83 Ala. 478 | Ala. | 1887
Section 2256 of the Code declares: “There is no distinction between the whole and the half blood in the same degree, unless the inheritance came to the intestate by descent, devise, or gift, from or of some one of his ancestors; in which case, all those who are not of the blood of such ancestor are excluded from the inheritance, as against those of the same degree.” The statute abolishes the distinction between the whole and the half blood, as to the descent of estates, except in the single instance, that the inheritance came from an ancestor who was of the blood of one, and not of the other class. In Stallworth v. Stallworth, 29 Ala. 76, it was construed “to limit the qualified preference of the whole over the half blood, to estates which the intestate inherited, as contradistinguished from those otherwise acquired by him.” The intestate, who was the wife of two husbands, bore children of each marriage. The petition for the sale of the land shows that it was allotted to the intestate after the death of her last husband, under the statutes, as a homestead exempt from sale for his debts, and which she is permitted to retain until it is ascertained whether his estate is solvent or insolvent, and vested in her absolutely, his estate having been reported and declared insolvent. — Code, §§ 2821, 2827. She acquired the estate, not by inheritance from an ancestor, but by statutory right, the statute carving it out of the estate of her husband, and devolving the title on her. The children of both marriages stand in the same degree of
Affirmed, on both appeals.