"AN ACT TO ALTER THE NAMES OF SIDNEY S. GAY, SAMUEL C. GAY, MARY G. GAY AND FABIUS H. GAY, OF WAKE COUNTY, AND TO LEGITIMATE THEM.
"Be it enacted, etc., That Sidney S. Gay, Samuel C. Gay, Mary G. Gay and Fabius H. Gay, the illegitimate children (29) of Burwell Perry, shall hereafter be known and distinguished by the names of Sidney S. Perry, Samuel C. Perry, Mary G. Perry and Fabius H. Perry, and by that name shall be made capable to sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded within any court within this State, and by that name shall be legitimated and made capable to take, possess and enjoy and inherit any estate, either real or personal, which may be devised or descend to them, in as full and ample a manner, to all intents and purposes, as if the said Sidney, Samuel, Mary and Fabius had been born in lawful wedlock; any law to the contrary notwithstanding."
The complainants alleged that, by the force of this act, they became, in law, legitimated as the children of the intestate, and were to be regarded as if born to him in lawful wedlock, and were entitled to succeed to his estate, real and personal, as his only children, heirs at law and next of kin; and they prayed for an account and distribution of his estate.
To this bill the defendant demurred, and, the demurrer being sustained and the bill dismissed, the plaintiffs appealed. The act under which the plaintiffs claim cannot be read without receiving a vivid impression that it was meant to legitimate these persons as the children of Burwell Perry. It states them to be "the illegitimate children of Burwell Perry," and then alters their name from Gay to Perry, and by this last name they are made legitimate and capable to take and inherit any estate, either real or personal, in as full and ample a manner as if they had been born in lawful wedlock. It seems to us that there can be but one answer to the questions: As whose children are they legitimated? From whom may they take and inherit property? It would have been more formal and *Page 19 professional to have written the act that they should be deemed the legitimate children of Burwell Perry and might succeed to him. But if the act had been so drawn, though the expression would have been more precise, yet the sense would not have been plainer than it is now; for certainly the legitimacy (30) enacted must take the place of the illegitimacy recited. This is a necessary implication from the recital; else why make such a recital at all? It is on this point that the present case differs from that of Drake v. Drake, 15 N.C. 110, in which it did not appear whose illegitimate offspring the persons were deemed by the Legislature to be. But here that fact is affirmed and necessarily controls the construction of the act and renders its meaning obvious. When thus rendered, it is our duty to execute the law, whether it be a public or private statute; for the difference between them is not in their obligation, but only in the rules of construction. The latter is never carried beyond its letter or plain implication. Here we think the implication a necessary one, from the language of the act, unaffected, of course, by the agency of the father in procuring it to be passed.
But, although the agency of the father can have no influence on the construction of the act, it may be material to give effect to it and make it operate on his property. We do not mean to say positively that the Legislature cannot make one who is out of the line of descents succeed to an ancestor against the consent of the ancestor, instead of him who would be heir, according to the general law. Perhaps if the power of disposition by the ancestor in his lifetime be not restricted, and as the law gives the capacity to inherit, it may not be beyond the power of the Legislature, by even a private law, passed before the death of the owner, to annul the capacity of one person to succeed and confer it on another. But if that can be done, it is not to be presumed to have been intended, without an explicit manifestation of such intent. On the contrary, the general principle is that private acts are in the nature of assurances at common law, and, therefore, that their operation is meant to depend on the consent of those persons who are in esse and whose estates are the subjects of the acts. Whatever difficulty there might be upon the question of legislative power in the case supposed, of a legitimation against the will of the ancestor, it does not exist in this case. The bill explicitly states the father's consent to the act, and it is admitted by the demurrer, and consequently his (31) estate is bound, not merely by the force of the statute, but by that and his own act and consent together.
The decree must be reversed and the demurrer overruled, and *Page 20 the cause remanded for an answer and other proceedings in the court below. The cost in both courts must be paid out of the assets of the intestate.
PER CURIAM. Decree reversed.
Cited: Lee v. Shankle, 51 N.C. 315.