1. Cоunsel in the instant case devote much of their argument to the question of whether or not the allegations of the petition are sufficient tо authorize a court of equity to decree that there had been a virtual adoption of the petitioner by the testator. In the view we take of this case, it is not necessary to pass upon that question here.
2. A will is to be construed by the law as it exists at the date of the deаth of the testator.
Hertz
v.
Abrahams,
110
Ga.
707 (
3. Granting, but not; deciding, that the allegations of the petition are sufficient to show a virtual adoption, can the petitioner recover as a child under a will devising property “to my children, share and share alike”? This cоurt in
Comer
v.
Comer,
195
Ga.
79, 87 (
4. The next question is: Does the term “children” include the petitioner, who is an illegitimate child of the testator? It has been held many times by this court that the term “children” does not include an illegitimate child. See
Hicks
v.
Smith,
94
Ga.
809 (
5. It is contended that a certain affidavit executed by the testator some six years prior to his death, stating in effect that the petitioner was his child, together with the fact that the petitioner lived in the testator’s home, and that the testаtor referred to the petitioner as his child, is sufficient to show that the testator in the instant case intended to
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include the petitioner in the tеrm “children” as used in his will. The intention to include persons other than natural, lеgitimate children within the term “children” in a will must be found in the will itself, extraneous evidеnce being inadmissible to give it a more inclusive meaning.
Judgment affirmed.
