The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff commenced this action to quiet title to certain real property in Montgomery county. Judgment was rendered in her favor and against defendant Edna Marchant, who appeals. All the other defendants filed disclaimers.
On July 10,1915, John A. Marchant owned an undivided one-half interest in the land in controversy. On that day he. was shot and killed by defendant Edna Marchant, who was then his wife. They had no children. Edna Marchant was afterward convicted of manslaughter in the third degree for killing her husband.
1. Edna Marchant claims that she is the only heir of John A. Marchant, deceased, and that she is, therefore, the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the rteal property. She claims that section 3856 of the General Statutes of 1915 does
“Any person who shall hereafter b,e convicted of killing or of conspiring with another to kill, or of procuring to be killed, any other person from whom such person so killing or conspiring to, kill or procuring said killing would inherit the property, real, personal, or mixed, or any part thereof, belonging to such deceased person, at the time of death, or who would take said property by deed, will or otherwise, at the death of the deceased, shall be denied all right, interest and estate in or to said property or any part thereof, and the same shall descend and be distributed to such other person or persons as may be entitled thereto by the laws of descent and distribution, as if the person so convicted were dead.”
In McAllister v. Fair, 72 Kan. 533, 84 Pac. 112, decided in 1906, this court declared that a husband inherits his intestate wife’s property, although he killed her for' the purpose of acquiring that property. The 1907 session of the legislature passed the statute quoted, apparently for the purpose of changing the rule of law declared by the court. The language of the statute is broad and includes every person who may take property. from a deceased person in either of the ways named in the statute. The statute says any person who shall hereafter be convicted of killing any other person, etc. A conviction for manslaughter is a conviction for killing.- John A. Marchant was killed by his wife, who shot him. That act was within the statute.
2. It is contended that Edna Marchant did not inherit nor otherwise take from her husband. Then how does she claim any right to the property? If she has any right, that right comes from our statute of descents and distributions. She acquires no right to her -husband’s property, except by virtue of that statute. It does not matter whether that right is acquired by inheritance or by contract growing out of the marriage relation. Edna Marchant either inherited the .property or otherwise took it from her husband, unless section 3856 prevents her from acquiring it. That section controls, and prevents her from taking the property under any circumstances.
3. The constitutionality of the statute is questioned. It is argued that it violates sections 10 and 12 of the bill of rights, and section 6 of article 6 of the state constitution, and that it also violates the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the
The judgment is affirmed.