McManus v. Lynch
McManus v. Lynch
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The appellants contend that the court below erred in distributing this estate per stirpes of the maternal grandfather of the intestate, and therefore in dividing the estate into thirds and so distributing it; and, again, that the court erred in not distributing the intestate’s estate per capita among the first cousins and among the second cousins per stirpes of their parents, and therefore in not dividing the estate into fifths, and so distributing it. The determination of these questions depends upon the construction of the Code, secs. 948-950, and 955 [31 Stat. at L. 1342, 1343, chap. 854], relating to an intestate’s estate acquired by purchase.
Chapter 21 of the Code, Descents, is really the re-enactment of the Maryland act of 1786, chapter 45, an act to direct
The statute we must here interpret has been for more than a century the rule of inheritance in Maryland and in this Federal district alike. The interpretation uniformly given to it by the Maryland court of appeals, in the absence of a different construction by the courts of this District, is of very great weight. In Maxwell v. Seney, 5 Harr. & J. 25, where collateral relations contended for the lands of an intestate which he acquired by purchase, it was argued, as it is now argued in this case, that in the collateral line only those in equal degree, and none more remote than the children of brothers and sisters, can take, and that they must take per capita, and not per stirpes; but Judge Buchanan said: “Whatever would be the true construction of that branch of the act if it stood alone, the 4th section [in our Code sec. 955], the office of which is to ascertain who shall be considered as standing in the same degree, and the proportions to which they shall be respectively entitled, furnishes an interpretation that cannot be resisted, and is a full answer to any argument that can be drawn from the second section. If none could take but those in the same degree, it would follow that where there are brothers and sisters, and children of a deceased brother or sister, as the brothers and sisters could alone stand in equal degree they would take the whole estate, to the exclusion of the nephews and nieces. But this is obviated by the 4th section of the act, which, if it has any meaning, contemplates and provides for such a case by declaring the children of a deceased father or mother to be
In McComas v. Amos, 29 Md. 120, 132, Dr. Amos died intestate, seised of lands which he acquired by purchase, leaving only collateral relations, less remote, however, than in the case before us, and the Maryland act of 1820, chap. 191, limited the descent by the proviso “that there be no representation permitted among collaterals after brothers’ and sisters’ children.” Brothers and sisters referred to in this proviso, by the' English and Maryland courts have been construed to mean brothers and sisters of the intestate. In the Amos Case the heirs were all in equal degree of relationship to the intestate,- and it was contended that, by a correct interpretation of the statute to direct descents, they would inherit and take per capita,- or in equal portions, and that it is only when they stand in different degrees of relationship to the intestate that they inherit and take per
The primary object of the Maryland statute to direct descents was to prevent the land of an intestate from descending to the eldest son in exclusion of his brothers and sisters, and to make it descendible to all the children equally, and, Avhere there were no children of the intestate, to make it descend equally among
The representative principle, the principle which allows the children or remoter descendants of a dead person to stand in that person’s stead in a scheme of inheritance, was. fully adopted in the common law. The Maryland courts naturally recognized it in these cases concerning collateral relations.
In the case before us, the second Venerando Pullizzi takes by representation the same share of the estate as his father, Venerando Pullizzi, a son of the maternal grandfather of the intestate, would have been entitled to, namely, one third; and Ambrose Sevier Lynch, the son of Agatha Lynch, takes the same share that daughter of the maternal grandfather would have been entitled to, namely, one third; and Mary A. K. Mc-Manus, one of three children of Angela King, a daughter of the maternal grandfather, takes one third of the same one third share of the estate her mother, Angela King, would have been entitled to; while the one third of the same one third share, which her brother, Martin P. King, would have been entitled to, passes to his five children, and must be equally divided among such children; and, finally, the one third of the same one third share, to which George W. King, the deceased son of Angela King, would have been entitled, passes to his daughter, Edna B. King, by representation. Therefore the widow and two children of Venerando Pullizzi, and Ambrose Sevier Lynch, first cousins of the intestate, each take one third in the ■distribution of her estate; Mary A. K. McManus, another first ■cousin of the intestate, takes one third of one third; the five ■children of Martin P. King, who are second cousins of the intestate, are entitled to have one third of the same third of the distribution of the intestate’s estate divided equally amongst them; and Edna B. King, another second cousin of the intestate, takes the remaining third of the one third by right of representation. The auditor has so distributed this fund, and the learned court below committed no error in ratifying his report. 'The estate was properly distributed amongst those entitled ac
Appellants’ counsel relied upon Barnitz v. Casey, 7 Crunch, 456, 3 L. ed. 403. In that case Justice Story held that this Maryland statute to direct descents provided for three classes of cases: First, estates descended to the intestate on the part of the father; second, estates descended to the intestate on the part of the mother; third, estates vested in the intestate by purchase, and “not derived from or through either of his ancestors;” and therefore Justice Story held that in the case before him “a descent from brother to brother is not within the statute, and of course is a casus omissus, to be regulated by the common law.” Justice Story had before remarked that counsel on both sides had argued that the legislature intended to form a complete scheme of descents, and that the court ought not to construe any case to be a casus omissus if it could be avoided, but he decided that the case before him was an omission in the statute, and therefore to be regulated by the common law.
The case in 7th Cranch has no application to the question before us. It was decided in 1813. Now, in 1817, Judge Buchanan delivered the opinion in Hall v. Jacotos, 4 Harr. & J. 256, and, apparently without knowledge of Justice Story’s decision in 7th Oranch, considered the same question and reached the same conclusion, for Judge Buchanan said: “This, then, being neither the case of an estate descended to the intestate on the part of the father, an estate descended to the intestate on the part of the mother, nor an estate by purchase, but a descent from brother to brother, it is not within the act of assembly, and is a casus omissus, subject to the rules of the common law governing descents.” The same Judge Buchanan
It is true that in none of the Maryland cases are the collateral relations concerned exactly in the same degrees as are the collaterals of the intestate in the case before us, yet it is also true that in each of those cases the Maryland court was required, where the intestate’s seisin was by purchase, to interpret a clause of similar import to the one we here interpret; namely, “then to the grandfather on the part of the mother, and, if no such grandfather, then to his descendants in equal degree equally.” And in each case, though the degree of collateral relationship differed, that court construed a clause in other respects of like import with the one we have just quoted, and determined that sec. 4 of act of 1786, chap. 45, identical with our Code, sec. 955, qualified and explained provisions like the one we last quoted. The Maryland cases all maintain that the rule of per capita distribution, here urged by the appellant, ignores the rule of representation prescribed by the law, and, in the words of Judge Alvey, “would not only do violence to the language employed, but would be adopting a principle that the legislature has shown a manifest design to exclude.”
The judgment of the learned court below must be affirmed. In a case like this, however, we think all of the costs of this appeal should be paid out of the remainder of the fund hereafter to be distributed. Judgment affirmed.
Reference
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- McMANUS v. LYNCH
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- STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION; INTESTATE SUCCESSION; STATUTE OF DESCENTS. 1. Where a statute under interpretation here has been for more than a century the rule of inheritance in Maryland and in this District alike, the interpretation uniformly given to the rule by the court of last resort in Maryland will be here given very great weight, in the absence of a different construction by our courts. 2. Under D. C. Code, sees. 940, 950 (31 Stat. at L. 1342, 1343, chap. 854), providing that, where an intestate has no nearer relatives, his real estate shall descend to the descendants of his maternal grandfather “in equal degree equally,” the distribution is per stripes of the grandfather, and not per capita. 3. H died intestate, leaving no issue, brothers, sisters, father, mother, or paternal grandfather, but only descendants of a maternal grandfather, A. A had children, B, C, D, and E, all of whom are dead. B had a child, P. C had a child G-. D had a child, the intestate H. E had children, I, J, and K. I died leaving five children. K. died leaving a child. Under D. C. Code, secs. 940-950, relating to the descent of intestates’ real estate, H’s property will be divided as follows: One third to F, one third to G-, one third of one third to J, one third of one third to the child of K, and. one fifth of one third of one third to each of the five children of I.