Garcia's Estate, In re
Decision Date | 01 November 1949 |
Citation | 210 P.2d 841,34 Cal.2d 419 |
Court | California Supreme Court |
Parties | In re GARCIA'S ESTATE. MARSHALL v. ROGERS. S F. 17770. |
Benjamin C. Mickle and A. B. Bianchi, San Francisco, for appellant.
J. J. Henderson and Donald E. Wachhorst, Sacramento, as amici curiae on behalf of appellant.
Donahue, Richards, Rowell & Gallagher and A. R. Rowell, Oakland, for respondent.
Petitioner has appealed from a judgment entered on the pleadings precluding him from participating as an heir in the distribution of his paternal aun't estate as well as from an order denying his motion to amend his petition after judgment. The order is not appealable under the provisions of section 1240 of the Probate Code, and the appeal therefrom must be dismissed. The petition on which judgment was entered against petitioner on the pleadings alleged that although born the illegitimate son of decedent's brother, he had been legitimated by his father under the provisions of section 230 of the Civil Code. Respondent, administratrix of the estate of petitioner's aunt, contends that under section 255 of the Probate Code petitioner cannot inherit any part of the aunt's estate because his parents never intermarried.
Section 230 of the Civil Code provides: Section 255 of the Probate Code provides: The issue, therefore, is whether section 255 of the Probate Code qualifies section 230 of the Civil Code and governs the inheritance of all persons born illegitimate whether or not they are subsequently legitimated.
The cases involving the right of a person born illegitimate to inherit directly from his father have uniformly held that section 230 is not qualified by section 255; that the two sections provide alternate methods by which a person may become the heir of his father. In re Estate of Pico, 52 Cal. 84, 87; In re Jessup, 81 Cal. 408, 421-422, 21 P. 976, 22 P. 742, 1028, 6 L.R.A. 594; In re Estate of Flood, 217 Cal. 763, 767, 21 P.2d 579; In re Estate of Lund, 26 Cal.2d 472, 482, 159 P.2d 643, 162 A.L.R. 606. It is clear, therefore, that with regard to direct inheritance from the father, the words 'illegitimate child' in section 255 are applicable, not to every child who is born illegitimate, but only to children, born illegitimate, who have not been legitimated under either section 215 or section 230 of the Civil Code. These words must have the same meaning with regard to inheritance through the father if their meaning has any consistency. Otherwise the restrictive language of section 255 * would conflict with the provision of section 230 of the Civil Code that a child legitimated by adoption is thereafter 'deemed for all purposes legitimate', and the provision of section 215 of the Civil Code that 'A child born before wedlock becomes legitimate by the subsequent marriage of its parents.' A child who is 'deemed for all purposes legitimate' cannot be regarded as still illegitimate for some purposes, and a child who has become legitimate can no longer be regarded as an 'illegitimate child.'
The statutes are not in conflict when the words 'illegitimate child' are interpreted as referring only to children born illegitimate who have not been legitimated under the provisions of the Civil Code. Although this interpretation renders some of the restrictive language of section 255 superfluous, it is supported by the legislative history of the statutes regarding legitimation and inheritance by illegitimates as well as the cases involving the rights of direct inheritance of those born illegitimate. See, 29 Cal.L.Rev. 185, 187-191. The forerunner of section 255 of the Probate Code was enacted in 1850 (Cal.Stats.1850, pp. 219-220) to provide a method by which a person born illegitimate could inherit from his mother, and...
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