147 Ga. 754 | Ga. | 1918
William Pair, of Cobb county, survived his wife and died on July 16, 1915. He had no children born to him in lawful wedlock. J. W. Pair was legally adopted in the superior court of Cobb county, in November, 1895, and survived him. After the death of William Pair, William Henry Pair was appointed temporary administrator of his estate; and as such he instituted an action against J. W. Pair, to recover the possession of certain personalty and certain described notes due to William Pair, deceased. This action is still pending. J. W. Pair was thereafter appointed permanent administrator of the estate of William Pair, but an appeal by William Henry Pair was taken from this judgment of the court of ordinary; and this appeal is still pending. J. W. Pair then filed his petition in equity, reciting the foregoing facts, and alleging that William Henry Pair and his brothers, naming them, were mere intermeddlers and interlopers and without any right or interest in the estate of William Pair, deceased; that there were no debts owing by the estate of William Pair; that he was the sole heir at law of the deceased, and was entitled to his estate, and to injunction against any interference therewith by William Henry Pair and his brothers. The petition contained appropriate prayers. To the petition, William Henry, Sam A., and Irwin Pair answered, and by way of cross-petition alleged: J. C. Pair was the father of the defendants, and the defendants are his “only children and sole heirs at law.” J. C. Pair died a short time before the death of William Pair. William Pair was the father of J. C. Pair, but William Pair and the mother of J. 0. Pair were never married. William Pair and the mother
The whole inquiry relates to the ruling on the demurrer to the cross-petition of the defendants. Illegitimates “have no inheritable blood, except that given them by express law.” Civil Code, § 3029; Hicks v. Smith, 94 Ga. 809 (22 S. E. 153). An illegitimate son does not inherit from the putative father in this State. Johnstone v. Taliaferro, 107 Ga. 6, 16 (32 S. E. 931, 45 L. E. A. 95). It is neither alleged nor insisted that.William Pair legitimated J. C. Pair under section 3012 or section 3013 of the Civil Code. The only right, legal or 'equitable, possessed by J. C. Pair in his lifetime to claim any interest in the estate, or any part thereof, of William Pair depends upon and grows out of the alleged parol contract to adopt him and make him his heir. The courts of this State, under certain circumstances, have enforced parol contracts of adoption; and it may now be considered as settled that equity will decree an adoption and its resultant rights in eases where no statutory adoption exists, and where to do otherwise would result in irreparable injury. Crawford v. Wilson, 139 Ga. 654 (78 S. E. 30, 44 L. R. A. (N. S.) 773); Crawford v. Wilson, 142 Ga. 734 (83 S. E. 667); Fairchilds v. Hartsfield, 144 Ga. 348 (87 S. E. 285); Heery v. Heery, 144 Ga. 467 (2a), 468 (87 S. E. 472); Lansdell v. Lansdell, 144 Ga. 571 (87 S. E. 782); Rahn v. Hamilton, 144 Ga. 644 (87 S. E. 1061); Fay v. Burton, 147 Ga. 648 (95 S. E. 224). There are some decisions elsewhere to the contrary; but “by the great weight of authority it is established that such agreements are valid and enforceable” (1 C. J. 1376, § 17, and cases cited in note), provided the necessary elements of a valid contract exist. This doctrine is to be in all circumstances cautiously applied. Subject to the rule, sometimes overlooked, that the remedy of specific performance is within the discretion of the court and will not be granted where it is not necessary to secure justice to the child (Kirkland v. Downing, 106 Ga. 530, 32 S. E. 632; 36 Cyc. 548), such an agreement, partially or fully performed by the child, will be specifically enforced in equity if the contract be definite and specific, based upon a sufficient legal consideration, and the proof of it be strong, clear, and satisfactory.
The decision in the case of Crawford v. Wilson, 139 Ga. 654 (supra), seems to have been misunderstood. The first ruling in that case is as follows: “A parol obligation by a person to adopt the child of another as his own, accompanied by a virtual though not a statutory adoption, and acted upon by all parties concerned for many years and during the obligor’s life, may be enforced in equity upon the death .of the obligor, by decreeing the child entitled as a child to the property of the obligor, undisposed of by the will.” In the sixth headnote of that ease it is distinctly ruled that the child did not “occupy the legal status of heir or creditor.” In Lansdell v. Lansdell, supra, the decision in the Crawford case was considered and it was there said that the facts alleged in the petition in the Crawford case “gave to the child such an equitable status and such equitable rights as she could enforce in a court having equitable jurisdiction.” All our decisions are to the effect that the contract, whether one to' adopt, with the resulting rights of an heir at law, or one to give the child a share in the estate of the adopting parent, is a contract which when performed by the child creates a status which a court of equity, in a proper proceeding brought by proper parties, has power to declare. The proper and necessary party to a suit to enforce the contract in the instant case is the personal representative of J. C. Pair. Whether the heirs at law of J. C. Pair could maintain the cross-petition if it appeared that the estate of William Pair consisted of realty, or realty and personalty, is not decided.
Judgment affirmed.