Adamson's Estate

58 Pa. D. & C. 511, 1947 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 209
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County
DecidedApril 25, 1947
Docketno. 584
StatusPublished

This text of 58 Pa. D. & C. 511 (Adamson's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adamson's Estate, 58 Pa. D. & C. 511, 1947 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 209 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1947).

Opinion

The facts appear from the following excerpts from the adjudication of

Hunter, J.,

auditing judge. — This trust arose under the will of William Adamson, who died June 16, 1879, whereby he directed the division of the residue of his estate, including the share held for his wife at her death, into as many shares as he shall leave children, and a deceased child’s issue, and gave the shares of his daughters to his trustee, in trust, to pay the income to each during her natural life:

“. . . And from and after the death of each of my said daughters in trust, as to the principal sum or other property held upon said trust, in case any daughter shall die leaving a husband or children her surviving, to pay or transfer the same to such person or persons as such daughter may direct by her will or instrument in the nature thereof; and in default of will capable of operating on the contingency above mentioned then in trust for such persons as would be entitled to the property of my said daughter had she died the absolute owner thereof.”

The fund accounted for is the share of Mary E. Adamson testator’s last surviving child, who died March 29, 1946, unmarried and without issue of her body.

She married July 11,1885, but divorced her husband soon thereafter and resumed her maiden name.

[513]*513Mary E. Adamson while a resident of Florida presented her petition to the Circuit Court of the Eleventh Judicial District in and for Dade County, Fla., in which she recited:

“. . . that she desires to adopt a child and make it her child and heir-at-law in order that petitioner may dispose of a trust estate of which she is now beneficiary under her father’s will, and in order that said child may be one of the beneficiaries named in petitioner’s will.”

Whereupon said court entered the following decree dated July 18, 1939:

“It Is Ordered and Adjudged that the said Nancy Cooper Kennickell be, and she is hereby declared to be adopted by the said petitioner, Mary E. Adamson, and the said Nancy Cooper Kennickell is also hereby made the child and heir-at-law of the said Mary E. Adamson in all respects and to the same extent as if she had been born to the said Mary E. Adamson in lawful wedlock. The name of said child is hereby changed to Nancy Cooper Kennickell Adamson.”

Is the adopted child of Mary E. Adamson a “child” within the meaning of the will?

The power given by the will is a general testamentary power but is conditioned upon the daughter leaving “husband or children”.

In Corr’s Estate, 338 Pa. 337, it was decided that a power of appointment among “children and descendants” did not include a person subsequently adopted by the donee of the power. The question in construing the word “children” as used in a will, is not the rights of inheritance of an adopted child under the intestate laws, but his rights, if any, under the terms of the will. The word “children” as used in a will means “natural-born children” unless the testator shows that he intended to extend the meaning. See also Puterbaugh’s Estate, 261 Pa. 235 and Yates’ Estate, 281 Pa. 178.

[514]*514In Corr’s Estate, as in the instant case, testator died before the effective date of the Wills Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 403, so that the act has no application. Even if it did apply it would not help the adopted child because 16(5) provides that where the gift is to the child of another than testator the adoption must take place before the date of the will.

It is contended, however, that the cases above cited have no application because testator makes no gift to the children but merely makes the power conditional upon the wholly unrelated fact of there being husband or children — that if Mrs. Adamson was so survived she had a general power and could have appointed to strangers and omitted her children. Testator, it is argued, having shown no desire to restrict the appointment to blood relatives, he must have intended a broader meaning for the word “children”, so as to include any person between whom and one of his own children the legal relationship of parent and child existed.

I cannot follow this argument because, while he left the distribution to the discretion of his daughter, he must have had in mind that she would in all probability make an appointment to her husband or children. According to the rules of law he did not contemplate an adopted child, and this intention should control the disposition of the property whether his gifts were direct or indirect to the ultimate beneficiaries of the power. In my opinion testator has not evidenced an intent to broaden the normal meaning of the word “children”.

It is also contended that the Florida decree of adoption created in the adopted child the status of a natural child.

A decree or statute of another State cannot alter our laws of distribution.

In Zoell’s Estate, 345 Pa. 413, where the question was the right of a child, adopted in Ohio, to inherit personal [515]*515property from a natural relative dying intestate in Pennsylvania, Mr. Chief Justice Schaffer said (p. 415) :

“The full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution requires us to recognize only her status as adopted. What we are dealing with is a question of descent, not one of status. ‘The state of the place of the property, in denying him the right to inherit, is not denying his status as an adopted child, nor even the incident of that status (for rights of inheritance as to property located in the state of adoption are still recognized), but is merely giving effect to its statute of inheritance prescribing the class of persons who shall or shall not take property there located:’ 73 A. L. R. 974. To which may be added, that that is the function, solely of the State of the domicile of the intestate or of the property’s location. As to personal property, which is what is here involved, it follows the person of the owner and is distributable according to the intestate laws of his place of domicile. The Restatement, Conflict of Laws, Sec. 305(b), thus states the rule: ‘If the law of the state of the decedent’s domicil allows an adopted child to take a distributive share, a legally adopted child will take a share although the law of the state of adoption or of the state where a chattel is provides otherwise. If the law of the state of the decedent’s domicil does not allow an adopted child to take a distributive share, he cannot do so, although the law of the State of adoption or of the state where a chattel is would allow him to take.’ ”

See also Crossley’s Estate, 135 Pa. Superior Ct. 524.

Cases on the status of an illegitimate child, where there is the fact of the actual physical birth of the child are to be distinguished. When the law of the domicile of the parent declares that the child was legitimate at or from birth, that status is recognized everywhere: Thorn Estate, 353 Pa. 603; A. L. I. Restatement of Conflict of Laws §137 et seq., 204.

[516]*516In my opinion the right of an adopted child to inherit from a Pennsylvania decedent, and as well its right to take under a Pennsylvania will, are both controlled by the laws of Pennsylvania.

I conclude that the adopted child is not a “child” within the meaning of the will, and that the power of appointment which was conditioned upon the survival of “husband or children” did not exist.

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Bluebook (online)
58 Pa. D. & C. 511, 1947 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adamsons-estate-paorphctphilad-1947.