VIVIAN COWGILL MENEES, Appellant, v. LILLIAN COWGILL ET AL., Respondents
No. 41282-223 S. W. (2d) 412
Division One
September 12, 1949
Motion for Rehearing or to Transfer to Banc Overruled, October 10, 1949
697
The court found that the Cowgills had in 1920 entered into an agreement to adopt the plaintiff and held that, although the Cowgills had
Plaintiff deemed the judgment to be inadequate and erroneous and took her appeal to the Kansas City Court of Appeals. That court adopted an opinion reversing the judgment and remanding the cause “with directions to the trial court to enter judgment against Lillian Cowgill, as prayed, and to dismiss the petition as to all other defendants,” but the court transferred the cause to this court on the dissent of one оf the judges. Menees v. Cowgill (Mo. App.), 214 S. W. (2d) 561, 571. We shall review the record and determine the cause as if it had come on original appeal.
The facts are fully stated in the opinion of Cave, P. J. and will not be repeated here. See Menees v. Cowgill, supra. We are in agreement with that opinion, except that we construe the petition as seeking both a decree of equitable adoption and a declaratory judgment as to appellant‘s status, and hold that a declaratory judgment, rather thаn a dismissal, should have been entered. While we have reached the conclusion that appellant is entitled to no affirmative equitable relief against any of the respondents except Lillian Cowgill, appellant‘s status, as or as not the adopted daughter of Guy M. Cowgill, should have been determined against all of the respondents. Regardless of what her status is, appellant is entitled to have a declaration thereof under the Declaratory Judgment Aсt and we construe the Act in agreement with the opinion of Dew, J. (214 S. W. (2d) 561, 567).
Appellant says that her “motion for judgment on the pleadings should have been sustained and judgment should have gone for her declaring her status to be that of an adopted child since the year 1920 of Guy M. Cowgill, deceased, and the defendant, Lillian Cowgill“; and that the court should have declared that the judgment establishing such status was binding on all of the defendants. Appellant insists that the judgment entered by the trial court was “not rеsponsive to the pleadings and evidence” and was erroneous in that “the court had no jurisdiction, right or authority to attempt to determine the interests of the parties in and to the real and personal property located and being administered upon in the State of Iowa.”
Although the petition alleged that the Cowgills “did in fact adopt plaintiff” and although plaintiff prayed the court to declare that she had “the status of a legally adopted child of Guy M. Cоwgill and Lillian Cowgill” and that the contract of adoption became an executed contract in the year 1920, the petition further alleged that
Appellant insists that no amount in money or property is in dispute before the court; that the action is one in personam; that the only issue made by the pleadings relates to the “status” of the plaintiff; and that she did not ask any further relief. Appellant further states: “It is true as the respondents say that the appellant seeks only a decree of adoption. . . . Since 1920 she has or she has not had the status of and has been the adopted child of Guy M. Cowgill. She needs proof of this status, alleged to have been created in Missouri, under Missouri law, and the purpose of this action is to get that proоf. . . . The plaintiff seeks a decree of adoption PERIOD. That such a decree would make her the child of Guy M. Cowgill and Lillian Cowgill, ‘with all of the legal relationships, rights, privileges, powers and immunities which the law creates between natural parents and their child,’ is a matter not of decree but rather a matter of consequence of the decree. It also is a matter of law, or consequence, rather than of the decree that an equitable adoption creates the same relationship which would be created by a strict compliance with the adoption statutes of Missouri.” (Italics ours). In addition appellant contends that a legal adoption was effected and a legal status of adopted child of Guy M. Cowgill was created by the alleged contract of adoption and the admitted facts, although the contract was unperformed to the extent that “the statutory formalities required by law relating tо the adoption of children” were never complied with. Appellant insists that her legal status as an adopted child can be recognized and declared under the declaratory judgment act against persons who were not parties to the contract and particularly against the respondents who claim the Iowa property as the heirs at law of Mrs. Cochrane. Appellant says “her status exists as well now as though she had been formally adoptеd.”
No issue is presented upon this appeal concerning the decree of equitable adoption entered against Lillian Cowgill. The issue presented concerns only the appellant‘s right to a judgment against the personal representative and the collateral heirs of Clara Cowgill Cochrane, deceased, to the effect that appellant is the lawfully adopted daughter of Guy M. Cowgill and sustained that status to him. Ap-
Respondents contend that the court had no jurisdiction to enter a decree of equitable adoption on the cause of action stated against Guy M. Cowgill or any of the defendants; except Lillian Cowgill; that, if the appellant was entitled to a declaration of rights against Lillian Cowgill, the decree should have decreed that appellant еither did or did not have the rights she sought to have declared; and that the court should have declared that “appellant does not have the ‘status’ of an adopted child (of Guy M. Cowgill) under Missouri law and is not entitled to greater relief than that given her by the decree entered below.”
It clearly appears from the allegations of the petition, as well as from the admitted facts, that the fundamental and basic fact upon which appellant bases her cаuse of action is the breach by the Cowgills of their contract to adopt the appellant as their daughter. Except for the basic fact that the Cowgills failed to comply with “the statutory formalities required by law relating to the adoption of children,” there would be no occasion for this action or the relief here sought. In this connection the answering defendants denied that Guy M. Cowgill and Lillian Cowgill adopted plaintiff or that plaintiff was the lawfully adopted child of the Cowgills under and by virtue of the laws of this state. Defendants further alleged “that, as alleged in plaintiff‘s petition, Guy M. Cowgill died long before the bringing of this suit by plaintiff, and that his estate has been completely distributed, the plaintiff being one of the beneficiaries under the will of the said Guy M. Cowgill; that all of the property which plaintiff now seeks to inherit was the property of a sister of Guy M. Cowgill, whose death occurred subsequent to that of said Guy M. Cowgill and after final distribution of his estate; . . . that the partiеs to the alleged agreement to adopt made no attempt to comply with the statutes then in force and effect providing for the adoption of children in the State of Missouri; and that, therefore, there was no adoption, even though the conduct of the parties to the alleged agreement to adopt has been such that they themselves, or their direct descendents claiming under them, in a proceeding against them alone, might be estopрed from denying such adoption. These defendants further say that they were not parties to the said alleged agreement to adopt and that they are not the direct descendants of any of said parties to said alleged agreement to adopt, and therefore that no right or claim of estoppel to deny said adoption is applicable to them.” Defendants prayed the court “to adjudge and decree that there was no adoptiоn under the laws of the State of Missouri, and that the plaintiff is not entitled to inherit from the collateral kin of said Guy M. Cowgill.”
In this case, as stated, appellant‘s action is based upon the contract of the Cowgills to adopt her, the full performance of the contract by herself and her father and the fact that the Cowgills performed the contract in every manner, except that they “failed to execute a valid deed of adoption on their part or to otherwise formally adopt her in accordance to the statutes of the State of Missouri in such cases made and provided.” Appellant says that the action is not based upon estoppel, fraud or inducements, but on contract; and that there was a legal adoption regardless of any compliance with statutory provisions.
Many cases involving oral contracts of adoption have been considered by this court, but we can not agree to the contention that there can be an adoption by contract and performance without either a compliance with “the statutory formalities required by law relating
“It has long been recognized, however, that a person who is legally competent to adopt may enter into a binding contract whereby for a good consideration he agrees to take another as his child. Where such contract is actually made and based upon a good consideration and where it is fully performed by the person to be adopted but is not performed by the promisor during his lifetime, a court of equity will declare specific performance against the adoptor‘s estate to the extent at least of making the adoptee an heir.” Niehaus v. Madden, supra; Bland v. Buoy, 335 Mo. 967, 74 S. W. (2d) 612, 619; Taylor v. Coberly, 327 Mo. 940, 38 S. W. (2d) 1055, 1060; Lynn v. Hockaday, supra (162 Mo. 111, 126).
Equitаble adoption in this state is founded upon well established equitable principles by which equity may grant specific enforcement of a contract to adopt, or declare, in a proper case, that a defendant is estopped to deny the adoption agreed to be made. Some of the grounds upon which affirmative equitable relief may be granted are discussed in Thompson v. Moseley, 344 Mo. 240, 125 S. W. (2d) 860, 862; Shelp v. Mercantile Trust Co., 322 Mo. 682, 15 S. W. (2d) 818, 824; Weber v. Griffiths, 349 Mo. 145, 159 S. W. (2d) 670, 673; and Holland v. Martin, 355 Mo. 767, 198 S. W. (2d) 16.
Appellant has called our attention tо a footnote in 2 C. J. S. 401, based upon Lindsley v. Patterson (Mo. Sup.), 177 S. W. 826, stating: “In Missouri, and in this jurisdiction only, it is held that a fully executed contract of adoption on the part of the child, although the statutory procedure was not followed . . . operates to change the status of the child, so that it may take as an heir.” Also see the discussion of Missouri cases in 2 C. J. S. 376, Sec. 6. In the opinion in the Lindsley case it is stated that “any person who was capable of contracting could, at common law, adopt a minor child as his or her own son or daughter, in the same sense that he might enter into any other contract,” and the court said concerning the propositions presented: “First, was Mabel legally adopted as a child by Laura D. Patterson according to the principles of the common law?” (Italics ours). A reading of the opinion referred to and a reference to the authorities upon which it is based indicates that the case involved an equitable adoption proceеding, the action being essentially for the specific performance of an oral contract of adoption, where a failure to decree an equitable adoption would have been a fraud on the child. In so far as the case refers to adoption according to the principles of the common law, the case has not been cited or followed.
Appellant also relies upon statements contained in Rauch v. Metz, En Banc (Mo. Sup.), 212 S. W. 357; Carlin v. Bacon, 322 Mo. 435, 16 S. W. (2d) 46; Holloway v. Jones (Mo. Sup.), 246 S. W. 587 and other cases, as supporting her contention of a legal adoption by mere
In adoption cases, except for such relief as may be granted in equity in a proper case, the rule is properly stated in 2 Beale‘s, “The Conflict of Laws,” page 713, Sec. 142.1, as follows: “In order to create the status of adoption there must be some formal legal act; and as the common law knows no such status, it can only be created in strict and formal conformity to the terms of some statute. It cannot be created by contract or agreement.” See Niehaus v. Madden, supra; McIntyre v. Hardesty, 347 Mo. 805, 149 S. W. (2d) 334, 336; Sarazin v. Union Railroad Co., 153 Mo. 479, 485, 55 S. W. 92; Healey v. Simpson, 113 Mo. 340, 346, 20 S. W. 881; Sharkey v. McDermott, 91 Mo. 647, 4 S. W. 107; Mutual Life Ins. Co. of N. Y. v. Benton, 34 Fed. Supp. 859, 862; 2 C. J. S. 368, Adoption of Children, Sec. 1. We hold that no status of adoption exists in this state independent of compliance with statutory provisions or a decree of equitable adoption.
As stated, appellant was not adopted by Guy M. Cowgill and Lillian Cowgill aсcording to the existing statutory requirements on May 17, 1920, or at any subsequent time. Whether appellant is entitled to a decree of equitable adoption by Guy M. Cowgill in this action against the respondents and whether she had the legal status of an adopted daughter must be determined under the laws of this state. Appellant admits that the courts of this state have “the exclusive right to determine that status“; and that the ownership of Iowa property is not directly involved, nor within our jurisdiction. We need not therefore consider respondents’ contention that equity acts only with reference to property rights. See Beach v. Bryan, 155 Mo. App. 33, 133 S. W. 635.
Except as hereinbefore stated, the respondents were made defendants solely upon the theory that they were the collateral kin and heirs at law of Clara Cowgill Cochrane, deceased; and that they were claiming the intestate property of her estate as such and were, accordingly, interested in a determinаtion of whether or not appellant had the status of an adopted daughter of Guy M. Cowgill. While it is in effect admitted that the appellant would have been entitled to a decree of equitable adoption against Guy M. Cowgill during his lifetime, or against his heirs at law or his personal representatives after his death, entitling her to inherit from him as an
If Guy M. Cowgill had legally adopted appellant in compliance with statutory requirements, the adoption would have been binding on all persons, including the respondents, but in an equitable proceeding based upon contract, only the parties thereto, or those in privity with them are bound. Equity acts only against specific individuals and, in such case, one person may be bound аnd not another. A decree of equitable adoption merely forecloses “the parties to the suit against a denial of the status that the court declares” and the status decreed exists only in equity and against the judgment defendants. As between appellant and the respondents, appellant was not, in either law or equity, the adopted child of Guy M. Cowgill by reason of his contract to adopt her and the facts and circumstances admitted.
Appellant is dеnied the affirmative equitable relief sought against respondents, other than Lillian Cowgill, but the relief granted against her is affirmed. The decree is modified (1) to exclude the holding against Guy M. Cowgill and any direct determination of appellant‘s rights in the Iowa property, and (2) to add that, as between appellant and all the respondents, appellant is not the adopted daughter of Guy M. Cowgill and has no rights or status as such.
As modified the judgment is affirmed. Bradley and Van Osdol, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by DALTON, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
