250 Pa. 179 | Pa. | 1915
Opinion by
The question here to be determined arises in connection with the distribution of the personal estate of Mrs. Mary Munson Webb, who died a widow, intestate, 31st October, 1912. Mrs. Webb left no lineal descendants. She had, however, in 1901, under the provisions of the Act of . 9th May, 1889, P. L. 168, adopted as her child
By the terms of the Act of 9th May, 1889, the person adopted thereunder as the child of another becomes entitled to all the rights of a child and heir of the adopting parent. The rights thus conferred are of course strictly legal rights, such as are created by law; and in this particular instance the only right involved relates to property. What right, that is to say, what enforceable claim or title has one born in lawful wedlock to the property of the parent? Just as we measure the right of such an one, so we must measure the right of Mrs. Beckwith, the parent of the claimant, in the estate of this intestate. Only by so doing can we accord to her the full benefit of the statute under which she became a child by adoption. It is a mere truism that no right in the child to any of the property of the parent arises out of the mere parental relation, so long as the parent survives. It is the right of the parent to do with the property as he or she sees fit, and it is only when the parent’s dominion over it is terminated by death that anybody succeeds to that right. If the parent who has the legal right to appoint a successor in right die without making-such appointment, in such case the law appoints as the successor the surviving child, or children if more than one, and the issue, if any, of any deceased child. It is only at this point of time, the death of the parent, that