175 Ga. 569 | Ga. | 1932
J. H. Milner died intestate, and Storey and others as administrators filed this petition praying for direction in the administration of the estate, and for a proper construction of section 3931 of the Civil Code of -1910. J. H. Milner was never married. He survived both his parents, and his brothers and sisters. The brothers died without issue. The two sisters were Mrs. A. C. Jordan and Mrs. Sarah Milner Moon, both of whom were survived by children and grandchildren at the time of the death of the intestate. Mrs. Jordan was the mother of three children, who were a nephew and nieces of the intestate. Mrs. Moon had nine children, likewise his nieces and nephews. O. H. Jordan, one of the nephews of the intestate, died, leaving six children who are grandnieces and grandnephews of the intestate. Three of Mrs. Moon’s children died, to wit: B. H. Moon, Georgia Moon Grant, and Sallie Moon Reynolds. The other six Moon children are still in life. The three children of Mrs. Moon who died had in all
Civil Code § 3931, so far as that section relates to the rights of inheritance of brothers and sisters of a deceased person, is as follows : “ Brothers and sisters of the intestate stand in the second degree, and inherit, if there is no widow, or child, or representative of child. The half-blood on the paternal side inherit equally with the whole-blood. If there be no brother or sister of the whole or half-blood on the paternal side, then those of the half-blood on the maternal side shall inherit. The children or grandchildren of brothers and sisters deceased shall represent and stand in the place of their deceased parents, but there shall be no representation further than this among collaterals.” In this case, while the intestate had brothers, they left no issue, and he survived them. He had two sisters, Mrs. Moon and Mrs. Jordan, whom he also outlived. One of these sisters had three children, and-the other was the mother of nine, and the question is whether the first division of the estate shall be into twelve equal parts, or whether the estate shall be divided into two parts, one representing Mrs. Moon and the other Mrs. Jordan, each of whom were sisters of the intestate, and thereafter divided per stirpes, the part of Mrs. Jordan being divided between her three children, two portions thereof going to her living children and the third part being distributed per stirpes to the children of her deceased child, and the one-half of the estate representative of the interest of Mrs. Moon likewise divided into nine portions, six to go to the grandnieces and grandnephews who are living, and the other three each to be divided per stirpes and allotted to Mrs. Moon’s grandchildren. The court below held that the distribution should be per capita, that the nephews and nieces were entitled to have the estate divided into twelve portions, without regard to the fact that the heirs of Mrs. Jordan would receive only three shares or one fourth, and the heirs of his sister Mrs. Moon would receive nine shares, or three fourths of the estate. The plain
The portion of paragraph 5 of § 3931 which is applicable to the case at bar is as follows: “The children or grandchildren of brothers and sisters deceased shall represent and stand in the place of their deceased parents.” In applying this code section specifically to the facts of this case, it will be noted that “The children . . of . . sisters deceased shall represent and stand in the place of their deceased parents.” Omitting, for the present, reference to grandchildren, it would seem plain that the first purpose of paragraph 5 of § 3931 is to allocate brothers and sisters of an intestate and declare that they stand in the second degree to a deceased person if he leaves no widow, or child, or representative of child. But the next intention of the lawmakers in the portion-of the paragraph now under consideration was to make a rule where there were no brothers and sisters, as in this case. So the section proceeds to say that children or grandchildren of brothers and sisters deceased shall represent and stand in the place of their parents. This would seem to require that the distribution be per stirpes as between the children or grandchildren of deceased sisters. There would be no use to declare that children or grandchildren should represent and stand in the place of their deceased parents if the distribution were to be per capita, because they would then be equally representative of their equal relationship to the intestate. In the case before us, all twelve of the nieces and nephews (whether children of Mrs. Jordan or of Mrs. Moon) are equally related to J. EC. Milner, their uncle. But the statute says that these children or grandchildren of the sisters deceased “shall represent and stand in the place of their deceased parents.” Now certainly Mrs. Jordan’s children can not represent and stand in the place of Mrs. Moon, and Mrs. Moon’s children can not represent or stand in the place of Mrs. Jordan. To represent the parent in an inheritable and distributive sense, one must be the next of kin of the person whom they represent and stand in the place of; and while representing and standing in the place pf Mrs. Jprdan, h.er children would be her next of kin and would be
The defendants in error insist that the ruling of the court should be controlled by the opinion in Houston v. Davidson, 45 Ga. 574, and that the distribution of this estate should be per capita. In that case it was said: “By the settled rule for the construction of the act [English statute], if the brothers and sisters be all dead at the death of the' intestate, the next of kin take per capita. The doctrine of representation only comes in when a portion only of the brothers or sisters have died leaving children, . . and this is a very reasonable and proper construction. So by our law, up to 1859, representation among collaterals did not extend further than to the children of brothers and sisters; and had the intestate died before 1859, the distribution would have been per capita among the living nephews and nieces alone, since there were no uncles or aunts.” In discussing the effect of tlie act of 1859, this court said: “We do not think, therefore, it was intended to change the manner in which the nephews and nieces were to take, but-only to provide that the grandchildren of a brother or sister should take their father’s share; that they should be let in, even though all of the class next above them in the scale should not be dead. We think, therefore, the true rule under the act of 1859, and of the Code, is that the grandchild of a brother or sister shall simply stand in his father’s place; that the estate shall be distributed as though his father were living, and he shall represent him. If the nephews and nieces be all dead, then the distribution is per capita, no matter who takes. But if any of them be living, it is distributed as though they were all living, the children of each one deceased standing in place of the parents.”
In this case were two nieces of the intestate, children of his sister, Mrs. A. C. Jordan, who were living at the time of his death, and six nieces and nephews who were the children of Mrs. Sarah Moon, who were also living. All of the nieces and nephews were not dead; so the' statement in the Houston case that “the distribution is per capita, no matter who takes,” does not apply; for this rule
The decision in Houston v. Davidson, supra, is not authority in this case. That decision was reviewed in Rhodes v. Williams, 143 Ga. 342 (85 S. E. 105), and the scope of the decision was pointed out by Mr. Justice Lumpkin, who said: “In Houston v. Davidson, 45 Ga. 574, it was held that the provision of the act of 1859 that representation among collaterals should extend to the children and grandchildren of brothers and sisters was so far applicable to the law which allowed inheritance from a bastard by his brothers and sisters, or, if they be dead, by their children, as to extend the representation among bastards to children and grandchildren of brothers and sisters inheriting from an illigitimate. That decision was dealing only with the distribution of the estate of an illegitimate child, and the right of representation under the law covering that subject. It was not dealing with the distribution of the estate of a legitimate child, or any claim to inheritance from him by an illegitimate descendant of his sister or brother. As any right to claim under Marshall Jr. must rest upon his having been legitimate,