146 A. 656 | N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. | 1929
While Charles Finkenzeller and Annie Mathilda, his wife, were domiciled in this state, they petitioned the surrogate's court of the county and State of New York for the adoption of an infant girl then in the care and custody of a charitable institution located in New York county, and in their petition, signed and sworn to by both husband and wife, they prayed for an order allowing the adoption and directing that said infant be thereafter regarded and treated in all respects as their own child and be known by their surname. At the same time they entered into a written agreement with the charitable institution agreeing (among other things) to adopt and treat said infant as their own lawful child. A decree was made by said court, dated May 4th, 1920, ordering that said agreement of adoption be in all respects allowed and confirmed and ordering that said infant be thereafter regarded and treated in all respects as the child of the adoptive parents and be known by their surname. The adoptive *45 parents and the child thereafter resided together in this state and while domiciled here Mrs. Finkenzeller died March 12th, 1926, leaving her husband and said child surviving her. Mr. and Mrs. Finkenzeller had a child of their marriage who predeceased Mrs. Finkenzeller, and at Mrs. Finkenzeller's death she had surviving her no child of her body, or any legal representative of her deceased child. Mrs. Finkenzeller left real and personal property and a will admitted to probate by the surrogate of Essex county, whereon letters of administration with the will annexed were granted to Charles Finkenzeller, the husband. The distributive provisions intended to be made by the testatrix were not contained in the will but were written on sheets of paper separate from the will, which sheets of paper were denied probate, so that the will as admitted to probate contained no provision for the disposition of the testatrix' personal estate and the same will go to her next of kin under our statute of distribution. Upon the administrator's failure to file an inventory of the personal estate of the deceased, he was, on petition of the adopted daughter, ordered by the orphans court to do so, and from said order he now appeals. The claim made in his behalf is that the decree of adoption of the New York court will not be recognized to affect the distribution of the testatrix' personal estate under the laws of this state; that our statute of distribution giving the right of inheritance to a child from his parent, applies to a child of the body and to a child adopted under the statutes of this state only and to extend this right to a child adopted under the laws of another state, would be in contravention of our statute of distribution, and that since the testatrix died without issue, the administrator, as surviving husband, is entitled to all of his deceased wife's personal estate (Cum. Supp. p. 2628 § 146, 169 sub. 2) and cannot be required to file an inventory.
Comp. Stat: p. 3855 § 120 makes it unnecessary for an administrator with the will annexed, who is entitled to all the personal estate of the testator, to file an inventory unless the orphans court, upon the application of "any person interested in the estate" shall order him to do so. It is necessary *46
therefore to determine whether the adopted daughter is a person interested in the estate. In re Folwell,
The weight of authority in this country is that a child adopted in a foreign state or country may take under local statutes of descent and distribution, if such foreign state or country had jurisdiction to fix his status with respect to his adoptive parents, and if the law with regard to adoption, of the state in which the real and personal property is situated, does not differ essentially from the laws of the state in which the adoption was had, so that local public policy is not violated by recognizing and giving effect to the adoption proceedings of the foreign state or country. 65 L.R.A. 187; 14 L.R.A. (new series) 980;L.R.A. 1916 A, 666 and cases cited. New York courts recognize and apply this doctrine under the comity between states. NewYork Life, c., v. Viele,
A child adopted under the Adoption act of this state (Comp.Stat. p. 2807 §§ 13 et seq.; Cum. Supp. p. 1555 §§ 97, 16) occupies the same position as a natural born child of the adoptive parents, so far as concerns the right to take by inheritance from such parents. In re Book,
Reference to cases upon which the learned vice-chancellor relied in arriving at his conclusion may be helpful in determining the instant case. Hood v. McGehee,
The Birtwhistle Case does not apply to personal property and we have no statute in this state similar to the statute of Merton, but we have our adoption statute and statutes legitimating children born out of wedlock, whose parents afterward marry (P.L. 1915 p. 333) and children born of a ceremonial marriage afterwards annulled or declared void (P.L.1924 p. 318) and giving such children the right of inheritance from their parents, which statutes are contrary to the statute of Merton. Whatever may be the rule to apply in this state as to the right of a child under a foreign adoption to take land in this state by inheritance from an adoptive parent, I know of no case which is authority for denying the right of a child adopted under a New York court decree to *49 take by inheritance from her adoptive parent personal property having its situs here, and I shall hold that comity between states requires that the New York decree of adoption in question should be recognized in this case as giving the adopted child the same status as a lawful child so far as concerns the personal estate of her adoptive mother, and that therefore she is a person interested in such estate. Cum. Supp. 2628 § 146, 169 sub. 1. The result is that the order of the orphans court directing the administrator to file an inventory will be affirmed. *50