Skelly v. Skelly
Skelly v. Skelly
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal from a judgment determining the heirs of the deceased, and from an order denying a new trial. The trial court found that respondents, designated in the briefs as the New Orleans claimants, were the heirs of the deceased, and determined their respective shares as follows: To Daniel Skelly, of Jersey City, N. J., one-fourth; to Rose Ann Fox, of Jersey City, N. J., one-fourth; to Edward J. McGinnis, one-eighth; to Alice Rose McGinnis, of Sioux City, Iowa, one-eighth; to Mary Margaret Thompson, of New Orleans, Ea., one-eighth; to Annie McGinnis, Mary Frances McGinnis, Eillie Cecil Mc-Ginnis, and Paul McGinns, all of New Orleans, La., each one thirty-second. The judgment of the court directed the administrator to immediately turn over the estate to the attorneys for said claimants. The appellants are designated in the briefs as the Brooklyn claimants.
John Manning testified that he knew the deceased, meeting him first at Bismarck, Dale., in the latter part of 1875; that in 1876, he met deceased at Deadwood, and knew him intimately from that time until his death;_ that the' deceased remained continuously in the Black Hills from his arrival in 1875 until the time of his death, except for very brief absences in the last few years of his life; that the deceased had told him that he came to the Black Hills from the state of New York. James W. Allen testified that he had been intimately acquainted with deceased from 1876 until the time of the death, and that deceased had come to the Black Hills from the state of New York. Olaf Seim testified that he had been intimately acquainted with deceased for upwards of 20 years; that deceased had frequently referred to his earlier life; had told witness of sisters that resided in Brooklyn, N. Y., and also that he had a brother; witness was 'unable to recall their names; that he told witness about joining a fire company in Brooklyn, and about serving in the United States army during the Civil war, and that a short time prior to his death he told witness that his sisters resided in Brooklyn, N. Y. It does not appear from the record that the foregoing witnesses were called on behalf of either set of claimants.
Mary Margaret Thompson, daughter of Ann Skelly Mc-Ginnis, was born in New Orleans in 1868, and, after identifying the family, testified that her uncle, John FI. Skelly, came to' this country in 1849 or 1850; that he was in New Orleans in 1850; that he went thence to Jersey City, thence to Brooklyn about 40 years ago (1866); that her Aunt Bridget visited him in Brooklyn about 1873; that her Aunt Bridget told her just three months before her death “that Bridget’s brother, John H. Skelly, was in Deadwood; that she corresponded with him in Deadwood; that in 1885 she caused Alice Rose McGinnis to write a letter to John EL Skelly in Deadwood, S. D.; and that he sent Bridget some money.” Witness further testified that her mother, Ann, “was only sick four days. She took sick of a Sunday and died Wednesday morning June 6, 1876,” aged 36 years, but it appears from the calendar that June 6,1876, was on Tuesday. Attention to this discrepancy is called because her deposition fairly bristles with exact dates, and she appeared to be very sure of dates. It appears in the deposition of her sister that their mother died on June 6, 1877.
Alice Rose McGinnis, a sister of the last witness, testified that she was born in New Orleans in 1873, and that she was a sister in the Convent of the Good Shepherd at Sioux City, Iowa; that ■her mother, Ann, and her uncle, John H Shelly, come to this country together in 1842, landing at New Orleans; that they were the only members of the family -that c-ame over at that time; that her mother died in New Orleans, June 6, 1877; that she remembered when her uncle, John H. Shelly, called at their home in New Orleans; that she learned that he went to Deadwood, S- D., from Brooklyn, “about twenty^-eight years ag'o” (1878); that in 1885 she wrote him a letter addressed to John" H. Shelly, Deadwood, S. D., that she saw and read the answer to that letter written. tp her Aunt Bridget; that this aunt died in 1893; that she supposed the letter was destroyed. She did not testify as to its contents, nor that money was sent,
John Donohue, the only disinterested witness on behalf of the New Orleans claimants, testified that he was born in the year 1847; that he was at one time an engineer in the Convent of the Good Shepherd in New Orleans, when Bridget Hanneberry resided there; that he knew Bridget in the old country. He gave testimony fully identifying the John H. Shelly, whom he knew as a member of the family of the New Orleans claimants, and that he knew John H. Shelly in the town of Longford, Ireland; that they were boys together, and lived about five miles apart; that they used to meet every Saturday, that was market day, and very often met without going to the market, and that after market hours they would go in and settle up their business and have a minute’s talk about the business of the day and how the market went; that at the time John H. Shelly came to this country witness was 7 or 8 years old (upon cross-examination 6 or 7), and that John H. Shelly must have been 12 or 14, or maybe more; that there were two separate and distinct Shelly families in the county of Longford, Ireland; that the name John Shelly is a very common name in Ireland, and a common name in the county of Longford; that witness came to this country in 1869 or 1870;
It is a significant fact that nowhere in the testimony on behalf of the New Orleans claimants is any mention made that their John H. Skelly was ever in the Union army. If he had been, Bridget would surely have said something about it to Donohue, or to Mary Margaret Thompson, or to Alice Rose McGinnis. The testimony of Donohue also contradicts that of Mary Margaret Thompson in regard to the time John H. Skelly came to this country, and the John H. Skelly known by him could not have been in New Orleans in 1850. Stress is laid upon the fact that Alice Rose McGinnis was a sister in a convent as tending to make her testimony the more credible. We are not disposed to throw discredit upon her testimony in regard to the writing of the letter to John H. Skelly at Deadwood. Giving this full credence, the fact remains that she did not testify that the John H. Skelly of Deadwood acknowledged relationship with her or her Aunt Bridget, nor did she testify that he sent money to her Aunt Bridget, as testified to by Mary Marg-aret Thompson. The testimony as to the sending of money rests solely upon the testimony of the latter witness, who claimed that her Aunt Bridget so informed her three years before she died, and also that her sister Alice so
It' is stated in respondent’s brief: “it appears from the evidence, and it is conceded by all parties, that the John H. Skelly who died at Deadwood on the 23d day of October, 1903, was the only person of that name who ever -lived in Deadwood.” We find nothing in the record bearing out this statement, and it does net appear to be inserted in respondents’ brief, because they deem the statement of the contents in appellants’ brief to be imperfect and unfair. On previous pages they had supplied what was known under the former practice as ‘Respondents’ additional abstract,’ and this statement is not. a part of that, but it appears in the statement of respondents’ theory of the case.
It is noteworthy, also, in considering the testimony of appellants -that none of the witnesses on behalf of the New Orleans
In the view we take of the case it is not necessary to recapitulate the testimony on behalf of the Brooklyn claimants. It is fully as contradictory as is that above set forth. Suffice it to say that in our opinion the record likewise fails to show a preponderance of the evidence in their behalf. Being of that opinion, it would be improper to grant costs to appellants.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed, without costs, and the cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings according to law.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In re SKELLY'S ESTATE. SKELLY v. SKELLY
- Status
- Published