144 P. 143 | Cal. | 1914
The court below entered its decree distributing the estate of Louis Shipp in equal shares to Harry Shipp and to Donald Shipp, a minor. Harry Shipp appeals.
The only question is whether Donald Shipp was entitled to share in the estate. Harry Shipp, the appellant, was the son of Louis Shipp by a marriage which had been dissolved by divorce prior to 1909. He was, beyond any question, an heir of the decedent. Donald Shipp was born March 1, 1911, the offspring of a union between Louis Shipp and Ora McCoy. There was evidence which amply warranted the trial court *641
in believing that in January, 1909, a ceremony of marriage between Louis Shipp and Ora McCoy, thereafter known as Ora Shipp, had been solemnized by a priest; that the solemnization was regular in every respect save for the want of a license; that Ora McCoy believed that a license had been duly issued and that she entered into marital relations with Shipp in good faith, believing that she was his wife. The child was recognized by Louis Shipp as his son. Counsel for Donald Shipp stipulated at the hearing that there was no record of any license in the county of Los Angeles, where the ceremony was performed, nor any record of any marriage, and admitted that "the purported marriage was a void or null marriage." Perhaps, in thus admitting the invalidity of the marriage, he conceded too much. No doubt solemnization is, since the amendment of 1895 to section
There may be some question whether the enactment applies to the offspring of marriages which are declared by the code to be "illegal and void," or "void from the beginning," such as incestuous marriages (sec. 59), marriages of whites with *642
negroes (sec. 60), or (under certain conditions) marriages between persons one of whom is already married. (Sec. 61.) This question was very fully argued in Estate of Baldwin, but the court, in deciding the case (
The respondent makes the further claim that the child was legitimated by adoption, in accordance with the provisions of section 230 of the Civil Code. Our conclusion on the question already discussed makes it unnecessary to consider the soundness of this position.
The judgment is affirmed.
Shaw, J., and Angellotti, J., concurred.