
    Frank M. Tout, Appellee, v. Mary E. Woodin and Others, Appellants.
    Parent and child: illegitimate relationship: evidence. In this ac-1 tion to establish plaintiff’s alleged rights as an illegitimate son and heir to decedent’s estate, the evidence is reviewed and held to ■show that plaintiff was the son of decedent.
    Same: recognition: evidence. The recognition by a putative father 2 of his illegitimate child, to be such as to entitle the child to inherit, must be general and notorious; but it need not have been universal or made known to all, or to a majority of the community. It is sufficient if the father frankly admitted the relationship whenever there was occasion for him to speak, and made no effort to conceal the same, even though many of his friends and acquaintances had no knowledge of such recognition. Evidence held to show recognition.
    Same: paternity: evidence. Statements of the mother of an ille3 gitimate child, made at the time of its birth and repeatedly thereafter, that decedent was the father of her child, were admissible as tending to show its paternity.
    
      Appeal from Keolculc District Court. — Hon. W. G-. Clements, Judge.
    Friday, October 25, 1912.
    
      Plaintiff claims to be tbe illegitimate son of Evan H. Sldllman, deceased, who in his lifetime recognized such relationship. Sldllman died without will, and this action was begun to establish plaintiff’s alleged rights as an heir of the estate. Decree as prayed, and defendants appeal.
    
      —Affirmed.
    
    
      Stockman & Baker, and J. A. Devitt, for appellants.
    
      John O. Malcolm and Geo. G. True, and D. W. Hamilton, for appellee.
   Weaver, J.

— I. The law applicable to eases of this class is not the subject of serious dispute between counsel, but, concerning its effect as applied to the case at bar, there naturally a wide divergence of opinion- The evidence on part of the plaintiff ^ ^ Ev¡m Skillman wag born in the year 1850, and, except for a period (as hereinafter noted) when he was under restraint in a hospital for the insane, he lived quite continuously at Sigourney, Iowa. In the year 1894 he married one Emma Bunyon, who died without issue. Skillman died without direct heirs, unless plaintiff is adjudged entitled to stand in that relation. The defendants are the collateral relatives of the deceased, who will inherit the estate if plaintiff’s claim is rejected. That plaintiff is the son. of one Laura Belle Myers, an unmarried woman, and was born in Sigourney in 1818, appears to be conceded'. When about six months old, plaintiff was adopted by one Basil Tout, and was thereafter known by the name of the adopting parent. About the time of his adoption, Miss Myers is said to have married one Hall and removed from Sigourney, but whether such marriage took place is not certain. She is not now living. In support of the claim that Skillman was father of the child, the testimony of several witnesses was offered tending to show that Skillman visited and waited upon Miss Myers for a considerable period before her pregnant condition became known to her friends and neighbors. That she frequently charged Skillman with the paternity of the boy is also shown. If witnesses are to be believed, he spoke of plaintiff as his child or his boy to the mother of Miss Myers, to his associates, and to his acquaintances and friends McClenahan, Gears, McCoy, Grimes, Covey, Lyons, Webb, Lowe, Newkirk, Osborne, Benton, McConnell, Crowe, Bootin, Brown and Seiner. To others he said he had a child — or had a boy — over at What Cheer, the place where Tout resided, but did not always name or point him out. To other witnesses he said he would have married Belle (plaintiff’s mother) if it had not been for his folks. It appears that, when the pregnant condition of Miss Myers became known, she went or was sent to the county poor farm, where she remained until she recovered from her confinement. Members of the family then in charge of the farm testify that, after plaintiff was born, Skillman visited the mother while she was still in bed, held the child in his arms, and brought or sent goods or supplies for its use. Another witness, a woman residing iff Sigourney, testifies that after plaintiff had been adopted by Tout, and before his mother removed from Iowa, the latter, returning to Sigourney from a neighboring town, was met at the station by Skillman, who brought her to the witness’ home, where, at his request, she was kept overnight. In speaking of her to the witness he called her “my girl.” On the following morning he went away with her. Other circumstances are relied upon to corroborate or strengthen plaintiff’s theory of the facts, but we think it unnecessary to pursue the recitation any farther. In defense, two of Skillman’s sisters, defendants herein, deny that the deceased at any time in conversation with them or in their presence ever said or admitted that he was plaintiff’s father. In further pursuance of the same line of testimony witnesses Scliipper, Funk, Kleinschmidt, Namur, Ford, Neas, Lewis, Dern, Pinkerton, Mackey, Kerr, Franken,- Johnston, Linder, Jessup, Carr, Paff, Bice, and Goldthwait, business men, professional men, farmers, and others who knew Skill-man in his lifetime, and had more or less intimate acquaintance with him, all testify that they never heard him admit the paternity of the child. But one witness, North, ever heard him deny that the child was his. It was also shown that in June, 1894, Skillman was adjudged a proper subject for treatment in the hospital for the insane, and was there confined a short time, when he returned home. In the following year he was recommitted to the hospital, where he remained substantially all the time until his death in 1908. He left an estate valued at from $20,000 to $25,000, subject to mortgage and other' indebtedness not exceeding $4,000.

This, stated as briefly as possible, is the record presented, and it is apparent that the central question upon which our decision must turn is one of fact. Is the evidence sufficient to establish the fact that the plaintiff is the son of Evan II. Skillman, deceased ? If such paternity has been proven, we then have’to inquire whether Skillman’s alleged recognition of that relation is shown to be general and notorious within the meaning of the statute. Code, section 3385. That the trial court correctly found the alleged paternity satisfactorily proven we have little doubt. All the evidence given on the subject bears in that direction. The defendants offer no evidence to the contrary, but ask the court to infer, or rather to indulge in the suspicion, that because of the young woman’s subsequent relations with Hall, he must have been the father of the child. This we can not do upon such slight foundation. The only debatable proposition that is vital to the case is upon the question of the sufficiency of the recognition.

II. As has already been said, it must have been general and notorious. But to fill this measure it is not required that the recognition should have been universal or made known to all or to a majority of the . community. Van Horn v. Van Horn, 107 Iowa, 247; Blair v. Howell, 68 Iowa, 619. It can not be supposed that in any case a putative father, however sincere his purpose to recognize an illegitimate child, nor however frankly he may admit the relationship when there is occasion for him to speak of it at all, will make it the subject of voluntary rehearsal to every person whom he meets, or. force the unpleasant subject into conversation with others. If in his intercourse with neighbors, associates, and friends he makes no attempt, to conceal the relationship he bears to the child, but acknowledges it openly whenever any reference to the subject is made, and this recognition is so often repeated to different people as to evince his willingness that all who care to know the truth may understand that he admits himself the father of the child, we regard it as sufficiently general for the purposes of the statutory rule, although many of his acquaintances may never have heard him mention the matter. It appears quite clearly that at the time of the birth of plaintiff and for years thereafter Skillman was very generally reputed to be his fathei\

It is true, as counsel say, that such paternity can not be established by hearsay or rumor or current scandal. The circumstance of such general repute may, however, be of some significance, not as in itself proving the relationship, but as bearing-upon the effect to be given the testimony of defendant’s witnesses, who say they knew Skillman well, and never heard him mention the matter; for if such story was being 'publicly bandied about in the community where he lived, and he took no pains to deny it to the friends and acquaintances whose good opinion he would be likely to covet, does it not lend some weight to the affirmative testimony as to his acknowledgment of the child? See Alston v. Alston, 114 Iowa, 29. But, even if we disregard the evidence of repute as being incompetent for any purpose, we must still say that the clear weight of the competent testimony is with the plaintiff. It may be admitted that the story told by one or two witnesses has a somewhat strained and unnatural sound, and, if the case rested upon this alone, we might perhaps reach a different conclusion. But no attempt has been made to impeach the credibility of the twenty or more persons who testify to Skillman’s acknowledgment of the relationship. So far as appears, none of them had any interest in the controversy, and the court below, having them present at the trial and under its immediate observation, has accepted their testimony as true. Conceding their credibility, and we can not consistently do otherwise in view of the record before us, the decree entered below was inevitable. The acknowledgment was not a single or isolated admission. No two of the witnesses testify to the same admission. The statements of Skillman were not made in confidence, or as a secret to be concealed by the persons to whom they were made but openly and without apparent reserve, and they seem to have been made on so many and different occasions, and with a single instance of denial on his part,' that we are forced to hold the recognition to be both general and notorious. Against this evidence defendants offer nothing whatever, except an array of witnesses who knew Skillman, and who say that he never made any such acknowledgment to them or in their hearing. Conceding that this evidence was competent, we think it must be said to be both weak and inconclusive.

Counsel have called our attention to census statistics showing Sigourney at the time in question to have been a town of from 1,300 to 2,000 inhabitants. The purpose of this reference, we assume, is to contrast the number of witnesses testifying for the plaintiff, as compared with the population of the town, and thereby draw the conclusion that the recognition was neither general nor notorious. The argument is unsound. To make his case plaintiff was not bound, as we have already said, to show that the admissions had been made to every person in the community or to a majority of such persons. If Skillman made the acknowledgment openly and not in secret, and to so many different persons and upon so many different occasions that we may say he made it public property, and manifested a willingness that all who cared to know or inquire should understand that he recognized the paternity of the child, the showing of these facts is all that is required to sustain the decree appealed from.

Our attention has been called by counsel on both sides to the adjudicated cases, but we think it unnecessary to attempt their extended review. Oases of this character turn so largely upon varying states of fact that precedents directly in point are rare, while the essential rules of law applicable to such issues are the subject of little, if any, dispute. Our construction of the law and treatment of the facts finds more or less support in Blair v. Howell, 68 Iowa, 619; Alston v. Alston, 114 Iowa, 29; Morgan v. Strand, 133 Iowa, 299; Van Horn v. Van Horn, 107 Iowa, 247. Upon the question of general and notorious recognition, it is said in the Van Horn case that “general” is not equivalent to universal, but means rather “extensive, though not universal, and that 'notorious’ is synonomous with 'open’ and should be construed with reference to the circumstances and surroundings of the parties.” Again, it has been said that, where the gejieral bearing of the putative father toward the child “is such as to involve á recognition, it follows that the recognition was general.” Blair v. Howell, supra; Alston v. Alston, supra. Upon the same subject we said in Morgan v. Strand, supra: “The record leaves little doubt of a general and notorious recognition that he did have a child back in Illinois. Doubtless he did not tell every one he talked with, but whenever the subject was broached he freely stated his connection with such child.” Measured by the standard approved in these cases, the plaintiff’s recognition by Skillman was clearly established.

III. The court permitted plaintiff to prove that at the time of his birth and repeatedly thereafter his mother stated to witnesses that Skillman was the father of her child. Of this ruling complaint is made. The same objection was made in the Alston case, but we held it not well taken, saying: “Declarations as to the paternity of a child made by the father and mother in their lifetime may be shown, and circumstances indicating a recognition of the relationship on their part.” Other items of evidence are urged upon our attention by the appellants, but in each and every instance they have only a remote and uncertain bearing upon the case and none of them are necessarily inconsistent with the truth of the plaintiff’s claim. The preponderance of the evidence is largely with the plaintiff upon every material issue in the case.

We find no reason to disturb the conclusion announced by. the court below, and the decree appealed from is therefore — Affirmed.  