113 P. 59 | Or. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court.
“Of the Adoption of Children.
“Sec. 2307. Any person competent to make a will is authorized in manner hereinafter set forth, to adopt as his own the minor child of another, conferring thereby upon such child all the rights, privileges, and responsibilities which would pertain to the child if born to the person adopting in lawful wedlock.
“Sec. 2308. In order thereto, the consent of both parents, if living and not divorced or separated, and if divorced or separated, or if unmarried, the consent of the parent lawfully having the care and providing for the wants of the child, or if either parent is dead, then the consent of the survivor, or if both parents be dead, or the
“Sec. 2309. Such instrument in writing shall be also signed by the person adopting, and shall be acknowledged by all the parties thereto in the same manner as deeds affecting real estate are required to be acknowledged; and shall be recorded in the recorder’s office in the county where the person adopting resides, and shall be indexed with the name of the parents by adoption as grantor, and the child as grantee, in its original name if stated in the instrument.
“Sec. 2310. Upon the execution, acknowledgment and filing for record of such instrument, the rights, duties and relations between the parent and child by adoption shall, thereafter, in all respects, including the right of inheritance, be the same that exist by law between parent and child by lawful birth.
“Sec. 2311. In case of maltreatment committed or allowed by the adopted parent, or palpable neglect of duty on his part toward such child, the custody thereof may be taken from him and entrusted to another at his expense, if so ordered by the circuit court of the county where the parent resides, and the same proceedings may be had therefor, so far as applicable, as are authorized by law in such a case in the relation of master and apprentice; or the court may, on showing of the facts, require from the adopted parent, bond with security, in a sum to be fixed by him, the county being the obligee, and for the benefit of the child, conditioned for the proper treatment and performance of duty toward the child on the part of the parent; but no action of the court in the premises shall affect or diminish the acquired right of inheritance on the
The reception of this statute in evidence was objected to by the plaintiff on the ground for one thing, that the statute of the sister state of Iowa was not pleaded by the defendant Mullen so as to entitle the same to admission in evidence. The defendant Mullen also introduced in evidence what purported to be copies of two sets of adoption papers relating to her adoption; first, by Cyrus Crooks and Delite Crooks; and, second, by Mary Malinda Clinton and Richard Clinton, which papers, with certificates thereunto annexed, read as follows;
“Articles op Adoption.
“Cyrus Crooks & Delite Crooks to Hattie Jackson. Know all men by these presents, that we, Albert & Mary Jackson, father and mother of Hattie Jackson, do by these presents consent and agree that Cyrus Crooks & Delite Crooks may have and by these presents do consent that the said Cyrus & Delite Crooks may have from this time on until the period of said Hattie Jackson’s majority the sole and absolute possession of said Hattie Jackson, that they may adopt her as 'their own child the same as though she had been born unto them as their own child. The said Cyrus Crooks & Delite Crooks do hereby consent to adopt the said Hattie Jackson as their own child and agree that she may have all rights and privileges the same as though she the said Hattie had been born unto them. It is further agreed that the name the said Hattie Jackson shall be known by from the date of this article henceforth shall be Hattie Crooks. This article is made in pursuance of the provisions of the Code of Iowa 1873, and it is mutually agreed between the parties to it that the section of said Code of 1873, in relation to the adoption of children shall be a part of this article and the terms of this article governed thereby. All the above named parties being now residents of Cherokee Co., Iowa. In testimony whereof we have hereunto set our hands this 17th day of January, 1876. Albert Jackson. Mary Jackson. Cyrus Crooks. Delite Crooks.
County of Cherokee.J
[ss.
Be it remembered that on the 17th day of January, A. D. 1886, before the undersigned, J. D. F. Smith, a notary public in and for said county, personally came Albert Jackson, Mary M. Jackson, Cyrus Crooks and Delite Crooks, to me known to be the identical persons whose names are affixed to the foregoing instrument and acknowledged the execution of the same to be their voluntary act and deed. Witness my hand and notarial seal the day and year last above written.
[seal] J. D. F. Smith, Notary Public.
“Filed for record August 23, 1889, at 9 o’clock A. M.
“0. Gage, Recorder.”
Above and foregoing articles recorded in Book 1 of Mise. Records, p. 571.
“Adoption Papers.
“Mary Malinda Clinton & Husband to Hattie Crooks, Cyrus Crooks & Elizabeth Delite Crooks. Know all men-by these presents, that we, Cyrus Crooks and Elizabeth Delite Crooks, husband and wife, residents of Cherokee, Cherokee County, Iowa, having heretofore adopted as our own child Hattie Jackson under the name of Hattie Crooks, by articles of adoption duly signed, executed and acknowledged by us and the said child’s father and mother Albert Jackson and Mary Malinda Jackson, which articles of adoption were filed for record in the office of the recorder of Cherokee, Cherokee County, Iowa, this 23d day of Aug., 1889, do hereby consent that the said Hattie Crooks, a resident of Cherokee, Cherokee County, Iowa, may be adopted as their own child by her natural mother, Mary Malinda Clinton, of Portland, Oregon, and Richard Clinton, of Portland, Oregon, husband of said Mary Malinda Clinton, the said child hereafter to be called and known by the name of Hattie Clinton. Said child was fourteen years old Sept. 28, 1888. And the said Mary Malinda Clinton and Richard Clinton hereby agree to adopt and do adopt as their own child with right of inheritance from each of them, the said Hattie Crooks, to be
“State of Iowa 1
County of Cherokee.J
[ss.
Be it remembered that on this 23d day of August, A. D. 1889, before me, M. Wakefield, a notary public in and for said county, personally appeared Elizabeth Delite Crooks and Mary Malinda Clinton to me personally known to be the identical persons whose names are subscribed to the foregoing instrument as makers thereof or grantors therein and severally acknowledged the same to be their free and voluntary act and deed. Witness my hand and notarial seal this 23d day of August, A. D. 1889, at Cherokee, Cherokee County, Iowa.
[seal] M. Wakefield,
Notary Public in and for Cherokee Co., Iowa.
“State of Oregon 1
County of Multnomah. J
[ss.
“Be it remembered that on this 11th day of October, A. D. 1889, before the undersigned, a notary public in and for said county, personally came Richard Clinton to me personally known to be the identical person whose name is affixed to the foregoing instrument as grantor or maker and acknowledged the instrument to be his voluntary act and deed and that he executed the same for the purposes therein mentioned. Witness my hand and notarial seal the day and year last above written.
James Gleason,
Notary Public for Oregon.
Filed for record Oct. 15th, 1889, at 3y% o’clock P. M.
0. Gage, Recorder.
“State of Iowa 1
County of Cherokee.J
[ss.
I, John W. Stevens, county recorder in and for Cherokee County, Iowa, do hereby certify that the foregoing is
John W. Stevens,
Recorder, Cherokee County, Iowa.
“State op Iowa 1
County of Cherokee. J
[ss.
I, Wm. Hutchinson, judge of the Fourth Judicial District of the state of Iowa, hereby certify that John W. Stevens, whose signature appears to the above certificate, is at present the recorder of Cherokee County, Iowa, and is the officer having the legal custody of the records of articles of adoption that have been filed for record in said county and state.
[seal] Wm. Hutchinson.
Dated at Cherokee, Iowa, April 5, 1909.
Attest: H. V. Taft, Clerk.”
The plaintiff objected to these adoption papers on the ground, among other things, that they do not show a legal adoption under the laws of Iowa or any other state. The allegation of the answer of the defendant Mullen respecting her adoption by Richard Clinton, deceased, reads as follows:
“That at all the times and dates herein alleged, and for more than twenty years last past, Hattie Mullen was, and is now, the duly and legally adopted daughter and heir at law of the said Richard Clinton, deceased.”
If it were a matter of pleading a judgment or decree of a court, it would be sufficient to state that the same
The adoption process in Iowa, according to the statute quoted, is summed up in the language of Section 2310:
“Upon the execution, acknowledgment and filing for record of such instrument, the rights, duties, and relations between the parent and child by adoption shall, thereafter, in all respects, including the right of inheritance, be the same that exist by law between parent and child by lawful birth.”
In the absence of pleadings and evidence on that subject, we cannot presume that the persons seeking to adopt the defendant Hattie Mullen were possessed of “testamentary capacity” as defined by the Iowa Code, or that the acknowledgments set out in the adoption papers were sufficient under the laws of that state. Indeed, presuming, as we must in the absence of both pleading and evidence on that subject, that the common law prevails in Iowa as to testamentary capacity, we are forced to the conclusion that the married women mentioned in those' papers had not testamentary capacity, for at common law no married woman could by will dispose of either real or personal property. 30 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.) 606.
Many cases have been pressed upon our attention calling for the liberal construction of the act of adoption, but in all the Iowa cases on that subject the acknowledgment and filing for record, as well as the execution of the instrument of adoption, are laid down as essential requisites to complete a legal adoption. As late as 1907, in the case of Sires v. Melvin, 135 Iowa 460 (113 N. W. 106), the supreme court of that state reviews the authorities, and, while applying liberal construction to acts of adoption where mere details are not essential, yet holds fast to the principle that execution, acknowledgment, and filing for record are three requirements of a valid adoption, neither one of which can be dispensed with. The doctrine of the Missouri cases is also laid before us, of which Thomas v. Maloney, 142 Mo. App. 193 (126 S. W. 522), is an illustration. In that case the adoption was
Moreover, as held in the Iowa case of In re Lamb, 140 Iowa 89 (117 N. W. 1118: 18 L. R. A. (N. S.) 226), unless the facts relied upon establish the relationship of heir at law, the claimant in question cannot assume that relationship in equity.
The conclusion is inevitable that both as a question of pleading and as a question of evidence the case of the defendant Hattie Mullen on the matter of adoption is not made out.
In view of these circumstances, especially as there are no intervening interests, the court considers that the allegation of mutual mistake in entering satisfaction of the mortgage is made out by the great preponderance of the evidence.
These considerations lead to a reversal of the decree of the circuit court. A decree of this court will be entered according to the prayer of the complaint, but with this difference, that neither party shall recover costs or disbursements from the other in either the circuit or the Supreme Court.
Reversed: Rehearing Denied.