Armando Grazzini died testate April 22, 1937, leaving a mother, a sister, and two daughters by adoption. His last will left all his property to the mother and sister, and failed to mention the adopted daughters. The sister filed the will for probate and asked for letters. The older daughter filed an opposition to the petition, a contest of the will, and a petition asking that letters be granted her as administratrix with the will annexed, A demurrer to her contest was sustained. The two jDetitions for letters were heard *170 at the same time and letters were ordered issued to the sister of deceased and denied to appellant. The daughter appearing for herself, and as guardian of her minor sister, has appealed from these portions of the order.
The appellant now concedes, on the authority of
Estate of Sankey,
When the order of adoption was offered by appellant the trial court refused to admit it upon the ground that it was void upon its face. This was error. The ruling was based upon the highly technical conception that the order of adoption showed lack of jurisdiction because of the recital that the consent of the natural father was not necessary because of his “abandonment of said minor children without provision for their identification”. Section 224 of the Civil Code, as it read when the order of adoption was made in March, 1926, provided that the consent of the parents of a legitimate child was not necessary (subd. 5). “From a father or mother of any child deserted by its parents without provision for their identification.” Respondents argue that the section makes it unnecessary to have the consent of the parents only where both have deserted the child without provision for the identification of the parents and that, since in the case at hand, the mother was dead, the recital in the order means that the father had not made provision for the identification of the children and thus the order shows lack of jurisdiction.
This position cannot be sustained for these reasons—the use of the word “their” was clearly a clerical error which was corrected at the 1927 session of the legislature. This portion of the section was then made to read “where the father or mother of any child has deserted the child without provision for its identification”. Thus the section was made to read that if one of the parents deserted a child without provision for identification, the consent of that parent only was dispensed with, whereas, the old section was open to the interpretation that a child must be deserted by “its parents” *171 without provision for the identification of both. If such was the interpretation placed upon the old section by the court below, it was entirely too narrow and technical. The court in the adoption proceedings found that the mother of the children was dead and to now hold that her consent was nevertheless necessary unless she was also found to have failed to make provision for her identification after death would be absurd.
But for another reason the ruling may not be sustained. The requirement that the parents make provision for “identification” means this and nothing more—that they make provision so that they may be identified as the parents of the minor and that the minor may be identified as their child. This is in accord with the rule of “reasonable” interpretation which so many eases have held to be our guide. Hence, the difference between “their” and “its” is like tweedledum and tweedledee.
It should be noted that the adoption statutes do not require that the jurisdictional facts be stated in the order of adoption. These proceedings are initiated by petition filed in the superior court, which is a court of general jurisdiction. The judgment or order of adoption is entitled to all the presumptions which attach to any other judgment of such courts.
(Burris
v.
Kennedy,
Here it should be noted that eleven years elapsed from the time of the adoption until the attack was made—not by the adopting parent, but by those claiming under him. If this had been a direct attack upon the order of adoption the defense of estoppel would have been available to the minors and they could also have made proof in support of the order. Clearly linked with this doctrine is the salutary rule adopted in many jurisdictions that where the only objection to adoption proceedings is the question of consent of the natural parent, he alone may attack the proceedings on that ground and the decree is valid as to all others. (1, Am. Jur., p. 642.) These are sufficient reasons for denying to respondents the right to make this collateral attack upon the order.
The second ground urged by appellant requires little discussion, since the rights of the parties are governed by express statutes. An adopted child succeeds the same as a natural child. (Prob. Code, sec. 257.) When a child is not provided for by will, or by settlement, such child succeeds to the same share as if the testator had died intestate. (Prob. Code, see. 90.) The adopted children, being entitled to *173 succeed to the entire estate, are entitled to testamentary letters in preference to the sister of deceased, who does not succeed to any portion of the estate. (Prob. Code, secs. 422, 409.) For these reasons the appellant Gina Antongiovanni is entitled to letters with the will annexed. In reaching this conclusion we are in accord with the ruling of the trial court that the unsigned note is no part of the will, as is clearly disclosed on the face of the paper.
The portions of the order appealed from heretofore noted are reversed. The appellants should have their costs.
Sturtevant, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on March 23, 1939, and a petition by respondents to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on April 20, 1939.
