1. A contract for adoption of a minor child, made in consideration of marriage of his mother, is within the statute of frauds, and consummation of the marriage is not sufficient performance to take it without the statute.
2. Surrender of custody and parental control of the child by the natural parent to the adopting parent, and subsequent performance of the parol adoption contract by services rendered by the child in his changed domestic status, by filial affection bestowed by the child which will ordinarily be sufficient in virtual-adoption cases to authorize recovery as for specific performance, will not necessarily be so where the adopting *Page 592 parent is the stepfather, and it does not appear that the same situation would not have prevailed without regard to the adoption contract. In the present case, under these principles no sufficient allegations are made to authorize a recovery.
Whether the plaintiff may prevail on the case as stated depends upon an application of the principles of law as announced in the leading case of Crawford v. Wilson,
The first essential of a contract of adoption of a child, where no statutory adoption exists, is that it be made between persons competent to contract for the disposition of the childand be based upon a sufficient consideration. Rucker v.Moore,
The inquiry now leads us to consider whether the other allegations of the petition, with reference to surrender of the child and performance by him in the changed domestic status resulting from his mother's marriage and from his being taken into the home of his stepfather, are, either alone or in connection with the consummation of the marriage, sufficient to meet the obstacle of want of consideration and failure to have the contract in writing as required by the statute of frauds. Although this court is committed by statements made in Crum v.Fendig,
So far as the status of the mother is concerned, she yields no custody or parental control, but indeed is better enabled to retain it. Giving effect to all natural reasoning on the subject, it would seem that so far as change of domestic status is concerned it would not necessarily be affected in anywise by the alleged agreement to adopt; and if that be true, allegations setting up change of status or performance by the child (where they appear as limited as they do in the allegations of the plaintiff's petition in this case) would not, in our judgment, be sufficient to state a consideration for the contract. Therefore they could add nothing to the consummation of the marriage; and since the marriage would not hold as a consideration, the two elements taken together would not supply one. The same may be said in so far as these elements are needed to take the case out of the operation of the statute of frauds. In the present case, as has been seen, the child took the name of the stepfather, but this was not conclusive. At best it was but a mere circumstance which might have been received in proof if the contract were sufficient to be put in issue. See Baker v. Payne (Mo.),
Not only must the contract itself be definite and specific and established by proof that is clear, strong, and satisfactory but the performance relied upon to constitute an exception under the statute of frauds must be shown to have been done in pursuanceof and in accordance with the terms of the contract. In Crum
v. Fendig, supra, it was said: "But virtual or equitable adoption must be founded upon a contract and performance inaccordance with the terms of the contract by the person claiming to have been adopted." (Italics ours.) "The part performance which will withdraw such a contract from the ban of the statute must consist of an act or of acts which it clearly appears that the performing *Page 599
party would not have done in the absence of the agreement or without a direct view to its performance." 25 R. C. L. 587, § 191. "The part performance relied on to take the case out of the statute must have been done strictly with reference to the contract; if referable to anything else it is not available." 27 C. J. 347, § 429. In Williams v. Morris,
As pointed out in our statement of facts, the plaintiff in this case is a brother of the plaintiff in the case of Boles v.Eddleman,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.