47 So. 577 | Ala. | 1908
— James Finley, now deceased, in 1903 by proper procedure under the statute of the state of Georgia adopted as his child James Jordan, an infant of tender years, changing his name to James Finley, Jr. At that time he was domiciled in that state. The child and its mother also lived in that state, in 1906 James Finley died unmarried, leaving no lawful children born in wedlock, no father or mother, and no brothers or sisters, or representatives of brothers or sisters,
.Under our statute of decents, had James Finley, Jr., been born unto James Finley in lawful wedlock, or, if our of wedlock, he had been legitimated under and in - accordance with the statutes of this state, then he would have inherited the lands, to the exclusion of Alexander Finley; and it may be, had he been adopted in this I stale in pursuance to the statute authorizing the adop-* tion of children, the lands would, have descended to him. But his adoption, being under the statute of another state which conferred upon him the right of inheritance of the property of the adopting parent in that state, does not confer upon him that right in this state. The statute has no extraterritorial operation. This is the principle which controlled the descission in Lingen v. Lingen, 45 Ala. 410. In that case the child claiming the right of inheritance was legitimated by its father in accordance with the laws of France. In France it became and was his legitimate child and entitled to inherit its father’s property in that country. Notwithstanding this, the court, following Birthwhistle v. Vardill, 5 Barn. & C. 438, and Smith v. Derr' Adm’r, 34 Pa. 126, 75 Am. Dec. 641, held that it could not inherit the properey of its father in this state.
But it is insisted that this case, while properly decided, is distinguishable from the one in hand, but, if not, should be overruled, because opposed to the great
Again, it is contended that the Lingen Case could have been correctly decided upon the proposition that this forum will not enforce a foreign law which would
Affirmed.