This is an inheritance tax case in which appellant Arthur Hamilton claims that he falls in preference Class A, Art. 7118, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., as a “ * * * direct lineal descendant of * * * wife,” even though decedent and appellant’s mother were divorced at the time of decedent’s death.
The stipulated facts show:
Otis Phillips, Sr., the decedent, married Clevy Hamilton in 1912 and they lived together as husband and wife until shortly before they were divorced on July 5, 1944.
Mrs. Clevy Phillips had been previously married and Arthur Hamilton was her son by such former marriage.
Four children were born of the marriage of Otis Phillips, Sr., and Mrs. Clevy Phillips, all of whom, as well as Mrs. Phillips, were living at the death of Otis Phillips, Sr., on August 14, 1947.
Arthur Hamilton was between four and five years of age when his mother married Mr. Phillips. From that time and until he completed his legal education in Harvard Law School, in 1935, Arthur Hamilton was a member of the Phillips family and shared equally with the other children the comforts and benefits of the Phillips home and in the advantages and gratuities extended by Mr. and Mrs. Phillips. This equality of treatment was last expressed by Mr. Phillips in his will which left his entire estate to his divorced wife, his four children, and Arthur Hamilton, in equal shares.
The three principal cases discussed by the parties in their briefs are: Lewis v. O’Hair, Tex.Civ.App.,
*455 In the O’Hair case the court held that the widow of a deceased son was the “wife of a son” and entitled to Class A classification under Art. 7118.
In the Decker case the court held that the adopted child of a deceased wife was a “direct lineal descendant of * * * wife,” [
In the Davis case the court held that a divorced wife and the mother of decedent’s three children was not a “wife” within the meaning of Art. 7118.
The rationale of these decisions is that affinal relationships created by marriage will survive the dissolution of such marriage by death, but do not survive if the marriage is dissolved by divorce.
In the Davis case the court, after holding that the word “wife” as used in the statute is synonymous with surviving wife or widow, “to which person alone the term ‘wife’ as used in the statute can, under any tenable theory of construction, be held to apply”,
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This being true, Mr. Hamilton could not be a .direct lineal descendant of the wife of decedent because Mr. Hamilton’s mother was neither a deceased spouse nor the surviving wife or widow of decedent, he and she were “strangers.”
It is useless for us to examine Biblical law or the decisions in other jurisdictions on this question, as suggested by appellants. We are bound by the construction of this statute made in the Davis case and approved by the Supreme Court.
The opinion in that case leaves us no room to consider the actual family relationship of decedent and appellant, nor does it leave authority for us to give effect to the actual solicitude which decedent bore him.
We, therefore, hold that appellant was correctly denied inclusion in preference Class A of Art. 7118.
Appellant, in the event we should hold as above indicated, urges the unconstitutionality of the 1935 amendment to Art. 7118, V.A.C.S. H.B. 682, Acts 44th Leg.Reg.Sess., p. 922.
The ground of this attack is that the title varies from the body of the Act and that Art. Ill, Sec. 35, of our Constitution, Vernon’s Ann.St., providing in part that “if any subject shall be embraced in an act, which shall not be expressed in the title, such act shall be void only as to so much thereof, as shall not be so expressed”, was contravened.
The title of the Act provides, in part, that the statute should be amended “ * * * by adding to the class exempted and taxed under class ‘A’ therein, stepchildren of the decedent, and their direct descendants * * whereas the Act itself adds, in this respect, the words, “* *. * or any direct lineal descendant of husband or wife * *
We doubt if appellant has sufficient interest to raise this question but, even so, we are of the opinion he is wrong.
A stepchild is a child of one’s wife or husband by a former marriage. Notice in the caption that the statute was to be amended by adding, “stepchildren of the
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decedent, and their direct descendants”, was fair notice of the subject-matter of the projected law which added, “* * * any direct lineal descendant of husband or wife * * Gulf Ins. Co. v. James,
All other questions raised by appellant are immaterial, in view of the conclusions above announced.
The judgment of the trial court i» affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. This language was modified by the opinion in the Decker case, supra, the court there saying: “We find no reasonable basis for limiting the classification here in issue to direct lineal descendants of a surviving spouse. The reasons, are just as cogent for inclusion of lineal descendants of a deceased spouse.”
