92 N.Y.S. 1019 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff, a sister of Abby E. Allen, deceased, claims that she and the defendants Catharine Smith and Frances Glover, also sisters of the decedent, are the only heirs at law of such decedent, who died in 1903, intestate, seised of certain land in the city of New York and of other land in the county of Suffolk, in the state of New York, and she seeks partition of such premises. It is alleged in the complaint that the defendant Minnie Allen, sued as Minnie T. Ostheim, claims some interest in the premises, and that defendant set up in her answer that she was entitled to the premises by reason of her having been adopted by the said Abby E. Allen and her husband, Theodore Allen, by formal proceedings had in the Court of Common Pleas of the City of New York on the 18th of May, 1886. The cause was tried at the Special Term, and judgment was rendered for the defendants dismissing the complaint. The court found that the defendant Minnie T. Allen is alone entitled to the estate by reason of her adoption as a child by the decedent. The other defendants make no contest.
The proofs respecting the adoption of the defendant sued as Minnie T. Ostheim were introduced, and there was no other evidence in the case as to the title of the premises sought to be partitioned, it having been admitted that the plaintiff and the defendants Catharine Smith and Frances Glover were the sisters of the decedent. The order of adoption was made at the Special Term of the Court of Common Pleas on the 18th of May, 1886, upon a petition of Theodore Allen and Abby E. Allen, in which it was set forth that Kitty M. Ostheim, a child of five years, was a granddaughter of the petitioner Theodore Allen; that the petitioners desired to adopt their grandchild as their own child; whereupon the order was made.
“No Inheritance before the death of an intestate arises from any relations existing between him and another. But those who, at the time of his death, come within the description of persons entitled by law to inherit, and those only, take the relation of inheritors to his estate. The death is the event, and the conditions then existing are solely the subject of consideration in determining the right of inheritance and distribution of the estate of an intestate."
If Mrs. Allen had died before the act of 1887 went into effect, doubtless the defendant Minnie Ostheim could not have taken any interest in her estate; but the right to inherit existed when Mrs. Allen died.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
INGRAHAM and LAUGHLIN, JJ., concur. McLAUGHLIN, J., concurs in result.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. When the child was adopted, it was intended only to clothe such adopted child with the rights the