I shall refer in this memorandum only to such facts as are essential to a consideration of the issue of egitimacy. It is unnecessary to mention any name other than that of the decedent.
Under paragraph 5 of the will the remainder was given to the grandnieces or grandnephews of the decedent, who survived her two nieces and nephews. There was only one grandniece and she predeceased the survivor of the niece and nephew. The situation that arose upon the death of the survivor of the nieces and nephews *99was not provided for in the will. Therefore, the testatrix died intestate as to the entire remainder. It vested in those who were the heirs at law and next of kin of the testatrix at the time of her death. Clark v. Cammann, 160 N. Y. 315; Grinnell v. Howland, 51 Misc. Rep. 132. She left a nephew and a niece and a daughter of a deceased niece. The question is whether this grandniece of the testatrix was one of the heirs at law and next of kin. Her legitimacy is the real issue.
She was born out of wedlock February 5, 1882. The next day, February 6, 1882, her parents were married. This marriage was annulled for duress by the New York Supreme Court, June 23, 1883. The annulment decree provided that the marriage “ is wholly null and void from the date of this judgment * * *.” Chapter 531, Laws of 1895, provided that “All illegitimate children whose parents have heretofore intermarried, or shall hereafter intermarry, shall thereby become legitimatized and shall be considered legitimate for all purposes.” The testatrix died in 1897 when this statute was in effect. The act was retroactive in its operation. It did not disturb any vested rights under the will because none existed until the death of the testatrix in 1897 subsequent to its enactment. It is contended that the annulment of the marriage operated to prevent the child from being legitimatized under the express language of the statute.
I am of the opinion that the illegitimate was legitimatized by this legislation. The statute expressly applies where the parents “ have heretofore intermarried.” To warrant a holding that a prior marriage was no marriage at'all I am inclined to think such prior marriage must have been polygamous, incestuous or of some similar character prohibited by law. This was the view taken by the Court of Appeals in Olmsted v. Olmsted, 190 N. Y. 458, 467, where under facts different from those herein the court referred to this statute as follows: “As we have already stated, the statute was designed only for such persons as were free from legal obstacles preventing their marriage * * *.” In that case, a prior lawful marriage was the legal obstacle and the children were held illegitimate. The controlling reason for the reversal of the very able and humane decision of the majority of the Appellate Division (118 App. Div. 69) was that remainders already vested would be divested. No such situation arises here.
The parties to this marriage were capable of contracting and the marriage was not in violation of any law. If the annulment proceeding had not been brought, the marriage would have continued valid and binding. The decree of annulment did not annul the marriage ab initio. The evident acquiescence of the parties as *100indicated by the terms of'the decree shows that the marriage was deemed valid from February 6, 1882, the date of the ceremony, to June 23, 1883, the date of the decree. What is called the presumption of legitimacy is said to be one of the strongest known to the law. The courts have frequently applied it. Matter of Biersack, 96 Misc. Rep. 161, and cases therein cited. This rule requires the court to resolve every close question of evidence in favor of legitimacy. By analogy, it should prevent a finding of illegitimacy based on fine-spun reasoning, and highly technical distinctions in apparent avoidance of the plain words of a statute.
The ceremonial marriage and the provisions of the decree of annulment ought to be sufficient answer to the contention that there never was a marriage within the .intent of the statute. The statute was enacted for a humane purpose. Its intent was benign and beneficent. It should be construed in like spirit. Because of the circumstances above referred to I think the marriage was in the nature of a voidable one. A clear statement of the difference between a void and a voidable marriage is found in the opinion of Mr. Justice Greenbaum in Houle v. Houle, 100 Misc. Rep. 28, a case that is distinguishable, but helpful, because it involved an application of. the statute in question.
In holding that this daughter of the niece of the testatrix was legitimate, I find that she was entitled to the share of the remainder to which .her mother would have been entit’ed had she survived the testatrix. Therefore, the infant represented by the special guardian does not take through his mother. He takes from his mother, who survived the testatrix and whose interest had vested in her lifetime. This vital fact should be kept clearly in mind in reading opinions in cases like Matter of Lauer, 76 Misc. Rep. 117, where the illegitimate claimed the right to inherit from a decedent through the illegitimate’s mother.
Tax costs and settle decree on notice directing distribution in accordance with the above memorandum.
Decreed accordingly.