201 N.W. 925 | Minn. | 1925
The facts are these: Martha P. Sutton died intestate September 17, 1921. She was then a widow, having no children living except *427 appellant and no issue of any deceased child. She had had another son, Harry E. Sutton, who predeceased her, leaving no widow or natural child. He, however, had married prior to July 1, 1913, when he and his wife adopted respondent. He died in October, 1917. Subsequently his widow married Nicholas E. Kummer. In 1921 she died, but prior thereto her husband, with her consent, adopted respondent who was by the decree duly made the child and heir of Nicholas E. Kummer and her name changed from Elizabeth Mary Sutton to Elizabeth Mary Kummer.
The first decree of adoption, rendered by the district court of Stearns county, is attacked as without jurisdiction because, it is asserted, neither the natural parents nor the institution which had the custody of the child gave written consent. It is sufficient to say the decree is not subject to collateral attack, unless want of jurisdiction appears on the face of the record. The contrary appears here, for the decree itself recites consent. The law does not require consent to be filed or found by the court. G.S. 1913, § 7155. The decree is by a court of general jurisdiction. In order to determine that it had jurisdiction to render a judgment as to the status of the child, it necessarily determined whether the consent which the law requires for the adoption was given by the natural parents or by the institution which had the custody of the child. All jurisdictional prerequisites to rendering a decree by a court of competent jurisdiction are conclusively presumed, unless the contrary affirmatively appears from the face of the record. Gulickson v. Bodkin,
The second adoption did not annul the status of respondent as heir of her first adoptive father, Harry E. Sutton. We held in Roberts v. Roberts,
The last contention is that the adoption, while it makes a child the heir of the adoptive parents, should not be held to make it an heir of persons who were not parties to the adoption and had no voice therein. A very well considered case from Missouri is cited. Hockaday v. Lynn,
The judgment is right and is affirmed.