158 Iowa 156 | Iowa | 1912
As between the plaintiff who is the widow of W. S. Baker, and the defendants (other than Leander W. Calhoon and his wife), who are alleged to have interests in the property in controversy as the heirs of W. S. Baker, no issue is presented on this record. The sole question for determination is whether Leander W. Calhoon has an interest therein, growing oiit of facts which will now be stated only so far as they are necessary to show what the issue decided by the trial court really was.
In 1885, David P. Baker died seised of the land in controversy. Prior to his death, he adopted as his child, by articles properly executed and filed, one Hattie Calhoon, issue of a marriage between his daughter Frances and the defendant Leander W. Calhoon, who in the meantime had been divorced from his wife, Frances, .and had gone to another state to reside, and had there remarried. David P. Baker left surviving him five children and also his adopted child, Hattie,Calhoon, and it is agreed that this adopted child be
By the statutory provisions in this state regulating the descent of real property, which provisions contain no specific reference to cases of adoption, the surviving parents of one
The statutory provisions as to adoption which were in force when the adoption took place, and at the death of Hattie Calhoon, declared that any person competent to make a will might adopt the child of another, “conferring thereby upon such child all the rights, privileges, and responsibilities which would pertain to the child if bom to the person adopting in lawful wedlock,” and that upon the execution, acknoAvledgment, and filing for record of the instrument of adoption, “the rights, duties, and relations between the parent and child by adoption,' shall, thereafter, in all respects, including the right of inheritance, be the same that exist by law between parent and child by lawful birth. ’ ’ See Code of 1873, sections 2307, 2310.
Under these statutory provisions, this court expressly refused to decide, in Burger v. Frakes, 67 Iowa, 460, 469, whether, on the death of an adopted child, the adopting parents surviving became the heirs of such child under the general statutes of inheritance, leaving it an open question whether the adopting parents or the natural parents inherit from the adopted child whom they survive. In Chehak v. Battles, 133 Iowa, 107, the court treated the question of the right of inheritance from the adopted child, as between the surviving foster parents and natural parents, as still open, with the suggestion that the authorities in other states are not harmonious, although in the meantime the Code of 1897
But it is contended for appellants that there has been recently a legislative interpretation of the previously existing statutory law on this subject by the enactment, in 1902, of a statute amending Code, section 3253, by adding the provision that, as between the adopting parent and adopted child, the right of inheritance from each other shall be the same as between natural parent and child (29 G-. A., c. 132), and another statute providing for an inheritance on the part of the parents by adoption in accordance with the general statutory provision regulating inheritance as between a parent and a child dying without issue, with the added provision that, if no heirs are found in the line of the adopting parents, the property of the deceased shall go to the natural parents, and, in case they have died, then in their line of descent (29 G-. A., c. 136). There is certainly some force in this argument. If, under the existing statutory provisions, the property of an adopted child would go to its adopting parents or, in case they were already deceased, to their heirs to the exclusion of the natural parents and their heirs, then there was no occasion for the additional legislation to effect the purpose accomplished, save in so far as it was desired to provide for an inheritance by the natural parents or their heirs in the event that no heirs in the line by adoption were found. However this may be, the fact that the Legislature saw fit, in 1902, to expressly provide for the descent of the property of the adopted child in the adopting line, does not constitute a legis
In the absence, therefore, of any controlling construction as to the statute in question so far as it relates to the rights of the heirs of David P. Baker to inherit the interest in his estate which passed to Hattie Calhoon by virtue of her adoption, we look to the decisions in other states relating to the construction of similar statutes so far as they bear on the question, and we find the weight of authority to be to this effect: That the general statutes of inheritance are modified and set aside by statutes regulating the effect of adoption only so far as there is some specific provision in the statutes for adoption inconsistent with the application, in such cases, of the general inheritance statutes. Reinders v. Koppelmann, 68 Mo. 482 (30 Am. Rep. 802); Upson v. Noble, 35 Ohio St. 655; Hole v. Robbins, 53 Wis. 514 (10 N. W. 617); Barnhizel v. Ferrell, 47 Ind. 335; Clarkson v. Hatton, 143 Mo. 47 (44 S. W. 761, 39 L. R. A. 748, 65 Am. St. Rep. 635) ; Keegan v. Geraghty, 101 Ill. 26; White v. Dotter, 73 Ark. 130 (83 S. W. 1052).
To apply such a rule in the construction of our own statutes is not in violation of the requirement of our Code (section 3446) that its provisions “shall be liberally construed with a view to promote its objects.” That language is used only to negative the rule of the common law that statutes in derogation thereof are to be strictly construed, and not with reference to the rule of construction to be applied in determining the extent of a statutory exception to a general statutory provision. Of course, the exception goes no further than the language used in providing for it will fairly warrant, and it must be presumed that, beyond the scope of the exception thus provided for, the general statutory provision shall apply.
The only cases cited for appellee which seem to run counter to the weight of authority, as above indicated, are those of Humphries v. Davis, 100 Ind. 274 (50 Am. Rep. 788), and Paul v. Davis, 100 Ind. 422, in which it is held that the property inherited by an adopted child from the adopting parent does not, on the death of such child, pass to its natural parents, but goes to the persons who would have inherited it had the adopted child been the natural child of the adopting parents. That is to say, so far at least as property inherited from the adopted parent is concerned, the rules of inheritance are exactly the same as those which apply to a natural child. But our statute does not so provide, and to give it such construction would be pure judicial legislation. As indicated in the case of Estate of Sunderland, supra, the adopting child does not become in law the natural child of the .adopting parent for all purposes unless the statute so provides, and the statute cannot be enlarged or extended in its scope beyond the legal effect of the language used. The theory of the two Indiana cases, last above cited, is that, for the purpose of effecting natural justice, the adopted child
The attempt to introduce a peculiar rule of descent for property acquired by the adopted child from the adopting parents might seem, in particular cases, to be more in accordance with our general notions of natural justice. Such rule would, however, not only be without statutory authority, but in many eases would unnecessarily lead to the greatest confusion in its application. Suppose the adopted child should for many years outlive its adopting parent and also its natural parent, having by inheritance derived property from each, and having also accumulated property of its own. How could any court undertake to determine what portion of the estate finally left by such child should go to heirs in the line of the
The decision of the trial court is therefore Reversed.