Thе administrator of the estate of Tamara Soon Ja Whitchurch commenced this action in the Washington Superior Court against John D. Perry, M.D., and the Central Vermont Medical Center, Inc., alleging that as a direct and proximate result of their negligence the plaintiff’s decedent suffered bodily injury, great pain, and death. Damages were sought under Vermont’s wrongful death act, 14 V.S.A. §§ 1491-1492, and also under 14 V.S.A. § 1453 which provides, in part, that a cause of action for bodily injury survives the death of the victim. He appeals from an order granting both defendants’ motions for summary judgment and dismissing his complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. We reverse in part.
In February of 1974 the plaintiff and his wife applied to the Holt Adoption Program, Inc., to adopt a Korean or Vietnamese child. They had been designated as suitable adoptive parents by the Vermont Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services. With the cooperation of the Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service, the Whitchurches were given custody of Soon Ja Kim (renamed Tamara Soon Ja Whit-church), а six month old Korean girl abandoned by persons unknown at the police station in Seoul, Korea.
Prior to receiving custody of Tamara and “for the purpose of adoption,” the Whitchurches executed a “placement *467 agreement” with the Holt Adoption Program and thе Vermont Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services. Under this agreement the Adoption Program remained the child’s legal guardian, and the Whitchurches agreed not to request an adoption for at least six months. This waiting period corresponded to a time limitation imposed by Vermont law before a final decree of adoption may issue. See 15 V.S.A. § 440. Furthermore, the adoption could not take place without a recommendation from Social and Rehabilitation Services and the written consent of the Adoption Program. The plаcement could be terminated during the waiting period if, in the Adoption Program’s “professional judgement,” it was not in the child’s best interests or “unforeseen circumstances” prevented the Whitchurches from completing the adoption.
On February 18, 1976, approximately two months prior to the time when Tamara’s adoption could become final, she was admitted to the Central Vermont Medical Center for treatment of injuries suffered by scalding when a makeshift vaporizer was upset. She died that day, and the events surrounding her treatment and death form the subject matter of this action.
These facts are not in dispute. The question on appeal is whether they entitle both defendants to judgment as a matter of law. 1 We hold that summary judgment was inappropri *468 ate as to the cause of action under 14 V.S.A. § 1453. See Part I, infra. However, it was properly granted on the plaintiff’s claim under 14 V.S.A. §§ 1491-1492 for damages caused by a wrongful death. See Part II, infra.
I.
Vermont’s survival statutes, 14 V.S.A. §§ 1451-1453, abrogate the 'harsh common law rule that personal tort actions die with the person of the plaintiff or the defendant. See generally W. Prosser, Handbook of the Law of Torts § 126 (1971). Section 1453 authorizes the executor or administrаtor of an estate to prosecute the cause of action the decedent had, or would have had if death had not ensued. See
Berry
v.
Rutland R.R.,
The superior court granted summary judgment in favor of both defendants on the surviving cause of action because it was “brought for the decеdent’s estate” and “[t]he prospective adoptive parents could not share in the distribution of the estate.” The plaintiff conceded in an affidavit filed in opposition to the motions for summary judgment “[t]hat the biological parents [of Tamara], and any heirs through biological relationships, are unknown . . . and cannot be determined through any investigation in Korea.” The court accepted the argument that it was pointless to permit the plaintiff to maintain the action because no beneficiaries stood to recover and, therefore, any proceeds would escheat to the town where Tamara was last an inhabitant.
The defendants admit that this ruling is based upon practical considerations. Practicality, in and of itself, however, does not justify summary judgment. In this case, the allegation is that bodily injury resulting in death was oc
*469
cаsioned by the defendants’ negligence. That cause of action is within 14 V.S.A. § 1453. See 14 V.S.A. §§ 1452-1453;
Giguere
v.
Rosselot,
II.
Vermont’s wrongful death act, 14 V.S.A. §§ 1491-1492, does not create a new cause of action but “merely a new right of recovery which attaches to the right of action arising from the original wrong. By it, a new element of damages is engrafted upon [the] right of action” surviving by virtue of the statutes discussed in Part I of this opinion.
Desautels’ Adm’r
v.
Mercure’s Estate,
The plaintiff concedes that “next of kin” within the meaning of 14 V.S.A. § 1492(c) must exist if damages for wrongful death are to be recovered in this action. See
D’Angelo
v.
Rutland Railway Light & Power Co.,
The superior court rejected this argument. It held that an equitable adoption requires the existence of a contract to adopt, that the placement agreement executed by the Whit-churches was not such a contract, and that the Vermont statutes do not recognize prospective adoptive parents as next of kin.
Courts generally apply the doctrine of equitable adoption in cases of intestate succession to permit participation in the estate by a foster child who was never legally, i.e., statutorily, adopted by the decedent. Typically the decedent obtained custody by expressly or implicitly promising the child, the *471 child’s natural parents, or someone in loco parentis that an adoption would occur. Custody is transferred and the child lives with the foster parent as would a natural сhild, but, for one reason or another (usually the promisor’s neglect), an adoption never occurs. Upon the foster parent’s death, a court, applying the maxim that “equity regards that as done which ought to be done,” declares that the child is entitled to share in the estatе as if he were a legally adopted child. See Note, Equitable Adoption: They Took Him Into Their Home and Called Him Fred, 58 Va. L. Rev. 727 (1972).
These cases rely on one or both of the theories that (1) the decedent’s promise is a contract to adopt and for its breach an equitable rеmedy, limited in application and result, allows the child to participate in the distribution of the estate, see, e.g.,
In re Williams’ Estates,
The plaintiff recognizes that this case presents the converse of the usual situation: here the prospective adoptive parents not the child seek the benefit of an equitable adoption. Attempts to obtain such relief have failed because foster parents who through neglect or design breach an agreement to adopt — and those claiming through them — are in no position to invoke the equitable powers of a court.
Heien
v.
Crabtree,
Bower
v.
Landa,
*473 Thai portion of the trial court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants on the сause of action under 1U V.S.A. § 1^53 is reversed, the balance is affirmed, and the cause is remanded.
Notes
We note that the motion filed by the Central Vermont Medical Center requested summary judgment on the wrongful death portion of the complaint only,
i.e.,
partial summary judgment. Although such a motion is speсifically authorized by V.R.C.P. 56(b), an order merely granting it and defendant Perry’s motion would not have disposed of all the claims against all of the parties. It therefore would not have been final, and this Court would have lacked jurisdiction to hear the appeal.
Beam
v.
Fish,
The defendants would have us rule that any recovery in the survival action is for the benefit of the deceased child’s estate and that the Whitchurches are not entitled to inherit from that estate. We decline to intimate any view on these questions because they do not affeсt the plaintiff’s right to maintain the survival claim. They must be left for the probate court in the exercise of its jurisdiction over the settlement of estates.
The parties rely on
Needham
v.
Grand Trunk Ry.,
We acknowledge that some language in
Abbott
v.
Abbott,
15 V.S.A. § 448 provides, in part, as follows:
Upon the issuance of a final adoption decree the same rights, duties and obligations, and the same right of inheritance shall exist between the parties as though the person adopted had been the legitimate child of the person or persons making the adoption, except that the person adopted shall not be capable of taking property expressly limited to the heirs of the body of the persons making such adoption.
