134 So. 476 | Ala. | 1931
The case was transferred from the probate court to the equity division of the circuit court.
The question for decision is raised by assignment of error No. 3 to the effect that: "The Court erred in his final decree in holding that the property of said estate should be distributed to the heirs and distributees of said estate without preference to petitioner by reason of the fact that he is of full blood with deceased."
The decree was final and supports an appeal. De Graffenried v. Breitling,
The deed from Miss Patience League to John T. Purcell was never shown, to our satisfaction, to have been delivered and may be laid out of the case. The mere fact that it came from among the grantor's papers after her death did not show delivery, but tended to show the contrary. Culver v. Carroll,
What of the construction given by the trial court to section 7369 of the Code?
The evidence of the relationship of the parties is that testatrix was a sister to the *75 mother of O. P. and John T. Purcell. Their father had children by a second wife — half brothers and sisters of petitioner. The devisee and legatee, John T. Purcell, the whole-blood brother of petitioner, died intestate, leaving as next of kin his brothers and sisters, or their children, where the parent had died intestate, parties to this suit. The will of Miss Patience League contained the following item: "Second: I will, bequeath and devise to my nephew, J. T. Purcell, who has faithfully taken care of me during my declining years, all my property, real, personal and mixed of which I may die seized and possessed, or to which I may be entitled at the time of my decease to have and to hold absolutely."
The property so dealt with was real estate and a savings bank account that went into the possession of J. T. Purcell and which he retained until the time of his death. The recital of faithful "care" of testatrix during her "declining years" by said nephew did not impress said property with the character of "nonancestral" within the rule as to half and whole blood inheritance.
It will be noted that the statute, section 7369, Code, as to the subject, property, or character thereof, had for its purpose a modification of the common law (Stallworth v. Stallworth,
The wording of the statute, section 7369, Code, contains further limitations, as expressed or embraced in the use of the terms "same degree" and "from or of some one of his ancestors." Whether an estate is ancestral or nonancestral is determined by the legal title. In Higdon v. Leggett,
And in 2 C. J. p. 1334, the authorities are collected to the effect that the technical use of the word "ancestor" in statutes of descent means any one from whom an estate may be inherited. For example: A child may be the "ancestor" of his parent, Lavery v. Egan,
The "character of the estate," and the personal relationship, or the act of law and the right of blood, enter into the legal definition of a descent. Springer v. Fortune, 2 Handy, 52, 58, 12 Ohio Dec. (reprint) 325; Den v. De Hart, supra.
The opinion by Mr. Justice Story in Gardner v. Collins, 2 Pet. 58, 88,
That is to say, "As used in a statute concerning descents, providing that in case an inheritance came to an intestate by devise or descent from one of his 'ancestors,' when used with reference to the descent of real property, the term embraces collateral as well as lineals through whom an inheritance is derived. Righter v. Ludwig,
It is well to note the observation of the annotator to section 7369, Code of 1928, which is in the words of Cox v. Clark,
Mr. Justice Stone, in the early case of Johnson v. Copeland's Adm'r,
In Stallworth v. Stallworth,
The foregoing is an application of the rule or definition of "one of ancestors" and of the "same degree." Cox v. Clark,
It may be noted further, regarding the limitations of statute as to kin of the "same degree," that half-brothers will inherit before a more remote degree, as before cousins of the full blood, Coleman v. Foster,
Construing the present statute, which comes to us from the Code of 1852, this court stated that but for the words "same degree" it would have followed the decisions in other states; that those who are not of the blood of the ancestor from whom the inheritance comes, are excluded until that line is exhausted; that "the exclusion of those who are not of the blood of the ancestor from whom the inheritance came" does not extend "to the exhaustion of that ancestral line, but only when there are those of that line in the same degree, the 'same degree' not affecting the rights of lineal descendants or the descendants of a brother or sister of the ancestral line of inheritance." 29 L.R.A. 546, 553.
To advert to Cox v. Clark,
It should be further said of our statutes that the degree of kindred must be computed according to the rule of the civil law (section 7368, Code; Danzey v. State, 126) Ala. 15, 28 So. 697); and that the personal estate of one dying intestate is distributed in the same manner as his real estate, and according to the same rules, in respects here applicable. Sections 7366, 7374, Code; Phillips v. Lawing,
The instant suit being for an estate, real and personal, devised and bequeathed by the aunt to the nephew on the side of the sister and mother, was (1) a devise and bequest from an ancestor within the statute. and that estate was ancestral; (2) that the several parties in interest are, under the statute, within the "same degree"; and (3) that those not of the blood of such ancestor are excluded from the inheritance as against those of the blood of such ancestor of the same degree. The appellees, while of the "same degree" with appellant, as counted by the rules of the civil law, were not of the blood of such ancestor — Miss Patience League — and appellees were excluded by the statute from inheritance as against a whole blood of the same degree.
It may be specifically stated that appellant's petition as to the 109 acres of land in Coats Bend, Etowah county, Ala., and the savings account on deposit with the First National Bank of Gadsden of about the sum of $1,686.94, and interest thereon, that may be uncollected, were the properties and moneys that constituted the ancestral estate from Patience League, and should be distributed to O. P. Purcell according to the prayer of his petition. The other properties (real, personal, and mixed) of said decedent will be distributed to the whole blood and half bloods, or their respective heirs or distributees, according to the general laws of descent having application.
The judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for proper judgments of distribution as to the several properties of decedent and those taking the same under the statutes.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and BROWN, JJ., concur. *78