At fifteen or sixteen years of age appellant, complainant in the court below, was an orphan. Mrs. Faulkner was an invalid without children. She and her husband took Alva, as the witnesses refer to appellant, into their home where she remained for fifteen years and until her marriage to Marietta. Alva helped about the home, and the evidence leaves no room for doubt that she was a great comfort to her foster parents. For the purposes of this cause it will be conceded that the common understanding between appellant and her foster parents was that appellant would inherit their property at the death of the parents. Mrs. Faulkner died seized and possessed of certain real property and now the contest is between the foster child and the heirs at law of Mrs. Faulkner. By her bill, appellant sought a decree establishing *Page 562 her status as "sole legatee and heir" — as the prayer of the bill puts it — of the deceased Bettie A. Faulkner, Mrs. Faulkner to whom we have referred. Mrs. Faulkner left no will, nor was there at any time an effort to meet the conditions for the adoption of children prescribed by section 9302 of the Code of 1923. The circuit judge, sitting as chancellor, on hearing the pleading and proof, denied relief and dismissed appellant's bill.
Appellant's case carries a strong appeal to sympathy; but we have been unable to find adequate support for it in law or equity. In Prince v. Prince,
Recurring to Prince v. Prince,
In Prince v. Prince,
Decree affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and THOMAS and BROWN, JJ., concur.