73 Mich. 600 | Mich. | 1889
Plaintiffs brought ejectment, claiming to be th'e legal heirs of Franklin Keeler, deceased, who died July 16, 1882, intestate. • Franklin Keeler was the only child of Minerva Keeler, and was illegitimate. Minerva Keeler died in 1828, with no other descendants but Franklin. Plaintiffs are heirs of her brothers. Defendant is grantee of Ellen Keeler, widow of Franklin Keeler, who had no issue, and she has died since her husband.
The only question in the ease is whether under the ■statutes of descent in force in 1882 the widow of an illegitimate person who had no parents, brothers or sisters, ■or their-issue, living, takes in preference to the relatives of his mother who are not her issue. The statutes of descents, found in chapter 219, How. Stat., contains under section 1 nine successive subdivisions, which, taken
“If any illegitimate child shall die intestate without lawful issue, his estate shall descend to his mother; if she be dead, it shall descend to the relatives of the intestate on the part of- the mother, as if the intestate had been legitimate.”
The provision under which defendant claims is subdivision 8, which is as follows:
“If the intestate shall leave a husband or wife and no issue, nor other lineal descendants, nor father, mother, brother, nor sister, and there be no issue of brothers or sisters, the estate of such intestate shall descend to the husband or wife of such intestate, as the case may be.”
The provisions of previous sections, so far as the widow is concerned, gave her a life-estate to the exclusion of all heirs but the descendants of the husband. Subdivision 8 gave her preference in the inheritance over all persons but his parents and the descendants of one or both of his parents. It is only where there is no widow that more remote kindred would take. In the present case there are no descendants of a parent of the intestate. If legitimate, it is not claimed that plaintiffs would be near enough of kin to interfere with the widow’s inheritance. There is therefore nothing in section 3 which, comparing it with subdivision 8 of section 1, in any way conflicts with it, or gives plaintiffs any title in preference to the ■claim of the widow. The only theory on which such a conflict is set up is that all the provisions of section 1 should be read as if in each clause the word “person,” as applied to the intestate, had prefixed to it the word “legitimate,” so as to read “when any legitimate person shall die seized,” etc.
We do not think it allowable to interpolate conditions
Even at the common law an illegitimate person had no heritable incapacities beyond those of tracing lineage backward. His marriage and its consequences have always been of the same validity as marriages of other persons. It would be impossible to attribute to any legislative action a purpose of making his widow worse off than the widow of any one else. If the intestate’s mother had survived him, the widow would not have succeeded, because his mother is recognized as capable of inheriting from him, and is named in the law before the widow. The same section, which provides that the mother shall inherit, also says her relatives shall inherit as if they were legitimate. If the mother’s brothers had been legitimate relatives of the intestate they would not have stood before the widow. The statute gives them no better standing on account of their illegitimate relation. We see no conflict in the sections, so far as subdivision 8 is concerned, and think the widow took the estate.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.