94 Ga. 809 | Ga. | 1895
In October, 1853, a testator died leaving a will which was executed March 28th, 1850, and a codicil thereto,
“ Item 11. I will and direct that my plantation known as Fullerville, lying partly in Washington and partly in Laurens county in said State, shall be divided, as soon after my death as possible, into two parts of shares as nearly equal in the number of acres as may consist with equality in value, including in one part or share No. 1 the portion of land lying in Washington county with the mills and other water privileges, and in the other part or share No. 2 the portion of land lying in Laurens county. But should the land in either county be eonsiderably greater in quality than that in the other, then I do not desire that the county lines should govern in setting off' the shares, my object being only to make two plantations of as nearly equal size as possible, to accomplish which the county lines 'may be disregarded, and the difference in the value of the two shares shall be made good to the least valuable share in the manner hereinafter directed.
“Item 12. I give and devise share number 1, mentioned in item eleven, to my beloved daughter Malvina V. Parsons, for her sole and separate use for and during the term of her natural life only, free and exempt from the debts, contracts, liabilities or disposition of her present or any future husband; and from and immediately after the death of the said Malvina Y. Parsons, I give and devise the same únto her child or children living at the time of her death, and their heirs forever, but in "default of any child living at the time of her death, then the said land to return to and be equally divided among my children and other legal representatives per stirpes; provided always, that the share or shares falling to her sons Thomas Henry Parsons and James William Parsons, according as one or both may survive her, shall remain to him or them for and during the term of their respective natural lives only, remainder to their children living at the time of their death and their heirs" forever, but in default of such children, remainder to the other*811 lineal representatives of my said daughter, but in default of any other lineal representatives of my said daughter at the death of the said Thomas plenry Parsons and James William Parsons, remainder over to be equally distributed among my children and their lineal representatives peí' stirpes.”
The codicil was as follows, to wit:
“ It is will and desire that the devises contained in the 11th and 12th items of my said last will and testament be so changed as to read thus: I give and devise my Fullerville plantation, lying partly in Washington and partly in Laurens county in said State, embracing all the lands attached to said pi-emises, uiito my beloved daughter Malvina V. Parsons, for her sole and separate use for and' during the term of her natural life only, free and exempt from the debts, contracts, liabilities or disposition of her present or any future husband; and from and after her death the said devised property in this item of this codicil named, to be subject to all the conditions, resti’ictions and limitations in said 12th item in said last will and testament set forth.”
The executors of the testator delivered the property described to Malvina Y. Parsons, and she remained in possession until her death in 1874. She left only two childi’en, William H. Parsons, who died in 1887 (he being the husband of one and the father of the other of the defendants in this case), the other of said sons being Thomas A. Parsons, who died on January 7th, 1894. Though there is an apparent discrepancy between the names of these two sons as expressed in the pleadings and as stated in the will, the evidence explained satisfactorily how this discrepancy occurred, and it may be taken as a fact that they are the same persons mentioned by the testator in his will. Thomas A. Parsons (one of the sons of Malvina Y. Parsons), who did not marry, was the father of T. A. Parsons, one of the plaintiffs in this suit, and by an order of the superior court, dated September 30th, 1892, caused T. A. Parsons, one of the present plaintiffs, to be regularly and duly legitimated.
The General Assembly early saw the propriety of allowing a bastard to inherit from its mother, and bastard children of the same mother, without reference to their paternity, to inherit each from the other. The law of escheats forfeited to the State the estates of such persons who, dying intestate, left no heirs. It was held by some of the courts, that for want of inheritable blood in her descendants the bastard children of a mother dying intestate were incapable of taking her estate, and by force of the statute the same was forfeited to the State to the exclusion of those who upon the commonest principles of humanity should and would have been the recipients of her bounty. For remedy of this palpable injustice, in 1816 the legislature passed an act the provisions of which are contained in section 1800 of the code, and which relieves bastards of some of the disabilities imposed by the common law. So the act of 1850 was passed to allow bastard children of widows to inherit equally with those who were legitimate.
The status of the bastard as fixed by the common law, except as changed by statute, remains under our system of laws. The rules of the common law generally are recognized by our code, and with respect to all matters in which it has not been changed by legislative enactment, or in process of time by judicial decision to meet the varying conditions in the affairs of men which
The views herein expressed are in perfect harmony with, and are supported and sustained by, adjudications of this court made upon special legitimating statutes passed before the adoption of the general law upon the subject which is embraced in the section of the code hereinbefore referred to. In the leading case of Shelton et al. v. Wright, 25 Georgia, page 636, this court states broadly that such statutes are to be strictly construed, and, so construing the particular statute then under consideration, it holds that a statute which fully legitimated and made the illegitimate the heir at law of her reputed father and made her capable in law of inheriting the property of her reputed father as though born in
From the section of the code in question and from the act of legitimation from which that section is codified the word fully is omitted. As we have seen, we may fairly presume that this omission was intentional. While the tendency of the courts has been recently toward the adoption of rather more liberal rules for the interpretation of statutes of legitimation, than those which formerly prevailed, we conclude that the wisest .and most conservative construction to place upon this
What is the legal status of this plaintiff? Whether he sues as the heir at law of his reputed father, or by virtue of a supposed right as a purchaser under his great-grandfather’s will, he cannot recover, because the estate to his father was limited by the express terms of the will to enjoyment by him during his natural life; at his death, the remainder interest in fee was vested in his children, and he having none, -in the children of his brother. Does this plaintiff* come within the class of persons who could take under this provision of the will? Was he in legal contemplation the child of Thomas A. Parsons? Was he such a child as the testator can be legally presumed to have had m contemplation at the time of the execution of the will? We have seen that,, though he might have been of the blood of Thomas A. Parsons, and while he was, at the instance of his reputed father, made legitimate by an appropriate order of the-court, yet that the legal effect of such judicial legitimation was only to so far confer upon him a status as a legitimate child as to enable him to inherit from his. father. For all other purposes he was still a bastard. He could take by force of the statute as the heir of his father, but he could not thus take as a purchaser under the will of his great-grandfather. There is nothing in the will justifying the inference that it was the intent of the great-grandfather to include him as a legatee thereunder. His rights are referable to strict law. No presumptions will be indulged in his favor, and we will presume that the testator intended to use the word children with reference to its strict legal significance, rather than as in its conventional sense it is occasionally employed. To undertake to presume at this late day that