102 Cal. 70 | Cal. | 1894
Appeals from two orders of the superior court of Sacramento county, making partial dis
Lewellyn Williams died testate, and Lucy W. Auzerais is named in his will as a residuary legatee. This will was admitted to probate in the superior court of Sacramento county, prior to the commencement of this proceeding, and in her petition asking for a partial distribution of the estate to her, the respondent, Auzerais, alleges, in addition to the foregoing facts, that she is the adopted child of said deceased, and that he never had any other child, and was unmarried at the time of his death.
The appellants, claiming to be respectively the nephew and niece of the deceased, appeared in opposition to the application for partial distribution, and filed an answer to the petition therein, in which they denied that the respondent, Auzerais, was ever adopted by the deceased as his child, and also denied that the deceased died testate; and in this connection they further alleged the pendency of a proceeding instituted by them to revoke the probate of the alleged will of the deceased.
The issues thus made by the petition and answer thereto were tried by the court, and findings of fact filed to the effect that the petitioner was duly adopted by the deceased as his child on August 17, 1875, and that she was and is his only child, and the court further found the allegation of the answer, in reference to the pendency of the proceeding to revoke the probate of the alleged will of the deceased, to be true.
The appellants insist that the finding in reference to the adoption of the respondent, Auzerais, is not justified by the evidence, and also that the court erred in admitting evidence to prove that fact, and the questions thus presented are the only ones we deem it necessary to consider in this opinion.
“It is hereby ordered, adjudged, and decreed that said Lucy W., child aforesaid, shall, from now henceforth, be regarded and treated in all respects as the child of said Lewellyn Williams and Lucy 0. Williams, his wife.”
The order makes no mention of the fact of the residence of the adopting parents, and fails to state that any of the parties were examined separately or otherwise by the judge making the order, but it was proven by oral evidence upon the trial of the present proceeding that the adopting parents were residents of the
This evidence was properly admitted, and the contention of appellants that the order of adoption is void because it does not show upon its face that the deceased and his wife resided in the county of Sacramento at the time of the adoption, and that all the parties to that proceeding were examined by the judge in the manner directed by section 227 of the Civil Code, cannot be sustained. Undoubtedly under section 226 of that code it is a material fact, and necessary to the validity of an order consenting to the act of adoption, that the adopting parent and the judge making the order shall both be residents of the same county (Ex parte Clark, 87 Cal. 638); but the statute does not require that this fact shall appear upon the face of what may be termed the adoption papers. The only memorial of the proceeding which is required by the chapter of our Civil Code relating to adoption is the written consent of the parties whose consent is made necessary by the law, and the order of the proper judge “ declaring that the child shall thenceforth be regarded and treated in all respects as the child of the person adopting.” (Civ. Code, secs. 226, 227.)
This being so, it is evident that extrinsic evidence should be received for the purpose of proving any other matter, the existence of which is necessary to the validity of the proceeding. It has been held, and, we think, correctly, that facts necessary to show that a court or board of special or limited power has acted within its jurisdiction may be proven by other competent evidence, in the absence of a statute requiring such facts to apt-pear in the minutes or other record of its proceedings. (Jolley v. Foltz, 34 Cal. 321; Reclamation District v. Goldman, 65 Cal. 638; Van Deusen v. Sweet, 51 N. Y. 378; Williams v. Cammack, 27 Miss. 209; 61 Am. Dec. 508; 2 Freeman on Judgments, 4th ed., sec. 518.) It is true the act of adoption in this state is not a judicial proceed
But if the rule were otherwise, and it should be conceded that the court erred in admitting evidence as to the residence of the deceased, the error was harmless, as the petition for adoption states that the deceased and his wife were residents of the county of Sacramento, and having, upon the strength of that representation, obtained the order of the county judge of that county consenting to the adoption of respondent, the deceased would, in bis lifetime, have been estopped to-deny its truth in any controversy as to his parental duty to support and care for the child thus adopted by him, and the appellants who claim under him are equally estopped to deny the fact in this proceeding.
The appellants further claim that the order of adoption is void, first, because it was made upon the joint petition of the deceased and his wife, and purports te
There is no force in the first of the foregoing objections.
Section 221 of the Civil Code gives to any adult person the right to adopt the minor child of another, in the cases and under the rules prescribed by the chapter of which that section forms a part, and the following section, 223, provides that neither husband nor wife, unless lawfully separated, shall adopt a child without the consent of the other, if capable of giving such consent. Under these sections the wife has precisely the same right to adopt a child as the husband, and we know of no reason why both may not unite in an application for the adoption of a child as the child of both, or why in such a case the order of adoption should not declare that the child shall henceforth be treated and regarded as the child of both spouses. On the contrary, such procedure would seem to be in entire harmony with the object of the law, and an appropriate way by which husband and wife may mutually consent to the adoption of a stranger in blood into the family, and to assume toward such child the duties of the parental relation. The question of the right of husband and wife to jointly adopt a child arose in the state of Indiana under a statute similar to our own, and the supreme court of that state in Krug v. Davis, 87 Ind. 590, in answer to the objection that the statute did not contemplate or authorize such joint adoption, said: “ On the contrary, the better and more reasonable construction appears to us to be that a wife may unite with her husband in such a proceeding, as from the very nature of things the interests of the entire family are necessarily involved in the object sought to be accomplished by it. There is not only
Nor can the right of the respondent here to succeed to the estate of her parent by adoption be defeated by the fact that the judge signing the order of adoption failed to separately examine the parties to it. It was expressly held by us in In re Johnson, 98 Cal. 531, that the examination of a child under the age of twelve years— the age of consent—was entirely discretionary with the judge, and we think the general reasoning of the opinion in that case in regard to the nature of the act of adoption in this state, and its statement of the rule by which to determine whether the provisions of a statute prescribing the mode of proceeding upon the part of a public officer in the discharge of a given duty, is mandatory or simply directory, lead to the conclusion that the examination of the other parties to the contract by the judge making the order is not absolutely necessary in order to effect the adoption of a minor; and, if this is so, it would necessarily result that section 227 of the Civil Code must be regarded as directory in so far as it requires that the parties shall be separately examined. In the case just referred to, in speaking of the nature of the act of adoption under our statute, we said: “The essential foundation of the proceeding is the consent of the persons named in the statute, and when this has been given in the presence of the proper judge, and manifested in writing, and by the order of such judge, the contract cannot be declared invalid because of some merely technical objection to the manner in which the judge who signed the order of adoption may have discharged his duty in the premises.” And it was further said by us at that time that the object of the statute in
The remaining question to be considered is whether the validity of the order of adoption is affected by the fact that it was made without the consent of 'the father of respondent, and without notice to him. As already stated the father of respondent had been divorced from the mother on the ground of his adultery, and such being the case, his consent to the order of adoption was. rendered unnecessary by the express provisions of section 224 of'the Civil Code then and now in force. The fact that the decree of divorce was made before the enactment of our Civil Code, and for an act of adultery committed in another state, did not make that section inapplicable to the proceeding taken by the deceased for the adoption of respondent, and to so hold is not to give, any retroactive or extraterritorial effect to the provisions of that section. The section simply declares under what circumstances the consent of the natural
Orders affirmed.
Fitzgerald, J., and McFarland, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.