The statute of Tennessee of 1865, c. 40, § 8, declaring
that children of slave marriages should be legitimately entitled to
inherit, as it has been construed by the highest court of that
state as not extending the right of inheritance beyond lineal
descendants of the parents, is not unconstitutional under the equal
protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Inheritance is not a natural or absolute right, but the creation
of statute, and is governed by the
lex rei sitae.
The rights of one claiming real property as heir, through an
alien, a bastard or a slave, must be determined by the local law.
Blythe v. Hinckley, 180 U. S. 333.
While a colored freedman in Tennessee could dispose of property
acquired during freedom by deed or will and it descended to his
issue, if any, if he died intestate, if no issue survived, it
passed under the terms of the Act of 1865 to his widow, if she
survived, and not to his collateral relatives.
The facts, which involve the construction and constitutionality
under the Fourteenth Amendment of certain provisions of the laws of
Tennessee in regard to the descent of real property, are stated in
the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE LURTON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a question of collateral descent arising under the
Tennessee statutes.
Page 234 U. S. 616
One John Jones, a colored freedman, died in 1889, the owner of a
tract of 87 acres of land lying in Shelby County, Tennessee, upon
which he and his wife had lived for many years. He died intestate
and without issue. The title to the land was claimed by his widow,
the defendant in error, Marguerite Jones, who has, since the death
of John Jones, intermarried with the other defendant in error,
Albert Jones. Her claim was rested upon § 4165, Shannon's
Compilation of Tennessee Laws, which provides that, if one die
intestate, "leaving no heir at law capable of inheriting the real
estate, it shall be inherited by the husband or wife in fee
simple." The plaintiff in error, Will Jones, contested the claim of
the widow, contending that the land passed to the surviving
brothers and sisters of the intestate, under whom, through
quitclaim deeds, he claimed the title. The widow's bill was for the
purpose of cancelling these deeds as clouds upon her title. The
Tennessee court sustained her bill and adjudged that, the intestate
having died without issue and without heirs at law capable of
inheriting, his real estate passed to his widow under § 4165,
supra.
The deeds denounced as clouds upon the widow's title were
attacked upon a number of grounds, among them fraud in their
procuration. The decree ordering their cancellation was apparently
based only upon the ground that their makers, assuming them to be
legitimate full brothers and sisters of the intestate John Jones,
were sons and daughters of a born slave and themselves born slaves,
and as such were not his heirs within the meaning of the Tennessee
statutes of descent.
There is a Tennessee statute of descent which provides that the
land of an intestate shall pass to his brothers and sisters in case
the owner die without issue, and the contention is that, if this
statute preferring the brothers and sisters of an intestate dying
without issue over the husband or widow be construed as applying
only to brothers and
Page 234 U. S. 617
sisters born free, it discriminates against those born slaves,
and thereby violates that equal protection of the law guaranteed by
the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution.
This provision of the Tennessee canon of descent by which the
brothers and sisters of an intestate dying without issue take his
real estate is as old as the state, and comes from the common law.
It does not distinguish in terms between brothers and sisters born
free and those born slaves. Neither does it distinguish between
those who are born bastards and those born in wedlock, and those
who are aliens and those who are not. Nevertheless, neither a
bastard nor an alien has inheritable blood, nor are they capable of
inheriting as heirs unless by aid of some statute: 2 Kent's Comm.
*211; 2 Blackstone's Commentaries *249;
Levy v.
M'Cartee, 6 Pet. 102. The civil status of slaves in
Tennessee, as well as in other states in which slavery existed, was
such as to disable them from inheriting or transmitting property by
descent. Thus, it was said:
"They cannot take property by descent or purchase, and all they
find and all they hold belongs to the master. They cannot make
lawful contracts, and they are deprived of civil rights. They are
assets in the hands of executors for the payment of debts."
2 Kent's Commentaries, 11th ed. 278, *253;
Jackson v.
Lervey, 5 Cow. 397. Slaves therefore were not within the
meaning and effect of the statutes of descent, and no descent from
or through a slave was possible except as provided by some special
statute. The rule was the same as to aliens and illegitimates.
After the emancipation of the slaves of the South, the statutes
of inheritance were extended in many states so as to confer upon
the children of parents born in slavery the right to inherit from
their parents. But these enlargements of the canon of descent
extended only to lineal descendants, and did not embrace
collaterals. The Tennessee
Page 234 U. S. 618
statute, which was claimed in the court below to be broad enough
to embrace collateral relatives, is that of 1865-66, c. 40, §
5, carried into Shannon's Compilation as § 4179. That act
declared that slaves who, within the state, had lived together as
man and wife should be regarded as lawfully married, and that the
children of such slave marriages should be
"legitimately entitled to an inheritance in any property
heretofore acquired or that may be hereafter acquired, to as full
an extent as children of white citizens are entitled by the laws of
this state."
But this statute has been more than once construed as not
extending the right of inheritance beyond the lineal descendants of
the parents.
Shepherd v. Carlin, 99 Tenn. 64;
Carver
v. Maxwell, 110 Tenn. 75. In
Shepherd v. Carlin,
supra, the question here presented was decided. Agnes Lee, a
colored woman, born in slavery, died intestate and without issue.
Her land was claimed by her surviving husband under § 4165,
Shannon's Compilation, heretofore referred to, and by her niece as
her only collateral relative. The court held that the right to
inherit the real estate of an intestate born in slavery had been
extended only in favor of lineal descendants, and that collaterals
possessed no inheritable blood. To the same effect are many cases,
among them:
Tucker v. Bellamy, 98 N.C. 31;
Jones v.
Hoggard, 108 N.C. 178;
Williams v. Kimball, 35 Fla.
49.
Inheritance is governed by the
lex rei sitae. It is not
a natural or absolute right, but the creation of statute law. If
one claim the right to succeed to the real property of another as
heir, and his right is denied because he must trace his pedigree or
title to or through an alien, a bastard, or a slave, the question
is one to be determined by the local law.
Cope v. Cope,
137 U. S. 682;
Levy v. M'Cartee, supra; Blythe v. Hinckley, 180 U.
S. 333. In
Levy v. M'Cartee, supra, the
question was one of inheritance, the
Page 234 U. S. 619
plaintiff tracing his pedigree through an alien ancestor. After
first deciding that a question of inheritance to land in New York
was one to be determined by the law of that state, the Court held
first, that an alien had no inheritable blood, and could neither
take land himself by descent, nor transmit it to others; second,
that, under the law of New York, one citizen of the state could not
inherit in the collateral line of another when he must make his
pedigree or title through a deceased alien ancestor.
It is true that the land of the intestate John Jones was
acquired when he was a freedman. Under the law of the state when he
acquired it, he had the right to dispose of it by deed or will. If
he died intestate, leaving issue, it descended to such issue. But
if he left no such descendants, it passed, by the express terms of
the statute, to his widow.
We are unable to see in the Tennessee statute of descent any
such denial of the equal protection of the law as is prohibited by
the Fourteenth Amendment.
The decree is accordingly affirmed.