31 Md. 113 | Md. | 1869
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Prudence Biggs, an illegitimate woman, who had, in 1829, acquired real estate by purchase, intermarried with David Morrison in May, 1831, and died intestate in 1853, never having had any children, leaving no brothers or sisters, or descendants of brothers or sisters, or other descendants or kindred, but leaving her husband surviving her. The sole question in the case is, did the real estate of the wife, upon her death, pass to the husband, or es-cheat to the State ?
The right of the husband rests upon the last clause of 1st section of the Act of 1820, ch. 191, then in force. The same provision was in the Act of 1786, eh. 45, and is codified in sec. 23, Art. 47, of the Code. It is in these words:
“ And if there be no descendants or kindred of the intestate as aforesaid, to take the estate, then the same shall go to the husband or wife, as the case may be,-and if the husband or wife be dead, then to his or her kindred, in the like course as if such husband or wife had survived the intestate, and then had died entitled to the estate by purchase; and if the intestate has had moré husbands or wives than one, and all shall die before such intestate, then the estate shall be equally divided among the kindred of the several husbands or wives, in equal degree equally.”
By the terms of this clause, the husband and wife, and their respective kindred, are designated by law as parties to take, upon the death of persons lawfully married, leaving no descendants or kindred capable of taking, before the
The common law imposed upon a bastard a total incapacity to take as heir either to the putative father, mother, or any one else. To prevent the evils of illicit intercourse, the guilt of the parents was thus branded upon the unoffending offspring. By the Act of 1786, ch. 45, sec. 7, the subsequent marriage of the parents and acknowledgment by the father, remitted the penalty and legitimated the child to all intents and purposes, and by the Act of 1825, ch. 156, illegitimate children were endowed with inheritable privileges from the mother and inter sese. "With these modifications, the common law still prevails in this State, but even at common law, the rule of nullius filius applies only to the case of inheritances. Bastards can acquire, hold, devise, and convey estates real and personal. They can marry and are held amenable to the penalties of the law if they marry within the prohibited degrees. Their children born in wedlock, and their descendants, inherit from them. Personal property and effects are distributed in ease of intestacy to the wife, husband, children, and lineal descendants, and the widow has dower, and the husband curtesy in realty. In short, the ties of nature and all the incidents, rights, and responsibilities, arising
No special reference was made in argument to the Act of 1780, ch. 50, sec. 5, by which it was provided that any lands within -this State, of which any person has or shall hereafter die, seized in fee simple, without any heir of the whole blood who could have inherited if he had been a subject of this State, or without leaving any relation of the half blood within two degrees, that is, first cousins, as the same are reckoned by the common law, such lands shall escheat to the State, or to the similar provision in the Act of November Session, 1781, ch. 20, sec. 8, or to the Act of 1785, ch. 78, wherein lands are treated as escheatable where the person seized thereof dies intestate and wi thout heirs of the whole or half blood. But it is to be observed, these several acts were passed prior to that of 1786, ch. 45, abolishing the law of descents which originated with the feudal system and military tenures, establishing a new system and containing the clause we have considered, which was continued by the Act of 1820, ch. 191. Anything, therefore, in these laws, inconsistent with the provisions of subsequent legislation was clearly repealed thereby, and can have no effect in determining the question now presented.
But we have been referred to the Act of 1881, ch. 23, as
The order sustaining the caveat of the appellee is affirmed.
Order affirmed.