delivered the opinion of the Court.
It certainly is a rule of the English common law, that brothers and sisters of the half-blood shall not inherit to each other — that, if a man die seised of an estate of inheritance, leaving a brother of the half-blood, but no heirs of the whole blood, the estate shall not go *361to the brother of the half-blood, but shall escheat to the Lord, for Want of heirs. This rule was derived from the Constitution of Feuds, which limited the descent to the heirs of the whole blood of the first feudatory. Where there were children, the eldest male took the whole real estate 5 if there were no children, the estate according to the rules of descent by which the heir was ascertained, often went to solne remote relation, passing by those who were much nearer of kin. In this State it is provided by statute, that the real estate shall descend to all the children, and their legal representatives, if anj. be dead. And if the intestate have no child or children, at the time of his decease, such estateshall descend, equally to the next of kin, in equal degree, and those who represent them. And the father living is expressly placed in the first degree, agreeaably to the civil law; whereas by the common la w the father could not inherit to his child. By our law it is also provided that personal estate shall be distributed in the same manner to the next of kin; so that by our law the real and personal estate go to the same persons ; whereas by the English law, they often took different directions.
In the Act for the settlement of testate and intestate estates, passed 8th March, 1787, are, among others, the following provisions— ie And the remainder bath of the real and personal estate, in proportion as aforesaid, to every of the brothers and sisters of the intestate, of the whole blood, and such as legally represent them: or, if there be no such kindred, then to the parent or parents of the intestate. And if there be no parents, then in proportion as aforesaid, to every of the brothers and sisters of the half-blood of the intestate : but, if there be no parent, brother or sister, then in proportion (as aforesaid, to every of the next of kin to the intestate in equal degree, and those who legally represent them: kindred of the whole blood to take in preference to kindred of the half-blood in the same degree.”
The framers of this statute seem to have had in view, both the common law of descent, and the English statute of distributions, enlarging the common law regulating the descent of real estate, by rendering kindred of the half-blood capable of inheriting, and restraining the provisions of the statute of distributions in favor of the half-blood, by postponing them to kindred of the whole blood.
*362Our present statute, passed on the 10th March, 17971 which regulates the descent of real estate, giving the personal estate to the same heirs, has adopted the general principles, and in many instances the expressions of the English statutes of the 22d and 23d of Charles tl. commonly called the statute of distributions. The , , , ,. , . , framers of this statute had the English statute in view, and the construction which had been given to that statute.
About five years after the passing of the English statute, this point was decided in the Court of Common Pleas in favour of the half-blood in the case Smith vs. Tracy, 1 Mod. 209 — 2 Mod. 204. A man died leaving issue by two venters, three sons by the first wife, and two daughters by the second. One of the brothers died, and the eldest surviving brother took administration, and the Judge of the Consistory Court ordered distribution to the sisters of the half-blood. The administrator prayed a prohibition, but the Judges of the Common Pleas were unanimously of opinion with the Judge of the Consistory Court, and refused a prohibition. It was afterwards settled in tjre case Crocker vs. Watts, upon appeal to the House of Lords, that those of the half-blood should have an equal share with those of the whole'blood. Indeed the question had long been virtually decided, in the construction of the statutes of Ed. III. and Hen. VIII. directing the Ordinary to commit the administratipn of the effects of a deceased intestate to the next of kin. Upon these statutes it had long been settled, that the brothers and sisters of the half-blood, were equally entitled to administration with those of the whole blood.
The present case, however, does not involve the question whether the half-blood stand in the same degree of kindred as brothers of the whole blood, but whether they are at all akin to each other. They have, indeed, as it respects each other, but half the blood of the common stock from which we are to reckon in this case. But, whether two persons are of kin to each other, does not depend on the quantity of common blood, but on their aclual derivation from the common stock. Second, third and fourth cousins, are as really of kin to each other as father and child, but more remote in degree. V iewed in this light, it is unnecessary to resort to precedents to support the claim of the appellants; common sense and common feelings are sufficient to decide against every authority short of a positive law.
*363The Court, therefore, reverse the decree of the Court of Probate Caledonia, in this case, and order that distribution be made of a moiety of the 1815/’ estate of the intestate, to and among the appellants according to law.