DocketNumber: No. 8714SC96
Citation Numbers: 86 N.C. App. 463, 358 S.E.2d 118, 1987 N.C. App. LEXIS 2731
Judges: Orr, Phillips, Wells
Filed Date: 7/21/1987
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
As the caveator recognized in the court below and concedes here: In this state except as authorized by statute an illegitimate child has no legal right to share in the estate of its father; in view of the facts stated above the only statute that could possibly grant her that right is G.S. 29-19(b). This statute states that an illegitimate child may succeed to the estate of:
Any person who has acknowledged himself during his own lifetime and the child’s lifetime to be the father of such child in a written instrument executed or acknowledged before a certifying officer named in G.S. 52-10(b) and filed during his own lifetime and the child’s lifetime in the office of the clerk of superior court of the county where either he or the child resides.
Thus, the only question raised by this appeal is whether the court erred in ruling that the affidavits, exhibits and other materials presented at the hearing on propounder’s motion, when viewed in the most favorable light for the non-movant caveator, did not tend to show that her father, Mack Bunch, substantially complied with those provisions. Other than the established facts above stated caveator’s evidence only tends to show that: Caveator’s original North Carolina birth certificate states that she was born in Wake County on 10 June 1939, that her mother was Beatrice Hicks and her father was Earl Mac Hicks, whose whereabouts and occupation were then unknown. Caveator moved to New York in 1965 and while there her father took steps to get her birth certificate amended to show that she was his daughter; he sent her a North Carolina “Birth Certificate Amendment Application” form, which she had her mother, who lived in the Bronx, fill in and sign. And after the form was completed and signed by her mother the caveator sent it to her father. In that application, Ms. Hicks stated in substance that: She was unmarried when the child was born; when the child was just a baby she gave her to Mildred Bunch (the mother of the testator), and the child thereafter lived in Raleigh with Mrs. Bunch and always used the surname of Bunch; and all her records were in that name. A space on the application form designated “Name of Father” had “Earl Mac Hicks” typed in it; a space identified as Item 9 and designated “Item(s) Wrong Or Missing (At Time of Birth)” contains the words
The application does not meet the requirements of G.S. 2949(b) and we affirm the dismissal of caveator’s case. It contains no statement by Mack Bunch or anyone else that he was the father of the child; and even if his signature in the blank space involved could be construed to be an unambiguous acknowledgment of paternity, which it cannot, he did not swear to it before any official authorized to administer oaths, as the statute expressly requires. For that matter, the application does not even show that its purpose was to establish that Mack Bunch was the caveator’s father; the only reason stated in it for changing the child’s name was that she had lived with Mrs. Bunch and gone by that name since she was a baby. Thus, while Mack Bunch may very well have intended to formally acknowledge his paternity of the caveator, it cannot be deduced that he in fact ever did so in the manner that the statute requires.
Affirmed.