Court Opinion

ID: 6657952
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:59:23.522057+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:04:37.949460
License: Public Domain

Duffie, 0.
Tbe subject matter in. controversy in this case is tbe estate of one Josiab Webb, who died in Custer county, Nebraska, leaving as bis estate a quarter section of land. This estate is claimed by tbe children of three different women, all having tbe same father. Tbe case was submitted to the district court on tbe pleadings, and, from a judgment excluding Jeremiah Shores from any part in tbe estate, an appeal has been taken.
Tbe facts as disclosed by tbe pleading of Jeremiah Shores, and from tbe statements of which bis rights must be determined, are briefly these: All the parties involved are of African descent, and were slaves in the state of North Carolina until emancipated by the war of the rebellion. The relation of the parties is as follows: Moses Shores, the father of all the children, while in a state of slavery lived with one Fannie Shores as husband and wife, but whether they were married according to the custom prevailing among slaves or in any other manner is not known. Jeremiah Shores, the appellant, was a result of their cohabitation. Subsequently to the birth *595of Jeremiah Shores, Moses, his father, cohabited with Hannah Webb, and as a result of that union there was born Josiali Webb, whose estate is in'question, and. Moses Speese, now deceased, but whose estate is represented by numerous heirs. At a still later date Moses Shores cohabited with Patsy Davis, and as a result of that union there were born John Wesley Shores, Mary Hauser and Elizabeth Stimpson. These various children of Moses Shores, under the custom which obtained in the slave states, each took the name of the master of their mother, and this accounts for the discrepancy in the names of the children of Moses Shores. The pleading of Jeremiah Shores charges the children of Moses Shores born to him from Hannah Webb and Patsy Davis as being illegitimate, while these children assert that they are the legitimate children of Moses Shores, and allege that Jeremiah is illegitimate. The court on the pleadings alone, in the absence of any evidence, found the following: “It appearing from the pleadings that Moses Speese was a brother of the deceased, that they had a common mother, and that John Wesley Shores, Mary Hauser and Elizabeth Stimson, the former a brother and the latter being each sisters of the deceased of the half blood, are entitled as a matter of law to inherit the land in question; it further appearing that Moses Speese is dead, and that his heirs are Susan Speese, his widow, William H. Speese, John W. Speese, Joseph Speese, Radford Speese, Sarah Taylor, Charles Speese and Earl Speese, his children, it is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that said heirs of Moses Speese together and jointly take and have an undivided one-fourtli interest in said real estate.” It does not appear from the pleadings that Moses, Shores lived with any of the three women mentioned, except in the state of North Carolina, and it is distinctly charged that Hannah Webb and Patsy Davis both died in North Carolina, Hannah Webb in 1855, while a slave, and Patsy Davis soon after the close of the war of the rebellion. It is further alleged in the pleading of Jeremiah Shores that his father *596and mother, Moses and Fannie Shores, lived together as husband and wife after their emancipation, and from this circumstance the claim, is made on behalf of Jeremiah Shores that he became their legitimate child. TVe do not see how his being made legitimate can affect the case or give him any interest in the estate of Josiah Webb. Tn North Carolina slaves could neither legally marry nor own or inherit property. Tucker v. Bellamy, 98 N. Car. 31, 4 S. E. 34. Even in those slave states where a marriage custom among slaves prevailed, marriage was an obligation of such imperfect character that a separation of the parties at or before emancipation was deemed a divorce. As stated in 1 Bishop, Marriage and Divorce (6th ed.), sec. 163: “If the law takes cognizance' of slave marriages, it must also of these slave divorces.” In this view of the case, we are driven to the conclusion, looking at the pleadings alone upon which the case was tried, that' the children born to the several women with whom Moses Shores lived in North Carolina were each and all illegitimate, and that the estate in question must be disposed of under our statute as the estate of an illegitimate child. McDowell v. Sapp, 39 Ohio St. 558; Butler v. Butler, 163 Ill. 451. Section 4932, Ann. St. 3907, is in the following language: “If an illegitimate child shall die intestate, without lawful issue, his estate shall descend to his mother, or, in case of her decease, to her heirs at law.”
Josiah Webb, whose estate is in dispute, died intestate without lawful issue, and his mother departed this life many years prior to his death. He had a full brother, Moses Speese, who died many years previous to the death of Webb, and whose children are now claiming his estate. Moses Speese, if living, would take the estate, as he would be the only remaining heir of his mother, Hannah Webb, but as he is not living his children represent him and take as his representatives. We cannot see how John W. Shores, Mary Hauser or Elizabeth Stimpson have any interest in this estate under our statute, as their mother never was an heir of Hannah Webb, the mother of Josiah *597Webb, whose estate is under consideration. Neither could Jeremiah Shores, the child of Fannie Shores, claim the estate, as his mother could not inherit from Hannah Webb, and whether he was legitimate or illegitimate is immaterial to the question in controversy. The fact that the court awarded an interest in the estate to the heirs of Patsy Davis is not a matter of which Jeremiah Shores can complain, as under no circumstances could he have an interest in the estate, and, as the children of Moses Speese, the legal heirs of Josiah Webb, make no complaint of the distribution made by the district court, the judgment of that court should be affirmed, and we so recommend.
Epperson and Good, GO., concur.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.