In 1893, Gеorge C., Pemberton died intestate in Washington county, Nebraska, and was at the time of his death the owner in fee of certain lands situated in that county. An administrator of the estate was appointed, all debts were paid, and the administration closed prior to the institution of the suit at bar. At the time of Pemberton’s death, he left surviving him his wife, Margaret A. Pem-berton, but no children born of his marriage. In 1863,
The contest is simply between the plaintiff and the collateral heirs of the deceased, the rights of the surviving wife being recognized in all the pleadings. The wife, however, testified, as far as the cоurt would permit, in support of plaintiff’s claim. At the time the contract in issue was entered into there was no statute in the state, or rather territory, of Nebraska, providing for the adoption of children by deed or otherAvise, so that plaintiff’s right to recover must stand or fall on an interpretation of the written contract, admitted to have been signed by the deceased and his wife at the time above set forth. The question of acknoAAdedgment of this contract is immaterial, as it would be ineffective as a deed of adoption, even if it had been regularly acknowledged by both husband and wife. The question as to whether the delivery of this paper was made to plaintiff by direction of the deceased is also immaterial, because the right of aсtion, if any, on the paper does not depend upon its delivery. The writing offered in evidence was and is admissible for the
That specific performance of a contract of this nature will he enforced in equity, when properly established, is beyond dispute in this jurisdiction since the decision in Kofka v. Rosicky,
In suits of this character the rеlief granted necessarily depends on the facts and circumstances surrounding each particular case. While certain general principles are applied, yet the application of these principles to a particular case depends on its special environment. While we do not concede, because of different conditions surrounding the cases, that the conclusion reached in Kofka v. Rosicky, supra, was necessarily influenced by the decision in Wright v. Wright, supra, yet, because this contention is strongly urged by defendants, we have reexamined the latter case, as well as the cases in which it is said to have been overruled. As a result of our investigation, we find that in the case of Wright v. Wright, supra, the plaintiff, when about two years old, was indentured or bound to his foster-parents until he was 21 years of age, and it appears from the statement made in the dissenting opinion that there was no contract in this indenture that the child should inherit as an heir of the persons to whom he was bound. It further appears that afterwards the foster-parents under an unconstitutional
We are also cited by the defendants to the holding of the supreme court of the state of Missouri in Davis v. Hendricks,
“The strongest case made by the evidence for the*677 plaintiffs is that McCormick agreed to adopt the child and make her his heir. Such an agreement falls far short of the one alleged, namely, that he agreed to grant and devise to her all his property at his death.. The proved agreement only places the adopted child in the position of a natural child.”
We think this decision, in so far as it holds that the agreement proved gave the plaintiff the rights of heirship as a natural child, makes against rather than for the decision rendered by the learned trial judge in the case at bar. For if, under that decision, the deceased and his wife had died intestate, plaintiff, under her contract of adoption, would have taken the entire estate.
In this connection, our attention is called by plaintiff to a later decision of the supreme court of the state of Missouri in the case of Healey v. Simpson,
As against these authorities it is of no avail to suggest that, notwithstanding the existence of the contract sued upon, the deceased could have disposed of his property as he pleased during his lifetime, by deed, devise, or otherwise. It is true that he might have donе so, and also true that he did not. The deceased plainly lived up to both the letter and spirit of the contract in every particular, and died in the belief that its conditions would be carried out as he desired they should be. And we think there is no reason in equity and conscience why a decree of specific performance of this contract should not be granted.
Wе therefore recommend that the judgment of the district court be reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to enter a decree as prayed for in the petition.
By the Court: For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, it is ordered that the judgment of the district court- be reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to enter a decree as prayed for in the petition..
Reversed.
