Sams v. Sams' Administrator

| Ky. Ct. App. | Mar 19, 1887

CHIEF JUSTICE PBYOB

delivered the opinion oe the court.

Leroy Sams died in the county of Estill in the year 1885, intestate, leaving surviving him his widow, Ann ’Sams, who was his second wife, and four children by his first marriage. He owned land of considerable value, and personal estate valued at twenty-five or thirty thousand dollars. His last wife, at the time of their marriage, was the mother of seven children, all of whom were born out of lawful wedlock, she never having married until her marriage with the intestate. Fannie and Nancy, two of these illegitimate children, asserted a. claim to an equal interest in the estate with the children by the first wife, upon the ground that they were the children of the intestate, and were so recognized by him during his lifetime, and that the marriage consummated between him and their mother rendered them legitimate under the statute, and entitled them to share in the distribution of his personalty and in the division of. his land. The statute provides, “if a man having had a child by a woman shall afterwards marry *398her, such child, or its descendants, if recognized by bim before or after marriage, shall be deemed legitimate.”

This action was instituted in the court below by the administrator of the estate and the children of the first wife, against the widow and the two children who are claiming to be heirs of the intestate, for the purpose of having distribution and determining the right of these children to an interest in the estate.

The widow seems to have made a contract with the administrator and heirs by which she agreed to take one-seventh of the personalty as her full interest in the distribution; that, upon a proper state of pleading, was-set aside, and the widow left to take such an interest in ■the personal and real estate as she was entitled to under the law of descent and distribution. Her rights as widow, however, are not here involved. The chancellor adjudged that the two children, Fannie and Nancy, were not entitled to any part of the estate, and that question is the only one presented. It appears that these two children were born, the one about eight, and the other some ten years prior to the death of intestate’s first wife. They were recognized by the intestate as his children during the life of the first wife, and always, after her death. The name of Fannie Ann Green, one of the children, was changed, by an order of the E,still county court, to Fannie Ann Sams, the record reciting, that Leroy Sams, the father of the child, consents to the same. It is also shown that the intestate, on his death-bed, expressed a wish that each of the two children should inherit from him as much of his estate as any one of his children by his first wife. Their mother states that the intestate was the father of the two girls, *399and the fact of the recognition by him of them as his. children is clearly established, and their right to inherit from the intestate must depend upon the construction given the statute by virtue of which it is maintained they are legitimate.

It is insisted by counsel for the appellants that the meaning and intention of the statute is so plain that but one interpretation can be given it; and although the children were begotten by the intestate when he was the lawful husband of another, his adulterous practices with an unchaste woman, and unfaithfulness to his own wife and children, cannot be considered in determining the rights of those who were not participants in the wrong, and whose rights the statute was enacted to protect.

If the case before us, or that class of cases where the husband has violated his marriage vows, and become the father of children by an adulterous sexual connection with another woman during the marital relation, had been the subject of legislative thought, it can scarcely be supposed, that any law would have been enacted by which the children of the adulterous intercourse would be made legitimate, that they might inherit with the children of the lawful wife equal parts of his estate. Such a statute, if so construed, would only invite the husband to desert his wife, and the woman of easy virtue to encourage the violation of his marriage vows, that she might some day become his lawful wife and her children the rightful heirs of his estate. The motive to supplant the love of a true woman by the lewd practices of degraded women would be found in such a statute, and the law, instead of secur-' *400ing to the innocent offspring an interest in the estate of the father, and encouraging the latter to make reparation for the wrong committed by marrying the mother, would invite the commission of great moral wrong, and. hold out an inducement to the guilty parties to remove those who stood in the way of legitimizing their children by the consummation of the contract of marriage.

Where the offspring is the result of an illicit intercourse between unmarried people, the Legislature saw the necessity of enacting some statute by which the children in a certain state of case might be made legitimate, and, therefore, the law has said to the parties, if you will marry, your children shall not be bastardized, but will be under the law your legitimate offspring; and to say that this law applied to cases where married men were being guilty of adultery, and as an encouragement to them to do better, and to relieve their offspring from the position in which they are placed by the law, would be an absurd construction of this statute.

■ It is a well-settled rule of construction, that the letter ■of a statute will not be followed when it leads to an absurd conclusion ; but, on the contrary, the reason for the enactment must enter into its interpretation, so as to determine what was intended to be accomplished by it.

It is true, the statute provides that if “ a man having had a child by a woman, afterwards marry her, and recognize the child as his, it shall be held legitimate.” The language might be applied to any man, whether single or married ; but was such the legislative purpose ?

The statute provides, that ua man shall not marry Ms mother, grandmother, daughter or grand-daugh*401tier, nor shall a woman marry her father, brother,” etc. This statute was not intended to apply to those who are married, by saying to them, you can not leave your lawful wife and marry your near kindred, because such a marriage to any woman would be unlawful, and the party guilty of bigamy; but the language is addressed to those who are single, and are not, at their .second marriage, the lawful husband or wife of another. It was not to encourage those who had entered upon the marital relation to forsake their marriage vows, and cohabit with others, in anticipation of a future marriage, with a view of making their offspring legitimate, that this statute was enacted, but to make the illegitimate •children, begotten by one unmarried, legitimate upon his marrying the mother.

Where a marriage is contracted in good faith, under the belief by both parties that the former husband or wife was dead, then the children born of such marriage ;are made by our statute legitimate. The mistake is made to apply to both parties ; but when a married man is living in open adultery with another than his wife, with offspring in existence, the result of the unlawful association, no statute or rule of policy should be adopted by which such children should become legitimate, and inherit with the children of the lawful wife the father’s estate, because he happens, after the •death of his wife,' to marry his concubine. No such construction should be given the statute before us.

The statute, if construed to apply to a man who is married at the time he begets the illegitimate children, its literal meaning would also apply to children begotten of a woman who was, at the time, the lawful wife .of another, as well as to an unmarried woman,

*402The statute provides : “ If a man having had a child' by a woman shall afterwards marry her,” etc., making no distinction between a single woman and one married, and to follow the strict interpretation, or rather the language used, if the child was born of a married woman whose husband should thereafter die, and she marry the reputed father, then his recognition of the child would make it the lawful heir of the last husband. This would be a novel construction, and lead to a conclusion directly opposite to that intended by the Legislature.

The father, if he so regards himself, may provide for such children by a last will and testament, or a statute, has been enacted, and now the law, by which one may render another capable of inheriting as his heir-at-law by adopting him as such by petition filed in the circuit court of the county of his residence. Under this statute, however, the party proposing to make another his heir, if married, cannot do so unless his wife join in the petition, so that every opportunity is afforded parties who are bound to others by natural ties to provide for them either by last will or by adopting them as heirs-at-law. To construe the statute by its letter' in this case would not only conflict with the legislative intent, but would encourage the faithless husband to pursue his-immoral practices, and invite his concubine, to terminate by intrigue, and perhaps crime,, the existence of the; marital relation.

The judgment below is. affirmed.