On the 18th day of April, 1909, George W. Walworth died intestate at Bennington, this State, the place of his residence, leaving a solvent estate in this State consisting mostly of real property. He left surviving him a wife, Jennie L. Walworth, and several brothers and sisters (the exceptants in this case), but no father or mother. On January 15, 1885,
By Laws of 1880, No. 137, Sec. 1, “any person other than a married woman, of full age and sound mind, and any husband and wife, may adopt any other person as his or their heir at law with or without change of name of the person adopted.” Sections 2, 3, 4, and 5 prescribe the method of procedure, and the form of the instrument to be executed to effect such adoption. And by sec. 6, “ Such instrument shall, if it appears to the probate court that the provisions of the statute have been complied with, be recorded in the probate office where it is filed. And upon the proper execution and filing of such an instrument the same rights, duties and obligations and the same rights of inheritance shall exist between the parties as though the person adopted had been the legitimate child of the person or persons making the adoption, except that the person so adopted shall not be capable of taking property expressly limited to the heirs of the body or bodies of the parties making such adoption. And the natural parents of a minor shall be deprived, by the adoption, of all legal rights as respects the control of such minor, and such minor shall be freed from all obligation of obedience
The question then is, 'whether the child of the adopted daughter deceased is entitled to inherit through her by right of representation a share in the adoptive father’s intestate estate. This question, now for the first time before this Court, is not on the face of the statute altogether free from doubt.
The doctrine of adoption was unknown to the common law of England, and in this country, in states whose jurispruddence is based exclusively on that system, it exists only by statute. Matter of Thorne,
By the civil law before the time of Justinian the effect of adoption was to place the person adopted in the same position
Mr. Holland, in his Elements of Jurisprudence, says that parental right extends to the custody and control of children, and to the produce of their labor till they arrive at years of discretion; and that it is acquired on the birth, and also under some systems, on the adoption of a child. Holl. Jur. (10th Ed.) 172.
In Ross v. Ross, cited above, the question was, whether a child legally adopted in Pennsylvania and thus entitled to inherit real estate there, having with the adopting parent become resident in Massachusetts, could inherit the real estate of such parent in the latter state upon his dying there intestate. Holding that generally the law of the domicile of the parties is the rule which governs the creation of the status of a child by adoption, it became necessary for the court to determine the legal status of the adopted child by the statute of Pennsylvania under which the adoption was had, as construed by the highest court of that state. Referring to two such cases the court said: “The opinion in each of those cases clearly recognizes what is indeed expressly enacted in the statute, that as between the adopted child and the adopting father, the child has all the rights and duties of a child, and the capacity
By the statute of Indiana, a child after its adoption takes the name in which it is adopted, and is entitled to all the rights and interests in the estate of the adopter, by descent or otherwise, that it would if the natural heir of the adopter; and the adoptive father or mother occupies the same position toward such child that he or she would if the natural father or mother, and is liable for the maintenance, education, and every other way responsible as a natural father or mother, — in substance not materially unlike our own statute, except that ours excludes from the right of inheritance property expressly limited to the heirs of the body, of the adopter. In Markover v. Krauss,
Although the direct effects of adoption under our statute arernot left to rest upon the determination of the meaning of that term by construction, yet such effects expressly declared by the law-making power correspond in most respects with the
Furthermore, the status of parent and child is a correlative one. Where there is a legal child there is a legal father. In Humphries v. Davis, cited above, the court said it was not to be presumed that the Legislature meant to violate logical results by creating the legal relation of child without the corresponding one of parent. As a logical sequence, the children of such legal child are the grandchildren of the legal father. The status of Howard M. is therefore that of a legal grandchild to the intestate, and as such he is entitled to stand in his mother’s place and right respecting the intestate estate, and share in it as her legal representative, unless prevented from so doing by the restrictions contained in either the statute of adoption or the statute of descent, presently to be considered. The ex-ceptants rely upon the cases of Moore v. Moore’s Exrs.,
The special act under which the adoption was had in Powers v. Hafley, cited above, changed the name of the child from that of her natural parents to that of the adoptive parents, and made her “capable of taking and holding, by descent, the-estate of” the latter “in as full and complete a manner as if she-was his lawful child.” The language of that act is certainly no broader than that of the statute now under consideration. After adoption the child died leaving children (the appellant» in that case), and after her death the adoptive father died intestate. The question was, whether the appellants, as such children, were entitled to the estate of the intestate, by right of representation. It was held that by the law of adoption the adopted child was made a full legal heir to the adopting father,., and was put precisely upon the same footing, so far as taking and holding the latter’s property by descent was concerned, as a natural child; that, taking the logical sequence of the language of the act, aided as it is by the principles of the civil-law, the conclusion was inevitable that the appellants were the legal grandchildren of the adopting father, and as such by right of representation entitled to share in the distribution of his estate. The doctrine of this case was reaffirmed in Atchison v. Atchison’s Exrs.,
From the examination we have given the subject, it is believed that in no other reported case has a like question been determined, and hence that there is no diversity of decision.
It is said however that the words “between the parties”, used in the section of the statute pertaining to the effects of the adoption, should be literally and strictly applied, and that with such application they clearly indicate - an intention by the Legislature to limit the right of inheritance to “between the parties” to the instrument of adoption. The statute expressly defines the direct effects produced by the event of adoption; but it contains nothing which excludes the incidental consequences of the status produced, either alone, or coupled with subsequent facts. An “incident,” says Lord Coke, is “a thing •appertaining to or following another as a more worthy or principal.” Co. Litt. 1515. The direct effects of the adoption are ■complete when that event Is entered upon. But the incidents are attached to the status by fixed rules of law, and whether they become operative in resulting rights may be contingent upon subsequent circumstances. Thus, we have seen that by operation of law the minor child Howard M. is the legal •grandchild of the Intestate, consequent on the correlative relation of the parties to the adoption. Yet the right of such grandchild to inherit from the intestate arises not out of the status produced by the adoption, alone, but out of that status •coupled with the subsequent fact of his mother’s death before that of her adoptive father intestate; and therefrom the law fixes the results. “Every right,” says Mr. Justice Holmes, “is a consequence attached by the law to one or more facts which the law defines, and wherever the law gives any one special rights not shared by the body of the people, it does so on the
As respects the right of inheritance we think the words “between the parties” are intended to limit such right of the person adopted to inherit from the person or persons making the adoption, and to this end they in effect negative any right to inherit through such person or persons by right of representation; and if the statute be mutual (a question not considered), the right of the adopter to inherit is limited in like manner. Yet as such limitations do not pertain to incidental consequences flowing from the legal'parental relations, the right of the minor-child in this case, through his mother by right of representation, to share in the intestate’s estate is not affected thereby.
It is further contended that the word “children,” as used in the first canon of descent (P. S. 2936), does not include an adopted child, and that the word “issue,” as used in the second' canon, does not include either an adopted child or the children of such child. In Ross v. Ross, cited above, it is said that the statute of descent “must be understood as merely laying down general rules of inheritance, and not as completely and accurately defining how the status is to be created which gives the capacity to inherit. It does not undertake to prescribe who shall be considered a child, or a widow, or a husband, or what is necessary to constitute the legal relation of husband and wife, or of parent and child. Those requisites must be sought elsewhere. The-words ‘children’ and ‘child,’ for instance, in the first clause, ‘issue,’ in the phrase ‘if he leaves no issue,’ in subsequent clauses, and ‘kindred,’ in the last two clauses of this section, clearly include a child made legitimate by the marriage of its parents and acknowledgment by the father after its birth under section 4 of the same chapter, or a child adopted under the provisions of chapter 110 of the General Statutes, or chapter 310 of the statutes of 1871. ” Exactly the same holding was had in Fosburg v. Rogers,
If the contention of the exceptants in this regard were sound, the provisions of the statute of adoption expressly conferring-upon the person adopted the capacity to inherit would be in
The word “issue” in the second canon of descent has a broader significance than the word “children”in the first,-since it must necessarily include the “legal representatives of deceased children,” also within the first. Indeed by statute (P. S.) 10 the word “issue, ’ ’as applied to the descent of estate, shall include the lawful lineal descendants of the ancestor.
It is further said that the widow’s share of the estate should not be affected by the adoption, since she never consented thereto nor took any part therein, and reference is made to Stanley v. Chandler in support of this position. But in that case, as Before observed, the person was made “ heir at law” by a married man without the joinder or consent of his wife. In such circumstances it seems to be pretty generally held, as there, that "the rights of the widow in the estate of the husband are not affected thereby. Carroll’s Estate, 219 Pa. St. 440,
In Bancroft v. Heirs of Bancroft,
Judgment affirmed. To be certified to the probate court.
