198 A. 81 | Pa. | 1938
This appeal is from a judgment for defendant in ejectment and turns on the construction of section 16 of the *306 Intestate Act governing devolution from an adopted person.
The defendant, Mary H. Robison, had three children by her first husband, William Robison, also named as a defendant but not served. She was divorced from him January 28, 1901. On April 3, 1901, she married Dr. D. E. Fisher. January 24, 1906, she deserted Dr. Fisher, who obtained a decree of divorce for desertion on that date. On January 21, 1906,1 before the desertion, Dr. Fisher, by decree of the Court of Common Pleas of Fulton County, Pennsylvania, adopted one of the children of Mary H. Robison, this child being called in the record, D. Edward Fisher.
Dr. Fisher died February 26, 1936, seized of the land in suit, leaving a will, duly probated, devising his property to his adopted son D. Edward Fisher. The devisee died intestate and unmarried, August 30, 1936, leaving as his nearest collateral, or adoptive relative, James B. Fisher, a brother of Dr. Fisher. Claiming in that right, James B. Fisher brought this suit against Mary H. Robison who had taken possession as heir of D. Edward Fisher.
It would perhaps not be disputed that, if Mary Robison had not been married to Dr. Fisher at the time he adopted her son, the case would be ruled in plaintiff's favor by what was said in Cave's Estate,
We think this is not a proper construction of section 16 of the Intestate Act which governs the case. The section is as follows: "(a) Any minor or adult person adopted according to law, and the adopting parent or parents shall, respectively, inherit and take, by devolution from and through each other, personal estate as next of kin, and real estate as heirs, under the provisions of this act, as fully as if the person adopted had been born a lawful child of the adopting parent or parents.
"(b) The person adopted shall, for all purposes of inheritance and taking by devolution, be a member of the family of the adopting parent or parents. The adoptive relatives of the person adopted shall be entitled to inherit and take from and through such person, to the exclusion of his or her naturalparents, grandparents, and collateral relatives; but the surviving spouse of such adopted person, and the children and descendants of such adopted person, shall have all his, her, and their respective rights under this act. Adopted personsshall not be entitled to inherit or take from or through theirnatural parents, grandparents, or collateral relatives, but each adopted person shall have all his or her rights under this act in the estates of his or her spouse, children, *308 and descendants." (Italics supplied.) (Act of 1917, P. L. 429, 439, 20 PS sections 101, 102.)
Adoption was not a common law act; it depends altogether on the statute, and, in this state, may be defined as taking the child of another in the manner provided by, and with the consequences specified in, the statute.2 Being in derogation of the common law, it has been strictly construed in order to carry out the legislative intention: Cave's Estate, 326 Pa. at p. 358,
It will be observed that the Act authorized adoption by "any person3 desirous of adopting any child as his or her heir, or as one of his or her heirs . . . with the consent of the parents or surviving parent of such child," and provided that the decree should confer on the child "all the rights of a child and heir of such adopting parent. . . ." The adoption statute and section 16 of the Intestate Act must be construed together in ascertaining the resulting relations.
Dr. Fisher's petition set forth that he was "desirous of adopting D. Edward Robison, a child of William Robison and Mary H. Robison of the County of Fulton as one of his heirs . . ."; it was not a joint petition,4 though we do not now consider whether Mrs. Fisher could adopt her own son.5 At the foot of the petition her consent appears in this form and in these words: "The consent __________ Mary H. Fisher." It cannot be treated as a joint petition as in Peterson's Estate,
The decree of adoption stated: "and the Court being satisfied upon due consideration that the welfare of the said D. Edward Robison will be promoted by being *310 adopted as his child and as one of his heirs, with the consent of his mother, decree that the said child shall assume the name of D. Edward Fisher and have all the rights of a child and heir of the said Dr. D. E. Fisher and be subject to the duties of a child."
We have, then, a minor adopted by Dr. Fisher, and not by him and the child's mother, though she happened to be petitioner's wife. All she did was to comply with the statute by consenting. Under section 16(b) the adopted child then became a member of the family of Dr. Fisher. For purposes of inheritance, the statute said, "The adoptive relatives of the person adopted shall be entitled to inherit and take from and through such person, to the exclusion of his or her natural parents, grandparents, and collateral relatives."6 The judgment of the learned court below gave no effect to the provision expressly preventing inheritance by the child's "natural parents,"7 and, instead, providing that the "adoptive relatives" shall inherit from and through him.8 *311
As the Intestate Act provides that the natural parent shall not inherit from the adopted child, is that statutory prohibition nullified, and a right to inherit created, by the fact that at the time of adoption by Dr. Fisher, and until the divorce, defendant was Dr. Fisher's wife? By the adoption, he transferred the child from the class in which it had been, i. e., one of Mrs. Robison's three children, and conferred on it the status (which resulted from the adoption and distribution statutes) of his child as the adopting parent. If we should now assume that, prior to the divorce, defendant could have been regarded as an adoptive relative within the meaning of the statute, that relation was completely severed by the divorce. At the time of Dr. Fisher's death, when the land vested in the adopted son, defendant, even on the proposed assumption, was not an adoptive relative within the terms of the statute. Defendant at that time sustained no relation to him; the family relation with her had been severed by her desertion and the divorce; the family then consisted of Dr. Fisher and his adopted son. At the son's death, intestate, his successor in title to the land was appointed by the Intestate Act, which designated his adoptive relative, the plaintiff, as the next *312
taker "to the exclusion of his . . . natural parents." InCave's Estate,
The judgment is reversed, and the record is remitted for the entry of judgment in accord with this opinion.
See, also, the valuable paper by A. J. White Hutton: Concerning Adoption and Adopted Persons as Heirs in Pennsylvania, 42 Dick. L. Rev. 12.