94 Me. 421 | Me. | 1900
The appellant excepts to the ruling of the judge at nisi prius dismissing her appeal from the decree of the judge of probate, grantihg to Elijah Phillips and wife the adoption of the child of the appellant and her deceased husband.
By R. S., c. 67, § 36, a right of appeal is given only to the petitioner and to the child by its next friend. Gray v. Gardner, 81 Maine, 558. The mother might have taken an appeal for the child as its next friend. Murray v. Barber, 16 R. I. 512. She did not, however, undertake to appeal for the child.
The appeal both in form and substance is her own. It sets forth that she is interested as the mother of the child, that she is aggrieved by the decree, and that she appeals therefrom. The reasons of appeal are personal to herself. They are, in substance, that she has not consented to the adoption, that she’has not abandoned the child, that she does not want the petitioners to have him but wants him herself, that she is able to care for him and wishes him to be adopted by her present husband. They have no reference to the interest and welfare of the child, the paramount consideration in cases of adoption. Plainly this is not an appeal of the child by his next friend.
Neither can appellant’s right to appeal be sustained under R. S., c. 63, § 23, which gives a right of appeal to any person aggrieved by any decree of á judge of probate. It is not every person that is dissatisfied with a decree of the probate court who is “aggrieved” within the meaning of the statute, but only those who have rights which may be enforced at law and whose pecuniary intei-est might be established in whole, or in part, by the decree. Deering v. Adams, 34 Maine, 41; Briard v. Goodale, 86 Maine, 100. Without deciding whether the appellant in the present case falls within that class, it is sufficient to say that the right of appeal under this section is conditional, and that the appeal can be prosecuted only upon complying with the requisites of the statute. Bartlett, appellant, 82 Maine, 210.
Exceptions overruled.