the Acts of 1866 and 1879. As to Rule 10, she does not claim directly from a brother or sister, or from the *144
issue or heirs of either, but from an illegitimate first cousin. Sawyer v.Sawyer, 28 N.C. at pp. 408, 409. It is well argued in the brief of the defendant's counsel that in Tucker v. Bellamy,
It may be that the plaintiff's claim should appeal most strongly to our sense of what is just and fair and also to our sympathy. If this be true, and we do not say that it is, as we can not pass upon such matters, the law has declared against her, and what the law declares must stand for all that is right without question by us.
The court erred in its judgment, which is reversed, and the case is remanded with direction to enter a judgment, upon the facts agreed, for the defendant.
Reversed.