207 N.W. 17 | Minn. | 1926
The appellants are the three children of Catharine Hack who died in 1878. John Hack, a widower, died July 13, 1919, aged 95 years. An instrument purporting to be his last will and testament, dated March 31, 1916, was presented to the proper court for *36
probate. All the property of the deceased was thereby given to his adopted son, John W. Hack. The appellants appeared to contest the will on the grounds of mental incapacity of the testator and undue influence exerted by John W. Hack. From the start appellants' right to contest was denied and, in view of a protracted litigation ahead, a special administrator was appointed. Then, after an appeal from the decision of the probate court allowing the will, proceedings were apparently stayed so that appellants could by suit in the district court assert a claimed contract right to half of the estate by virtue of Sp. L. 1863, p. 246, c. 59, § 2. That case was tried and decided against appellants in the district court and on appeal affirmed. Kempe v. Hack,
Adoption was unknown to the common law. Prior to the enactment of L. 1876, p. 107, c. 91, there was in this state no statutory procedure for adopting children, and by § 6 of said chapter it was expressly declared that the adoption itself shall not constitute the child heir of the adoptive parents. First by chapter 96 [p. 166], of the Laws of 1891, was authorization given to decree the child adopted such an heir, and prior decrees so providing were validated. R.L. 1905, § 3616, G.S. 1923, § 8630, gave all adopted persons the right of inheritance, whether adopted before or after its passage. Sorenson v. Rasmussen,
The question recurs: Did the mother of appellants become and remain the adopted child of John Hack? "The legal adoption by one person of the offspring of another, giving him the status of a *37
child and heir of the parent by adoption, was unknown to the law of England or of Scotland." Ross v. Ross,
Hence whenever, in the absence of an adoption pursuant to some legislative enactment, a child, received from the natural parents into the home of foster parents and treated by the latter as a natural child, has been allowed to share in the estate left by the foster parents, it was only where a contract to legally adopt such child or to give it a share in such estate is clearly proven. This was done in Fiske v. Lawton, supra, but unsuccessfully attempted in Kempe v. Hack, supra. There remain to appellants now only these two resources, viz: (a) To establish a contract to adopt; or (b) to prove a legal adoption which was in effect when their mother died.
It is impossible to find a contract to adopt. Whether Catharine Hack came into the home of John Hack as a doorstep waif or was received from her natural parents, is not disclosed. There is not the slightest evidence that she or her natural parents ever had any actual knowledge either of the enactment of Sp. L. 1863, p. 246, c. 59, or of Sp. L. 1874, p. 305, c. 87. She was under 7 years when she came into the Hack home and of course incapable of contracting. She married and established a home of her own in 1868 when only 16 years old. From these facts it is not possible to find an implied contract to adopt, hence the principle of estoppel cannot be invoked, for there must first be proved, to say the least, an implied contract. Simply that a child of another is received into a home, cared for and educated until the age of 16 years, cannot well indicate that such a child has further claims upon those who so took it in. No doubt such a child has received much more than it has parted with. *38
In this state prior to the enactment in 1876 of the statute authorizing the district courts of the state to decree adoption, upon the natural and adoptive parents taking certain prescribed steps, there was no way of creating the status of child as to persons not its natural parents. John Hack could not have created that status or relation between himself and Catharine by any written or oral declaration. It could be done only by the state through an act of the legislature. There was here such an attempted adoption by chapter 59, p. 246, Sp. L. 1863. This act is assailed as invalid for defective title. The title is: "An act to Change the name of Ann Jane Clark to that of Catharine Hack." By section 2 thereof Catharine Hack is "declared to be the daughter and heir at law of John Hack." Such a defect in the title of a general law providing the procedure for the adoption of children was held fatal in People v. Congdon,
For example, chapter 150, p. 385, Sp. L. 1867, bears the title "An act to change the names of divers persons" and therein 12 children are separately declared either the adopted child of some named person or the child and heir at law of some one, and about as many more persons simply have their names changed. Chapter 127, p. 426, Sp. L. 1868, under a like title, concerns 28 persons who are either adopted and made heirs at law, or constituted heirs at law only, indiscriminately, and 24 other persons merely receive another name, all in one section. These are only samples.
Courts should hesitate at this late day to disturb the status and rights established long ago. Atwell v. Parker,
There can be no fair doubt of the power of the legislature to interfere with the rights of heirship. Sorenson v. Rasmussen, *39
"Without such acts the common law or contract does not sanction an attempt to create the relation of parent and child by adoption. It is the state, and not the parents by nature and by adoption, which creates the new status of a child by adoption. The rights and obligations of the adoptive parent and of the adopted child are due wholly to the statute of the state. The prerequisites for adoption are subordinate to the authorization or imprimatur of the state. When the state has sanctioned the adoption, the new status of parent and child is ipso facto complete. It seems reasonable to assume that a status created by the state may be altered or abrogated by the state only. * * *. Status can be determined only by the state and not by agreement of the parties. * * *. Whenever a condition in life is determined by law, and not by act of the parties, it is correctly denominated a status in jurisprudence, * * *. Status, recognized by law, is the basis of rights. The status of an adopted child, for example, is the basis of his legal rights against his adoptive parents. When his rights are invaded it is not the contract of adoption he resorts to, but to his status as the child of his adopted father. So the duties and rights of the adoptive father *40 are determined by the law of the status and not by contract. Burnes v. Burnes, 137 Fed. Rep. 781, 797, 70 C.C.A. 357. Under all systems of law which recognize adoption of children, emancipation from parental power and control, or an abrogation of the artificial relation, is also recognized and is treated as an act by operation of law and not as an act of the parties to the adoption. In other words, the state alone can determine when the relation of parent and child ceases."
The principles so clearly set forth above preclude the thought that John Hack could be estopped from questioning either the adoption or the abrogation thereof, even though it may properly be said that both acts were passed at his instance. Sayles v. Christie,
We conclude that it was within the sole power of the legislature to abrogate the status between Catharine and John Hack, created by Sp. L. 1863, p. 246, c. 59, and that this was accomplished by the repeal of section 2 thereof in 1874 by chapter 87 of the special laws. Her status as a child of John Hack being thereby terminated, the appellants, her children, are not heirs at law of John Hack, and the court below correctly decided that they had no right to contest his will.
Order affirmed. *41