This сase is before the court by virtue of a reservation upon stipulation from the Superior Court. The specific questions reserved are detailed below, but the essential issues are the constitutionality of General Statutes § 45-274 as interpreted by our cаse law and the effect of the amendment to the statute which became operative on October 1, 1978. 1
The issues presented arose in an accounting proceeding in the Probate Court for the district of Hartford. On April 12, 1977, the plaintiff administrator of thе decedent Russell R. Richards’ estate exhibited his final account, applied for an ascertain *182 ment of heirs and distributees, and an order of distribution. Russell R. Richards died intestate February 13, 1976, leaving no surviving spouse. He was, however, survived by his parents and two young children, whоse mother, Prances Richards, also know as Frances Coleman, the decedent had never married.
During his lifetime, the decedent, Prances Richards and the children lived together as a family unit; the decedent acknowledged paternity of the children; he was named as their father on their birth certificates; and he claimed them as dependents on his federal income tax return.
On June 24, 1977, the Probate Court, after a hearing on the administrator’s application for an order of distribution, issued a decree еxpressing its inability to determine the proper heirs and distributees in face of the apparent conflict between General Statutes § 45-274 and the opinion of the United States Supreme Court in
Trimble
v. Gordon,
At the time of the decedent’s death, General Statutes § 45-274 provided that after distribution of a spouse’s share the residue shall be distributed in equal shares to children. It also provided that “[c]hildren born before marriage whose parents afterwards intermarry shall be deemed legitimate and inherit equally with other children.” 2
*183
An examination of the interpretation of § 45-274 and its forerunners reveals that the word “children” as used in § 45-274 embraces a mother’s illegitimate as well as legitimate children, i.e., illegitimate children can inherit from the mother’s estate. Under the English common law, an illegitimate child cоuld not inherit from either parent. See 1 Swift, Digest pp. 47-48. In
Heath
v.
White,
The terms of General Statutes § 45-274, interpreted with the aid of our case law, bar the illegitimate children of Russell R. Richards from inheritance from their father’s intestate estate.
I
In 1977, the Supreme Court of the United States in
Trimble
v.
Gordon,
In 1978, the Supreme Court of the United States again considered this same issue in
Lalli
v.
Lalli,
Using the standards laid down in both Trimble and Lalli, 4 it can only be concluded that General Statutes § 45-274, which required the subsequent marriage of the parents, at the time of Russell R. Richards’ death, violated the equal protection clauses of both the United States and Connecticut constitutions.
II
The parents of Russell R. Richards claim that the amendment to the statute effective October 1, 1978, has retrospective effect 5 and that the amendment does meet all of the objections which the Supreme Court of the United States found in Trimble and that the amendment is a more liberal consideration of illegitimates than that which was found constitutional in Lalli.
General Statutes § 55-3 providеs as follows: “No provision of the general statutes, not previously contained in the statutes of the state, which imposes any new obligation on any person or corporation, shall be construed to have a retrospective effect.” Thе “obligations” referred to in the statute are those of substantive law.
Little
v.
Ives,
158 Conn.
*187
452, 457,
The 1978 amendment to General Statutes § 45-274 creates rights of inheritance that did not previously exist.
6
“A law providing for the future descent of property is prospective.”
Brooks Bank & Trust Co.
v.
Roranacher,
The answer to the first question is “no”; Kelley and Robert Richards are not the “children” of Russell R. Richards within the meaning of General Statutes § 45-274.
The answer to both the second and third questions is “yes”; the provisions of General Statutes § 45-274 as applied to Robert and Kelley Ann Richards violate the equal protection clause of both the United States and Connecticut constitutions.
The answer to the fourth question as propounded need not be answered.
No costs will be taxed to any party.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The questions upon which advice was requested are аs follows:
“(a) Upon the foregoing facts, are Robert R. Richards and Kelley Ann Richards the “children” of the decedent, Russell R. Riehards, within the meaning of Section 45-274 of the Connecticut General Statutes, and therefore his sole heirs at law?
“(b) If the answer to question (a) is ‘no’, do the provisions of Section 45-274 therefore deny to Robert R. Richards and Kelley Ann Riehards equal protection of the law, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution?
“(c) If the answer to question (a) is ‘no’, do the provisions of Seсtion 45-274 therefore deny to Robert R. Riehards and Kelley Ann Richards equal protection of the law, in violation of Section 20 of Article I of the Connecticut Constitution?
“(d) If the answers to questions (a), (b) and (c) are ‘no’, are defendants, Russell A. Richards and Helyn P. Richards, thе decedent’s sole heirs at law, under the provision of Section 45-276?”
“[General Statutes] Sec. 45-274. distribution to spouse and children. After distribution has been made to the husband or wife of the intestate of such portion or share of the estate of the intestate as such husband or wife is entitled to by law, all the residue of the real and personal estate shall be distributed in equal proportions, according to its value at the time of distribution, among the children and the legal representatives of any of them who may be dеad, except *183 that children or other descendants who receive estate by advancement of the intestate in his lifetime shall themselves or their representatives have only so much of the estate as will, together with such advancement, makе their share equal to what they would have been entitled to receive had no such advancement been made. Children born before marriage whose parents afterwards intermarry shall be deemed legitimate and inherit equally with other children.”
“An illegitimate child is heir of its mother and of any maternal ancestor, and of any person from whom its mother might have inherited, if living; and the lawful issue of an illegitimate person shall represent such person and take, by descent, any estate which the parent would have tаken, if living. An illegitimate child whose parents intermarry and who is acknowledged by the father as the father’s child shall be considered legitimate.” Ill. Rev. Stat. c.3, 5 12 (1973).
The recent United States Supreme Court case of
Parham
v.
Hughes,
This is so by virtue of General Statutes § 55-3.
“[General Statutes] Sec. 45-274. distribution to spouse and CHILDREN. CHILDREN BORN OUT OF WEDLOCK MAY INHERIT, (a) After distribution has been made to the husband or wife of the intestate of such portion or share of the estate of the intestate as such husband or wife is entitled to by law, all the residue of the real and personal estatе shall be distributed in equal proportions, according to its value at the time of distribution, among the children and the legal representatives of any of them who may be dead, except that children or other descendants who receive estate by аdvancement of the intestate in his lifetime shall themselves or their representatives have only so much of the estate as will, together with such advancement, make their share equal to what they would have been entitled to receive had no such advancement been made.
“(b) (1) Children born before marriage whose parents afterwards intermarry shall be deemed legitimate and inherit equally with other children. (2) A child born out of wedlock shall inherit from (A) his or her mother and (B) his or her father, provided such father (i) has bеen adjudicated the father of such child by a court of competent jurisdiction, or (ii) has acknowledged under oath in writing to be the father of such child.
“(c) For the purposes of this section (1) issue shall include children born out of wedlock and the issue of such сhildren provided both the child born out of wedlock and any of such issue qualify for inheritance under this section; (2) legal representatives shall include legal representatives of children born out of wedlock, provided both the child born out of wedlock through whom such legal representatives inherit and the legal representatives qualify for inheritance under this section.”
