6 Vt. 83 | Vt. | 1834
The opinion of the court was pronounced by
— The only question presented in this case is, whether “ one illegitimate child can inherit to another illegitimate child of the same mother.”
The 77th section of the probate act declares, that “ Bastards shall also be capable of inheriting and transmitting inheritance on the part of the mother, as if legally begotten of such mother.” What language could be more intelligible ? What can it'mean, unless it be that among mothers and children of this description, property shall be inherited — that is, attainable by succession, and transmissible by inheritance ? This is an innovation upon the common law, and there are many such in our law relating to the descent and distribution of estates. — One in this very section, making the common law give place to the civil, in case the parents of illegitimate children afterwards intermarry.
It has been urged that at most Rhoda was a sister of the half-blood to Thomas. It has been decided in Brown vs. Brown, 1 Chip. R. 362, that the half-blood under our laws inherit equally with the whole-blood, both real and personal property, the same as they do personal property in England, under the statute of distribution, the feudal doctrine which excludes the half-blood from taking lands by descent, never having been adopted here. Besides as bastards are the children of no father, if would seem difficult to show that these are children of different fathers. It has also been said, that the word “ inheriting,” in the 77th section, can only apply to lands — such being the common law definition. But by the 78th section of the statute before mentioned, it is enacted that the personal estate of those who die intestate, shall be distributed in the same manner in which real estate descends by said act.— ‘ This removes the objection.
Finally, it has been said that the statute could never intend to give such great privileges to these illegal children,
The judgment of the court is, that the said Rhoda Fosby is the heir at law of Thomas Jackson, the intestate, and is entitled to the personal estate of which he died possessed.